Escalating cross-border hostilities between the United States and Iran have sparked a sharp diplomatic rebuke from Tehran, which on Monday slammed the European Union for what it calls a blatant display of biased moral judgment in the group’s response to recent Iranian strikes against US military sites in the Middle East. The condemnation comes as the Trump administration carried out new offensive operations against Iran over the weekend, leaving tentative peace negotiations deadlocked.
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Leen Ezzeddine, the US-Lebanese graduate at Harvard Medical School who chose to speak out
On the surface, Leen Ezzeddine’s 2026 commencement address at Harvard Medical School could have fit neatly into the beloved narrative of immigrant achievement: a young Lebanese woman earning a medical degree from one of the world’s most selective elite institutions. But Ezzeddine rejected that sanitized script, choosing instead to center stark personal and political contradiction in a speech that quickly went viral and reignited long-simmering debates on U.S. campuses over Palestine, academic complicity, and the moral obligations of medical professionals.
Ezzeddine’s connection to the crisis unfolding in her home region is not abstract. Just 18 months before she crossed the commencement stage, a U.S.-supplied Israeli missile destroyed her family’s summer home in Arab Salim, a village in southern Lebanon. Her grandparents, who had lived in the home for decades, were forced to flee to Beirut, and the village has remained under repeated Israeli bombardment even as Ezzeddine delivered her speech. Standing in the sanctity of Harvard’s graduation ceremony, she drew a clear, unflinching line between her own privileged path to medicine and the experiences of equally ambitious medical students across Lebanon and Palestine, who are forced to pursue their degrees amid collapsing infrastructure, bombardment, displacement, and the constant threat of death.
“The only difference between me and students who shared the same dream, the same work ethic, and the same devotion to medicine is that they had to pursue that dream in conditions no student should ever have to endure,” Ezzeddine told Middle East Eye in an interview following her speech. She rejected the common narrative that her success at Harvard stemmed solely from hard work or merit, framing her position as the product of luck and circumstance, not inherent worth.
Ezzeddine’s speech entered a charged, long-running battle over Palestine that has roiled U.S. campuses for years, including at Harvard. Since the outbreak of Israel’s expanded military campaign in Gaza, student activists demanding university divestment from companies linked to the war have faced widespread disciplinary action, police raids, suspensions, and accusations of antisemitism. Just one year before Ezzeddine’s graduation, hundreds of Harvard graduates walked out of the commencement ceremony to protest the university’s decision to bar students who participated in a pro-Palestinian encampment from graduating. The university’s handling of Gaza-related activism has become a central flashpoint in a national debate over whether U.S. academia protects dissenting speech – or punishes it when it centers Palestinian rights.
Rather than delivering an abstract political address, Ezzeddine anchored her argument in personal testimony and the core principles of medical practice. Citing Black liberation activist Assata Shakur, she emphasized that dehumanization is a precondition for violence, noting that people affected by war in the Middle East are too often reduced to statistics or political talking points instead of being recognized as full human beings with their own dreams, families, and aspirations. “Lives no less full, no less sacred, and no less worthy than their own,” she said of those caught in the conflict.
For Ezzeddine, medicine cannot be separated from the political structures that determine who gets access to safety, shelter, clean water, and healthcare. “Medicine is a social science, and politics is nothing but medicine on a large scale,” she explained. “Our work does not begin and end at the bedside. A patient’s health is shaped by whether they have housing, clean water, food, safety, freedom of movement, and access to a hospital that has not been bombed or defunded. So when political decisions determine who is allowed to live with dignity and who is denied the basic conditions of survival, doctors cannot pretend medicine and politics are separate.”
She also challenged the hypocrisy she sees embedded in modern medical education: while students are routinely taught to recognize structural violence, health equity, and the social determinants of health, those very principles are often abandoned when the lives at stake are politically inconvenient for institutional power holders. That contradiction has left countless students and faculty across the U.S. disillusioned since the start of the Gaza war, as universities navigate donor pressure, political backlash, and internal divisions over how to address the conflict.
When asked about the personal and professional risks of speaking out, Ezzeddine situated her choice within a long history of dissident activists whose moral stances were once condemned before being widely celebrated, including Malcolm X, Assata Shakur, Nelson Mandela, and Martin Luther King Jr. “Moral clarity is often most costly before it becomes widely accepted,” she said, echoing activist and thinker Audre Lorde’s famous declaration: “Your silence will not protect you.”
Beyond rhetoric, Ezzeddine has turned the attention drawn by her speech into tangible action. She launched a GoFundMe campaign to provide urgent essentials – including baby formula, diapers, medical supplies, mattresses, and blankets – to pregnant people, newborns, and displaced families in southern Lebanon. What began as a speech has already grown into a community-led response, with Ezzeddine noting that many people in the U.S. are hungry for concrete ways to support those affected by the conflict. Longer term, she plans to build a formal grassroots organization that meets emergency needs in Lebanon while creating pathways for more people from marginalized conflict-affected communities to enter elite institutions like Harvard and enter positions of power. “Because we need more of us in these rooms,” she said.
