Saturday, December 21, 2024


Exodus: Italian artist uses AI to immerse viewers in war's destruction

Adriano Tenore’s groundbreaking AI installation confronts audiences with the devastation of war, transporting them from safe galleries to bombed-out conflict zones.

Savin Massimo Mattozzi
TRT/AA
DEC 20, 2024

A woman stares at her AI-generated self in a bombed-out room at a showing of Exodus in Naples, Italy (Savin Massimo Mattozzi).

Inside a dimly lit gallery in Naples, people gather around a camera aimed at a darkened room. Curiosity pulls them closer. Some start waving their arms while others watch in astonishment as their AI-generated reflections appear on a wall before them. One young woman puts her face right in front of the camera and sees herself in a bombed out house with debris scattered on the ground around her. She stays there a moment before walking away in tears, her hand trembling over her mouth.

This is Exodus, a powerful and haunting art installation by Naples-based visual artist, Adriano Tenore. By combining real-time AI technology with immersive visuals, Tenore creates a portal that places viewers directly inside the devastation experienced by people displaced by war. For a few surreal moments, they are no longer passive spectators of distant tragedies; they are inside the destruction.

Although Tenore doesn’t wish for people to cry when they see his project, he understands that when people have strong reactions to it, the project has served its purpose.





“On the one hand it's bad to see [people cry], but it also makes me understand that it worked. The viewer arrived where she needed to arrive” he tells TRT World.

Technology meets purpose


While fine tuning and developing the technology for several months in 2024, Tenore realised that he had a strong communication tool in his hands, he just had to decide what he wanted to communicate.


After being inundated with images of mass destruction and maimed civilians pouring out of Palestine's Gaza from Israel’s assault on the occupied territory, Tenore decided that he wanted to use his technology to put people, even if just for a few seconds, in the shoes of those suffering in Gaza.


“Once I developed this technology I understood that I had a super powerful tool in my hand because it allowed me to reinvent reality in real time” Tenore says. “The idea seemed to me to be the perfect moment to be able to talk about something more important that was linked to current events and a rather urgent, problematic, serious and atrocious situation which is that of Palestine.”


Adriano Tenore stands on his terrace in Naples' old city while he projects a test of his Exodus project on a building next to him
(Savin Massimo Mattozzi).

When Exodus first debuted in April, more than 34,000 Palestinians had been killed by Israeli forces in Gaza. Now, more than a year after Israel’s onslaught on Gaza, the death toll has risen to nearly 45,000 with more than 106,000 wounded. The International Criminal Court is currently seeking an arrest warrant for Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former defense minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Giulia, a second generation Palestinian activist and member of the Handala Ali Cultural Centre in Naples’ old city, believes that it is vitally important to discuss Palestine, especially when it comes to art and artistic expression.

“I think the most important thing, especially this year, is to never stop talking about Palestine” she explains. “The interpretation of Palestine, also in Western art, is fundamental for people who perhaps have not participated in protests.”

From spectators to participants

Although she explains it is important to centre Palestinian artists and voices, she thinks it is necessary to grab people’s attention for longer periods of time than simply fleeting images on social media.


Three people stand and watch as their AI generated selves move around the projection in a bombed-out room (Savin Massimo Mattozzi).

“The unique thing about this project is that the viewers become participants in the images themselves” Giulia says. “These people don’t expect what will happen next, they just see a portrayal of the destruction of Gaza. Then they find themselves projected inside of the image and it gives them a strong reaction because up until now they have just been observers but now they find themselves within the images.”

AI and the ethics of impact

While Exodus has drawn praise for its emotional power, it has also sparked questions about the role of generative AI in art. Critics argue that AI blurs the line between authentic artistic expression and machine-generated visuals.

For software engineers and data scientists, the question of the limitations of this kind of technology are increasingly more complicated.

Carmen Baiano, a data scientist that works with AI, believes that people, both inside and outside the computer science community, are not thinking about where this technology could take us.

“From my point of view we are not always thinking of the implications of what we do, we get so caught up in the fact that we are developing a new technology that we become lost” Baiano tells TRT World.

In addition to the technology potentially ending up in the wrong hands, she questions whether projects that use AI like Exodus will have any kind of lasting effect on its audience or if it’s just a fleeting emotion that people will only feel in the moment of the show.

“I don’t know if you go to the show and see it and experience it, if it’s enough to really affect how people live their life… I don’t know if it will be enough for people to take actions like participating in a boycott” she says.







For Tenore, the fleeting impact that his work could have on his audience is not lost on him. He acknowledges its limitations but is optimistic about not just the outcome of his project but any kind of art that aims to change the way people see and understand the world around them.


“Art not only should change the world but it must” he explains to TRT World. “I think if art can put technological progress to good use and if its in the right, ethical hands, it will change the world.”

Global vision

Tenore’s vision for Exodus extends beyond Gaza. He hopes to adapt the project to highlight other ongoing conflicts, such as those in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where violence and displacement continue largely unnoticed by global media.


“Exodus can be applied to any other conflict or genocide that is happening today” he explains.


Adriano Tenore and an audience member make the peace symbol for their AI-generated selves to imitate 
 (Savin Massimo Mattozzi).


Back in the small art gallery in Naples, the room is thick with silence. The sounds of distant explosions and sirens echo from speakers in the corner. People step in front of the camera, one after another, their expressions shifting from fascination to discomfort. A green couch in the room transforms on screen into rubble and weeds. The walls seem to collapse. The viewers are no longer in Naples; they are somewhere far more harrowing.

In these moments, Tenore’s message comes to life: Exodus bridges the chasm between the observer and the observed, between safety and suffering. For just a moment, it makes the incomprehensible real.

SOURCE: TRT World

Savin Massimo Mattozzi is a Naples-based freelance journalist who writes on migration, organised crime, conflict and culture.
Pope Francis slams Israel's 'cruelty' after Gaza air strike

Pope Francis calls for an investigation to determine if Israel’s attacks in Gaza constitute genocide, according to excerpts from an upcoming new book.



"The Pope's remarks are particularly disappointing as they are disconnected from the true and factual context," the Israeli Foreign Ministry said. / Photo: AFP

Pope Francis has again condemned Israeli air strikes in besieged Gaza, a day after an Israeli government minister publicly denounced the pontiff for suggesting the global community should study whether the Israel carnage there constitutes a genocide of the Palestinian people.

Francis opened his annual Christmas address to the Catholic cardinals who lead the Vatican's various departments with what appeared to be a reference to Israeli air strikes on Friday that killed at least 25 Palestinians in Gaza.

"Yesterday, children were bombed," said the pope on Saturday. "This is cruelty. This is not war. I wanted to say this because it touches the heart."

The pope, as leader of the 1.4-billion-member Roman Catholic Church, is usually careful about taking sides in conflicts, but he has recently been more outspoken about Israel's military attacks on Gaza against Palestinians.

In book excerpts published last month, the pontiff said some international experts said that "what is happening in Gaza has the characteristics of a genocide"

Israel accuses Pope of double standards

Israel has accused Pope Francis of "double standards" following his remarks.

"The Pope's remarks are particularly disappointing as they are disconnected from the true and factual context," the Israeli Foreign Ministry said.

"Enough with the double standards and the singling out of the Jewish state and its people."

Israel has killed over 45,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, in its carnage in Gaza so far.

Tel Aviv has caused a massive shortage of basic necessities in its onslaught, including food, water, electricity and medicine, while displacing almost the entire population.

November 21, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its military campaign in the enclave.

