Several killed in Kabul blast, Afghan Interior Ministry says

According to the Taliban’s interior ministry, several people have been killed in a blast in Kabul, Afghanistan.

The Shahr-e-Naw neighborhood of the capital, which is known for being one of the safest parts of Kabul, was the site of the explosion on Monday.

A number of people were killed and injured, according to preliminary reports, according to Interior Ministry spokesman Abdul Mateen Qani, adding that more details would be made available later.

Since the Taliban’s rule was overthrown in Kabul and throughout Afghanistan in 2021, but ISIL (ISIS) affiliates are still active and carry out sporadic attacks. However, bombs have been more uncommon since the Taliban’s rule was overthrown.

Afghanistan experienced two suicide attacks in 2025. &nbsp,

The UK is now willing to undermine British institutions to protect Israel

Craig Guildford, the chief constable of West Midlands Police in the United Kingdom, retired on Friday, according to a press release. His decision to step down was prompted by what he termed the “political and media frenzy” surrounding the Israeli fans’ ban from attending the team’s game against Aston Villa in Birmingham.

It was the first time a home secretary has publicly stated in two decades that she had “lost confidence” in Guildford’s leadership following sustained political and media pressure. The ban was viewed by ministers and the majority of the media as a national disgrace, not just a moral outrage.

Risk assessment was needed to assess the risks involved in this scandal, not one involving corruption, brutality, or police cover-ups. The internal guidance that underpined the decision to ban Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters from Villa Park in November was dissected by the British media and public officials. The British state did so by opposing its own police in a way that resembles the supporters of an Israeli football team.

Later, West Midlands Police made errors known. Those errors should be corrected, but they should be balanced. They are not sufficient evidence of prejudice, conspiracy, or bad faith. No evidence was found by an independent review, which the public outrage machine has largely drowned out, making it clear that officers were not influenced by anti-Semitism or malicious intent.

Context has also been consistently left out of media coverage. A fan base of Maccabi Tel Aviv has a long, well-known history of violent and racist behavior, including explicitly anti-Palestinian chants. This invention is neither recent nor a marginal claim. It has been acknowledged for decades, even within Israel itself.

Violence that occurred at a Maccabi Tel Aviv game in Amsterdam in 2024, which led to the police risk assessment, racist chants that praised the Israeli military, and Palestinian symbols that were used as targets, were heard, and there was violence that affected the police risk assessment. Israel’s genocide in Gaza occurred in the midst of intense international outcry over its systematic killings, displacement, and starvation. In light of all of this, it was neither shocking nor sinister to choose caution. It involved policing.

Anti-Semitism is a real problem that needs to be seriously addressed, and it is becoming more prevalent globally. However, denying any suspicion of an Israeli football team’s fan base and imposing its support on its supporters does nothing to combat anti-Semitism. Instead, it uses it to bolster its position by eroding trust in public institutions and raising suspicion over Muslim communities.

Football supporters being prohibited on safety grounds is not a common practice in the UK, which makes the political response to this case even more revealing. Due to their reputations for violence and disorder, British fans have been frequently prohibited from watching matches abroad or at home.

These preventive, collective actions have long been accepted as routine public order policing. No ministers have expressed discrimination. No arrests have been made against police chiefs. There hasn’t been a national crisis declared.

Not in terms of principle, but rather. It is political, indeed.

This incident fits a more extensive and painfully well-known pattern for Palestinians. In Gaza, Israel has carried out a genocide for more than two years, with tens of thousands of people killed, the majority of the population displaced, homes, hospitals, schools, and universities destroyed, and starvation imposed as a means of warfare. War crimes and crimes against humanity have been the subject of international legal experts and human rights organizations’ warnings. The British government has responded with three constant responses: equivocation, protection, and delay.

No arms embargo has been lifted. No restrictions. No meaningful Israel-related accountability.

The pattern that shapes Britain’s response to Gaza is the same one that was revealed in Birmingham. The state mobilizes when Israeli interests are threatened. It urges restraint when Palestinians are killed. People in Britain are prosecuted when they attempt to obstruct genocide’s supply chains. Some are currently incarcerated. Some people are demonstrating hunger.

Today, Palestine Action activists are confronted with this reality. And that is why it is impossible to ignore the fundamental theme of this narrative.

Israel will never be confronted by the British government over a mass murder if it can’t tolerate a police decision that causes an Israeli football team. If it is willing to defy its own institutions in order to demonstrate loyalty, it won’t be able to defend impunity against whom it has been accused.

The controversy relates to power workings, not the events at a stadium in Birmingham. It demonstrates who’s fears are treated as valid, who’s suffering calls for action, and who’s lives can be explained away.

The message is clear to Palestinians. In these circumstances, justice is not delayed. It is denied.

Israel launches ‘large-scale’ military raid in occupied West Bank’s Hebron

In a move that has rendered the city’s southern districts paralyzed by the Israeli military’s “large-scale” operation in Hebron in the southern occupied West Bank.

