Minggu, 12 November 2023

Anwar meets leaders of Jordan, Iran and Pakistan - The Star Online

KUALA LUMPUR: A meeting was held between Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim and the King of Jordan, King Abdullah II, on the sidelines of the 8th Extraordinary Summit of the Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC) in Riyadh.

“The meeting created opportunities for bilateral cooperation between Malaysia and Jordan, besides highest-level visits in 2024, as well as private sector collaboration, especially in drone 2technology and military cooperation.

“We also discussed the need to address the tension in the West Bank and Baitulmaqdis, especially the Israeli settlers’ aggression against the Palestinians,” he said in a Facebook post about the Saturday meeting.

He said they also discussed possible efforts to be taken to stop the war in Gaza and the humanitarian crisis affecting innocent people in the region.

Bernama reported that Anwar also held bilateral talks with Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar, the caretaker Prime Minister of Pakistan.

Also present at the bilateral meeting were Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Dr Zambry Abdul Kadir and Foreign Ministry secretary-general Datuk Seri Amran Mohamed Zin.

In a Facebook post later, Anwar expressed hope that his meeting with Kakar would take bilateral relations between Malaysia and Pakistan to greater heights.

Anwar also held bilateral talks with Iranian president Ebrahim Raisi, saying they are ready to improve bilateral relations in the fields of economy, education and science and technology.

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2023-11-12 22:59:15Z
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More Gaza hospitals suspend operations as Israel hunts Hamas - CNA

"NO ONE IS ALLOWED IN, NOBODY IS ALLOWED OUT"

Israel's military said it had offered to evacuate newborn babies and had placed 300 litres of fuel at Shifa's entrance on Saturday night, but that both gestures had been blocked by Hamas.

Muhammad Abu Salmiya, director of Shifa, said reports of refusing to leave the diesel were "lies and slander". Ashraf Al-Qidra, spokesperson for the Health Ministry in Hamas-controlled Gaza, said that of 45 babies in incubators at Shifa, three had already died.

Shifa was out of reach for the newly wounded, said Mohammad Qandil, a doctor at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis in south Gaza, who is in touch with colleagues there.

"Shifa hospital now isn't working, no one is allowed in, nobody is allowed out," he said.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said Al-Quds hospital was also out of service, with staff struggling to care for those already there with little medicine, food and water.

"Al Quds hospital has been cut off from the world in the last six to seven days. No way in, no way out," said Tommaso Della Longa, spokesperson for the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

Three UN agencies expressed horror at the situation in the hospitals, saying it had in 36 days registered at least 137 attacks on healthcare facilities, resulting in 521 deaths and 686 injuries - including 16 dead and 38 wounded medics.

"The world cannot stand silent while hospitals, which should be safe havens, are transformed into scenes of death, devastation, and despair," it said, saying half of Gaza's hospitals were now closed.

With the humanitarian situation across Gaza worsening, 80 foreigners and several injured Palestinians crossed into Egypt in the first evacuations since Friday, four Egyptian security sources said.

Poland said 18 of them were its citizens, and US national security adviser Jake Sullivan told CBS News American citizens would be moved out of Gaza during Sunday.

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2023-11-12 22:52:45Z
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Gaza hospitals 'no longer operational' as UN aid chief condemns 'reprehensible' attacks - The Straits Times

GAZA – Intense fighting raged around Gaza hospitals on Sunday, with some of them running out of fuel and power, prompting a top United Nations official to condemn Israel’s attacks on hospitals as “unconscionable” and “reprehensible”.

The Palestine Red Crescent Society said the Al-Quds Hospital in the Gaza Strip was “out of service and no longer operational” due to “depletion of available fuel and power outage”.

Al-Shifa, the largest medical facility that houses thousands of refugees, as well as other hospitals in northern Gaza, were also barely able to care for patients.

Dr Mohammad Qandil of Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip said: “Shifa Hospital now isn’t working, no one is allowed in, nobody is allowed out. And if you are wounded or injured around Gaza area, you can’t be evacuated by our ambulance to Shifa Hospital, so Shifa Hospital now is out of service.”

Mr Martin Griffiths, the UN humanitarian aid chief, said hospitals across Gaza had been left with “no power, food or water”, and there had been shooting at civilians as they tried to flee.

“This is unconscionable, reprehensible and must stop,” he said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter. “There can be no justification for acts of war in healthcare facilities.”

But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that Israel had offered fuel to Gaza’s Al-Shifa Hospital.

“On the contrary, we offered actually, last night, to give them enough fuel to operate the hospital, operate the incubators and so on, because we (have) no battle with patients or civilians at all,” he told NBC News.

“Hamas, (which) is hiding in the hospitals and placing itself there, doesn’t want the fuel for the hospital... it wants to get fuel that it will take from the hospitals to the tunnels, to its war machine.”

Hamas denies Israeli allegations that it has command posts under Al-Shifa and other Gaza hospitals.

Israel’s military also said it was ready to evacuate babies from Al-Shifa on Sunday, but Palestinian officials said the people inside were still trapped, with three newborns dead and dozens at risk from a power outage.

