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Azerbaijan’s FM and Blinken’s assistant hold phone talk

01 Aug 2022 22:27

News.az

On August 1, 2022, a telephone conversation was held between the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Azerbaijan Jeyhun Bayramov and the Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Karen Donfried of the United States of America, the Press Office of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs told News.az.
The current state of the post-conflict normalization process between the parties, Azerbaijan and Armenia, the tripartite declarations signed by the leaders of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia, as well as between the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia through the mediation of the President of the Council of the European Union, Charles Michel. As a result of bilateral meetings, they exchanged views on the implementation of statements.
Minister Jeyhun Bayramov brought to the attention of the other side the well-known position of Azerbaijan regarding the need to ensure peace and progress in the region, including the opening of transport and communications, the delimitation of the border of the two states, and the need to start work on the future peace treaty.
The minister noted the importance of full implementation of the obligations of the parties. In this regard, contrary to the commitments arising from the tripartite statement dated November 10, 2020, the Armenian armed forces have not been fully withdrawn from the territories of Azerbaijan and the inadmissibility of this has been emphasized.
During the telephone conversation, the next steps in the process of normalization between Azerbaijan and Armenia, issues on the regional agenda, as well as other topics of mutual interest were discussed.

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Ayman al-Zawahiri: Who was al-Qaeda leader killed by US?

BBC News – August 1, 2022
15 hours ago

Ayman al-Zawahiri, who has been killed by a US drone strike in Afghanistan, was often referred to as the chief ideologue of al-Qaeda.

Ayman al-Zawahiri, who has been killed by a US drone strike in Afghanistan, was often referred to as the chief ideologue of al-Qaeda.

An eye surgeon who helped found the Egyptian Islamic Jihad militant group, he took over the leadership of al-Qaeda following the killing by US forces of Osama Bin Laden in May 2011.

Before that, Zawahiri was considered Bin Laden’s right-hand man and believed by some experts to have been the “operational brains” behind the 11 September 2001 attacks in the United States.

Zawahiri was number two – behind only Bin Laden – in the 22 “most wanted terrorists” list announced by the US government in 2001 and had a $25m (£16m) bounty on his head.

In the years after the attacks, Zawahiri emerged as al-Qaeda’s most prominent spokesman, appearing in 16 videos and audiotapes in 2007 – four times as many as Bin Laden – as the group tried to radicalise and recruit Muslims around the world.

Bin Laden and Zawahiri formed the World Islamic Front for Jihad against Jews and Crusaders in 1998

His killing in last weekend’s attack in Kabul was not the first time the US had sought to target Zawahiri.

In January 2006, he was the target of a US missile strike near Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan.

The attack killed four al-Qaeda members, but Zawahiri survived and appeared on video two weeks later, warning US President George W Bush that neither he nor “all the powers on earth” could bring his death “one second closer”.

Distinguished family

Born in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, on 19 June 1951, Zawahiri came from a respectable middle-class family of doctors and scholars.

His grandfather, Rabia al-Zawahiri, was the grand imam of al-Azhar, the centre of Sunni Islamic learning in the Middle East, while one of his uncles was the first secretary-general of the Arab League.

Zawahiri became involved in political Islam while still at school and was arrested at the age of 15 for being a member of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood – Egypt’s oldest and largest Islamist organisation.

His political activities did not, however, stop him from studying medicine at Cairo University’s medical school, from which he graduated in 1974 and obtained a masters degree in surgery four years later.

His father Mohammed, who died in 1995, was a pharmacology professor at the same school.

Radical youth

Zawahiri initially continued the family tradition, building up a medical clinic in a suburb of Cairo, but soon became attracted to radical Islamist groups which were calling for the overthrow of the Egyptian government.

In recent years, Zawahiri had become a remote and marginal figure, only occasionally issuing messages

 
When Egyptian Islamic Jihad was founded in 1973, he joined.

In 1981, he was rounded up along with hundreds of other suspected members of the group after several of them, dressed as soldiers, assassinated President Anwar Sadat during a military parade in Cairo. Sadat had angered Islamist activists by signing a peace deal with Israel, and by arresting hundreds of his critics in an earlier security crackdown.

During the mass trial, Zawahiri emerged as a leader of the defendants and was filmed telling the court: “We are Muslims who believe in our religion. We are trying to establish an Islamic state and Islamic society.”

