Category: 2. World

  • Syria ready to work with US to return to 1974 disengagement deal with Israel

    Syria ready to work with US to return to 1974 disengagement deal with Israel


    BEIRUT: Hezbollah has begun a major strategic review in the wake of its devastating war with Israel, including considering scaling back its role as an armed movement without disarming completely, three sources familiar with the deliberations say.

    The internal discussions, which aren’t yet finalized and haven’t previously been reported, reflect the formidable pressures the Iran-backed Lebanese militant group has faced since a truce was reached in late November.

    Israeli forces continue to strike areas where the group holds sway, accusing Hezbollah of ceasefire violations, which it denies. It is also grappling with acute financial strains, US demands for its disarmament and diminished political clout since a new cabinet took office in February with US support.

    The group’s difficulties have been compounded by seismic shifts in the regional power balance since Israel decimated its command, killed thousands of its fighters and destroyed much of its arsenal last year.

    Hezbollah’s Syrian ally, Bashar Assad, was toppled in December, severing a key arms supply line from Iran. Tehran is now emerging from its own bruising war with Israel, raising doubts over how much aid it can offer, a regional security source and a senior Lebanese official told Reuters.

    Another senior official, who is familiar with Hezbollah’s internal deliberations, said the group had been holding clandestine discussions on its next steps. Small committees have been meeting in person or remotely to discuss issues including its leadership structure, political role, social and development work, and weapons, the official said on condition of anonymity.

    The official and two other sources familiar with the discussions indicated Hezbollah has concluded that the arsenal it had amassed to deter Israel from attacking Lebanon had become a liability.

    Hezollah “had an excess of power,” the official said. “All that strength turned into a weak point.”

    Under the leadership of Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed last year, Hezbollah grew into a regional military player with tens of thousands of fighters, rockets and drones poised to strike Israel. It also provided support to allies in Syria, Iraq and Yemen.

    Israel came to regard Hezbollah as a significant threat. When the group opened fire in solidarity with its Palestinian ally Hamas at the start of the Gaza war in 2023, Israel responded with airstrikes in Lebanon that escalated into a ground offensive.

    Hezbollah has since relinquished a number of weapons depots in southern Lebanon to the Lebanese armed forces as stipulated in last year’s truce, though Israel says it has struck military infrastructure there still linked to the group.

    Hezbollah is now considering turning over some weapons it has elsewhere in the country — notably missiles and drones seen as the biggest threat to Israel — on condition Israel withdraws from the south and halts its attacks, the sources said.

    But the group won’t surrender its entire arsenal, the sources said. For example, it intends to keep lighter arms and anti-tank missiles, they said, describing them as a means to resist any future attacks.

    Hezbollah’s media office did not respond to questions for this article.

    Isreal’s military said it would continue operating along its northern border in accordance with the understandings between Israel and Lebanon, in order eliminate any threat and protect Israeli citizens. The US State Department declined to comment on private diplomatic conversations, referring questions to Lebanon’s government. Lebanon’s presidency did not respond to questions.

    For Hezbollah to preserve any military capabilities would fall short of Israeli and US ambitions. Under the terms of the ceasefire brokered by the US and France, Lebanon’s armed forces were to confiscate “all unauthorized arms,” beginning in the area south of the Litani River — the zone closest to Israel.

    Lebanon’s government also wants Hezbollah to surrender the rest of its weapons as it works to establish a state monopoly on arms. Failure to do so could stir tensions with the group’s Lebanese rivals, which accuse Hezbollah of leveraging its military might to impose its will in state affairs and repeatedly dragging Lebanon into conflicts.

    All sides have said they remain committed to the ceasefire, even as they traded accusations of violations.

    PART OF HEZBOLLAH’S ‘DNA’

    Arms have been central to Hezbollah’s doctrine since it was founded by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to fight Israeli forces who invaded Lebanon in 1982, at the height of the 1975-1990 Lebanese civil war. Tensions over the Shiite Muslim group’s arsenal sparked another, brief civil conflict in 2008.