Ezzeddine’s speech did not resolve the deep contradictions she laid bare. Harvard remains an elite institution embedded in existing power structures, U.S. academia remains a deeply contested terrain over Palestine, and the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and southern Lebanon continues unabated. But her address cut through the comfortable ritual of graduation to demand that medical professionals live up to the ethical principles they claim to uphold. At its core, her message rejects the idea that medicine is separate from the systems that decide which lives are worthy of care – and in a moment where silence too often passes for neutrality, she chose to speak.
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Lebanese flee their homes as Israel orders attacks on Beirut
Fresh escalation along the Israel-Lebanon border has sent civilians back into displacement, as Israel’s top security official’s threat to expand attacks into the Lebanese capital dashed the fragile normalcy residents of Beirut’s southern suburb of Dahieh had only just begun to rebuild.
On Monday, thousands of residents who had trickled back to their homes following an April ceasefire began packing their belongings to evacuate once again, after Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz issued a blunt warning that no part of Beirut would be spared from violence if Hezbollah’s cross-front hostilities did not stop. Katz explicitly equated Dahieh, a dense, heavily residential district in southern Beirut long associated with Hezbollah, to Israeli communities in northern Israel that have faced frequent cross-border attacks. “If there is no calm in the north [of Israel], there will be no calm in Beirut,” he stated.
Katz’s warning came amid a sharp intensification of Israel’s ground and air offensive across Lebanon over the past week, a campaign that has already pushed far beyond the country’s southern border regions. The latest point of contention centers on the ancient Beaufort Castle, a strategic hilltop fortress in southern Lebanon. While Israeli officials announced Sunday they had seized the site and raised the Israeli flag there, Hezbollah contradicted the claim in a Monday statement, confirming its fighters were continuing a “battle of attrition” against Israeli troops in the area.
Israel frames its expanded military campaign as a necessary operation to push Hezbollah forces away from its northern border communities. Katz added that the Israeli military aims to establish full security control over the entire Litani River basin, turning the region into a weapons-free zone cleared of what Israel terms “terrorist elements.” The Litani, which runs roughly 30 kilometers north of the Israel-Lebanon border, has long been a focal point of Israeli demands for Hezbollah to withdraw its military assets from southern Lebanon.
In recent days, Israeli military operations have pushed even further north past the Litani. Last week, the Israel Defense Forces designated all territory south of the Zahrani River — located 40 kilometers from the border and encompassing the major population centers of Tyre and Nabatieh — as an official combat zone, issuing mandatory evacuation orders for all local residents. On Monday, IDF spokesperson Avichay Adraee extended these expulsion orders to additional towns and villages located north of the Litani River.
For residents of Dahieh, the new threats have resurrected trauma many had only just started to process after months of displacement. Thousands of residents had gradually returned to the district following the April ceasefire, repairing damaged homes, reopening shuttered businesses, and working to rebuild a fragile sense of daily normalcy. That progress has now been completely upended.
Thirty-one-year-old Batoul Fawaz, who had spent the duration of the conflict in rented temporary accommodation, had just finalized plans to move back to her Dahieh home and returned the keys to her rental when the Israeli threat was released. Now, she is forced to rent another short-term space just to have a place to sleep. “We are no longer afraid for our lives only. We are afraid for our homes,” Fawaz told Middle East Eye. Her entire family, she added, has been scattered by displacement once again: one of her sisters had just given birth and returned to Dahieh, only to flee again with her newborn just days later.
The new threats against Beirut come after weeks of mounting pressure from Israel’s far-right ruling coalition to escalate operations against Hezbollah, in response to the group’s increasing use of explosive FPV drones targeting Israeli troops in southern Lebanon. A recent report from Israeli public broadcaster Kan found that Hezbollah’s advanced drone capabilities are currently limiting roughly 80 percent of Israeli ground assaults in southern Lebanon.
Senior far-right ministers have publicly pushed for massive retaliation against Lebanese civilian centers. Last week, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich called for the Lebanese capital to be collectively punished for Hezbollah’s drone attacks, arguing that “for every explosive drone, 10 buildings should fall in Beirut.” National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir has additionally urged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to resume full-scale war in Lebanon, calling for Israel to cut the country’s national electricity supply and seize all territory up to the Zahrani River. Netanyahu has aligned with the hardline position, vowing last Friday to push Israeli forces deeper into Lebanese territory and confirming that large swathes of southern Lebanon are now classified as combat zones.
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun condemned the latest Israeli escalation, labeling it “a vicious and reprehensible Israeli aggression.” The expanding offensive has also disrupted regional diplomatic efforts to de-escalate the wider conflict across the Middle East. Iran’s foreign ministry stated Monday that a full ceasefire in Lebanon remains a non-negotiable prerequisite for any indirect talks with the United States to end the broader regional war. Iranian state news agency Tasnim later confirmed that Iran has paused all indirect negotiations with the U.S. in response to Israel’s ongoing attacks.
For the displaced families of Dahieh, the political and diplomatic standoff translates to a far more immediate crisis: the ceasefire that gave them a chance to return home has already been rendered meaningless, and any hope of resuming normal life has been delayed indefinitely once again.
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Mandelson called Wes Streeting’s Israel criticism ‘wild’ and ‘hysterical’
Thousands of pages of confidential documents tied to Peter Mandelson, the disgraced former Labour cabinet minister and UK ambassador to the U.S., have been made public, pulling back the curtain on bitter internal divides within Britain’s ruling Labour Party over the Israeli military campaign in Gaza and the recognition of a Palestinian state.
