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  • Iran Executes Individual Accused of Spying for Israel

    Iran Executes Individual Accused of Spying for Israel

    Iran executed on Saturday an individual accused of spying for Israel, the judiciary’s Mizan news agency reported on Sunday citing an Iranian prosecutor.

    The individual had links to the Israeli intelligence service Mossad and had leaked classified information, Mizan cited the judiciary official as saying, according to Reuters.

    Entangled in a decades-long shadow war with Israel, Iran has executed many people it accused of having links with Israel’s intelligence service and facilitating its operations in the country.

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  • Ex-French President Sarkozy Says ‘Not Afraid’ ahead of Jail Term

    Ex-French President Sarkozy Says ‘Not Afraid’ ahead of Jail Term

    Former French president Nicolas Sarkozy, set to start a five-year prison sentence on Tuesday after being convicted of attempting to raise campaign funds from Libya in 2007, said he is not afraid of going to jail, La Tribune Dimanche reported.

    Sarkozy, who is due to be incarcerated at Paris’s Sante prison on October 21, told the newspaper he had already packed his bags and feels calm ahead of the start of his sentence.

    “I am not afraid of prison. I will hold my head high, even in front of the gates of Sante,” Sarkozy said, adding he will not ask for any special privileges.

    SARKOZY SAYS PLANS TO WRITE BOOK WHILE IN PRISON

    The former president told La Tribune Dimanche he does not want to complain or be pitied during his imprisonment. He plans to spend his time in jail writing a book, the newspaper said.

    Sarkozy, who led France from 2007 to 2012, was found guilty of criminal conspiracy over efforts by close aides to procure funds for his successful 2007 presidential bid from Libya during the rule of late dictator Muammar Gaddafi.

    Sarkozy has always said he was innocent and has appealed his conviction.

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  • Ukrainian Drones Strike a Major Russian Gas Plant

    Ukrainian Drones Strike a Major Russian Gas Plant

    Ukrainian drones overnight struck a major gas processing plant in southern Russia, sparking a fire, according to a Russian governor and the Ukrainian military.

    The Orenburg plant, run by state-owned gas giant Gazprom and located in a region of the same name near the Kazakh border, is part of a production and processing complex that is one of the world’s largest facilities of its kind, with an annual capacity of 45 billion cubic meters.

    According to regional Gov. Yevgeny Solntsev, the drone strikes set fire to a workshop at the plant and damaged part of it. Solntsev said there were no casualties, The AP news reported.

    Ukraine’s General Staff said in a statement Sunday that a “large-scale fire” erupted at the Orenburg plant, and that one of its gas processing and purification units was damaged.

    In the same statement, it claimed a separate drone strike hit Russia’s Novokuibyshevsk oil refinery, in the Samara region near Orenburg, sparking a blaze and damaging its main refining units.

    The Novokuibyshevsk facility, operated by Russian gas major Rosneft, has an annual capacity of 4.9 million tons, and turns out over 20 kinds of oil-based products. Russian authorities did not immediately acknowledge the Ukrainian claim or discuss any damage.

    Russia’s Defense Ministry said in a statement early Sunday that its air defense forces had shot down 45 Ukrainian drones during the night, including 12 over the Samara region, one over the Orenburg region and 11 over the Saratov region neighboring Samara.

    Ukraine has ramped up attacks in recent months on Russian energy facilities it says both fund and directly fuel Moscow’s war effort.

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  • Rybakina Wins Ningbo Title to Close in on WTA Finals

    Rybakina Wins Ningbo Title to Close in on WTA Finals

    Elena Rybakina rallied from a set down to beat Russian fourth seed Ekaterina Alexandrova 3-6 6-0 6-2 and win the Ningbo Open title on Sunday, as her late surge to reach next month’s WTA Finals gained momentum.

    A 10th career title for Rybakina means the Kazakh only has to reach the semi-finals of the Pan Pacific Open in Tokyo this week to seal the last qualifying spot for the season finale at the expense of Russian teenager Mirra Andreeva, Reuters reported.

