UK journalist Sami Hamdi detained in US amid pro-Israel lobby pressure

In what a US-based organization called an “abduction,” British political commentator and journalist Sami Hamdi has been detained by federal authorities in the country.

Hamdi’s arrest was attributed to his criticism of Israel’s war on Gaza, according to the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Hamdi, a frequent critic of US and Israeli policy, was scheduled to address a CAIR gala in Sacramento on Saturday night and speak at a subsequent CAIR event in Florida prior to his arrest by the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency.

According to CAIR, he was stopped at the airport as a result of a coordinated “far-right, Israel First” campaign.

It stated in a statement that “our nation must stop abducting Israel First bigots who are unhinged.” It must end because this is an Israel-first policy, not an America-first policy.

Friends of Hamdi called his arrest “a deeply troubling precedent for the freedom of expression and the safety of British citizens abroad” in a statement seen by Al Jazeera.

The United Kingdom Foreign Office was asked to “demand urgent clarification from the US authorities regarding the grounds for Mr. Hamdi’s detention.”

He is still being held in the US and hasn’t been deported, according to Al Jazeera.

A British citizen’s arrest for expressing political views is a dangerous precedent, according to the statement.

Mohamed El-Hachmi Hamdi, Hamdi’s father, claimed in a post on X that his son “has no affiliation” with any political or religious organization.

His position on Palestine is not in line with any faction there, but rather with the people’s right to peace, freedom, and dignity. He continued, “Quite simply, he is one of the young dreamers of this generation who longs for a world with more compassion, justice, and solidarity.”

“Proud Islamophobe”

Hamdi’s detention was confirmed on Sunday by DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin, who asserted that there was no proof that he posed a threat to national security. She wrote on X that “This individual’s visa was suspended and he is currently in ICE custody.”

Hamdi has frequently criticized Western governments for directly challenging arms transfers and diplomatic cover for Israeli war crimes, accusing US politicians of actively encouraging Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

His arrest is one more example of US authorities thwarting access for Palestinian and pro-Palestine voices.

Awdah Hathaleen and his cousin Eid Hathaleen, two Palestinian men, were denied entry to the same airport in June and deported to Qatar. Awdah was reportedly killed by an Israeli settler in the West Bank’s occupied West Bank a few weeks later.

Laura Loomer, a far-right activist and ally of US President Donald Trump, was immediately applauded online for playing a role in Hamdi’s detention after she publicly described herself as a “proud Islamophobe” and “white advocate.”

She falsely described him as a “supporter of HAMAS and the Muslim Brotherhood,” saying “you’re lucky his only fate is being arrested and deported.”

Loomer has previously advanced conspiracies, including those that claim the September 11 attacks were inside the US.

Loomer and others attributed the RAIR Foundation, a pro-Israel pressure organization whose stated goal is to fight “Islamic supremacy,” to the rise in Hamdi. RAIR demanded Hamdi’s removal from the country a day after he was accused of trying to “extend a foreign political network hostile to American interests.”

Shaun Maguire, a partner at the tech investment firm Sequoia and a vocal supporter of Israel, claimed on Sunday that Hamdi had tried to hire him through an AI-generated email campaign, claiming that “there are jihadists in America whose full time job is to silence us.”

The opposite is true, according to Hamdi’s supporters and civil rights advocates, and this detention is yet another instance of political retaliation against Israel critics, which is carried out at the border before even one word is uttered in the media.

Unexploded Israeli bombs threaten lives as Gaza clears debris, finds bodies

As thousands of tonnes of unexploded Israeli bombs threaten lives across the Gaza Strip, the city’s mayor claims that Israeli restrictions on the entry of heavy machinery are hampered by Israeli restrictions on debris removal and reconstruction of vital infrastructure.

Mayor Yahya al-Sarraj stated in a news conference on Sunday that Gaza City needs at least 250 heavy trucks and 1, 000 tons of cement to maintain water networks and build wells.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Only six trucks, according to Al Jazeera’s Hind Khoudary, who was reporting from Gaza’s Az-Zawayda region.

Palestinians are still buried beneath the rubble, with at least 9, 000 of them. Instead of assisting Palestinians in finding their loved ones who are still buried beneath rubble, the new equipment is being prioritized for the recovery of the remains of Israeli prisoners.

According to Khoudary, “Palestinians know the ceasefire won’t change until the bodies of all the Israeli prisoners are brought back.”

