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  • ‘Acts of revenge’: Israel arrests Palestinian women footballers and students

    ‘Acts of revenge’: Israel arrests Palestinian women footballers and students

    Before the first light of day filtered across the occupied West Bank, the sharp, sudden sound of pounding echoed through the entrance of Ahmed Safi’s apartment building in the town of Birzeit, north of Ramallah. When the 48-year-old Palestinian father jolted awake, he watched as Israeli soldiers streamed through the halls of his building, and assumed the incursion targeted another resident. He could never have guessed the operation would end with his own 20-year-old daughter, Sama – a psychology undergraduate at Birzeit University – in handcuffs.

    “We were stunned, completely shocked,” Safi told reporters from Middle East Eye in an interview. “We never had any indication this raid was meant for her.”

    Family accounts confirm soldiers entered the residential compound shortly after 2 a.m. on Tuesday, shouting orders in Hebrew as they cleared each floor and made their way to the Safi family’s unit. They demanded identification from Ahmed, his wife, and Sama, before presenting the 20-year-old with a sealed arrest warrant. When the family pressed for details on the allegations against her, commanding officers only offered that they would “learn the reason in court.”

    Before moving Sama out of the apartment, soldiers ransacked her personal study and bedroom, seizing her mobile phone, laptop, and multiple personal items. Among the possessions taken were framed photographs of her cousin, Ayser Safi, who was killed by Israeli forces in a separate 2024 incursion. Sama was then led down the stairs of the building, handcuffed behind her back, blindfolded, and loaded into an unmarked Israeli military vehicle.

    For the Safi family, the shock of the arrest is compounded by urgent fears over Sama’s chronic medical condition: she lives with Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF), an inherited autoimmune inflammatory disorder that requires daily, consistent medication to prevent life-threatening complications. Ahmed Safi said he repeatedly attempted to explain his daughter’s health needs to the raiding party, but soldiers refused to let him gather her medication or discuss her condition before taking her into custody.

    “Without her daily drugs, she suffers crippling high fevers, intense body pain, and other disabling symptoms,” Safi explained. “This disease triggers spontaneous autoimmune attacks. If she goes without her medication, it can cause permanent liver and kidney damage. We are extremely worried for her right now.”

    As of this week, Sama is being held at the Al-Maskubiya interrogation facility in Jerusalem, with her first scheduled court appearance set for next Tuesday. No formal charges against her have been released to the public.

    Sama is not alone in this latest wave of detentions: she is one of five Palestinian women taken into Israeli custody in a series of overnight raids this week, three of whom are current Birzeit University students, with one a recent graduate of the institution. Among the detainees are two active players on the Palestinian women’s national football team: 20-year-old Natalie Abu Diya and 20-year-old Rand Halawani. The other two detainees are third-year public administration student Julan Abu Awad and recent graduate Laila Nael Khalil.

    Natalie Abu Diya, a second-year media studies student at Birzeit, was taken from her on-campus student housing during what witnesses described as a violent overnight incursion. Her father, Samer Abu Diya, told Middle East Eye that Natalie had represented Palestine in international youth competition as a member of the national under-18 women’s football squad. The family was on a phone call with Natalie until roughly 10:30 p.m. the night of her arrest, when she told them she had 13 class assignments to finish and planned to stay up late to complete the work. By 3:30 a.m., her roommates contacted the family to say Israeli soldiers had broken into her room and taken her into custody.

    Natalie was later transferred to Israel’s Ofer Prison, where she has already met with her legal representation. The family says they still have no information about what charges, if any, will be brought against her.

    “Natalie is my youngest daughter. She is independent, determined, and exceptionally bright,” Samer Abu Diya said. “I do not doubt her ability to withstand this ordeal, but I am deeply heartbroken by the injustice that is being done to her.”

    The second national team player, Rand Halawani, was arrested after Israeli authorities summoned her for questioning in Jerusalem. A military court has extended her detention through Friday, and no further details on charges have been released.

    The Palestinian Football Association (PFA) issued a scathing condemnation of the detentions, calling the arrests “unjust” and part of a broader pattern of systematic targeting that has gone unchecked for years.

    “Their arrest is not an isolated incident; it is part of a well-documented pattern of systematic targeting of Palestinian athletes, which continues without any form of accountability,” the PFA statement read. “The PFA calls on FIFA, our continental confederations, and the entire global sporting community to move beyond empty statements and take concrete disciplinary action within the framework of international football to address these ongoing violations. The targeting of Palestinian athletes must end. The impunity must end. The double standards must end.”

    Julan Abu Awad, the third Birzeit student detained, was arrested during a pre-dawn raid on her family’s home in the West Bank. Her sister, Jenin Abu Awad, said the entire family was left stunned by the incursion.

    “We tried to ask why they were taking her, but they just told us we would find out in court, and that she would be detained for a long time,” Jenin told Middle East Eye. “They tore her room apart, searched every inch of it, and turned everything upside down.”

    The raid that led to Julan’s arrest came just one week after Israeli forces first raided the family home, interrogating all members, seizing personal items including a bottle of perfume and a pack of cigarettes, but leaving without making any arrests. Julan is currently being held at the Al-Maskubiya interrogation center, and like Sama Safi, she has a pre-existing chronic medical condition that requires regular medication: she experiences severe recurring migraines that can leave her incapacitated for days.

    “When she has a migraine, she vomits repeatedly, cannot stand any light, and needs complete silence. She needs strong painkillers and a sedative injection to get through an attack,” Jenin explained. “We are very worried about her health right now.”

    These five detentions are part of a much broader, ongoing pattern of daily incursion and arrest across the occupied West Bank. Palestinian prisoner rights organizations estimate that roughly 9,000 Palestinians are currently held in Israeli prisons, with nearly half of that population detained without formal charges or trial.

