geopolitical

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Could Russia Follow the “Hormuz Playbook” in the Baltic and Black Seas?

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On the eve of the U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran, 56 tankers sailed through the Strait of Hormuz. Two days later, Lloyd’s List, the maritime industry’s journal of record, counted just seven tankers and a single gas carrier — all small and three of them shadow-fleet vessels — with hundreds more drifting in the Gulf of Oman. One of the world’s most important maritime chokepoints had not been mined, blockaded, or seized by a navy. Rather, it had been priced shut by a handful of drone strikes and the insurance market.Within two days of the first U.S.-Israeli strikes on Feb. 28, The post Could Russia Follow the “Hormuz Playbook” in the Baltic and Black Seas? appeared first on War on the Rocks .

19 days ago

geopolitical · geopolitical

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‘Wow, it really worked!’: the 70s TV show that’s causing worldwide panic – 50 years later

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When UK mockumentary Alternative 3 tried to spook viewers that scientists were vanishing as part of a sinister space plot it succeeded. Today, the resulting conspiracy theory has even seen Trump’s government launch an investigation Over the past few months, a strange story has been seeping into the mainstream media from the more excitable corners of Substack and YouTube. Its claim: scientists whose work related to aerospace and nuclear research are either dying or going missing. According to an influential report in the Daily Mail in March , the disappearances form a “chilling pattern”: two, for instance, had worked together at an air force laboratory. The implications, in some accounts, are Hollywood sinister, with scientists working on top-secret breakthroughs running into dark forces who wanted to get hold of what they knew – or ensure their silence. And it all seems to have something to do with what we used to call UFOs. On examination, these claims collapse. The “scientists” actually worked in disparate fields, from chemical biology to plasma physics. Several were actually administrators. Two had retired. One died of natural causes; another in a shooting spree. In any case, as the debunker Mick West pointed out , the “US top secret-cleared aerospace and nuclear workforce” is around 700,000, so normal mortality rates would predict far more deaths over the 22 months concerned – about 4,000. Nonetheless, Congresspeople have been warning darkly of threats to “national security”. The Trump administration has launched an investigation into a phenomenon that is often said to go hand-in-hand with something called “Alternative 3” – whose origins might end up surprising Trump and co. Continue reading...

21 days ago

geopolitical · geopolitical

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IAEA chief says inspections of Iranian nuclear sites ‘will happen’

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IAEA chief says inspections of Iranian nuclear sites ‘will happen’ The head of the UN nuclear watchdog said on Wednesday that inspections of Iranian nuclear facilities would resume, but gave no timetable for their return. Rafael Grossi, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said a preliminary agreement signed by Tehran and Washington explicitly provided for the agency to supervise Iran’s nuclear activities. “Obviously, to do that, we will have to inspect,” Grossi told reporters during a visit to Japan. He said discussions were continuing with the Iranian government over the timing and location of inspections, adding that a decision was expected soon. “Whether this happens today, the day after tomorrow, in one week or in 10 days, it’s important but not essential. This is going to happen,” he said. Grossi’s comments came amid conflicting statements over the scope of the agreement. Iran said on Tuesday that inspectors would not be allowed to visit nuclear facilities bombed by the United States and Israel last year, rejecting US Vice President JD Vance’s claim that Tehran had agreed to grant access. US President Donald Trump, however, said Iran had “fully and completely agreed” to the return of nuclear inspectors.

