Gaza’s forcibly disappeared must not be forgotten

It has been three months since the “ceasefire” took hold in Gaza. In this time, Israel has predictably refused to comply with its obligations under the deal. It continues to block the negotiated amounts of aid into the Strip. Adequate food, medicine and temporary shelters are not reaching us. The Rafah crossing remains closed and those needing urgent medical evacuations still cannot leave.

Israel also continues to bomb us, killing more than 400 people since October 10. The Israeli army continues to demolish Palestinian homes beyond the so-called yellow line, laying waste to whole neighbourhoods.

Meanwhile, there is ongoing mediation to push the ceasefire into phase two, where the army would withdraw and reconstruction would begin. While these efforts offer some hope that the situation in Gaza may improve, there is one important issue that they are failing to address: The fate of the Palestinians who remain in Israeli captivity.

After Israel received all its captives, except for the body of a deceased one, there has been no talk of the continuous suffering of Palestinians who were forcibly disappeared from Gaza by the Israeli army. There are at least 1,800 Palestinians from Gaza who remain detained; that is in addition to more than 8,000 others who have been kidnapped from the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

My brother is one of those 1,800 people from Gaza.

Khalid is a 34-year-old father of three. His children, Dyala, 8, Hamdan, 10, and Abeer, 11, were the centre of his life before his abduction.

Khalid went missing on December 3, 2023. We – 17 family members – had just fled our home in Shujayea neighbourhood because of Israeli attacks and were sheltering at the Western Directorate of Education in Gaza City, near Yarmouk Stadium.

At night, I woke up to the sound of heavy military vehicles moving in. I realised my brother, who had been sleeping next to me, was gone.

Hours later, Israeli forces stormed the building and forcibly separated the women and children from the older boys and men. We were eventually let go, and 15 of us reunited at al-Shifa hospital; Khalid and our father were missing.

Fifteen days later, we learned that our father had been released and was sent to Rafah. We were able to get in touch with him, and he said he believed Khalid had also been detained in the Israeli attack, not killed.

Almost one year later, as we took shelter at my sister’s house in Shujayea, I received a call from a Red Cross employee, asking if Khalid was my brother. My heart dropped. I asked for any news about Khalid; was he still alive? I was informed my brother was alive, detained in the notorious Ofer prison.

When the January 2025 ceasefire was announced, hope returned. We were finally reunited with our father, who was able to come to the north.

We also expected Khalid’s name to show up in the lists of Palestinian prisoners Israel was going to release in the multiple exchanges of captives.

My younger brother, Mohammed, and I anxiously scrolled through the names. Khalid’s name did not appear on any list. Later, we heard from several freed prisoners that Khalid was being held in Nafha Prison.

When the October ceasefire was announced, we searched the list again. A total of 1,718 civilians kidnapped from Gaza, along with only 250 Palestinians unjustly serving life or long sentences, were released.

Khalid was not among them.

This broke me in ways I can’t describe. I cannot fully express the depth of my disappointment in a world so unjust.

Some days, the longing for my brother feels heavier than I can carry. I think about him constantly, about where he is and what he’s going through. The distance between us feels unbearable. There are moments when I would do anything just to see him, even briefly, just to know he’s still there.

The separation has settled into my life in a quiet, exhausting way. It follows me everywhere, shaping my days and filling the spaces he used to occupy.

When I look at Dyala, Hamdan, and Abeer, my eyes fill with tears. Eight months ago, their mother, Nadia, was killed when the cafe she worked in was bombed by the Israeli army; 38 others were massacred with her.

The author’s nieces, Abeer and Dyala and his nephew Hamdan in Gaza [Courtesy of Yusuf El-Mbayed]

Now, the three live without either parent.

I long to see Khalid’s face free from fear and violence. I dream of laughing with him, hugging him and spending time together.

I am one of thousands of Palestinians who are held prisoner to constant fear and anxiety for their loved ones held in Israel’s dungeons. We have all heard the horrifying stories from released prisoners about the torture and abuse. We have seen bodies, shrunk and emaciated; skin, bruised and melted.

Israel has celebrated the return of all its captives – dead or alive – as a diplomatic victory, a moment of closure. But for Palestinians, there is no closure. No one is celebrating. Our loved ones remain in captivity.

To those at the negotiation table: We urgently call on you to bring the issue of Palestinian prisoners back. This is not a matter that can be put off – it is a moral and urgent imperative. Palestinian prisoners are not a file to be shelved; they are human beings who deserve dignity and justice. Their lives are in imminent danger.