    Abdullah Zaghari, head of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club, a prominent advocacy group, said in an interview that Israeli forces have seen a sharp uptick in the detention of Palestinian girls and women in recent months, with a particular focus on university students and former political prisoners. Most of these arrests are carried out under the broad allegation of “incitement,” often tied to nothing more than social media posts expressing opposition to the Israeli occupation or solidarity with other Palestinian communities.

    Zaghari warned that detained Palestinian women face severe risks inside Israeli prisons, including documented abuse, systemic medical negligence, and prolonged solitary confinement. “The number of arrests of male and female university students has skyrocketed under this pretext, which has no basis in international law whatsoever,” Zaghari said. “These arrests are part of ongoing acts of revenge against the Palestinian people by the occupation.”

    Data from the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club shows that the total number of Palestinian women held in Israeli facilities has risen to 89 as of this week. That population includes three minor girls, three pregnant women, and two women living with cancer. Most are held in Israel’s Damon Prison, while dozens more are still being held in temporary interrogation and detention facilities. At least 19 of the 89 detained women are held under administrative detention, a policy that allows Israeli authorities to imprison individuals without charge or trial, with detention terms renewable indefinitely.

  • Lebanon-Israel ceasefire plans in doubt following Hezbollah’s rejection

    Lebanon-Israel ceasefire plans in doubt following Hezbollah’s rejection

    After four rounds of US-mediated direct negotiations between Israeli and Lebanese delegations in Washington, a US-backed draft plan for a ceasefire between the two nations has emerged, but its path to implementation remains deeply uncertain, with multiple Lebanese stakeholders warning critical pieces are still missing and key regional players stand opposed.

    The two days of talks concluded with a preliminary declaration that lays out a framework for a ceasefire and the establishment of pilot security zones in southern Lebanon. Under the proposed arrangement, the Lebanese Armed Forces would take sole control of these designated areas, barring all non-state armed groups from operating within their borders. The pilot zones are framed as an initial testing ground for a wider security arrangement that could be expanded across the region if successful.

    However, a senior Lebanese official close to President Joseph Aoun told Middle East Eye that the draft proposal lacks any clear, binding implementation mechanism, and its entire fate now rests on whether Hezbollah, the powerful non-state armed group that holds significant sway in southern Lebanon, will give its approval. What is more, the official confirmed that neither Hezbollah nor Nabih Berri – Lebanon’s long-serving Parliament Speaker, a key Hezbollah ally and established intermediary between the group and Washington – were privy to the full details of negotiations as they progressed. Once the draft text was finalized, President Aoun circulated it to both Hezbollah and Berri to gather feedback before communicating Lebanon’s final position to US negotiators.

    The senior official described the closed-door negotiations as grueling, noting that the Lebanese delegation threatened to walk out and suspend talks after Israeli negotiators pushed back against demands for a full, immediate ceasefire. It was this deadlock that led US mediators to put forward the pilot zone concept as a compromise middle ground to break the impasse.

    Another sticking point emerged during the talks when the US delegation insisted on including language condemning what it called “Iran’s attacks on countries in the region”. Lebanese negotiators viewed the repeated push for this language as a deliberate attempt to decouple the Israel-Lebanon peace track from ongoing US-Iran negotiations. Iran has listed a full end to Israeli strikes on Lebanon as a core condition for its own ceasefire talks with Washington, and just days prior, Tehran suspended negotiations in response to Israeli threats to bomb central Beirut.

    The situation on the ground in southern Lebanon has continued to deteriorate despite a nominal ceasefire declared on 17 April. Since that truce took effect, Israel has steadily expanded its military presence across the region, through territorial occupation, repeated air strikes, and mandatory evacuation orders for local residents. Roughly one-fifth of Lebanon’s total territory is now under direct or indirect Israeli control, a footprint that extends far beyond the initial buffer zone Israel declared when the truce was announced. Notably, the new US-backed proposal makes no mention of requiring an Israeli troop withdrawal or ending ongoing Israeli military operations in southern Lebanon, and Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz confirmed Thursday that Israeli forces would “for the time being, continue its fire and operations on the ground”. Katz added that Israel would keep working to dismantle Hezbollah’s infrastructure in the region and retained US-backed “freedom of action” to strike targets in Beirut in response to any attacks on Israeli territory.

    Hezbollah officials say they were not surprised by the outcome of the Washington talks. A source familiar with the group’s position told Middle East Eye that Hezbollah opposed direct negotiations between the Lebanese state and Israel from the start, predicting it would produce a framework that ran counter to the group’s core interests. “From the first statement issued after the first joint meeting that initiated the direct negotiations path, we knew this is where the Lebanese state intended to go,” the source said. “That is why we were against this track from the start.”

    Hezbollah secretary-general Naim Qassem has since formally rejected the outcome of the talks, calling direct negotiations with Israel “shameful” for Lebanon and dismissing any attempts to tie a ceasefire and Israeli withdrawal to the group’s disarmament. Qassem stressed that any credible ceasefire must cover all of southern Lebanon, where Israel has seized a self-declared security zone, and argued that Israeli security in northern towns would never be achieved as long as Lebanese villages remain under attack, unsafe, and destroyed. “Towns in northern Israel would not be secure as long as our villages are unsafe, bombed, destroyed, and our people are being killed,” Qassem said. For Hezbollah, any discussion of the group’s weapons must only take place after a full stop to all Israeli attacks across Lebanon and a complete withdrawal of Israeli troops from all occupied Lebanese territory – a position that directly clashes with the US framework, which centers on restricting Hezbollah’s military presence and activity south of the Litani River as a core condition for the ceasefire.

