Three stonemasons have died after a section of the historic walls around the Old City of Kairouan in Tunisia collapsed on Saturday.

Officials say a 30m section of the wall near the Gate of the Floggers crashed to the ground.

Two others were also injured in the accident and are said to have suffered fractures

An investigation has been opened into the accident. Authorities say it could be linked to recent heavy rain.

Moez Tria, a spokesperson for the Civil Protection Department said a perimeter had been set up to stop people from walking under part of the wall which is still at risk of further collapse.

The city of Kairouan was founded in 670 AD and is one of North Africa’s holiest cities.

It was the capital of the Muslim world in North Africa for four centuries, before Tunis was chosen as Tunisia’s political capital in the 12th century.

Kairouan became a Unesco World Heritage site in 1988 and is home to the Mosque of the Three Doors, the oldest known mosque with a sculpted facade.

Unesco describes the mosque as “an architectural masterpiece that served as a model for several other Maghreban mosques”.

North Korea has fired its most advanced long-range missile, South Korean authorities confirm, defying UN curbs.

The launch of the solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile drew immediate condemnation from the West. It landed west of Hokkaido in Japan.

It comes after South Korean and US defence officials met last week to update plans on how to respond to a nuclear attack from the North.

Pyongyang had said in response it would take “more offensive countermeasures”.

The isolated state launched the long-range missile on Monday morning about 08:24 local time (23:24 Sunday GMT) from the Pyongyang area.

South Korean and Japanese officials said the missile travelled for 73 minutes, covering about 1,000km (621 miles).

ICBMs have the range to reach the North American continent. Monday’s launch is North Korea’s fifth successful launch of an ICBM this year.

Tensions between the North and the South flared last month when Pyongyang successfully launched a spy satellite into orbit, in violation of United Nations sanctions.

Seoul responded by partially suspending a military agreement with the North that was meant to limit military activity along the border and reduce the likelihood of clashes.

Pyongyang then withdrew from the agreement entirely. North Korea has since rearmed its soldiers in previously unarmed areas of the Demilitarised Zone.

Last week, South Korea’s national security advisor Kim Tae-hyo said he was expecting the North to launch an ICBM at some point in December.

On Monday, South Korean national security officials confirmed the ICBM launched was a solid-fuel missile. Such missiles can be fired with less warning, as they do not need to be fuelled prior to launch.

The North had tested its Hwasong-18 missile in July following a first successful flight in April.

North Korea is also working to develop a new solid-fuel medium-range ballistic missile. Last month it claimed to have successfully tested the engine, but the missile had not yet been successfully launched.

As North Korea continues to refine and add to its arsenal of nuclear weapons, South Korea and the United States are stepping up their defence of the region.

In a meeting in Washington on Friday, officials updated their contingency plans for how to respond to a North Korean nuclear attack. The two countries also agreed to war-game the use of nuclear weapons in their military exercises next summer.

British MP Layla Moran’s family trapped in Gaza church

Separately, Pope Francis on Sunday deplored the killing of the two women, and once again suggested Israel was using “terrorism” tactics in Gaza.

There are reports that nearly 300 people, including children and the sick, are seeking shelter in the Holy Family Catholic Parish. The two Christian women, identified as Nahida and Samar, were shot dead by an Israeli sniper while inside the grounds of the church, with reports of seven others wounded.

 

“I am desperately worried for my extended family in Gaza City. They have no electricity, no water, no food, and now a sniper is inside the Church compound where they are sheltering. My family are not collateral damage. We need an immediate bilateral ceasefire now,” she tweeted.

Pope deplores killings of two women by Israeli sniper, says Tel Aviv using ‘terrorism’ tactics

Ms Moran in a BBC interview said the situation near the church escalated last Tuesday and said that bombs and white phosphorus had been used to target the compound.

The Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem said in a statement that a gunman had killed the pair at around midday on Saturday, revealing that “one was killed as she tried to carry the other to safety”.

Oxford West and Abingdon MP Ms Moran said her relatives are among the Christians who have sought shelter in the church complex.

The patriarchate highlighted that no warning was given before the shooting started, saying “they were shot in cold blood inside the premises of the parish, where there are no belligerents”.

Ms Moran’s tweets outlining the tweets went viral. “There is no water left. There are 300 people there. We don’t know why this is happening. Are they going to be expelled from a church just days before Christmas??!”

