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Yemen sides meet on Hodeida for first time in months

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

Displaced Yemeni children gather at a make-shift camp in the country's Hajjah province, on Sunday (AFP photo)

HODEIDA, Yemen — Representatives from Yemen's government and Houthi rebels tasked with pulling forces out of the key port city of Hodeida met on Sunday for the first time in five months.

The redeployment from Hodeida is a critical part of a ceasefire deal reached in December in Sweden that calls on the government and the Houthis to move forces away from ports and parts of city.

“The joint meeting of the redeployment coordination [committee] meeting started earlier this afternoon,” a UN official present at the meeting told AFP, adding it was set to continue on Monday.

The last meeting was held on February 16 and 17, the source added.

The UN head of the committee confirmed the meeting “aboard a UN vessel on the high seas”, adding it would centre on “steps to implement” the Hodeida pullback plan.

Led by Danish General Michael Lollesgaard, the committee established under the Sweden agreement includes representatives from the United Nations, the Yemen government and Houthi rebels.

The pullback was supposed to have taken place two weeks after the ceasefire went into force on December 18, but that deadline was missed. 

In May, the UN announced the rebels had withdrawn from Hodeida and two other nearby ports, the first practical step on the ground since the ceasefire deal.

But the government accused the militia of faking the pullout, saying it had merely handed control to its allies.

Lollesgaard confirmed in June there had been no Houthi military presence in all three ports since their withdrawal a month before.

The UN is hoping that a de-escalation in Hodeida will allow desperately-needed food and medical aid to reach millions in need in Yemen.

The Red Sea port is the entry point for the bulk of imported goods and relief aid to Yemen, which the United Nations has described as the world's worst humanitarian crisis.

The Yemen conflict has killed tens of thousands of people since the Saudi-led military coalition intervened in support of the beleaguered government in March 2015, according to the World Health Organisation.

The fighting has also displaced millions and left 24.1 million — more than two-thirds of the population — in need of aid.

European powers urge dialogue, end to escalation in Iran nuclear crisis

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

PARIS — Three key European powers on Sunday called for dialogue and an end to the escalation over Iran's nuclear programme, as tensions further intensified between Tehran and the United States.

The statement by the leaders of Britain, France and Germany expressed concern that the 2015 deal over Iran's nuclear programme risked further unravelling but said it was up to Tehran to ensure the deal survived.

"We believe the time has come to act responsibly and seek a path to stop the escalation of tensions and resume dialogue," said the English-language version of the statement issued by the Elysee.

The statement was published after President Emmanuel Macron hosted German Chancellor Angela Merkel and senior British Cabinet minister David Lidington at the annual Bastille Day parade in Paris.

"The risks are such that it is necessary for all stakeholders to pause and consider the possible consequences of their actions," it added.

The three European powers were among the key players in the 2015 deal (known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action or JCPOA) on Iran's nuclear programme.

But US President Donald Trump in 2018 announced Washington was pulling out of the deal, to the dismay of its European allies.

Angered that its beleaguered economy is not receiving the sanctions relief it believes was promised under the deal, Iran has intensified its sensitive uranium enrichment work, prompting stern warnings from Washington.

"We are concerned by the risk that the JCPOA further unravels under the strain of sanctions imposed by the United States and following Iran's decision to no longer implement several of the central provisions of the agreement," said the three European powers.

"We are extremely concerned by Iran's decision to stockpile and enrich uranium in excess of authorised limits," it added, also warning over "the deterioration of the security in the region”.

The three powers said they would continue to support the nuclear deal but said its implementation "was contingent on Iran's full compliance”.

"We strongly urge Iran to reverse its recent decisions in this regard," the statement said.

Qatar opens biggest coast guard base

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

Qatar's coast guards take part in the inauguration ceremony of the new building of the General Directorate of Coasts and Borders Security, in northern Qatar, on Sunday (AFP photo)

SEMAISIMA, Qatar — Qatar inaugurated its largest coast guard base on Sunday as a standoff between Iran and the United States continues to boost tensions in strategic Gulf waters. 

Prime Minister Abdullah bin Nasser Bin Khalifa Al Thani and commander of US Naval Forces in the Middle East Vice Admiral Jim Malloy attended the ceremony at the Al Daayen naval base in Semaisima, 30 kilometres from Doha on Qatar's eastern coast.

