
Arab ministers condemn Israel 'ban' on planned West Bank visit
The foreign ministers of five Arab countries, who had planned to visit the occupied West Bank this weekend, condemned on Saturday Israel's decision to block their trip.
The ministers condemned "Israel's decision to ban the delegation's visit to Ramallah (on Sunday) to meet with the president of the State of Palestine, Mahmud Abbas", the Jordanian foreign ministry said.
Ministers from Egypt, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates had been expected to take part alongside Turkey and the secretary-general of the Arab League.
Israel had announced late Friday that it would not cooperate, effectively blocking the visit as it controls the territory's borders and airspace.
Abbas "intended to host in Ramallah a provocative meeting of foreign ministers from Arab countries to discuss the promotion of the establishment of a Palestinian state," an Israeli official said.
"Such a state would undoubtedly become a terrorist state in the heart of the Land of Israel. Israel will not cooperate with such moves aimed at harming it and its security."
Had the visit gone ahead, the delegation's head, Prince Faisal bin Farhan, would have become the first Saudi foreign minister to visit the West Bank.
Israel this week announced the creation of 22 new Jewish settlements in the West Bank, regarded by the United Nations as illegal under international law and one of the main obstacles to a lasting peace between Israelis and Palestinians.
During a visit to one of the new settlement sites on Friday, Defence Minister Israel Katz vowed to build a "Jewish Israeli state" in the Palestinian territory.
- 'Diplomatic confrontation' -
Taking aim at foreign countries that would "recognise a Palestinian state on paper", he added: "The paper will be thrown into the trash bin of history, and the State of Israel will flourish and prosper."
In June, Saudi Arabia and France are to co-chair an international conference at UN headquarters meant to resurrect the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Saudi Arabia was said to have been close to recognising Israel before the start of the Gaza war, and US President Donald Trump, during a recent visit to Riyadh, called normalisation between the countries "my fervent hope and wish".
But de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has repeatedly said Saudi Arabia will not recognise Israel without an independent Palestinian state.
Firas Maksad, a fellow at the Washington-based Middle East Institute, said Israel's rejection of the visit indicated "how far Saudi and Israel have moved from normalisation to diplomatic confrontation".
He added that the planned visit "underscores just how much the Saudi position has shifted away from creating a credible pathway towards a Palestinian state through conditional normalisation with Israel, to one that aims to create such a path via an international coalition in support of Palestinian aspirations".
Saudi Arabia is co-hosting with France a conference at the United Nations headquarters in New York aiming to revive the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
French President Emmanuel Macron previously said he could recognise a Palestinian state at that conference, drawing a sharp rebuke from Israel.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Citizen
43 minutes ago
- The Citizen
Eight injured in ‘flamethrower' attack on Israeli hostage protest in US
A man yelling 'Free Palestine' attacked a peaceful pro-Israel rally with incendiary devices in Boulder, injuring eight people and sparking a federal terror investigation. An Israeli flag is fixed to a street sign as police stand by off Pearl Street on the scene of an attack on demonstrators calling for the release of Israeli hostages held in Gaza, in Boulder, Colorado, on June 1, 2025. (Photo by Eli Imadali / AFP) A man yelling 'free Palestine' used incendiary devices to torch protesters rallying in support of Israeli hostages, injuring at least eight people in the US state of Colorado on Sunday. The FBI said it was investigating the incident as a 'targeted terror attack' and identified the suspect as 45-year-old Mohamed Sabry Soliman. He was booked into the county jail just before midnight on multiple felony charges, according to county records. His bond has been set at $10 million. Police in the city of Boulder said it was too early to determine a motive for the attack, which took place shortly before 1:30 pm (1930 GMT) at a demonstration outside a mall. The Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish activist group, said the 'violent antisemitic attack' occurred at Sunday's 'Run for Their Lives' event, a weekly gathering of the Jewish community in solidarity with hostages seized during Hamas's October 7, 2023, attack on Israel, sparking the war in Gaza. FBI agent Mark Michalek told reporters the attack happened