In a statement on Sunday, Pope Francis condemned an attack on the compound of the Catholic parish, “where there are no terrorists, but families, children, people who are sick and have disabilities, and nuns.”

“A mother, Mrs Nahida Khalil Anton, and her daughter, Samar Kamal Anton, were killed, and others were wounded by the shooters while they were going to the bathroom,” the pope said.

Though many on X expressed their solidarity with Ms Moran, including historian William Dalrymple, some pointed out that there was a “notable lack of public solidarity with Layla Moran from her parliamentary colleagues”.

Al Jazeera reported that the church has been a target of direct Israeli bombardment over the past few days.

“Major parts of it have been destroyed. Snipers are shooting at every moving object in the yard,” reported Hani Mahmoud, the news channel’s correspondent in Gaza.

Gen Asim lauds American-Pakistani for $9m donation to NUST

LONDON/WASHINGTON: Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Asim Munir has appreciated American-Pakistani business tycoon Tanweer Ahmed for donating $9 million to Islamabad’s National University of Science and Technology (NUST), to build an IT Tower, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said in a statement.

 

The army chief — who is currently visiting the US — held meetings with Washington’s top officials and met a large number of Pakistani diaspora communities.

 

“The COAS met Mr Tanweer Ahmed who graciously donated $9 million for NUST in the field of IT development in Pakistan. COAS appreciated him and said Pakistan is proud of heroes like him,” the ISPR added.

 

In a note of appreciation, the COAS praised Ahmed for his donations to help Pakistan during natural calamities and to promote IT education in the country.

 

The COAS wrote to him: “Your support to NUST in establishing the Science and Technology Park, expansion of campuses and partnership for assisting financially challenged students are praiseworthy initiatives, meeting due recognition. Indeed, through this venture not only will NUST gain further strength but will also enable many students to bear their expenditures.”

 

The COAS added: “Your efforts in the domains of humanitarian assistance and interest in academia of Pakistan is a true reflection and favour for the people of Pakistan.”

 

Last week, the Indus University on the recommendation of Sindh’s governor conferred the honorary doctorate degree on Ahmed in acknowledgement of his services to the IT and health sectors in Pakistan.

Ahmed has built a state-of-the-art hospital in Sialkot providing free medical care.

In an interview, he said he was inspired by the army chief’s passion and vision for Pakistan’s IT sector.

Ahmed said: “I was excited and thrilled when I came to know about the vision of Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Syed Asim Munir who is passionate about the IT Sector.

“I believe that with the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC) in which the army has assumed an active role, that’s a brilliant approach to unlock the true IT potential of Pakistan.”

 

He added: “I have conceived the idea of NUST Information Technology (IT) Tower for the youth of Pakistan for which COAS General Asim Munir is leading the effort to harmonise our endeavours.

“The steps taken by General Asim Munir are commendable and inspiring. No army chief has done as much as Gen Munir has done in just one year for the IT sector of Pakistan and for a clean national economy. He has taken excellent steps to put Pakistan’s economy on the right course.”

 

The business entrepreneur said Pakistan has essential infrastructure available along with significant public sector investment in resource development.

“Pakistan has untapped digital potential of USD 59.6 billion (PKR 9.7 trillion) and FinTech potential of USD 35 billion by 2025. IT base potential is evidenced by a 47% growth in freelancing which stands at 4th in the world. Pakistan’s youth is 64% of the population under 30 years which is our biggest resource,” he added.

Nation observes 9th anniversary of APS attack

The nation today observes the ninth anniversary of the tragic terror attack on the Army Public School in Peshawar that martyred around 147 innocent students and teachers on December 16, 2014.

The APS attack remains one of the most painful incidents in Pakistan’s history when six terrorists dressed in military uniforms entered the school premises and opened indiscriminate fire at students, teachers and staff.

The security forces, immediately after the attack, surrounded the school and killed the outlawed Tehreek-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP) terrorists after a long operation.

At least 147 people including 122 students embraced martyrdom, while the school’s principal Tahira Qazi and school teacher Sofia Hijab were also martyred in the attack.

In the encounter with the terrorists, at least nine security personnel including two officers were injured. Additionally, six terrorists involved in the attack were arrested by the security forces and were subsequently sentenced to death by the military courts.

