Wednesday, 9 April 2025

LIVE - Israel bombs Gaza kitchen, ‘safe-zone’ as blockade on aid continues

LIVE - Israel bombs Gaza kitchen, ‘safe-zone’ as blockade on aid continues

>LIVE - Israel bombs Gaza kitchen, ‘safe-zone’ as blockade on aid continues










UN chief Antonio Guterres says Gaza has become “a killing field” as Israeli forces continue bombarding the enclave, killing at least 26 Palestinians on Tuesday.







Doctors Without Borders (MSF) says an Israeli attack hit close to its clinic in the so-called safe zone of al-Mawasi in Gaza, while new footage shows Israeli forces bombed a charity kitchen in Khan Younis on Monday.


US forces continue bombing Yemen, killing at least six people in Hodeidah, as Israeli forces launch air raids on Lebanon’s Baalbek and Bekaa Valley.


Gaza’s Health Ministry says at least 50,810 Palestinians are confirmed dead and 115,688 wounded in Israel’s war on Gaza. The Government Media Office updated its death toll to more than 61,700, saying thousands of people missing under the rubble are presumed dead.


At least 1,139 people were killed in Israel during the Hamas-led October 7, 2023 attacks and more than 200 were taken captive.



US families accuse Palestinian-American billionaire of facilitating Hamas attacks



Nearly 200 Americans, including survivors and relatives of victims of the October 7 attacks on Israel, have filed a lawsuit against Bashar Masri, accusing him of providing assistance in constructing infrastructure that allowed Hamas fighters to carry out their deadly assault.


Bashar Masri poses during an interview with Reuters in Rawabi, October 5, 2020 [Rami Ayyub/Reuters]



The lawsuit, filed in the US District Court for Washington, DC, is thought to be the first case of a US citizen being accused of providing major support for the attacks.


In a statement, the plaintiffs said properties that the Palestinian-American owned, developed and controlled “concealed tunnels underneath them, and had tunnel entrances accessible from within the properties, which Hamas used in terrorist operations before, on and after October 7th”.


“Defendants facilitated the construction and concealment of those tunnels and even built above-ground solar panel installations that they then used to supply Hamas with electricity to the tunnels,” it said.


Masri’s office called the lawsuit “baseless”.


It said Masri would seek their dismissal in court, that he had been involved in development and humanitarian work for the past decades and “unequivocally opposes violence of any kind”.


“Neither he nor those entities have ever engaged in unlawful activity or provided support for violence and militancy,” it added.


The Humanitarian Situation Update is issued by OCHA Occupied Palestinian Territory twice a week. The Gaza Strip is covered on Tuesdays and the West Bank on Thursdays. The Gaza Humanitarian Response Update is issued every other Tuesday. The next Humanitarian Situation Update for the West Bank will be issued on 10 April.



Key Highlights



  • Acts of war in Gaza show utter disregard for human life, top UN officials say, calling on world leaders to act with urgency to save Palestinians in Gaza.


  • With no aid entering since 2 March, malnutrition, disease and other preventable conditions are expected to surge, increasing the risk of preventable child deaths, UNICEF warns.


  • Medicines and medical consumables are rapidly running out in Gaza, including critically low levels of supplies and blood units for maternal and child health. With two-thirds of the Gaza Strip territory designated as “no-go” zones or placed under displacement orders, over 390,000 people have been displaced in three weeks.


  • The number of aid workers killed since October 2023 rises to 412.



Humanitarian Developments



  • Since 18 March, and for more than three weeks, Israeli forces have escalated bombardment from the air, land and sea across the Gaza Strip and expanded ground operations, resulting in hundreds of casualties, destruction of civilian infrastructure, and large-scale displacement. Humanitarian operations have been stifled by a combination of expanded military activity, the Israeli government’s blockade on the entry of humanitarian aid and commercial supplies for more than a month, killing of aid workers and attacks on their premises, and severe movement restrictions within Gaza. Over 390,000 people are estimated to have been displaced again, according to the Site Management Cluster (SMC), with no safe place to go. On 3 and 6 April, rockets were fired from Gaza towards Israel, most of which were reportedly intercepted. Rocket fire that directly hit the city of Ashkelon on 6 April reportedly resulted in the injury of at least 12 Israelis, according to media reports. On 7 April, the heads of OCHA, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the UN Office for Project Services (UNOPS), UNRWA, the World Food Programme (WFP), the World Health Organization (WHO), and the International Organization for Immigration (IOM) issued an urgent appeal to world leaders to act firmly and urgently to save Palestinians in Gaza. In their statement, the top UN officials noted that “acts of war in Gaza…show an utter disregard for human life.” They also stressed that “assertions that there is now enough food to feed all Palestinians in Gaza are far from the reality on the ground,” warning that key commodities, including essential medical and trauma supplies, are rapidly running out. Underscoring the urgent call, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, Tom Fletcher, stated that " we are being deliberately blocked from saving lives in Gaza, and so civilians are dying.”


  • According to the Ministry of Health (MoH) in Gaza, between 3 and 8 April, as of noon, 287 Palestinians were killed and 912 were injured. Many bodies remain under the rubble of destroyed structures, according to MoH. Since 19 January, when the first phase of the ceasefire took effect, and as of 8 April, a total of 901 bodies were retrieved from across the Gaza Strip, the MoH reported. Between 7 October 2023 and 8 April 2025, the MoH in Gaza reported that at least 50,810 Palestinians have been killed and 115,688 Palestinians injured. This includes 1,449 people killed and 3,647 injured since the escalation of hostilities on 18 March, according to MoH.


  • On 1 April, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) reported that one of its staff, working at the MSF urgent care unit in Khan Younis, was killed along with his wife and 28-year-old daughter. MSF said that this is the second killing of an MSF colleague in just two weeks. On 6 April, the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) stated that two of their staff, who worked at the PRCS Al Amal hospital in Khan Younis, were killed along with their three children in an airstrike that hit their home in Khan Younis. In total, since 7 October 2023, at least 412 aid workers, including 291 UN staff, have been killed in Gaza.