Mandelson, who was appointed to the ambassador post by Prime Minister Keir Starmer in 2024, was forced to step down from the role in September 2025 after reports of his long-standing personal ties to deceased convicted sex offender and financier Jeffrey Epstein became public. It was the 1,000-plus page release of files related to Mandelson on Monday that has now revealed the intense behind-closed-doors clash between Mandelson and current UK Health Secretary Wes Streeting over Streeting’s sharp condemnation of Israeli actions in Gaza.
An independent analysis of the released files by Middle East Eye confirms that in July 2025, just two months before the UK government formally recognized Palestinian statehood, Streeting reached out to Mandelson directly to share his unvarnished views and seek input on the pending recognition decision. Streeting argued that recognizing Palestinian statehood was the correct course of action on both moral and political grounds, writing that Israel was openly committing war crimes in Gaza for the world to see. He added that Israel’s ruling leadership used rhetoric matching ethnic cleansing, and that he had spoken to British medical personnel deployed in Gaza who described systematic, deliberate brutality targeting civilian women and children.
Calling Israeli actions “rogue state behavior”, Streeting pushed for the UK to impose full state-level sanctions on Israel, writing that Israel should face consequences as an international pariah rather than only targeting a small number of extreme cabinet officials. These messages were originally released by Streeting himself earlier this year, and multiple anonymous Labour Party sources confirmed to Middle East Eye that the leak was intentionally orchestrated by Streeting to consolidate grassroots support ahead of a potential future leadership bid and increase political pressure on Starmer.
Within days of receiving Streeting’s message, Mandelson launched a scathing personal attack on the Health Secretary in private text exchanges with Pat McFadden, the UK’s current Secretary of State for Work and Pensions. Mandelson described Streeting’s message as “a wild long hysterical message” and told McFadden he had pushed back against Streeting’s claims, adding that the comments reflected poorly on Streeting’s political maturity. McFadden responded by confirming Streeting was aggressively pushing his views on the issue across WhatsApp groups for sitting Labour MPs.
Four days after that exchange, Mandelson shared a post from the U.S. State Department on X with McFadden, noting that the U.S. had rejected the upcoming UN two-state solution conference that the UK planned to attend. McFadden replied that Streeting had already circulated a set of videos and a redacted memo to the entire cabinet ahead of the conference, prompting Mandelson to dismiss the action as “pathetic” and joke that Streeting was “experiencing an early midlife crisis.”
While large portions of the released files remain redacted, the texts offer rare insight into the internal deliberations of senior British cabinet ministers in the months leading up to the UK’s formal recognition of Palestinian statehood. In a July 19 exchange, McFadden described the humanitarian situation in Gaza as heavily redacted, and added that Starmer was not inclined to support symbolic political gestures but may have no other option, suggesting that the scale of humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza left the government with little choice but to move forward with recognition.
The files also confirm that former UK Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair remained actively engaged with current cabinet ministers throughout the decision-making process. Blair had been a key figure in former U.S. President Donald Trump’s controversial Gaza Board of Peace initiative the previous year. When Mandelson asked McFadden if he had consulted Blair on Gaza, McFadden confirmed they had spoken, noting that Blair was focused on long-term solutions, including cooperation with Arab states and reform of the Palestinian Authority. Mandelson, who has long backed a two-state solution dating back to the 1970s, responded that if the party did not move carefully, the decades-long push for a two-state solution would stall entirely, recounting how previous attempts at a final agreement had collapsed due to spoilers on both sides over the past 50 years.
Earlier this year, former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn publicly released a letter he sent to Streeting, accusing Streeting of a “shameful failure” to resign from the Starmer cabinet despite his private condemnation of Israeli war crimes. In the letter, Corbyn argued that if the UK government acknowledges Israel is committing war crimes, any continued military or political support for the country amounts to the UK knowingly aiding and abetting those violations of international law.
To date, the Starmer government has only imposed sanctions on far-right Israeli cabinet ministers Itamar Ben Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, rejecting widespread calls to sanction the state of Israel itself. While diplomatic relations between the UK and Israel have grown strained under Labour, with the UK imposing a partial arms embargo on Israel, the Starmer government has maintained military cooperation with Israel throughout its ongoing military campaign in Gaza that has been widely described as genocide. As recently as March 2025, just months before Streeting sent his private messages, Starmer walked back comments from then-Foreign Secretary David Lammy that confirmed Israel had committed a breach of international law in Gaza.
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In Tehran, exhausted Iranians are caught between war and the shadow of war
More than three months have passed since the United States and Israel opened military hostilities against Iran, and for ordinary Iranian citizens across Tehran, every day has been defined by a single, draining reality: a liminal state of neither open war nor lasting peace that has left nearly all facets of daily life frozen. For 38-year-old Tehran resident Afshin, his weariness echoes the sentiment of a large swathe of the population. “We’re exhausted,” he shared in an interview. “It’s either been war since last summer, or the constant shadow of war. I hope they reach a deal so we can finally escape this suspended state… I just want life to go back to normal.”