    Others who have qualified for the WTA Finals, to be held in the Saudi Arabian capital of Riyadh from November 1-8, are Aryna Sabalenka, Iga Swiatek, Coco Gauff, Amanda Anisimova, Jessica Pegula, Madison Keys and Jasmine Paolini.

    “I’d like to congratulate Ekaterina for a great week and great season,” said Rybakina.

    “It hasn’t been an easy year for all of us, a difficult schedule … thank you so much to my team for always pushing me to be better.

    “The end of the season isn’t easy but without you I wouldn’t be here. Hopefully, we can push a little more this week (in Tokyo).”

    Alexandrova made a flying start, racing 4-1 ahead as Rybakina struggled to rein in the errors and mix up her game, before the 30-year-old comfortably took the first set with a powerful forehand winner.

    Desperate to prevent a fourth straight defeat by Alexandrova on hardcourts, Russian-born Rybakina came out firing in the next set, hitting a crosscourt winner to consolidate an early break and lay the platform to level the match.

    World number nine Rybakina cranked up the intensity from the baseline in the deciding set, but it was a foray to the net that earned the 26-year-old another early break, and she went on to claim her second trophy of the season.

     

     

     

     

     

     

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  • Yemen’s Houthis Detain 20 UN Employees and Confiscate Equipment

    Yemen’s Houthis Detain 20 UN Employees and Confiscate Equipment

    Iranian-backed Houthis detained two dozen UN employees Sunday, a day after they raided another UN facility in the capital Sanaa, a UN official said.

    Jean Alam, a spokesman for the UN resident coordinator for Yemen, told The Associated Press that the UN staffers were detained inside the facility in Sanaa’s southwestern neighborhood of Hada.

    He said those detained Sunday include five Yemenis and 15 international staff. He said the Houthis released another 11 UN staffers after questioning.

    He said the UN was contact with the Houthis and other parties to “to resolve this serious situation as swiftly as possible, end the detention of all personnel, and restore full control over its facilities in Sanaa.”

    A second UN official, speaking spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the raid, said the Houthis confiscated all communications equipment from the facility, including phones, servers and computers.

    The official said the detained employees belong to multiple UN agencies including the World Food Program, UNICEF and the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

    The Houthis have launched a long-running crackdown against the UN and other international organizations working in Houthi-held areas in Yemen including Sanaa, the coastal city of Hodeidah and the Houthi stronghold in Sadaa province in northern Yemen.

    Dozens of people, including over 50 UN staffers, have been detained so far. A World Food Program worker died in detention earlier this year in Sadaa.

    The Houthis have repeatedly alleged without evidence that the detained UN staffers and those working with other international groups and foreign embassies were spies. The UN fiercely denied the accusations.

    The crackdown forced the UN to suspend its operations in Saada province in northern Yemen following the detention of eight staffers in January. The UN also relocated its top humanitarian coordinator in Yemen from Sanaa to the coastal city of Aden, which serves as seat for the internationally recognized government.

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  • Saudi Crown Prince Approves Renewal of Al-Benyan’s Chairmanship of SME Bank

    Saudi Crown Prince Approves Renewal of Al-Benyan’s Chairmanship of SME Bank

    Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, also Chairman of the National Development Fund (NDF), has approved the renewal of the membership of Yousef bin Abdullah Al-Benyan as Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Small and Medium Enterprise Bank (SME Bank) for a three-year term, starting from 3/6/1447 AH.

    According to SPA, Al-Benyan expressed his gratitude and appreciation to the Crown Prince for this generous trust, praising His Highness’s continuous support for the SME sector, which contributes to enhancing its stability and strengthening its role as one of the key pillars of economic development and a vital enabler in achieving the goals of Saudi Vision 2030.

    Al-Benyan noted that the great attention the wise leadership has devoted to the SME sector has been the main driver behind its significant expansion and the rise in financial facilities provided to it over the past years.