  • In two separate incidents, three Palestinian journalists were reportedly killed in Khan Younis. On 6 April, a female journalist was killed along with seven other Palestinians, including children and women, when a residential building was reportedly hit in Al Amal neighbourhood in western Khan Younis. In another incident on 7 April, a tent used by journalists and media workers was hit close to Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Younis, setting it on fire and killing one journalist and another Palestinian. Nine other journalists were injured, including one who succumbed to his wounds on 8 April. Referencing the incident, the Palestinian Journalists Protection Center (PJPC) emphasized that “the deliberate targeting of journalists constitutes a war crime and reflects a broader, systematic pattern of grave human rights violations committed by Israel against civilians—especially journalists—who are entitled to protection under international humanitarian law.” The Palestinian Journalists Syndicate (PJS) also condemned the attack, noting that the number of journalists and media workers killed in the Gaza Strip since October 2023 has increased to 208. According to PJS, in March, seven journalists were killed by Israeli forces, six of whom were in the field and one in his home. Additionally, eight of the journalists’ relatives and family members were killed when the journalists were killed, PJS reported.


  • Between 3 and 7 April, other incidents resulting in fatalities were reported across the Gaza Strip, including the following: On 3 April, at about 18:00, four Palestinians were reportedly killed when a school was hit in At Tuffah area, east of Gaza city.

    • On 4 April, at about 01:50, 25 Palestinians, including women and children, were reportedly killed and others were injured or missing under the rubble when a residential building, housing over 50 people, was hit in the Al Manara neighbourhood in southeastern Khan Younis.


    • On 4 April, at about 13:20, three children were reportedly killed and others injured when a bicycle carrying water was hit in Khuza'a in eastern Khan Younis. On 6 April, at about 22:20, at least nine Palestinians, including four children and three women, were reportedly killed and at least 27 others were injured when a residential building was hit in central Khan Younis.


    • On 5 and 7 April, two food charity distribution points (Tekiya) were hit in Khan Younis, resulting in the killing of three Palestinian men on 5 April and seven Palestinians, including two children, among them a girl, on 7 April.


  • Between 7 October 2023 and 8 April 2025, according to Israeli forces and official Israeli sources cited in the media, more than 1,607 Israelis and foreign nationals were killed, the majority on 7 October 2023 and its immediate aftermath. This includes 407 soldiers killed, in addition to 2,587 soldiers injured, in Gaza or along the border in Israel since the beginning of the ground operation in October 2023. As of 8 April, it is estimated that 59 Israelis and foreign nationals remain captive in Gaza, including hostages who have been declared dead and whose bodies are being withheld.


  • Between 18 March and 6 April, the Israeli military issued 15 displacement orders, placing about 130.8 square kilometres, or 36 per cent of the Gaza Strip, under active displacement orders. In addition to areas placed under displacement orders, the Israeli authorities have requested the UN to coordinate movements to the “no-go” zone along Gaza’s perimeter and along Wadi Gaza where Israeli forces have re-deployed since 20 March. Together, these areas comprise about 66 per cent of the Gaza Strip. According to the Site Management Cluster (SMC), over 390,000 people are estimated to have been displaced between 18 March and 6 April, including families who were sheltering at about 320 displacement sites. Between 3 and 6 April, two displacement orders were issued by the Israeli military, as follows:

    • On 3 April, a displacement order was issued for Az Zaytoun and Tel El Hawa areas in Gaza governorate, covering approximately 5.1 square kilometres in two neighbourhoods.


    • On 6 April, a displacement order was issued for Az Zawayda and An Nuseirat in Deir al Balah governorate, covering approximately 3.1 square kilometres in nine neighbourhoods. Initial information indicates that the area includes 12 displacement sites with about 8,000 people, one field hospital, three Primary Health Care Centres (PHCs) and three medical points. Two field hospitals, four PHCs, and eight medical points are located within 1,000 metres of the area slated for evacuation.


  • Most attempts to coordinate humanitarian movements to about two-thirds of the Gaza Strip territory designated as “no-go” zones or placed under displacement orders (see above) have been denied, especially for aid delivery which is often blocked. Given restricted access, there are no clear estimates of the number of people who remain in these areas. Humanitarian partners on the ground report that these areas are not empty and include families who may have immediately fled following the issuance of orders but returned when only limited military activities were conducted. Initial information based on recent field visits by aid actors in Gaza, including in central, eastern, and southwest of Gaza city, indicate that despite efforts to scale up response, access to essential services is increasingly difficult due to insecurity and lack of supplies. Additionally, restricted humanitarian movements are hindering critical tasks, such as the delivery of chemicals for desalination plants and picking up commodities at crossings.


  • Between 3 and 7 April, out of 36 planned aid movements across the Gaza Strip that were coordinated with the Israeli authorities, 25 were denied, one faced impediments, and 10 were facilitated. Out of 14 planned humanitarian assistance movements in or to northern Gaza that were coordinated with the Israeli authorities, only five were facilitated and nine were denied. These include 12 aid missions that needed to pass through the Israeli-controlled Wadi Gaza area between southern and northern Gaza. Of these, five were facilitated by the Israeli authorities through Al Rashid Road while seven others were denied. In southern Gaza, out of the 22 planned humanitarian assistance movements, five were facilitated, 16 were denied and one faced impediments.