    The United States and Israel deem Hezbollah a terrorist group.

    Nicholas Blanford, who wrote a history of Hezbollah, said that in order to reconstitute itself, the group would have to justify its retention of weapons in an increasingly hostile political landscape, while addressing damaging intelligence breaches and ensuring its long-term finances.

    “They’ve faced challenges before, but not this number simultaneously,” said Blanford, a fellow with the Atlantic Council, a US think tank.

    A European official familiar with intelligence assessments said there was a lot of brainstorming underway within Hezbollah about its future but no clear outcomes. The official described Hezbollah’s status as an armed group as part of its DNA, saying it would be difficult for it to become a purely political party.

    Nearly a dozen sources familiar with Hezbollah’s thinking said the group wants to keep some arms, not only in case of future threats from Israel, but also because it is worried that Sunni Muslim jihadists in neighboring Syria might exploit lax security to attack eastern Lebanon, a Shiite-majority region.

    Despite the catastrophic results of the latest war with Israel — tens of thousands of people were left homeless and swathes of the south and Beirut’s southern suburbs were destroyed — many of Hezbollah’s core supporters want it to remain armed.

    Um Hussein, whose son died fighting for Hezbollah, cited the threat still posed by Israel and a history of conflict with Lebanese rivals as reasons to do so.

    “Hezbollah is the backbone of the Shiites, even if it is weak now,” she said, asking to be identified by a traditional nickname because members of her family still belong to Hezbollah. “We were a weak, poor group. Nobody spoke up for us.”

    Hezbollah’s immediate priority is tending to the needs of constituents who withstood the worst of the war, the sources familiar with its deliberations said.

    In December, Secretary General Naim Qassem said Hezbollah had paid more than $50 million to affected families with more than $25 million still to hand out. But there are signs that its funds are running short.

    One Beirut resident said he had paid for repairs to his apartment in the Hezbollah-controlled southern suburbs after it was damaged in the war only to see the entire block destroyed by an Israeli airstrike in June.

    “Everyone is scattered and homeless. No one has promised to pay for our shelter,” said the man, who declined to be identified for fear his complaints might jeopardize his chances of receiving compensation.

    He said he had received cheques from Hezbollah but was told by the group’s financial institution, Al-Qard Al-Hassan, that it did not have funds available to cash them. Reuters could not immediately reach the institution for comment.

    Other indications of financial strain have included cutbacks to free medications offered by Hezbollah-run pharmacies, three people familiar with the operations said.

    SQUEEZING HEZBOLLAH FINANCES

    Hezbollah has put the onus on Lebanon’s government to secure reconstruction funding. But Foreign Minister Youssef Raji, a Hezbollah critic, has said there will be no aid from foreign donors until the state establishes a monopoly on arms.

    A State Department spokesperson said in May that, while Washington was engaged in supporting sustainable reconstruction in Lebanon, “this cannot happen without Hezbollah laying down their arms.”

    Israel has also been squeezing Hezbollah’s finances.

    The Israeli military said on June 25 that it had killed an Iranian official who oversaw hundreds of millions of dollars in transfers annually to armed groups in the region, as well as a man in southern Lebanon who ran a currency exchange business that helped get some of these funds to Hezbollah.

    Iran did not comment at the time, and its UN mission did not immediately respond to questions from Reuters.

    Since February, Lebanon has barred commercial flights between Beirut and Tehran, after Israel’s military accused Hezbollah of using civilian aircraft to bring in money from Iran and threatened to take action to stop this.

    Lebanese authorities have also tightened security at Beirut airport, where Hezbollah had free rein for years, making it harder for the group to smuggle in funds that way, according to an official and a security source familiar with airport operations.

    Such moves have fueled anger among Hezbollah’s supporters toward the administration led by President Joseph Aoun and Nawaf Salam, who was made prime minister against Hezbollah’s wishes.