Humanity Must Not Look Away: a call to protect Gaza’s healthcare system

We stand with Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, Director of Kamal Adwan Hospital, in pleading with the international community: Do not remain silent as Gaza’s healthcare system is systematically destroyed.
December 21, 2024 0
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Director of Kamal Adwan Hospital, Hussam Abu Safiyeh (middle), holds up his hands during the Israeli invasion of the hospital, October 26, 2024.
 (Photo: Screenshot/Social Media)


Editor’s Note: The following is a statement from the Palestine Mental Health Networks and Doctors Against Genocide.

The Palestine Mental Health Networks and Doctors Against Genocide stand with Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, Director of Kamal Adwan Hospital, in pleading with the international community: Do not remain silent as Gaza’s healthcare system is systematically destroyed. The relentless assaults on Kamal Adwan Hospital—a sanctuary meant to save lives in northern Gaza—are part of a deliberate genocidal campaign. These attacks on hospitals and clinics, places meant for healing and shelter, are not accidents of war; they are the cold calculations of those who would see an entire people erased.

For 15 months, Gaza’s hospitals and clinics have been turned into crime scenes. Airstrikes shatter operating rooms mid-surgery. Children gasp for air as oxygen lines are cut off. Parents search through rubble for their loved ones while doctors stand helpless, their surgical gloves empty-handed and their hearts heavy. These are not “tragic byproducts”—they are intentional crimes against humanity. They shred the promise of international humanitarian law, reducing the Geneva Conventions to hollow words.

The world looks on, as Gaza’s healthcare system buckles under siege and bombardment. Medical supplies blocked at borders. Ambulances banned from reaching the injured. The simplest lifesaving tools withheld. This is not mere negligence; it is a brutal strategy of attrition, starving a people’s capacity to live, heal, and resist. The mental toll is immeasurable. Imagine the terror in a child’s eyes when the bombs fall again, the despair in a surgeon’s voice when forced to turn away a bleeding patient. Families bury their children in silence, their cries muffled by international indifference.

We echo Kamal Adwan Hospital’s urgent, anguished appeal:

1. Open a humanitarian corridor now. Let medicine, surgical equipment, and ambulances reach those who are dying for lack of the most basic care.

2. Protect healthcare facilities and workers immediately. Demand that the international community enforce the laws meant to guard medical spaces and staff from harm.

3. End the blockade of Gaza. This decades-long siege has turned Gaza into an open-air prison where even survival is treated as a privilege, not a right.

Humanity cannot pretend not to see. Neutrality in the face of genocide is complicity. Every bomb that slams into Kamal Adwan Hospital, every nurse forced to watch a child slip away, every life lost from denied treatment indicts us all.

The world is watching. Will it once again stand idly by as another hospital crumbles, another child’s breath is silenced, another fragile hope is extinguished? Or will it finally rise to restore the sanctity of life and the universal right to health?

Please take action:Sign this urgent petition regarding “Not Another Hospital”. https://ujoin.co/campaigns/3307/actions/public?action_id=4319
Sign petition “No Child A Target-Internationa” https://ujoin.co/campaigns/3351/actions/public?action_id=4410
Write to your representatives, follow this link https://ujoin.co/campaigns/3331/actions/public?action_id=4369
Please share this article with at least 10 individuals in your network

In solidarity and profound sorrow,

Doctors Against Genocide

The Palestine Mental Health Networks (Australia, Belgium, Canada, Chile, Egypt, France, Germany, Iraq, Ireland, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine, South Africa, Sweden, Turkiye, United Kingdom, United States)


Israel conducts continuous airstrikes on Kamal Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahia - as it happened



Ahram Online , Saturday 21 Dec 2024

Hamas said in a statement on Saturday that reaching a Gaza ceasefire agreement with Israel “has become closer than ever before” only if Tel Aviv refrains from imposing new conditions.


A wounded person is treated inside Kamal Adwan Hospital, in the northern Gaza Strip. 

As Israeli aggression in Gaza, Lebanon, and Post-Assad Syria deepens human suffering and regional instability, and amid growing international calls for ceasefires and de-escalation, Ahram Online covers the latest developments in the Middle East as they unfold on Saturday, 21 December.

Related
Hamas calls for global pressure on Israel to halt terrorism in Gaza - as it happened

21:50 The General Command in Syria announced today, Saturday, the appointment of Marhaf Abu Qasra, known as Abu al-Hassan al-Hamawi, as Minister of Defense in the Syrian Interim Government, reported DPA.

Abu Qasra was assigned following a meeting between the Commander-in-Chief of Operations, Ahmed al-Sharaa, and the leaders of the armed factions.

Abu Qasra was born in the city of Halfaya in the Hama countryside, holds a bachelor's degree in agricultural engineering, and is one of the prominent leaders in Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, according to DPA.

The General Command said that Ahmed al-Sharaa discussed the form of the new military institution in his meeting with the Syrian military factions.

Al-Sharaa stated that the military factions will be merged into one institution under the management of the Ministry of Defense in the new army.

The news has not been announced yet by the Syrian News Agency.

21:15 Four Palestinians were killed and several others were injured in an Israeli airstrike that targeted a home in the Nuseirat refugee camp, central Gaza, on Saturday evening.

WAFA correspondent reported that Israeli fighter jets struck the home of the Kabaja family, causing the murder of four civilians and injuring others. The attack also caused damage to neighbouring homes.

Earlier in the day, another Israeli airstrike on Al-Mansoura Street in the Shujaiya neighbourhood east of Gaza City resulted in the killing of four more individuals and left others injured.

18:45 A mother and her three daughters were killed in an Israeli airstrike on Saturday evening in northern Gaza. The attack targeted the Felfel family home near Sheikh Zayed Mosque in the region, according to local sources.

The bombing resulted in the killing of the mother, along with her three children, as their house was destroyed in the strike.


A Palestinian man is helped to put a shrouded body into the ground during a funeral of Palestinians killed in an Israeli strike the previous night, in Jabalia, in the northern Gaza Strip. AFP

18:30 Gaza's Health Ministry issued an urgent appeal for medical and food supplies to be delivered to Kamal Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahiya in largely isolated northern Gaza, while the hospital director described conditions as dire, as Israel's military presses its latest offensive.

The ministry reported continuous gunfire and Israeli shelling near the hospital, saying “shells have struck the third floor and the hospital’s entrances, creating a state of panic.”

Hospital director Dr. Husam Abu Safiyeh said the facility faced “severe shortages” and asserted that requests for essential medical supplies and ways to maintain oxygen, water and electricity systems "have largely gone unmet.”

He said 72 wounded people were being treated at the hospital.

“Food is very scarce, and we cannot provide meals for the wounded," Safiyeh added. “We are urgently calling on anyone who can provide supplies to help us.”

Aid groups have said Israeli military operations and armed gangs have hindered their ability to distribute aid.

18:05 Iran said unknown gunmen had killed a local staffer of the Iranian Embassy in Syria in Damascus, the official IRNA news agency said.

Its report quoted Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei as saying “terrorists” opened fire on Davood Bitaraf’s car last Sunday. It did not say what he did with the embassy.

Baghaei said Iran considers Syria’s interim government responsible for finding and prosecuting those behind the killing. Iran had been a key ally of recently ousted Syrian leader Bashar Assad.

17:00 A drone attack on a car in northeastern Syria attributed to the Turkish military has killed three civilians, a media report and Kurdish security forces said on Saturday.

The strike came after two journalists from Turkey's Kurdish-majority southeast were killed, reportedly by a Turkish drone, while covering clashes between an Ankara-backed militia and US-backed Kurdish fighters in Syria.