  • On 4 April, the UN Human Rights Office (OHCHR) expressed alarm at the breakdown of public order in Gaza, with recent allegations of killings and unnecessary or disproportionate use of force in crowd control by the local police. OHCHR stated: “As vital aid becomes scarcer and people become more desperate, our Office has received reports of several incidents alleging the unnecessary or disproportionate use of force by local police against crowds seeking food” as well as reports of “undue restrictions on the freedoms of peaceful assembly and expression, including arbitrary detention, ill-treatment and torture.” OHCHR added: “Israel’s continued attacks on Gaza have served to dismantle and destroy Gaza’s governance and law enforcement structures, contributing to a deterioration of public order that threatens the safety of Palestinians and their access to basic services and life-saving humanitarian aid,” a situation that has been “further exacerbated by Israel’s complete closure of crossings into Gaza, preventing entry of any goods or essential supplies as families struggle to find the basic necessities such as food and water.”


  • The health system in Gaza is overwhelmed by the influx of casualties and rapidly depleting essential medicines and supplies due to the blockade on the entry of humanitarian aid supplies into Gaza for over a month. On the occasion of World Health Day, WHO reported that supplies for maternal and child health, including for caesarean sections, anesthesia for delivery and pain management, as well as blood units needed for surgeries and complicated deliveries are critically low. Essential medical equipment, such as portable incubators, ventilators for neonatal intensive care, ultrasound machines, and oxygen pumps were reportedly not allowed entry to Gaza. In addition, 180,000 doses of routine childhood vaccines — enough to fully protect 60,000 children under the age of two — have not been permitted to enter, leaving newborns and young children without the life-saving care they urgently need. In a press conference marking the same occasion, the MoH in Gaza reported that while medical teams and ambulance crews continue to operate under life-threatening conditions to save lives, 37 per cent of medications and 59 per cent of medical supplies are at zero stock. This includes medications for operating rooms, intensive care units, and emergency departments that have been depleted to unprecedented levels, with higher percentages of critical medications being at zero stock, such as 54 per cent of medications for cancer treatment, 40 per cent of those for primary care and 51 per cent of medicines for maternal and child health. Furthermore, the destruction of diagnostic imaging equipment has severely restricted patients’ access to these vital services, while fuel shortages threaten to shut down the hospitals' essential departments that rely on generators, MoH added.


  • In Gaza governorate, access to health care facilities is affected by displacement orders and the safety of healthcare workers remains at risk, with at least two reported killed as they left their health facility in Gaza city on 7 April. Twelve out of 17 hospitals are partially functional and 17 out of 41 PHCs are functional, including 13 partially, and there is only one field hospital. Moreover, Health Cluster partners support 23 health facilities in Gaza governorate, including a newly opened, level-2 health centre offering general medical consultations, services for non-communicable diseases, wound care, sexual and reproductive health services, psychosocial support and nutrition services. At Al Shifa Hospital, doctors are being forced to discharge patients early to make room for trauma cases in urgent need of surgery, according to WHO, which is providing technical expertise to strengthen mass casualty management to save lives. A WHO-provided tent with ten inpatient beds is already in place, with plans underway to bring in more tents to expand hospital bed capacity. A new 70-bed surgical and orthopedic wing is also under construction to help absorb the growing caseload.


  • Following coordination with Israeli authorities and notwithstanding extremely challenging conditions, on 6 April, WHO reached Al Ahli Hospital in Gaza city, where it had deployed an international orthopedic emergency medical team to address the surge in trauma cases, supporting the replenishment of essential supplies from its dwindling stocks, and improving trauma care pathways to enable patient transfers to Al-Shifa Hospital, also in Gaza city. Due to heavy patient overload, Al Ahli Hospital’s CT scanner — the only one in northern Gaza — has broken down due to sustained overuse, 50 out of 160 blood units were used in one day, and the hospital’s three operating theatres are not enough to meet the demand for surgeries, WHO reported. In one instance, the hospital’s emergency department was pushed to eight times its capacity following an airstrike on a school in the city, receiving over 180 injuries and 52 fatalities in just one night, according to WHO. Referring to this incident, Dr. Khamis Elessi, rehabilitation and pain medicine consultant at the hospital, told WHO that the vast majority of casualties were women and children and stated: “In Gaza city, we need more doctors, more emergency physicians, more vascular surgeons and neurosurgeons. And more efforts to stop this and to open a safe passage for people who want to get treated outside.”


  • A significant reduction in water supply through pipelines from Israel, coupled with the lack of power, fuel, spare parts and access, is likely to further jeopardize people’s access to safe drinking water across the Gaza Strip and expose them to conditions that threaten their survival and dignity, according to the water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) Cluster. At present, only one of three Mekorot water pipelines from Israel to Gaza is functional—the Bani Suheila connection in Khan Younis—and the main desalination plant in southern Gaza has had an 85 per cent reduction in its water production since early March following power cuts by Israel. The second pipeline in Deir al Balah (Bani Saeed) has been non-functional since January 2025, after sustaining damage, with no permission hitherto granted by Israeli authorities to safely access and repair the line in the “no-go” zone. The third pipeline to northern Gaza (Al Muntar) has stopped functioning since 3 April 2025; the line previously provided nearly 50 per cent of water supply in Gaza and North Gaza governorates.


  • UNICEF now estimates that access to drinking water for one million people, including 400,000 children, has dropped from 16 litres per person per day during the ceasefire to just six, warning that if “fuel runs out in the coming weeks, this [the amount] could drop below four liters, forcing families to use unsafe water, increasing the risk of disease outbreaks, particularly among children.” The WASH Cluster is exploring contingency measures, such as scaling up water trucking from private desalination plants and further expanding the use of ground water wells, but serious challenges persist, including the blockade on the entry of essential supplies, including fuel, and shrinking humanitarian space.


  • A growing sanitation crisis is having a detrimental impact on Gaza's health care facilities. The WASH Cluster reports that over 250 health care facilities are awaiting essential infection prevention and control supplies, currently held outside the Gaza Strip. These supplies are vital to protect both patients and health workers, especially given the limited capacity of WASH services across health care facilities. In the absence of these supplies, there is an urgent need for prioritization and targeted training to help staff identify the best safety measures with limited resources. This situation is placing an additional burden on Gaza’s already overwhelmed health care workforce, amid an exceptionally serious depletion of essential medical and trauma supplies while hospitals have been inundated with casualties.