    Alongside its Shiite ally, the Amal Movement, Hezbollah swept local elections in May, with many seats uncontested. The group will be seeking to preserve its dominance in legislative elections next year.

    Nabil Boumonsef, deputy editor-in-chief of Lebanon’s Annahar newspaper, said next year’s poll was part of an “existential battle” for Hezbollah.

    “It will use all the means it can, firstly to play for time so it doesn’t have to disarm, and secondly to make political and popular gains,” he said.

    Continue Reading

  • Gaza ceasefire takes priority over Israel ties, says Saudi FM

    Gaza ceasefire takes priority over Israel ties, says Saudi FM

    Listen to article

    Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud said on Friday that the kingdom’s current priority is reaching a permanent ceasefire in Gaza, when asked about the possibility of normalising ties with Israel.

    He was speaking during a visit to Moscow.

    The local health ministry in Gaza says more than 57,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s assault on the region since an October 7 attack on Israel by the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas.

    According to Israel, 1,200 people were killed in that attack and more than 250 taken hostage into Gaza.

    Gaza final proposal 

    US President Donald Trump said on Friday it would probably be known in 24 hours whether the Palestinian militant group Hamas has agreed to accept what he has called a “final proposal” for an Israel-Hamas ceasefire in Gaza.

    The president also said he had spoken to Saudi Arabia about expanding the Abraham Accords, the deal on normalization of ties that his administration negotiated between Israel and some Gulf countries during his first term.

    Trump said on Tuesday Israel had accepted the conditions needed to finalise a 60-day ceasefire with Hamas, during which the parties will work to end the war.

    He was asked on Friday if Hamas had agreed to the latest ceasefire deal framework, and said: “We’ll see what happens, we are going to know over the next 24 hours.”

    A source close to Hamas said on Thursday the Islamist group sought guarantees that the new US-backed ceasefire proposal would lead to the end of Israel’s war in Gaza.

    Two Israeli officials said those details were still being worked out. Dozens of Palestinians were killed on Thursday in Israeli strikes, according to Gaza authorities.

    The latest bloodshed in the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict was triggered in October 2023 when Hamas attacked Israel, killing 1,200 and taking about 250 hostages, Israeli tallies show.

    Gaza’s health ministry says Israel’s subsequent military assault has killed over 56,000 Palestinians. It has also caused a hunger crisis, internally displaced Gaza’s entire population and prompted accusations of genocide at the International Court of Justice and of war crimes at the International Criminal Court. Israel denies the accusations.

    A previous two month ceasefire ended when Israeli strikes killed more than 400 Palestinians on March 18. Trump earlier this year proposed a UN takeover of Gaza, which was condemned globally by rights experts, the UN and Palestinians as a proposal of “ethnic cleansing.”

    Abraham accords

    Trump made the comments on the Abraham Accords when asked about US media reporting late on Thursday that he had met Saudi Defense Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman at the White House.

    “It’s one of the things we talked about,” Trump said. “I think a lot of people are going to be joining the Abraham accords,” he added, citing the predicted expansion to the damage faced by Iran from recent US and Israeli strikes.

    Axios reported that after the meeting with Trump, the Saudi official spoke on the phone with Abdolrahim Mousavi, chief of Iran’s General Staff of the Armed Forces.

    Trump’s meeting with the Saudi official came ahead of a visit to Washington next week by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

     

    Continue Reading

  • Russia pounds Kyiv with largest drone attack, hours after Trump-Putin call – World

    Russia pounds Kyiv with largest drone attack, hours after Trump-Putin call – World

    Russia pummelled Kyiv with the largest drone attack of the war, injuring at least 23 people and damaging buildings across the Ukrainian capital hours after US President Donald Trump spoke to Russia’s Vladimir Putin, officials said on Friday.

    Air raid sirens, the whine of kamikaze drones and booming detonations reverberated from early evening until dawn as Russia launched what Ukraine’s Air Force said was a total of 539 drones and 11 missiles.