Qatar, a key US ally in the region, is home to Washington's largest Middle East military base.

Malloy, commander of the US Fifth Fleet based in Bahrain, said the new base was "a wonderful opportunity for us to interface more strongly with the Qatari coast guard". 

Tensions in the Gulf — through which nearly a third of the world's oil is transported — have spiked in recent weeks, with the US blaming Iran for multiple attacks on tanker ships in the region and Tehran shooting down an American drone. 

The 600,000-plus square-metre site aims to "facilitate the securing of all territorial waters of the State and border posts", the interior ministry wrote on Twitter.

It includes a "sophisticated seaport", training and medical facilities, civil defence offices and operating rooms, the ministry added.

Asked whether the base could enhance US-Qatari coordination on Iran, Malloy said the move was "all about maritime security, that's what our focus is".

The US said on Thursday it was discussing military escorts for vessels in the Gulf a day after armed Iranian boats allegedly threatened a British oil tanker in the Strait of Hormuz.

And on Friday Britain said it was sending a second warship to the Gulf and raising the alert level in the oil-rich region after Iranian gunboats threatened a UK supertanker.

Sudan paramilitaries shoot dead civilian — doctors

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

Sudanese protesters take part in a vigil in the capital Khartoum to mourn dozens of demonstrators killed last month in a brutal raid on a Khartoum sit-in on Saturday (AFP photo)

KHARTOUM — Members of a feared Sudanese paramilitary force shot dead a civilian on Sunday in a town southeast of the capital as angry residents protested against the paramilitaries, witnesses and doctors said.

The incident occurred in El Souk in the state of Sinnar when residents of the town rallied demanding that members of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) leave the town, witnesses told AFP.

"Residents of the town had gathered outside the office of the National Intelligence and Security Service [NISS] to complain about the RSF," a witness said.

"RSF members deployed and initially started shooting in the air but later they opened fire at residents, killing a man and wounding several other people," said the witness, who declined to be named for security reasons.

A committee of doctors linked to the country's umbrella protest movement, the Alliance for Freedom and Change, confirmed the incident.

The resident "was killed by gunshot in his head fired by Rapid Support Forces militia", it said in a statement, adding that several other people were wounded.

Witnesses said El Souk residents had gone to the NISS office to complain after the RSF raided a youth club on Saturday during a rally held to mourn the deaths of demonstrators killed in a Khartoum sit-in on June 3.

"During that rally the RSF raided a youth club and beat the youths there," one witness said.

On Saturday, protesters held rallies in several cities and towns across the country, including in Khartoum, to mourn those killed in a raid on a protest camp on June 3 in the capital.

Protesters and rights groups allege that the raid on the sit-in outside the army headquarters in central Khartoum was carried out by members of the RSF.

More than 100 demonstrators were killed in the raid on that day when armed men in military fatigues cracked down on protesters who had been camping out there for weeks, doctors close to the protesters have said.

RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo is the deputy chief of Sudan's ruling military council that seized power after the army's ouster of Omar Al Bashir in April following nationwide protests against his rule.

Dagalo has dismissed claims that the RSF was responsible for the deadly June crackdown, saying it was an attempt to distort the image of his force.

Egyptian delegation seeks to prevent new Gaza flare-up

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

Palestinian demonstrators run away from the fence during protests along the border with Israel, east of Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip on Friday (AFP photo)

RAMALLAH, Palestinian Territories — Egyptian security officials have held talks with Palestinian leaders in recent days in part to prevent a new flare-up of tensions between Israel and the Gaza Strip, Palestinian officials said on Sunday.

The Egyptian delegation led by deputy intelligence chief Ayman Badie was in the Gaza Strip on Friday and Saturday and the occupied West Bank on Saturday, the officials said.

A statement on Saturday from Islamist movement Hamas said the discussions included talks on "understandings with the enemy" — a reference to a fragile ceasefire with Israel tested in recent days.

Contacted on Sunday, a Hamas official said the movement did not want to comment further beyond its official statements.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas met with the delegation in Ramallah on Saturday on the Gaza-Israel ceasefire and attempts to heal the long-existing division between Hamas and Abbas’ Fateh, official Palestinian news agency WAFA said.