  • UNICEF warns that with no aid entering since 2 March, malnutrition, disease and other preventable conditions are expected to surge, increasing the risk of preventable child deaths. In central and southern Gaza, ready-to-use complementary food for infants—critical for healthy growth amid widespread food shortages—has been depleted. Only limited amounts of ready-to-use infant formula (RUIF) remain for 400 children, while nearly 10,000 infants under six months are not exclusively breastfed. UNICEF cautions that without access to RUIF, families may be forced to use alternatives mixed with contaminated water, compounding health risks, and that the lack of food and drinkable water also compromise breastfeeding practices and infant health. “UNICEF has thousands of pallets of aid waiting to enter the Gaza Strip,” said UNICEF Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa Edouard Beigbeder. “Most of this aid is lifesaving – yet instead of saving lives, it is sitting in storage. It must be allowed in immediately. This is not a choice or charity; it is an obligation under international law,” he added. Meanwhile, displacement orders and bombardment have forced the closure of 15 per cent of all nutrition sites, interrupting treatment for about 350 acutely malnourished children. Many more are at risk of being denied lifesaving support as nutrition detection and treatment services are disrupted. The Nutrition Cluster reports that operational capacity for nutrition screening has dropped by 30 per cent, reaching only around 58,000 children in March, compared with 83,000 in February.


  • A recent assessment conducted by Food Security Sector (FSS) partners reveals an interlinked crisis in agriculture, livestock, and fisheries, marked by input shortages, water scarcity, and widespread damage to livelihoods and infrastructure. Whether due to missing irrigation systems, livestock losses, or destroyed fishing boats, production disruptions are not isolated challenges but symptoms of a broader collapse in access, affordability, and mobility, particularly for vulnerable groups. While limited inputs constrain crop producers, herders face a survival crisis marked by high rates of animal mortality, the destruction of shelters, and potential health risks due to parasite infection among surviving livestock that passes on to people. This is compounded by unexploded ordnance risk and access limitations, which significantly undermine food production. Furthermore, fishers continue to face insecurity at sea and lack of essential equipment. Overall, the assessment finds that physical access challenges and security access constraints shape participation in land, water, or sea activities.


  • The escalation of hostilities since October 2023 has triggered a severe environmental crisis in Gaza, with profound impacts on water resources, agriculture, and waste management systems, according to a recent report by the Palestinian Environmental NGOs Network (PENGON). The report highlights that the destruction of critical infrastructure and heavy military vehicle activity have exacerbated long-standing environmental challenges, resulting in widespread pollution, including water pollution, reduced agricultural output, and soil degradation. Warning of severe threats to public health, the report notes that the vast majority of fields once used to grow crops and olive tree orchards have been damaged or destroyed, solid waste management services are on the brink of collapse, and there is widespread environmental contamination by an estimated 50 million tonnes of debris, unrecovered bodies, the open burning of waste and unexploded ordinances. The report calls for urgent, coordinated efforts to rebuild Gaza’s environmental infrastructure and mitigate long-term socio-economic and public health impacts.



Funding



  • As of 8 April 2025, Member States have disbursed approximately US$178.1 million out of the $4.07 billion (4.4 per cent) requested to meet the most critical humanitarian needs of three million out of 3.3 million people identified as requiring assistance in Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, in 2025, under the 2025 Flash Appeal for the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT). Nearly 88 per cent of the requested funds are for humanitarian response in Gaza, with just over 12 per cent for the West Bank. Moreover, during March 2025, the oPt Humanitarian Fund (oPt HF) managed 110 ongoing projects, totalling $67.6 million, to address urgent needs in the Gaza Strip (89 per cent) and the West Bank (11 per cent). Of these projects, 56 are being implemented by international non-governmental organizations (INGOs), 42 by national NGOs and 12 by UN agencies. Notably, 43 out of the 68 projects implemented by INGOs or the UN are being implemented in collaboration with national NGOs. For more information, please see OCHA’s Financial Tracking Service webpage and the oPt HF webpage.


* Asterisks indicate that a figure, sentence, or section has been rectified, added, or retracted after the initial publication of this update.


Disclaimer
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
To learn more about OCHA's activities, please visit https://www.unocha.org/.





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Tuesday, 8 April 2025

China ready to fight till end if U.S. is bent on tariff war - China F.M. Spokesperson

China ready to fight till end if U.S. is bent on tariff war - China F.M. Spokesperson

China ready to fight till end if U.S. is bent on tariff war - China F.M. Spokesperson










China is ready to fight till the end if the United States is bent on waging a tariff war or trade war, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson, Lin Jian said on Tuesday when commenting on the U.S. threat of an additional 50 percent tariff on Chinese imports.







In response to a relevant query at a daily press briefing, spokesperson Lin Jian said that the indiscriminate imposition of tariffs by the United States seriously violates the legitimate rights and interests of other countries, seriously violates the rules of the World Trade Organization, seriously damages the rule-based multilateral trading system, and seriously impacts the stability of the global economic order.


"It is typical unilateralism, protectionism, and economic bullying, and has been widely opposed by the international community," Lin Jian said, noting that China strongly condemns and resolutely opposes it.


Pointing out that no winners emerge in trade wars and tariff wars, and protectionism leads nowhere, Lin said the Chinese people do not cause trouble, but they are not afraid of trouble either. Pressuring, threatening and blackmailing are not the right ways to deal with China.


"China will take necessary measures to resolutely safeguard its lawful rights and interests. If the United States ignores the interests of the two countries and the international community and insists on fighting tariff wars and trade wars, China will surely fight till the end," said the spokesperson



China to work with EU to promote sound, steady development of relations



Chinese Premier Li Qiang said in a phone conversation with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Tuesday that China is ready to work with the European side to promote the sound and steady development of China-EU relations.