Red Cross vehicles were seen arriving after holding meetings with Hamas’s armed wing, the Qassam Brigades, to alert them to an Israeli prisoner’s location in southern Rafah.

The Red Cross and Egyptian teams have been permitted to travel beyond the “yellow line,” which allows Israel to control 58 percent of the besieged enclave, according to a spokesperson for the Israeli government, to search for captives’ remains.

Nour Odeh, a journalist from Amman, reported for Al Jazeera that Israel had been insisting for two weeks that Hamas had located all of the bodies of the captives.

Israel has now allowed Egyptian teams and heavy machinery to enter the Gaza Strip to assist in the enormous task of removing debris, trying to reach the tunnels, or underneath the homes or structures that the captives were held in and killed in, she said.

Odeh added that Hamas had been unable to access a tunnel for two weeks as a result of Israeli bombing-related damage. She remarked that the Red Cross and Hamas have been given the opportunity to assist in the discovery of potential burial sites beneath the rubble and that “that change of policy is coming without explanation from Israel.”

Netanyahu: “We have control over Gaza.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reiterated his political authority at home on Sunday, claiming that Israel controls how foreign forces might enter Gaza.

We have made it clear to international forces that Israel will decide which forces are against our will, and that is how we act and will continue to do so,” he said. The United States accepts this, as its most senior representatives have recently said.

Odeh explained that Netanyahu’s statements are intended to reassure Israel’s far-right base, who believes he’s no longer in charge of the affairs.

According to her, Israeli soldiers and army leaders don’t appear to be the ones currently in charge of the ceasefire, with Washington “demanding that Israel notify it of any attack that Israel might be planning to conduct inside Gaza.”

Odeh cited a wider plan to maintain political support at home as evidenced by Israel’s insistence on controlling which foreign actors operate in Gaza in addition to the country’s limited resources for reconstruction.

A threat from unexploded bombs

Unexploded ordnance poses additional challenges for reconstruction in Gaza. Gaza is “essentially one giant city” where every inch of it has been struck by explosives, according to Nicholas Torbet, Middle East director at HALO Trust in the United Kingdom.

Some munitions are intended to linger, but he told Al Jazeera, “Ordnance that is expected to explode upon impact hasn’t.”

According to Torbet, removing explosives stifle the reconstruction process. Instead of permanently closing off large areas, his teams intend to work directly within communities to safely remove bombs. He remarked that “the best way to dispose of a bomb is to use a small amount of explosives to blow it up.”

Torbet added that progress is being made and that the required equipment is starting to be moved forward. It can be moved by hand or by small vehicles.

Gaza is now rife with deadly remnants from Israeli bombings because of the scale of the debris dropped.

According to Mahmoud Basal, a Palestinian Civil Defense spokesperson, Israel dropped at least 200 000 tonnes of explosives on the territory, with roughly 70 000 tonnes failing to detonate.

On a bed at al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on Saturday, October 25, 2025, Yahya Shorbasi, who was also injured by an unexploded weapon, and his six-year-old twin sister Nabila.

Particularly vulnerable children have been, frequently mistaken for toys, with bombs. Yahya Shorbasi and his sister Nabila, both 7, were playing outside when they discovered what appeared to be a toy, according to Ibrahim al-Khalili of Al Jazeera.

They discovered a typical child’s toy, not a typical one. It was being held by the girl. The boy then began to use a coin to tap it before taking it. We allored an explosion all at once. Their mother Latifa Shorbasi reported to Al Jazeera, “It went off in their hands.”

While Nabila is still receiving medical attention, Yahya’s right arm required an amputation.

The situation, according to Dr. Harriet, an emergency physician at al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, is “a public health catastrophe waiting to happen.” She claimed that children are being harmed by live explosives, which appear to be harmless, like toys, cans, and other debris.

According to Luke David Irving, head of the UN Mine Action Service, 328 people have died or been injured by unexploded weapons since October 2023.

Over the course of Gaza, tens of thousands of tonnes of bombs, including landmines, mortar rounds, and large bombs designed to flatten concrete structures, are still buried. According to Basal, it could take years and be worth millions of dollars to clear the explosives.

Israeli strikes kill three in Lebanon before army targets UN patrol

Despite a ceasefire that began almost a year ago, three people have been killed by Israeli strikes in southern and eastern Lebanon, according to the Lebanese Ministry of Health.

