International
Nearly 100 people killed in Israeli attack on north Gaza, Hamas-run civil defence says
Nearly 100 people killed in Israeli attack on north Gaza, Hamas-run civil defence says
Nearly 100 people, including children, have been killed in a large-scale Israeli ground, air and sea attack launched early Friday in north Gaza, the Hamas-run civil defence and residents have said.
The civil defence said at least nine homes and tents housing civilians had been bombed overnight and it had received dozens of calls from people trapped.
Witnesses also reported smoke bombs, artillery shelling and tanks in Beit Lahia.
Israel’s military said it was “operating to locate and dismantle terrorist infrastructure sites” in north Gaza and had “eliminated several terrorists” over the past day.
This marks the largest ground assault on north Gaza since Israel resumed its offensive in March.
Basheer al-Ghandour, who fled Beit Lahia for Jabalia after the attack, told the BBC people were sleeping when suddenly “intense bombing” hit overnight.
“It came from all sides – air strikes and warships. My brother’s house collapsed. There were 25 people inside,” he said.
He said 11 people were injured and five killed, including his nieces, aged five and 18, and a 15-year-old nephew. He and others tried to free relatives from the rubble.
“My brother’s wife is still under the rubble – we didn’t manage to rescue her. Because of how intense the bombing was, we had to flee,” he said.
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“We didn’t take anything with us – no furniture, no food, no flour. We even left in bare feet.”
Another survivor, Yousif Salem, told reporters he and his three children had “just escaped death”.
“An air strike hit our neighbours’ home – none of them survived,” he said.
He said artillery shells began hitting near their house as they were trapped inside. When he tried to leave, a quadcopter drone opened fire, he said.
He made a second attempt under heavy shelling, he said. All roads were blocked, but they managed to find a side road.
“We escaped only minutes before Israeli tanks encircled the area,” he said.
According to local residents, the attack began with smoke bomb barrages followed by intense artillery shelling from nearby Israeli positions.
Tanks then began advancing toward Al-Salateen neighbourhood in western Beit Lahia.
Witnesses reported that Israeli armoured vehicles surrounded a school sheltering hundreds of displaced civilians.
The attack in north Gaza comes after Israeli air strikes killed more than 120 people, mostly in the south, on Thursday.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said on Friday it had struck more than 150 “terror targets” throughout Gaza over the past day, including anti-tank missile posts, military structures, and centres where groups were planning to “carry out terrorist attacks against IDF troops”.
In south Gaza, the IDF said it had dismantled Hamas structures and shafts and killed “several terrorists” who Israel said had planned to plant an explosive device.
While Friday’s powerful overnight strikes and reported advance by ground troops west of Beit Lahia are significant, this does not yet look like Israel’s threatened major military offensive.
Israel’s government has pledged to intensify operations in Gaza and indefinitely reoccupy the Strip if Hamas did not accept a proposal for a temporary ceasefire and the return of remaining hostages by the end of President Donald Trump’s regional trip, which concluded on Friday.
While there has been no sign of a breakthrough with negotiating teams still in Doha, local media say that Arab mediators have been pushing for more time to give talks a chance.
A ceasefire between Israel and Hamas agreed in January broke down when Israel relaunched air strikes on Gaza in March.
Israel also implemented a total blockade on humanitarian aid, including food, that has been widely condemned by the UN as well as European and Arab countries.
Israel’s defence minister Israel Katz last month said the blockade was a “main pressure lever” to secure victory over Hamas and get all the hostages out.
There is growing evidence that Israel’s 10-week blockade is having an increasingly detrimental humanitarian impact. Aid organisations and residents say people in Gaza are now starving.
A recent UN-backed report said Gaza’s whole population – some 2.1 million people – is at critical risk of famine.
The Israeli government has insisted there is no shortage of food in Gaza and that the “real crisis is Hamas looting and selling aid”.
Israel and the US have proposed allowing in and distributing aid through private companies – a plan rejected by the UN.
The deteriorating situation in Gaza has drawn concern from the US this week.
Boarding his flight home from the Middle East, Trump said the US needs to “help out the Palestinians” and acknowledges “a lot of people are starving”.
On Thursday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the Trump administration was “troubled” by the humanitarian situation.
Israel launched a military campaign to destroy Hamas in response to the group’s cross-border attack on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
At least 53,000 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.
Fifty-eight hostages are still being held in Gaza, up to 23 of whom are believed to be alive.
Nearly 100 people killed in Israeli attack on north Gaza, Hamas-run civil defence says
BBC
International
Iran Declares Strait of Hormuz Fully Open
Iran Declares Strait of Hormuz Fully Open
Iran has announced that the Strait of Hormuz is now “completely open” to commercial shipping, marking a significant de-escalation in regional tensions and easing fears of global energy supply disruption.
Iran’s Foreign Minister, Abbas Araghchi, confirmed that the vital waterway would remain accessible to all vessels for the duration of the ongoing ceasefire linked to the conflict involving Lebanon.
The development follows weeks of heightened tensions and partial restrictions on maritime traffic through the strait, which had raised concerns about a potential global oil supply shock.
Global oil markets reacted swiftly to the announcement, with Brent crude and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) prices dropping by as much as 10 percent as investor confidence improved. The reopening is expected to ease pressure on supply chains, reduce shipping risks, and lower insurance costs for oil tankers navigating the region. Analysts say the move could provide short-term relief to energy-importing and oil-dependent economies, including Nigeria, which has been affected by price volatility in recent weeks.