    Criticism of the proposal has also come from other Lebanese officials not affiliated with Hezbollah. One senior Lebanese official not involved in the negotiations described the proposal’s wording as deeply ambiguous, saying it remains unclear whether the ceasefire and security arrangements would take effect simultaneously or sequentially. The official also called out a section of the draft that endorses US Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s claim that Hezbollah is “an enemy of Lebanon” in addition to being an enemy of Israel and the United States, calling the paragraph embarrassing for Lebanon even if it only reflects a US position.

    The dispute highlights the narrow, high-stakes path facing the Lebanese government. The presidency has framed the proposal as a last chance to secure a broad ceasefire, but Hezbollah views it as an attempt to achieve through diplomacy what Israel failed to win through military force. It also exposes a core contradiction at the heart of the US-led process: Washington is pushing for a formal state-to-state agreement between Lebanon and Israel, but the most powerful military actor on the Lebanese side – Hezbollah – has been excluded from the negotiations entirely.

    Israeli and Lebanese delegations are scheduled to reconvene later this month for further talks on political and security arrangements. Even so, Lebanese officials openly acknowledge that without Hezbollah’s backing, the proposal is at risk of remaining nothing more than a non-binding diplomatic framework with no viable path to implementation.

  • Israel’s military creep killing Gaza peace plan

    Israel’s military creep killing Gaza peace plan

    In recent weeks, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has directed the Israel Defense Forces to expand its territorial control in Gaza to 70% of the enclave, marking an 11% increase from the roughly 60% the military already holds. This new expansion aligns with an updated map distributed to Gaza-based aid agencies in late March, which draws a new “orange line” marking Israel’s newly claimed restricted military zone. This boundary extends 11% beyond the “yellow line” demarcation agreed upon during the October 2024 ceasefire deal with Hamas.

    Compounding this territorial shift, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant has publicly reaffirmed the Israeli government’s plan to relocate large numbers of Palestinian residents out of Gaza “when conditions are appropriate and the process is carried out appropriately.” These unfolding moves come amid heightened domestic political upheaval in Israel: the country’s parliament, the Knesset, voted to dissolve itself on May 20, clearing the path for a snap national election to be held as early as this September.

    Experts and international observers have already flagged that Israel’s expanding push directly contradicts the 20-point Gaza peace plan brokered by the U.S.-led Board of Peace. That framework explicitly calls for a phased withdrawal of Israeli military forces from the enclave and includes explicit language guaranteeing that “No one will be forced to leave Gaza, and those who wish to leave will be free to do so and free to return. We will encourage people to stay and offer them the opportunity to build a better Gaza.” Even U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio acknowledged this mismatch during a recent congressional hearing, confirming that the peace plan “doesn’t call for” expanded Israeli military control over Gaza.

    As Israel expands its hold, the 2.1 million Palestinian residents of Gaza are increasingly squeezed into a shrinking, war-ravaged, overcrowded strip of coastal land, with little meaningful intervention from the global community to halt the territorial shift. To understand the gravity of these actions, it is necessary to examine them through the lens of established international law, which places clear limits on military occupation of foreign territory. While international law permits temporary occupation to achieve legitimate wartime objectives, two core rules are non-negotiable.

    First, an occupying force cannot assert a permanent legal claim to the territory it seizes. Article 2(4) of the United Nations Charter explicitly outlaws territorial conquest as an instrument of war, a principle the global community enforced firmly in response to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, where breaches were widely recognized as the crime of aggression. The International Court of Justice (ICJ) reaffirmed this principle in its 2024 advisory opinion on Israeli actions in occupied Palestinian territories, making clear that Israel cannot claim sovereignty over any part of Gaza.

    Second, all occupying powers are bound by international humanitarian and human rights law, which requires them to protect the welfare of the civilian population under their control and preserve the existing demographic composition of the occupied territory. This means forced displacement of the local population and transfer of the occupying power’s own civilian settlers into the territory are strictly prohibited. These obligations have applied to Israel since it seized Gaza from Egypt during the 1967 Six-Day War, launching a decades-long occupation that continued in a legal sense even after Israel withdrew its ground troops and dismantled settlements in 2005.

    Despite these clear legal standards, enforcing compliance with Israel’s international obligations has proven slow, fragmented, and largely ineffective to date. After the ICJ’s 2024 ruling ordered a full Israeli withdrawal from all occupied Palestinian territories on the grounds that Israel’s presence violates the core principles of Palestinian self-determination and the ban on territorial conquest, the UN General Assembly endorsed the ruling and set a September 14, 2025 deadline for completion of the withdrawal. Israel simply ignored the deadline. Enforcement of ICJ rulings falls exclusively to the UN Security Council, where the U.S.’s permanent veto power has blocked any meaningful action to compel compliance.

    Worse still, the clear legal prohibitions on conquest, forced displacement, and settlements are being intentionally muddied by the Trump administration-brokered 20-point peace plan and the Board of Peace overseeing its implementation. In November 2025, the UN Security Council endorsed the plan, which aimed to end the conflict, disarm Hamas, and establish a transitional Palestinian government overseen by the Board of Peace and a multinational International Stabilisation Force. But from its inception, the ceasefire deal was riddled with critical gaps: it included no binding provisions defining the scope of Israel’s military presence in Gaza, no mechanism for holding actors accountable for alleged war crimes, and no clear roadmap for demilitarization.

    Unsurprisingly, the entire peace process has ground to a standstill since the ceasefire took effect. Israeli airstrikes and ground operations have continued, killing more than 900 Palestinians, aid deliveries remain drastically insufficient to meet the desperate needs of the civilian population, and Hamas has refused to disarm without concrete, binding guarantees for full Palestinian self-determination in the future.