    Families huddled in underground metro stations for shelter. Acrid smoke hung over the city centre. Outside a high-rise apartment block damaged by a drone, residents stood around surveying the scene as the clean-up job began. Some cried. Others looked on silently.

    “I woke up to the sound of explosions, first the Shahed drones started buzzing, and then the explosions began,” said 40-year-old resident Maria Hilchenko. “Then people started screaming outside. The explosions from the Shaheds kept coming.”

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called the attack “deliberately massive and cynical”.

    “Notably, the first air raid alerts in our cities and regions yesterday began to blare almost simultaneously with media reports discussing a phone call between President Trump and Putin,” Zelensky said on X.

    “Yet again, Russia is showing it has no intention of ending the war and terror,” he added, calling for increased pressure on Russia and more air defence equipment.

    Kyiv officials said the attack damaged about 40 apartment blocks, passenger railway infrastructure, five schools and kindergartens, cafes and many cars in six of Kyiv’s 10 districts. Poland said the consular section of its embassy was damaged in central Kyiv, adding that staff were unharmed.

    Mayor Vitali Klitschko said on Telegram that 14 of the injured were taken to the hospital.

    Ukraine’s state-owned railway Ukrzaliznytsia, the country’s largest carrier, said on Telegram that the attack on Kyiv forced them to divert a number of passenger trains, causing delays.

    Damage was recorded on both sides of the wide Dnipro River bisecting the capital, and falling drone debris set a medical facility on fire in the leafy Holosiivskyi district, Klitschko said.

    Russian airstrikes on Kyiv have intensified in recent weeks and included some of the deadliest assaults of the war on the city of 3 million people.

    Call for sanctions

    Trump said that the call with Putin on Thursday resulted in no progress at all on efforts to end the war, and the Kremlin reiterated that Moscow would keep pushing to solve the conflict’s “root causes”.

    Speaking to reporters on his return to Washington from a trip to Iowa, Trump said, “I’m very disappointed with the conversation I had today with President Putin, because I don’t think he’s there, and I’m very disappointed.

    “I’m just saying I don’t think he’s looking to stop, and that’s too bad.”

    The decision by Washington to halt some shipments of critical weapons to Ukraine prompted warnings by Kyiv that the move would weaken its ability to defend against intensifying airstrikes and battlefield advances.

    On Friday, Zelensky called for increased pressure on Moscow to change its “dumb, destructive behaviour”.

    “For every such strike against people and human life, they must feel appropriate sanctions and other blows to their economy, their revenues, and their infrastructure,” he said.

    Ukraine’s Air Force said it destroyed 478 of the air weapons Russia launched overnight. However, airstrikes were recorded in eight locations across Ukraine, with nine missiles and 63 drones, it added.

    Social media videos showed people running to seek shelter, firefighters fighting blazes in the dark and ruined buildings with windows and facades blown out.

    Both sides deny targeting civilians in the war that Russia launched with its full-scale invasion in February 2022. Thousands of civilians have been killed in the conflict, the vast majority of them Ukrainian. Many more soldiers are believed to have been killed on the front line, but neither side releases military casualty figures.

    Late on Thursday, Russian shelling killed five people in and near the eastern Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk, Ukraine said.

    Trump, Zelensky discuss weapons, escalating Russian strikes

    Zelensky said he discussed air defences in a conversation with Trump later on Friday, agreeing to work on increasing Kyiv’s capability to “defend the sky” as Russian attacks escalate.

    He added in a message on Telegram that he discussed joint defence production, as well as joint purchases and investments with the US leader.

    Ukraine has been asking Washington to sell it more Patriot missiles and systems that it sees as key to defending its cities from intensifying Russian air strikes.

    A decision by Washington to halt some shipments of weapons to Ukraine prompted warnings by Kyiv that the move would weaken its ability to defend against Russia’s airstrikes and battlefield advances. Germany said it is in talks on buying Patriot air defence systems to bridge the gap.