Speaking from inside the biggest hospital, Al-Shifa, Gaza Health Ministry spokesman Ashraf Al-Qidra said Israeli fire had not hit it directly overnight but was “terrorising medical officials and civilians alike”.

When asked about Israel’s offer to evacuate the babies, Mr Al-Qidra said: “We have not been informed about any mechanism to get the babies out to a safer hospital. So far, we are praying for their safety and not to lose more of them.”

Twenty of Gaza’s 36 hospitals are “no longer functioning”, according to UN’s humanitarian agency.

In the Indonesian Hospital in Beit Lahiya in the northern Gaza Strip, Mosab Subeih, a baby boy, had been rushed in from a house that was struck by an Israeli missile.

“He has a direct injury to the head and is bleeding, and we have no surgery,” said one of the medics treating him with a manual resuscitator as power had been cut.

On Sunday, Israel said people could safely evacuate from three hospitals in northern Gaza, including Al-Shifa, via one of its exits. Hospital director Mohammad Abu Selmeyah told Al Arabiya television that there was no safe passage out.

With the humanitarian situation across Gaza worsening, 80 foreigners and several injured Palestinians crossed into Egypt in the first evacuations since Friday, four Egyptian security sources said. Poland said 18 of them were Polish citizens.

Very little aid has entered Gaza since Israel declared war on Hamas more than a month ago after militants rampaged through southern Israel, killing about 1,200 people and taking more than 200 hostage, according to Israeli officials.

Palestinian officials said on Friday that 11,078 Gaza residents had been killed in air and artillery strikes since then, around 40 per cent of them children.

Disease is spreading amid evacuees packed into schools and other shelters and surviving on tiny amounts of food and water, international aid agencies say.

Some countries have taken to delivering aid by parachute. Jordan said it had airdropped a batch into a field hospital early on Sunday.

On Saturday, the leaders of Iran and Saudi Arabia, two regional rivals that restored diplomatic ties in 2023, met in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, at a summit, where they called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.

The two Islamic countries, which support opposing factions in proxy conflicts across the region, announced their diplomatic breakthrough in March, after years of hostility, in a deal brokered by China. But it was unclear whether the shift would lead to a lasting detente between Saudi Arabia’s Sunni monarchy and Iran’s Shi’ite government.

Israel’s bombardment of the Gaza Strip, however, appears to have hastened the warming of ties between Saudi Arabia and Iran, just as delicate diplomacy had been inching Saudi Arabia and Israel towards possible normalisation of relations. Iran, which Israel considers its most dangerous foe, is a powerful patron of Hamas.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, whose visit to Saudi Arabia was the first by an Iranian president to the kingdom in more than a decade, was greeted at the summit venue by Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The Iranian President draped on his shoulder a keffiyeh, the black-and-white square chequered scarf that has become a badge of Palestinian identity.

The two leaders had spoken by phone for the first time just a few days after Oct 7.

At the summit, Mr Raisi criticised the international community for what he said was its silence on violations committed against Palestinian civilians in Gaza. Israel and the United States – Israel’s most important ally – oppose a ceasefire for now, saying it would only allow Hamas’ military wing to regroup, although Israel has agreed to what officials call short “humanitarian pauses” to allow people to leave combat zones.

The Saudi Crown Prince said the crisis had demonstrated “the failure of the Security Council and the international community to put an end to the flagrant Israeli violations of international laws”.

The Arab and Muslim participants at the summit called for an arms embargo against Israel, and said regional peace could not be achieved without resolving the Palestinian issue based on a two-state solution, a long-time pillar of Middle East diplomacy efforts.

Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister, Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud, said regional countries’ pressure on Israel was beginning to pay off.

“We are starting to see a shift in positions, not enough yet, but moving in the right direction,” he said at a news conference after the summit.

“We are starting to hear that countries that used to give Israel a blank cheque are now talking about protecting civilians and the importance of conducting combat within the boundaries of international humanitarian law and humanitarian pauses.”

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2023-11-12 15:08:06Z
2574209220

Iran and Saudi Arabia, regional rivals, call for Gaza ceasefire - The Straits Times

JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia – The leaders of Iran and Saudi Arabia, regional rivals that restored diplomatic ties in 2023, met on Saturday in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, at a summit where they called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and the unconditional delivery of humanitarian aid to the enclave, which Israeli forces have besieged since the Oct 7 Hamas attack.

The two Islamic countries, which support opposing factions in proxy conflicts across the region, first announced their diplomatic breakthrough in March, after years of hostility, in a deal brokered by China. But it was unclear whether the shift would lead to a lasting detente between Saudi Arabia’s Sunni monarchy and Iran’s Shi’ite government.