Against this backdrop of persistent instability, many Iranians hold a fragile, tentative hope that indirect negotiations between Tehran and Washington, brokered by regional intermediaries including Pakistan and Qatar, will pull the country out of its current crisis. These talks have continued despite major escalations: recent U.S. airstrikes on southern Iran and Israel’s ongoing ground invasion of southern Lebanon have failed to derail the diplomatic process entirely. Over the past week, circulating reports suggest a potential preliminary deal that would institute a 60-day mutual ceasefire, creating space for negotiators to hammer out a more comprehensive agreement addressing longstanding sticking points, including Iran’s uranium enrichment program and the relief of crippling U.S. economic sanctions.
Yet for all the quiet hope, no guarantee of a breakthrough exists, and the endless uncertainty has become a heavy emotional burden that most Iranians struggle to carry week after week. While 27-year-old Tehran resident Hediyeh suspects a preliminary agreement has already been finalized behind closed doors—telling Middle East Eye that “it appears they’re only still negotiating on how and when to announce it”—she remains deeply skeptical of how long any deal will hold. She notes that public speculation already frames the 60-day ceasefire as merely a delay for tougher negotiations on core issues to come later. “But what if there isn’t a final agreement? Honestly, we’re tired. We are tired of hearing about uranium and the nuclear programme and negotiations and ‘informed sources who asked not to be named,’” she said.
For many Iranians, recent history only fuels deep distrust of the ongoing diplomatic process. Both the 12-day conflict last year and the new war that began in late February broke out while Iranian and U.S. diplomats were already engaged in indirect talks through intermediaries. That pattern has left many convinced another outbreak of hostilities could come at any time, even amid current negotiations. “I don’t trust Trump anymore,” 46-year-old Mohammad, another Tehran resident, told Middle East Eye. “Two times he attacked us while we were negotiating. Why shouldn’t it happen a third time? All this uncertainty drags my mind more towards the possibility of another war.”
Trump’s own erratic public messaging has only amplified this uncertainty: the U.S. president has shifted wildly day to day, sometimes posting respectful messages to Iranian officials on social media and claiming a deal is close, only to turn around days later and tell reporters he is unhappy with proposed terms and issue new threats of military action. This inconsistency has filtered through his own administration, creating whiplash for observers both inside and outside Iran. On May 28, the Associated Press cited multiple senior U.S. officials reporting that the full text of a preliminary agreement had been finalized and was waiting for Trump’s approval. Just hours later, Iran’s Tasnim News Agency, an outlet aligned with the country’s Revolutionary Guards, rejected the report entirely. Citing a senior Iranian negotiator, Tasnim confirmed no final text had been agreed, and no such update had been shared with Pakistani mediators. The conflicting reports have only deepened public suspicion across Iran.
For business owners like 58-year-old clothing retailer Hamidreza, this months-long uncertainty has paralyzed economic activity across the country, from large enterprises to ordinary households. “Everything in our lives is hanging in the air. We don’t know what to do. The market is terrible. We can’t plan ahead. We can’t even visualise the future adequately. Customers are in exactly the same situation,” he explained. Asked if he believes a deal will ever be reached, he laughed bitterly. “Trump himself likely doesn’t know, much less me. Anyone who tells you with certainty what’s going to happen is a charlatan. The world is now dealing with a man who goes into one night’s sleep and wakes up the next morning saying something totally different. How can anyone properly and confidently predict anything, when so much of global politics rests on someone this unpredictable?”
This uncertainty has not only strained public mood and business activity—it has upended concrete, long-held personal plans for many Iranians. Thirty-one-year-old lab technician Sima, who had been planning to pursue a master’s degree in Europe, has seen her dream put on indefinite hold. Visa processing for most Iranians has effectively frozen amid the current crisis, she explained. “Many European embassies in Tehran are essentially semi-shut down. You cannot get an appointment in Iran, they won’t permit you to apply through embassies in neighbouring countries either,” she said. After spending months securing admission to a reputable Italian university, the Iranian rial collapsed in value, completely wiping out her carefully calculated budget for study abroad. Even with an acceptance letter in hand, she cannot book a visa appointment—and the new academic year is just months away.
Not all Iranians are pushing for a rapid deal with Washington, either. Some argue that a hasty agreement could become another strategic trap that leaves Iran surrendering key leverage without gaining any meaningful, lasting concessions. Forty-one-year-old civil engineer Mehdi is deeply pessimistic about the current negotiation framework, questioning what Iran will actually gain in exchange for the concessions it is being asked to make. “If they stopped the war and went back to bargaining, it’s from pressure associated with the Strait of Hormuz and increasing oil costs,” he noted. “So now we reopen the strait and in return they return a tiny fraction of our own frozen cash? That sounds absurd to me.”
Mehdi fears that any temporary ceasefire deal will ultimately weaken Iran’s position without preventing a future full-scale conflict. “I’m not saying I like war,” he clarified. “But do you know what’s worse than war? When they can go wherever they want, blow up parts of your country, and nothing really happens in return. That’s how things played out for years in Syria.” He warns that if Iran eases economic pressure on the U.S. and global markets, Washington and Israel will simply return to all-out military action once Iran has given up its leverage.