Israeli attacks on Sunday were initially reported by Lebanon’s authorities as two fatalities, but a second death was reported after a third attack.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

In Naqoura, in the southern Tyre province of Naqoura, two of the victims passed away, while the third passed away in the eastern Baalbek region.

A Syrian national was among the victims, according to the Baalbek town of al-Hafir, according to the Health Ministry.

Hezbollah members were targeted by the Israeli military, according to the statement.

It claimed Ali Hussein al-Mousawi’s death in eastern Lebanon in a statement.

According to the Israeli army, Al-Mousawi “purchased and transferred weapons from Syria to Lebanon” and “significantly contributed to the re-establishment and strengthening of Hezbollah.”

In addition, the Naquoura strike claimed the life of local Hezbollah representative Abed Mahmoud al-Sayed from the village of Ras Biyada.

Hezbollah’s assertions regarding the alleged deaths were unconfirmed.

We don’t ask for anyone’s consent, they say.

11 months after Israel and Hezbollah’s conflict was ended by a ceasefire, the latest deaths occur.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned on Sunday that despite agreeing to ceasefires in both Lebanon and Gaza, his country would not seek approval for them.

Israel is a sovereign state. Netanyahu told government ministers, “We will defend ourselves by our own means and we will continue to decide our fate.”

“We don’t want this to get anyone’s vote.” He continued, “We control our security.”

His remarks came just before an Israeli drone was dropped close to one of its patrols on Sunday afternoon near Kfar Kila by the United Nations peacekeeping force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), which has been operating in southern Lebanon since 1978.

UNIFIL reported that an Israeli tank then fired a shot, but neither the tank’s personnel nor its assets were hurt.

UNIFIL stated in a statement on X that Israel’s attacks “infringed on Security Council Resolution 1701 and Lebanon’s sovereignty” and show disregard for the safety and security of peacekeepers carrying out Security Council mandated tasks in southern Lebanon.

A group of UN experts expressed concern over Israel’s continued attacks in Lebanon last week.

According to them, “These attacks have caused an increasing number of civilian casualties, injuries, destruction, and damage to infrastructure, housing, the environment, and agricultural areas, which are essential to civilian livelihoods.”

Gaza Tribunal calls for ‘Israeli perpetrators and enablers’ to face justice

The Gaza Tribunal’s final findings, which state that “Israeli perpetrators and their Western enablers” should not be able to escape justice for their crimes, have been released.

Following four days of hearings in Istanbul, Turkiye, the unofficial tribunal, which was established in London in November, delivered its “moral judgment” on Sunday.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

The initiative, which is led by Richard Falk, a former UN special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian territories, follows the Russell Tribunal’s precedent, which heard Vietnami war crimes cases in 1967.

The entire year-long process involved obtaining records, hearing witnesses, and preserving the evidence.

The tribunal’s jury ruled in favor of the genocide in Gaza and crimes like the deliberate denial of food to the civilian population, torture, and journalists’ journalists’ targets.

Post-war plans are being criticized.

The tribunal recommended that all “perpetrators, supporters, and enablers” be held accountable and that Israel be expelled from international organizations like the UN after claiming that Israel’s war against Gaza demonstrated how poorly international governance is performing its obligations.

Additionally, the jury found that Western governments, “particularly the United States,” were complicit with Israel through the provision of “diplomatic cover, weapons, weapon parts, intelligence, military assistance and training, and continuing economic relations.”

The tribunal also criticized two post-war initiatives by US President Donald Trump and his French counterpart, saying they “ignored the rights of the Palestinian people under international law” while “doing nothing to rein in the genocide perpetrators.”

Members of the tribunal stated in a statement that “palestinians must lead the restoration of Gaza, and Israel and its enablers must be held accountable for all reparations.”

The tribunal should be seen as a civil society response to the Gaza war because it is not a court of law, the jury said. It does not “preport to determine guilt or liability of any person, organization, or state.”

The jurors argued that genocide must be named and documented, and impunity fuels ongoing violence all over the world. All humanity is concerned about the genocide in Gaza. Civil society is able to and must do so when states are silent.

At the International Court of Justice (ICJ), South Africa has brought allegations of genocide against Israel.

Although it will likely take several years before the ICJ will rule, it determined in an interim judgment in January 2024 that Israel’s violation of the UN Genocide Convention is “plausible.”

Ivory Coast candidate Billon concedes as partial results favour Ouattara

Alassane Ouattara, the country’s current president, has conceded defeat to former Ivory Coast commerce minister Jean-Louis Billon, who has early partial results showing that the latter holds a strong lead nationwide.