    He affirmed the board’s commitment to fostering the growth of small and medium enterprises, enhancing their contribution to GDP, promoting financial sustainability, and supporting overall economic growth.

    The SME Bank was established under a resolution of the Cabinet. The bank operates under the umbrella of the NDF, aiming to expand the total lending portfolio within the financial sector, bridge the financing gap, strengthen the contribution of financial institutions in offering innovative financing solutions, and promote financial stability in this vital and dynamic sector.

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  • A Father Returns from Israeli Detention to Find Gaza and His Family Shattered

    A Father Returns from Israeli Detention to Find Gaza and His Family Shattered

    Amid the joy of being released after 20 months of suffering in Israeli prisons, Mohammed Abu Moussa could tell something was wrong.

    Descending from the bus that brought him and other released Palestinian detainees to Gaza last week, the 45-year-old medical technician was reunited with his wife and two young children. But when he asked about his mother, his brother wouldn’t look him the eye.

    Finally they sat him down and told him: His mother, his younger sister Aya, Aya’s children and his aunt and uncle had all been killed by an Israeli airstrike that hit their shelter in central Gaza in July, The AP news reported.

    More than 1,800 Palestinians seized from Gaza by Israeli troops during the two-year war were freed this week under the ceasefire deal that brought Hamas’ release of the last living hostages. Israel also freed around 250 Palestinian prisoners convicted over the past decades, who mainly returned to the occupied West Bank or were exiled abroad, though a few were sent to Gaza.

    Those released back to Gaza were met by the shock of how their homeland had been destroyed and families shattered by Israeli bombardment and offensives while they were locked away, with little news of the war.

    Recounting his return, Abou Moussa said the grief hit even before the freed detainees got off the bus on Monday. Some shouted out the bus windows to people they knew in the cheering crowd welcoming them and asked about brothers, mothers and fathers.

    Often, he said, their reply was terse: “God rest their souls.”

    Taken as his family fled Abu Moussa suffered his first loss soon after Israel launched its campaign aiming to destroy Hamas after the militants’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel.

    Eight days later, an airstrike hit his family’s home in the city of Khan Younis in southern Gaza, while he was on duty in Nasser Hospital, where he worked as a radiology technician. Video circulating online at the time showed him and his wife, Rawan Salha, rushing around the hospital in search of their son, Youssef, among the casualties. “He’s 7 years old, curly hair, fair-skinned and beautiful,” Salha cried.

    The boy had been brought in dead. Also killed in the strike were the wife of one of Abu Moussa’s brothers and their two children.

    In the next months, Abu Moussa worked constantly as wounded flowed into the hospital, where Salha and his two surviving children were also sheltering along with hundreds of others driven from their homes. In February 2024, Israeli forces surrounded the hospital, preparing to storm the facility to search for suspected militants. They demanded everybody leave but staff and patients too critical to move.

    But Salha refused to leave without Abu Moussa, he said. So they set out walking with their children. At a nearby Israeli military checkpoint, Abu Moussa was called aside with others for interrogation in a nearby stadium.

    It was the start of his long separation from his family.

    Abuse in prisons Abu Moussa says his months in Israeli prisons were filled with abuse. Like the other detainees released back to Gaza on Monday, he was never charged.

    It began in the stadium, where he said he was beaten with sticks and fists during interrogation. All those taken from the checkpoint were kept with their hands bound in zip ties for three days, given no water and not allowed to use a bathroom. “Almost all of us soiled ourselves,” Abu Moussa said.

    He was taken to Sde Teiman, a military prison camp inside Israel, where he would be held two months. Every day, he said, detainees were forced to kneel for hours without moving – “it’s exhausting, you feel your back is broken,” he said. Guards would pull some aside for beatings, said Abu Moussa, adding that his rib was broken in one beating.

    He was moved to Negev Prison, run by civilian authorities. There, he said, beatings were less frequent, taking place mainly when guards conducted weekly searches of the cells, he said.

