Thursday, November 20, 2025

Despite ceasefires in Gaza and Lebanon, the war isn’t over for Netanyahu


al Jazeera:

Despite ceasefires in Gaza and Lebanon, the war isn’t over for Netanyahu


US President Donald Trump has declared peace but Israel’s PM Benjamin Netanyahu says the war on Gaza is not over


US President Donald Trump gestures beside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at Ben Gurion International Airport in Israel [Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters]



By Justin Salhani
Published On 19 Nov 2025



On Tuesday, Israel’s target was the largest Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon. The two missiles its forces fired killed at least 13 people. A drone attack on the same day in the city of Bint Jbeil killed another person. And the next day Israeli airstrikes hit villages in southern Lebanon.

Meanwhile, in Gaza, Israeli air raids and drone attacks continue. At least one person was killed on Wednesday, as Israel struck Rafah and Khan Younis.

The attacks have come despite ceasefire agreements in both Lebanon and Gaza and a major pronouncement by United States President Donald Trump that the Middle East is now at peace.

But as far as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is concerned, Israel’s war on the region is not over.



In a speech to Israel’s parliament on November 10, one month to the day after a ceasefire ostensibly went into effect in Gaza, Netanyahu said the war “has not ended,” according to The Times of Israel, and he claimed that Israel’s enemies are rearming.

The ceasefire should have brought Israel’s more than two years of war on Gaza to an end but attacks have not ceased. Israel has killed more than 280 Palestinians since then.

And Israel’s war is not limited to Gaza, either. In Lebanon, Israel has killed more than 100 civilians in the last year, despite a ceasefire with Lebanon on November 27, 2024, while Israeli attacks also continue in the occupied West Bank.


Israel keeps attacking

Netanyahu’s words are of little surprise given Israel’s ongoing attacks on people in the region. In fact, analysts say, the precedent was clear even before the ceasefires were signed.

“There was never any evidence that the Israelis would respect the ceasefire in Gaza or Lebanon,” Elia Ayoub, a Lebanese-Palestinian researcher, told Al Jazeera.

“Netanyahu can rely on the lack of international accountability, especially with the backing of the US, to continue his war on civilians,” Ayoub added.






On October 13, 2025, Trump gathered with political representatives from more than two dozen nations in Egypt’s Sharm el-Sheikh to declare peace in Gaza and the wider region.

“At long last, we have peace in the Middle East,” Trump said.

But a little more than a month later, Israel’s attacks on both Gaza and Lebanon continue on a near-daily basis.

On Wednesday, November 19, the death toll from Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza since October 7 rose to 69,513 Palestinians.

Pressure had begun to build on Israel over its war on Gaza in recent months as Israeli human rights groups and the world’s top scholars joined the institutions saying that Israel was committing genocide.






But the Sharm el-Sheikh summit and the public announcement of a ceasefire seem to have eased pressure on Israel.

On the ground in Gaza and Lebanon, people from areas where Israel continues to attack are unable to go back to their lives or rebuild their homes.

Not only has Israel attacked reconstruction equipment, but, in the case of Gaza, for example, it has also stopped much of the aid promised to Palestinians in the enclave.

“As long as Netanyahu expects impunity, there is no reason to believe that anyone in Lebanon or Palestine is safe from Israel,” Ayoub said.


Why the war isn’t over

Netanyahu’s recent comments show that he “is determined to keep Israel in a perpetual state of war, as evidenced by his repeated stalling and sabotage of previous ceasefire negotiations,” Rida Abu Rass, a Palestinian political scientist, told Al Jazeera.

Protests in Israel have occasionally called for an end to the war. But they were largely centred around calls for a deal with Hamas to release the remaining Israeli captives in Gaza. The living captives have all been released, though Hamas is still reportedly looking for the remains of three captives.

Netanyahu himself says the war must continue because Israel’s enemies are regrouping.

“Those who seek to do us harm are rearming. They did not give up their aim of destroying us,” Netanyahu said during his speech to the Knesset.

Despite the widespread destruction of Gaza, Netanyahu says his goal of dismantling Hamas has not yet been completed. Israeli officials and media also report that Hezbollah is rebuilding, despite analysts saying the group is not in a position to attack Israel.
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Experts have cast doubt on Netanyahu’s justifications for continuing the war. They believe Netanyahu’s stated goals of dismantling Israel’s enemies were purposefully unachievable in order for him to keep the war going and avoid domestic and international accountability.

“His political career hangs in the balance: far-right coalition partners demand the war’s resumption, seeing a historic opportunity to advance their vision of ethnically cleansing Palestine,” Abu Rass said.

“Netanyahu would like to sell his supporters and coalition partners the narrative that the war isn’t over.”

In Israel, Netanyahu is on trial in three corruption cases. The cases have been delayed repeatedly due to the war, with courts citing “national security priorities”.

“Keeping Israel on a constant war footing is good for [Netanyahu] since it allows him to keep delaying his trial and the demands of his far-right coalition to reshape Israel’s internal governing principles, which caused him so much trouble in the past,” Rob Geist Pinfold, a lecturer in international security at King’s College London, told Al Jazeera.

He’s also reportedly fearful of any investigation into the failures to prevent the operation by Hamas and other Palestinian factions that took place on October 7, 2023. However, Netanyahu also has a long game, analysts say.

“Throughout his career, he has consistently worked to displace Palestinians and expand settlement. For him, the war provided an opportunity to advance these goals,” Abu Rass said.

Internationally, the International Criminal Court has issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu and his former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes in Gaza.

“I view the so-called ceasefires as gaslighting campaigns designed to indefinitely delay accountability,” Ayoub said.

In this sense, Ayoub said, Netanyahu’s comments show that the conditions of the ceasefire are not applied universally.

“The Israeli strategy is clearly ‘you cease, we fire’. And if any actor fires back, the Israelis simply intensify what they’re already doing.”

These attacks seem set to continue as the international community has turned its focus away from Gaza. While the ceasefires in both Lebanon and Gaza have eased the ferocity and frequency of attacks, violence continues in both places and in the occupied West Bank. Such conditions will continue, analysts say, until the root cause is confronted.

“International stakeholders – governments, civil society groups, and media – must continue to apply pressure on the Israeli and US governments,” Abu Rass said.

“We will inevitably face new escalations unless the root causes – namely, Israeli apartheid and military occupation – are dismantled.


Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Deadly Israeli attack on Gaza brings death toll since ceasefire to 280


al Jazeera:

Deadly Israeli attack on Gaza brings death toll since ceasefire to 280


The attack marks the latest of nearly 400 Israeli violations of a US-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, according to Gaza’s Government Media Office


Smoke rises in an area within the so-called yellow line to which Israeli troops withdrew under the ceasefire in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, November 18, 2025 [Ramadan Abed/Reuters]


By Mariamne Everett
Published On 19 Nov 2025


At least one Palestinian has been killed and two others – a woman and her child – injured in Israeli attacks on southern Gaza, according to the Wafa news agency and a medical source.

The killing came on Wednesday in the Qizan an-Najjar area, south of Khan Younis, a source from the city’s Nasser Hospital told Al Jazeera.

Earlier, a woman and her child were gravely injured in a drone attack on the southern town of Bani Suheila, east of Khan Younis.

They add to 279 killings and more than 650 injuries in nearly 400 Israeli violations recorded by the enclave’s Government Media Office since the October 10 ceasefire brokered by the United States.

The office called on “US President Donald Trump, the mediating countries, the guarantors of the agreement, and the UN Security Council to take serious and effective action to stop these attacks, restrain the occupation, and compel it to strictly adhere to the terms of the ceasefire agreement and the humanitarian protocol, thereby ensuring the protection of civilians and putting an end to the escalating violations”.

On Monday, the United Nations Security Council had approved a resolution, drafted by the US as part of Trump’s 20-point peace plan, mandating a transitional administration and an international stabilisation force in Gaza that envisions a “credible pathway” to Palestinian statehood. The resolution passed in a 13-0 vote, with Russia and China abstaining.

“A lot of progress has been made with respect to Gaza and just about everything else we touch,” Trump said on Tuesday in a news conference during a visit by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) to Washington, DC.

“Just yesterday, the United Nations Security Council formally adopted my peace plan and officially endorsed the board of peace.”







Trump said the so-called board of peace would “end up being quite a large board because it’ll be the heads of every major country”.

Hosting MBS for dinner at the White House, Trump said, “I hope your highness will be on the board.” He also thanked MBS for his role in securing the ceasefire, without elaborating further.

Under the UNSC resolution, the board will serve as an interim administration, handling security, public services and reconstruction.

It remains unclear how it will be implemented, but its mandate will run until the end of 2027.


Immediate challenges

Reporting from Gaza City, Al Jazeera’s Hani Mahmoud said Palestinians are more concerned about the immediate challenges they are facing in their daily lives than Trump’s idea of a board of peace, which is “still a political concept”.

“They worry about waking up in the morning and trying to get clean drinking water into their displacement areas,” he said.

People also wake up “worried about the next heavy rainfall, how to stay dry and how to protect their children”, Mahmoud added.

Above all, “Palestinians want to know what’s going to happen next”, Mahmoud said, adding, as if they will be allowed to return to their homes.


Palestinian women struggle to receive food at a community kitchen in Nuseirat, central Gaza Strip, November 19, 2025 [Abdel Kareem Hana/AP Photo]


This is a complex question for those whose homes are in the eastern part of the besieged enclave, as the area “has now been officially marked as a yellow area under Israeli control, with their livelihoods, their homes, their residential clusters completely destroyed”, said Mahmoud.

The so-called yellow line is an invisible boundary dividing the Gaza Strip into Israeli-occupied and Hamas-controlled zones, established as part of the October ceasefire. Israel has been routinely firing and killing Palestinians venturing to check on the ruins of their homes in areas it controls in recent weeks.

“Political diplomacy is not changing the course of things on the ground for them so far … People need a clear roadmap into ending all forms of violence, opening the crossings and making them more operational … they want proper and efficient access to food and water supplies,” said Mahmoud.
‘Winter is coming’ for Palestinians

Under the ceasefire, aid deliveries were supposed to be significantly ramped up, with at least 600 trucks due to enter Gaza each day to fulfil the population’s needs. But the numbers have been much lower than that, and the UN has warned that the hunger crisis in Gaza remains catastrophic.

Trump also touted the return of the captives to Israel as part of his 20-point plan, though he incorrectly stated that Hamas still has two bodies left to return when the actual figure is three.

“A lot of work has been done by Hamas, and a lot of people said they wouldn’t be doing that,” Trump said.

At the start of the truce, Hamas held 20 living captives and 28 bodies of the deceased. In exchange, Israel has released nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners in its custody and returned the bodies of hundreds of deceased Palestinians.

“We also want to thank all of the people living in Gaza … They’ve begun to move back to their homes … [They have] a lot more safety than they’ve ever had before,” Trump claimed.

In an interview with our colleagues at Al Jazeera Arabic, Philippe Lazzarini, the chief of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA), disputed Trump’s claims.

“The residents of the Gaza Strip are suffering from disease and displacement, and insufficient resources are entering the Strip,” said Lazzarini. “The aid entering Gaza is insufficient, and food is unavailable due to high prices.”

“Winter is coming, and this will add further hardship to the residents of the Strip due to the rain and cold. The crossings must be opened to deliver the aid that the residents of the Gaza Strip need,” he said.


In N. Sembilan, woman changing car tyre on NSE killed after being hit by container lorry





In N. Sembilan, woman changing car tyre on NSE killed after being hit by container lorry



Seremban District Police Chief ACP Azahar Abdul Rahman said the 31-year-old victim, driving a Proton X50, suffered severe injuries to her body and was pronounced dead at the scene. — Picture by Ahmad Zamzahuri

Wednesday, 19 Nov 2025 6:34 PM MYT


SEREMBAN, Nov 19 — A woman who was changing a flat tyre on her car in the emergency lane was killed after being hit by a container truck at KM 260.6 of the North-South Expressway (NSE) southbound near here this morning.

Seremban District Police Chief ACP Azahar Abdul Rahman said the 31-year-old victim, driving a Proton X50, suffered severe injuries to her body and was pronounced dead at the scene.

“Preliminary investigations found that the victim was travelling from Gadong towards her workplace in Senawang when the rear right tyre of her car went flat, prompting her to stop in the emergency lane.

“While she was changing the tyre, a container truck driven by a 24-year-old man in the left lane collided with the woman,” he said in a statement today.