22 days ago

geopolitical · geopolitical

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Former Israeli prime minister says he smuggled Starlink receptors into Iran

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Former Israeli prime minister says he smuggled Starlink receptors into Iran Submitted by MEE staff on Wed, 06/24/2026 - 09:39 Naftali Bennett accuses Netanyahu of stopping his programme to provide internet in Iran to help anti-government protesters Naftali Bennett speaks in the Israeli city of Tel Aviv on 12 May (Jack Guez/AFP) Off Former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said he had helped to smuggle tens of thousands of Starlink receptors into Iran . Speaking at the JNS International Policy Summit in Jerusalem on Tuesday, Bennett said the plan had been to aid anti-government protesters during times when the Islamic Republic cut off internet access, as it often does during demonstrations. "What happens every time there's a protest? They turn off the internet, and then there's no communications," he said. "So what I had started was a process of acquiring and smuggling into Iran tens of thousands of Starlink receptors that would allow continuity of the internet and social networks when they turn it off, and would allow the protests to coordinate and ultimately topple." However, he said that current Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's "incompetent" government stopped the programme. .push({}); "And when the protest happened, that infrastructure was not there," he said, referring to the protests in Iran that began in late December. The anti-government protests that escalated in January saw thousands killed. The demonstrations started in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar in response to inflation before growing and becoming a vehicle for anger at the Islamic Republic as a whole. War on Gaza: Former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett calls on US to bring down Iran Read More » Although Iranian police and Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) forces were blamed for most of the deaths, there have also been claims of Israeli infiltrations into the demonstrations and the killing of Iranian security forces and civilians by anti-government activists. Bennett's comments come as the US and Iran continue negotiating an end to the war that began in February, when Israeli and American forces attacked the country, killing its supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The US suspended sanctions against Iran on Monday during a day of talks that US Vice President JD Vance characterised as "good progress". US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced the Treasury would be temporarily lifting sanctions until 21 August under a 60-day general licence that authorises Iranian oil production and sales. Any transactions during this period must be made in US dollars. War on Iran News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0

22 days ago

geopolitical · geopolitical

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Killed in Israeli strike, Mona Khalil remembered as the guardian of turtles