Li said that China-EU relations are showing a momentum of steady growth. This year marks the 50th anniversary of diplomatic ties between China and the EU, and the development of bilateral relations faces important opportunities, he said.


Li noted that Chinese President Xi Jinping had a telephone conversation with European Council President Antonio Costa at the beginning of this year, which sets the tone and charts the course for deepening China-EU relations.


China and the EU are each other's most important trading partners, he said, adding that their economies are highly complementary and interests are closely intertwined.


Li pledged China's willingness to work with the EU to maintain sound and smooth high-level exchanges, enhance political mutual trust, expand practical cooperation, and resolve each other's concerns through dialogue and consultation.


The two sides should promote the holding of new China-EU high-level dialogues in the strategic, economic and trade, green, and digital fields at an early date, he said.


Li pointed out that the United States has recently announced indiscriminate tariffs on all its trading partners, including China and the EU, under various pretexts, which is a typical case of unilateralism, protectionism and economic bullying.


The resolute measures taken by China are not only to safeguard its own sovereignty, security and development interests but also to defend international trade rules and international fairness and justice, Li said, noting that all human beings live in the same global village and no country can thrive in isolation.


Protectionism leads nowhere, and only openness and cooperation represent the right path for mankind, Li added.


China and the EU, as strong advocates of economic globalization and trade liberalization, as well as staunch defenders and supporters of the World Trade Organization (WTO), should enhance communication and coordination, expand mutual openness, jointly safeguard free and open trade and investment, and maintain the stable and smooth operation of global industrial and supply chains, so as to inject more stability and certainty into both sides and the world economy, Li said.


China's macro policy this year has taken full account of various uncertainties and has sufficient reserve of policy tools to hedge against adverse external impacts, Li said, adding that China is fully confident in maintaining sustained and healthy economic development.


China will continue to unswervingly expand opening-up, strengthen cooperation and share development opportunities with the EU countries and other countries in the world, he said.


Noting that the EU always attaches great importance to its relations with China, von der Leyen said it is crucial for EU-China relations to maintain continuity and stability under current circumstances.


The European side looks forward to holding a new EU-China leaders' meeting at an appropriate time to review the past, look into the future, and jointly celebrate the 50th anniversary of EU-China diplomatic relations, she said.


The European side is willing to promote high-level dialogue with China in various fields and deepen mutually beneficial cooperation in such fields as economy, trade, green economy and climate change, von der Leyen added.


She noted that the tariffs imposed by the United States have severely impacted international trade, causing a serious impact on Europe, China and vulnerable countries.


The EU and China are committed to upholding the fair and free multilateral trading system with the WTO at its core and safeguarding the sound and steady development of global economic and trade relations, which serves the common interests of both sides and the world at large, von der Leyen said
















Iran names location for high-level US talks

Iran names location for high-level US talks

Iran names location for high-level US talks




FILE PHOTO: Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. ©Horacio Villalobos/Corbis via Getty Images






The US president earlier revealed that he had sent a letter to Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, proposing renewed negotiations over the nuclear deal, which the US unilaterally withdrew from during Trump’s first term in 2018. He further warned that if Tehran rejects the offer, it could face bombing strikes “the likes of which it has never seen.”







Tehran, which denies it is seeking nuclear weapons, rejected the demand for direct talks. Araghchi denounced the proposal as “meaningless.” “If you want negotiations, then what is the point of threatening?” he questioned.


Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian has stated that Tehran is willing to engage in dialogue with Washington but only on equal terms. He urged the Trump administration to demonstrate a genuine commitment to negotiations, emphasizing that Iran will not agree to talks at any cost – particularly not under pressure or in demeaning conditions.


While Trump stressed his preference for a diplomatic way to strike a deal with Iran, he warned that “Iran is going to be in great danger” if the talks fail “because they can’t have a nuclear weapon.”


In response to US bombing threats, Iran reportedly placed its military on high alert on Sunday and warned neighboring countries that host American bases – including Iraq, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Turkey, and Bahrain – not to support any potential US strikes.


The intensifying rhetoric comes after years of strained relations over Tehran’s nuclear program. During his first term, Trump unilaterally withdrew from the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) — a multinational agreement aimed at limiting Iran’s nuclear activities in exchange for sanctions relief. Following the US withdrawal and resumed sanctions, Iran reportedly reduced its compliance with the deal.


In an interview with the Tasnim news agency on Tuesday, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said that he and US President Donald Trump's special envoy, Steve Witkoff, will lead the high-level negotiations in Oman.


"It is as much an opportunity as it is a test. The ball is in America's court," the Iranian foreign minister said in a post on X on Tuesday.


According to Iran's NourNews agency, Omani Foreign Minister Badr bin Hamad bin Hamood Al-Busaidi will also take part in the negotiations.


Trump announced on Monday that the US will hold "very high-level talks" with Iran on Saturday to address its nuclear program, warning that failure to reach an agreement would result in a "very bad day" for the Islamic Republic.
















Hamas slams US claim it used ambulances for ‘terrorism’ after medics killed

Hamas slams US claim it used ambulances for ‘terrorism’ after medics killed

Hamas slams US claim it used ambulances for ‘terrorism’ after medics killed










Hamas has slammed a statement by the US which claimed the Palestinian group “uses ambulances and more broadly human shields for terrorism”.







The Palestine Red Crescent Society’s president has called for an independent international inquiry into the “deliberate killing” of 15 humanitarian personnel last month in an attack by Israeli forces in Gaza.


Israel pounds Gaza, bombing a tent housing journalists near Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, killing at least two people and wounding nine others.


Gaza’s Health Ministry says at least 50,695 Palestinians are confirmed dead and 115,338 wounded in Israel’s war on Gaza. The Government Media Office updated its death toll to more than 61,700, saying thousands of people missing under the rubble are presumed dead.


At least 1,139 people were killed in Israel during the Hamas-led October 7, 2023 attacks and more than 200 were taken captive.