To Khalid: Your absence pains us and we long for your return. We will not rest until you are back with us. We will wait for you, dear Khalid, for as long as it takes.

‘Alive or dead?’: Gaza families trapped in information void about relatives

For thousands of Palestinian families in Gaza, the ongoing Israeli genocidal war is not just about the huge loss of life, utter destruction and relentless bombardment, but the agonising silence of missing loved ones swallowed by Israel’s detention system.

“We do not know if he is detained or a martyr,” the wife of Abdul Rahman, a young man who disappeared in January, told Al Jazeera. “We filled out many forms … but hope still exists.”

This psychological limbo was highlighted this week by the case of Hamza Adwan, a 67-year-old detainee whose family was informed of his death on Sunday – four months after he actually died in custody on September 9, 2025.

Adwan, a father of nine who had already lost two sons before the war, was arrested at a checkpoint on November 12, 2024. According to his family, he was detained despite suffering from serious health issues, including heart disease, and requiring constant medical care.

The delayed notification of his death is not an isolated incident. It reflects a systematic policy of “enforced disappearance” – creating a total void of information that the Commission of Detainees’ Affairs and the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society describe as an integral part of the ongoing “war of genocide”.

A system of uncertainty

In testimonies gathered by Al Jazeera, families described a chaotic reality where official information is often scarce or contradictory.

The father of Amro, a young man arrested in December 2024, lives in a cruel state of uncertainty. He was initially told by officials that his son had died in custody on December 13. However, released prisoners later reported seeing Amro alive after that date.

“We live on hope that he is alive and well,” the father said, despite fearing his son may have been subjected to “unimaginable torture”.

‘Legalising’ execution

The rights groups accused Israel of pursuing a policy of “slow execution” through starvation, medical neglect, and torture, aimed at making this “the deadliest phase in the history of the Palestinian prisoner movement”.

They warned that this surge in deaths coincides with Israeli political efforts to pass legislation approving the execution of Palestinian prisoners.

According to the groups, this move aims to “legalise” extrajudicial killings and transform them from actions taken outside the law into a “legitimate and codified policy”.

This legislative push targets a population where the vast majority are held without charge or trial.

By the numbers

The Commission and the Prisoner’s Society released alarming new statistics illustrating the scale of the crackdown. As of January 2026, the total number of Palestinians held in Israeli prisons has surpassed 9,300.

Most are legally in limbo, including:

  • 3,385 administrative detainees, held indefinitely on secret evidence without trial.
  • 1,237 detainees classified as “unlawful combatants”, a designation Israel uses to hold Palestinians from Gaza without granting them prisoner-of-war status or legal rights.

With the confirmation of Adwan’s death, the number of prisoners known to have died in Israeli custody since the war began has risen to 87, including 51 from Gaza.

ICRC denied access

Compounding the families’ distress is the paralysis of international monitors. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) confirmed to Al Jazeera that it remains completely barred from visiting Palestinian detainees.

“The ICRC has not been able to access detainees held in Israeli detention centres since October 2023,” Amani Al Naouq, the ICRC spokesperson in Gaza, told Al Jazeera.

“We are constantly receiving inquiries from families concerned about the health and safety of their loved ones,” she added.

Medics under fire

The crackdown has not spared those saving lives. On Monday, medical staff in Gaza held a protest demanding the release of 30 doctors and paramedics detained from Kamal Adwan Hospital alone.

Protesters held banners and photos of dozens of detained colleagues, prominently featuring Dr Hussam Abu Safia, the hospital director who was seized while treating patients.

“These heroes … were arrested outside the framework of international humanitarian law,” said Fares Afana, director of ambulance services. “The testimonies we hear from those released are beyond the comprehension of the human mind.”

Another medical representative at the rally warned of the lethal risks facing detainees, pointing to the fate of Dr Iyad al-Rantisi, the director of the maternity department at Kamal Adwan Hospital, who died under interrogation.

Iran, US at possible precipice of renewed conflict as protests continue

Washington and Tehran are engaged in escalating rhetoric over ongoing protests in Iran, with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi saying his government is ready for war after United States President Donald Trump threatened military action over Iran’s crackdown on the demonstrations.

Iran’s intelligence agency said on Tuesday that US arms and explosive equipment had been seized from “militants” who hid the weapons in several homes in the country.

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The statement followed earlier claims by Araghchi, in an exclusive interview with Al Jazeera, that Iranian authorities had recordings of voices from abroad giving orders to “terrorist agents” to fire on police and protesters.