The day termed Pakistan’s 9/11 serves as a reminder of the country’s enduring dedication to countering the menace of terrorism and ensuring the safety of its people.

The heartless incident left the entire nation in deep sorrow and grief, whereas the civil and military leadership united to chalk out the country’s first-ever National Action Plan, the most comprehensive strategy to counter terrorism in all its shapes, which followed major operations including Zarb-e-Azb and Radd-ul-Fasaad against terrorists for their elimination.

Pakistan is the worst victim of terrorism amidst its global surge, sacrificing over 70,000 lives and suffering economic losses of over $150 billion. Despite the immense loss, the nation remains resolute in getting rid of the scourge.

An objective review of the biggest terrorist incidents revealed that Pakistan’s major cities had faced different waves of terrorism, but Peshawar suffered the most and the APS attack was the worst.

Pakistan has been repeatedly flagging Indian involvement in state-sponsored terrorism on its soil, and a dossier was sent to the United Nations, European nation ambassadors and envoys of friendly countries to expose Indian clandestine designs financing terror groups in destabilising the country.

The dossier by Pakistan contained very specific information such as bank accounts and Indian nationals involved. It also included the locations of training camps for TTP, Baloch miscreants, and other groups.

According to a security analyst, recently Indian intelligence agency RAW spent $1 million for the merger of the TTP with four other militant groups to carry out terrorism in Pakistan. The analyst said that India had also been funnelling money to Baloch separatists and activists through think tanks in Afghanistan and other means.

Pakistan has also repeatedly exposed India for its involvement in terror attacks aimed at disrupting the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) for which RAW is also investing very heavily in different militant groups.

The mastermind of the APS attack was Mullah Fazal Ullah while the other collaborators including Gul Zaman Orakzai, Omar Narai and Muhammad Khurasani were in touch with RAW and NDS handlers in Afghanistan.

On the APS attack anniversary, the nation including the civil and military leadership as well as the civil society will pay tribute to the martyred children and teachers, and their families for their sacrifices.

The day also serves to reaffirm the nation’s resolve against terrorism with a renewed call for the Interim Afghan government to act against terrorist outfits like TTP and put an end to the use of their soil against Pakistan.

Turkish MP who suffered heart attack during Gaza speech dies

A Turkish opposition legislator who suffered a heart attack and collapsed in parliament during a speech railing against the government’s policy towards Israel has died, reported Al Jazeera has died.

Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said on Thursday that Hasan Bitmez, a 54-year-old member of the Islamist Saadet Partisi, or Felicity Party, had died in an Ankara hospital two days after the incident.

“You allow ships to go to Israel, and you shamelessly call it trade. … You are Israel’s accomplice,” Bitmez said in his speech targeting President Recep Tayyip Erdogan Justice and Development Party (AK Party) on Tuesday after placing a poster on the podium reading: “Murderer Israel; collaborator AKP.”

“Even if you escape the torment of history, you will not be able to escape the wrath of God,” he said at the end of the 20-minute speech before collapsing at the lectern.

Other members of the Grand National Assembly rushed forward to help, and Koca said on Tuesday that Bitmez had been “resuscitated in parliament and transferred within 20 minutes to hospital” where medical equipment had kept him alive.

 

The opposition figure, who was married and a father of one, graduated from Cairo’s Al-Azhar University, worked for Islamic nongovernmental groups and was chairman of the Centre for Islamic Union Research.

His speech accused the government of continuing friendly economic relations with Israel during its assault on Gaza, which has killed nearly 19,000 Palestinians. His remarks drew jeers from AK Party members.

While Erdogan has worked to improve ties with Israel after a period of frosty relations, he has also railed against the current war between Israel and the Palestinian armed group Hamas, calling Israel a “terror state” and pushing for a ceasefire.

In a small ceremony on Thursday on the grounds of the Grand National Assembly, Bitmez’s coffin was draped with a Turkish flag, and a small Palestinian flag was attached as well.

Western nations urge Israel to halt settler violence in West Bank

PARIS: Western nations and the European Union on Friday urged Israel to “take concrete steps to halt unprecedented violence by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank,” in a joint statement published by France’s foreign ministry.

