My neighbourhood in Gaza is gone, reduced to rubble and silence

Shujayea, my home town in east Gaza, is gone! Without a single stone left on another, the entire building was reduced to rubble. The dust and destruction that once accompanied the sounds of children’s laughter, the vendors’ calls, and the familiar rhythms of daily life now smother the streets. What was once a vibrant, enthralling community has been completely destroyed.

My brother Mohammed returned to Shujayea to check on our family home a few days ago. When he returned, he informed my father that only a few shattered columns and broken walls were left. We learned soon after that my father had braved the most extreme danger and witnessed it with his own eyes. He made the decision to walk through the remnants of our past, a place where every step can lead to death.

My grandfather and father spent years working on the house that embodied my dad’s dreams and left marks of his labor and sacrifice. He raised his children there, where we celebrated weddings and birthdays, and where numerous family memories were made. It is now only rubble, though.

However, this particular house is not the only thing that our family is losing. My sister Heba’s demolished home, my sister Heba’s demolished apartment, my sister Somaia’s two burned apartments, and my father’s destroyed home are now my own burned apartments, my sister Nour’s bombed apartment, and my sister Nour’s demolished apartment. Add to this list my uncle Hassan’s destroyed building, my uncle Ziad’s building, my uncle Zahir’s residence, my aunt Umm Musab’s apartment, my aunt Faten’s apartment, and my aunts Sabah, Amal, and Mona’s completely destroyed homes. And our immediate family only suffered these losses. Numerous friends, neighbors, and relatives have witnessed their homes destroyed, and their memories are buried beneath the debris all around us.

Not just the staggering financial value of what we have lost, this is important. Although the homes were filled with valuables, including furniture, personal belongings, and valuable possessions, much more was lost. We have lost something that is irreplaceable. A house can be rebuilt, but the connection to the familiar streets and community where generations of your family have lived cannot be changed with bricks and cement.

More than just buildings, Shujayea. Its members bonded through shared histories, relationships, and memories of everyday life. The ancient Ibn Othman mosque, which echoed with prayers during Ramadan, the small corner shop where we gathered to chat, and the neighborhood bakery where we bought fresh bread at dawn. These were the areas where children played, families celebrated, and neighbors fought it out for each other in the good and bad times.

When a neighborhood like Shujayea is completely destroyed, the walls become the result. No reconstruction project can truly heal because of the destruction that ties neighbors, displaces families across shelters and refugee camps, and leaves behind a deep wound. Although a rebuilt house may have four walls and a roof, it won’t be the same as the one that once housed generations of tales.

My family is not unique to this loss. Nearby neighborhoods across Gaza have been flattened completely. The history of a family, the joy of the children, the elders’ wisdom, and the love of a once-thriving community are hidden in each pile of rubble. The human cost of this war cannot be accurately expressed in terms of money or damage assessment, but every home destroyed is a silent example of it.

Identity is what we have lost in addition to property. A person’s life unfolds in a home, where milestones are observed, where grievances are shared, and where bonds are forged. A whole population is being displaced from the places that defined them by the destruction of so many homes. It is a deliberate destruction of both lives and those of memory, heritage, and belonging.

What was lost will not be recovered by reconstruction. If new structures ever are constructed, they will adorn the graves of our memories. They won’t bring my father’s years of hard work back to life, nor will they restore his sense of security and comfort. They won’t bring back the warm, familiar, and vibrant neighbourhood we were used to know.

Generations-long will be left with the wound caused by Shujayea’s destruction. Not just humanitarian aid or reconstruction funds, though. The heart and soul of a community is purposefully destroyed here. No amount of concrete can rekindle friendship, rekindle memories, or reunite dead neighbors.

Shujayea has vanished. And with it, a portion of us has been interred. We continue to cherish the stories, the love that once permeated our homes, and the hope that justice will prevail in the future. Because they can destroy our homes, they can also destroy the memories and bonds we hold dear to us in our hearts.

Pakistan out of Asia Cup 2025 as hockey tournament begins in India

As the Asia Cup hockey competition gets underway in India on Friday, Pakistan will miss the event for the first time in its history due to security concerns.

Three months after India and Pakistan returned from a devastating war on their shared border, an eight-nation tournament is being held in Rajgir, a city in India’s northeastern state of Bihar.

