Malaysia says it will ban social media for under-16s from next year

Hamas meet Egypt’s spy chief, says Israel’s attacks on Gaza threaten truce

As Palestinians in Gaza mourned the victims of recent Israeli attacks, a senior Hamas delegation met with Egypt’s intelligence chief in Cairo to discuss Israel’s violations of the ceasefire agreement.

In a statement released on Sunday, the group claimed at its meeting with Hassan Rashad that it had reiterated its commitment to implementing the first phase of the cease-fire agreement, but that it had also claimed that Israel had “continued violations” that it claimed threatened to “undermine the agreement.”

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Hamas called for a “clear and defined mechanism” under the supervision of mediators to document and stop any breaches of the agreement, including its exiled Gaza chief Khalil al-Hayya among its members.

Hamas and Israel have been acting as mediators between Egypt, Qatar, and the United States, helping to secure the ceasefire that was signed last month.

The Palestinian organization said it had also discussed ways to quickly find solutions to the Gaza-occupied tunnel networks that Hamas fighters are strewn in with Egypt.

It claimed that fighters’ communication had been cut off.

At least 24 Palestinians, including children, were killed in a series of air attacks across Gaza the day after Israeli forces launched a wave of bombings that destroyed homes, makeshift shelters, and a car.

After a fighter entered Israel-controlled Gaza territory to attack Israeli soldiers there, the Israeli military claimed to be targeting Hamas members. A local Hamas commander was among the dead in the Saturday strikes, according to the military.

Hamas claims Israel was looking for an excuse to kill, and Hamas refutes the allegations. The group demanded on Saturday that Egypt, Qatar, and the US step up and put pressure on Israel to “immediately stop these violations” in a letter to the mediators.

Israel has violated the ceasefire at least 497 times since it became effective on October 10, according to the Gaza Government Media Office.

The majority of the victims, according to the report, were children, women, and the elderly, who were the most seriously injured in the attacks.

Palestinians fear an expansion of Israel’s attacks, according to Al Jazeera’s Tareq Abu Azzoum, who is based in Gaza City.

“It’s very difficult to tell whether Israel’s attacks on Gaza have stopped. Beyond the “yellow line,” which refers to the areas under Israeli control, are attacks persisted. According to Abu Azzoum, we are seeing the destruction of civilian structures and landmarks, as well as the encroachment of a barren landscape.

“People here are concerned about the potential expansion of Israeli attacks on other parts of Gaza in the near future.” People are also skeptical about moving from the first phase of the ceasefire to phase two because they are still awaiting confirmation of whether the agreement will be sustained and whether humanitarian aid and reconstruction efforts will progress, he continued.

According to US President Donald Trump’s peace plan, phase one of the ceasefire includes the opening of the Rafah crossing with Egypt, the exchange of prisoners and captives, and the distribution of humanitarian aid.

Hamas has so far released all of the dead’s bodies, with the exception of three. Nearly 2, 000 Palestinians who are currently serving life sentences have been released by Israel. However, it has placed restrictions on border crossings, which humanitarian organizations continue to criticize.

Israel has also blocked the opening of the Rafah crossing.

In addition, the second phase of the ceasefire calls for the Trump-led “board of peace” to be under the control of a technocratic Palestinian committee. Additionally, the board will deploy a temporary International Stabilization Force to demilitarize Gaza, train Palestinian police, and secure border areas.

Hamas claims, however, that it will not defuse the Israeli occupation for a long time.

In addition, Tump’s plan states that “Israel will not occupy or annex” the territory and that no Palestinians would be made to leave Gaza.

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,369

On Monday, November 24, this is how things are going.

Trump’s strategy

    American Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated to reporters in Geneva that “a significant amount of progress” had been made on Sunday during discussions in the Swiss city and that he was “very optimistic” that a deal could be reached “very soon, in a very reasonable period of time.”