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Killed in Israeli strike, Mona Khalil remembered as the guardian of turtles Submitted by Rita Kabalan on Wed, 06/24/2026 - 08:49 Lebanese marine activist was killed when Israel targeted her home near Tyre in south Lebanon Mona Khalil, a Lebanese ecologist activist, looks at a turtle at a coast in the southern Lebanese port city of Tyre on 12 August 2002 (Jihad Seqlawi/AFP) Off On the eve of World Environment Day, the Israeli army targeted The Orange House, the south Lebanon home of marine ecologist and environmentalist Mona Khalil, leaving her critically wounded. Two weeks later, on 19 June, Khalil succumbed to her wounds in Beirut. Born in Lagos, Nigeria, in 1949, Khalil spent years living in the Netherlands during Lebanon’s civil war. She returned to Lebanon in 1999, where her life took an unexpected turn after a chance encounter with a sea turtle. Ramy Khashab, a consultant at the Environmental Centre and a close friend, recounted the moment Khalil felt sand being flung into the air by a nearby nesting green sea turtle. It was after that night that she embarked on a mission to protect the sea turtles that nest along the shores of Mansouri, her hometown just south of Tyre. “The Orange House was meant to be in every single way because that’s where she discovered the sea turtle that turned her life around,” Khashab, 32, told Middle East Eye. .push({}); Khashab met Khalil randomly on the beach in Mansouri as a child, describing it as the perfect coincidence of his life. By then, she had already been working with turtles for more than a decade. Khalil recognised Khashab’s love of animals, reptiles and amphibians, and later gave him his first job while he was still in high school. People close to Khalil knew her strengths, but also the grief and struggles that shaped her life. Life and resistance in the south Khalil trained generations of volunteers in environmental conservation. She taught them how to protect dozens of eggs from foxes and other animals, from cars driving onto the beach, and even from UN forces who tried to hire local fishermen to hunt the turtles for them. During nesting season, she would be the first to patrol the shoreline. Khalil and her volunteers would also help newly hatched turtles, who only have about a 1 in 1,000 chance of surviving to adulthood, make their way into the Mediterranean Sea. .push({}); Her long fight against coastal privatisation, new building development and the use of dynamite in fishing is also a key reason why turtles have thrived in Mansouri. Mona al-Khalil (R) and Habiba (second name not available) collect turtle eggs and baby marine turtles at Mansouri beach on 26 August 2004 (Joseph Barrak/AFP) During winter, when Mansouri was empty of tourists and storms rolled in, she would call on her friends to help clear the coast, or when waste, believed to be drifting from Israel , would suddenly wash up on southern Lebanese shores. They would start in the border town of Naqoura and work their way north. Visitors and community members have long celebrated Khalil's Orange House as a welcoming space for people of all backgrounds and identities. Several people who spoke to MEE shared a common thought: Israel targeted Mona Khalil for who she was, a leader committed to preserving life and freedom. There is only one Orange House in Mansouri, and Khalil, who decided to stay despite Israel’s bombing campaigns, built a community, a sense of solidarity and a shared purpose around it. .push({}); “She kept resisting and taught everyone to love Lebanon as much as she did. It’s because she insisted on staying, because she was symbolising life and resistance there in the south, that’s probably why they murdered her,” Khashab said. Immortal legacy The day after her death, hundreds gathered in Beirut to pay their respects. The mourners were diverse: relatives, activists, environmentalists, friends, and representatives from the culture and environment ministries. Most people were dressed in black in mourning, but notes of colour moved through the crowd, as some of Khalil’s friends who remain displaced did not have access to their black clothes. Perhaps the most striking presence at her wake was that of her assistant Hawi, who had been with Khalil in her final moments before the Israeli strike. 'She kept resisting and taught everyone to love Lebanon as much as she did' - Ramy Khashab That day, despite the second-degree burns she sustained in the attack, the Ethiopian woman ran to a nearby Lebanese army post to urge them to rescue Khalil. It was because of her actions that Khalil did not die buried under the rubble. A large photo of Khalil holding a baby turtle and looking into the camera rested on a wooden table at her wake. Next to it, two large glass bowls held dates and small green and brown turtle charms, in tribute to the thousands of endangered loggerhead and green sea turtles she and her guests had saved at The Orange House. Amal Ephrem, a university professor and environmentalist who founded the Waste Management Coalition, chose a green turtle for her bracelet. Ephrem said she had long wanted to meet Khalil and had come not only to pay tribute to the activist, but also to mourn the thousands of people killed by Israel during the war. More than 4,000 people have been killed in Israeli attacks, among them women and children, and more than 12,000 others have been wounded since 2 March. “I came because I could,” she said, alluding to the vast areas of southern Lebanon that are inaccessible or unsafe due to Israeli bombardment. “It’s in Beirut, how can I not? It’s also not only for Mona. It’s for all of the people who died. It’s to see my friends from the south who are going through a lot, to stand with them at this moment.” In south Lebanon, Israeli drones use the sound of crying children to lure civilians Read More » In an Instagram post on her Lebanese Composters page, Ephrem wrote: “We will keep walking on the white sands of Mansouri, admiring its purple seashells and diving into its turquoise waters, grateful for all you did to protect this special place. “We will keep walking with endless admiration.” In 2000, Khalil started the project at The Orange House. In 2026, Israel took her life but not the work. “Her passion, her persistence, and her stubbornness, even, are what make her so amazing,” Khashab said. “The things we learned from her we use daily, not only in relation to sea turtles and environment, but in our everyday life.” Much of the conservation work and awareness around sea turtles and other environmental projects continued during the war, despite intense Israeli bombardment of southern Lebanon. Khalil's work became a model for conservation efforts on other beaches across southern Lebanon beyond Mansouri, and its influence will continue into the future. “Mona’s legacy is immortal. Parts of Mona are in every person, not only myself,” Khashab said. Israel's war on Lebanon Beirut News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0

22 days ago

geopolitical · geopolitical

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No double standards over Iran having ballistic missiles, says Pakistan's PM