Palestinian American teen fatally shot by Israeli troops in West Bank village



Israeli forces have conducted a series of overnight raids and arrests across the occupied West Bank.


Israeli troops conduct a military raid in Qalqilya [Zain Jaafar/AFP]



They rounded up seven Palestinians, including two brothers, in the city of Qalqilya, as well as two people, including a minor, in Hebron and the nearby town of Beit Ula, according to the Wafa news agency.


Hundreds of people gathered at the mosque in this small village Monday as they bid farewell to Amer Rabee, a 14-year-old Palestinian American shot dead by Israeli forces a day earlier.


The Israeli military shot three teenage boys in Turmus Ayay on Sunday, the mayor and mourners said, as violent attacks by Israeli settlers and troops in the West Bank continues to surge in the backdrop of the Israel-Gaza war.


The shots that Rabee faced proved fatal. His friend Ayoub Jabara, 15, also an American citizen, is in intensive care in Ramallah, according to the mayor, Lafi Shalabi. Their other friend, 15-year-old Abdulrahman Shihada, was also hospitalized by the attack, Shalabi added


The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said in a statement Sunday: “During a counterterrorism activity in the area of Turmus Aya, IDF soldiers identified three terrorists who hurled rocks toward the highway, thus endangering civilians driving. The soldiers opened fire toward the terrorists who were endangering civilians, eliminating one terrorist and hitting two additional terrorists.”


The IDF released a grainy 10-second video purporting to show the incident, in which three figures can be seen and one appears to hurl something at the end.


Shalabi said the three boys were picking green almonds in the fields near Road 60, a major highway that cuts through the West Bank, when the IDF shot at them.


Rabee had moved to the occupied West Bank when he was a child, having grown up in the United States, his mother, Majd, told The Washington Post. Once he was done with high school he was hoping to move back, she added, to be with his four older siblings who reside in the United States.


Jabara and Shihada managed to escape despite their wounds toward the village and a separate Palestinian ambulance transferred them to the hospital, Suha Jabara, a relative of the slain teenager, said. When she heard the news of Rabee’s death, she immediately thought of her own sons. She is considering sending them to the United States where she hopes they might be safer.


On Monday, mourners waving Palestinian flags marched with Rabee’s body down the picturesque town’s winding roads to the cemetery. Rabee’s body was buried next to Omar Qateen, an American permanent resident who Palestinian officials say was shot dead by a settler during an attack on the town in June of 2023.


Known colloquially as Little America, around 85 percent of the population of Turmus Ayya has U.S. citizenship, Shalabi previously told The Post. Typically residents residing in the United States return for the summer, though most have not the last two summers since the war in Gaza broke out and tensions in the West Bank soared.


Many attendees at the funeral were U.S. citizens, but residents also said they were angry at the U.S. government for providing Israel with arms and political support, and attempts to displace them from their homes.


Rabee had enjoyed playing soccer and riding his scooter, his relative Mouman Jabara, 13, said at the funeral. Jabara was still shocked by Rabee’s death; he had been outside and heard the fateful gunfire.


Jabara said he moved 10 months ago to Turmus Ayya from New Jersey, as his parents wanted him to improve his Arabic and learn about his Palestinian heritage. He loves living there “but I am always scared,” he said. “Say I go out with friends — then suddenly there could be a raid” by the military or settlers.


Rabee’s distraught mother, Majd, sat surrounded by women mourning her son’s death at the funeral.


She said she last saw him before he left home to join his friends, but thought nothing more of the interaction as it appeared to be a normal day. Her son, she said, was smart, kind and diligent with his prayer.


“We are Palestinian,” she said. “This is what’s written for us. God bless his soul.”
















Kiev’s media blitzkrieg is faltering. Krivoy Rog is the latest example

Kiev’s media blitzkrieg is faltering. Krivoy Rog is the latest example

Kiev’s media blitzkrieg is faltering. Krivoy Rog is the latest example




FILE PHOTO: Iskander-M missile combat launch. ©Sputnik/Russian Defence Ministry






The strike on Krivoy Rog this week has reignited the familiar chorus of accusations from Kiev and its Western backers. Ukraine claims dozens of residential buildings were damaged, hinting – without evidence – that Russia deliberately targeted civilians. But once again, beneath the fog of war and politicized narratives, a more complex and revealing truth emerges – one that the mainstream media and Western officials seem all too eager to ignore.







According to the Russian Ministry of Defense, the strike hit “a meeting place of commanders of military units and Western instructors in one of the restaurants” in Krivoy Rog. Video footage and on-the-ground reports from Russian war correspondents support this claim. There is no indication that a cluster munition, often used to inflict wide-scale damage, was deployed. Instead, a single high-explosive missile appears to have been used, striking with precision and targeting a specific structure. The implication is clear: this was not a random or reckless act, but a targeted military operation.


The outrage from Kiev rings hollow, especially considering the Ukrainian military’s well-documented habit of embedding its personnel and foreign mercenaries in civilian areas. This is not speculation; it’s a pattern. Nearly one month ago to the day, Russian forces struck a hotel in Krivoy Rog used as a base by foreign mercenaries. The outcry then was similar, but the facts held up – military targets were embedded within what Kiev called “civilian infrastructure.”


If civilian casualties do occur in such circumstances, the blame does not lie solely with the missile that struck, but with the cynical strategy of using human shields. It’s a tactic designed not just for tactical cover, but also for information warfare – to exploit every Russian strike for international sympathy and political gain.


Let’s ask a hard question: Who benefits if civilians are killed? Certainly not Russia, which has nothing to gain from inflaming Western opinion at a time when there is a fragile diplomatic opening with Donald Trump’s team in Washington. But Kiev? It gains everything. President Zelensky’s criticism of the US ambassador’s response as “weak” after the Krivoy Rog incident reveals his real concern: Washington isn’t reacting strongly enough to maintain the image of Moscow as an intransigent aggressor. That image is essential if Ukraine hopes to derail even the slightest move toward a negotiated settlement – something Zelensky desperately fears as he loses ground both militarily and politically.


