Legal

Middle East crisis live: US claims there are ‘serious concerns’ over Unrwa as agency says Israel has abused detained staff


US official tells ICJ there are ‘serious concerns’ over Unrwa impartiality

A US official on Wednesday told the international court of justice (ICJ) there were “serious concerns” about the impartiality of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (Unrwa).

ICJ judges are holding a week of hearings to help them formulate an advisory opinion on Israel’s obligations towards UN agencies delivering aid to Palestinians in Gaza.

“There are serious concerns about Unrwa’s impartiality, including information that Hamas has used Unrwa facilities and that Unrwa staff participated in the 7 October terrorist attack against Israel,” said Josh Simmons from the US state department legal team, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Israel banned all cooperation with Unrwa’s activities in Gaza and the occupied West Bank earlier this year, and claims the agency has been infiltrated by Hamas, an allegation that has been fiercely contested.

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William Christou

William Christou

At least 11 civilians and security officials were killed in ongoing clashes in a town near Damascus on Wednesday, state media reported, the second consecutive day of fighting in Druze-majority areas around Syria’s capital.

Reports said fighting had started overnight in the town of Ashrafiah Sahnaya, south-west of Damascus, after unknown gunmen attacked a security checkpoint. An attack on the Druze-majority Damascus suburb of Jaramana a day earlier left at least 10 people dead, according to the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Residents reported hearing gunfire, explosions and shelling throughout Wednesday morning. The security forces closed off roads leading to the area and sent reinforcements in an attempt to stop the fighting.

Armed members of Syria’s Druze community attend the funeral of seven people killed in the recent clashes near Damascus. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

The Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, also announced that Israeli forces had struck an “extremist group that was preparing to attack the Druze population south of Damascus”. He said: “Israel will not allow harm to the Druze community in Syria.”

Israel has said it will protect the Druze population in southern Syria, an offer that Syrian Druze have said they did not ask for.

The fighting comes as Syria’s authorities grapple with rising tensions a month after an attack by remnants of the deposed regime of Bashar al-Assad on security forces sparked sectarian massacres in the coastal Latakia governorate which left at least 1,000 people dead.

This week’s clashes are likely to strain the already frosty relationship between the Syrian government and Druze communities, which are engaged in negotiations over their areas’ inclusion in the Syrian state.



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