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No double standards over Iran having ballistic missiles, says Pakistan's PM Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Tuesday that there should be no double standards where some countries are permitted to have ballistic missiles while Iran is not. Sharif told reporters that there was no mention of ballistic missiles in the memorandum of understanding agreed between the US and Iran because it was “never on the table”. “Convey my message to the Supreme Leader that Iran has been able to achieve the ceasefire and MoU with dignity,” Sharif said at a press conference with Iran’s President Pezeshkian in Islamabad. He added that Pakistan would like to continue its role in mediating negotiations until a lasting peace is achieved. Reporting by Reuters Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian (L) shaking hands with Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif in Islamabad on 23 June 2026 (Pakistan's Prime Minister Office/AFP)

22 days ago

geopolitical · geopolitical

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Bongeziwe Mabandla faced addiction, illness and ‘backstabbers’. How has the South African singer stayed so upbeat?

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An indie star in his homeland, Mabandla’s fame is growing abroad – and his uplifting new album is full of existential insight after some of the toughest years of his life As the camera pulls back from Bongeziwe Mabandla in the video for his recent single Yalwa , the true stars of the show reveal themselves: two women, dressed in a mix of crisp white and black traditional isiXhosa umbhaco garments and chic designer wear. Sure, Mabandla himself strikes a compelling figure in the centre of the frame in his own traditional apparel; the herd of cattle grazing around them are resplendent; and the forested ridges of South Africa’s Eastern Cape remain rapturous. But those stoic, confident, badass women! “Yeah, that’s my mom and aunt,” Mabandla says with a chuckle. The song, he says, is “all about heritage, going back and celebrating women in my lineage and in my family”. Keeping that connection alive has become especially important to Mabandla now that the singer-songwriter – an indie icon in Johannesburg – has been living far away from them for the first time. After years of finding particular acclaim in France (including a nomination for the prestigious Radio France Internationale award early in his career), Mabandla has been settled in Paris for six months amid bouts of touring and travelling through Europe. “I’m everywhere these days, living between two countries,” he says, laughing again. “I wanted to see what doors would open for me living in a different culture, especially in a big place like Paris. It’s been life-changing, but I’ve been very careful I don’t abandon my South African side.” Continue reading...

23 days ago

geopolitical · geopolitical

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Royal succession crisis strains Malaysia’s governing alliance ahead of polls

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Malaysia’s rare postponement of a meeting of its royal council has pushed a throne dispute in the state of Negeri Sembilan beyond palace walls, threatening to turn a customary succession row into an electoral liability for Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s uneasy governing alliance ahead of snap polls. The June 23–25 meeting of the Conference of Rulers – a council of Malaysia’s hereditary Malay rulers and state governors – was called off at the eleventh hour amid concerns that allowing Negeri...

23 days ago

geopolitical · geopolitical

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Trump to meet arms company CEOs on Wednesday, Reuters reports

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Trump to meet arms company CEOs on Wednesday, Reuters reports US President Donald Trump is set to host executives from weapons manufacturers for a meeting in the Oval office on Wednesday, Reuters has reported, citing a course familiar with the plan. This comes as delicate negotiations are taking place to work towards a ceasefire with Iran, and between Israel and Lebanon.

24 days ago

geopolitical · geopolitical

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Two killed by Israeli fire in southern Lebanon

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Two killed by Israeli fire in southern Lebanon Two people have been killed by Israeli fire in southern Lebanon on Tuesday, the country's National News Agency is reporting. According to the report, two men were killed when Israeli soldiers “opened fire with their machine-guns in their direction while they were standing near an excavator that was unblocking a road” in a town near the city of Nabatieh. The deaths are the first reported from Israeli fire since a fragile US-brokered "ceasefire" was implemented on Sunday. Hezbollah condemned the attack as a "blatant" violation of the agreement. The Israeli forces said its fighters had “struck armed terrorists who posed an immediate threat” to soldiers in the Ali al-Taher ridge area, which they said falls within an area which the millitary have declared a "security zone".