He added that the victim’s body was taken to Rembau Hospital for a post-mortem and urged anyone with information regarding the incident to contact the investigating officer Insp Nor Fadzilah Mohd Zainuddin at 019-4611794 or visit the nearest police station to assist with the investigation. — Bernama


***


Extremely dangerous to change tyre on an expressway, especially the right side wheels in a left lane drive, in any left lane drive country - vice versa for right lane drive


Indonesia’s Mount Semeru erupts, pyroclastic flows sweep East Java






Indonesia’s Mount Semeru erupts, pyroclastic flows sweep East Java



The eruption began at around 4pm, according to a written report from Mukdas Sofian, an officer at Indonesia’s volcanology monitoring post. — Picture from X/@saddamovic

Wednesday, 19 Nov 2025 8:22 PM MYT


JAKARTA, Nov 19 — Indonesia’s Mount Semeru, the country’s tallest and one of its most volatile volcanoes, erupted Wednesday afternoon, sending a dense ash column high over East Java and triggering fast-moving pyroclastic flows that swept several kilometres down its slopes, officials said, reported German Press Agency (dpa).

The eruption began at around 4pm (0900 GMT), according to a written report from Mukdas Sofian, an officer at Indonesia’s volcanology monitoring post.

The ash column rose roughly 2,000 metres above the summit, reaching an altitude of about 5,676 metres above sea level.


“Pyroclastic flows are still occurring, with the runout distance reaching seven kilometres from the summit, and the eruption was ongoing at the time this report was prepared,” Sofian said.

Mount Semeru, located in a densely populated region of Java, is Indonesia’s highest peak at 3,676 metres and sits on the Pacific “Ring of Fire”, a seismically active arc where volcanic eruptions and earthquakes are common.

The volcano has erupted repeatedly in recent years, including a deadly episode in 2021 that killed 35 people and buried villages in hot ash.

Indonesia is home to more active volcanoes than any other country, and Semeru’s frequent activity is closely monitored because of the risks it poses to nearby communities, transport routes and aviation. — Bernama-dpa


***


WHEN A VOLCANO ERUPTS WE MUST SACRIFICE A NON-VIRGIN NIPPON PM TO THE RAGING VOLCANIC DEITY, WAKAKAKA.


Protest, cases against govt to halt if Indira gets daughter back - group










Protest, cases against govt to halt if Indira gets daughter back - group


Ayesha Sheik Mazrul & Farah Solhi
Published: Nov 19, 2025 3:45 PM
Updated: 8:53 PM




M Indira Gandhi will pull the plug on the upcoming “justice march” and drop all civil cases filed against the government and the police if her daughter Prasana Diksa is returned to her, said the Indira Gandhi Action Team (Ingat).

Its chairperson, Arun Dorasamy, told the press today that the only objective behind all the legal action and protest is for Indira to be reunited with her daughter.

“If we have Prasana in our hands, the very next nano-minute, the entire justice march, not only that, every case that we have filed in court, whether it’s a civil suit, judicial monitoring, everything (will) cease.

“That is the promise we’ll stick by,” he said.

The protest, organised by Ingat and Agamam Ani Malaysia, will take place this Saturday, Nov 22.

Among the goals for this protest is for Indira to meet and present Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Khalid Ismail with Prasana’s teddy bear, serving as a poignant reminder of the many broken promises and years of delayed justice.

Inspector-General of Police Khalid Ismail


Arun said the rally will begin around 10.30am, with protesters walking 1.8km from the Sogo shopping centre, through Jalan Dang Wangi, Jalan Kuching, Jalan Parlimen, Jalan Cenderawasih, and ending at Jalan Tanglin, outside the Bukit Aman federal police headquarters.

However, he stressed that the march will only end when the IGP agrees to meet them, pointing out that the police have remained silent even after evidence surfaced linking Riduan to Budi95 and Sara aid transactions.

“We will not move an inch until the IGP shows up, whether it takes hours or days.

“We need to meet the IGP because until today we have not had a substantial, substantive statement from the IGP explaining the Budi95 or the Sara (discovery).

“We have not seen a serious gesture from the police as of yet. So we will wait until the IGP shows up,” Arun said.



He added that the authorities have been notified of the march via letter, and that several notable individuals, such as Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Law and Institutional Reform) M Kulasegaran and former law minister Zaid Ibrahim, will be attending.

A mother’s last-ditch effort

Indira, who joined the press conference online today, said that the protest is her last attempt to reunite with her daughter.

“I plead to everyone to come and support this cause… It’s been 16 years, as everybody knows, that Prasana was separated from me.

“(And I think) this is my last attempt to find her, because we have done all the legal battle, private investigating, you name it, we’ve done it.

“I don’t know what else I could do to find my daughter. This will be my last attempt, to seek help from the IGP (to return her to me),” she said.

M Indira Gandhi


Indira’s plight started in 2009, when her ex-husband, Riduan Abdullah, then known as K Pathmanathan, abducted the then 11-month-old Prasana, who was still nursing, and disappeared.

The following year, the Ipoh High Court granted Indira full custody, but in 2014, the Court of Appeal overturned a High Court order directing the IGP to recover Prasana.

The High Court order gave Riduan a week to bring Prasana to Indira, or be jailed. He defied the order, failing to carry it out by the deadline at noon on June 6, 2014.

In 2016, the Federal Court finally ordered the police to arrest Riduan and reunite Prasana with her mother - a mandate that remains unfulfilled to this day.


Were allegations against Terrirudin ever investigated, Latheefa asks










Were allegations against Terrirudin ever investigated, Latheefa asks


Published: Nov 19, 2025 4:02 PM
Updated: 9:54 PM



The appointment of Federal Court judge Ahmad Terrirudin Salleh to the Judicial Appointments Commission (JAC) is simply unacceptable, lawyer Latheefa Koya said.

She said this is because serious allegations against Terrirudin remain unresolved.

In a statement today, she asked whether those allegations were even investigated in the first place.

"What happened to the investigation or inquiry into the allegations? Or was there any? What is the outcome? Why the silence on this from Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim and the government?"

Latheefa (above) was referring to a purported leak of JAC meeting minutes from a session in May, in which a now-retired judge reportedly alleged that Terrirudin was interfering with the judiciary.

The authenticity of the leak has never been confirmed.