    This stalemate works entirely in Israel’s strategic interests. Under the original ceasefire map, Israel was allowed to maintain military control of all territory behind the “yellow line”, which already gave it control of just over half the enclave, squeezing the majority of Gaza’s population into a small coastal pocket. Within the territory it already controlled, Israel has already undertaken two key projects that reveal its long-term political goals.

    First, the military has completely flattened entire residential neighborhoods and hundreds of civilian structures, turning large swathes of northern and eastern Gaza into uninhabited wasteland cleared of all civilian infrastructure and residents. On this cleared land, Israel has since built an extensive network of permanent military infrastructure, including new access roads, fortified outposts, barriers, and tall earthen berms. This creates a de facto permanent Israeli-controlled zone emptied of its Palestinian population, a status quo that amounts to unlawful forced displacement and territorial conquest under international law.

    Day by day, the area available to Palestinian residents of Gaza shrinks, as Israel reshapes the territory’s borders through bulldozers and permanent fortifications. Netanyahu has already indicated that Israel has no intention of stopping at 70% control and depopulation. The Israeli government may seek to establish a large permanent buffer zone across much of Gaza, mirroring similar permanent Israeli military presences it has built in southern Lebanon and occupied Syrian territory, or it could even revive plans to establish new Israeli settlements in the strip – a project already being aggressively expanded across the occupied West Bank.

    All of these unfolding moves violate clear international law and the text of the very “peace plan” that was supposed to resolve the conflict, while offering no viable long-term path to justice or self-determination for the Palestinian people. This analysis is by Michelle Burgis-Kasthala, Professor of International Law at La Trobe University, republished with permission under Creative Commons license.

  • Polanski and Corbyn join calls for Britons who served in Israeli army to be tracked

    Polanski and Corbyn join calls for Britons who served in Israeli army to be tracked

    A heated debate has erupted across British politics after two senior party leaders added their voices to growing demands that the UK government track and monitor British citizens who have served in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), following allegations of widespread war crimes and genocide in Gaza.

    Zack Polanski, leader of the Green Party, and former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn were among the high-profile signatories of an open letter coordinated by investigative outlet Declassified UK, addressed to UK Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood and Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper. The letter calls on authorities to systematically track the movements of British nationals who have served in the IDF, and implement mandatory secondary screening for these individuals at UK ports of entry when deemed necessary. It also pushes for full, rigorous war crimes investigations that adhere to both domestic UK legislation and international legal frameworks.

    Current data suggests that approximately 2,000 British-Israeli dual nationals have served in the IDF during Israel’s ongoing military campaign in Gaza, a conflict that a United Nations commission of inquiry formally ruled constituted genocide in 2024. Since the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack that killed roughly 1,200 people in southern Israel, Israeli military operations in Gaza have killed nearly 73,000 Palestinians, injured more than 170,000, and left thousands more unaccounted for, presumed dead under the rubble of destroyed civilian infrastructure.

    In the text of the open letter, signatories — a cross-group coalition of politicians, legal professionals, human rights advocates, journalists, and other public figures — argue that monitoring the entry of IDF-serving dual British nationals into the UK and investigating potential ties to war crimes serves a clear public interest. The letter notes that many of these individuals have returned to the UK after fighting in Gaza and now reside in British communities, even holding positions in public institutions including hospitals, law enforcement agencies, and schools. It adds, “Nobody wants to live next to a potential war criminal – not least members of the Palestinian community in the UK who have family or friends who have been subjected to war crimes.”

    This latest push for action comes after London’s Metropolitan Police sparked outrage in April 2025 when it announced it would not open investigations into 10 British nationals accused of war crimes and crimes against humanity for their service with the IDF in Gaza. The decision came more than a year after the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) and the UK-based Public Interest Law Centre (PILC) submitted a 240-page evidence dossier to the Metropolitan Police’s dedicated War Crimes Team. The dossier outlined detailed allegations that the 10 British nationals, a number of whom hold dual UK-Israeli citizenship, participated in targeted killings of civilian bystanders and humanitarian aid workers, carried out indiscriminate strikes on densely populated civilian areas, attacked hospitals and other protected civilian sites, and aided in the forced displacement of Palestinian civilians. In justifying its refusal to move forward with the case, the Met claimed there was no realistic prospect of securing a conviction and that a thorough, effective investigation could not be completed.

    Alongside Polanski and Corbyn, the open letter has secured support from multiple sitting UK parliamentarians, including independent lawmakers and high-profile Labour Party rebels John McDonnell and Diane Abbott.

    The move has drawn fierce condemnation from opponents on the opposite side of the political and ideological spectrum. Conservative Party chairman Kevin Hollinrake criticized the initiative in an interview with The Telegraph, arguing that “At a time when anti-Semitism is on the rise, Zack Polanski should not be stoking further division and hostility in our society.” The Board of Deputies of British Jews, a leading UK Jewish community organization that has publicly backed Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, echoed that criticism, saying the letter represented “another attempt to demonise Israelis and promote an atmosphere of intimidation against British Jews.”

    In response to the backlash, a spokesperson for Polanski defended the call for action, noting that the IDF has faced credible, well-documented allegations of catastrophic war crimes in Gaza from leading global human rights bodies including the UN Human Rights Council, Human Rights Watch, and Amnesty International. The spokesperson emphasized that “the UK Government should be taking robust action against any British citizen complicit in these crimes.”

    The renewed debate comes amid escalating Israeli military operations in Gaza. Data from the Palestinian Ministry of Health recorded 119 Palestinian deaths at the hands of Israeli forces in May 2025, marking the highest single-month death toll since November 2024. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has confirmed that the IDF continues to expand its territorial control across Gaza, currently holding roughly 60 percent of the enclave with plans to push that figure to 70 percent in coming operations.