    One source briefed on the call told Reuters they were optimistic that supplies of Patriot missiles could resume after what they called a “very good” conversation between the presidents.

    US outlet Axios reported, citing unnamed sources, that the call lasted around 40 minutes, and that Trump told Zelensky he would check what US weapons due to be sent to Ukraine, if any, had been put on hold.

    Zelensky, speaking later in his nightly video address, said he and Trump had agreed to “arrange a meeting between our teams to strengthen air defences.

    “We had a very detailed discussion on joint production. We need it, America needs it.”

    Speaking to reporters as he left Washington for Iowa earlier on Friday, Trump said “we haven’t” completely paused the flow of weapons but blamed his predecessor, Joe Biden, for sending so many weapons that it risked weakening US defences.

    “We’re giving weapons, but we’ve given so many weapons. But we are giving weapons,” he said. “And we’re working with them and trying to help them, but we haven’t [completely stopped]. You know, Biden emptied out our whole country giving them weapons, and we have to make sure that we have enough for ourselves.”

    The pause in US weapons shipments caught Ukraine off guard and generated widespread confusion about Trump’s current views on the conflict, after saying last week he would try to free up a Patriot missile defence system for use by Kyiv.

    Ukrainian leaders called in the acting US envoy to Kyiv on Wednesday to underline the importance of military aid from Washington, and caution that the pause in its weapons shipments would weaken Ukraine’s ability to defend itself against Russia.

    The Pentagon’s move has meant a cut in deliveries of the Patriot defence missiles that Ukraine relies on to destroy fast-moving ballistic missiles, Reuters reported on Wednesday.

    Continue Reading

  • U.N. Pulls Nuclear Inspectors Out of Iran for Safety Reasons – WSJ

    1. U.N. Pulls Nuclear Inspectors Out of Iran for Safety Reasons  WSJ
    2. IAEA inspectors depart Tehran after US-Israel-Iran conflict  Al Jazeera
    3. Iran committed to NPT, says FM  Dawn
    4. Iran still committed to nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, says FM Araghchi  The Times of Israel
    5. Oil Updates — crude falls as Iran affirms commitment to nuclear treaty  Arab News

    Continue Reading

  • Turkey battles deadly wildfires as Greece brings blaze in Crete under control

    Turkey battles deadly wildfires as Greece brings blaze in Crete under control

    ANKARA, Turkey — Firefighters in Turkey remained locked in a battle to contain flames tearing through forested hillsides in the west of the country on Friday, while similar wildfires in neighboring Greece were largely brought under control.

    Wildfires that broke out in at least five locations across Turkey’s Aegean coastal province of İzmir — fueled by soaring temperatures, strong winds, and low humidity — have killed two people, forced the evacuation of tens of thousands and damaged some 200 homes.

    Forestry Minister İbrahim Yumakli said Friday that firefighters, supported by water-dropping aircraft, remained on the ground battling a deadly wildfire near the town of Odemis for a third day. Elsewhere, emergency crews worked to halt the spread of a new blaze that broke out late Thursday near the district of Buca.

    The fire near Odemis claimed two lives — a forestry worker who died Thursday trying to contain the flames, and an 81-year-old resident who succumbed to smoke inhalation, according to authorities.

    “Our intense air and land fight to control the fires in Odemis and Buca,” continues, the minister said on X, without providing further details.

    Another wildfire that broke out Wednesday near the popular vacation destination of Cesme was contained Friday, Yumakli said. The fire prompted the evacuation of three neighborhoods and caused temporary road closures.

    In Greece, a coastal wildfire on Crete remained under control. But the fire service maintained a large deployment on the island as the authorities feared flare ups due to strong winds.

    More than 5,000 tourists, hotel workers and local residents were moved out of the area on Wednesday as the blaze threatened seaside resorts. Several areas of the country remain on alert due to the adverse weather conditions.