Billon said in a statement congratulating the president on Sunday that “the initial results place the incumbent president, Mr. Alassane Ouattara, in the lead.”

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Billon, an 83-year-old former international monetary fund executive, is one of four opposition candidates vying for a fourth term in office.

Billon was unable to win the support of Tidjane Thiam, the former Credit Suisse chief, who was barred from the election.

The Independent Electoral Commission of the nation began announcing preliminary results from Saturday’s national television broadcasts earlier in the day.

According to Ahmed Idris, who was presenting from Abidjan, the economic capital, “the results of 20 departments or divisions are being read out,” and 10 or 11 departments still exist. Six nations’ diaspora votes were included in this.

The most crucial stage of the election is when the results from various polling stations and centers are being compiled and announced, Idris said.

“From the initial results, it’s obvious that the incumbent is currently in the lead by a sizable margin in many of the areas.”

In a contest where the opposition was divided, which was further hampered by the ban of two popular candidates, nearly nine million people in Ivorians were able to cast ballots.

Idris claimed that “Ivorians are closely watching what takes place here.” The outcome of this election will determine how peaceful the streets will be.

Former President Laurent Gbagbo and President Thiam were Ouattara’s main rivals, Laurent Gbagbo for a criminal conviction, and Thiam for obtaining French citizenship.

Pre-election protests and calls for a boycott of the elections followed this.

Although the election commission president, Ibrahime Coulibaly-Kuibiert, previously estimated voter turnout to be about 50%, the official figure is still unknown.

The AFP news agency reported that nearly no polling places were present in Abidjan and historically opposition-friendly areas of the south and west. In addition, it claimed that voters in the north, where Ouattara commanded the majority of his support, turned out in large numbers.

Ouattara was the clear favorite even with other major contenders withdrawn.

The vote on Saturday reminded me of the previous election in 2020, when he won with a turnout of slightly higher than 50% in an election that the main opposition boycotted.

Two killed in Cameroon protests ahead of election results, opposition says

According to the opposition campaign, at least two people have been killed by gunfire in Cameroon as a result of protests the day before the results of the presidential election were announced.

In Cameroon’s commercial capital Douala on Sunday, hundreds of supporters of opposition candidate Issa Tchiroma erected barriers to roads and burned tires. To disperse the crowds, police used tear gas and water cannons. Additionally, a police car was burned.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

The protesters accuse the authorities of preparing to rig the election by accusing Tchiroma of defeating 92-year-old Paul Biya in the October 12 polls.

In a number of cities, protests have erupted, including Yaounde, Tchiroma’s hometown Garoua, Maroua, Meiganga, Bafang, Bertoua, Kousseri, Yagoua, Kaele, and Bafoussam.

Following preliminary reports from the local media that Biya was poised to win an eighth term in office, the demonstrations took place.

Tchiroma was deemed the winner during the counting process, as reported by the figures. Tchiroma contests the electoral commission’s decision to award Biya the victory during the national count, which the electoral commission later disagreed with.

He claims to have won the elections and has the supporting evidence, which led to calls for nationwide demonstrations to demand the truth about the ballot boxes.

Prior to the release of the results of the presidential election, supporters of the political opposition demonstrate in Garoua on October 21, 2025.

“We want Tchiroma,” the statement read.

“We want Tchiroma, we want Tchiroma!” In Douala’s New Bell neighborhood, the protesters chanted. They threw rocks and other projectiles at security forces as they scuffed up roads with debris.

On Sunday, police detained at least four protesters, according to Reuters news agency reporters.

The opposition’s claims of irregularities have been refuted by Cameroon’s government, which has urged people to wait until the election results, which are scheduled for Monday.

Tensions were raised earlier on Sunday when Tchiroma’s campaign manager claimed that authorities had arrested about 30 politicians and activists who supported his candidacy.

He claimed that Djeukam Tchameni, the leader of the MANIDEM party, and Anicet Ekane, a well-known member of the Union for Change movement, were among those who were being detained.

Although he did not specify who or how many people had been detained, Cameroon’s interior minister, Paul Atanga Nji, on Saturday, announced that arrests had been made in connection with what he termed an “insurrectional movement.”

Biya has been in power in Cameroon since 1982, making her the oldest ruler in the world. He could remain in power until he reaches the age of 100 with a further seven years.