  • Israel seeks to recruit ultranationalists for police unit at Al-Aqsa Mosque

    Israel seeks to recruit ultranationalists for police unit at Al-Aqsa Mosque

    A newly revealed recruitment initiative by Israeli law enforcement has sent shockwaves through the region, with Israeli authorities actively courting ultranationalist activists and Jewish settlers to serve in police units stationed at the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in occupied East Jerusalem, Israeli daily newspaper Haaretz has reported.

    The call for new hires came directly from Daniel Lerach, deputy commander of the police detachment tasked with overseeing the sensitive religious site. In a public online appeal, Lerach explicitly sought what he termed “religious officers” to be deployed at Al-Aqsa. In messages circulated across social media platforms and private WhatsApp groups—many of which are tied to Israeli settler communities in the occupied West Bank—Lerach extended an open invitation: “Anyone who wants to take part in implementing sovereignty is welcome to contact me.”

    Haaretz’s reporting further confirms that rabbis affiliated with the Temple Mount movements, extremist organizations that stage frequent incursions into the Al-Aqsa compound and openly advocate for the destruction of the mosque to make way for a third Jewish temple, have urged their followers to answer the recruitment call. Arnon Segal, a high-profile leader of the Temple Mount movement, hailed the initiative as a pivotal milestone, framing it as growing official Israeli recognition of Jewish claims to the contested site. Segal acknowledged that some potential recruits had raised concerns about joining a police force that currently enforces the long-standing status quo ban on Jewish prayer at the compound, but noted that a large number of movement activists have still opted to enlist.

    This recruitment drive is the latest in a string of escalating actions that Palestinian officials characterize as a deliberate campaign to reduce Palestinian presence at Al-Aqsa while entrenching unilateral Israeli control over the site. The Jerusalem Governorate of the Palestinian Authority has condemned the move as a “dangerous development” that forms part of a broader project to erase the mosque’s centuries-old Islamic identity.

    In an official statement released Thursday, the governorate explained that the initiative aims to embed activists from extremist Temple Mount groups and adherents of the religious Zionist movement directly into the institutional structure Israel uses to enforce its control over the holy compound. The statement emphasized that the plan marks a new, more open phase of collaboration between official Israeli state bodies and radical Temple Mount organizations.

    “This issue extends beyond the recruitment campaign itself,” the statement read. “Israel is seeking to transfer effective authority over Al-Aqsa from the Islamic Waqf, which holds legal and historical custodianship of the site, to Israeli police and other state bodies.”

    The Al-Aqsa Mosque compound holds profound religious significance across multiple faiths: it is the third-holiest site in Islam, while for Jewish communities it is known as the Temple Mount, revered as the location of two ancient Jewish temples that once stood on the land. For decades, the site has operated under a fragile internationally recognized status quo arrangement, which preserves its identity as an Islamic place of worship and formalizes the custodianship role of the Jordan-backed Islamic Waqf. Under this agreement, only Muslim worshippers are permitted to pray at the site, while non-Muslim visitors may enter under terms set by the Waqf, which retains full authority over all administrative, maintenance, and religious matters related to the compound.

    Since Israel occupied East Jerusalem in 1967, however, the Israeli government has steadily eroded this status quo, imposing growing restrictions on Palestinian and Muslim access to the site while steadily expanding Jewish presence and administrative control. Violations of the long-standing arrangement have accelerated dramatically since October 2023, with senior Israeli officials and sitting lawmakers openly calling for the imposition of full Israeli sovereignty over the entire Al-Aqsa compound.

  • Exclusive: UK says Jordan Al-Aqsa custodianship ‘must be respected’

    Exclusive: UK says Jordan Al-Aqsa custodianship ‘must be respected’

    Tensions over the future of Jerusalem’s most sensitive religious sites have escalated this week after the United Kingdom issued its first formal public reaffirmation of Jordan’s longstanding custodianship role, following explosive reports of a covert US-Israeli plot to overhaul the decades-old status quo at the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound.

    Last week, independent outlet Middle East Eye (MEE) broke the story detailing alleged plans backed by former Trump administration advisor Jared Kushner—now unaffiliated with the current US administration—and current US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee to strip the Jordanian monarchy of its historic custodianship rights, a position enshrined in decades of international agreements. Multiple anonymous officials from the US, Jordan, Palestine, as well as Western and Gulf Arab diplomatic sources confirmed the details of the proposal to MEE.

    Under the reported plan, the Jordanian-backed Islamic Waqf, which currently manages administrative and religious affairs at Al-Aqsa, would be stripped of its authority. A new Israeli-controlled body would rebrand the mosque compound as a “multi-faith centre”, granting Jews equal access to the sacred Muslim site and formally permitting organized large-group Jewish prayer— a change that breaches longstanding arrangements that have prevented religious friction at the site for decades. The plan would also give Israel significant control over the appointment of imams, senior mosque leadership, and final approval over the content of weekly Friday sermons.

    The revelations sparked rapid backlash from UK lawmakers, with independent MP Shockat Adam penning a formal letter dated May 29 to Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper pressing the government for a clear response. In his letter, Adam noted that many of his constituents had reached out to express deep outrage and alarm over the reported plans, emphasizing that for Palestinians and Muslim communities globally, Al-Aqsa Mosque is far more than a place of worship: it is a core symbol of national and religious identity, collective dignity, and a bulwark against ongoing territorial dispossession in the region.