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The reopening is tied to a fragile 10-day ceasefire following intense hostilities between Israel and Lebanon, which reportedly resulted in over 2,000 deaths and more than 7,000 injuries, according to official figures from Lebanese authorities. While the truce has created room for de-escalation, Iran has indicated that the long-term status of the Strait may depend on broader progress toward a comprehensive regional peace agreement.
Tehran has consistently linked maritime access to geopolitical developments, reinforcing the strategic importance of the waterway in ongoing diplomatic negotiations.
U.S. President Donald Trump reacted to the announcement, describing it as a positive development and suggesting that a wider agreement with Iran could be imminent. Trump has recently indicated that negotiations between Washington and Tehran are advancing, particularly on issues related to nuclear activities and regional stability.
Despite the positive signals, analysts warn that the situation remains uncertain. Shipping operators are expected to proceed cautiously until security conditions are fully stabilised. The key concern remains whether commercial traffic can resume smoothly and whether the ceasefire will hold beyond its initial timeframe.
For now, the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz is seen as a critical but tentative step toward regional stability, with global markets closely monitoring further developments.
Iran Declares Strait of Hormuz Fully Open
International
Eight Killed as Helicopter Crashes in Remote Indonesian Forest
Eight Killed as Helicopter Crashes in Remote Indonesian Forest
At least eight people have been confirmed dead after a helicopter operated by Matthew Air Nusantara crashed in a remote forested area of West Kalimantan, Indonesian authorities have said.
The ill-fated aircraft, identified as an Airbus H130, lost contact shortly after takeoff on Thursday morning, triggering an intensive search and rescue operation in one of the country’s most difficult terrains.
According to Indonesia’s national search and rescue agency, the helicopter departed from a plantation site in Melawi but disappeared from radar approximately five minutes into the flight. Officials said all six passengers and two crew members on board perished in the crash.
Head of the rescue agency, Mohammad Syafii, confirmed that the aircraft went down in a densely forested region marked by steep, hilly terrain, significantly hampering rescue efforts.
“The location of the crash is in a densely forested area with steep hills, making access extremely challenging,” Syafii said.
Search teams comprising military personnel, police, and emergency responders had to rely on overland routes to reach the site, slowing down recovery operations. Early findings revealed debris believed to be part of the helicopter’s tail located about three kilometres from the aircraft’s last known position.
Authorities have yet to release the identities of the victims, pending formal identification and notification of next of kin.
The helicopter had reportedly taken off from a plantation owned by Citra Mahkota, though officials have not disclosed the purpose of the flight.
Investigators are expected to begin a full probe into the cause of the crash once the wreckage is fully accessed. No immediate indication has been given as to whether weather, technical failure, or human error may have played a role.
The tragedy adds to growing concerns over aviation safety in Indonesia, where air transport remains vital for connecting remote and isolated regions spread across thousands of islands.
In recent years, the country has recorded several fatal aviation incidents. In January, a turboprop aircraft chartered by the fisheries ministry crashed into a mountain in Sulawesi, killing all 10 people onboard. Similarly, a helicopter crash in South Kalimantan last September claimed eight lives, while another crash in Ilaga shortly afterward left four people dead.
Authorities say efforts are ongoing to recover all bodies and secure the crash site, as the nation once again grapples with the human toll of air travel accidents in its challenging geography.
Eight Killed as Helicopter Crashes in Remote Indonesian Forest
International
Trump Says Iran Agrees to Hand Over Enriched Uranium in Nuclear Deal Talks
Trump Says Iran Agrees to Hand Over Enriched Uranium in Nuclear Deal Talks
United States President Donald Trump has claimed that Iran has agreed to surrender its remaining stockpile of enriched uranium and abandon any ambition of developing nuclear weapons, saying negotiations between both countries are “very close” to a breakthrough.
Speaking to reporters at the White House before departing for Las Vegas, Trump said ongoing diplomatic talks had reached an advanced stage, insisting Iran had agreed “to almost everything” in the proposed framework.
“We’re very close to making a deal with Iran. They’ve totally agreed that they will not have a nuclear weapon,” Trump said.
He further claimed that Iran had agreed to return what he repeatedly referred to as “nuclear dust,” a term he used to describe enriched uranium stockpiles believed to be stored in heavily fortified underground facilities.
“They’ve agreed to give us back the nuclear dust,” he added.
Trump also suggested that a fresh round of negotiations could take place over the weekend, while acknowledging uncertainty over the durability of the current ceasefire arrangement linked to wider tensions in the Middle East.
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The comments come amid heightened diplomatic and military tensions in the region, following weeks of conflict that have disrupted global energy markets and raised concerns over the security of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical oil shipping route.
However, Iranian authorities have not confirmed Trump’s claims. Officials in Tehran have previously rejected similar statements, insisting that no final agreement has been reached on key issues, including uranium enrichment levels and sanctions relief.
Recent diplomatic engagements involving intermediaries have reportedly focused on narrowing differences over Iran’s nuclear programme, but major sticking points remain unresolved. These include verification mechanisms for uranium stockpiles and the scope of any restrictions on enrichment activities.
Analysts say any potential agreement would require strict international monitoring to ensure compliance, particularly given the complexity of tracking enriched material stored in secure facilities.
The situation also carries broader geopolitical implications, with energy markets reacting sharply to tensions in the region. A sustained de-escalation could ease pressure on global oil prices and improve stability across major supply routes.
While the White House has signalled optimism about progress, no formal agreement has been announced, and diplomatic channels remain active as both sides continue discussions.
Trump Says Iran Agrees to Hand Over Enriched Uranium in Nuclear Deal Talks
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