Fresh tensions were feared after Israel shot dead a Hamas member on Thursday along the border with the Gaza Strip, prompting the Islamist movement to vow revenge.

Israel later signalled it had fired in error, saying an initial inquiry showed soldiers misidentified a Hamas security agent as “an armed terrorist and fired as a result of this misunderstanding”.

On Friday night, Israel’s military claimed that two rockets were fired from the Gaza Strip into Israeli territory, but no damage or injuries were reported.

Earlier in the day, at least 33 Palestinians were shot and wounded during weekly demonstrations and clashes along the Gaza-Israel border, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

Under a fragile ceasefire brokered by Egyptian and UN officials following a severe flare-up in May, Israel is meant to ease aspects of its blockade on the strip in exchange for relative calm.

At least 295 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire in Gaza since major Hamas-backed protests began along the border fence in March 2018.

Most were killed during the protests and clashes but others died in air strikes or tank fire.

Six Israelis have been killed.

Israel and Hamas have fought three wars since 2008.

Agony of Yazidi women torn between kids, or return home

By - Jul 14,2019 - Last updated at Jul 14,2019

Iraq’s Yazidi survivor Layleh Shemmo sews inside her tent in the Khonke camp for displaced persons in northwestern Iraq on June 24 (AFP photo)

BAADRE, Iraq — Freed after years in captivity, Jihan faced an agonising ultimatum: abandon her three small children fathered by a Daesh fighter or risk being shunned by her community.

“Of course I couldn’t bring them home. They’re Daesh children,” said Jihan Qassem matter-of-factly, sitting in a sparse concrete structure she now calls home.

““How could I, when my three siblings are still in Daesh hands?,” she added, highlighting the harsh reality that the children serve as constant reminders of the brutalities inflicted on the closed, tight-knit Yazidi community by the so-called Daesh group.

Dozens of Yazidi women and girls systematically raped, sold and married off to terrorists after being abducted by Daesh from their ancestral Iraqi home of Sinjar in 2014 have faced the same gut-wrenching dilemma. What to do about the children born of these forced unions?

Now freed, the women are desperate to heal from the wounds inflicted on the conservative minority — but raising terrorists offspring would make closure impossible, they said.

Kidnapped at 13, Jihan was forced to marry a Tunisian Daesh fighter at 15 and then fled with him and their children from Daesh’s bombarded Syrian holdout of Baghouz four months ago. 

When US-backed forces learned she was Yazidi, they whisked her and her two-year-old boy, year-old girl and four-month-old infant to a northeast Syria shelter hosting other mothers from the brutalised minority.

The safehouse, known as the Yazidi House, circulated her photograph on Facebook and her older brother Saman, still in northern Iraq, recognised his long-lost sister.

He wanted her home. But without the children. 

After days of an anguished back-and-forth, Jihan decided she would leave her infants with Syrian Kurdish authorities in exchange for what she said was her real family. 

“They were so young. They were attached to me and I to them... but they’re Daesh children,” she murmured.

She said she does not have any pictures of her children and does not want to remember them. 

“The first day is hard, and then little by little, we forget them,” she said. 

 

‘No one asks 

about them’ 

 

For centuries, Yazidis who married outside the sect — even against their will — were ex-communicated. 

Girls forcefully taken by Daesh in 2014 risked suffering the same fate, but a landmark decree by Yazidi spiritual leader Baba Sheikh said survivors of Daesh’s sexual abuse should be honoured by the community. 

That compassion, however, has not been extended to their children.

In April, the Yazidis’ Higher Spiritual Council issued an ambiguous decree welcoming “children of survivors”,sparking hope of a second reformation to accept those born of a Yazidi mother and Daesh father. 

But a ferocious backlash from conservative Yazidis prompted the council to clarify that nothing had changed: it would only welcome children born to two Yazidi parents.

Any further reform was seen as a threat, opening the floodgates of change to a traumatised community, said Yazidi activist Talal Murad.

“If there’s this kind of change in the creed, other things could change too — there will be a breakdown, a total collapse of the Yazidi religion,” said Murad, who also heads Ezidi24, an outlet covering Yazidi affairs.

Council representative Ali Kheder told AFP the debate wasn’t solely about dogmatic reform. 