For now, the majority of ordinary Iranians are trapped between two equally frightening outcomes: the immediate fear of a resumption of full-scale war, and the long-term fear that a flawed, fragile peace will only delay the inevitable conflict, leaving them exhausted and adrift in limbo for months or years to come.
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Trump tells Erdogan he plans to visit Turkey for Nato summit
Multiple anonymous sources with direct knowledge of recent diplomatic conversations between Washington and Ankara have confirmed to Middle East Eye that former President Donald Trump, the sitting U.S. President, has informed Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan that he intends to participate in the upcoming NATO summit scheduled to take place in Ankara this coming July. The development marks a sharp reversal from Trump’s public stance just one month prior, when he stated in April that he was actively evaluating a full U.S. withdrawal from the 75-year-old transatlantic security alliance and made clear he was deeply dissatisfied with NATO’s member commitments and operations.
The shift in tone occurred during a formal phone call between the two heads of state on May 20, where Trump confirmed his planned visit to the Turkish capital for the alliance’s flagship annual gathering. Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan publicly reinforced this framing over the recent weekend, noting that Erdogan has held multiple conversations with Trump over the past 30 days, and at no point in those discussions did Trump indicate he would skip the summit.
Beyond the NATO summit, additional reporting has raised speculation about a potential earlier informal meeting between the two leaders. Turkey is set to face the United States in a group-stage World Cup match in Los Angeles on June 25, and sources familiar with Erdogan’s patterns note the Turkish leader frequently attends major international tournaments to support his national team. If Erdogan proceeds with a trip to California for the match, sources say he is likely to request a bilateral meeting with Trump and even invite the U.S. president to attend the match as his guest. No final decision has been reached on this potential side meeting, however.
Diplomatic observers note Trump’s reported commitment to the Ankara visit aligns with longstanding reciprocal travel agreements: Erdogan traveled to Washington during both of Trump’s first and second presidential terms, and Trump has repeatedly promised to make a return visit to Turkey. Still, senior U.S. and European officials caution that nothing regarding Trump’s attendance has been formally finalized, pointing to Trump’s well-documented history of impulsive decision-making and last-minute changes to planned itineraries. The White House has not yet issued a formal response to requests for comment from Middle East Eye.
Trump’s shifting comments on NATO are not an isolated incident, either. Earlier this year, the U.S. leader sent conflicting signals on European force deployments: he announced a plan to withdraw 5,000 U.S. troops from the continent, only to reverse course weeks later and say he would deploy the same number of troops to Poland instead.
The uncertainty around Trump’s attendance has pushed European officials to rank the Ankara summit as one of the most critical alliance gatherings in recent decades. Many European capitals now view the meeting as a make-or-break moment for NATO’s future, amid persistent signals from Trump that the U.S. may no longer be willing to uphold its longstanding security commitments to defend Europe against external aggression.
One senior European official summed up the split sentiment to Middle East Eye: “If he comes, there may be mayhem and shouting matches. However, if he doesn’t come, it would be detrimental to the future of the alliance.”
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte and other senior European alliance leaders are already preparing to use the summit to make a direct case to Trump, laying out detailed arguments for why the alliance remains a cornerstone of transatlantic security and critical to U.S. strategic interests. Some more pessimistic European diplomats, however, argue that the shifts in U.S. policy set in motion during Trump’s previous term are already on an irreversible path toward a full drawdown of U.S. security commitments in Europe. For these officials, the priority for host nation Turkey and other NATO allies is not to convince Trump to stay, but to secure a clear roadmap from Washington for a gradual, orderly U.S. withdrawal rather than a sudden, destabilizing exit.
One senior European diplomat explained, “We need a new framework that could both accommodate Trump’s wishes and address Europe’s security needs. But it would take years.”
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Hasan Piker was set to meet Zack Polanski and Jeremy Corbyn in UK before being banned
A brewing controversy over free speech and political censorship has erupted in the United Kingdom after the Home Office blocked entry for two high-profile American progressive political commentators over their public criticism of Israel, multiple sources confirm to Middle East Eye. Hasan Piker and Cenk Uygur, founder and host of the popular online political show *The Young Turks*, were scheduled for a slate of public events across the UK this week, including podcast interviews, a planned discussion with veteran British politician Jeremy Corbyn, speaking engagements at the Oxford Union and SXSW London festival. But their travel authorisations were revoked at the eleventh hour, shutting down all planned in-person appearances.
The cancellation of the pair’s visit drew immediate condemnation from across the UK political spectrum, with critics arguing the move exposes a growing bias against dissent on Israeli policy, while supporters frame the ban as a necessary step to curb hate speech and community division. Green Party deputy leader Zack Polanski, who was set to host Piker on his *Bold Politics* podcast, was among the first to speak out against the decision Monday morning.
“People often talk about the dangerous road we would go down under a Reform government – this is another clear warning we are already down that road,” Polanski said in a statement, demanding answers from UK Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood and Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham. “A Labour government is doing everything possible to silence criticism of the Israeli Government,” he added.
Corbyn, the former Labour Party leader and a longstanding critic of Israeli policy who was set to join Piker for a separate interview with UK outlet PoliticsJOE, called the ban “an absurd and cowardly decision from an increasingly authoritarian government.” He went further, framing the move as an overt attack on fundamental democratic rights: “Let us call this what it is: an attack on the freedom to criticise Israel, as well as the UK government’s own complicity in genocide,” he said. As of publication, PoliticsJOE has not released an official comment on the planned interview, and MEE has reached out to the outlet for additional context.