The call from Australia, Britain, Canada, France, the European Union and several other European countries — but notably excluding Germany and the United States — highlighted “an unprecedented number of attacks perpetrated by extremist settlers” since early Oct that they said had claimed eight Palestinian lives and wounded 83 people.

Reiterating that Israel’s settlement policy “is illegal under international law,” the signatories of Friday’s statement said that “as the occupying power, Israel must protect Palestinian civilians in the West Bank” and “bring those responsible for this violence to justice”.

Friday’s statement comes days after EU chief Ursula von der Leyen backed imposing sanctions on “extremist” Israeli settlers — although not all of the bloc’s 27 nations agree.

Call on Tel Aviv to ensure safety of civilians

While some members such as Spain have sharply criticised Israeli aggression against Gazans, others including Germany stand firmly behind the state.

In the West Bank city of Jenin, the troops killed a youth at a hospital during raids, Palestinian authorities said.

Soldiers operating inside the Khalil Suleiman hospital compound just outside Jenin’s built-up refugee camp killed an unarmed teenager there, according to medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF). Soldiers shot the 17-year-old in the chest, the Palestinian health ministry said.

During the raid Israel blocked ambulances from entering the camp to transport seriously ill patients, Mahmoud Al-Saadi, director of the Palestinian Red Crescent in the northern West Bank city, said.

“The army did not allow us to enter,” despite attempts to coordinate with the International Red Cross and the U.N. Palestinian relief agency, he said, adding soldiers were also stationed outside the hospital.

‘Leave the West Bank’

Alaa Al Sadi, who lives in the Jenin camp, said soldiers who came to his home searching for guns smashed his television before taking him blindfolded into detention at an army compound outside the city for about 14 hours, along with hundreds of other people.

The soldiers found no guns but demolished his family home and accused him of being a member of Hamas, telling him he should leave the West Bank and move to Lebanon or Syria, Al Sadi, 44, said in an interview. He denied any links to the Hamas.

The Israeli military did not respond to a request for comment about Alaa Al Sadi’s account.

Turkiye strongly condemns “provocations” by Israeli forces during raids on a refugee camp and the desecration of a mosque there, Turkiye’s foreign ministry said, calling for those responsible to be punished.

“We strongly condemn the provocations of Israeli soldiers who stormed the Jenin Refugee Camp, and disrespected sanctity of a place of worship by entering the mosque,” Spokesman Oncu Keceli said on social messaging platform X late on Thursday.

“In East Jerusalem and the West Bank, where tensions are running extremely high due to settler terror and heavy pressure and attacks by Israeli security forces against Palestinians, we expect attacks on Muslim holy places to be ended immediately and those who perpetrate these provocations to be punished in the most severe way,” he added.

The Palestinian government criticised the operation inside Jenin as a “dangerous escalation” and in a statement said the desecration of the mosque by some Israeli troops fanned religious tension. Israel’s army said it would discipline the soldiers.

The majority of the people taken into detention earlier in the raid have since been released, the Palestinian Prisoner’s Club, an advocacy group, said in a statement.

PM calls for recognising India as ‘world’s largest hypocrisy’

Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar said Thursday neighbouring India should be recognised as “the world’s largest hypocrisy” instead of being labeled the world’s largest democracy.

In his address to the Azad Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly in Muzaffarabad, the prime minister reiterated Pakistan’s steadfast commitment to supporting the people of Kashmir in their rightful struggle against Indian subjugation.

The PM’s address came after India’s Supreme Court upheld a 2019 decision by Narendra Modi’s government to revoke special status for the state of occupied Jammu and Kashmir and set a deadline of September 30 next year for local polls to be held.

In response, caretaker Foreign Minister Jalil Abbas Jillani slammed the Indian Supreme Court’s verdict as “travesty of justice, based on distorted historical and legal arguments”.

Meanwhile, Kakar underscored that the Indian government’s unilateral actions on August 5, 2019, endorsed by the Indian Supreme Court, blatantly violate international provisions.

He asserted that domestic legislation and judicial decisions cannot absolve India of its international obligations under UN Security Council resolutions, emphasising that any process subject to the Indian constitution cannot determine IIOJK’s final status under international law.

The prime minister said that Jammu and Kashmir is an international dispute, and neither the Indian government nor its judiciary has the right to take unilateral actions against the will of other involved parties namely, the Kashmiri people and Pakistan.