Calls for RCI

The leak had prompted calls from various quarters, including PKR deputy president Nurul Izzah Anwar, for there to be a royal commission of inquiry or tribunal to investigate the claims made in the leak.

Thus far, the only investigations that have been announced on this matter are a police probe to determine the source of the leak, as well as a probe against Malaysiakini.



The probe against Malaysiakini is over questions the news portal had posed to a judge about allegations that were similar to those contained in the leak.

The judge had ordered an aide to lodge the report against Malaysiakini after the questions were asked.

However, the scandal and questions about the case ceased after Wan Ahmad Farid Wan Salleh was elevated as chief justice following the retirement of Tengku Maimun Tuan Mat.

Terrirudin was appointed to the JAC under the quota of five executive-picked members of the JAC.

Federal Court judge Ahmad Terrirudin Salleh


Under that quota, the prime minister can appoint one Federal Court judge and four eminent persons who are not members of the executive or other public service.

The other four members, who are automatically appointed by virtue of their position in the judiciary, are the chief justice, who is also the commission’s chairperson, the Court of Appeal president, and the two chief judges representing East and West Malaysia.

Come clean on parking concessions award to ‘royal-linked company’, Selangor govt told





The Selangor state government has been urged to clarify issues surrounding the awarding of parking concessions in the state to a company reportedly linked to a member of the Selangor royal family. — Scoop file pic, November 19, 2025


Come clean on parking concessions award to ‘royal-linked company’, Selangor govt told


Anti-graft group C4 accuses the state administration of trying to stifle information on the matter of public interest


KUALA LUMPUR — The Selangor state government has been urged to clarify issues surrounding the awarding of parking concessions in the state to a company reportedly linked to a member of the Selangor royal family.

In a statement today, the Centre to Combat Corruption & Cronyism (C4 Centre) accused the state administration of not only keeping mum on the issue, but also allegedly attempting to block public access to key documents in the matter.

The anti-graft group was commenting on a recent Malaysiakini report of Raja Muda of Selangor, Tengku Amir Shah, owning a 16.5 per cent stake in Selmax Sdn Bhd, a company awarded three concessions under the Selangor Intelligent Parking (SIP) initiative to privatise street parking.

The stake is reportedly owned through two other holding companies: Tanah Perwira Sdn Bhd and Greyscale Holdings Sdn Bhd.

In the statement, C4 pointed out that the Selangor state government had, back in July, announced that the concessions would be collected by Rantaian Mesra, a subsidiary of Menteri Besar Incorporated (MBI) with local councils, on a revenue-sharing model, before announcing the involvement of a private company in the deal, just days later.

In August, Selmax reportedly signed multiple long-term concessions, and the state government in late October blocked concession documents from the public, citing the Official Secrets Act (OSA) 1972, alleged C4.

The royalty’s involvement was only just revealed via the Malaysiakini report.

“This sequence of events raises more questions than answers, particularly regarding the integrity of the procurement process, the management of conflicts of interest, and the use of secrecy provisions to suppress essential information,” read the statement.

C4 then raised several questions for the Selangor state government to answer, including why Selmax was brought into the concession structure despite the initial plan to place operation responsibilities on a state-linked company, and whether beneficial ownership interests involving members of the royal household were properly declared and evaluated.

“How were bidders assessed, and were all bidders competing on equal footing, given the influence of powerful individuals?

“Why has the state government not publicly justified the significant differences between its July announcements and Selmax’s subsequent Bursa filing?” asked C4.

Erodes public trust

The civil society group stressed that while parking concessions are not matters of national security, they do directly affect the daily experience of millions of Selangor residents, and involves substantial streams of public revenue.

“Shielding them behind secrecy laws erodes public trust and runs counter to the principles of open government that the state has long claimed to champion.”

On the involvement of the royal household member, C4 said the public procurement process must be structured in a way that prevents even the perception that influence, access, or status could shape commercial outcomes.

“In any public infrastructure concession – especially one involving long-term revenue streams, enforcement powers, and widespread public impact – the participation of politically influential or constitutionally recognised figures requires stricter safeguards, not looser ones.

“Royal households hold symbolic constitutional roles and carry significant moral and institutional influence, and for this reason, international procurement norms treat such individuals as politically exposed persons

(PEPs) whose involvement must trigger enhanced due diligence and disclosure mechanisms,” said C4.

In the case of SIP, the protections appear to have failed on several levels, added C4, beginning with the non-disclosure of the Raja Muda’s involvement, despite its direct relevance to public trust and the integrity of the tendering process.

Governance gaps

“Whether the state was aware of this beneficial ownership and chose not to reveal it, or was unaware due to insufficient verification, both scenarios point to serious governance gaps. Moreover, even if the request for proposal (RFP) process was followed, the presence of royalty-linked interests creates an unavoidable perception

that the playing field was not level, and that public institutions may have been placed under undue pressure, whether intentionally or otherwise,” said C4.

The group then demanded assurance from the Selangor state government that no preferential treatment influenced the concession award, and an explanation for why no conflict-of-interest checks were not conducted prior.

To remedy the situation, the state government must revert the SIP initiative concession back to the contracting stage and issue a new request for proposals, it said.

“The state government must also implement contracting processes that prioritise public disclosure regarding concession details and conflicts of interest, and that also prioritise access to information.

“Furthermore, we strongly urge the Federal government to amend the Official Secrets Act 1972 to remove broad discretionary and non-reviewable powers, while aligning it with the proposed Freedom of Information Bill.”— November 19, 2025

‘I’m still the CEO of Harimau Malaya’: Rob Friend





Harimau Malaya CEO Rob Friend has pushed back against a FIFA report that described him as a consultant to the Football Association of Malaysia (FAM). - Social media pic, November 18, 2025


‘I’m still the CEO of Harimau Malaya’: Rob Friend



The national squad manager has pushed back against a FIFA report that described him as a consultant to the Football Association of Malaysia



Sandru Narayanan
Updated 13 hours ago
18 November, 2025
11:12 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR — Harimau Malaya CEO Rob Friend has pushed back against a FIFA report that described him as a consultant to the Football Association of Malaysia (FAM), saying excerpts of his testimony were taken out of context and stressing that his official title was recorded during the hearing.


Speaking to Scoop, the 44-year-old Canadian rejected the characterisation, saying the consultancy label by FIFA referred to his advisory role in the legal matter and his match‑day technical support, not to his overall position.