15:30 Hamas said in a statement that reaching a Gaza ceasefire agreement with Israel “has become closer than ever before” only if Tel Aviv refrains from imposing new conditions.

The Palestinian movement said it held a meeting in Cairo on the ongoing negotiation efforts with representatives of the Islamic Jihad and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

The meeting was attended by Hamas deputy head, Khalil al-Hayya, and Islamic Jihad Movement Secretary-General Ziyad al-Nakhalah.

Efforts to strike a Gaza truce and captive release deal between Israel and Hamas have repeatedly failed over key stumbling blocks, but recent negotiations have raised hope of an agreement.


A man inspects the damage following an Israeli strike on a home belonging to the al-Zaytouniyah family, in the al-Daraj neighbourhood in Gaza City, in the central Gaza Strip. AFP

14:30 Israel has used civilian contractors to demolish buildings and construct military infrastructure in the southern Gaza city of Rafah, The Guardian reported, citing an article from the Israeli news site Walla.

The report, written by a journalist embedded with the Israeli army, details military operations in the Shaboura neighbourhood, on the outskirts of the Rafah refugee camp.

The Israeli military’s tasks in the area include exploring, securing, and opening roads, as well as locating and destroying infrastructure both above and below ground.

A report by the New York Times earlier this month revealed that the Israeli army has demolished over 600 buildings to create buffer zones and expanded a network of military bases.

The so-called Netzarim corridor, initially a four-mile road, has expanded into an 18-square-mile area controlled by Israeli forces, which now bisects the Palestinian territory and keeps many displaced Palestinians from returning north.

The New York Times report confirmed earlier findings by Israeli newspaper Haaretz, which showed the Israeli army is widening roads, building outposts, and installing long-term infrastructure for a prolonged military presence in Gaza.

This territorial expansion has fueled speculation about Israel’s long-term intentions for Gaza. Israeli leaders have vowed to maintain security control even after the war without providing much detail.

A senior Israeli officer serving in Gaza told Haaretz that “the Israeli army won't withdraw before 2026." Still, some ministers have suggested military control could lead to a renewed Israeli settlement in Gaza.

Israel's relentless bombardment has already reduced much of Gaza to rubble, displaced 1.9 million people (at least once), and enabled Israel to occupy 26 percent of the territory, with settlers eyeing further expansion.

According to Haaretz, Israeli sources have admitted that the army is actively clearing Palestinian villages and cities in northern Gaza as part of a plan dubbed the "Generals' Plan," transforming the area into a military enclave.


13:30 The health ministry in Gaza said that at least 45,227 people have been killed during more than 14 months of Israeli war on Gaza.

The toll includes 21 deaths in the previous 24 hours, according to the ministry, which said 107,573 people have been wounded in the Gaza Strip since the Israeli war began.

12:30 The Palestinian news agency Wafa reported that an Israeli strike targeting a gathering of people in Al-Shati Camp, west of Gaza City, killed at least three and wounded many others.

On Friday, Israeli strikes killed at least 25 Palestinians, including eight in an apartment in the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza, and 10 others, including seven children, in a separate strike on a home in Jabalia, northern Gaza, Reuters reported, citing medics.

Commenting on the Jabalia strike, Gaza Civil Defence Agency spokesman Mahmoud Bassal told AFP, "There are 10 martyrs... all targeted by an airstrike on their home in Jabalia al-Nazla, southwest of Jabalia. All of the martyrs are from the same family, including seven children, the oldest aged six."

Bassal added that the strike injured 15 other people.

Gaza's health ministry says Israel's war on Gaza has killed at least 45,206 people, the majority of whom are women and children, and injured 107,512 others. The UN rights office confirms the figures are reliable and that most of the dead are women and children.

12:00 The UN Security Council has unanimously approved a resolution extending the UN peacekeeping force on the Israel-Syria border and underscoring that there should be no military activities in the demilitarized buffer zone.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday that Israeli troops will occupy the buffer zone for the foreseeable future. Israel seized the buffer zone in a land grab shortly after the collapse of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's government.

The resolution adopted Friday stressed that both countries are obligated “to scrupulously and fully respect” the 1974 Disengagement of Forces Agreement that ended the 1973 war between Syria and Israel and established the buffer zone. The resolution was co-sponsored by the United States and Russia.

The Security Council extended the mandate of the UN peacekeeping force monitoring the border area, known as UNDOF, until June 30, 2025 and called for a halt to all military actions throughout the country including in UNDOF’s area of operations.

The resolution expresses concern that ongoing military activities in the area of separation have the potential to escalate Israeli-Syrian tensions and jeopardize the 1974 ceasefire. It also expresses alarm that violence in Syria “risks a serious conflagration of the conflict in the region.”

11:00 Pope Francis condemned the bombing of children in Gaza as "cruelty," a day after an Israeli airstrike killed seven children from one family.

"Yesterday, children were bombed. This is cruelty, this is not war. I want to say it because it touches my heart," he told an audience of Holy See government members.

The Gaza Strip is now considered the deadliest place in the world for children. About 30 percent of the 11,300 identified children killed in Gaza were younger than five, and Gaza currently has the highest rates of child malnutrition globally, according to the NGO Save the Children.


Palestinian women mourn a dead child, killed in an Israeli strike the previous night, at Al-Ahli Arab hospital, also known as the Baptist hospital, in Gaza City. AFP

9:00 The Israeli military says a rocket fired from Yemen hit an area of Tel Aviv overnight, leaving 16 people slightly injured by shattered glass from nearby windows.

A further 14 people sustained minor injuries as they rushed to shelters when air raid sirens sounded before the projectile hit just before 4 a.m. Saturday, the military said.

Israel's military said it had failed to intercept the projectile, which struck a district of Tel Aviv municipality, forcing many residents to leave their homes.

Yemen's Houthi rebels later claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it used a ballistic missile and was directed at "a military target of the Israeli enemy".

The attack comes less than two days after a series of Israeli airstrikes on Yemen’s Houthi-held capital, Sanaa, and port city of Hodeida killed at least nine people.

The Israeli strikes were in response to a Houthi attack in which a long-range missile hit an Israeli school building. The Houthis also claimed a drone strike targeting an unspecified military target in central Israel on Thursday.

The Israeli military says the Houthis have launched more than 200 missiles and drones during the Israeli war on Gaza. The Houthis have also been attacking shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden — attacks they say won’t stop until there is a ceasefire in Gaza.

The Israeli strikes Thursday caused “considerable damage” to the Houthi-controlled Red Sea ports “that will lead to the immediate and significant reduction in port capacity,” United Nations spokesman Stephane Dujarric said. The port at Hodeida has been key for food shipments into Yemen in its decade-long civil war.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said both sides’ attacks risk further escalation in the region and undermine U.N. mediation efforts.

This picture shows debris in a bedroom in Tel Aviv after a projectile fired from Yemen landed near the building. AFP

8:30 The Biden administration said Friday it has decided not to pursue a $10 million reward it had offered for the capture of Syrian militant leader Ahmad al-Sharaa aka Abu Mohammed al-Jolani, whose group led insurgents that ousted President Bashar Assad earlier this month.

The announcement followed a meeting in Damascus between Ahmad al-Sharaa, who was once aligned with al-Qaida, and the top U.S. diplomat for the Middle East, Barbara Leaf, who led the first U.S. diplomatic delegation into Syria since Assad’s ouster.

Al-Sharaa's group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, remains designated a foreign terrorist organization, and Leaf would not say if sanctions stemming from that designation would be eased. However, she told reporters that Sharaa had committed to renouncing terrorism and as a result the U.S. would no longer offer the reward.