Bangladesh will take over in Group B of the upcoming tournament from the three-time former champions and one of the founding members of the Asian Hockey Federation (AHF).

Last week, Hockey India’s (HI) President Dilip Kumar Tirkey confirmed Pakistan’s withdrawal from the competition by citing security concerns of the Pakistan Hockey Federation (PHF) in India.

Due to security concerns, Pakistan will not participate in this tournament, Tirkey told Indian news agency ANI.

Tirkey claimed that Pakistan had never rejected the invitation and that they had withdrawn of their own accord.

Reports in Pakistani media claimed that the PHF had informed HI and the AHF of their decision earlier in August, while their omission was confirmed by the tournament’s schedule announcement last week.

Before a ceasefire was reached, India and Pakistan were at odds with one another for the first four days of the conflict in May. There are conflicting accounts about the casualties, but more than 70 have been killed by missile, drone, and artillery fire on both sides.

Numerous Indian media reports that the nation’s sport organizations would avoid joining Pakistan in international competitions in the wake of the escalations. In the ICC Women’s ODI World Cup, both nations were given the same group, but Pakistan played at a neutral venue.

The ICC brokered a mutual agreement that would “host” its neighbor at a neutral venue for all upcoming global cricket tournaments, which was supported by the decision.

However, no hockey tournament officials have ever negotiated any of these agreements.

India and Pakistan have a rich history of international hockey matches.

Pakistan’s double jeopardy

By not participating in the Asia Cup, Pakistan, which last won the tournament in 1989, will lose out on a chance to advance to the FIH Hockey World Cup 2026.

The qualifiers will feature the Asia Cup champions, who will also be guaranteed a spot in the 2026 World Cup. Second- and sixth-placed teams will also be included. Pakistan currently ranks 15th in the men’s FIH World Hockey rankings, with bleak prospects for World Cup qualification.

In the meantime, India will relish the chance to claim their first continental title at home and advance to the World Cup, which Belgium and the Netherlands will host together in August 2026.

South Korea, the reigning champion, will also be favored and aim for a sixth Asian title that will extend beyond the mark. Other participating countries include China, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Japan, China, and Chinese Taipei.

India's captain Harmanpreet Singh, left, is challenged by Pakistan's Afraz during the men's Asian Champions Trophy hockey match between India and Pakistan in Chennai, India, Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2023. (AP Photo/R. Parthibhan)
During the men’s Asian Champions Trophy hockey match between India and Pakistan on August 9, 2023, Pakistan’s Afraz challenges India’s captain Harmanpreet Singh, left.

shared hockey glory

Both India and Pakistan have a national hockey team, and both of these countries have a history of playing the sport up until the early 1990s.

The partition of India in 1947, which led to the emergence of Pakistan and a decades-long, largely political conflict, impacted sport.

The then-Indian team, which included athletes from both sides of the now-divided border, had until then, and they had won gold at the 1928, 1932, and 1936 Olympic Games.

India and Pakistan have combined to win 11 gold medals at the Olympics, five world titles, three FIH Champions Trophy victories, and dozens of hockey legends.

Germany, France, UK trigger process to reimpose sanctions on Iran

After a number of meetings failed to lead to an agreement on Iran’s nuclear programme, France, Germany, and the UK established a mechanism to reimpose sanctions on Iran.

Tehran has been warned for weeks by the three European countries by the acronym E3 that Iran’s 2015 nuclear agreement with major powers may be renewed in October.

A 30-day window is opened by the decision on Thursday for the reimposition of sanctions. This comes after an Iranian ministry of foreign affairs spokesman warned this week that a new round of sanctions would result.

Tehran has been accused of breaking the terms of the 2015 nuclear agreement, which required Iran to renounce its nuclear program in exchange for lifting international sanctions on its economy.

The “snapback” mechanism, which is a component of the nuclear deal, allows for immediate reimposition of sanctions if Iran is found to be violating the deal.

The foreign ministers of France, Germany, and Britain have all written in a letter to the UN Security Council on Thursday that “Iran has increasingly and deliberately ceased to fulfill its JCPoA commitments” since then.

They claimed that this included the accumulation of a high-enriched uranium stockpile, which is unprecedented for a state without a nuclear weapons program, and that it is unprecedented.

Abbas Araghchi, the country’s foreign minister, criticized the E3’s decision as “unjustified, illegal, and without any legal basis.”