“First, according to Iraqi law, any child with a missing father will be registered as a Muslim, automatically,” said Kheder in the council’s headquarters in Sheikhan.

Islamic law, on which the Iraqi constitution is based, stipulates that religion is inherited from the father. 

Psychologically too, Kheder said the Yazidi society remained too scarred by the prolonged abduction of their own people to accept raising the children of their abusers.

“Until now, we have thousands of Yazidi women and girls in Daesh hands. No one asks about them. They ask about a few children that can be counted on one hand,” said Kheder.

The council said it does not keep statistics on returning Yazidi survivors with infants born of rape.

 

Flesh, blood, tears 

 

While most Yazidi mothers leave their children at the Yazidi House in Syria, some brought Daesh-born infants home to Iraq. They declined interviews because of the subject’s sensitivity.

One woman insisted to her Yazidi family that she would raise her year-old infant fathered by a missing Daesh fighter, but balked when she discovered she could not acquire Iraqi identification papers for him as his father was not present.

She gave him up for adoption, her doctor said. 

Another 18-year-old arrived in Iraq in the spring after finally being freed, but was heavily pregnant by her Daesh captor, according to a social worker involved in her case.

She spent weeks in a safehouse without her family’s knowledge until she gave birth, sent the newborn away and joined her relatives in a displacement camp. 

Last year, five children born to Yazidi mothers and Daesh fathers were left at an orphanage in Mosul, which helped local Muslim families adopt them, according to Mosul’s director of women and children’s issues Sukaynah Younes. 

They are now registered as Muslim. 

The psychological impact of this separation will likely be long-lasting. Jihan herself still seemed torn. 

Weeks ago, she had described her children to a social worker as her “flesh and blood”, saying she missed them. 

While she sounded more detached when speaking to AFP, a shy smile crossed her face as she remembered them. When she was out of her brother’s earshot, she cried quietly.

“If it was up to me, I would have brought them,” she said.

 

‘The genocide goes on’ 

 

Yazidis believe the events of 2014 were the 74th “genocide” suffered by the minority in its 4,000-year history, and that it has not ended. 

The most painful wound is that hundreds of men, women, and children remain missing, despite hopes they would be found after Daesh’s “caliphate” collapsed in March.

Some 100,000, nearly a fifth of the pre-war community, have been resettled abroad and another 360,000 remain displaced in Iraq with their villages lying in ruins.

“The genocide is ongoing. People can’t go home to Sinjar, we still have women and girls missing, everyone is looking to leave to Europe,” said Kheder. 

Baba Shawish, a cleric and custodian of the Yazidis’ holiest site at Lalish, blamed Baghdad. 

“The federal government in Baghdad knows very well that thousands of Yazidis remain captive, but it has not decided to arrest the kidnappers. It’s not cooperating with us.” 

A bill introduced in April by Iraq’s president proposes reparations for Yazidis and a way to determine children’s legal status, but parliament has yet to debate it.

Gripped by such pressing issues, Yazidis expressed frustration with what they saw as misplaced global pressure to enact religious reform and welcome children born of Daesh.

The best option, community figures said almost unanimously, was for Yazidi mothers to be resettled abroad.

“It’s a very complicated issue, and the most appropriate solution right now can be found outside Iraq,” said Vian Dakheel, a Yazidi and former parliamentarian. 

“In my view, it’s for these women to go to Europe with their children.” 

Dr Nagham Hasan, an obstetrician-gynecologist who has worked extensively with Yazidi survivors since 2014, said patients with young children had all but given up on Iraq.

“I’ve been warning that we would be dealing with the issue of mothers for years,” she said.

“Everyone wants to leave. The Yazidi community is broken.”

Algeria army arrests five on suspicion of planning ‘attacks’

By - Jul 14,2019 - Last updated at Jul 14,2019

Algerian protesters demonstrate in Algiers on Friday, in the latest in weeks of rallies against the ruling class amid an ongoing political crisis in the country (AFP photo)

ALGIERS — The Algerian army has arrested five suspects for planning “attacks” against anti-government demonstrations that have swept the north African country since February 22, the defence ministry said on Sunday. 