Leaf said the U.S. would make policy decisions based on actions and not words.


Ahmad al-Sharaa aka Abu Mohammed al-Jolani. AFP

8:00 The Israeli military said its soldiers shot and wounded a protester Friday in the Syrian village of Maariyah.

Since the fall of Bashar Assad’s government in Syria, Israel’s military has occupied several locations in the country along the border with Israel.

During a protest Friday by dozens of Syrians against the Israeli presence in Maariyah, soldiers shot at one man who the military said had approached their position, wounding him in the leg.

Residents in the area previously told The Associated Press that Israeli forces were preventing farmers from reaching their fields.

A villager from Maariya told AFP that Israeli soldiers had been entering his village and other nearby villages in recent days.

"When the Israelis entered ... they sowed fear and horror among the people, the children, the women," Ali al-Khalaf, 52, told AFP.

"So much so that some people fled to other nearby villages. They (Israeli troops) entered the villages of Maariya, Aabdyn and Jamlah," he added.

On Tuesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held a security briefing atop a strategic Syrian mountain inside the UN-patrolled zone.

During the visit Netanyahu reviewed the army's deployment in the area, his office said.

Israeli leaders say they will remain in the area indefinitely.
Despite censorship and intimidation we continue to demand: no more research for genocide at MIT

An MIT lab is collaborating with the Israeli military to develop AI surveillance algorithms and the university censored a campus publication that tried to expose it. We refuse to be intimidated and continue to demand: No More Research for Genocide.
December 21, 2024 2
MONDOWEISS

A picture taken on May 15, 2018 shows an Israeli quadcopter drone dropping tear gas canisters over Palestinians, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on May 15, 2018. (Photo: Ashraf Amra/APA Images)


On November 7th, we published an op-ed titled “Daniela Rus, The People Demand: No More Research for Genocide” in the MIT Tech. Our piece detailed how Prof. Daniela Rus, director of MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, uses Israeli Ministry of Defense money to develop algorithms with applications in “multirobot security defense and surveillance.” Rather than engage with these publicly verifiable facts, the Tech’s editorial board (under the guidance of Prof. Rus) retracted our op-ed.

MIT sent several of us “no contact” and “no harassment” orders for Prof. Rus, disciplining one student for simply writing our Op-Ed’s title on a public chalkboard! As if this naked intimidation wasn’t enough, the Tech indefinitely halted all Op-Eds after retracting our piece. This comes directly after the suspension and effective expulsion of MIT PhD student Prahlad Iyengar, in part due to an email he sent Professor Rus’ students “offering support” and a “safe space” to discuss her research.

We refuse to be intimidated by MIT. Professor Rus takes money from a genocidal army to do research with military applications (stated in her own papers here, here and here). Retractions and suspensions cannot change these simple facts. Here, we republish our article in full:
Daniela Rus, The People Demand: No More Research for Genocide

Today, MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) conducts research funded by the Israeli Ministry of Defense (IMoD), with direct applications to the ongoing genocide in Gaza. We, the MIT Coalition for Palestine, whose tuition and labor support CSAIL, call on CSAIL Director Daniela Rus to lead by example and end her IMoD-sponsored research.

Rus currently leads the project “Coreset Compression Algorithms,” which has received $425,000 in direct sponsorship from the IMoD since 2021, according to MIT’s 2024 Brown Books. This project develops AI algorithms for applications like “city-scale observation systems” and “surveillance and vigilance”. Many of these lightweight algorithms are ideal for teaching small unmanned vehicles, including drones, to track and pursue targets with increased autonomy. Notably, navigating human environments is central: “a human may provide the global path… and the robots will adapt their configuration automatically”.

Many of us have friends and family surveilled and killed by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) drones streamlined by Rus’s research. These quadrotor drones are used extensively to monitor, injure, and kill Palestinian civilians at close range. Last Wednesday, October 30, 2024, Palestinian poet Mosab Abu Toha shared videos showing Israeli bombs destroying his home, including footage of a quadrotor drone with a mounted machine gun just meters away. He described how Israel’s relentless indiscriminate bombardment in Gaza has wiped out entire families he knew. Stories like his have become the norm for families in Gaza.

As we write this piece, Jabalia has been under constant siege for a month. The Israeli military is targeting hospitals and burning patients alive. The government blocks access to life-saving humanitarian supplies, worsening Gaza’s already severe health crisis, all while threatening, targeting, and killing journalists attempting to report on these war crimes. At this time, it is our moral responsibility to do everything in our power to disrupt and dismantle all which enable the continuing of this genocide.

There has been a long-standing demand for Rus’s IMoD-sponsored projects to end.

The MIT Coalition for Palestine (C4P) is a group of MIT students, staff, faculty, community members, and campus organizations who refuse to devote their labor to companies complicit in Israeli apartheid, occupation, and the violation of Palestinian human rights. Daniela Rus was first contacted by the C4P on March 8th, 2024 by email where she was informed of how her IMoD-sponsored projects made her complicit in the ongoing genocide in Gaza.

Without response, we then emailed out to the graduate students in her lab informing them of these ties and of potential alternative funding arrangements. In April, we launched the Scientists Against Genocide Encampment, where we consistently highlighted her lab’s IMoD ties to the school and community.

Over a year of accelerating genocide has now since passed, seven months since we first contacted Rus, and she continues her research, violating MIT’s own rules for research sponsorship. On Tuesday October 22, 2024, the Coalition Against Apartheid, a member organization of C4P, delivered a second letter in-person to her CSAIL office, chanting and flyering in the process.

We are committed to engaging in continuing action because it works. For instance, The U.S. arm of Israeli defense contractor Elbit Systems recently ended its lease of office space in Cambridge after months of demonstrations by pro-Palestinian protestors. This win reinforces our resolve, and reminds us of a crucial lesson: the only way to make material disruptions for these inhumane systems is to continuously raise the cost for conducting research for genocide.

MIT’s police and disciplinary response against peaceful demonstrators was swift and unjust.

Within fifteen minutes, MIT escalated the situation with police force by violently arresting student protestors and detaining others for merely chanting and passing out flyers. At one point, there were four to six cops pinning down one person. Even those who were simply filming the arrests were detained, pushed around, and groped. There was no warning or attempt by faculty or administrators to engage with the students in order to understand their actions. Three days after the protest, eight students received interim sanction letters from the MIT Committee on Discipline (COD).

This interim letter did not indicate what charges students were being prosecuted for. Rather, they prohibited the students from entering common student spaces in CSAIL, where some of these students work. They also issued three no-contact orders to students: one for Rus, one for her collaborator on IMoD-funded projects Eytan Modiano, and one for Jack Costanza, a CSAIL employee who physically assaulted students in an attempt to unlawfully aid police in their arrests. None of the students were given the chance to review or respond to the charges. Once again, the COD demonstrates it operates primarily on the premise of treating political dissidents as “guilty until proven innocent.”

One week later, students received their alleged charges from the COD. All eight of them, whether they were chanting, putting a flyer up on a wall with painter’s tape, or simply video-taping the protest, received the same charges: assault, disorderly conduct, harassment, and threats/intimidation. COD Chair Tamar Schapiro later verbally admitted to one student in a meeting that she was aware none of the protestors assaulted anyone. Yet she still sent the letters accusing all eight of the students of assault. The COD systematically criminalizes the Coalition for Palestine as a community for protesting genocide. By indiscriminately instating a blanket no-contact order against all individuals who received a discipline letter, the COD draws a direct parallel between the acts of collective punishment MIT inflicts on pro-Palestinian advocates on its campus, and the collective punishment that Israel has long been inflicting on Palestinians themselves.

