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Israeli drone strike on Gaza kills eight children at a water point

Israeli drone strike on Gaza kills eight children at a water point

The Journal14-07-2025
A DRONE STRIKE at a refugee camp in Gaza killed ten people, including eight children, who were collecting water earlier yesterday.
Israel's military admitted to the incident at the Nuseirat camp, claiming a technical error caused munitions to fall 'dozes of metres from the target'. More
than 40 people were killed by Israeli strikes yesterday in Gaza
.
Despite previous positive pronouncements claiming ceasefire talks between Israel and militant group Hamas were progressing, the negotiations have now all but stalled. Delegations have spent a week trying to reach a truce agreement.
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There was no immediate sign an end to the fighting was near. Strikes across the Gaza killed at least 43 people yesterday, including 11 at a Gaza City market, the region's civil defence agency said.
The Israeli military, which has recently intensified operations across Gaza, said that in the past 24 hours the air force 'struck more than 150 terror targets'.
It released aerial footage of what it said were fighter jet strikes attacking Hamas targets around Beit Hanoun, in northern Gaza, showing explosions on the ground and thick smoke in the sky.
More than 58,000 people, most of them civilians, have been killed by Israel's counteroffensive on Gaza following an attack by Hamas in October 2023.
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© AFP 2025
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Iran planning to execute 30,000 in repeat of horror 1988 ‘massacre' as part of desperate crackdown, insiders fear
Iran planning to execute 30,000 in repeat of horror 1988 ‘massacre' as part of desperate crackdown, insiders fear

The Irish Sun

time33 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

Iran planning to execute 30,000 in repeat of horror 1988 ‘massacre' as part of desperate crackdown, insiders fear