    Local authorities in Crete estimate that the wildfire has burned approximately 15 square kilometers (3,700 acres) of land.

    Turkish officials have not provided an estimate of the total land area consumed by the fires.

    Authorities said most of the fires Izmir were caused by faults on power lines. Yumakli blamed the blaze in Buca on sparks caused by construction workers using a grinder to cut through metal.

    Summer wildfires are common in both Greece and Turkey, where experts warn that climate change is intensifying conditions.

    __

    Gatopoulos reported from Athens.

    Continue Reading

  • ‘No other explanation’: children of Gaza doctor killed in airstrike believe he was deliberately targeted | Gaza

    ‘No other explanation’: children of Gaza doctor killed in airstrike believe he was deliberately targeted | Gaza

    The children of Dr Marwan al-Sultan, director of Gaza’s Indonesian hospital and one of the territory’s most senior doctors, said they believed their father was deliberately targeted in the Israeli airstrike that killed him on Wednesday.

    Sultan died when an Israeli missile was fired into the apartment block in Gaza City where he and his extended family were staying after their displacement from northern Gaza. His wife, daughter, sister and son-in-law were also killed in the attack.

    His surviving daughter Lobna said the airstrike specifically targeted the room her father was in. “All the rooms were fine except for his, the missile hit it precisely,” she said.

    His son Ahmed said there was “no other explanation” other than that his father was deliberately targeted by the Israeli military. He also added that the floors where his father and their extended family were staying were the only parts of the block hit in the airstrike.

    The apartment building in Gaza City where Dr Marwan al-Sultan and several family members were reportedly killed in an Israeli airstrike

    Photos and videos taken by local journalists and given to the Guardian, showed that the apartment block had been hit on the front side of the fourth and fifth floors, while the rest remained intact.

    “Until the last minute of his life, he did not leave his job. He paid for this dedication with his life,” said Ahmed. “I was there only 10 minutes before the airstrike and the scene I faced when I went back to the apartment after the attack is indescribable. I didn’t know who had survived and who had died. Some people were only now shattered body parts. Most of those who died were women and children.”

    He said his father’s death was not just a loss for the family but for the whole of Gaza. Sultan was an experienced cardiologist and a leading figure in Gaza’s medical community. He was also one of only two remaining heart specialists in the territory, according to Healthcare Worker Watch (HWW), a Palestinian medical organisation.

    “My father was loved by all people,” said Ahmed. “He had been besieged at the Indonesian hospital and also at the Kamal Adwan hospital but he did not leave. For the first few months [of the war] we did not see him except a few hours of the day because he was always at the hospital.”

    His death means that all of the directors of the hospitals in northern Gaza have either been killed or detained by the Israeli military forces.

    Video footage of a bombed out apartment in Gaza

    The director of Kamal Adwan hospital, Dr Ahmed al-Kahlout, and his fellow acting director, Dr Hussam Abu Safiya, as well as Dr Ahmed Muhanna, the director of al-Awda hospital in northern Gaza, are all being held in an Israeli prison.

    In a statement, the IDF said: “On Wednesday, the IDF struck a key terrorist from the Hamas terrorist organisation in the area of Gaza City. The claim that as a result of the strike uninvolved civilians were harmed is being reviewed.

    “The IDF regrets any harm to uninvolved individuals and operates to mitigate harm to them as much as possible. The Hamas terrorist organisation systematically violates international law while using civilian infrastructure for terrorist activity and the civilian population as human shields. The incident is under review.”

    According to data from HWW, Sultan was the 70th healthcare worker to have been killed by the Israeli military in the past 50 days. The UN says that overall more than 1,400 healthcare workers have been killed in Gaza since the beginning of the war in October 2023.

    Under the Geneva conventions, the set of international laws that police the conduct of warring parties, attacks on healthcare workers during conflict could be war crimes. The conventions state that doctors and other healthcare professionals should be protected, not targeted or attacked during conflict, and must be allowed to carry on providing medical care to those who need it.