Both Piker and Uygur have confirmed the ban stems directly from their public condemnation of Israel’s ongoing military campaign in Gaza, which both have described as genocide. The Times of London reported that Mahmood revoked Uygur’s Electronic Travel Authorisation after concluding his presence in the UK would not be “conducive to the public good,” citing official Home Office concerns that his rhetoric on Israel could fuel antisemitism and stoke tensions between local communities.
Uygur pushed back against that characterization in a post on X, the social platform formerly known as Twitter, mocking the Home Office’s reasoning. “The British government said that my charge that Israel controls the American government through donations to 94% of Congress, while factual, is antisemitic nonetheless,” he wrote. “Don’t know if facts will soon be banned in Britain. I didn’t get banned for criticizing the UK, but for criticizing Israel. They broke the irony record by saying it was because I said Israel might control other governments. I wonder if they’re going to ban themselves.”
Organizers of the planned events have also voiced alarm over the last-minute cancellation. Arwa Elrayess, president of the Oxford Union, told MEE the speaking engagements had been publicly announced months in advance, making the sudden Home Office ruling all the more disruptive and worrying. “To this day, we defend freedom of speech; the right for our invited speakers to express themselves, and to be challenged, irrespective of political viewpoint,” Elrayess said, adding that the union is exploring all available alternatives to hold the discussion, including moving the event to an online format.
A spokesperson for SXSW London, meanwhile, noted that entry decisions fall exclusively under the purview of the Home Office and the individuals affected. “SXSW London’s role is to convene a broad range of diverse voices and perspectives,” the organization said in a statement.
Not all politicians have criticized the ban, however. Last week, Labour MP David Taylor publicly called on the Home Office to bar Piker from entering the UK, and he applauded the decision after it was announced Monday. “Thank you Home Secretary for revoking Hasan Piker’s visa,” Taylor said. “There’s no reason to open our doors to those who seek to spread hate and division, especially to those who’ve supported a proscribed terror group.”
The ban is part of a broader recent trend of the UK Home Office denying entry to high-profile foreign speakers over a range of political concerns. Last month, officials barred 11 people scheduled to speak at a far-right rally organized by anti-Islam activist Tommy Robinson, whose legal name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon.
British left-wing commentator Aaron Bastani drew a contrast between the UK’s current approach to dissenting speech and its historical position as a haven for exiled political thinkers. “Britain at the height of its power and prestige was home to Karl Marx and Giuseppe Mazzini. It was a refuge for Alexander Herzen and Victor Hugo,” Bastani said. “Now, in 2026, it won’t allow American YouTubers & streamers to enter because they criticised Israel.”
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Israelis sing national anthem inside Al-Aqsa Mosque during raid
On a Sunday in May 2026, a contingent of at least 199 Israeli ultranationalists carried out a deeply provocative incursion into the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in occupied East Jerusalem, under the direct protection of Israeli police. During the raid, the group raised the Israeli national flag, sang the country’s national anthem, and multiple participants openly conducted Talmudic prayers — actions that directly violate long-standing agreements governing the holy site.
Al-Aqsa Mosque ranks as one of the most sacred sites in Islam, and its governance has been guided for decades by a globally recognized status quo arrangement. This binding international framework, widely accepted by major world powers, explicitly designates the entire mosque complex as an exclusively Islamic place of worship, where only Muslim followers may conduct religious rituals. While non-Muslim visitors are permitted limited access under specific conditions, all administrative, maintenance, and worship oversight falls to the Jerusalem Islamic Waqf, which operates under the custodianship of Jordan’s king, with Jordan holding formal protection responsibility for the site.
For years, however, Israel has faced growing international condemnation for systematically eroding this status quo. Successive Israeli governments, and particularly the hard-line administration led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that took office in 2022, have increasingly facilitated near-daily incursions by ultranationalist Jewish groups into the compound, allowing activities that were banned for decades to prevent regional unrest. For generations, Israeli leaders enforced restrictions on displays of the Israeli flag and formal Jewish prayer at Al-Aqsa, out of explicit concern that such actions would ignite widespread violence across Jerusalem and the occupied Palestinian territories. But ultranationalist factions, which openly advocate for the destruction of Al-Aqsa Mosque to build a Jewish temple in its place, have pushed relentlessly to lift these restrictions, and Netanyahu’s government has largely capitulated to their demands.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency following Sunday’s incursion, Omar Rajoub, media department director for the Jerusalem Governorate, framed the action as part of a deliberate, state-backed campaign to reshape the identity of East Jerusalem. “Raising the Israeli flag inside the courtyards of Al-Aqsa Mosque, along with performing provocative rituals, is part of a systematic and deliberate official Israeli policy led by the extremist occupation government,” Rajoub stated. He added that these targeted practices are intended to forcibly impose new realities on occupied East Jerusalem, and fundamentally undermine the site’s centuries-old historical and legal status quo.