The suspects “planned attacks against peaceful protests across different parts of the country”, it said in a statement, adding they were arrested in “anti-terrorist” raids last week in the Batna region southeast of the capital Algiers.

It identified the suspects as “terrorists”, a term Algerian authorities use to describe armed Islamists who have been active in the country since the early 1990s. 

Algeria has been rocked by months of protests since longtime leader Abdelaziz Bouteflika announced in February he would run for a fifth term.

He quit office but protesters have kept up the mass demonstrations, calling for an overhaul of the “system” and departure of key Bouteflika-era figures.

Interim president Abdelkader Bensalah has proposed a “neutral” national dialogue, without the involvement of the state or the military, to prepare for new presidential polls.

His proposals, backed by powerful army chief Ahmed Gaid Salah who has emerged as the country’s key powerbroker since Bouteflika’s departure, have failed to calm protesters.

Massive rallies continue to be held weekly on Fridays in Algiers and other key towns.

In recent weeks, police have detained dozens of demonstrators — releasing them at the end of the Friday rallies.

Observers say the detentions and other measures including heavy police deployments are meant to discourage protesters from taking to the streets.

Britain sends second warship to Gulf after Iran tanker standoff

By - Jul 14,2019 - Last updated at Jul 14,2019

This file photo, taken on July 6, shows crew members walking down a ladder on supertanker Grace 1 off the coast of Gibraltar (AFP photo)

LONDON — Britain said Friday it was sending a second warship to the Gulf and raising the alert level in the oil-rich region as tensions spike after Iranian gunboats threatened a UK supertanker.

The decision was disclosed as US President Donald Trump stepped up his war of words with the Islamic republic, which breached part of a nuclear accord already rejected by Washington.

"Iran better be careful," Trump told reporters outside the White House.

"They're treading on very dangerous territory. Iran, if you're listening, you better be careful."

British officials said the naval deployment was part of a pre-planned rotation and meant to ensure a continued British naval presence in one of the most important but volatile oil shipment routes in the world.

But a source said the switchover was brought forward by several days and should see two of Britain's most advanced warships jointly navigating the waters off Iran for a period that might last a number of weeks.

A government spokesman said the HMS Duncan was "deploying to the region to ensure we maintain a continuous maritime security presence while HMS Montrose comes off task for pre-planned maintenance and crew changeover".

On Wednesday, HMS Montrose warned off three fast Iranian gunboats that UK officials said were trying to "impede" the progress of a British supertanker through the Strait of Hormuz in the Gulf.

Iranian officials have denied the incident ever happened.

The British government decided at the start of the week to raise the alert level for ships travelling through Iranian waters to three on a three-point scale, indicating a “critical” threat.

HMS Duncan is an air defence destroyer that carries a set of heavy Harpoon anti-ship missiles and has a company and crew in excess of 280.

 

Curbing Trump 

 

After weeks of escalating tensions, Trump last month authorised an air strike on Iran over its downing of a US spy drone but backed away at the last minute.

Alarmed that Trump’s hawkish stance could lead to war, the Democratic-led House of Representatives on Friday voted to bar funding for military operations against Iran unless they are in self-defence or explicitly authorised by Congress.

“Frankly, what it will prevent is what this president promised to the American people not to do — to get into another endless, costly war in the Middle East,” said Representative Ro Khanna, the Democrat who led the measure.

But the Senate, controlled by Trump’s Republican Party, defeated a similar proposal. 

Khanna’s amendment was part of a broader defence bill, meaning that the two chambers will need to negotiate on the language.

Michael McCaul, the top Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, called the amendment “reckless”, saying that the military should not be held up by a potentially lengthy legislative process.

“This will tie our military’s hands at a perilous time. We need Iran and its terrorist proxies to think twice before they attack Americans, our friends or our interests”, he said.

 

Gibraltar arrests 

 

The Strait of Hormuz episode occurred a week after UK Royal Marines helped the Gibraltar authorities detain an Iranian tanker that US officials believe was trying to deliver oil to Syria in violation of separate sets of EU and US sanctions.

Iran has bristled at the arrest and issued a series of increasingly ominous warnings to both the United States and Britain about its right to take unspecified actions in reprisal.

“If the enemy had made the smallest assessment they wouldn’t have done this act,” Iran’s Revolutionary Guards deputy commander Ali Fadavi said on Thursday.

