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An Israeli airstrike killed a man, his wife and their six-year-old daughter in the Gaza Strip yesterday, Palestinian health officials said as talks to advance the US-brokered Gaza ceasefire deal faltered. The strike on an apartment building in Deir Al-Balah in central Gaza killed Omar Abu Qassem, his wife, Asma, and their daughter, Habeeba, medics said. Their three-year-old son, Sami, survived, but was injured, medics said. The Israeli military said the strike targeted a Hamas fighter. Friends and relatives arrived at the Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir Al-Balah where they paid farewell to the three white-shrouded bodies before burying them after performing special prayers. “The child is the lone survivor. How (to live) without a father, without a mother? What kind of cruelty is this that the people of Palestine, the people of Gaza, are enduring?” Abu Anas Shahin, a relative, said to Reuters.“Where is the mercy? Where is the humanity?” he said. More than 58,000 children in Gaza have lost one or both parents, according to UN figures as of November 2025. In Sheikh Radwan neighbourhood in Gaza City, an Israeli airstrike killed one person, medics said. The deaths add to a toll of more than 1,100 Palestinians, mostly civilians, killed by Israeli attacks since an October ceasefire between Israel and Hamas to end the war took effect, according to health officials in the enclave. Hamas doesn’t usually disclose information about its fatalities. The truce halted major fighting, but has failed to stop near-daily Israeli strikes. Four Israeli soldiers have been killed by fighters in Gaza over the same period. The latest violence comes as Hamas leaders wrapped up another round of truce talks in Cairo on Tuesday. The discussions — mediated by Egypt, Turkiye and Qatar — were aimed at implementing the second phase of US President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace plan. The talks included the disarmament of Hamas and the Israeli military’s withdrawal from the strip, according to sources close to the talks, who said there had been little progress amid deep distrust between the two sides. The second phase also includes allowing a US-backed Palestinian technocratic committee to assume power from Hamas, the deployment of an international security force, and the start of the reconstruction of Gaza, which has been devastated by the war. Five countries — Indonesia, Morocco, Kazakhstan, Kosovo and Albania — have committed to providing troops to the US-backed International Stabilisation Force. However, none have yet been deployed as negotiations between Trump’s Board of Peace and Hamas have stalled for months. Speaking at an aid donor meeting in Brussels on Monday, Nickolay Mladenov said the October ceasefire was holding but “imperfectly” with violations continuing, adding that Hamas has yet to agree to what he called a “roadmap” for negotiations. Hamas official Basem Naim accused Mladenov of supporting Israel’s position in negotiations, and failing to hold the country accountable for violating the ceasefire and not upholding the terms of the first phase of the Trump plan. The plan called for Israel to withdraw its troops to a demarcated “yellow” line, but Israel has been slowly moving its troops forward and now effectively occupies more than 60% of the strip.Hamas has repeatedly said that it cannot advance to the second phase of the peace plan until the terms of the first phase are fulfilled. Source link
His Excellency Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al-Thani, met on Thursday with the Presidential Advisor on Security Affairs of the Republic of South Sudan Tut Gatluak, who is visiting Qatar with an accompanying delegation.During the meeting, HE Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs received a message of condolence from President of the Republic of South Sudan Salva Kiir Mayardit, on the passing of HH the Father Amir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani.The two sides also discussed bilateral relations and ways to expand cooperation, as well as several issues of mutual interest. Related Story Source link
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The US Supreme Court appeared sympathetic Wednesday towards moves by President Donald Trump’s administration to strip humanitarian protections from hundreds of thousands of Haitian and Syrian immigrants, part of his signature immigration crackdown. The justices heard arguments in the administration’s appeal of rulings by federal judges in New York and Washington, DC, halting its actions to terminate Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, previously provided by the US government to more than 350,000 people from Haiti and 6,100 from Syria. The legal dispute presents a test of Trump’s executive power and the Supreme Court’s traditional deference to presidents on matters of immigration, national security and foreign policy. The court last year let the administration end TPS for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans. US Solicitor General D John Sauer, arguing for the Trump