    But conditions were harsh, he said. Nearly all the detainees had scabies, an infestation by mites that dig into the skin. “People were rubbing themselves up against the walls trying to get rid of the itching,” he said. Despite requests, prison officials did not give detainees creams to treat it until a few weeks before his release, he said.

    Bedding was filthy, and detainees were allowed no change of clothes. Cuts often became infected, he said. When they washed their one set of clothing, they had to strip naked and wrap themselves in a blanket – but if guards saw, “they took away the blanket and made you sleep without it,” he said.

    Sick detainees or those with chronic conditions asked for medicines but were refused, he said. One man, Mohammed al-Astal, suffered a colon blockage that worsened and he eventually died, Abu Moussa said.

    “They treated us like animals,” he said.

    Asked about Abou Moussa’s account, the Israeli Prison Service, which operates Negev Prison, said it was not aware of it. It said it operates in accordance with the law and that prisoners’ rights to medical care and proper living conditions are upheld.

    Also in response, the military denied systematic abuse takes place in its facilities and said it acts in accordance with Israeli and international law. It said it investigates any concrete complaints.

    Abu Moussa’s account mirrors those of many previously released Palestinians. At least 75 Palestinians have died in Israeli prisons and detention facilities during the war, the UN said in a report last month, saying conditions in the facilities amounted to torture that contributed to deaths. One 17-year-old Palestinian who died in prison in March was found to have wasted away from starvation and had colon inflammation and scabies, according to an Israeli doctor who observed the autopsy.

    Returning to devastation Crossing the border from Israel into Gaza after the release, “the first shock was the destruction,” Abu Moussa said.

    His home city of Khan Younis was unrecognizable. Entire neighborhoods were razed. He and his fellow passengers searched for landmarks among the shattered buildings.

    The buses pulled into Nasser Hospital, where the crowd awaited them. Panicked at not seeing them in the crowd, Abu Moussa asked a hospital co-worker where his wife and children were. He assured him they were inside, waiting.

    He asked one of his brothers about his mother. The brother couldn’t look Abu Moussa in the eye, saying only, “She’s coming.”

    “He wasn’t being straight with me,” Abu Moussa said. After being reunited with his wife and children, he asked again about his mother and his sister, Aya. Finally, they told him.

    Recounting what happened, Abu Moussa fell silent for long moments, overcome with emotion. His voice breaking with tears, he recalled how his mother had always been strong, refusing to cry after one of his brothers was killed during the 2009 Israel-Hamas war.

    “She always kept a grip on herself, so we all wouldn’t weaken,” he said.

    He wondered if the joy would have broken his mother’s reserve if she’d be able to see him return from his imprisonment.

    “I miss her. I want to see her,” he cried. “I want to kiss her hand, her head.”

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  • Saudi Arabia Reaffirms Leadership in Global Sustainability Efforts

    Saudi Arabia Reaffirms Leadership in Global Sustainability Efforts

    The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia reaffirmed its continued leadership in supporting international initiatives to combat land degradation and drought, as well as promoting environmental sustainability. It also highlighted its contribution to global efforts to protect the planet and conserve natural resources.

    This came in a statement during Saudi Arabia’s participation in the G20 Ministers of Environment and Climate Change meeting, held in Cape Town, South Africa.

    The Saudi delegation was headed by Deputy Minister of Environment, Water, and Agriculture for the Environment Dr. Osama Faqeeha. The meeting was part of the G20’s ongoing efforts to strengthen international cooperation in tackling global environmental challenges and promoting the protection of ecosystems worldwide, according to SPA.

    In his speech, Dr. Faqeeha emphasized Saudi Arabia’s leading role in advancing environmental protection at the national, regional, and international levels. He pointed to key initiatives launched by Saudi Crown Prince—the Saudi Green Initiative and the Middle East Green Initiative—as well as the adoption of the National Environment Strategy.

    Dr. Faqeeha also noted the Kingdom’s progress in expanding afforestation projects, combating desertification, rehabilitating degraded lands, and increasing protected areas by more than 400%. He further highlighted Saudi Arabia’s prominent role within the G20, including its launch of the Global Initiative to Reduce Land Degradation and the Global Coral Reef Initiative during its G20 presidency in 2020.