    Continue Reading

  • BBC Verify Live: Dramatic new footage emerges of strike on Tehran during Iran-Israel war

    BBC Verify Live: Dramatic new footage emerges of strike on Tehran during Iran-Israel war

    How often do French police stop small boat crossings?published at 13:06 British Summer Time

    Rob England
    BBC Verify senior data journalist

    French police have stopped a small boat from crossing the English Channel to the UK this morning by slashing its inflatable hull.

    Officers typically try to intercept boats before they launch, as French maritime law restricts their ability to intervene once vessels are in the water – unless those on board call for help.

    But this morning’s incident was in “waist-deep water” according to the BBC’s Andrew Harding, who witnessed it happen on a beach south of Boulogne on France’s Channel coast.

    So how often do French police step in?

    According to official figures, there have been at least 12,130 instances this year where people were prevented from boarding small boats.

    Recently, a gap has emerged between the number of preventions and successful crossings, with nearly 4,800 arrivals in the UK compared with about 2,700 preventions.

    The BBC has previously reported on smugglers adapting their methods – including the use of “taxi boats” to ferry people out to vessels waiting just offshore, in an attempt to exploit French legal limits on water-based intervention.

    France is now considering legislation to allow police to act once boats are in the water. However, some campaigners warn the move could endanger lives.

    Continue Reading

  • Japan’s July 5 panic — Over 1,000 quakes and a viral doomsday prediction

    Japan’s July 5 panic — Over 1,000 quakes and a viral doomsday prediction

    What’s happening right now?

    • Evacuations Underway: Residents of Akusekijima, part of Kagoshima’s Tokara island chain, began evacuating on Friday, July 4, following a 5.5-magnitude quake.

    • Ongoing Tremors: The region has experienced over 1,000 quakes since June 21.

    • Quake Intensity: The most recent quake measured lower 6 on Japan’s seismic scale — the strongest ever recorded on the island since 1919. Such quakes can cause structural damage and make standing difficult.

     Seismic warnings

    The Tokara Islands, prone to seismic activity, continue to experience frequent tremors. Although no tsunami risk has been reported, authorities warn of possible aftershocks. A similar evacuation occurred on June 3, when Akuseki Island residents were relocated after another powerful quake.

    Rumours and prophetic panic

    A manga comic published in 1999 has intensified public anxiety. Japanese artist Ryo Tatsuki’s manga The Future I Saw predicts a catastrophic earthquake and tsunami on July 5, 2025, said to be three times worse than the 2011 disaster. Despite repeated expert and government denials, the prediction has gone viral, fueling fear across Japan and East Asia.

    Why is July 5 creating panic?

    Much of the anxiety stems from Tatsuki’s 1999 manga, which has eerily forecasted:

    • The 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami

    • The COVID-19 pandemic in 2020

    • A predicted massive disaster on July 5, 2025

    Though Tatsuki insists she is not a prophet, the uncanny accuracy of her past predictions has sparked widespread speculation and fear, especially online.

    Economic and tourism fallout

    • Tourism hit: Rumours surrounding July 5 have led to flight cancellations from Hong Kong and a 30% drop in travel bookings from China, Thailand, and Vietnam.

    • Estimated loss: Japan could face economic losses of up to ¥560 billion ($3.9 billion), according to Nomura Research Institute.

    • Official Response: Japanese officials are urging calm. “We must not let unscientific rumours disrupt our economy,” said Miyagi Governor Yoshihiro Murai.

    Government and expert reaction

    • The Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) has dismissed the July 5 prophecy as a hoax.

    • Experts confirm that earthquake prediction remains scientifically impossible.

    • Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and disaster preparedness officials emphasise vigilance, not panic, and encourage reliance on official advisories.

    Who is Ryo Tatsuki?