Discipline against pro-Palestinian students reinforces systemic racism at MIT.

Over the past year, MIT’s administration’s response to protests against genocide continues to be reflective of MIT’s longstanding racist and xenophobic systems. Students have attempted time and time again to address these issues, as described in this article by the Black Graduate Students Association. Despite the manufactured facade of an MIT community that is safe for students of minoritized backgrounds, racism at MIT has persisted over the last year at an institutional level.

At an institutional level, the MIT administration has been emboldened to continue to weaponize the police and inconsistent “academic” disciplinary proceedings in order to disproportionately target Black and Brown students. In the past year, 87% of the people MIT has disciplined, relating broadly to protest activity, have been people of color. Just consider MIT’s response to the letter delivery protest of Rus’ lab: people of color made up 8 out 13 student protestors present, yet 7 out of 8 people who received letters from the CoD were people of color. In addition to the disciplinary discrimination we face, many of us on campus feel incredibly unsafe, as the Institute of Discrimination Harassment and Reporting (IDHR) has failed to follow up on at least thirty reports of harassment against us. Simultaneously, IDHR selectively applies sanctions against us without evidence. To MIT, we are solely perceived as threats, never as victims. When Tamar Schapiro was asked to clarify the discipline, she told one female student that as a woman, she should understand that Daniela Rus felt unsafe by the demonstration, even though she was not even present in the lab at the time. What about the women in Gaza who fear being killed by the very technology Daniela Rus’s work contributes to? What about the women of color on campus who fear being unjustly brutalized by the frequent displays of disproportionate police violence? Tamar Schapiro, and MIT as a whole, fail to acknowledge the tangible fears of marginalized women, yet prioritize the theoretical fears of white women. This twisted, victim-blaming, racist logic matches the insinuation of Provost Barnhart in the previous Spring semester, wherein she justified the interim suspensions and eviction threats of 27 people by suggesting that MIT apply the same disciplinary measures previously reserved for when individuals are immediately at risk of sexual assault. As long as we have a broken reporting system, rapists and sexual offenders continue to freely walk on campus while students of color are treated as criminals for protesting a genocide.

To Daniela Rus and the world: no more labor for apartheid and genocide!

At the end of the day, MIT’s racism and racist discipline cannot counteract one fact: Daniela Rus is complicit in doing research for genocide. She has been complicit since 2012 when the sponsorship was first established through her then-postdoc, Dan Feldman, who currently works at University of Haifa in occupied Palestine. Professor Rus continues to deny her evident, present-day connections to the IMoD while flaunting her other morally dubious connections, such as her recent public statement of admiration, at her October book talk, for Marvin Minsky, alleged co-perpetrator of notorious pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

As students of conscience, we cannot stand for this. The time to take action is now. We therefore call on Daniela Rus to immediately terminate all IMOD-funded projects and for MIT to provide transitional funding to all affected graduate students, in line with how MIT terminated financial ties with the Skoltech Institute in Russia the day after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Why are we here at MIT? What purpose is there to any of the science and research being done on this campus when we know that ultimately our work will be used for mass murder and exploitation? It is the current leadership at MIT that is ensuring that the great potential of this community is being abused to oppress individuals globally. Therefore, it will take all people of conscience at this institution to change the course we are currently on to force MIT to embody the values it claims to have. We cannot rest until MIT completely cuts ties and divests from all entities that support genocide and colonialism.

Every human on this planet, especially those of us at MIT, is morally obligated to use their voice, body, and labor to make an immediate material impact toward ending the ongoing genocide.
SLAVA UKRAINA

Usyk beats Fury in heavyweight championship rematch

Sulafa Alkhunaizi
December 21, 2024


RIYADH: Ukrainian heavyweight boxer Oleksandr Usyk takes the crown again in a rematch with British heavyweight boxer Tyson Fury, retaining the “undisputed” title.

The rematch took place at Riyadh’s Kingdom Arena on Saturday evening.

Usyk was awarded the fight 116-112 in favor by all three judges, handing Fury his second loss.

Usyk’s win takes him to 23-0 with 14 knockouts and extends one of the all-time best careers that includes Olympic gold and undisputed champion at cruiserweight.



On the sidelines of the much-anticipated rematch, the first ever artificial intelligence judge was used as an experiment and did not decide the fight, according to Turki bin Abdulmohsen Alalshikh, Chairman of the General Entertainment Authority.

During the media press conference, Fury told Arab News about the positive seven months he spent training and prepping for the rematch.

“I’ve had a good life, it's been good times, and I have had good training.”

Usyk told Arab News that he is happy that he won.



"I'm not a proud man, I'm just happy that I won. I like to motivate people to give them the incentive to do something."

As part of the undercard matches, Rhys Edwards, the Welsh featherweight boxer was overcome by the Peter Mcgrail British featherweight, who claimed his 11th professional win.

The fight was initially scheduled to be Mcgrail and Dennis McCann, who failed a drug test, causing him to be disqualified. Edwards stepped in with a five-day notice and accepted the challenge.

In an interview with Arab News, Edwards expressed his sentiments but remained optimistic given the short notice.

“ I'm a bit gutted I didn't get the win, but the whole week has absolutely been fantastic. And I've loved every moment of it…. I have learned a lot about myself. I took the fight (with) four days' notice, and a lot of people didn't give me enough credit or a chance coming into this fight. It was a very close (and) hard fight for both of us. So, I'm sure my profile and stocks have risen and I'm happy.

”I'm a very good fighter and I will fight anyone. I'm looking forward to a very big 2025.”

Tyson superfan Molly Chapman shared her predictions on which heavyweight will take the crown.



“I think Tyson Fury is going to win. I think his attitude is completely different this time. He seems more focused. He's been training hard. He looks in good shape and I think he's going to win.”

She told Arab News that her first time visiting the Kingdom has been amazing and has already begun planning her next visit.

“Saudi Arabia is just beautiful. The culture, the people, everyone's so friendly. And yeah, we're actually going to come back in February for the next fight.”

Daria Pyliukhno attended the boxing night rocking a “Ukraine” shirt, a true testament to her support towards Usyk.

“So today, of course I have to be here supporting my country. I'm from Ukraine, and I support Usyk. And I think he will win because Ukrainians mentality are strong enough to fight…I think that Usyk should bring Ukraine again the title of “The heavyweight champion.”



Riyadh Season’s wonderful surprises did not end there. A member of the audience was selected to win a Mercedes-Benz S-Class, presented by Alsheikh, during the opening ceremony.

Riyadh’s newly built Kingdom Arena played host to the boxing event, dubbed ‘Ring of Fire’, with a sellout crowd including several sports and entertainment figures in attendance at the 22,000-capacity venue.


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What Israel’s capture of Syrian territory as Assad fell signifies for the Middle East

Analysis



ANAN TELLO
December 21, 2024
ARAB NEWS

Israeli government’s action viewed as taking advantage of a neighbor at a time of distraction and weakness

Takeover of demilitarized buffer zone deprives Syria of more fertile land and water resources of Golan



LONDON: In the early hours of Sunday, Dec. 8, shortly after a coalition of opposition forces seized Damascus and toppled Bashar Assad’s regime, Israeli troops infringed on Syrian territory for the first time in 50 years, marking another breach of international law.

They advanced into a demilitarized zone along the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights and seized roughly another 400 square kilometers of Syrian territory.

The move has drawn international criticism, with Jordan slamming the deployment of Israeli troops in the Golan as a violation of international law.

Similarly, Saudi Arabia condemned the move, saying it confirms Israel’s “determination to sabotage Syria’s chances of restoring its security, stability and territorial integrity.”