IRAN'S merciless regime is plotting to kill tens of thousands of prisoners in a repeat of the 1988 massacre, insiders fear. Rattled supreme leader Ali Khamenei has ordered a surge in executions - turning hangings into public spectacles in a chilling warning to dissidents. 9 Executions are often well-attended public events Credit: AFP 9 Mehdi Hassani has been executed by Iran's regime Credit: NCRI 9 Behrouz Ehsani was also killed by the regime Credit: NCRI It comes as callous mullahs yesterday hanged two political prisoners who had been jailed on trumped-up charges. Mehdi Hassani, 48, and Behrouz Ehsani, 70, were killed in cold blood for daring to oppose the barbaric regime they were forced to live under. Earlier this year, The Sun shared a Ehsani meanwhile bravely More on Iran Iran has repeatedly unleashed lethal force on its own people - especially at times of crisis - in a sickening bid to stamp out rebellion. Glaring vulnerabilities in the regime's grip on power have been exposed after Israel and the US launched a monumental effort to destroy its nuclear threat. Executions and arrests are weaponised to scare dissidents, and it is feared panicked Ayatollah Khamenei is planning a similar plot to the 1988 massacre of 30,000 political prisoners. The regime was also in turmoil that year after accepting a ceasefire with Iraq. Most read in The Sun Now, death sentences against those affiliated with the main democratic opposition, the People's Mojahedin Organisation of Iran (PMOI/MEK), are being expedited as Khamenei scrambles for control. Chillingly, state-run Fars News Agency - a mouthpiece of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps - this month issued a public call to repeat 1998's inhumane massacre as the regime fears for its survival. Dad set to be executed in Iran shares powerful audio message blasting regime from behind bars British politicians and leading human rights lawyers have urged the UK government to intervene to prevent such an atrocity. Alongside the (NCRI), they also criticised the focus on Tehran's nuclear programme, warning that it has overshadowed the worsening human rights crisis. Baroness O'Loan DBE said: "Those threatening our national security are the same individuals planning atrocities in Iran's prisons. So, we must act, now." Dowlat Nowrouzi, the NCRI's UK representative, told The Sun: "The international community's failure to hold the regime accountable for its atrocities, including crimes against humanity and genocide, has allowed the regime to enjoy impunity. "It is long overdue to hold Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader, and others accountable for committing these crimes. It comes as one of Iran's longest-serving political prisoners has laid bare the dire situation in a handwritten letter shared with The Sun. More than 100 armed guards raided the ward Masouri was on, beating prisoners before hauling them across the floor with handcuffs and leg shackles and bags over their heads. Masouri has been exiled to the notorious Zahedan Prison - just days after penning a haunting letter warning a massacre is looming. 9 Saeed Masouri has been in jail for 25 years Credit: NCRI 9 He shared a chilling handwritten letter from inside jail Credit: SUPPLIED 9 Four Iranian convicts hanging after a public execution in 2007 Credit: AFP 9 Pictures show a man named Balal who was led to the gallows by his victim's family He wrote: "Just as it happened in 1988, today we fear that the same path is being repeated, albeit with different language and methods. "Back then, it was called the 'Death Committee'; today, it is 'Fire at discretion'. "But this widespread repression and intensification of executions are not signs of strength—they are admissions of the regime's helplessness in the face of truth and the will of the people. "Likewise, this so-called 'fire at discretion' is nothing but an attempt to conceal the depth of infiltration, decay, and structural collapse within the ruling system—failures they now seek to compensate for by exacting revenge on the people of Iran and their prisoners." All contact between political prisoners and their families has now been cut off. Ms Nowrouzi added: "The assault on Mr. Masouri is not an isolated incident. "It is part of a broader campaign of escalating executions, arbitrary detentions, and systematic repression. "The regime, emboldened by decades of impunity and inaction, is now openly signaling its intent to repeat the horrors of 1988. "As Mr. Masouri warned in his message from prison, 'a crime is in progress,' and the world must not remain silent." Iran's calculating mullahs meanwhile are refusing to hand the bodies of slain Ehsani and Hassani back to their grieving families. How Iran is stifling critics after defeat to Israel by Katie Davis, Chief Foreign Reporter (Digital) TYRANNICAL leaders in Iran have demanded citizens act as undercover informants to turn in anyone who dares oppose the regime, insiders say. Panicked mullahs have also ordered "telecom cages" be installed around prisons as the regime Political prisoners - largely Insiders say their treatment is being weaponised to deter opposition. The fight against repression has loomed large for decades in the rogue state - but the so-called 12-day war last month has made the barbaric Ayatollah more fearful than ever of being toppled. Sources inside Iran told The Sun how a direct alert has been issued to the public, urging them to report any activity linked to resistance groups of the People's Mojahedin Organisation of Iran (PMOI/MEK). Regime loyalists have been implored to act as informants - compiling detailed reports with photos, times, locations, licence plates and facial features of suspected individuals. Orders were publicised in an official government news outlet - marking a distinct shift in the paranoid regime's usual strategy of covert suppression. Insiders noted it points to the regime's growing perceived threat posed by the PMOI's grassroots operations. The PMOI has long fought for a secular, democratic Iran, and is understood to be gaining traction amid frustration with economic hardship, political repression, and international isolation. Insiders say they are instead planning to secretly bury them in a twisted bid to cover up their actions. Hassani's devastated daughter, who bravely campaigned for her dad's release, wept as she told how they had not been informed of his execution. In a harrowing video message shared with The Sun, she said: "They didn't grant him a final visit before the execution. "None of us knew, not even my father, who had told my sister to visit him on Monday. "I don't know what to say. I fought so hard. I had so much hope, so much… I still can't believe what has happened." Maryam Rajavi, president-elect of the NCRI, has called on the United Nations to take "concrete and effective measures against a regime built on executions and torture". Mrs Rajavi said: "They [Ehsani and Hassani] now join the eternal ranks of those who have given their lives in the struggle for freedom and justice. "In what appears to be a desperate act during the twilight of his rule, Khamenei has perpetrated yet another grave crime - an effort to delay the inevitable collapse of his regime. Ayatollah 'on his heels' by Katie Davis, Chief Foreign Reporter (Digital) IRAN'S merciless regime is "fully on its heels" - leaving the Ayatollah's days numbered, a former US ambassador says. But the West will not be able to topple Tehran's brutal dictatorship, Mark D. Wallace, CEO & Founder of United Against Nuclear Iran, warned. The ex-ambassador to the UN said it will be down to the Iranian people - who have suffered outrageous repression for decades - to finally end the regime's rule. Iron-fist fanatics have used violent and ruthless measures, including executions and torture, in a twisted bid to stamp out opposition and silence critics. The regime's future now appears to be hanging by a thread, however, as it sits in a "combustible state" following the obliteration of its nuclear empire by the US and Israel. Several of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's top military brass were wiped out in the 12-day war - leaving the barbaric ruler vulnerable. Power held by Iran's terror proxies - including Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen - has also been severely depleted. Wallace told The Sun: "The regime isn't just wounded, they're fully on their heels." "Far from securing his hold on power, this brutality only intensifies the outrage of the Iranian people and reinforces the determination of Iran's courageous youth to bring an end to this theocratic tyranny. "Honour to these steadfast Mojahedin who, after three years of unwavering resistance under torture, pressure, and threats, fulfilled their solemn pledge to God and the people with pride and dignity." It comes after The Sun reported how Iran's wounded regime As Israeli missiles rained down on a nearby military site on June 16, panicked inmates at Dizel-Abad Prison in Kermanshah begged to be moved to safety. But they were instead met with a hail of bullets from the regime's merciless enforcers in a "deliberate and cold-blooded act", a witness said. Meanwhile, sweeping arrests are also plaguing Iran's population - with around 700 people understood to have been detained last month with reported links to a "spy network". Iran has one of the most horrific human rights records in the world, and according to campaigners also holds the harrowing title for the highest execution rate. Official records show that the number of executions last year reached 1,000 - the highest number in 30 years and 16 percent higher than the previous. Insiders believe this year that distressing toll will be much higher. 9 Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei makes his first public appearance since the war with Israel on July 6 Credit: Getty 9 A demonstrator takes part in a protest against the Iranian government outside the Federal Building in Los Angeles, California on June 23 Credit: Reuters