    Known as Japan’s “Baba Vanga,” Tatsuki is a manga artist whose comic has predicted several past events, leading to a cult following. Her work has become the center of current fears, though experts stress that her claims are speculative and unscientific. 

    Ryo Tatsuki’s Eerie predictions – a quick rundown

    July 5, 2025: Earthquake & Tsunami

    2011 Tōhoku Earthquake

    2020 COVID-19 Pandemic

    2030: COVID Returns

    Freddie Mercury’s Death

    1995 Kobe Earthquake

    The ‘15-Year Delay’ Theory

    While Japan faces real and measurable seismic risks, the government and scientific experts urge the public to stay alert but not alarmed. Predictions from manga artists may make for intriguing reading — but they should not override scientific evidence, official guidance, and disaster preparedness protocols.

    Authorities have urged the public to stay informed through official channels, avoid panic, and verify information before sharing it.

    With inputs from AFP, agencies

    Continue Reading

  • Israeli military kills 15 in Gaza as Trump waits for Hamas response to ceasefire proposal – Reuters

    1. Israeli military kills 15 in Gaza as Trump waits for Hamas response to ceasefire proposal  Reuters
    2. Israel kills more than 300 in Gaza in 48 hours as focus intensifies on GHF  Al Jazeera
    3. At least 15 Palestinians killed in Israeli attacks on Khan Younis: report  Dawn
    4. 95 Palestinians martyred amidst continued Israeli aggression  Ptv.com.pk
    5. Dozens killed in Gaza as Israel intensifies bombardment, rescuers say  BBC

    Continue Reading

  • At least 27 Palestinians in Gaza killed by Israeli forces since dawn

    At least 27 Palestinians in Gaza killed by Israeli forces since dawn

    Listen to article

    At least 27 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces in Gaza since dawn, according to medical sources.

    Hospital officials told Al Jazeera that five of the victims were shot near an aid distribution point north of Rafah in southern Gaza.

    Earlier, at least 15 people were killed when Israeli airstrikes targeted tents sheltering displaced residents in the al-Mawasi area, close to Khan Younis in southern Gaza.

    US President Donald Trump said on Friday that it would probably be known within 24 hours how Hamas will respond to a proposed ceasefire deal with Israel in Gaza, Reuters reports

    Trump stated earlier this week that Israel has agreed to the terms of a 60-day ceasefire. He urged the Palestinian group Hamas to accept the deal promptly, warning that the situation could deteriorate further if the offer is rejected.

    “We’ll probably know in 24 hours what Hamas decides,” Trump told reporters, without giving further details.

    The announcement comes ahead of Trump’s scheduled meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on Monday. The leaders are expected to discuss the truce proposal and ongoing efforts to secure the release of hostages held in Gaza.

    60-day ceasefire proposal

    Hamas said on Wednesday it was studying what US President Donald Trump called a “final” ceasefire proposal for Gaza but that Israel must pull out of the enclave.

    In a statement, the Palestinian group said it was studying new ceasefire offers received from mediators Egypt and Qatar but that it aimed to reach an agreement that would ensure an end to the war and an Israeli pullout from Gaza.

    Meanwhile, Netanyahu called for the elimination of Hamas in his first public remarks since Trump’s announcement.

    “There will not be a Hamas. There will not be a ‘Hamastan’. We’re not going back to that. It’s over,” Netanyahu told a meeting hosted by the Trans-Israel pipeline.

    The two sides’ statements reiterated long-held positions, giving no clues as to whether or how a compromise agreement could be reached.

    Israel’s war on Gaza

    The Israeli army has launched a brutal offensive against Gaza since October 2023, killing at least 57,012 Palestinians, including 134,592 children. More than 111,588 people have been injured, and over 14,222 are missing and presumed dead.

    Last November, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

    Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its war on the enclave.

    The proposed deal includes a pause in hostilities, increased humanitarian aid, and negotiations on the release of captives.

     

    Continue Reading