Although he was cleared of involvement in Sadat’s assassination, Zawahiri was convicted of the illegal possession of arms, and served a three-year sentence.

According to fellow Islamist prisoners, Zawahiri was regularly tortured and beaten by the authorities during his time in jail in Egypt, an experience which is said to have transformed him into a fanatical and violent extremist.

Following his release in 1985, Zawahiri left for Saudi Arabia.

Soon afterwards, he headed for Peshawar in Pakistan and later to neighbouring Afghanistan, where he established a faction of Egyptian Islamic Jihad while working as a doctor in the country during the Soviet occupation.

Zawahiri took over the leadership of Egyptian Islamic Jihad after it re-emerged in 1993, and was a key figure behind a series of attacks by the group on Egyptian government ministers, including the Prime Minister, Atif Sidqi.

The group’s campaign to topple the government and set up an Islamic state in the country during the mid-1990s led to the deaths of more than 1,200 Egyptians.

In 1997, the US state department named him as leader of the Vanguards of Conquest group – a faction of Islamic Jihad thought to have been behind the massacre of foreign tourists in Luxor the same year.

Two years later, he was sentenced to death in absentia by an Egyptian military court for his role in the group’s many attacks.

Western targets

Zawahiri is thought to have travelled around the world during the 1990s in search of sanctuary and sources of funding.

In the years following the Soviet withdrawal of Afghanistan, he is believed to have lived in Bulgaria, Denmark and Switzerland, and sometimes used a false passport to travel to the Balkans, Austria, Yemen, Iraq, Iran and the Philippines.

In December 1996, he reportedly spent six months in Russian custody after he was caught without a valid visa in Chechnya.

According to an account allegedly written by Zawahiri, the Russian authorities failed to have the Arabic texts found on his computer translated and he was able to keep his identity secret.

In 1997, Zawahiri is believed to have moved to the Afghan city of Jalalabad, where Osama Bin Laden was based.

A year later, Egyptian Islamic Jihad joined five other radical Islamist militant groups, including Bin Laden’s al-Qaeda, in forming the World Islamic Front for Jihad against Jews and Crusaders.

The front’s first proclamation included a fatwa, or religious edict, permitting the killing of US civilians. Six months later, two simultaneous attacks destroyed the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, killing 223 people.

Zawahiri was one of the figures whose satellite telephone conversations were used as proof that Bin Laden and al-Qaeda were behind the plot.

Two weeks after the attacks, the US bombed the group’s training camps in Afghanistan. The next day, Zawahiri telephoned a Pakistani journalist and said: “Tell America that its bombings, its threats, and its acts of aggression do not frighten us. The war has only just begun.”

In the years following Bin Laden’s death, US air strikes killed a succession of Zawahiri’s deputies, weakening his ability to coordinate globally.

And in recent years, Zawahiri had become a remote and marginal figure, only occasionally issuing messages.

The US will herald his death as a victory, particularly after the chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan last year, but Zawahiri held relatively little sway as new groups and movements such as Islamic State have become increasingly influential.

A new al-Qaeda leader will no doubt emerge, but he will likely have even less influence than his predecessor.

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5 Facts About Ayman al-Zawahiri, 9/11 Strategist And Bin Laden Successor

Ayman al-Zawahiri was one of five signatories to Osama bin Laden’s 1998 “fatwa” calling for attacks against Americans

WorldNDTV News Desk (with inputs from AFP)Updated: August 02, 2022 12:20 pm IST

Here are 5 facts about him:

Zawahiri grew up in a comfortable household in Cairo. He became involved with Egypt’s radical Islamist community at a young age and was reportedly arrested at 15 for joining the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood.
He was jailed for three years in Egypt for militancy and implicated in the 1981 assassination of president Anwar Sadat and the massacre of foreign tourists at Luxor in 1997. He then linked up with bin Laden in Afghanistan, becoming Al-Qaeda’s main strategist and serving as bin Laden’s personal doctor.
He was one of five signatories to bin Laden’s 1998 “fatwa” calling for attacks against Americans. Like bin Laden, he vanished after the September 11, 2001 attacks, surviving repeated attempts on his life and re-emerging after reports that he had already died.
But he stayed in US sights, with a $25 million bounty on his head for the 1998 Africa attacks. Zawahiri took command of Al-Qaeda in 2011 after US Navy SEALs killed bin Laden.
But during the decade the 71-year-old presided over the group, it never recovered its prominence, as the aggressive Islamic State group took the lead in the jihadist movement, seizing large swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria and declaring a caliphate.