The Israeli army and Shin Bet confirmed the offensive in a joint statement released on Monday, saying it would “thwart terrorist infrastructure” and seize weapons from the Jebel Johar area.

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The army forewarned that the operation would last “several days.”

“Defensive Shield” strategies

Montaser Nassar, a correspondent for Al Jazeera Arabic on the ground, described a total lockdown state.

Hebron, the so-called southern region, has been closed off since dawn, according to Nassar. Bulldozers and tracked armoured vehicles are frequently deployed as occupation forces, according to the statement.

He noted the significance of the heavy equipment and said, “We witnessed tracked armoured vehicles. The last time we saw these in Hebron was during]Israel’s] Operation Defensive Shield.”

Dividing the Divided

As soldiers installed new metal barriers, Nassar observed, citing “counterterrorism goals,” as a sign of a long-term tightening of control.

Iron gates were introduced recently, and this is where it’s dangerous, Nassar said. What appears to be happening on the ground is a prelude to dividing the already divided, one might say.

Israeli forces used cement blocks and earth mounds to close the Tariq bin Ziyad roundabout, according to local sources’ videotape. At least seven arrests were reported by the Palestinian news agency Wafa.

Mosque under fire

In response to recent Israeli moves to oust Palestinian authority over the site, Nassar pointed out that the raid is occurring less than a kilometer from the Ibrahimi Mosque.

According to Nassar, the decision to place a 15-day ban on the Ibrahimi Mosque’s director follows a transfer of site management to the Israeli Civil Administration.

Trump tells Norway PM not bound to ‘think purely of peace’ after Nobel snub

Donald Trump, the president of the United States, expressed his simmering resentment after failing to receive the Nobel Peace Prize by reiterating his position as the country’s prime minister.

Trump stated in a message that was confirmed on Monday that “I no longer feel compelled to think purely of peace” in response to Norwegian leader Jonas Gahr Store’s announcement to not award me the Nobel Peace Prize for stopping 8 Wars PLUS.”

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Analysts and observers have questioned Trump’s claim that he ended eight wars, some of which were brief, like the one involving India and Pakistan, and others that have continued to be hot wars today, like Israel’s genocidal war against Gaza and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

A source close to the subject’s communication to the AFP news agency and Store to the Norwegian newspaper VG confirmed the message’s authenticity.

Given that Oslo’s political leadership does not grant the Nobel Peace Prize, nor does the Norwegian government receive the award, it is unclear why Trump directed the message.

Store underlined that in a written response. He said, “I have clearly explained what is well known, including to President Trump, that the prize is given by an independent Nobel Committee.”

Trump has long complained that he regrets not receiving the annual prize.

Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado visited the White House two weeks after US special forces abducted Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, sparking a new ire last week.

Trump, for example, did not permit live cameras inside the meeting because he frequently does when he meets with political figures or leaders in person. However, a photo of him receiving the medal from Machado was released by the White House.

For leading Venezuela’s opposition, the right-winger Machado was awarded the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize.

In the 2024 presidential election, she will face long-time rival Maduro in a decisive victory in the Venezuelan opposition’s presidential primary in 2023.

However, Machado’s nomination was overturned by Venezuela’s Supreme Tribunal of Justice, which upheld the ruling.

The court-backed government claimed that she supported US sanctions, that she had ties to a weapons plot with her party, and that she had contributed to losses for Venezuelan assets like the Colombian chemical company Monomeros, which is based in Colombia.

Machado claimed that she presented Trump with the medal as a “recognition for his exceptional commitment to our freedom” during her trip to Washington.

Trump later confirmed to Twitter that Machado had taken the medal, saying, “She is a wonderful woman who has been through so much. For my efforts, Maria gave me the Nobel Peace Prize.

The Norwegian Nobel Institute once more stressed that once awarded, a peace prize cannot be transferred or shared. Even if the actual medal changes hands, the title of the recipient is relegated to the Nobel Foundation in accordance with Alfred Nobel’s wishes.

Gianni Infantino, the head of the FIFA World Football Association, presented Trump with the inaugural FIFA Peace Prize in December, further confirming his support for the Republican leader and raising eyebrows worldwide with a lavish ceremony.

FIFA’s commitment to political neutrality has long been questioned.

Infantino’s blatant praise of Trump and FIFA’s decision to award a peace prize to the US president sparked a formal complaint about political neutrality and ethics violations days after the football body’s event.

How Russia is weaponising the freezing weather in Ukraine

NewsFeed

Much of Kyiv is without reliable heat or power due to freezing temperatures and Russian energy attacks on Ukraine’s energy grid, making residents have to endure near-freezing homes in an environment of emergency. Nils Adler from Al Jazeera reports from Kyiv, where residents rely on temporary warming facilities to survive the winter.