Iranian officials have previously accused the US and Israel of deploying “foreign agents” to the country to instigate violence.

“The internet was only cut after we confronted terrorist operations, and realised that orders were coming from outside the country,” Araghchi told Al Jazeera.

“We have recorded voices of individuals giving orders from abroad to terrorist agents, instructing them to fire at police forces and fire at demonstrators if police forces were not present. Their intention was to spread killing.”

In the interview, Araghchi responded to Washington’s recent threats of military action over the repression of the protests by saying his country was ready for war if Washington wanted “to test” it.

“If Washington wants to test the military option it has tested before, we are ready for it,” said Araghchi, adding that he hoped the US would choose “the wise option” of dialogue, while warning of “those trying to drag Washington into war in order to serve Israel’s interests”.

He said communications with US special envoy Steve Witkoff had “continued before and after the protests and are still ongoing”.

Vance, Rubio ‘presenting options’ to Trump

The office of US Vice President JD Vance said on Tuesday that top Trump administration officials were preparing diplomatic and military options to present to Trump over the ongoing protests.

“Vice President Vance and Secretary of State Rubio together are presenting a suite of options to the president, ranging from a diplomatic approach to military actions,” said William Martin, Vance’s communications director.

The comments came as hardline US Republican Senator Lindsey Graham urged Trump to escalate pressure on Iran’s leadership, saying the “biggest prize” of his presidency would be the “demise of the Iranian state led by the Ayatollah”.

He said US military action should focus on targeting “the infrastructure that allows the killing to happen”, while stopping short of advocating a ground invasion.

Putting US troops on the ground against the battle-hardened Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) would risk serious US losses.

The US last year bombed Iranian nuclear sites when it joined Israel’s 12-day war with Iran.

The statements followed Trump’s remarks on Sunday that he was considering “strong options” for Iran over its leadership’s crackdown on the demonstrations, which began last month over a plummeting currency and have widened into broader antigovernment protests, resulting in many deaths and prompting Iranian authorities to cut off the country’s internet.

The semiofficial Tasnim news agency reported on Sunday that 109 security personnel had been killed in the protests.

Authorities have not confirmed the number of demonstrators who have lost their lives, but opposition activists based outside the country said the death toll is much higher and includes hundreds of protesters.

Al Jazeera could not independently verify either figure.

US tariffs on countries that trade with Iran

In addition to the threat of military action, Trump has threatened countries engaging in trade with Iran with a 25 percent tariff on any business done with the US. 

He announced the decision in a social media post on Monday, stating that it was “final and conclusive” but offering few additional details.

The move drew a scathing response from China. In a statement issued in Washington, DC, the Chinese embassy said Beijing “firmly opposes any illicit unilateral sanctions and long-arm jurisdiction”, and will take “all necessary measures” to safeguard its interests.

As demonstrations continued and security restrictions tightened, Washington also urged its citizens in Iran to flee the country immediately via Armenia or Turkiye.

“Leave Iran now. Have a plan for departing Iran that does not rely on US government help,” the US Virtual Embassy in Iran said in a security alert issued on Tuesday.

The Iranian government has “restricted access to mobile, landline, and national internet networks”, while airlines “continue to limit or cancel flights to and from Iran” with several suspending services until Friday, the alert said.

Internet blackout continues

Iran’s internet has been shut down for more than 100 hours, the London-based cybersecurity monitor NetBlocks said, with national connectivity levels continuing to flatline at about 1 percent of ordinary levels.

Despite restrictions on phone networks, mobile phone users in Iran were briefly able to make international calls on Tuesday, The Associated Press news agency reported, although it was unable to return calls to those numbers.

The Iranians who spoke to AP said SMS text messaging was still down and that internet users in Iran could connect to government-approved websites locally, but nothing abroad.

They described seeing a heavy security presence in central Tehran, with antiriot police officers, wearing helmets and body armour, and carrying shotguns, tear gas launchers and shields posted at important intersections.

Trump wants to cap credit card interest rates at 10%. Would that work?

United States President Donald Trump has announced plans to cap credit card interest rates at 10 percent for one year, effective January 20, the date of his inauguration.

Trump, who first proposed such a cap on the campaign trail, floated the idea in a post on Truth Social last week, saying Americans were being “ripped off” with interest rates as high as 30 percent.

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Trump returned to the idea again on Sunday, saying credit card companies had “really abused the public”.

“We’re putting a one-year cap at 10 percent. And that’s it. They know it,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One.

While there is bipartisan support in the US for lowering the costs imposed by card companies, experts have warned that Trump’s plans could also have unintended consequences, including limiting some consumers’ access to credit.