at a 'regularly scheduled weekly peaceful event.' ALSO READ: SA calls for urgent probe after 32 Palestinians killed while waiting for food 'Witnesses are reporting that the subject used a makeshift flamethrower and threw an incendiary into the crowd,' he said, adding that 'the suspect was heard to yell: 'Free Palestine!'' Boulder Police said that eight victims, four men and four women aged between 52 and 88, were transported to hospitals. Boulder Police Chief Steve Redfearn told reporters that 'at least one victim was very seriously injured, probably safe to say critical condition.' The suspect was also injured before being taken into custody, Redfearn said. Molotov cocktails In one video that purportedly shows the attack, a shirtless man holding clear bottles in his hands is seen pacing as the grass in front of him burns. He can be heard screaming 'End Zionists!' and 'They are killers!' towards several people in red T-shirts as they tend to a person lying on the ground. ALSO READ: 'Free Palestine' shooter kills two outside Jewish museum in Washington Other images showed billowing black smoke. Boulder resident Alexis Cendon said he felt 'very, very scared' after hearing about the attack near his workplace. Sunday's attack occurred during the Jewish holiday of Shavuot. It comes almost two weeks after the fatal shooting of two Israeli embassy staffers outside a Jewish museum in Washington, where a 31-year-old suspect, who shouted 'Free Palestine,' was arrested. Boulder Police Chief Redfearn insisted it was 'way too early to speculate motive,' but FBI chief Kash Patel described the attack as 'a targeted terror attack.' Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser labeled it 'a hate crime.' 'People may have differing views about world events and the Israeli-Hamas conflict, but violence is never the answer to settling differences,' Weiser said. ALSO READ: WATCH: 'ICJ case never came up' in meeting with Trump, says Ramaphosa White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller posted on X that the suspect was a foreign national who 'illegally overstayed (his) visa.' Fox News and CBS both cited US officials as saying Soliman was an Egyptian national. The White House said President Donald Trump had been briefed on the incident. 'Burning the streets' Israel's top diplomat Gideon Saar condemned Sunday's 'terrible antisemitic terror attack targeting Jews in Boulder.' Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations Danny Danon also voiced outrage. 'Terrorism against Jews does not stop at the Gaza border — it is already burning the streets of America,' he said in a statement. ALSO READ: WATCH: Is Ramaphosa in trouble? US Secretary of State Marco Rubio calls out SA ahead of Trump meeting US Secretary of State Marco Rubio also described the Boulder incident as a 'targeted terror attack,' while Attorney General Pam Bondi termed it 'a horrific anti-Semitic attack.' Lawmakers on both sides of the political aisle expressed revulsion. 'Tonight, a peaceful demonstration was targeted in a vile, antisemitic act of terror,' top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer said in a statement. 'Once again, Jews are left reeling from repeated acts of violence and terror.' Several organizations also decried the violence. 'This is an attack on all of us — and we will not stay silent,' the Israeli-American Council said in a statement. – By: © Agence France-Presse


eNCA
8 hours ago
- eNCA
Mexicans elect their judges under shadow of crime, corruption
Mexicans chose their judges Sunday in unprecedented elections that sharply divided opinion in a country plagued by rampant crime, corruption and impunity. The government and its supporters said the reform making Mexico the world's only nation to select all of its judges and magistrates by popular vote was needed to clean up a rotten justice system. Arturo Giesemann, a 57-year-old retiree, said his main motivation for voting was "the disgust I have with the current judiciary because of its corruption." Turnout appeared to be low as many voters struggled to choose from hundreds of largely unknown candidates. "We are not very prepared," said Lucia Calderon, a 63-year-old university teacher. "I think we need more information." In the western state of Jalisco, 63-year-old housewife Maria Estrada said she used her "intuition" as she did not know the candidates. Experts were concerned that the elections would politicize the justice system and make it easier for criminals to influence the courts with threats and bribery. AFP | Alfredo ESTRELLA While corruption already exists, "there is reason to believe that elections may be more easily infiltrated by organised crime than other methods of judicial selection," Margaret Satterthwaite, the United Nations special rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers, told AFP. Hundreds of opponents of the reforms marched