Meanwhile, the ceasefire agreement regarding attacks on energy infrastructure – a minimal 30-day moratorium – has been consistently violated by Ukrainian forces. These aren’t isolated incidents; they’re near-daily breaches. Russia has held its fire on critical infrastructure to create space for diplomacy. Kiev has done the opposite, undermining the very basis of trust necessary for any future agreement.


It’s time to start asking who is actually obstructing peace. Who stands to gain by perpetuating an endless war narrative? The Krivoy Rog strike, once stripped of Western spin, doesn’t suggest a careless or barbaric attack. It points to a targeted operation against a legitimate military threat – one deliberately placed in a civilian zone by Ukrainian command. That’s the real scandal.


The tragedy of this war is not just the suffering it has caused, but the way truth itself has been weaponized. If the West is serious about peace, it must start looking beyond Kiev’s smoke and mirrors – and ask whether the story it’s been told is really the one that leads to an endgame.
















Timnas Indonesia 4 vs Yaman 1 Grup C Piala Asia 2025

Timnas Indonesia 4 vs Yaman 1 Grup C Piala Asia 2025

Timnas Indonesia 4 vs Yaman 1 Grup C Piala Asia 2025




Timnas Indonesia U-17. Foto: Instagram @timnasindonesia






Matchday kedua Grup C Piala Asia U-17 timnas Indonesia berhasil dengan gemilang menggulung Yaman dengan skor 4-1. Duel digelar di Stadion Prince Abdullah Al-Faisal, Jeddah, hari Senin malam WIB, 07/04/2025.







Laga menit - menit awal permainan berimbang saling serang. memasuki menit ke enam, lewat serangan Timnas U17 Indonesia dari sayap kiri, mampu menggetarkan jala gawang Yaman pada menit kesembilan.


Mierza Firjatullah berhasil mendorong bola masuk ke gawang Yaman, menyusul sebuah operan tarik. Namun, gol itu dianulir karena offside.


Memasuki menit ke sepuluh, timnas kembali membuat tekanan. Kali ini tekanan timnas Indonesia berhasil membuka keunggulan lewat gol indah Zahaby Gholy yang diarahkan tiang jauh gawang Yaman pada menit 15'.


Keunggulan Timnas U17 Indonesia 1-0 atas Yaman tidak bertahan lama, 10 menit kemudian kembali menjebol gawang Yaman. Gholy lagi-lagi berperan dalam proses gol ini.


Pemain Persija itu mencoba melepaskan tembakan. Namun, ia sedikit terpeleset.


Siapa sangka bola sepakan Zahaby Gholy yang kurang sempurna itu justru membuka jalan Fadly Alberto untuk mengemas gol.


Fadly Alberto yang merangsek ke kotak penalti, tak terkawal dan mampu menyarangkan bola ke gawang Yaman dengan sundulannya, 2-0 untuk timnas Indonesia.


Sekitar 15 menit jelang babak pertama berakhir, Timnas U17 Indonesia kembali mendapatkan kans mencetak gol, masing-masing melalui Putu Panji dan Evandra Florasta.





Namun sundulan Putu Panji masih bisa diamankan kiper Yaman, sementara upaya Evandra Florasta melayang tinggi.


Tertinggal 0-2 pada babak pertama membuat Yaman meningkatkan serangan pada babak kedua. Tekanan terus diberikan Yaman kepada Garuda Muda.


Kapten Putut Panji membuat kesalahan fatal dengan melakukan pelanggaran kepada Karem Hamdi. Pelanggaran itu berujung penalti untuk Yaman pada menit ke-50.


Al Garash yang menjadi eksekutor menjalankan tugasnya dengan baik. Sepakan kaki kanan Al Garash ke sisi kiri mengecoh kiper Dafa yang bergerak ke arah lain. Yaman memperkecil ketinggalan jadi 1-2 pada menit ke-52.


Pada babak kedua ini Indonesia lebih mudah kehilangan bola. Tanpa Zahaby Gholy, Timnas U-17 minim tembakan spekulasi yang bisa mengancam Yaman.


Yaman mutlak menguasai permainan dan serangan dengan bola-bola pendek. Sementara Indonesia mengandalkan sepak pojok dan lemparan ke dalam dalam menciptakan peluang.


Nazriel Alfaro Syahdan melepaskan tembakan kaki kanan dari jarak jauh pada menit ke-78, namun bola terlalu melebar di sisi kiri gawang Yaman.


Timnas Indonesia mendapatkan peluang menambah keunggulan setelah mendapatkan penalti pada menit ke-85. Penalti itu diberikan kepada Indonesia setelah kiper Wesam Fuad menjegal Rafi Rasyiq.


Evandra Florasta kembali jadi algojo penalti Indonesia. Dengan tenang Evandra menjalankan tugasnya. Penalti kaki kiri Evandra ke sisi kiri mengecoh kiper Wesam yang bergerak ke arah lain. Indonesia unggul 3-1 atas Yaman pada menit ke-86.


Dafa membuat penyelamatan dengan menangkap bola tendangan Tamer Hamid pada menit ke-88.


Timnas U-17 mengunci kemenangan atas Yaman jadi 4-1 berkat gol kedua Evandra pada menit ke-89. Gol itu bermula dari umpan terobosan lambung kepada Josh Holong.


Josh pun mengoper bola kepada Evandra yang memiliki posisi lebih baik dalam mencetak gol. Percobaan pertama Evandra diblok kiper Wesam. Namun bola rebound dituntaskan Evandar. Indonesia unggul 4-1 atas Yaman pada menit ke-89.


Tanpa tambahan gol pada sisa laga, Indonesia menang 4-1 atas Yaman. Kemenangan ini membuka kans Indonesia ke Piala Dunia U-17 2025 di Qatar, November mendatang.