“I am the CEO. “My official designation in the hearing was CEO of Malaysian National Team,” Friend told Scoop, adding that selected portions of his remarks were highlighted without the fuller context.

It was reported that FIFA’s motivated decision said Friend serves as a consultant to FAM, is based in Canada and travels to Malaysia on match days, and that his responsibilities are limited to advising on technical and coaching matters without exercising executive authority over the team or its administration.

The report noted Friend told the body he had no involvement in documentation or naturalisation procedures for heritage players that began before his engagement, saying all such procedures were managed by FAM and that he only became involved from August 22, 2025 onwards.

FIFA recorded that he was not aware of any wrongdoing and that his role was confined to providing technical guidance and match‑day support as part of FAM’s “heritage search plan.”

“My explanation was about scope of involvement, not role or title,” he said

“To be clear, I’ve never denied being CEO.”

He described his mandate as leading football performance and long‑term sporting strategy for the national team, while administrative and procedural matters remain the responsibility of FAM.

“I’ve supported leadership by identifying, engaging, and coordinating with experienced legal professionals to ensure the matter is handled appropriately.”

The FIFA disclosure prompted surprise on social media among local football fans, many of whom had previously understood Friend to be acting as CEO with more direct executive control over the squad.

Friend said he hopes the clarification will allow the national team programme to refocus on on‑field preparation and long‑term development, and that any reference to consulting work should be seen in relation to the specific legal case rather than as a redefinition of his post.

For the record, Friend was appointed CEO of the Malaysia national team in January 2025.

He previously had a playing career in Europe and North America, including spells in Germany and Major League Soccer, and was involved in football development programmes in Canada, building a reputation in technical analysis and coaching advisory roles. – November 18, 2025.

Fifa to probe Malaysian FA after players banned for forged documents





Fifa to probe Malaysian FA after players banned for forged documents



The Fifa report showed how Facundo Garces, Gabriel Arrocha, Rodrigo Holgado, Imanol Machuca, Joao Figueiredo, Jon Irazabal and Hector Hevel—all born outside Malaysia—were granted Malaysian nationality in a process supervised by the Malaysian football association.. — Bernama file pic

Wednesday, 19 Nov 2025 1:59 PM MYT


ZURICH, Nov 19 — Fifa is set to launch a formal investigation into Football Association of Malaysia’s (FAM) internal operations after suspending seven of its naturalised players over the alleged use of doctored documents.

The players were banned for 12 months after the global soccer body found that false documentation had been used so they could play in an Asian Cup qualifier for Malaysia against Vietnam.

All seven players appeared in Malaysia’s 4-0 win over Vietnam at the 2027 Asian Cup qualifiers in June.

“This investigation shall aim to identify the individuals responsible for the falsification of documents, assess the adequacy and effectiveness of FAM’s internal compliance and governance mechanisms, and determine whether additional disciplinary measures are warranted against FAM officials,” Fifa said.


Malaysia’s football association said yesterday it planned to take the case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.


“This step is being taken to ensure that justice is upheld and to uphold the integrity of the player eligibility process as set by the Malaysian government and relevant bodies,” Acting President Mohd Yusoff Mahadi said in a statement posted on Facebook.

Fifa has also ordered the association to pay a fine of 350,000 Swiss francs (RM1.8 million) and this month dismissed its appeals.


Its findings have sparked an uproar in Malaysia, with fans and some lawmakers calling for action against the association as well as the national registration department and home ministry.

Last month, the association suspended its secretary-general and formed an independent committee to investigate.

Naturalisation process supervised by Malaysia FA

The Fifa report showed how Facundo Garces, Gabriel Arrocha, Rodrigo Holgado, Imanol Machuca, Joao Figueiredo, Jon Irazabal and Hector Hevel—all born outside Malaysia—were granted Malaysian nationality in a process supervised by the Malaysian football association.

The players said their grandparents were born in Malaysia but Fifa was able to obtain birth certificates that had significant discrepancies with those submitted by the Malaysian football association to show the players’ Malaysian lineage.

“Players admitted at the hearing that they did not read any of the application documents submitted to the Malaysian government, including the part which concerned the declaration that they had lived for 10 years in Malaysia,” Fifa said.

“The players explained that following the submission of documents, FAM undertook the bureaucratic steps necessary for the players’ naturalization.”

Fifa also directed its Secretariat to notify authorities in Brazil, Argentina, the Netherlands, Spain and Malaysia.

“It is imperative that the relevant authorities are informed so that appropriate criminal investigations and proceedings may be pursued,” Fifa said. — Reuters


Federal Court judge Terrirudin appointed to commission vetting judges for appointments, promotions





Federal Court judge Terrirudin appointed to commission vetting judges for appointments, promotions



In a federal government gazetted published yesterday, the Malaysian government announced that the prime minister has appointed Tan Sri Ahmad Terrirudin Mohd Salleh to be a JAC member for a two-year period from November 15 this year until November 14, 2027. — Picture by Shafwan Zaidon

Wednesday, 19 Nov 2025 12:58 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 19 — Federal Court judge Tan Sri Ahmad Terrirudin Mohd Salleh has been appointed to the Judicial Appointments Commission (JAC), a body which filters and selects candidates to be appointed or promoted as judges.

In a federal government gazetted published yesterday, the Malaysian government announced that the prime minister has appointed Terrirudin to be a JAC member for a two-year period from November 15 this year until November 14, 2027.

About one year ago on November 12, then 56-year-old Terrirudin was sworn in as a Federal Court judge.

The Universiti Malaya law graduate’s career since 1992 had included a stint of nearly three years as the Federal Court’s chief registrar from May 2019 to March 2022, as solicitor general from March 2022 to September 2023, and as attorney general from September 6, 2023 until November 11, 2024.


The JAC’s website now also lists Terrirudin as one of its members.

Datuk Zabariah Mohd Yusof’s retirement last month as a Federal Court judge had previously left one of the seats in the JAC vacant.

Under the law, the JAC is to be a nine-member body, namely with the top four judges, and five persons appointed by the prime minister (one Federal Court judge and four eminent persons).


Currently, with the addition of Terrirudin, there are now eight members in the JAC.