through Mexico City waving flags and banners with slogans including: "Hands off our democracy" and "No to electoral fraud." The elections send the judiciary "to its grave," said Ismael Novela, a 58-year-old company worker. "It was the last counterweight we had against the totalitarianism of the executive branch." - 'Regime of corruption' - President Claudia Sheinbaum hit back at her critics on the eve of the vote. "Those who want the regime of corruption and privileges in the judiciary to continue say this election is rigged. Or they also say it's so a political party can take over the Supreme Court," she said in a video message. "Nothing could be further from the truth," she insisted. The run-up to the vote was not accompanied by the kind of violence that often targets politicians in Mexico. But "it is logical that organised criminal groups would have approached judges and candidates who are important to them," said consultant Luis Carlos Ugalde, a former head of Mexico's electoral commission. Rights group Defensorxs has identified around 20 candidates it considers "high risk," including Silvia Delgado, a former lawyer for Sinaloa Cartel co-founder Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman. Another aspiring judge, in Durango state, spent almost six years in prison in the United States for drug crimes. - 'Good reputation' - Voters were tasked with choosing around 880 federal judges -- including Supreme Court justices -- as well as hundreds of local judges and magistrates. Another election for the remainder will be held in 2027. AFP | Rodrigo Oropeza Candidates are supposed to have a law degree, experience in legal affairs and what is termed "a good reputation," as well as no criminal record. To do a good job, voters "would have to spend hours and hours researching the track record and the profiles of each of the hundreds of candidates," said David Shirk, a professor at the University of San Diego. He believes that most of the corruption in Mexico's judicial system is in law enforcement agencies and public prosecutor's offices. "If you can avoid being prosecuted, you don't have to worry about the judge," said Shirk, who heads the Justice in Mexico research project. The judicial reforms were championed by Sheinbaum's predecessor and mentor, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who frequently clashed with the courts before stepping down last year. The main reason for the elections seems to be "because Lopez Obrador had a grudge against the judges," Shirk said.


eNCA
8 hours ago
- eNCA
Key climate target of airline decarbonisation 'in peril': IATA
WASHINGTON - The airline industry's flagship goal of decarbonising by 2050 is now "in peril" due to climate-sceptic policies, including those of US President Donald Trump, the leading airline association IATA warned on Sunday. The emergence of leaders favouring fossil fuels and recent regulatory rollbacks are "obviously a setback... it does imperil success on the 2050 horizon", Marie Owens Thomsen, the International Air Transport Association's senior vice president for sustainability, told reporters. "But I don't think it's going to halt or reverse progress. I think it will just slow progress," she said at the IATA annual industry conference in India. Trump's Republican administration is supporting the development of fossil fuels in contrast to his Democratic predecessor Joe Biden, who had massively supported the production of renewable aviation fuels through tax credits. UN aviation agency members, from the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), have set the year 2050 as their goal for achieving net-zero carbon emissions for air travel -- an industry often criticised for its outsized role in climate change. The air transportation industry has faced growing pressure to deal with its contribution to the climate crisis. Currently responsible for 2.5 percent to three percent of global CO2 emissions, the sector's switch to renewable fuels is proving difficult, even if the aeronautics industry and energy companies have been seeking progress. To achieve net-zero emissions, airlines rely on non-fossil sources known as Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF). However, SAF biofuels are still three to four times more expensive than petroleum-based jet fuel. SAF is seen as a crucial ingredient in hitting emissions targets. The biofuel produces lower carbon emissions than traditional jet fuel and is made from plant and animal materials such as cooking oil and fat. European Union rules require carriers to include two percent of SAF in their fuel mix starting this year, rising to six percent in 2030 before soaring to 70 percent from 2050. IATA also indicated on Sunday that it expects global SAF production to double this year compared with 2024 to 2.5 billion litres -- slightly down from its previous projections of 2.7 billion litres.