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U.N. body determines Palestinian Authority condones torture and ill-treatment against civilians

The Committee against Torture named the PA as negligent in preventing torture, ill-treatment within the West Bank and Gaza, and laid out a series of reforms for Palestinian leadership

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas speaks at the United Nations (UN) Security Council on February 11, 2020, in New York City.

SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES

 

By 
Matan Kogen

The Jewish Insider –  August 2, 2022

Last week, the United Nations Committee against Torture (CAT) — a subsidiary of the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) — convened in Geneva to investigate, for the first time, instances of torture and ill-treatment carried out or condoned by the Palestinian Authority (PA).
After the completion of the hearings, CAT released its findings on Friday in a 15-page set of concluding observations, in which the committee determined that the PA is liable for the torture and ill-treatment, and set forth recommendations as to how the PA can better ensure the well-being of Palestinian civilians.
The committee’s recommendations include: categorizing torture — which is currently considered a misdemeanor — as a felony; banning unlawful and torturous detentions; and creating a domestic commission to investigate any allegations of torture and ill-treatment. CAT also recommended the PA implement policies to democratize the Palestinian system of government, including safeguarding free speech.
In preparation for the hearings, CAT, which holds broad powers to probe incidents of torture and cruel treatment, reviewed a report submitted by the PA, as well as alternative reports submitted by a dozen American, Palestinian and Israeli NGOs, including Human Rights Watch, the Palestinian Coalition Against Torture, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem’s Clinic on International Human Rights and others.
Felice Gaer, former vice-chair of CAT and director of the American Jewish Committee’s Jacob Blaustein Center for the Advancement of Human Rights, told Jewish Insider, “One of the most important things a review can do is to raise cases because it clarifies government policy, and also causes the state to pay special attention to those cases thereafter.”
David May, a research analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, suggested to Jewish Insider that the PA has used the international body as a way to put more pressure on Israel. “When the Palestinians joined all the various [human rights] bodies […] starting in 2014, the goal was twofold,” he said. “One, to establish themselves as a state to try to gain international recognition without having the instruments of statehood — so, to essentially be granted statehood by the U.N., even though it doesn’t really exist on the ground — and the second part was to put the screws on Israel.”
While the committee’s investigation into the PA was “important to do,” May said, it pales in comparison to the U.N.’s outsized focus on Israel.
But while the various alternative reports cited several unique instances of torture and ill-treatment carried out by Palestinian governing bodies or their proxies, CAT discussed only the 2021 killing of Palestinian human rights activist and PA critic Nizar Banat.
Despite any issues regarding the limited scope of CAT’s inquiry into Palestinian acts of torture, former Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Danny Danon told JI, “I think the [committee’s] report actually makes a strong point about what’s happening in the PA institutions, and it calls for a major reform to be required.” Danon suggested, however, that the implementation of effective reform would be highly unlikely.
Dina Rovner, legal advisor at UN Watch told JI, “We hope that the Palestinian delegation will implement the Committee’s recommendations, including on the definition and criminalization of torture in Palestinian laws, treatment of Palestinian detainees, and violence against women. Anyone who cares about human rights should fight for accountability from the Palestinian Authority on these issues, not just in terms of legislative changes but also in terms of enforcement.”
The next inquiry into torture and ill-treatment carried out by the Palestinian Authority will likely come at the International Criminal Court (ICC), to which the Israel-based International Legal Forum recently submitted an appeal.

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Israel’s Gov’t Votes to Halt Financial Payments to Palestinian Authority Because It Pays Salaries to Terrorists

CBNNEWS.COM

Israel’s Gov’t Votes to Halt Financial Payments to Palestinian Authority Because It Pays Salaries to Terrorists

08-01-2022

CBN News

Israel’s security cabinet voted on Sunday to withhold 600 million shekels ($176 million) from the Palestinian Authority over the next year to counter the money the PA pays to terrorists and their families.
Dubbed “pay-to-slay,” the PA policy of paying salaries to terrorists and their families for attacking Israelis is considered to incentivize Palestinians to carry out terror attacks.
The monies will be withheld from taxes collected by Israel on behalf of the PA, mostly from Palestinians who work inside Israel.
 