Another seat in the JAC is currently vacant, as Tan Sri Hasnah Mohammed Hashim retired last week as the third-highest ranked judge and as there has been no announcement yet on her successor for the Chief Judge of Malaya position.

At least seven JAC members are required to sit in JAC’s selection meetings when they vote on candidates to be recommended as judges or for promotions in the judiciary.

The JAC is an important body, as it screens and filters candidates to be judges or for the top four judges’ positions, before selecting suitable candidates to be recommended to the prime minister.

The prime minister can either ask the JAC to give more names or accept the recommended names, before advising the Yang di-Pertuan Agong on the names.

The Yang di-Pertuan Agong then appoints judges based on the prime minister’s advice.

Yesterday, Malaysian Bar president Datuk Mohamad Ezri Abdul Wahab said the current arrangement of having Malaysia’s second-highest ranked judge, the President of the Court of Appeal Datuk Abu Bakar Jais to temporarily be the acting Chief Judge of Malaya, should not go on for an “undue period” as it would not be ideal for the expectations of orderly succession within the judiciary.

Ezri had also noted that the JAC currently only had seven members when the law states that it should have nine.

He said this may affect the JAC’s ability to deliberate and efficiently make recommendations on suitable candidates to be appointed as judges.

“Timely attention to these matters is essential. The orderly functioning of the Judiciary depends on the continuity of its leadership and the proper constitution of the JAC. Addressing these vacancies without delay will affirm Malaysia’s commitment to a stable, independent and effective judicial system,” he had said.


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Hold the sushi: China bans Japanese seafood as diplomatic dispute deepens





Hold the sushi: China bans Japanese seafood as diplomatic dispute deepens



China had said in June that it would resume importing Japanese seafood products from all but 10 of Japan’s 47 prefectures. — Reuters pic

Wednesday, 19 Nov 2025 3:59 PM MYT


TOKYO, Nov 19 — China informed Japan today that it will ban all imports of Japanese seafood, media outlets reported — a decision which comes amid an escalating diplomatic dispute between Asia’s top two economies.

Tensions between the two countries ignited after new Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said this month that a Chinese attack on Taiwan threatening Japan’s survival could trigger a military response.

China has demanded she retract the remarks and urged its citizens not to travel to Japan, resulting in mass cancellations that could deal a sizable blow to the world’s fourth-largest economy.

The latest pain point for Japan comes after Beijing just months ago partially eased restrictions on Japanese seafood that had been imposed due to Tokyo’s decision to release treated wastewater from its Fukushima nuclear power plant in 2023.


China has told Japan that the re-imposition of the ban was due to the need for further monitoring of the water release, Kyodo news agency reported citing sources.


China’s commerce ministry and customs administration did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment. Representatives for Japan’s Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries were not immediately available for comment.

Facing a wave of vitriolic responses by a Chinese diplomat in Japan and Chinese state media aimed at Takaichi, Japan warned its citizens in China on Monday to step up safety precautions and avoid crowded places.


Tokyo has said Takaichi’s remarks in parliament are in line with the government’s position, suggesting no breakthrough is imminent.


Japan counts the costs

China had said in June that it would resume importing Japanese seafood products from all but 10 of Japan’s 47 prefectures.

The re-imposition will be a painful blow for many companies eager to re-enter a market that previously accounted for more than a fifth of all Japan’s seafood exports.

Nearly 700 Japanese exporters had applied to re-register for shipments to China, Japanese Agriculture Minister Norikazu Suzuki told reporters on Tuesday. However, only three had been approved to date.

Before the 2023 ban, China was Japan’s top scallop buyer and a major importer of sea cucumbers.

More immediately, China’s travel boycott could have far-reaching consequences for Japan’s shaky economy.

Tourism accounts for around 7 per cent of Japan’s overall gross domestic product, according to the World Travel & Tourism Council, and has been a major driver of growth in recent years. Visitors from mainland China and Hong Kong account for around a fifth of all arrivals, official figures show.

More than 10 Chinese airlines have offered refunds on Japan-bound routes until December 31, with one airline analyst estimating that around 500,000 tickets have already been cancelled.

A person at a state-owned Chinese bank said staff were informally told by managers on Tuesday that requests to travel to Japan would not be approved for the time being. The person declined to be named due to sensitivity of the matter.


Academic, cultural exchanges cancelled

An annual meeting of scholars from both countries due to start in Beijing on Saturday has also been postponed, China’s foreign ministry said.

An event promoting Japan-China friendship scheduled for November 21 in the western Japanese city of Hiroshima has also been cancelled.

China has suspended the screenings of upcoming Japanese films, and Japanese celebrities popular there have tried to pre-empt any potential backlash with messages showing their support for China.

“China is like my second homeland to me and all my friends in China are my cherished family — I will always support One China,” Japanese singer MARiA wrote on Weibo yesterday. — Reuters


Banned from Pakistan airspace and bleeding money, Air India lobbies to fly over China’s Xinjiang





Banned from Pakistan airspace and bleeding money, Air India lobbies to fly over China’s Xinjiang



The Indian government is reviewing Air India’s plea to diplomatically ask China to allow an alternative routing and emergency access to airports. — Reuters pic

Wednesday, 19 Nov 2025 3:04 PM MYT


NEW DELHI, Nov 19 — Air India is lobbying the Indian government to convince China to let it use a sensitive military airspace zone in Xinjiang to shorten routes as the financial toll from a ban on Indian carriers flying over Pakistan mounts, a company document shows.

The unusual request comes just weeks after direct India-China flights resumed after a five-year hiatus following a Himalayan border clash between the nations.

Air India has been seeking to rebuild its reputation and international network after a London-bound Boeing 787 Dreamliner crashed in Gujarat in June, killing 260 people and forcing it to briefly cut flights for safety checks.

But that effort is being complicated by the closure of Pakistan airspace to Indian carriers since their diplomatic tensions erupted in late April.


For Air India, the country’s only carrier with a major international network, fuel costs have risen by as much as 29 per cent and journey times by up to three hours on some long-haul routes, according to the previously unreported document submitted to Indian officials in late October and reviewed by Reuters.


The Indian government is reviewing Air India’s plea to diplomatically ask China to allow an alternative routing and emergency access to airports in case of diversions at Hotan, Kashgar and Urumqi in Xinjiang, aiming to reach US, Canada and Europe faster, the document said.

