Connect with us

உலகம்

One killed in Gaza as Turkish FM talks peace efforts with Hamas official

Published

on

Israel continues to violate a ‘ceasefire’ agreed to in October with hundreds more killed across the Strip.

A Palestinian man has been killed, and several others injured, after an Israeli drone strike targeted a motorcycle west of the Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza, amid Israel’s continued violations of a “ceasefire” agreed to in October.

A medical source confirmed the death on Saturday of Eyad al-Motawwaq to the Anadolu news agency, as well as the injuries of an unspecified number of people.

An Israeli drone had struck the motorcycle west of the camp, outside the zones of Israeli military deployment under the so-called “ceasefire” agreement, witnesses told the agency.

Israel separately shelled the eastern areas of Gaza City’s Tuffah neighbourhood on Saturday, Anadolu reported, although no casualties have been confirmed.

Al Jazeera’s Tariq Abou Azzoum, reporting from Shati Camp in Gaza City on Friday, confirmed an earlier air strike on the area, despite it being in the Israeli-designated “green line” meant to mark a safe area for civilians. At least four people were injured.

Gaza’s Health Ministry said late on Saturday that at least four people were killed and 15 others injured in the Strip in the past 48 hours. Some victims remained under rubble as rescue teams laboured to reach them, it added.

Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza, starting from October 2023, has left 72,736 people dead and more than 172,000 injured. Some 90 percent of Gaza’s civilian infrastructure has also been destroyed, and almost all of Gaza’s two million population is displaced.

Since the “ceasefire” in October, at least 850 Palestinians have been killed and 2,433 others injured in Israeli attacks, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry.

Israel’s military is presently occupying about 60 percent of Gaza’s territory, currently demarcated by a so-called “yellow line” buffer zone.

Truce talks between Israel and Hamas have stalled, with senior Israeli military officials pressing for a return to war because of Hamas’s stance against surrendering weapons. On Wednesday, an Israeli air strike killed Azzam al-Hayya, son of Hamas negotiator Khalil al-Hayya.

Meanwhile on Saturday, Turkiye’s Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan met with Muhammad Darwish, head of Hamas’s advisory Shura Council, to discuss efforts to secure peace in Gaza, as well as initiatives to deliver humanitarian assistance to the Strip.

Sources at the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs told Anadolu that at the meeting in Ankara, Fidan declared Israel’s expanding presence in Gaza and its obstruction of urgently needed humanitarian aid deliveries as “unacceptable”.

Fidan also said the ongoing war in the region should not overshadow the Palestinian issue, and he reiterated Turkiye’s opposition to any attempts to force Palestinians to leave Gaza, Anadolu reported.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/5/9/one-killed-in-gaza-as-turkish-fm-talks-peace-efforts-with-hamas-official?traffic_source=rss

உலகம்

Should we be worried about the hantavirus outbreak?

Published

on

The incident has drawn comparisons to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The World Health Organization says the hantavirus poses a low risk to public health.

Arrangements are underway to repatriate passengers from a cruise ship after three people on board died.

So, how are officials applying the lessons learned during the COVID-19 pandemic to respond to the hantavirus?

Dr Mukesh Kapila – Professor Emeritus of Global Health and Humanitarian Affairs at the University of Manchester

Dr Margaret Harris – Lecturer at the United Nations Institute for Training and Research, former W.H.O. spokeswoman

Nicholas Locker – Professor of Virology at the Pirbright Institute, near Guildford, UK

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/video/inside-story/2026/5/9/should-we-be-worried-about-the-hantavirus-outbreak?traffic_source=rss

Continue Reading

உலகம்

Three police officers killed in car bomb attack in northwest Pakistan

Published

on

Bomber and several fighters detonate explosives-laden vehicle near security post in Bannu, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, near Afghanistan.

A car bombing at ⁠a police post followed by an intense firefight has killed at least three officers ⁠in northwestern Pakistan, according to police and security sources.

The attack took place in Bannu, a district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan, late on Saturday.

Police official Zahid Khan told The Associated Press that a suicide bomber and several fighters detonated an explosives-laden vehicle near a security post. Shortly after, multiple explosions were heard and the security post collapsed from the impact of the blast, he said.

Pakistan’s Dawn reported that nearby civilian areas also suffered severe damage due to the blasts, and two civilians were injured.

The Reuters news agency, citing security officials, reported that after the bombing, there was an ambush on police personnel rushing ⁠to the scene to provide backup.

Police official Sajjad Khan told Reuters that more casualties were feared. He added that fighting was ongoing and the extent of the damage would only be known once ‌the operation was over.

Police sources told Reuters ⁠the aggressors also used drones in the attack.

Ambulances from ⁠rescue agencies and civil hospitals were dispatched to the scene, with officials saying a state of emergency has been declared in government hospitals in Bannu.

No group immediately claimed responsibility. However, such attacks have the potential to reignite fighting along Pakistan’s border ⁠with Afghanistan.

The worst fighting in years erupted ⁠between the allies-turned-foes in February, with Pakistani air strikes inside Afghanistan that Islamabad said targeted fighters’ strongholds.

Fighting has since eased, with occasional skirmishes breaking out along the border, but no official ceasefire ‌has been brokered.

Islamabad blames Kabul for harbouring armed groups who use Afghan soil to plot attacks in Pakistan. The Taliban has denied the allegations and ‌said ‌militancy in Pakistan is an internal problem.

The Pakistan Taliban, known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), and allied fighter groups have carried out similar attacks in the past. The Pakistan Taliban is a separate group but is often aligned with the Afghan Taliban, who seized power in Afghanistan in 2021.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/5/9/three-police-officers-killed-in-car-bomb-attack-in-northwest-pakistan?traffic_source=rss

Continue Reading

உலகம்

Palestinian family says settlers forced them to exhume father’s body

Published

on

Palestinian family says settlers forced them to exhume and relocate father’s body

A Palestinian family in Jenin says Israeli settlers forced them to exhume and rebury their father hours after his funeral. The settlers claimed the cemetery land belonged to the nearby Sa-Nur settlement. The UN rights office condemned the incident as part of a wider pattern of “dehumanisation of Palestinians”.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/video/newsfeed/2026/5/9/palestinian-family-says-settlers-forced-them-to-exhume-fathers-body?traffic_source=rss

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2024 by 7Tamil Media, All rights reserved.