    Adam put four key questions to the Foreign Secretary: whether ministers had raised the reported plans directly with US and Israeli counterparts; whether the UK would continue to formally back Jordan’s custodianship role; what risk assessment had been conducted into the threat of further ethnic cleansing and regional instability stemming from changes to the holy sites’ status; and whether the government would issue a public statement opposing any efforts to weaken Jordan’s internationally recognized custodianship.

    After MEE submitted Adam’s letter to the UK Foreign Office for comment, a department spokesperson issued the government’s first official stance on the controversy since MEE’s initial report broke. “We value Jordan’s important role as custodian of the Holy Sites in Jerusalem. The historic status quo arrangements at Jerusalem’s Holy Sites must be respected,” the spokesperson confirmed.

    The reaffirmation aligns with longstanding official UK policy, which has long recognized Jordan’s custodianship over both Muslim and Christian holy sites across Jerusalem. It also comes amid a marked shift in the UK’s approach to the Israeli government, with British officials increasingly toughening criticism of ongoing expansion of illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank. Just this week, MEE reported Wednesday that senior government sources confirm UK ministers are actively considering imposing a formal ban on imports of goods produced in those illegal settlements.

  • Iranian cartoonist Marjane Satrapi, creator of ‘Persopolis’, dies aged 56

    Iranian cartoonist Marjane Satrapi, creator of ‘Persopolis’, dies aged 56

    Renowned Iranian-French graphic novelist, filmmaker and human rights advocate Marjane Satrapi has passed away at the age of 56, a family and friend statement shared with French media has confirmed. The creative visionary, whose work reshaped the global understanding of life in post-revolutionary Iran, died just over a year after the loss of her husband Mattias Ripa, the statement notes. The 53-year-old Swedish national, whom Satrapi described as the love of her life, died in April 2025. The statement added that Satrapi “died of sadness” following Ripa’s passing.

    Satrapi’s most iconic work, the semi-autobiographical graphic novel *Persepolis*, remains her best-known contribution to global arts and culture. The book traces the coming-of-age journey of a young girl growing up in Iran in the years after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, offering a deeply personal, unflinching look at how political upheaval shapes ordinary lives. In 2007, Satrapi co-directed an animated adaptation of the novel alongside creative partner Vincent Paronnaud, which premiered to widespread acclaim at the Cannes Film Festival. The film went on to earn an Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Feature, cementing Satrapi’s reputation as a boundary-breaking storyteller.

    A prominent critic of the Iranian government, Satrapi was a vocal supporter of the 2022 “Woman, Life, Freedom” movement that erupted following the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian woman who died while in police custody for alleged improper hijab wear. Satrapi compiled a collection of graphic essays centered on the movement, released under the same “Woman, Life, Freedom” title that became the rallying cry for protests calling for gender equality and political change in Iran.

    News of Satrapi’s death drew an outpouring of tributes from across the globe, including from Nobel Peace Prize-winning Iranian activist Narges Mohammadi. In a post on X (formerly Twitter) shared June 4, 2026, Mohammadi mourned Satrapi’s passing, calling her a fearless voice for feminism and human rights.

    After becoming a naturalized French citizen in 2006, Satrapi remained outspoken about what she viewed as inconsistent French policy toward the Iranian regime. In a high-profile rebuke of the French government in 2025, she rejected the Legion d’Honneur — France’s highest civilian honor — over what she called the administration’s hypocrisy: allowing individuals tied to the Iranian government to enter the country, while blocking entry visas for Iranian dissidents and critics of the Islamic Republic.

    Satrapi’s work has been translated into dozens of languages, and her unapologetic storytelling made her one of the most recognizable and influential cultural voices coming out of the Iranian diaspora over the past three decades.

  • Satellite imagery appears to show damage at US air base in Kuwait after Iranian attack

    Satellite imagery appears to show damage at US air base in Kuwait after Iranian attack

    Fresh open-source satellite analysis released by Soar Atlas has cast significant doubt on official U.S. military statements claiming no successful Iranian strikes hit American infrastructure in Kuwait Wednesday, amid a escalating cross-regional attack that has already left one civilian dead and dozens more injured.

    Newly released high-resolution imagery of Ali Al Salem Air Base, a key U.S. military outpost located in northern Kuwait, shows clear signs of destructive impact at the site: one aircraft shelter appears completely destroyed, while the surrounding terrain is visibly charred and dotted with multiple fresh impact craters from incoming munitions. These observations directly contradict a public statement issued shortly after the attack by U.S. Central Command (Centcom), which insisted all missiles and drones launched toward the base had been “defeated” before reaching their targets.

    Centcom’s initial account of the cross-regional strikes claimed Iran launched a volley of ballistic missiles targeting sites across the Middle East, but argued all projectiles missed their intended targets. Per the command’s official statement, the two missiles Iran fired toward Kuwait either fell short of their targets or broke apart mid-flight, while three missiles directed at neighboring Bahrain were successfully intercepted by allied air defense systems before they could hit any sites.

    However, official accounts from Kuwait directly conflict with this narrative. Kuwait’s foreign ministry confirmed Wednesday that multiple Iranian missiles struck Kuwait International Airport and several diplomatic missions within the country’s borders. Local Kuwaiti authorities reported one fatality from the attack, later identified as an Indian national working in the country, alongside 60 injured people. Video footage captured at the airport in the immediate aftermath of the strikes shows extensive structural damage: Terminal 1 was engulfed in large fires, a section of the terminal roof collapsed, and thick plumes of black smoke billowed over the site.

    Following the attacks, Kuwaiti defense ministry spokesperson Brigadier General Saud al-Otayan issued a formal condemnation of what he labeled “criminal Iranian aggression” against the country. Iran, for its part, has pushed back against blame for the airport strike, claiming the damage to the site was actually caused by a errant U.S. Patriot interceptor missile — a claim Centcom immediately rejected as false. Iran’s state-aligned Tasnim News Agency also cited a statement from the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) denying the group ever targeted Kuwait International Airport at all.