24 days ago

geopolitical · geopolitical

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How Andy Burnham could set Britain on a new course on Israel and Palestine

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How Andy Burnham could set Britain on a new course on Israel and Palestine Submitted by Imran Mulla on Mon, 06/22/2026 - 16:01 Gaza was a major reason behind Labour haemorrhaging votes to the Greens and independents but will a new leader turn the tide? The new Labour Party MP for Makerfield, Andy Burnham, being sworn in after his win in the recent by-election, in the House of Commons in London on 22 June (AFP) Off Andy Burnham has been notably reticent to speak about foreign policy in the past few weeks. He and his team believed doing so would not help him win his by-election in Makerfield, a largely white working-class seat, according to Labour sources. On a rare occasion that he was asked about the topic, he declined to say Israel has committed genocide, explaining: "I can’t judge things of that enormity from where I am as mayor of Greater Manchester." He said that "I do have concerns about the disproportionate nature of what has happened in terms of the destruction, and there has to be a full process of investigation and accountability." Israeli forces have killed more than 73,000 Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank since the Hamas attack on 7 October 2023 which killed 1,200 people, with a further 170,000 wounded. But now Burnham is in parliament and poised to become prime minister as early as next month. .push({}); He will soon be forced to turn seriously to the topic of foreign policy if he wants to appeal to the Labour membership, who overwhelmingly support stronger policies on Israel. Pressure to appeal to the membership will be less strong if, as it now seems, Burnham will have a coronation and become prime minister unopposed, rather than having to fight a contest. However, he will certainly be keen to win back the many left-wing voters who have abandoned the party. 'Foreign policy isn’t a side issue. It’s about values, credibility and whose side you are on when it matters' - Labour MP Kim Johnson And Burnham has previously shown a serious interest in British foreign policy on the Middle East, and a willingness to take a more critical stance on Israel. As a foreign policy issue, Israel has been significant in Britain over the past two-plus years because of its genocide in Gaza. Labour lost more votes to the left-wing Green Party than to Reform at the local elections last month, polling has shown. A study then revealed that over half of former Labour voters who intend to vote for a centre or left-wing party in the next general election cited Israel 's genocide in Gaza as a factor in their decision. Labour MP Kim Johnson told Middle East Eye: "If Andy wants to win back traditional Labour voters, especially those who feel abandoned on foreign policy, he has to show the moral clarity [Starmer] has too often lacked on Gaza." How Keir Starmer supported Israel throughout its genocide in Gaza Read More » Johnson explained: "He needs to be prepared to say clearly what Starmer would not: that a genocide is ongoing and that Labour’s refusal to speak honestly and act decisively on about it has come at a huge political cost." She argued that "people wanted Labour to call it what it is, to stand up for international law and to listen to the Palestine solidarity movement. "Instead," she said, "that silence has alienated core voters and driven support away from the party. "Take the May local elections for example – Palestine was on the ballot for millions of progressive voters. We lost 58 percent of the seats we were defending in England and lost almost four times as many voters to the Greens than to Reform UK. "We cannot deny that Gaza is a major reason many have walked." Johnson emphasised that "foreign policy isn’t a side issue. It’s about values, credibility and whose side you are on when it matters." Burnham's record on foreign policy Burnham joined Labour Friends of Israel (LFI), a pro-Israel group within the party, in 2015. This established him as a non-radical figure in contrast to colleagues who were strongly pro-Palestinian, such as Jeremy Corbyn. "Given Andy's previous ties to Labour Friends of Israel," Johnson said, "there will inevitably be questions about whether he’s prepared to take a different line when it counts." 