Israel’s bombardment of the Gaza Strip, however, appears to have hastened the warming of ties between Saudi Arabia and Iran, just as delicate diplomacy had been inching Saudi Arabia and Israel towards possible normalisation of relations. Iran, which Israel considers its most dangerous foe, is a powerful patron of Hamas.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, whose visit to Saudi Arabia was the first by an Iranian president to the kingdom in more than a decade, was greeted at the summit venue by Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The Iranian President draped on his shoulder a kaffiyeh, the black-and-white square chequered scarf that has become a badge of Palestinian identity.

The two leaders had spoken by phone for the first time just a few days after Oct 7. Iran said in March that Mr Raisi had received an invitation to visit the kingdom shortly after the two countries announced resumed relations.

The war was set off after the Oct 7 attack in southern Israel by Hamas, the armed Palestinian group that controls Gaza, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 240 others were taken hostage, according to Israeli officials.

Since then, Israel has bombarded Gaza with thousands of air strikes, laid siege to the territory by cutting off water, food, fuel and other necessities, and launched a ground invasion with the stated intention of destroying Hamas, which Israel and many other countries regard as a terrorist organisation.

The Israeli air war and artillery strikes have killed more than 10,000 Palestinians, many of them children and women, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry.

At the summit, Mr Raisi criticised the international community for what he said was its silence on violations committed against Palestinian civilians in Gaza. Israel and the United States – Israel’s most important ally – oppose a ceasefire for now, saying it would only allow Hamas’ military wing to regroup, although Israel has agreed to what officials call short “humanitarian pauses” to allow people to leave combat zones.

The Saudi Crown Prince said the crisis had demonstrated “the failure of the Security Council and the international community to put an end to the flagrant Israeli violations of international laws”.

The Arab and Muslim participants at the summit called for an arms embargo against Israel and said regional peace could not be achieved without resolving the Palestinian issue based on a two-state solution, a long-time pillar of Middle East diplomacy efforts.

Prince Faisal bin Farhan, Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister, said regional countries’ pressure on Israel was beginning to pay off.

“We are starting to see a shift in positions, not enough yet, but moving in the right direction,” he said at a news conference after the summit. “We are starting to hear that countries that used to give Israel a blank cheque are now talking about protecting civilians and the importance of conducting combat within the boundaries of international humanitarian law and humanitarian pauses.”

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2023-11-12 02:42:00Z
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Israel offers to evacuate babies from main Gaza hospital amid fierce fighting - CNA

Muhammad Abu Salmiya, the hospital's director, told Al Jazeera TV, that protecting patients was the priority.

"We contacted the Red Cross and informed them we ran out of water, oxygen, fuel, and everything," Abu Salmiya said.

"The premature babies, patients of the intensive care, and even wounded people couldn't survive with the lack of electricity ... If the occupation forces want to evacuate the wounded people to any place in the world that is safer than the Gaza Strip, we are not against that."

Israel's chief military spokesperson, Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, said the Israeli military would help evacuate babies from the hospital, at the request of the staff at Al Shifa. Al-Qidra had said there were 45 babies in total.

Asked about the evacuations, Al-Qidra said: "We have not been informed about any mechanism to get the babies out to a safer hospital. So far we are praying for their safety and not to lose more of them."

Earlier, the World Health Organization expressed "grave concern" for the safety of everyone trapped in the hospital by the fighting and said it had lost communications with its contacts there.

Israel has said doctors, patients and thousands of evacuees who have taken refuge at hospitals in northern Gaza must leave so it can tackle Hamas gunmen who it says have placed command centres under and around them.

Hamas denies using hospitals this way. Medical staff say patients could die if they are moved and Palestinian officials say Israeli fire makes it dangerous for others to leave.

Israeli Agriculture Minister Avi Dichter called the evacuations "Gaza's Nakba" - a reference to mass dispossessions of Palestinians after Israel was founded in 1948.

"Operationally there's no way to conduct a war the way the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) wants to conduct it inside Gaza territories," Dichter said. "I don't know how it will end."

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2023-11-12 07:31:00Z
2574209220

Batu Caves Deepavali Celebrations draws diverse crowd - New Straits Times

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  1. Batu Caves Deepavali Celebrations draws diverse crowd  New Straits Times
  2. When the Festival of Lights doesn't shine as bright  Free Malaysia Today
  3. Orphans looking forward to Festival of Lights  The Star Online
  4. Deepavali’s message of devotion  The Hindu
  5. Celebrating Deepavali in a time of war and peace  Free Malaysia Today
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2023-11-12 04:34:57Z
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Sabtu, 11 November 2023

Anwar holds bilateral talks with leaders from Pakistan, Iran - New Straits Times

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  1. Anwar holds bilateral talks with leaders from Pakistan, Iran  New Straits Times
  2. Gaza in spotlight as Arab, Muslim blocs meet in Saudi Arabia  CNA
  3. Iran and Saudi Arabia, regional rivals, call for Gaza ceasefire  The Straits Times
  4. Arab and Muslim leaders slam Israel, demand swift end to ‘barbaric’ war  South China Morning Post
  5. Mansour bin Zayed participates in Joint Arab-Islamic Extraordinary Summit in Riyadh  ThePrint
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2023-11-12 01:38:40Z
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