British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt called on Friday for “cool heads” to prevail as threats mount.

“We want to do everything we can to make sure that we don’t have an unintended escalation which could be very dangerous for the world”, Hunt said.

The authorities of Gibraltar — a British overseas territory on Spain’s southern tip — said on Friday that the Iranian supertanker was carrying 2.1 million barrels of light crude oil.

They also insisted that they had asked British Naval Marines to help with the Iranian tanker’s arrest without any outside political pressure.

The Gibraltar police on Thursday announced the arrest of the Iranian tanker’s Indian captain and officer, and on Friday two more Indian crew members were detained.

All four were bailed without charge late Friday, Gibraltar police said.

26 killed in deadly Somalia hotel siege

By - Jul 13,2019 - Last updated at Jul 14,2019

A man passes in front of the rubbles of the popular Medina hotel of Kismayo on Saturday, a day after at least 26 people, including several foreigners, were killed and 56 injured in a suicide bomb and gun attack claimed by Al Shabaab militants (AFP photo)

MOGADISHU — Twenty-six people were killed and 56 injured in a 12-hour attack by Al Shabaab extremists on a popular hotel that ended early Saturday in the southern Somali port city of Kismayo. 

A suicide bomber rammed a vehicle loaded with explosives into the Medina hotel on Friday before several heavily armed gunmen forced their way inside, shooting as they went, authorities said.

It was the largest coordinated attack by Al Shabaab in Kismayo since 2012 when it lost control of the city.

The victims included several foreigners and a prominent Somali-Canadian journalist, Nodan Halayeh, who perished along with her husband.

Three Kenyans, three Tanzanians, two Americans, one Briton and one Canadian were among the dead, president Ahmed Mohamed Islam of the semi-autonomous Jubaland region told a news conference.

“There are also two wounded Chinese citizens,” he added.

The hotel was packed with politicians and prominent businessmen as meetings were underway for upcoming presidential elections in Jubaland, due in August. 

One of the candidates in the election died in the siege, local authorities said.

‘Martyrdom attack’ 

“The whole building is in ruins, there are dead bodies and wounded who have been recovered from inside. The security forces have cordoned off the whole area,” said witness Muna Abdirahman.

Another witness Hussein Muktar said: “The blast was very big.”

“The security forces are in control now and the last terrorist was shot and killed,” security official Mohamed Abdiweli said.

“There are dead bodies and wounded people strewn inside the hotel,” Abdiweli added. 

He said authorities believed four gunmen, who one witness described as wearing Somali police uniforms, were involved in the attack.

Halayeh’s death sparked an outpouring of grief on social media. 

She was an ardent campaigner for Somali unity and peace and had started an online TV show named Integration. 

In a recent podcast, Nalayeh said her television programme about the Somali diaspora gave the community a voice.

“Social media has changed the game for how people learn about culture. So, if we don’t become the creators of our own content, we are going to be at the mercy of other people telling the stories of Africa,” she had said.

A local journalist, Mohamed Omar Sahal, also died in the siege, the Somali journalists’ union SJS said, adding that these were the first journalist deaths in the country this year.

Shabaab, the Al Qaeda-linked group, claimed responsibility for the siege describing it as “a martyrdom attack”.

The US Mission to Somalia condemned the attack and said it would “continue to work with our Somali and other international partners in the fight against violent extremism”.

 

‘Criminal, murderous, destructive’ 

 

The African Union’s Special Representative in Somalia, Francisco Madeira, said the attack was “meant to derail progress in Somalia as the country rebuilds and consolidates the gains made on peace and security”. 

“The attackers are a group of people with a criminal, murderous and destructive agenda. They cannot claim to be fighting to bring good governance to the country,” he said.

The attack is the latest in a long line of bombing and assaults claimed by Al Shabaab, which has fought for more than a decade to topple the Somali government.

The militant group emerged from Islamic Courts that once controlled central and southern Somalia and are variously estimated to number between 5,000 and 9,000 men.

In 2010, the Shabaab declared their allegiance to Al Qaeda.

In 2011, they fled positions they once held in the capital Mogadishu, and have since lost many strongholds.

But they retain control of large rural swathes of the country and continue to wage a guerrilla war against the authorities.