Why is Trump pledging to cap interest rates?

Americans owe credit card companies an enormous amount of money.

Outstanding credit card debt stood at $1.23 trillion as of September, up from $1.17 trillion the previous year, according to the Centre for Microeconomic Data at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

That figure does not include other common forms of debt that put pressure on household finances, such as auto loans and mortgages.

Broken down by customer, the average credit card debt was $6,555 in November, according to TransUnion, a US credit reporting agency.

As credit card debt has grown, so has the cost of borrowing.

The average interest rate stood at 22.83 percent in August, according to the Federal Reserve, up from 16.28 percent in 2020.

The cost of living is a major concern for US voters, and affordability is likely to be a key issue in midterm elections scheduled for November.

While Trump’s re-election was widely attributed to public ire over high inflation, a majority of Americans are dissatisfied with his handling of the cost of living, opinion polls suggest.

In addition to targeting credit card companies, Trump has also announced plans to lower mortgage rates and bar institutional investors from buying single-family homes.

US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters on Air Force One on January 11, 2026 [File: Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP]

What are the details of Trump’s plan?

Trump has disclosed few details.

For a cap on interest rates to be legally binding, Trump would need lawmakers in Congress to pass legislation, according to Brian Shearer, director of competition and regulatory policy at the Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator.

“He can’t do it through executive action legally. But there are bipartisan bills in the House and Senate that he and his allies could push,” Shearer told Al Jazeera.

Trump on Monday signalled his support for the “Credit Card Competition Act of 2023”, a bipartisan bill introduced by Democratic Senator Dick Durbin and endorsed by Republican Senator Roger Marshall.

The bill targets hidden “swipe fees” levied by Visa and Mastercard on both customers and merchants.

“Everyone should support great Republican Senator Roger Marshall’s Credit Card Competition Act, in order to stop the out of control Swipe Fee ripoff. Roger is a FANTASTIC Senator!!!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

Another proposal, the 10 Percent Credit Card Interest Rate Cap Act, was introduced last year by independent Senator Bernie Sanders and Republican Senator Josh Hawley, but has since stalled in Congress amid opposition from the credit card industry.

A major question mark about Trump’s plans is enforcement.

The Sanders-Hawley bill, for example, would rely on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the Federal Trade Commission to police creditors, with violations attracting civil penalties.

Trump, however, slashed the budgets of both agencies last year.

The Trump administration is seen as particularly hostile towards the CFPB, a federal watchdog established in the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis.

Russell Vought, the White House budget office director, said in October that he intends to shut down the agency.

What are the benefits of capping interest rates?

A 10 percent ceiling on credit card interest rates could save Americans $100bn annually, according to a September analysis by Shearer, who previously worked at the CFPB.

But Shearer’s analysis also warned of negative consequences for consumers. He predicted that credit card companies would reduce their lending volume for customers with “fair” to “poor” credit scores and also cut rewards programmes.

According to the same analysis, however, a 15 or 18 percent cap would not lead to any reduction in lending while delivering consumer savings of $48bn or $16bn, respectively.

Shearer has argued that credit card companies are profitable enough to absorb the losses resulting from a cap and will be able to rely on other revenue streams, including billions of dollars in processing fees charged to merchants.

“I think the proposal would save money even if it’s just for one year. I’d of course want a permanent cap, but a one-year cap still saves money, and people are hurting now with high prices, so it would provide good relief,” he said.

cards
Consumer credit cards are shown in North Andover, Massachusetts, the US, on March 5, 2012 [File: Elise Amendola/AP]

What do critics say about Trump’s plan?

Industry critics say a cap on interest rates would lead to customers with lower credit scores being denied access to credit.

The Electronic Payments Coalition (EPC), which represents payment networks, banks, and credit unions in the US, said on Tuesday that more than 80 percent of credit card accounts could be “closed or severely restricted” under the cap, affecting 175-190 million customers.

“A one-size-fits-all government price cap may sound appealing, but it wouldn’t help Americans – it would do the exact opposite, harming families, limiting opportunity, and weakening our economy,” EPC Executive Chairman Richard Hunt said in a statement.

The Bank Policy Institute (BPI), a nonpartisan public policy, research, and advocacy group, has also criticised proposals for a cap.

In an analysis in May, the BPI estimated that as many as two-thirds of customers who roll over their credit card balance each month – meaning they do not pay it off completely – would see their credit lines “curtailed or eliminated” under a 10 percent cap.

Has this been tried before?