Other countries in the region, including Iran, Iraq, the UAE, Qatar, and Turkiye, also denounced Israel’s land grab in Syria. Qatar described it as “a dangerous development and a blatant attack on Syria’s sovereignty and unity.”



Israel’s foreign ministry responded with a statement accusing Turkiye of taking control of about 15 percent of Syria’s territory through three military operations from 2016 onward, and establishing armed proxy groups to control this territory, where “Turkish currency is in use, and Turkish bank branches and postal services have been operating.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu defended the takeover of the buffer zone as a decision taken to prevent “any hostile force from establishing itself on our border.”

He made the announcement from the Golan Heights, saying the fall of the Assad regime had rendered a Syria-Israel disengagement agreement dating back to 1974 obsolete and that “Syrian forces have abandoned their positions.”

Media reports, as well as the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), noted that Syrian forces abandoned their positions in Quneitra province — part of which lies within the buffer zone — just hours before Assad’s fall.

Antonio Guterres, UN secretary-general, insisted on Thursday that the 1974 agreement “remains fully in force,” calling on both Israel and Syria to uphold its terms.

Under that agreement, a UN-monitored demilitarized zone separated the Israeli-occupied territory from the area controlled by Syria.



The UN criticized Israel’s capture of the buffer zone, saying it constituted a violation of the 1974 agreement. Stephane Dujarric, spokesperson for Guterres, said on Dec. 9 that “there should be no military forces or activities in the area of separation.”

The Golan Heights is a rocky plateau 60 kilometers southwest of Syria’s capital, Damascus. It abuts Mount Hermon, also known as Jabal Al-Sheikh, the highest mountain on the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea, according to Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Israel seized the Golan from Syria in the closing stages of the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, later thwarted a Syrian attempt to retake it during the 1973 Middle East war, and unilaterally annexed it in 1981 — a move that was not recognized by the international community.

Following Assad’s downfall on Dec. 8, the Israeli military also seized control of the highest peak of Mount Hermon on the Syrian side.

Opinion
Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib
Israel is making a big mistake in Syria

This strategic summit, located just over 35 kilometers from Damascus and straddling the border between Syria and Lebanon, offers a commanding vantage point and firing range over the surrounding ridges, making it a crucial asset for observation and defense.

Michael Mason, director of the Middle East Centre at the London School of Economics (LSE), believes the occupied Golan Heights “is a strategically important area for Israel because of its geographical location and topography.”



“The elevation of the Golan contributes significantly to Israel’s military and surveillance capabilities in the north,” he told Arab News.

“It is not surprising, therefore, that the Israeli military seized the Syrian side of Jabal Al-Shaykh (Mount Hermon) earlier this month, and Israel has unilaterally occupied the UN-monitored demilitarized zone created in 1974.”

He added: “Politically, occupation of the Golan feeds the ultra-nationalist agenda of a Greater Israel and will encourage claims for further territorial expansion.”

Firas Modad, a Middle East analyst and founder of Modad Geopolitics, agrees that by seizing the Golan and Mount Hermon, Israel has “expanded its high grounds.”

By grabbing the highest peak of Mount Hermon, the Israelis now “overlook pretty much the entire region,” which “helps them with things like detecting drones and being able to do aerial surveillance a little bit better,” he told Arab News.

“It means that drones coming in from Iraq or from Lebanon are easier to detect for them.”

FASTFACTS


• The Golan Heights is considered occupied under international law and UN resolutions since 1967.

• In 2019, the US officially recognized Israeli sovereignty over the occupied Golan Heights.

• Syria’s attempt to retake the Golan in the 1973 Arab-Israeli war was thwarted. • There are more than 30 Israeli settlements in the occupied Golan Heights.


Modad added that capturing the Golan Heights also puts Damascus in an “untenable military position” for Israel as the Syrian capital becomes “closer to artillery range.”

He believes this places “the new government in Syria” in “an extremely vulnerable position.”

Ahmed Al-Sharaa, head of the new Syrian administration, said in an interview with The Times on Monday that war-weary Syria remains “committed to the 1974 agreement and we are prepared to return the UN (monitors).”

“We do not want any conflict whether with Israel or anyone else and we will not let Syria be used as a launchpad for attacks,” he added. “The Syrian people need a break, and the strikes must end, and Israel has to pull back to its previous positions.”

According to media reports, the Israeli military launched about 600 strikes across Syria in roughly eight days following the ousting of Assad. The Times of Israel news website reported that the Israeli military estimated it had destroyed 80 percent of the former regime’s strategic military capabilities.



More than 13 years of war and economic hardship have eroded Syria’s infrastructure and pushed 90 percent of the population below the poverty line, according to UN figures.

Some analysts warn that it could take 10 years for Syria to return to its 2011 GDP level and up to two decades to fully rebuild, Deutsche Welle reported.

The Golan Heights area is also known for its fertile land and vital water sources, including the Yarmouk River, which feeds the Jordan River.

Modad, the Middle East analyst, said Israel’s occupation of the area ensures its control over critical waterways.

“The key story is the Israelis gaining full control over the Yarmouk,” he said. “Yarmouk feeds into the Jordan River — it essentially becomes the Jordan River. It’s the river’s main tributary.”

He added: “And so, what the Israelis have done is that they’ve seized a very important water resource from the Syrians and placed it completely under their control,” giving them “leverage over Jordan by being able to cut off the water supply.”

Netanyahu stated on Dec. 9 that the Syrian Golan “will be part of the State of Israel for eternity,” despite initially describing his army’s presence in the buffer zone as “a temporary defensive position until a suitable arrangement is found.”

This territorial expansion, according to Modad, also increases Israel’s control over the Syria-Lebanon border, enhancing its ability to monitor and control traffic between the two countries.

“If they (the Israelis) keep going down the slopes of the East Lebanon mountain, that puts them in a very advantageous position to besiege Hezbollah,” the Lebanese militant group that has been fighting Israel since the 1980s.

“And the expanded territory that they’ve taken means they are much higher than Hezbollah in parts of Lebanon, including Shebaa, Rashaya and Hasbaya, all the way to the western Bekaa.”



This, he added, enhances the Israelis’ “ability to survey Hezbollah’s weapons transfers as part of their more aggressive enforcement of (Resolution) 1701 and of the ceasefire agreement,” which was signed on Nov. 27 to end the Israel-Hezbollah conflict that began on Oct. 8, 2023, and escalated into a deadly Israeli bombing campaign across Lebanon.

On Dec. 15, Netanyahu announced that his government had approved the “demographic development” of the occupied Syria territory, aiming to double the Israeli population there.

About 31,000 Israeli settlers live in dozens of illegal settlements in the Golan, alongside Syrian minority groups, including some 24,000 Druze, according to a Foreign Policy report.

A 2010 research by the Israeli daily Haaretz found that during the 1967 Arab-Israeli war and in the aftermath, some 130,000 Syrians fled or were expelled from the Golan by the Israeli army.

“Strengthening the Golan is strengthening the State of Israel, and it is especially important at this time,” Netanyahu said. “We will continue to hold onto it, cause it to blossom, and settle in it.”

LSE’s Mason believes that with the planned expansion of Israeli settlements, “the indigenous Arab population of the occupied Golan Heights — most of whom still identify as Syrian and have rejected Israeli citizenship — are likely to face intensified social and economic discrimination; for example, further loss of land and water resources.”

On Dec. 19, Israeli forces set up a position at an abandoned Syrian army base in the village of Maariyah, located outside the UN-patrolled zone on the western edge of Syria’s southern Daraa province.