administration, said the lawsuits challenging the TPS revocation are meritless and barred by federal law. The lawsuits before the Supreme Court “challenge the very kind of foreign policy-laden judgments that are traditionally entrusted to the political branches,” Sauer said. Revoking TPS and other humanitarian protections is part of Trump’s broader rollback of legal and illegal immigration since he returned to office in January 2025. In defending its actions on TPS, the administration has said such protections were always meant to be temporary. The United States first provided these protections to Haitians after a major earthquake in 2010 and to Syrians after their country descended into civil war in 2012. Under US law, TPS is a designation that allows migrants from countries stricken by war, natural disaster or other catastrophes to live and work in the United States while it is unsafe for them to return to their home countries. Ahilan Arulanantham, the lawyer representing the Syrian immigrants, said the administration’s position “contravenes the text, bedrock administrative law and common sense,” adding that “the government reads the statute like a blank check.” The administration has said it followed proper procedures, and has made the broader argument that courts cannot second-guess its TPS decisions in the first place, an assertion that if accepted by the court could doom challenges going forward. The law governing TPS “bars judicial review of both the (Department of Homeland Security) secretary’s ultimate decision, whether to designate, extend or terminate and of each antecedent step along the way to that determination,” Sauer told the justices. “That provision means what it says,” Sauer said, adding that “attempts to carve out exceptions to the review bar would eviscerate it.” The Trump administration has drawn parallels between the revocation of TPS and Trump’s travel ban targeting several Muslim-majority countries during his first term, which the Supreme Court declined to block in a 2018 decision known as Trump v. Hawaii. Justice Sonia Sotomayor, one of the three liberal justices, said the administration’s position is at odds with the relevant federal statute and the US Constitution. “Congress could have said any termination of TPS status is unreviewable, but it didn’t,” Sotomayor said. The relevant statute may not allow a challenge to the “substantive conclusions” of whether TPS should be terminated, but it does seem to allow challenges to the procedural steps undertaken to get there, Sotomayor said. “What you are basically saying is Congress wrote a statute for no purpose,” Sotomayor said. Federal law, Sotomayor said, clearly “set forth procedural steps that had to be followed.” TPS recipients, until the termination, “are here lawfully with permission,” Sotomayor added. “They are entitled to due process, and now Congress has given them a process — it may not be a court process, but that’s okay, it’s a process — and you are saying it is unreviewable whether the president has followed that process.” The Supreme Court has granted the Republican president’s requests to immediately implement various hardline immigration policies while legal challenges continue to play out in courts. For instance, it let Trump deport immigrants to countries where they have no ties and let federal agents target people for deportation based in part on their race or language. The legal dispute could have wide implications, affecting 1.3 million immigrants from all 17 countries currently designated for TPS, according to the plaintiffs. Trump’s administration has sought to rescind the protections for 13 of those countries so far. Conservative Justice Brett Kavanaugh asked Sauer why Congress would have wanted to prohibit judicial review of TPS determinations. Sauer responded that revoking a TPS determination is “the sort of foreign policy-freighted decision that lies at the heartland” of the executive branch’s competence. “Those sort of determinations being second-guessed at the district courts – it’s almost like these district court judges (are) appointing themselves junior varsity secretaries of state,” Sauer said. Lower courts ruled against the TPS terminations, finding that administration officials failed to follow mandatory protocols to assess conditions in a country before revoking its designation. The Trump administration has argued that courts should not be second-guessing whether government agencies engaged in sufficient consultant with each other before terminating TPS. Conservative Justice Samuel Alito seemed to endorse that argument, saying “it is always going to be possible to raise procedural objections to what’s been done.” When TPS for Syrians was terminated, “there was some consultation,” Alito said. “It was very brief, and maybe it was not what one would hope for, but still.” At issue are actions taken last year by Kristi Noem, Trump’s former Department of Homeland Security secretary, to revoke the TPS designations for Syria and Haiti, stating that providing this status to them was contrary to US national interests. Related Story Source link
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