For Palestinian family, tunnel under Israel barrier leads home

When complete, some 85 per cent of it is to be built inside the West Bank

By - Jul 13,2019 - Last updated at Jul 13,2019

Palestinian Omar Hajajla walks with his son through the tunnel connecting their home in Jerusalem to Al Walajah, their village in the occupied West Bank, on May 30 (AFP photo)

AL WALAJAH, Palestinian Territories — On one side of the Israeli separation barrier sits the Hajajla family's home. The Palestinians' house is cut off from the rest of their village that lies on the other side, with only a tunnel connecting the two.

Endless trouble has followed, they say.

Their situation made the news again when Israeli forces locked the gate leading to the tunnel linking their home to their village of Al Walajah in the occupied West Bank.

For more than a week, 10-year-old Mohammed Hajajla had to walk 6 kilometres in the blazing sun as part of his route to school due to the closure, the family says.

Israeli forces say the closure was because the family was suspected of allowing illegal crossings into occupied Jerusalem from the West Bank through the Israeli-built tunnel.

The family denies it and says it is another example of harassment from Israeli authorities they have faced over the years.

“I already refused to bend. I will not be discouraged,” said the father of the family, Omar Hajajla.

The brick house sits on a hill, across the valley from the Israeli settlement of Gilo on the outskirts of occupied Jerusalem.

Their problems date back to 2010, when construction of Israel's separation barrier cutting off the West Bank reached their area.

 

Doorbell dispute

 

Israel began constructing the barrier in 2002, during the bloody second Palestinian Intifada.

For Israel, the barrier is for security reasons. Palestinians see it as an “apartheid wall”, a potent symbol of the Israeli occupation.

Israeli forces gave the family a choice: Leave or see their home cut off by a fence. Other village land was also isolated by the barrier's construction.

Omar Hajajla says they offered him large amounts of money to move, but he refused and took the case to court.

In 2016, an agreement was reached with Israeli authorities on strict conditions for his family's use of the tunnel, whose gate can be opened by remote.

Hajajla said he later installed an electric doorbell at the other side of the tunnel to make it easier for family members to come and go, especially since his children don't have mobile phones.

But an Israeli police officer spotted it in May.

“They said to me, ‘This bell is in the [Israeli] security zone,’” the 53-year-old said.

Hajajla said he was taken for questioning for four hours and the gate was padlocked.

For eight days, the family was only able to get out by a clandestine side exit, he said.

Mohammed and his brother's route to school included walking 6 kilometres.

“We left very early in the morning and came back late,” said Mohammed.

The family threatened to take the case to court again and the lock was eventually removed, the family says.

 

‘A new excuse’ 

 

“Each time they invent a new excuse to force us to leave the house,” he said.

Israeli forces referred questions on the issue to police, who did not respond to requests for comment from AFP.

In a statement to Israeli newspaper Haaretz, police said Omar Hajajla “is suspected of taking advantage of the gate to improperly bring Palestinians through it and was therefore taken in for questioning”.

“All investigations that involve suspicion of security-related crimes of Palestinians result in the revocation of entry permits into Israeli territory until the suspicions can be clarified and/or an indictment filed.”

Palestinians say the family's situation is another example of the troubles posed by Israel's separation barrier.

The barrier, a combination of up to 9-metre-high  walls, electronic fences and barbed wire, is now more than two-thirds complete.

When complete, some 85 per cent of it is to be built inside the West Bank, the territory occupied by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War.

It cuts off nearly 10 per cent of Palestinian territory, according to the UN.

Meanwhile, Israeli expansion has continued in the West Bank, construction the international community considers illegal.

More than 400,000 Israelis live in West Bank settlements and another 200,000 in annexed East Jerusalem.

Karim Joubran of Israeli NGO B'Tselem said “security is an excuse for all Israeli violations, a pretext for denying Palestinian property on the land, justifying the annexation and expansion of settlements”.

Before the 1948 war surrounding Israel's creation, Al Walajah village amounted to 18,000 dunums, according to Hassan Breijeh of the Palestinian Colonisation and Wall Resistance Commission, which campaigns against the barrier.

Just 70 dunums now remain under the village's control, he said.

As for the Hajajlas, the padlock has been removed, but the family says they remain isolated.

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