Indonesia dipastikan akan lolos ke Piala Dunia U-17 2025 apabila Afghanistan gagal menang atas Korea Selatan.



Susunan Pemain Indonesia



Dafa Al Gasemi (PG); Muhamad Al Gazani, I Putu Apriawan(C), Mathew Ryan Baker; Evandra Florasta, Daniel Alfrido, Nazriel Alfaro Syahdan, Fabio Azkairawan; Muhamad Zahaby Gholy, Fadly Alberto Hengga, Mierza Fijatullah.


Dafa Al Gasemi, Fabio Azkairawan, I Putu Apriawan (C), Muhamad Al Gazani, Mathew Ryan Baker, Daniel Alfrido, Evandra Florasta, Nazriel Alfaro Syahdan, Muhamad Zahaby Gholy, Fadly Alberto Hengga, Mochamad Mierza Fijatullah.


Cadangan: Rendy Razzaqu Mochtar, Dafa Zaidan El Fikri, Ida Bagus Pramana, Fandi Ahmad Muzaki, Muhammad Aldyansyah Taher, Ilham Romadhona, Rafi Rasyiq, Fardan Farras, Putu Ekayana, Josh Holong Junior, Faaris Nurhidayat, Muhammad Rhaka


Pelatih: Nova Arianto



Susunan Pemain Yaman



Omar Anwar Atwy, Mohammed Noman Al-Raawi, Mohammed Wahib Al-Garash, Aiman Mohammed Abdulrab, Karem Hamdi Abdulatef, Ahmed Abdo Aljedy, Ahmed Nasser Sheijh, Ali Nassre Daleeo, Mohamed Ali Abdullah, Wesam Fuad Al-Asbahi


Cadangan: Muntaser Abdulqader Ghaleb, Akram Ebrahim Kathei, Abdullah Ahmed Saeed, Esam Obaid Al-Sakkaf, Madyan Mohammed Al War, Tamer Hamid A;-Shaleli, Ahmed Talal Saeed, Amgad Hassan Zaid, Sailan Basheer Sailan, Yuner Salem Sheikh, Saqr Nasser Mohammed, Anas Salem Al-Douh


Pelatih: Samer Mohammed Saleh



Klasemen Grup C Piala Asia U-17 2025



No Negara Main Gol Poin
1 Indonesia 2 +5 6
2 Yaman 2 +1 4
3 Korea Selatan 1 -1 0
4 Afganistan 1 -2 0















Monday, 7 April 2025

Kremlin menanggapi klaim Kiev tentang korban sipil dalam serangan Krivoy Rog

Kremlin menanggapi klaim Kiev tentang korban sipil dalam serangan Krivoy Rog

Kremlin menanggapi klaim Kiev tentang korban sipil dalam serangan Krivoy Rog




Pejalan kaki berjalan di dekat Kremlin di Lapangan Merah di Moskow, Rusia.
©Maksim Blinov






Militer Rusia tidak menyerang infrastruktur sipil di Ukraina, kata juru bicara Kremlin Dmitry Peskov.







Komentar Peskov menyusul klaim Kiev bahwa 18 warga sipil tewas, termasuk sembilan anak-anak, dan 56 lainnya terluka dalam serangan Rusia di kota Krivoy Rog di Ukraina tengah pada hari Jumat.


Juru bicara itu ditanya oleh wartawan pada hari Senin apakah mungkin "ada kesalahan di pihak Rusia, bahwa mungkin intelijen tidak akurat" menjelang serangan.


Peskov menjawab dengan mengatakan, "kita harus sepenuhnya bergantung pada pernyataan Kementerian Pertahanan kita," menambahkan: "Militer kita secara eksklusif menyerang target militer dan yang terkait dengan militer. Tidak ada serangan yang dilakukan pada fasilitas infrastruktur sosial."


Kementerian Pertahanan mengatakan dalam sebuah pernyataan pada hari Sabtu bahwa serangan itu menghantam "tempat pertemuan komandan unit militer [Ukraina] dan instruktur Barat di salah satu restoran" di Krivoy Rog.


Hingga 85 tentara dan perwira Ukraina dan asing tewas, dan hingga 20 kendaraan rusak dalam serangan itu, menurut pernyataan tersebut.


Pada hari Senin, Kementerian Pertahanan mengatakan Ukraina melanjutkan pelanggarannya terhadap gencatan senjata 30 hari atas serangan terhadap infrastruktur energi. Presiden Rusia Vladimir Putin dan mitranya dari AS, Donald Trump, menyetujui jeda tersebut selama panggilan telepon pada tanggal 18 Maret. Kemudian, Vladimir Zelensky dari Ukraina juga menyetujui jeda tersebut.


Dalam 24 jam terakhir saja, pasukan Ukraina telah menggunakan pesawat nirawak dan artileri untuk menargetkan enam fasilitas energi di wilayah Rusia, yaitu Voronezh, Bryansk, Kherson, dan Republik Rakyat Donetsk, yang mengakibatkan kerusakan pada infrastruktur dan mengganggu pasokan listrik bagi sejumlah pelanggan, ungkapnya.


Informasi ini juga sekaligus menjawab berita yang disampaikan metrotv dan tvones, yang sejak awal perang Ukrania dan Rusia, selalu berpihak pada Ukrania dan Barat, dimana berbagai berita yang dikeluarkan barat banyak yang isinya drama untuk membangun kebencian dunia pada Rusia.


Sejauh ini upaya membangun fitnah kepada Rusia yang dilakukan Amerika Serikat dan Aliasinya termasuk juga oleh Zelensky berhasil, terbukti metrotv dan tvones termakan oleh berita tesebut dan memang sudah sejak awal munculnya tvones dan metrotv, media ini secara tidak langsung seperti kepanjangantangan Barat untuk menyebarkan berbagai hal kepada masyarakat Indonesia.