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Israel says Iran violated ceasefire announced by Trump, orders new strikes

Israel says Iran violated ceasefire announced by Trump, orders new strikes

The Herald7 hours ago

Israeli defence minister Israel Katz said on Tuesday he had ordered the military to strike Tehran in response to what he said were missiles fired by Iran in a violation of the ceasefire announced hours earlier by US President Donald Trump.
Iran denied violating the ceasefire. The armed forces general staff denied there had been a launch of missiles towards Israel in recent hours, Iran's Nour News reported.
The developments raised early doubts about the ceasefire, intended to end 12 days of war.
Katz said he had ordered the military to 'continue high-intensity operations targeting regime assets and terror infrastructure in Tehran' in light of 'Iran's blatant violation of the ceasefire declared by the president of the US'.
Hours earlier, Trump had posted on Truth Social: 'The ceasefire is in effect. Please do not violate it.'
Israel and Iran had confirmed the ceasefire after it was announced by Trump.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel had achieved the goals it had set in launching its June 13 surprise attack on Iran to destroy its nuclear programme and missile capabilities.
'Israel thanks President Trump and the US for their support in defence and their participation in eliminating the Iranian nuclear threat,' Netanyahu said.
Iran said its nuclear programme is solely for peaceful purposes and denied seeking to develop nuclear weapons.
Iran's top security body, the Supreme National Security Council, said its military had forced Israel to 'unilaterally accept defeat and accept a ceasefire'.
Iran's forces would 'keep their hands on the trigger' to respond to 'any act of aggression by the enemy', it said.
Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araqchi had earlier said Iran would halt its retaliatory strikes provided Israel stopped attacking at 4am in Tehran.
Global stock markets surged and oil prices tumbled on Tuesday after the announcement of the ceasefire in the hope it heralded a resolution of the war two days after the US joined it by hitting Iranian nuclear sites with huge bunker-busting bombs.
Reuters

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How can anyone trust Trump's USA He's done it for America. He's put America first and bombed Iran. US bombers struck three enrichment plants. He gloated it was a spectacular success. Just yesterday he was talking peace. He said let's use diplomacy instead of bombs to resolve the Middle East crisis. But then Israel launched a surprise atack on Iran. Then Trump said he'll wait for two weeks and then decide whether the US should enter the fray. But suddenly he sends his war planes into Iran to bomb its nuclear sites. How can anyone trust this double-talking maniac? Iraq, Libya, Syria, Afghanistan and now Iran. The US cannot stay away from the Middle East. And Trump cannot stay away from controversy and trouble. The attack on Iran was unprovoked attack on another sovereign state. The US has breached an international law. But who will stop US aggression? The UN? It's a toothless organisation. 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While many public and private schools proudly promote values of diversity and transformation in their mission statements, these values must go beyond lip service. Transformation is not a passive hope; it requires active, ongoing engagement and institutional introspection. Schools play a critical role in redressing the deep inequalities and marginalisation embedded in our must be proactive in creating safe and affirming environments for all children, not only through symbolic gestures but through deliberate action, anti-racism training, and clear accountability mechanisms. The incident at Bryandale is not an isolated one. Just a few days ago, a Grade 8 learner at De La Salle Holy Cross College (in Johannesburg) was reportedly told, 'You don't belong… go home, you (K-word).' In 2024, Pretoria High School for Girls made headlines after WhatsApp messages targeted Black pupils. 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You may even be capable of reading a dictionary and testing its definitions with what passes for journalism in some media or statements uttered by politicians and NGOs. Let's start with 'genocide', a term loosely used when libelling Israel. In 1948, there were 500 000 Muslims (they were not called Palestinians then) in the areas now controlled by Hamas and the PA. Today there are 2.7 million. By what definition, or historical example, do the victims of a genocide actually grow exponentially?' Apartheid' is a particularly ugly word. It reminds us of the institutionalised racial segregation that existed in South Africa from 1948 to the early 1990s. A one-day visit to any Israeli city would dispel you of this notion. On the streets and on public transport you will see people of every colour and hear English, French, Arabic and Hebrew spoken everywhere. Arabs are proportionally over-represented in academia. 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