Related

Palestinian TV Calls for the Murder of Jews in Extremist Videos

 
Israel passed a law in 2018 requiring the government to withhold the same amount of money from the PA as was estimated they would pay to terrorists and their families. But it must be reapproved by the security cabinet from time to time, The Times of Israel said.
Hussein al-Sheikh, secretary-general of the executive committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization, called the Israeli vote a “financial blockade” and termed it stealing Palestinian money “in a step that adds to the daily escalation in our cities, villages and camps and the legalization of our bloodshed,” TOI reported.
The vote came on the 20th anniversary of a significant terror attack. On July 31, 2002, terrorists murdered nine people, including five American students, and injured more than 80 others in a bombing attack at the Frank Sinatra Cafeteria on the Hebrew University campus in Jerusalem.

And now as a matter of policy, the PA is giving raises to the terrorists who perpetrated the deadly Jerusalem attack.
Four Palestinians from an eastern Jerusalem Hamas cell were arrested shortly after the attack in August 2002 and four more were arrested over the next four years.  The Hebrew University attack was one of a number that the same cell carried out.
According to Palestinian Media Watch (PMW), an Israeli research institute, terrorist salaries increase according to their time served.
So, four of the terrorists are now receiving a raise from 7,000 ($2,251) to 8,000 ($2,572) shekels a month. They also receive supplements to those payments based on whether or not they are married, how many children they have, and for being Jerusalem residents.
“In other words, as a reward for their participation in terror and as a reward for murdering tens of people, the PA has paid these 8 terrorists a cumulative sum of 8,022,600 shekels ($2,579,614),” wrote Maurice Hirsch, Director of Legal Strategies at PMW in his report.
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Palestinian Authority raises payments to perpetrators of 2002 Hebrew U attack

i24NEWS
August 02, 2022 at 12:31 AM – latest revision August 02, 2022 at 03:21 AM

Olivier Fitoussi/FLASH90Students at the campus of “Mount Scopus” at Hebrew University, in Jerusalem, on April 19, 2021.

‘As we talk about reducing the conflict… this is just incompatible with the very concept of peace’

On Sunday, the 20th anniversary of a bombing in Jerusalem that killed nine people and wounded more than 80 others, the Palestinian Authority (PA) increased payments to the families of the imprisoned perpetrators.
In the midst of the Second Intifada, on July 31, 2002, an east Jerusalem-based Hamas cell carried out a bombing in the Mount Scopus campus cafeteria of Jerusalem’s Hebrew University.

Five of those killed were US citizens, in an attack that helped shape the Israeli-Palestinian conflict into what is it today.

In the 20 years since the bombing, the West Bank’s PA has paid the families of the attackers more than $2.5 million, in what some call rewards and others call allocations.

This month, as the convicted Palestinians reached their two-decade mark in prison, the PA is set to increase monthly payments to their families by 14.3 percent. Some see it as an automatic, incremental raise, while others consider it an active step to award terrorists for murder, in what is dubbed the “Pay to Slay” policy.
“It’s time for Israel to tell the international community that if you’re going to talk about peace and reach an agreement between Israel and the Palestinians, this cannot go on,” Dr. Emmanuel Navon, an international relations expert at Tel Aviv University, told i24NEWS.
“Even if we don’t talk right now about a political solution between Israel and the PA, as we talk about reducing the conflict and promoting common projects, this is just incompatible with the very concept of peace.”
Israel’s political and security cabinet on Sunday approved the deduction of approximately $176 million from the tax money that Israel collects for the PA, a recurrent response to payments to the families of prisoners and terrorists by Ramallah.

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Kuwait reappoints oil, finance ministers in new cabinet — state media

The outgoing government had resigned in April in a long-running standoff with the elected parliament. (File/KUNA)

01 August 2022: https://arab.news/4ycr

REUTERS
ARAB NEWS

KUWAIT: Kuwait reappointed Oil Minister Mohammed Al-Fares and Finance Minister Abdul Wahab Al-Rasheed in a new cabinet formed on Monday, said state news agency KUNA.

The outgoing government had resigned in April in a long-running standoff with the elected parliament.
The new decree also announced the appointment of Talal Khaled Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah as Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Defense and Acting Minister of Interior.
Among those appointed were Dr. Ahmed Nasser Al-Mohammed Al-Sabah as Minister of Foreign Affairs and Dr. Khaled Mahous Suleiman Al-Saeed as Minister of Health.