    U.S. officials have pushed back firmly against Iran’s denials, reiterating that the strike on Kuwait’s airport was a deliberate, pre-planned, and unjustified attack by Iran on sovereign Kuwaiti territory. The conflicting accounts of the attack’s scope and impacts have raised new questions about escalation risks across the already tense Middle East region, as competing official narratives leave key details of the strike unconfirmed.

  • ‘No reshape’: Algeria prepares for elections but few hold out hope for change

    ‘No reshape’: Algeria prepares for elections but few hold out hope for change

    Seven years after the pro-democracy Hirak uprising ousted long-ruling autocrat Abdelaziz Bouteflika, Algeria is set to hold parliamentary elections on July 2, with little optimism among observers that the vote will open new space for inclusive political reform. The North African nation will select 407 members of the National People’s Assembly (APN) for a five-year term, but the election unfolds against a backdrop of deep public disillusionment, tightening state control over political life, and a years-long trend of plummeting voter turnout.

    The 2021 legislative election delivered a stark warning to Algeria’s ruling establishment, with official data recording a historic 77% abstention rate — a result amplified by a widespread opposition boycott of the vote. Today, reversing that mass voter disengagement stands as the single biggest immediate challenge for authorities ahead of the 2025 poll. An anonymous Algerian official told Middle East Eye that any turnout above 35% will be framed as proof of political normalization following the unrest of the Hirak era, while a result below 20% would amount to a searing popular rejection of the current political order.

    Public apathy toward the election stems from a widespread perception that the APN functions as little more than a rubber stamp for executive branch decisions, offering no meaningful check on ruling elite power. Since Algeria gained independence from French colonial rule, every national assembly has been dominated by parties tied closely to the state establishment. The National Liberation Front (FLN), the former single ruling party born from the independence struggle, holds 105 of the 407 seats in the outgoing assembly, accounting for more than a quarter of the body. It is followed by the Movement of Society for Peace (MSP), a Muslim Brotherhood affiliate with 64 seats, and the National Democratic Rally (RND), a pro-establishment party founded in 1997, which holds 57 seats.

    In the years following the Hirak uprising, the Algerian state has steadily consolidated authoritarian power, passing a slate of new laws that expand presidential authority and tighten state oversight of political activity. Ahead of this year’s vote, hundreds of opposition-aligned candidacies have already been invalidated under new regulations. “Through the legislative elections, the Algerian regime wants to project the image of a democratic, pluralistic state,” veteran Algerian journalist Ali Boukhlef told Middle East Eye. With voter abstention long recognized as the defining feature of the country’s electoral politics, authorities are counting on a minimally acceptable turnout to legitimize a process that is widely viewed as pre-rigged to favor ruling parties FLN and RND, Boukhlef added.

    Nacer Djabi, a retired sociology professor from the University of Algiers 2, noted that beyond core party activists and their family members, most ordinary Algerians have lost all interest in this type of controlled election — a trend that has only grown sharper in the years since the Hirak movement was suppressed. “The situation is all the more critical [due to the fact] that the legislative body is controlled by the authorities and is completely subservient to the executive branch,” Djabi explained.

    To boost public engagement, authorities are pinning faint hope on the decision of several major opposition parties that boycotted the 2021 vote to rejoin the 2025 electoral race. The Socialist Forces Front (FFS), Trotskyist-aligned Workers’ Party (PT), and centre-left Rally for Culture and Democracy (RCD) have all confirmed their participation this cycle. Even so, party leaders acknowledge the systemic biases that shape the current electoral context.

    Since the 2019 Hirak uprising briefly opened space for democratic transition, political opposition, independent journalists, and civil society activists have decried a near-total closure of political and media space. Human rights NGOs have repeatedly accused Algerian authorities of restricting civil liberties, relying on arbitrary arrests, unfair trials, and travel bans to target peaceful dissidents. Multiple opposition parties have been suspended from operating entirely, including the Democratic and Social Movement (MDS) since 2023 and the Socialist Workers’ Party (PST) since 2022. As recently as May 2025, authorities refused to grant approval for an RCD rally in Algiers and an RCD party conference in Bejaia, offering no formal explanation for the rejections. Last September, MDS coordinator Fethi Ghares was arrested on charges of “insulting” the president and sentenced to two years in prison.

    For the once-boycotting parties, their return to the electoral arena reflects both growing exhaustion with an “empty chair” boycott strategy and a growing fear that prolonged absence from state institutions has only left them further weakened against the dominant ruling establishment. “It is clear that these legislative elections are taking place in a context of persistent political closure,” RCD president Atmane Mazouz told Middle East Eye. “However, leaving the field vacant is essentially giving full rein to the forces that perpetuate authoritarian and clientelist practices. Participating means refusing this abdication. It also means giving political expression to the democratic aspirations that have been expressed massively in recent years, but which remain without institutional outlets.”

    Mazouz added: “In short, we find ourselves in a paradoxical situation: participating in a process we criticise, not to endorse it, but to challenge it from within. It’s a demanding, sometimes uncomfortable, but consistent approach with the history and principles of the RCD.”

    This framing is shared by many other opposition actors. “The problem lies in a political environment that remains insufficiently open: a lack of spaces for debate, weak channels of expression and an opacity that fuels distrust,” Zouheir Rouis, vice president of centre-left opposition party Jil Jadid, told Middle East Eye. “Under these conditions, it’s difficult to speak of a fully dynamic political life.”