  • Rubio added that NATO and security guarantees were among the areas still being worked on in the 28-point peace plan for Ukraine, which was supported by US President Donald Trump.
  • The delegation’s head, Andriy Yermak, echoed Rubio’s words, telling reporters that they had made “very good progress” and were “moving forward to the just and lasting peace Ukrainian people deserve.”
  • Trump had previously stated in a post on Truth Social that Ukraine was not appreciative of US efforts. “EUROPE CONTINUES TO BUY OIL FROM RUSSIA, AND” THE LEADERSHIP OF IRELAND HAS EXPRESSED ZERO GRATITUDE FOR OUR EFFORTS,” Trump wrote.
  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy responded to the US president’s post quickly, saying that his country was “grateful to the United States… and personally to President Trump” for their assistance in “saving Ukrainian lives.”
  • Later, Zelenskyy claimed in his nightly video that Trump’s team in Geneva was “hearing us] Ukraine” and that discussions were planned to continue into the night with “further reports” to come.
  • Zelenskyy and Trump could meet in the US this week, according to CBS news reports, but the outcome in Geneva would determine how likely it would be.
  • Emanuel Macron, the president of France, said the EU should continue to support Ukraine and that he is confident in Zelenskyy’s ability to advance the country’s anti-corruption strategy. He added that Kyiv’s accession to the EU would require reforms of the rule of law.
  • Viktor Orban, the prime minister of Hungary, claimed that Ukraine had “no chance” of winning the war because of how intently it was being protracted by EU leaders. He added that Kyiv’s ongoing EU support for the conflict was “just crazy.”

Fighting

  • Four people were killed and 12 others were hurt in a “massive” Russian drone attack on Kharkiv in Ukraine on Sunday, according to local officials. Two children, ages 11 and 12, were among the injured.
  • Vladyslav Haivanenko, the acting head of the Dnipropetrovsk Regional Military Administration, described the region as a “difficult day” due to frequent Russian drone and shelling attacks that claimed the lives of two 42-year-old women and two 39-year-old men and injured at least five others.
  • A 40-year-old man was killed in a field in the Zaporizhia region of Ukraine when a Russian shelling attack struck, according to a post on Telegram from the State Emergency Service.
  • A Ukrainian drone attack on the Shatura Power Station, a heat and power station 120 kilometers (75 miles) east of the Kremlin, reportedly sparked a fire, according to the governor of Russia’s Moscow region, Andrei Vorobyov. Thousands of people were without heating after the attack, according to Vorobyov, before it was later restored.
  • After three Ukrainian drones were shot down while traveling toward the capital, Russia’s Federal Air Navigation Service announced that temporary restrictions were in place at Moscow’s Vnukovo international airport.
  • According to Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, an explosion on a crucial route for the delivery of weapons to Ukraine, including weapons transfers, was an “unprecedented act of sabotage,” promising to find the perpetrators.
  • Oil prices dropped as Novorossiysk, a major Russian export hub, resumed loading after being suspended for two days following a Ukrainian attack.
[Handout/Dnipropetrovsk Regional Military Administration via Anadolu] A person stands on a balcony that was damaged during a Russian attack on Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region on Sunday.

Weapons

  • At a meeting between Zelenskyy and Macron in Paris, Ukraine and France agreed to purchase up to 100 Rafale fighter jets over the course of ten years.

Slovenia referendum rejects assisted dying law for terminally ill adults

Barred Bosnian Serb leader Dodik’s party wins presidential election

The territory’s snap presidential election was won by close ally of Milorad Dodik, the former leader of the Serb-run region of Bosnia and Herzegovina, who was barred from office for promoting separatist policies that were stoking ethnic tensions.

The election commission announced on Sunday that Sinisa Karan, who represents the Alliance of Independent Social Democrats (SNSD), had won the majority of the vote in the election, which was called for Dodik’s replacement as president after he was removed from office and permanently barred from politics for six years.

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Karan’s victory was described as “unquestionable,” according to Dodik, who spoke at the SNSD headquarters in Banja Luka, the head of the Bosnian Serb statelet Republika Srpska.

The international High Representative for Bosnia, who oversees the implementation of the 1995 Dayton Accords, which put an end to the bloody three-and-a-half-year Bosnian war, was found guilty of disobeying the orders of the dismissed leader in August.

In Republika Srpska, which is under the control of Bosnian Serbs, he had repeatedly clashed with High Representative Christian Schmidt, who ruled his actions unlawful.

Bosniaks, who are primarily Muslims, and Croats govern the other half of the nation. A central administration ties the two organizations together.

Dodik, who still supports the eventual separation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, was fined and resigned as president while still leading his party’s ruling SNSD.

Following his ouster, Karan and Branko Blanusa, a university professor, squared off in the Serb Democratic Party’s snap election on Sunday.

Prior to the vote, Karan claimed that democratic elections “were a means of strengthening our Republic of Srpska and our entire republic” and that they were also “a means of strengthening our peace and stability.”

However, Karan’s victory was reportedly his victory, with Dodik indicating that he would continue to lead the charge and that “I will remain with you to fight for our political goals.”

The complex political structure of Bosnia was established 30 years ago by the US-brokered Dayton peace agreement, which put an end to the ethnic conflict that claimed more than 100 000 lives and left millions of people homeless.

US ‘very optimistic’ Ukraine peace plan can be reached ‘very soon’: Rubio