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‘Turkey in favor of stability, political reconciliation in Libya’

BY DAILY SABAH WITH AA

ISTANBUL AUG 01, 2022 – 11:14 AM GMT+3

Joint forces affiliated with Libya’s Government of National Unity (GNU) assemble inside the closed Tripoli International Airport, as they deploy on the outskirts and entrances of the capital Tripoli, Libya, July 25, 2022. (AFP Photo)

Turkey sees Libya as a whole and is in favor of stability and political reconciliation in the war-torn country, Turkey’s Ambassador to Tripoli Kenan Yılmaz said Monday.
Libya’s speaker of the Tobruk-based House of Representatives, Aguila Saleh, recently affirmed the rapprochement with Turkey and said he would visit Ankara in the near future. He is expected to visit Turkey on Aug. 1-2 and hold talks in the capital Ankara.
Ambassador Yılmaz evaluated Turkey’s expansion to the east of Libya and Saleh’s visit to Turkey to the Anadolu Agency (AA).
“We think that this visit is of great importance in terms of addressing all aspects of our relations and other political dimensions,” he said and added that he had verbally invited Saleh to Turkey during their meeting in January, and that they had conveyed the invitation of Parliament Speaker Mustafa Şentop to them in June.
Yılmaz stated that they had planned Saleh’s visit to Turkey in the first week of July, but this visit had to be postponed due to the protests that broke out in Libya on July 1 and the destruction of the House of Representatives building in Tobruk.
Stating that if possible, Saleh can be accepted by the higher authorities in Ankara, Yılmaz said: “We are continuing our efforts to ensure that Saleh’s postponed visit takes place as soon as possible.”
Noting that Turkey has deep-rooted historical relations with Libya, Yılmaz said that they first went to the city of Kubbe on Jan. 19 and had a very productive meeting with Saleh where they were warmly welcomed.
Yılmaz stated that they went to Benghazi with a group of Turkish businesspeople on Jan. 29 at the invitation of Benghazi Mayor Sakr Bucevari.
Yılmaz said that they discussed the continuation of the unfinished projects of Turkish companies that had worked in eastern Libya in the past and their participation in new projects, the reactivation of the currently closed Benghazi Consulate General of Turkey, and the resumption of Turkish Airlines (THY) Benghazi flights.
Yılmaz noted that they established the Turkey-Libya Inter-Parliamentary Friendship Group in April 2021 within the Turkish Parliament and Ahmet Yıldız is currently the chair.
Reiterating that they received the delegation in Turkey, which included a group from the House of Representatives in Tobruk, in December, Yılmaz said that they are making plans for a delegation headed by Ahmet Yıldız to visit the House of Representatives.
Regarding Turkey’s stance on the solution initiatives between the rival parties in Libya, he said: “In Libya, we have based our approach to finding a solution on principles and legitimacy from the very beginning. We support the Libyan-led solution based on legitimacy, which is owned by the Libyans.”
Yılmaz also stated that in the negotiations between the House of Representatives and the Supreme Council of the State, many items were agreed upon, there were a few controversial issues, and that Turkey supports these talks.
Emphasizing that they would benefit from preparing the constitutional ground in Libya as soon as possible and leading the country to elections, Ambassador Yılmaz said: “Turkey’s approach is the establishment of stability and political reconciliation in Libya and, naturally, the dominance of security. It is a holistic approach that covers the whole of Libya rather than political figures and sees the country as a whole. We see Libya as a whole, without making any distinction between the eastern, southern or western regions.
“One of our principles is not to create a power vacuum in the country. Instead of creating successive transitional governments, it would be best for Libya to come together by consensus and focus on elections,” he underlined.
After years of conflict in Libya between the United Nations-recognized Government of National Accord (GNA) and illegitimate forces loyal to eastern-based putschist Gen. Khalifa Haftar and the consequential difficult diplomatic period, an interim unity government has been established in recent years.
Turkey and Libya have seen closer ties in recent years, especially after the signing of security and maritime boundary pacts in November 2019, along with Turkey’s aid to help the legitimate Libyan government push back the putschist Haftar’s forces.
In the recent Libyan crisis, Turkey supported the U.N.-recognized legitimate government in Tripoli against the eastern-based illegitimate forces led by Haftar, who was backed by Egypt, France, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Russia. Turkey’s support for the Tripoli government was critical to repel the Haftar forces’ offensive to capture the capital Tripoli and led to a period of stability resulting in the formation of the unity government.
In the current situation, Turkey suggests that an election reflecting the will of the Libyan people should be held for the establishment of a long-lasting and stable government in the country.
Turkey had previously said that it was ready to talk to Saleh and his ally, putschist Gen. Haftar. Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu in December said that Saleh and Haftar had backtracked on a potential meeting.
Early in July, Libyan protesters stormed and set fire to the premises of the Tobruk-based House of Representatives, calling for the abolition of legislative and executive bodies and for elections to be held as soon as possible.
Once again, two competing governments are vying for control in Libya, already torn by more than a decade of civil war.
Libya has for years been split between rival administrations in the east and the west, each supported by rogue militias and foreign governments. The Mediterranean nation has been in a state of upheaval since the 2011 NATO-backed uprising toppled and later killed longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi.
But a plan had emerged in the past two years that was meant to put the country on the path toward elections. A U.N.-brokered process installed an interim government in early 2021 to shepherd Libyans to elections that were due late last year.
That government, led by Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, briefly unified the political factions under heavy international pressure. But the voting never took place, and since then, the plan has unraveled and left the country in crisis.
Lawmakers in Libya’s east-based parliament, headed by influential speaker Saleh, argued that Dbeibah’s mandate ended when the interim government failed to hold elections.
They chose Fathi Bashagha, an influential former interior minister from the western city of Misrata, as the new prime minister. Their position gained the endorsement of Haftar whose forces control the country’s east and most of the south, including major oil facilities.
Dbeibah has refused to step down and factions allied with him in western Libya deeply oppose Haftar. They maintain that Dbeibah, who is also from Misrata with ties to its powerful militias, is working toward holding elections.