“Air India’s long-haul network is under severe operational and financial strain ... Securing Hotan route will be a strategic option,” it added.


The airline, owned by Tata Group and Singapore Airlines , estimated the Pakistan airspace closure’s impact on its profit before tax at US$455 million (RM1.9 billion) annually - a significant amount given its fiscal 2024-25 loss stood at US$439 million.

The Chinese foreign ministry said it was not aware of the situation and referred Reuters to the “relevant authorities”.

Air India and civil aviation authorities in India, China and Pakistan did not respond to Reuters’ queries.

Without Hotan some routes becoming ‘unviable’

The Chinese airspace Air India is seeking to access is ringed by some of the world’s highest mountains of 20,000 ft (6,100 m) or more, and is avoided by international airlines due to potential safety risks in case of a decompression incident.

More critically, it also falls within People’s Liberation Army’s Western Theater Command, which is equipped with extensive missile, drone and air-defence assets and shares some airports with civilian aircraft, military analysts say.

The Pentagon’s December report on China’s military said the command’s responsibilities include responding to any conflict with India.

China’s military has much greater control of the country’s airspace than in most other aviation markets, restricting flight paths. Open-source intelligence tracker Damien Symon said China’s military has recently expanded an airbase at Hotan.

China’s defence ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Data from AirNav Radar shows no non-Chinese airlines departed or arrived at Hotan airport in the last 12 months.

Shukor Yusof, founder of aviation consultancy Endau Analytics, said: “Air India can try, but it’s doubtful China will accede” to access given the region’s terrain, lack of emergency airports and possibility of security issues.

Airspace globally has been constricted due to proliferating conflict zones.

US carriers have been banned from flying over Russia since the Ukraine war began in 2022 and pulled out of many US-India routes. That gave Air India a near-monopoly on non-stop flights from India.

But after the Pakistan airspace closure, Air India’s Delhi-Washington route was suspended in August. Now other routes are under review, with the direct Mumbai- and Bengaluru to San Francisco routes “becoming unviable” due to an additional three hours of travel time, including a technical stop in Kolkata, the document said.

A flight from San Francisco to Mumbai on Lufthansa via Munich is now only five minutes longer than on Air India.

“Passengers (are) shifting to foreign carriers due to shorter flight time as they have the benefit of Pakistan overflight,” the document said.

Air India estimates the requested Hotan route in China could substantially cut extra fuel requirements and flight times, help restore passenger and cargo capacity it trimmed by as much as 15% on routes like New York- and Vancouver-Delhi, and reduce losses by an estimated US$1.13 million per week.

Cash flow burden deepens finance woes

With no signs of airspace ban easing, Air India also wants “temporary subsidy till Pakistan airspace opens”, the document said.

Air India, which has placed US$70 billion of aircraft orders, is seeking help resolving legacy tax issues.

India’s government indemnified the airline against claims payable before selling it to Tata in 2022, but several notices have been received related to old tax liabilities of US$725 million, raising legal and reputation risks, the document said.

A confidential government notice from March, seen by Reuters, showed tax authorities warned of “coercive steps” - which can include freezing of assets - to recover dues of US$58 million in one case.

Contesting such tax demands has led to “additional cashflow burden ... despite assurances during disinvestment”, the airline said. — Reuters

MIC exit from BN? Zahid says he will respect their call






MIC exit from BN? Zahid says he will respect their call



While taking an open stance on the matter, Barisan Nasional (BN) chairman Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, who is also deputy prime minister and Umno president, said that he has no intention of interfering in MIC’s internal affairs. — Bernama pic

Wednesday, 19 Nov 2025 1:16 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 19 — Barisan Nasional (BN) chairman Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said he would respect MIC’s decision if the party chooses to leave the coalition.

While taking an open stance on the matter, Ahmad Zahid, who is also deputy prime minister and Umno president, said that he has no intention of interfering in MIC’s internal affairs.

“I have been closely following the discussions at the MIC Annual General Meeting (AGM). I respect whatever decision is made by the delegates and the party leadership, and I have no desire to intervene in their internal matters.

“Whatever decision they make, we will accept it graciously and with an open mind,” he told reporters after officiating the Global Chinese Economic & Technology Summit 2025 at Wisma MCA here today.


Also present were MCA president Datuk Seri Wee Ka Siong and the Chinese Ambassador to Malaysia, Ouyang Yujing.

On Sunday, at the party’s 79th Annual General Meeting in Shah Alam, delegates unanimously supported a motion for MIC to leave BN, leaving it to the party leadership to determine the appropriate timing for the withdrawal and to establish a new political alignment.

MIC president Tan Sri S.A. Vigneswaran later told reporters that the party’s Central Working Committee (CWC) would deliberate on the delegates’ decision to decide the next steps.


He also reaffirmed that MIC will continue to give full support to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim until the end of his mandate, regardless of any political decisions taken.

Yesterday, BN deputy chairman Datuk Seri Mohamad Hasan said discussions would be held with MIC’s top leadership after the conclusion of the Sabah State Election at the end of this month to clarify any confusion or misunderstandings regarding the party’s position within the coalition. — Bernama

DOSH: Impact from skylift boom likely caused ECRL canopy to collapse onto MRR2





DOSH: Impact from skylift boom likely caused ECRL canopy to collapse onto MRR2



Fallen beams lie atop a Suzuki Swift along the MRR2 in Selayang, Kuala Lumpur, November 18, 2025. — Bomba pic

Wednesday, 19 Nov 2025 3:55 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 19 — A temporary steel canopy that came crashing down onto a moving car along the MRR2 in Selayang yesterday collapsed after being struck by a skylift boom during inspection work, Selangor’s Occupational Safety and Health Department (DOSH) said.

The incident unfolded at about 2pm on the Batu Caves–bound stretch, where the structure — part of works for the East Coast Rail Link’s (ECRL) Road Under Bridge (RUB) #16 in Kampung Sungai Pusu — fell onto a Suzuki Swift.

Images shared by emergency responders showed the car pinned beneath several metal beams. The driver was rescued by members of the public before firefighters arrived and was confirmed safe.

DOSH said the subcontractor, Wuhan Construction Sdn Bhd, had been conducting a paint-thickness inspection when the skylift boom collided with the canopy.


“Preliminary investigation found that the structure was a temporary canopy to prevent objects from falling onto the road. It was not designed to withstand an impact load,” it said.