Interest rate restrictions already exist in the US for certain borrowers.

Under the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, members of the military benefit from a 6 percent cap on interest on loans, including credit card repayments, incurred before they began active duty.

Another law, the Military Lending Act, caps the maximum interest rate on some types of consumer debt to no more than 36 percent for active-duty personnel.

Federal credit unions, not-for-profit financial institutions open to all customers, are by law subject to a ceiling on their interest rates, currently set at 18 percent.

Efforts to cap borrowing costs have also been made at the state level.

In 2011, Arkansas amended its constitution to cap credit card interest rates at 17 percent.

The results in Arkansas have been mixed, according to research.

A 2022 study in the Journal of Financial Research found that the cap had created a “credit desert” for many residents with lower credit scores.

The study also found that some residents living in counties bordering other states crossed state lines to access financial services.

Taiwan says ‘general consensus’ reached with US on trade deal

Taiwan and the United States have reached a “general consensus” on a trade pact that would reduce US tariffs on Taiwanese exports, officials in Taipei have said.

Taiwan’s Office of Trade Negotiations said on Tuesday that the outlines of a deal had been reached following months of negotiations with US officials.

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“The goal of the US-Taiwan tariff negotiations has always been to seek reciprocal tariff reductions without stacking tariffs, and to obtain preferential treatment under Section 232,” the office said in a statement, according to the AFP news agency.

The trade office did not immediately respond to Al Jazeera’s request for comment.

US President Donald Trump announced a 32 percent “reciprocal tariff” on Taiwanese exports in April, before lowering the rate to 20 percent in August pending further negotiations.

Countries have made pledges to boost investments in the US in exchange for tariff relief since Trump launched his trade war last year.

Japan and South Korea last year agreed to invest $550bn and $350bn, respectively, to see their tariff rates cut from 25 to 15 percent.

Taiwan’s trade office did not provide details on the deal, but Bloomberg and The New York Times reported that the self-governing island’s tariff rate would be lowered to 15 percent.

As part of the deal, the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) would agree to build at least four more production facilities in the US state of Arizona, according to Bloomberg and The New York Times, which cited unnamed officials.

TSMC, the world’s largest chipmaker and supplier to companies such as Nvidia and Apple, said in March that it planned to spend $100bn on new fabrication and packing plants in the US, bringing its total investment in the country to $165bn.

Due to its strategic importance, the chipmaker has been under pressure from Washington since 2020 to expand production outside Taiwan.

The US fears that a blockade of Taiwan by China, which claims the island as its territory, could cut off access to TSMC’s chips.

US sailor sentenced to 16 years in prison in Chinese espionage case

A former United States Navy sailor has been sentenced to more than 16 years in prison after being convicted of selling technical and operating manuals for ships and operating systems to an intelligence officer working for China.

On Monday, a federal judge in San Diego sentenced Jinchao Wei, 25, to 200 months in prison.

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In August, a jury convicted Wei of six crimes, including espionage, based on accusations he was paid more than $12,000 for selling information, the US Department of Justice said in a statement.

Wei, an engineer for the amphibious assault ship USS Essex, was one of two California-based sailors charged on August 3, 2023, with providing sensitive military information to China. The other, Wenheng Zhao, was sentenced to more than two years in 2024 after he pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy and one count of receiving a bribe in violation of his official duties.

For years, US officials have expressed concern about the espionage threat they say the Chinese government poses, and prosecutors have pursued criminal cases against Beijing intelligence operatives who have allegedly stolen sensitive government and commercial information, including through illegal hacking.

Wei was recruited via social media in 2022 by an intelligence officer who portrayed himself as a naval enthusiast working for the state-owned China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation, prosecutors said.

Evidence presented in court showed Wei told a friend that the person was “extremely suspicious” and that it was “quite obviously” espionage.

Wei disregarded the friend’s advice to delete the contact and instead moved conversations with the intelligence officer to a different encrypted messaging app he believed to be more secure, prosecutors said.

Over the course of 18 months, Wei sent the officer photos and videos of the Essex, advised him of the location of various naval ships and told him about the Essex’s defensive weapons, prosecutors said.

Wei sold the intelligence officer 60 technical and operating manuals, including those for weapons control, aircraft and deck elevators. The manuals contained export control warnings and detailed the operations of multiple systems on board the Essex and similar ships.

He was a petty officer second class, which is an enlisted sailor’s rank.

The navy’s website says the Essex is equipped to transport and support a Marine Corps landing force of more than 2,000 personnel during an air and amphibious assault.