'Respect for international law is measured by actions, not rhetoric. The next prime minister must not be an ally to atrocities' - Rohan Talbot, Medical Aid for Palestinians Running unsuccessfully to be Labour leader in 2015, Burnham said his first overseas visit would be to Israel. But Burnham also marked himself out as a critic of the Israeli government. In March 2015, he reacted to Benjamin Netanyahu's reelection as Israeli prime minister by calling the news "depressing" in a post on X. "Netanyahu elected on pledge to build more settlements," he said. "Palestine will need more international support." Burnham told the Palestine Solidarity Campaign in July that year that he backed recognising Palestinian statehood, saying it was "not a gift to be given but a right to be recognised". He said "Labour recognises that the settlements and their continued expansion remain key obstacles to resolving the conflict." Chris Doyle, the director of the Council for Arab-British Understanding (Caabu), told MEE that the next prime minister "will need to make a really significant course correction on Middle East foreign policy". .push({}); Burnham is a longtime supporter of Caabu and visited the occupied West Bank in 2012 with the group. "I've always been grateful to Caabu for facilitating a visit I made in 2012 with Labour Friends of Palestine to the West Bank," Burnham said in March this year. At long last, Starmer is out. Can Burnham bring new hope to Britain? Read More » "Caabu is a partner in parliament that many people look towards.... in these times that we live now, Caabu is needed more than ever." Doyle told MEE that a real course correction would entail "ending the climate of impunity that Israel currently enjoys, ensuring that when the government states it does support international law, it has meaning, and it is prepared to impose consequences on those parties, including Israel, who violate it. "This means, for example, backing the International Criminal Court arrest warrants [for Israeli ministers]". It also means, Doyle said, "ensuring aid agencies get proper and full access to Gaza, including UN agencies". Doyle added: "We need to accept that we are a middle-ranking power, that we don't have the ability to go and determine conflicts abroad. "But where we can make a difference is through creative, imaginative, determined diplomacy rooted in international law, rooted in basic core principles of how to resolve conflicts." Policy pledges on Palestine Burnham took a bold stance after the Hamas attack on 7 October 2023, amid Israel's ensuing siege and bombardment of Gaza. As Greater Manchester mayor, he broke ranks with the Labour leadership by calling for a ceasefire, in tandem with London mayor Sadiq Khan and Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar. Explaining his decision in a column in The Independent, Burnham warned Starmer not to "brand" MPs who disagreed with the leadership on the issue "as disloyal or as if they don’t care about innocent lives". .push({}); Caabu and the British Palestine Project have unveiled five "policy pledges on Palestine" that they call on the next Labour leader to adopt. NEW: Labour party delegates have voted that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza and should be sanctioned, in a shock development at the annual party conference. MEE’s Imran Mulla ( @Imran_posts ) reports from the Labour conference in Liverpool pic.twitter.com/aTHSLPOEos — Middle East Eye (@MiddleEastEye) September 29, 2025 The pledges include "ban all UK trade with illegal Israeli settlement good and services", "enforce international law", enforce "unrestricted access for UN agencies and humanitarian organisations", open occupied Palestine "to journalists, politicians and investigators" and "act with allies to end unlawful regional occupations". Doyle told MEE the next prime minister will need to resist "pressure, not least from the Trump administration, and "not just cave in" to American demands. In the parliamentary Labour Party, calls have been mounting fr0m backbenchers for a full ban on the import of goods from illegal Israeli settlements. And recent polling of Labour members showed that a staggering 87 percent support a ban on trade with Israeli settlements, with only 6 percent opposing it. Privately, MEE understands, Foreign Office ministers have accepted that a ban on settlement goods would be consistent with the British position on the occupied territories. Rohan Talbot, director of advocacy and campaigns at Medical Aid for Palestinians, said on Monday: "Whoever walks into Downing Street next must do what Starmer would not to end these horrors: stop providing arms to Israel, stop trading with illegal settlements in the West Bank, guarantee unrestricted humanitarian access, and ensure that those responsible for crimes against humanity are held fully accountable. "Respect for international law is measured by actions, not rhetoric. The next prime minister must not be an ally to atrocities.” UK Politics News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0

24 days ago
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