The Public Works Department ordered the remaining sections of the canopy to be removed “immediately to prevent further incidents”.

The temporary structure had been erected to protect motorists from falling debris while RUB #16 works were ongoing; those works were completed in October, with dismantling scheduled to begin on November 20 after receiving approval from the relevant agencies.


DOSH said the inspection — categorised as high-risk work — had been carried out “without written permission from the main contractor, China Communication Construction Sdn Bhd”.

A notice has now been issued to the main contractor under Section 15(1) of the Occupational Safety and Health Act 1994, prohibiting it from continuing paint-inspection works “until a safe working system is created and approved”.

Deputy Human Resources Minister Datuk Seri Abdul Rahman Mohamad, who visited the location, said the safety of workers and the public “cannot be compromised”.

DOSH said he also emphasised the need for contractors to comply with the Occupational Safety and Health Regulations (Construction) (Design and Management), stressing that risk assessments should be done “as early as the design stage and continued continuously throughout the project period”.

Malaysia Rail Link Sdn Bhd (MRL), the project owner, said it had halted all construction activities in the affected area pending the full investigation. Cleanup and debris removal were carried out under the supervision of the Fire and Rescue Department (JBPM), the police, the Public Works Department and DOSH.

MRL also said it would assist the motorist affected by the collapse.

The ministry has ordered a detailed probe to determine the full chain of events and ensure “appropriate action is taken if any part failed to comply with safety requirements”.

It said oversight of high-risk construction activities would be stepped up “to ensure that safety at construction sites is always at an optimal level”.

JAPANESE PM: SMALL DUMPLING WITH 'VELY VELY' BIG MOUTH

 

Tuesday, November 18, 2025



JAPANESE PM: SMALL DUMPLING WITH 'VELY VELY' BIG MOUTH

 

There is a hurricane force storm brewing in a tea cup - this time ocha green tea in Japan and China. The less than four week old new, first female Japanese prime minister Sanae Takaichi has bungled big time when she told the Japanese Parliament that if China attacks Taiwan, then it will be a strategic threat and danger to Japan (or words to that effect).

Implying that Japan will have to intervene militarily. Of course this was an unusually loud mouthed and poorly thought statement to make about any neighbour, particularly China. Of course the Chinese took offense and released a series of statements protesting the Japanese "recalcitrance".

To save the day the super efficient Japanese Civil Service kicked into action. A ranking Foreign Ministry official with extraordinary skills at bowing down and touching the floor with his forehead was immediately despatched to Beijing - without taking a seppuku kit with him. The Chinese may have preferred the seppuku kit but they had to satisfy themselves with giving an earful to the Japanese envoy.

 

 

 

Here is a 30 minute video but the first 60 seconds gives you a good idea. Why waste more time? 

I suspect the Japanese PM was addressing a domestic audience only (without realising that her speech went out live to Tanzania and the Falklands). I believe she was trying to remind the Japanese people that they should allow the US Navy to remain at Yokosuka Naval base for another 100 years. 



This storm will likely blow itself out over the next day or two.


Israeli attack on Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon kills at least 13


al Jazeera:

Israeli attack on Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon kills at least 13


Israel continues to attack Lebanon on a near-daily basis in violation of a yearlong ceasefire with Hezbollah


Civil defence vehicles park at the entrance of Ain al-Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp, following an Israeli attack [Ali Hankir/Reuters]


By Abby Rogers and News Agencies
Published On 18 Nov 202518 Nov 2025


At least 13 people have been killed in an Israeli air strike on a Palestinian refugee camp in southern Lebanon, according to the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health.

The drone strike hit a car on Tuesday in the car park of a mosque in the Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp on the outskirts of the coastal city of Sidon, the Lebanese state-run National News Agency reported.


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Updates: Israel kills dozens in Gaza; Hezbollah chief declares ‘victory’


At least four people were wounded in the attack, the ministry said, adding that “ambulances are still transporting more wounded to nearby hospitals.”

Israel said it struck members of the Palestinian armed group Hamas who were operating in a training compound in the refugee camp.

“When we say we will not tolerate any threat on our northern border, this means all terrorist groups operating in the region,” the Israeli military’s Arabic spokesperson Avichay Adraee said in a statement. “We will continue to act forcefully against Hamas’s attempts to establish a foothold in Lebanon and eliminate its elements that threaten our security.”

Hamas denied Israel’s claim, calling it a “fabrication” and stressing the group doesn’t have training facilities in Lebanon’s refugee camps.

“The Zionist bombardment was a barbaric aggression against our innocent Palestinian people as well as Lebanon’s sovereignty,” it said in a statement.

Earlier on Tuesday, Lebanon said Israeli strikes on cars elsewhere in the country’s south killed two people.

Israel has killed several officials from Palestinian factions including Hamas in Lebanon since it launched its war on Gaza in October 2023 after Hamas led an attack on southern Israel






Israel’s war on Gaza has killed at least 69,483 Palestinians and wounded 170,706. A total of 1,139 people were killed in Israel during the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led attacks, and more than 200 were taken captive.


A day after Israel launched its war on Gaza, Hezbollah began firing rockets towards Israel, which responded with shelling and air strikes in Lebanon, and the two sides became locked in a conflict that Israel escalated into a full-blown war in late September 2024.

Israel’s war killed more than 4,000 people in Lebanon, including hundreds of civilians. In Israel, 127 people were killed, including 80 soldiers.



The war halted in late November 2024 with a United States-brokered ceasefire, but since then, Israel has carried out dozens of air attacks on Lebanon, accusing Hezbollah of trying to rebuild its capabilities.

Lebanon’s Health Ministry has reported more than 270 people killed and about 850 wounded by Israeli military actions since the ceasefire.

“There are daily violations of the ceasefire by Israel in Lebanon, and it would be unfair at this stage to pin the blame on the Lebanese government,” Lebanese political analyst Karim Emile Bitar told Al Jazeera. “The Lebanese government went above and beyond what was required … and took a historic decision to ask the Lebanese army to disarm Hezbollah.”

However, Bitar said, Israel has not lived up to its end of the bargain. Under the terms of the ceasefire signed on November 27, 2024, Israel was meant to withdraw its forces from southern Lebanon by January 26, a deadline it missed.


***


Shailok State has always been TREACHEROUS - it's an intrinsic part of their DNA