    The MSP, a moderate opposition party that has long participated in Algeria’s institutional electoral process, offered a more measured assessment. “Of course, like any political actor, and even more so in the opposition, including as members of parliament, we face real constraints, various difficulties, and sometimes pressures, whether organisational or related to the general context,” MSP MP Abdelouahab Yagoubi said. “However, the national political situation calls for a nuanced interpretation: while limitations exist, dynamics of change are also at work.”

    Despite this guarded optimism from establishment-aligned opposition, three new laws passed in the months ahead of the election have reinforced widespread fears that the state is moving to further tighten its grip over political life and electoral outcomes. On March 9, a new political parties law was enacted that critics say expands government control over party operations. While framed as an update to modernize Algeria’s political legal framework, the law imposes stricter rules for party formation and operation, caps party leader term lengths, mandates regular participation in elections to maintain legal status, and raises thresholds for regional representation, all measures that disproportionately disadvantage small and independent opposition groups.

    Two weeks later, on March 25, a constitutional amendment marketed as a minor technical adjustment drastically reduced the powers of the Independent National Electoral Authority (Anie), the body created after the Hirak uprising to transfer election management out of the hands of the interior ministry. Key oversight prerogatives have now been returned to the interior ministry, directly under executive control. The amendment also expands presidential power and extends the term of the Senate president from three to six years, doubling the tenure to cement loyalty to the head of state. It also introduced a minimum education requirement for presidential candidates, a rule that further blocks grassroots candidates without elite educational backgrounds from running for office.

    Finally, on April 2, an electoral reform law — again framed as a technical update — further expanded the power of incumbent President Abdelmadjid Tebboune and gave the national administration greater direct influence over the electoral process.

    “Since the introduction of political pluralism, the current regime has been working to establish rules that frame the political landscape and dictate its pace and limits,” journalist and researcher Lachemot Amar told Middle East Eye, referencing the end of FLN’s 25-year single-party monopoly in 1989. “Despite a carefully calibrated margin of freedom allowing for some diversity in parliament among different political currents, domination will remain in the hands of the system’s functional parties. There will be no fundamental upheaval in the balance of power and influence within the Algerian political system.”

    Amar noted that the return of the national administration to direct oversight of the electoral process is a clear indicator of the regime’s desire to control both the vote count and its long-term political outcomes. So far, that control has been visible in the early stages of the campaign: opposition parties have reported widespread administrative obstacles, and hundreds of candidates have been disqualified under Article 200 of the new political parties law, with candidates arguing the rejections are arbitrary. Earlier this week, Anie announced it had struck 3,174 candidates from the ballot, eliminating nearly a third of the 10,168 total candidates who filed to run.

    “We are facing difficulties,” Jil Jadid’s Rouis said. “They are not unique to our party, but stem from a broader environment: limited access to spaces for expression, difficulty in structuring a political platform in a context marked by distrust, and administrative and political constraints that weigh on party work.”

    The RCD and PT have both issued public statements decrying systemic barriers, with PT particularly highlighting obstacles to collecting the required number of voter sponsorship signatures mandated by new electoral rules. “The administrative obstacles to legalising sponsorships, the blockages observed in several [municipalities], the lack of neutrality of certain institutions supposed to oversee the electoral process… all of this confirms that the system continues to tightly control access to the competition,” RCD’s Mazouz said. “We are not dealing with isolated malfunctions, but with recurring practices aimed at filtering candidacies and limiting the expression of truly independent forces.”

    These control mechanisms were already on full display during the September 2024 presidential election, which delivered a second term to Tebboune against two little-known challengers widely seen as token opponents designed only to maintain a facade of democratic competition, with the final outcome widely viewed as predetermined before polls opened.

    Boukhlef, the Algerian journalist, noted that these barriers for opposition parties have been building for months, with nearly all public discourse spaces remaining closed to dissident voices. “Even after the election date was announced, these parties have remained banned from public media,” he said. “Added to this are difficulties with the administration, which will obviously benefit the ruling parties, who have the support of the media and the administration. The political landscape will therefore not be reshaped, but it will allow the ruling parties, the RND and the FLN, to maintain their advantages.”

  • Marilyn Monroe’s jewellery, dresses and letters auctioned for her 100th birthday

    Marilyn Monroe’s jewellery, dresses and letters auctioned for her 100th birthday

    To mark what would have been the 100th birthday of one of Hollywood’s most enduring and iconic stars, hundreds of Marilyn Monroe’s personal belongings — ranging from her fine jewelry and beloved everyday dresses to intimate handwritten letters — have been put up for public auction at a venue in California.

    Monroe, who transformed from a troubled young model into a global cultural phenomenon in the mid-20th century, still captivates public imagination decades after her tragic death in 1962. This special centenary auction has drawn intense interest from entertainment memorabilia collectors, Marilyn superfans, and investment buyers from across the globe, all eager to own a one-of-a-kind piece of the star’s personal history.

    Each item up for bid carries unique glimpses into Monroe’s private life, far from the glitz and glamour of her on-screen persona. The jewelry collection includes pieces she wore regularly off-camera, while the wardrobe lots feature casual dresses and undergarments that offer a rare unpolished look at the star. Her personal letters, written in her own hand, contain unfiltered thoughts about her career, relationships, and inner struggles — content that has not been widely shared publicly before the auction.

    Auction organizers note that the event is timed intentionally to coincide with the 100th anniversary of Monroe’s birth, turning the sale into a celebration of her lasting legacy as a cultural figure. Unlike some celebrity auctions that focus only on high-profile red carpet items, this sale prioritizes personal possessions that highlight the human side of the world-famous star, attracting a new generation of fans who continue to find resonance in Monroe’s story decades after her passing.