Rajoub warned that the repeated incursions by settlers and ultranationalists are a core component of an ongoing colonial project to Judaize Jerusalem and erase the city’s existing Palestinian, Arab, and Islamic religious and historical identity. He emphasized that these incursions, which are enabled and protected by Israeli security forces, amount to a clear violation of international law, and held the Netanyahu government fully accountable for any subsequent escalation of tensions in the region.
On the day of the incursion, Israeli police imposed additional strict restrictions on Palestinian worshippers seeking entry to the mosque, multiple witnesses confirmed. Several worshippers reported that their identity documents were seized by officers at the outer gates of the compound, barring them from accessing the site for worship. The Jerusalem Islamic Waqf added that the Israeli settlers deliberately provoked on-site guards and worshippers by taking photos throughout the mosque courtyards, including in front of the iconic Dome of the Rock, one of the most recognizable and sacred landmarks in the city.
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Syria’s government begins to return Alawi lands, while maintaining its hold over others
In the wake of the December 2024 lightning rebel offensive that toppled 50 years of Assad family rule in Syria, a quiet crisis over land ownership is unfolding in northern Hama, the historic core of Syria’s once world-leading pistachio industry, threatening to derail fragile efforts to build intercommunal peace.
The conflict traces back more than a decade to the earliest days of Syria’s civil war, when northern Hama’s pistachio-growing hills became a brutal frontline between regime forces and opposition factions. What were once scenic, multi-sectarian villages descended into sectarian bloodshed between majority Sunni communities, which made up most of the anti-Assad rebellion, and Alawis, the Shia offshoot sect to which Bashar al-Assad belonged. By the end of Assad’s rule, thousands of Sunni landowners had been displaced from their properties, while Alawi landholders fled en masse after the regime’s collapse, fearing retaliatory violence from returning rebels.
For Ahmed Ali, a former Syrian civil servant who lost his government job in 2019 for refusing mandatory military service on principle, the collapse of the Assad regime should have cleared the way for him to return to his 15-hectare family pistachio farm, a plot that has been in his family for more than half a century. Instead, Ali has become one of hundreds of landowners trapped in the messy new system of property administration implemented by the new Syrian government, led by former HTS leader Ahmed al-Sharaa.
Ali’s story is familiar to many displaced landowners. When he returned to his property after Assad’s ouster, he found his former Alawi neighbor Karim al-Khattib occupying his home, after Khattib’s own property was destroyed in the fighting. Ali initially agreed to let Khattib stay in exchange for a share of the annual pistachio harvest, only to discover that the state-owned agricultural investment firm Iktifaa had seized control of his land, branding him an Assad-aligned “shabih” without providing evidence of any crime.
Khattib, who has signed a new contract with Iktifaa to farm Ali’s land for 2026, says he will vacate the property once he earns enough to replant his own destroyed pistachio orchard. Last year, a weak harvest worsened by Syria’s worst drought in decades yielded around $4,000, 60% of which went to Khattib, with the remaining 40% going to Iktifaa. Ali estimates his losses from 2025 alone top $50,000, and he has been blocked from even selling the land he has owned for decades.
Founded in 2021 through a merger of two Idlib-based agricultural firms active in former opposition-held territory, Iktifaa is now the central body managing “absentee lands” across most of Syria, under the oversight of the newly created Illicit Gains Committee. The committee, an extrajudicial body independent of Syria’s court system, is tasked with investigating ties to the former Assad regime and seizing assets from those linked to the old government. It is overseen by Abraham Succarieh, a Lebanese-Australian national who remains under Western sanctions over allegations of terrorism financing, and all revenue from seized assets flows to the Syrian state’s sovereign wealth fund.
During the war, Iktifaa and its predecessor firms managed lands owned by displaced Druze and Christian minorities in HTS-held Idlib. While those properties were returned between 2020 and 2023 as HTS sought to improve its standing with minority communities, many landowners reported they never received compensation for years of use of their property, with all revenue going to the former Syrian Salvation Government, HTS’s pre-2024 governing body. Today, Iktifaa applies the same model to lands abandoned by displaced Alawis who fled after Assad’s fall.
Monzer Khattab, head of Iktifaa’s Hama and Homs branch, defends the firm’s approach, arguing that state oversight was necessary to prevent widespread land grabbing and chaos in the immediate aftermath of the regime’s collapse. He acknowledged that 2025 was a chaotic year, with much of the harvest in Hama and Homs stolen due to the firm’s limited capacity, but confirmed Iktifaa still earned between $1.5 million and $2 million in profits from the region last year, 90% of it from absentee lands. This year, the firm will deploy additional staff across all producing regions to monitor the upcoming June mid-harvest, he said.
But for displaced Alawi landowners who have already been cleared of any ties to the Assad regime, the system still leaves them locked out of their livelihoods. Ammar al-Aassad, an Alawi farmer from the northern Hama village of Maraiwid, received official clearance for his 29 dunam pistachio and olive orchard last month, but has still been unable to access his land. After a Bedouin faction occupied his property and Iktifaa signed a cultivation contract with the group, Aassad lost his entire 2025 harvest, with estimated losses of $40,000. He has yet to receive any compensation, and fears to return to his village even with official clearance: three days after Assad’s ouster, one of his Alawi neighbors who tried to return was killed by unknown assailants, and no other displaced Alawi residents have dared come back since.