Residents told the Associated Press news agency that Israeli soldiers, who advanced about 1 kilometer into Maariyah, blocked local farmers from accessing their fields.

The following day, protesters gathered to demand the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Maariyah. In response, Israeli soldiers opened fire, wounding a young Syrian man in the leg, according to the SOHR.

Amid these tensions, UN chief Guterres stressed that “in the occupied Syrian Golan, there should be no military forces in the area of separation other than ‌UN peacekeepers – period.”

He added in a post on X that “Syria’s sovereignty, territorial unity, and integrity must be fully restored, and all acts of aggression must come to an immediate end.”

However, Mason believes that, despite experiencing discrimination under Israel’s occupation, the indigenous people of the Golan have not endured the same violent repression as Palestinians in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

He said that while the Druze and Christian communities in the Golan Heights are “subject to discriminatory treatment compared to Jewish settlers,” they “have not yet faced the sustained level of systematic human rights abuses and violent repression suffered by Palestinians in the West Bank.”




In Israeli-occupied south Syria, villagers feel abandoned

People look on as Israeli soldiers patrol in the Syrian town of Jubata Al-Khashab, in the UN-patrolled buffer zone in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights, on December 20, 2024. 

AFP
December 21, 2024

Most villagers have cloistered themselves inside their homes since the troops arrived. A few look on through windows and from rooftops


QUNEITRA, Syria: In the towns and villages of southern Syria that Israel has occupied since the overthrow of longtime strongman Bashar Assad, soldiers and residents size each other up from a distance.

The main street of the village of Jabata Al-Khashab is largely deserted as a foot patrol of Israeli troops passes through it.

Most villagers have cloistered themselves inside their homes since the troops arrived. A few look on through windows and from rooftops.

It is the same story in nearby Baath City, named for the now suspended political party that ran Syria for more than 60 years until Assad’s ouster by Islamist-led rebels earlier this month.

The town’s main street has been heavily damaged by the passage of a column of Israeli tanks.

The street furniture has been reduced to mangled metal, aand broken off branches from roadside trees litter the highway.

“Look at all the destruction the Israeli tanks have caused to our streets and road signs,” said 51-year-old doctor Arsan Arsan.

“People around here are very angry about the Israeli incursion. We are for peace, but on condition that Israel pulls back to the armistice line.”

Israel announced on December 8 that its troops were crossing the armistice line and were occupying the UN-patrolled buffer zone that has separated Israeli and Syrian forces on the strategic Golan Heights since 1974.

The announcement, which was swiftly condemned by the United Nations, came the same day that the rebels entered Damascus.

Israel said it was a defensive measure prompted by the security vacuum created by the Assad government’s abrupt collapse.

Israeli troops swiftly occupied much of the buffer zone, including the summit of Syria’s highest peak, Mount Hermon.

The Israeli military has since confirmed that its troops have also been operating beyond the buffer zone in other parts of southwest Syria.

At a security briefing on Mount Hermon on Tuesday, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz spoke of the importance of “completing preparations... for the possibility of a prolonged presence” in the buffer zone.

He added that the 2,814-meter (9,232-foot) peak provided “observation and deterrence” against both Hezbollah in Lebanon and the new authorities in Damascus who “claim to present a moderate front but are affiliated with the most extreme Islamist factions.”

Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS), the Islamist group that led the rebel overthrow of Assad, has its roots in Al-Qaeda and remains proscribed as a terrorist organization by several Western governments, even though it has sought to moderate its image in recent years.

On the road south from Damascus to the provincial capital Quneitra, an AFP correspondent saw no sign of the transitional government or its fighters. All of the checkpoints that had controlled access to the province for decades lay abandoned.
Quneitra’s streets too were largely deserted as residents stayed indoors, peeking out only occasionally at passing Israeli patrols.

Israeli soldiers have raised the Star of David on several hilltops overlooking the town.
HTS leader Ahmed Al-Sharaa has said that Israel’s crossing of the armistice line on the Golan “threatens a new unjustified escalation in the region.”

But he added in a statement late last week that “the general exhaustion in Syria after years of war and conflict does not allow us to enter new conflicts.”

That position has left many in the south feeling abandoned to fend for themselves.
“We are just 400 meters (yards) from the Israeli tanks... the children are scared by the incursion,” said Yassin Al-Ali, who lives on the edge of the village of Al-Hamidiyah, not far from Baath City.

He said that instead of celebrating their victory in Damascus, the transitional government and its fighters should come to the aid of Quneitra province.

“What’s happening here really should make those celebrating in Umayyad Square pause for a moment... and come here to support us in the face of the Israeli occupation,” Ali said.




Syrian soldiers distance themselves from Assad in return for promised amnesty


Updated 22 December 2024

AP
December 22, 202401:13

Lt. Col. Walid Abd Rabbo, who works with the new Interior Ministry, said the army has been dissolved and the interim government has not decided yet on whether those “whose hands are not tainted in blood” can apply to join the military again

DAMASCUS, Syria: Hundreds of former Syrian soldiers on Saturday reported to the country’s new rulers for the first time since Bashar Assad was ousted to answer questions about whether they may have been involved in crimes against civilians in exchange for a promised amnesty and return to civilian life.

The former soldiers trooped to what used to be the head office in Damascus of Assad’s Baath party that had ruled Syria for six decades. They were met with interrogators, former insurgents who stormed Damascus on Dec. 8, and given a list of questions and a registration number. They were free to leave.

Some members of the defunct military and security services waiting outside the building told The Associated Press that they had joined Assad’s forces because it meant a stable monthly income and free medical care.

The fall of Assad took many by surprise as tens of thousands of soldiers and members of security services failed to stop the advancing insurgents. Now in control of the country, and Assad in exile in Russia, the new authorities are investigating atrocities by Assad’s forces, mass graves and an array of prisons run by the military, intelligence and security agencies notorious for systematic torture, mass executions and brutal conditions.

Lt. Col. Walid Abd Rabbo, who works with the new Interior Ministry, said the army has been dissolved and the interim government has not decided yet on whether those “whose hands are not tainted in blood” can apply to join the military again. The new leaders have vowed to punish those responsible for crimes against Syrians under Assad.

Several locations for the interrogation and registration of former soldiers were opened in other parts of Syria in recent days.

“Today I am coming for the reconciliation and don’t know what will happen next,” said Abdul-Rahman Ali, 43, who last served in the northern city of Aleppo until it was captured by insurgents in early December.

“We received orders to leave everything and withdraw,” he said. “I dropped my weapon and put on civilian clothes,” he said, adding that he walked 14 hours until he reached the central town of Salamiyeh, from where he took a bus to Damascus.
Ali, who was making 700,000 pounds ($45) a month in Assad’s army, said he would serve his country again.
Inside the building, men stood in short lines in front of four rooms where interrogators asked each a list of questions on a paper.

“I see regret in their eyes,” an interrogator told AP as he questioned a soldier who now works at a shawarma restaurant in the Damascus suburb of Harasta. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not allowed to talk to media.

The interrogator asked the soldier where his rifle is and the man responded that he left it at the base where he served. He then asked for and was handed the soldier’s military ID.
“He has become a civilian,” the interrogator said, adding that the authorities will carry out their own investigation before questioning the same soldier again within weeks to make sure there are no changes in the answers that he gave on Saturday.

The interrogator said after nearly two hours that he had quizzed 20 soldiers and the numbers are expected to increase in the coming days.