Israel due to begin another 10-hour military 'pause' in Gaza as UN pushes for two-state talks
Israel due to begin another 10-hour military 'pause' in Gaza as UN pushes for two-state talks

The Journal

timean hour ago

  • The Journal

Israel due to begin another 10-hour military 'pause' in Gaza as UN pushes for two-state talks

LAST UPDATE | 1 hr ago THE ISRAELI MILITARY will begin a second day of its daily 'tactical pause' in three areas of Gaza, in what it claims is an effort to ease the worsening humanitarian crisis. In a statement on Sunday, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it had launched a 'tactical suspension of military operations for humanitarian purposes' in al-Mawasi, Deir el-Balah and Gaza City. The pause is scheduled to run from 10am (8am Irish time) to 8pm local time daily, until further notice. Despite the move, safety on the ground is far from guaranteed for Palestinians. An airstrike was reported in Gaza City yesterday in an area where Israel had announced a pause just an hour earlier. The IDF said it was unaware of the strike. The UN's aid chief, Tom Fletcher, noted some easing of movement restrictions since Israel agreed to expand humanitarian access for a week. However, he urged that the effort now needed to be 'sustained, vast and fast', pressing Israel to accelerate the approval of lorries at border crossings. Jordan and the United Arab Emirates carried out their first airdrops into Gaza in months yesterday, though officials stressed that air delivery is no substitute for consistent land access. Humanitarian aid was airdropped to Palestinians over northern Gaza. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu again criticised the UN, accusing it of having 'no excuses left' for not delivering aid. He also rejected allegations that Israel is deliberately starving civilians, a potential war crime, calling such claims an 'egregious falsehood'. The UN said it would attempt to reach as many people as possible now that secure land routes have been announced. The World Food Programme (WFP) reported it has enough supplies in, or en route to, the region to feed Gaza's 2.1 million residents for almost three months. Advertisement The WFP says 62,000 tonnes of food per month are needed to meet the population's basic needs. Trucks carrying humanitarian aids line up to enter the Rafah crossing between Egypt and Gaza. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Israel said that 120 trucks of aid have been distributed in Gaza so far. UN Conference on Two-State Solution France and Saudi Arabia are leading a UN-backed initiative in New York this week aimed at reviving the push for a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine. French President Emmanuel Macron's announcement last week that France will recognise the State of Palestine in September has added momentum to the three-day conference. Several other European nations are expected to follow suit. France's decision to recognise Palestine 'will breathe new life into a conference that seemed destined to irrelevance,' said Richard Gowan, an analyst at the International Crisis Group. 'Macron's announcement changes the game. Other participants will be scrabbling to decide if they should also declare an intent to recognize Palestine,' Gowan said. Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa and officials from over 100 countries are expected to attend the New York conference. The conference will also focus on reforming the Palestinian Authority, disarming Hamas, and encouraging further Arab-Israeli normalisation. While no new peace deals are expected, French officials say Arab states will, for the first time, issue a joint condemnation of Hamas and call for its disarmament. Neither Israel nor the United States are participating in the talks. Despite 'tactical pauses' announced by Israel, the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza is expected to dominate speeches by representatives. Gowan said he expected 'very fierce criticism of Israel.' Additional reporting from AFP Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal

No10 confirms if there will be bank holiday for Euros win after Lionesses soared to victory with penalty heroics
No10 confirms if there will be bank holiday for Euros win after Lionesses soared to victory with penalty heroics

The Irish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

No10 confirms if there will be bank holiday for Euros win after Lionesses soared to victory with penalty heroics

THE Government has confirmed if there will be a bank holiday following the Lionesses' historic Euros victory. A decision has been made after Chloe Kelly's cool penalty decided in Basel, Switzerland, last night. Advertisement 2 PM Keir Starmer in the stand before the final yesterday Credit: Getty 2 Chloe Kelly converted the decisive kick as England beat Spain 3-1 on penalties Credit: AFP They are the first senior England football team to on foreign soil and the first to retain a trophy after victory in 2022. But speaking today, the Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds has revealed that there won't be a bank holiday to celebrate the win. Speaking to Times Radio, Mr Reynolds said: "There should be a day of celebration. That's what the prime minister promised. "That's not a bank holiday, but there is a Downing Street reception today. There'll be the Victory Parade tomorrow. Advertisement "I'm afraid I can't announce a bank holiday, but there should be a celebration to mark this brilliant achievement." The Prime Minister has previously pushed for a bank holiday to celebrate the Lionesses' achievements. Ahead of their loss to Spain in the World Cup final two years ago, Sir Keir Starmer has backed the day of celebration. Writing on X at the time, he said: "It's almost 60 years since England won the World Cup. Advertisement Most read in Football Live Blog "I'm never complacent about anything… but there should be a celebratory bank holiday if the Lionesses bring it home." Mr Reynolds added: "It's a magnificent achievement and it was just a privilege to watch. "I think this team handles the big tournament pressure better than any England team I've ever seen. "I mean, there were some tough moments, but they really came through." Advertisement England fell behind to a goal by Mariona Caldentey in the 25th minute, but scored a stunning equaliser after half time. The teams battled it out in 30 minutes of extra time before England's Advertisement Meanwhile, an estimated 16 million Brits watched from home. Manager ran on to the pitch punching the air as she joined the mass of players and staff mobbing Kelly. The Moments later, Kelly said: 'I am so proud of this team. So grateful to wear this badge. So proud to be English. I was cool, I was composed. Advertisement 'I knew I was going to hit the back of the net. Unbelievable. All the staff and Sarina Wiegman — she has done it again! Unbelievable. 'It is going to be crazy. I hope the whole of England comes out to support us and shows their love to these girls as they deserve it.' More to follow... For the latest news on this story keep checking back at The Sun Online Read more on the Irish Sun is your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures and must-see video. Advertisement Like us on Facebook at

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