“There should be evidence – the previous regime was oppressive, we don’t want oppression again,” Ali says of the current system.
Syrian provincial authorities in Hama acknowledge the growing tensions and say they are working to resolve the crisis. Hama Deputy Governor Hassan al-Hassan says the national presidency has issued formal directives supporting the return of displaced Alawis to their lands, and that new appeal offices linked to the Illicit Gains Committee will open in every province within weeks to allow landowners to challenge seizures. To resolve the immediate housing crisis that has displaced Sunnis and Alawis alike, the provincial council is planning to build temporary caravan housing for displaced Sunni farmers who returned to destroyed homes and now occupy abandoned Alawi properties.
“Our goal is to restore civil peace, and our thinking is that of a state and its institutions, not that of an armed faction. The state’s vision is that people return to their regions,” Hassan said, adding that priority must first go to Sunni farmers who returned after years of displacement to find their homes destroyed and trees uprooted. He gave no clear timeline for when full property returns would be completed.
Local intercommunal reconciliation committees, made up of both Sunni and Alawi community leaders, are already working to resolve disputes at the village level. Alaa Ibrahim, an Alawi landowner from Maan village who serves on one such committee, says his 138 dunam family property remains under Iktifaa control because his brother worked at an army-owned shoe factory, placing him under suspicion. With the 2026 harvest approaching, the Illicit Gains Committee has not issued a ruling on his case, and Ibrahim warns that if Alawi landowners are locked out of another harvest, the economic impact will be catastrophic for already vulnerable families, pushing many to sell their land at rock-bottom prices.
Ibrahim and other committee members are negotiating direct sharecropping contracts between Alawi landowners and their Sunni neighbors, while working to resolve long-running intercommunal violent disputes. If successful, he says, the agreements could pave the way for the safe return of displaced Alawis and ease sectarian tensions. If not, he warns, growing resentment will undermine the entire project of building post-war civil peace in Syria’s once-prosperous pistachio heartland.
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Serena Williams to return to tennis at Queen’s Club
One of the most decorated athletes in tennis history, Serena Williams, has sent shockwaves through the global tennis community with a long-awaited announcement: she is stepping back into competitive tennis nearly three years after her last professional outing, making her return at the Queen’s Club HSBC Championships later this month in women’s doubles competition. The 44-year-old American icon, who holds 23 Grand Slam singles titles – just one shy of the all-time record held jointly by Margaret Court and Novak Djokovic – has not competed at the top level since her third-round exit at the 2022 US Open, when she signaled she was “evolving away” from the sport rather than formally retiring.
Williams first teased the news to her millions of fans on social media, posting a clip of herself training on a court with the playful caption “Guess everybody heard the news,” as her phone buzzed nonstop with incoming messages in the background. The 7-time Wimbledon champion followed up with a confirming post, quipping that “Good news travels fast.” In an official statement released through tournament organizers, Williams called Queen’s Club the ideal venue to open this new chapter of her career. “Grass has given me some of the most meaningful moments of my career, and I’m excited to be back competing on one of the sport’s most iconic stages,” she said. The women’s draw of the historic London tournament gets underway on June 8, with Williams granted a wildcard entry into the doubles draw, where she is widely reported to partner 17-year-old rising Canadian star Victoria Mboko.
Speculation around a potential Williams comeback has been building for months. The first clue emerged back in December, when public records revealed Williams had rejoined the global tennis anti-doping program – a mandatory requirement for any player seeking to return to elite tour competition. Williams initially denied plans for a competitive return, but persistent rumors kept the story alive throughout the first half of 2024. Even men’s tennis great Novak Djokovic tipped off the public about a possible comeback back in March, and the announcement has dominated conversations among players competing at this year’s ongoing French Open in Paris.
Current and emerging stars of the sport have overwhelmingly welcomed the news of Williams’ return. Former world No. 1 Naomi Osaka, who defeated Williams in the controversial 2018 US Open final to claim her first Grand Slam title, said she is already looking forward to watching the comeback run. “I think it’s good for me. I’ll be very entertained,” Osaka told reporters. American rising star Coco Gauff, who bowed out of the French Open in the third round on Saturday, added that she would jump at the chance to face Williams for the first time in her career, calling the legend an inspiration to a generation of young players.
WTA Tournament Director and former British tennis pro Laura Robson expressed overwhelming excitement about the landmark comeback, saying “Serena Williams is one of the greatest athletes the world has ever seen, and we’re delighted that she will be making her return to tennis at the LTA’s HSBC Championships.” Robson noted that women’s tennis only returned to Queen’s Club last year after a long absence, making Williams’ participation a historic milestone for the event: “Women’s tennis made a historic return to the Queen’s Club last year and now we have an icon of the game stepping back on to court.”
Over the course of her legendary career, Williams spent a combined 319 weeks atop the WTA singles world rankings and claimed 73 tour-level singles titles. She also won 14 Grand Slam doubles titles alongside her older sister and long-time doubles partner Venus Williams, who returned to competitive tennis last year after a 16-month break. When Venus announced her own comeback 12 months ago, she said the only thing that could make her return better would be Serena joining her back on tour. That wish is now set to come true at Queen’s Club later this month.