    He noted that the Kingdom has made a transformative impact in the global dialogue on environmental issues, particularly through hosting the 16th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (COP16) in Riyadh in 2024.

    The conference marked the highest level of international participation in the convention’s history. It also led to the adoption of several key outcomes, including the Riyadh Declaration and more than 35 international resolutions focused on sustainable management of agricultural lands and rangelands, empowering local communities, and advancing research and innovation.

    Moreover, around 40 initiatives were introduced as part of the Riyadh Agenda, most notably the Riyadh Global Drought Resilience Partnership, which aims to strengthen global cooperation in combating drought.

    The G20 Environment and Climate Change Ministers’ Meeting serves as a platform to align global efforts in tackling climate change and to foster international collaboration in developing shared solutions to environmental challenges across the globe.

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  • Israeli Military Launches Attack on Gaza

    Israeli Military Launches Attack on Gaza

    The Israeli military launched an attack on Gaza on Sunday, Israeli media reported, dimming hopes that a week-old US-mediated ceasefire would lead to lasting peace in the enclave as Israel traded blame with Palestinian militant group Hamas.

    An Israeli military official said on Sunday that Hamas had carried out multiple attacks against Israeli forces inside Gaza, including a rocket-propelled grenade attack and a sniper attack against Israeli soldiers. “Both of the incidents happened in an Israeli-controlled area…This is a bold violation of the ceasefire,” the official said.

    Senior Hamas official Izzat Al Risheq said on Sunday that the Palestinian militant group remained committed to the ceasefire, which he accused Israel of repeatedly violating.

    Neither Al Risheq nor the Israeli military official made any mention of the reported Israeli strikes in Gaza.

    The government media office in Gaza said on Saturday that Israel had committed 47 violations after the ceasefire deal, leaving 38 dead and 143 wounded.

    The impact of the Israeli strikes on Sunday, the most serious test since an already fragile ceasefire took effect on October 11, was not immediately clear.

    The Israeli government and Hamas have been accusing each other of violations of the ceasefire for days, with Israel saying the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt will remain closed until further notice.

    Rafah has largely been shut since May 2024. The ceasefire deal also includes the ramping up of aid into the enclave, where hundreds of thousands of people were determined in August to be affected by famine, according to the IPC global hunger monitor.

    Israel and Hamas have been engaged in a dispute over the return of the bodies of deceased hostages. Israel demanded that Hamas fulfill its obligations in turning over the remaining bodies of all 28 hostages.

    Hamas has returned all 20 live hostages and 12 of the deceased but said the process needs effort and special equipment to recover corpses buried under rubble.

    Formidable obstacles to Trump’s plan to end the war still remain. Key questions of Hamas disarming, the governance of Gaza, the make-up of an international “stabilization force”, and moves towards the creation of a Palestinian state have yet to be resolved.

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  • Louvre Museum Closes in Paris after Theft

    Louvre Museum Closes in Paris after Theft

    France’s Culture Minister Rachida Dati on Sunday reported a break-in at the Louvre in Paris, as the world-renowned museum said it was closing for the day.

    “A hold-up took place this morning at the opening of the Louvre Museum,” she wrote on X, using a French word that can also mean “robbery.”

    “No injuries reported. I’m on site with museum staff and police,” she added.
    The Louvre said it was closing for the day “for exceptional reasons.”

    Dati said she was on site and that an investigation was underway.

    French daily Le Parisien reported that criminals entered the world’s most visited museum and former palace via the Seine-facing facade, where construction is underway. The report said they used a freight elevator to gain direct access to the targeted room in the Apollo Gallery.

    After breaking windows, they reportedly stole “nine pieces from the jewelry collection of Napoleon and the Empress,” Le Parisien said.

    The Galerie d’Apollon, where Sunday’s theft reportedly took place, displays a selection of the French Crown Jewels.

    The museum can draw up to 30,000 visitors a day.

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