He stressed that no Indian court verdict can suppress the aspirations of the Kashmiri people.

Highlighting the actions of the Hindutva-driven leadership of India, the prime minister condemned the targeting of defenseless Kashmiri men, women, and children.

He lamented the loss of over 96,000 lives, with thousands of women facing molestation and harassment in the past 34 years. Kakar called for an end to these brutalities.

The prime minister reminded Indian leaders that unilateral steps in Jammu and Kashmir cannot legitimise their occupation or suppress the genuine sentiments of the Kashmiri people.

He rejected illegal and unilateral measures, including gerrymandering of electoral constituencies, issuance of domicile certificates to outsiders, and additions to the voters’ list, as strategies to alter Kashmir’s demography and political landscape.

Affirming that Kashmir is Pakistan’s jugular vein, the prime minister stressed the intrinsic connection between Pakistan and Kashmir based on geographical proximity, shared history, and commonality of faith.

He asserted that the entire Pakistani leadership, despite political differences, stands united in supporting the Kashmiri people’s just struggle for self-determination.

Discussing Pakistan-India relations, the prime minister expressed Pakistan’s desire for good neighborly relations with New Delhi.

However, he emphasised that durable peace in South Asia hinges on resolving the Jammu and Kashmir dispute.

US terms Pakistan ‘important partner’ amid Gen Asim Munir’s maiden Washington visit

WASHINGTON: The United States on Thursday reiterated its commitment to continuing its partnership with Pakistan on regional defence and security-related matters amid Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Asim Munir’s maiden visit to the country.

The News reached out to the US Department of State to confirm if the Chief of Army Staff, Gen Asim Munir, had a meeting with the US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken.

A spokesperson of the State Department, without confirming if such a meeting took place, stated that Pakistan was an important partner and “we engage with a wide range of interlocutors within the Pakistani government”.

Pakistan’s army chief is on his first official visit to the US, where he met US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin on Wednesday. The brief readout released by the Pentagon stated that the two officials “discussed recent regional security developments and potential areas for bilateral defence cooperation.”

Earlier, the ISPR had issued a statement saying that the army chief was to hold meetings with senior US officials during his Washington visit.

Though no names or designations of American officials were mentioned in the note, some officials familiar with the army chief’s trip details had hinted that he would be meeting with the US Secretary of Defense, National Security Advisor and US Secretary of State.

‘US stands with Pakistan against terrorism’

Last week, the United States Special Representative for Afghanistan, Thomas West, conveyed Washington’s resolve to “stand with Pakistan” in its fight against terrorism and challenges posed by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).

Following his two-day visit to Islamabad, the US envoy said he held meetings with Pakistani officials on regional security and protection of Afghan refugees, among other important matters.

Taking to his official account on X, formerly Twitter, the American diplomat also shared the details of his meetings with Caretaker Foreign Minister Jalil Abbas Jilani, COAS Gen Asim, Pakistan’s Special Representative on Afghanistan Asif Durrani, and Interior Secretary Aftab Akbar Durrani.

Top US official arrives in Israel amid public rift over Gaza

Top White House official Jake Sullivan arrived in Israel on Thursday amid a public rift over civilian casualties in Gaza more than two months into the Israel-Hamas war.

President Joe Biden’s National Security Advisor was greeted by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ahead of talks expected to focus on Israel’s military offensive in the Palestinian territory.

A photo shared by the Israeli prime minister’s office showed Sullivan and Netanyahu shaking hands in Tel Aviv.

It said in a post on X, formerly Twitter, that “an expanded meeting with the members of the war cabinet will be held later”.

Ahead of his trip, Sullivan told a Wall Street Journal event he would discuss a timetable to end the war and urge Israeli leaders “to move to a different phase from the kind of high-intensity operations that we see today.”

The United States is a major funder of the Israeli military and last week vetoed a United Nations Security Council resolution that called for a ceasefire.

The war began when militants from the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas burst across the Gaza border with Israel on October 7 and killed about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, according to the Israeli authorities.

In response, Israel vowed to destroy Hamas and launched a relentless bombardment and ground invasion that has left swathes of Gaza in ruins.

The health ministry in the Hamas-run territory says 18,787 people have been killed, mostly women and children.