Saudi Arabia had warned Germany about attacker’s extremist views, condemns Magdeburg violence


Police investigation teams arrive in the area where a car crashed into a crowd at a Christmas market injuring more than 60 people on December 20, 2024 in Magdeburg, eastern Germany (AFP)

Arab News
December 21, 2024

Saudi authorities had sent several tips in 2023 and 2024

Kingdom also reiterated firm stance against all forms of violence

The Muslim World League similarly condemned the attack

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia had warned German authorities about a man involved in a car-ramming attack on Friday evening, a Saudi source told Reuters.

A German security source said Saudi authorities had sent several tips in 2023 and 2024 and that these had been passed on to the relevant security authorities.

The attacker, who plowed into a Christmas crowd in the German city of Magdeburg, had posted extremist views on his personal X account that threatened peace and security.

The Kingdom condemned the attack on Saturday, which left at least five people dead and over 200 others injured. The driver was arrested at the scene shortly after the incident.




The Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in a statement on Saturday, expressed its condolences and sympathy to the families of the victims and to the government, wishing those injured a swift recovery.

Saudi Arabia also reiterated its firm stance against all forms of violence.

The Muslim World League similarly condemned the attack, with the group reaffirming its stance against violence and all forms of terrorism.

In a statement, it also expressed ‘solidarity, heartfelt condolences, and sympathy to the families of the victims and the injured, as well as to the German community.’

German authorities are investigating the 50-year-old attacker who has lived in Germany for almost two decades in connection with the car-ramming.

The driver was arrested at the scene shortly after the incident. Police searched his home overnight.

The motive remained unclear and police have not yet named the suspect.

“What a terrible act it is to injure and kill so many people there with such brutality,” Chancellor Olaf Scholz said in the central city, where he laid a white rose at a church in honor of the victims.

Far-right in Germany goes into damage control mode after car-ramming attack

Officials say the suspect held anti-Islam views and was angry with Germany's migrant and asylum policy.




Reuters

Police officers line up as far-right demonstrators hold a sign and flags during a protest after a car drove into a crowd at a Christmas market, in Magdeburg / Photo: Reuters

The suspect in Germany's deadly car-ramming attack on a Christmas market held strongly anti-Islam views and was angry with Germany's migrant and asylum policy, officials said, prompting the far-right to go into damage control mode.

Interior Minister Nancy Fraser said on Saturday he held "Islamophobic" views.

Initially, the attack drew comparisons on social media to an immigrant's deadly attack on a Berlin Christmas market in 2016.

Later, it emerged that the Saudi suspect, a psychiatrist who had lived in Germany for 18 years, had criticised Islam and expressed sympathy for the far right in past social media posts.

This prompted damage control by the far-right.

Martin Sellner, an Austrian popular with Germany's far-right, posted on social media that the suspect's motives "seemed to have been complex", adding that the suspect "hated Islam, but he hated the Germans more".

'Sad and shocked'

The leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), Alice Weidel, wrote on X: "When will this madness stop?"

"What happened today affects a lot of people. It affects us a lot," Fael Kelion, a 27-year-old Cameroonian living in the city, told the AFP news agency.

"I think that since (the suspect) is a foreigner, the population will be unhappy, less welcoming."

Michael Raarig, 67 and an engineer, said: "I am sad, I am shocked. I never would have believed this could happen here in an East German provincial town."

He added that he believed the attack "will play into the hands of the AfD", which has had its strongest support in the formerly communist eastern Germany.

The car-ramming attack killed five people and left over 200 injured.

Security was stepped up Saturday at Christmas markets elsewhere in Germany, with more police seen in Hamburg, Leipzig and other cities.
How Assad's inner circle fled Syria after his fall

Following the fall of the Assad regime, many of his allies were left behind, with many who sought refuge in neighbouring countries.


The New Arab Staff & Agencies
21 December, 2024

President Bashar al-Assad fled to Russia on December 8, leaving behind many of his collaborators, some of whom sought refuge in neighbouring countries [GETTY]

A lightning rebel offensive early this month caught Syria's ruling clan off guard.

President Bashar al-Assad fled to Russia on 8 December, leaving behind many of his collaborators, some of whom sought refuge in neighbouring countries.

According to two sources, the ousted president, who fled to Moscow via the Russian military airfield in Hmeimim on Syria's coast, was accompanied by only a handful of confidants.

Among them were his closest ally, the secretary-general of presidential affairs, Mansour Azzam, and his economic adviser, Yassar Ibrahim, who oversees the financial empire of Assad and his wife, Asma.

"He left with his secretary and his treasurer," an insider who requested anonymity said, mockingly.


Bashar's brother, Maher al-Assad, commander of the elite Fourth Division tasked with defending Damascus, did not know about his sibling's plans.

Leaving his men stranded, Maher took a separate route, fleeing by helicopter to Iraq before travelling to Russia, according to a Syrian military source.

An Iraqi security source told AFP that Maher arrived in Iraq by plane on 7 December and stayed there for five days.

Maher's wife, Manal al-Jadaan and his son briefly entered Lebanon before departing through Beirut airport, said Lebanese Interior Minister Bassam Mawlawi, without disclosing their final destination.

Another Assad government heavyweight, Ali Mamlouk, the former chief of Syria's security apparatus, fled to Russia via Iraq, said a Syrian military source.

His son passed through Lebanon before leaving for another destination, according to a Lebanese security source.

'Wanted'

The Iraqi Interior Ministry denied on Monday the presence of either Maher al-Assad or Mamlouk in Iraq. Both are wanted men.

Maher and Bashar al-Assad are wanted by France for alleged complicity in war crimes over chemical attacks in Syria in August 2013.

The French courts have already sentenced Mamlouk and Jamil Hassan, former head of Syria's Air Force Intelligence, in absentia to life imprisonment for complicity in crimes against humanity and war crimes.


On Friday, the Lebanese authorities received an Interpol alert relaying a US request to arrest Hassan and hand him over to the US authorities should he enter the country.

The United States accuses Hassan of "war crimes", including overseeing barrel bomb attacks on Syrian people that killed thousands of civilians.

A Lebanese judicial source told AFP they had no confirmation of Hassan's presence in Lebanon but assured that he would be detained if found.

Last-minute escapes

Other prominent figures also made hasty escapes.

Bouthaina Shaaban, a former translator for Hafez al-Assad, Bashar's father who founded the brutal system of government his son inherited, fled to Lebanon on the night of 7 – 8 December.

Shaaban, Bashar al-Assad's long-time political adviser, then travelled to Abu Dhabi, according to a friend in Beirut.

Kifah Mujahid, head of the Baath Brigades, the military wing of Syria's former ruling party, escaped to Lebanon by boat, a party source told AFP.

Other officials took refuge in their hometowns in the Alawite region, and some of them told the AFP. Assad hailed from Syria's Alawite minority.

Not all escape attempts were successful.


Ihab Makhlouf, Bashar al-Assad's cousin and a prominent businessman, was killed on 7 December while trying to flee Damascus.

His twin brother, Iyad, was injured in the same incident, said a military official from the former government.

Their elder sibling, Rami Makhlouf, once considered Syria's richest man and a symbol of the regime's corruption, managed to survive. Rami, who fell out of favour with the Assad regime years ago, is believed to be in the United Arab Emirates.

Several other figures close to Assad's government crossed into Lebanon, according to a security source and a source in the business world. These included Ghassan Belal, head of Maher's office, and businessmen Mohammed Hamsho, Khalid Qaddur, Samer Debs and Samir Hassan.

A former Lebanese minister with close ties to Syria said that several senior Syrian military officers were granted safe passage by the Russians to the Hmeimim airbase.

They were rewarded for instructing their troops not to resist the rebel offensive to avoid further bloodshed, he said.