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A new aid deal between China and Syria

August 1, 2022

While Beijing insists the aid will be humanitarian in nature, Israeli defense sources say some products are expected to “fill current gaps in Syria’s military communications network.”
By JNS
A new aid deal between China and Syria that will include the delivery of communications equipment to Damascus has set off “alarm bells” within the Israeli security establishment, according to a report by news site Breaking Defense.
Israeli sources told the outlet that while the exact nature of the Chinese products remains known, they are expected to “fill current gaps in Syria’s military communications network.”

One source said that Israel has indications that Chinese experts in recent months visited Syrian military installations that were damaged heavily during the civil war.

“We believe that many [facilities] of the Syrian army will be rebuilt by the Chinese, who have the capability of bringing in thousands of workers to complete the work in the shortest time,” the source was quoted as saying in the report.

While Chinese state media outlet Xinhua said the assistance was meant to “improve local network infrastructure, especially in those areas hit hard during the Syrian crisis since 2011,” Israeli officials reportedly fear the equipment will be used to enhance Damascus’s intelligence capabilities.
China has donated tens of millions of dollars in aid to war-torn Syria over the past decade.

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Morocco king calls to restore ties with ‘brotherly’ Algeria

July 31, 2022 at 4:04 pm | Published in: AfricaAlgeriaMoroccoNews

King Mohammed VI of Morocco attends the signing of bilateral agreements at the Agdal Royal Palace on February 13, 2019 in Rabat, Morocco [Carlos Alvarez/Getty Images]
 

Middle East Monitor – July 31, 2022 at 4:04 pm

 Morocco’s King Mohammed VI has reiterated calls to restore diplomatic ties with Algeria, which severed ties with Rabat last year citing “hostile tendencies” towards Algiers following the kingdom’s decision to resume relations with Israel in 2020.

“We aspire to work with the Algerian presidency so that Morocco and Algeria can work hand in hand to establish normal relations between two brotherly peoples,” King Mohammed said yesterday as part of his traditional address marking the 22nd anniversary of his accession to the throne.
“I stress once again that the borders that separate the Moroccan and Algerian brothers will never be barriers preventing their interaction and understanding.
He urged Moroccans to “preserve the spirit of fraternity, solidarity and good neighbourliness towards our Algerian brothers” and described the two countries as being more than neighbours.
“We consider Algeria’s security and stability as part of Morocco’s security and stability,” Mohammed said. “What affects Morocco will also affect Algeria, because they are complementary twins.”
As part of the US-brokered Abraham Accords, Morocco joined other Arab states in normalising ties with Israel, including the UAEBahrain and Sudan. The agreement between Rabat and Tel Aviv was made in part, by the US agreeing to recognise the disputed Western Sahara territory, whose independence movement, the Polisario Front is supported by Algeria in addition to the Palestinian cause.

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