Araghchi added that he hoped the European countries would “appropriately correct this wrong move in the coming days” and that Iran “will respond appropriately to protect and secure its national rights and interests.”

Implementing the plan would lead to a return to the extensive UN sanctions that existed prior to the 2015 deal, including a conventional arms embargo, restrictions on ballistic missile development, and asset freezes.

Gabriel Elizondo, a journalist for the UN in New York, argued that the E3 announcement was just the start of a process.

Elizondo said, “This does not mean the sanctions are lifted right away, and there is room for negotiations over the upcoming weeks, so] this could potentially be diplomatically resolved behind the scenes.”

Nuclear discussions

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei claimed on Tuesday that Iran had stated to Europeans that it had no authority to ratify the mechanism during a meeting in Geneva. Baghaei did, however, promise that nuclear negotiations would continue between the two parties.

Tehran’s deputy foreign minister for legal and international affairs, Kazem Gharibabadi, also stated in a social media post that the country remained committed to diplomacy following Tuesday’s discussions.

It’s time for the E3 and the UN Security Council to make the right decision, Gharibabadi wrote on X.

After Trump unilaterally withdrew from the Iranian nuclear deal in 2018, Iran had been steadily increasing its nuclear enrichment.

When Israel launched a massive bombing campaign against Iranian nuclear, military, and civilian sites in June, killing hundreds of people, the nation, which denies seeking a nuclear weapon, had been engaging in indirect discussions with the US over its nuclear program.

The Iranian government resisted all diplomatic efforts because Israel also launched attacks against Iranian targets.

Iranian and European officials rekindled discussions in July, but they have so far failed to reach a resolution.

The E3 foreign ministers announced on Thursday that they would offer to impose sanctions on Iran if it agreed to specific actions in a letter to the UN Security Council.

However, they claimed that Tehran “has not reengaged in negotiations with a view to reaching an acceptable diplomatic solution” and has not returned to meeting its obligations with the International Atomic Energy Agency.

However, Al Jazeera’s Diplomatic Editor James Bays noted that “Iran is the one who has been consistent throughout”the nuclear talks.

He explained that while the US has been changing its mind, Tehran has consistently stated that it wants a peaceful nuclear program rather than a nuclear weapon.

The US once said that a peaceful nuclear program was possible, before saying no, absolutely no. Then, of course, diplomacy was still in full swing when Israel attacked Iran, Bags said.

Iran has maintained a consistent position throughout the entire process, and the US consistently and unexpectedly changes its mind.

“Retaliation cycle”

The E3’s move, according to Sina Toossi, a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy, “sees less like a path to reviving cooperation than an escalation designed to force Iran into short-term concessions.”

For the Responsible Statecraft magazine, Toossi wrote, “It risks locking both sides into a cycle of pressure and retaliation without an offramp,”

Iran was just bombed while the table was being negotiated, and according to some, a deal was almost in hand. The role of an effective intermediary between the US, Israel, and Iran is now in Europe’s hands rather than an escalater.

Meanwhile, Iranians have expressed outrage over the E3’s plan to reimpose sanctions on the country, especially in light of the recent events that have occurred in Israel, according to Foad Izadi, a professor at the University of Tehran.

Izadi noted that some Iranian politicians have been urging the country to leave the world’s nuclear non-proliferation treaty (NPT), “because Iran faces international condemnation and penalties” regardless of what it does.

At least 24 killed in RSF attack on Sudan’s el-Fasher : Doctors’ group

A medical organization claims that a paramilitary attack on the besieged city of el-Fasher in Sudan’s western Darfur region has resulted in the deaths of at least 24 people and the injuries of dozens of others.

The Sudan Doctors Network, a paramilitary group fighting Sudan’s military, said on Thursday that the Rapid Support Forces shelled the densely populated areas of the central market and the Awlad al-Reef neighbourhood in el-Fasher, the country’s civil war.

Five women, among them, were hurt in the attack, which was reported to have claimed was 55.

The RSF did not respond to the report right away.

El-Fasher, the provincial capital of North Darfur province, has been the site of more than a year of fighting between the Sudanese military and the RSF. In the Darfur region, it is the military’s final stronghold.

In April 2023, Sudan’s conflict turned into open fighting in Khartoum and other parts of the African nation as a result of long-standing tensions between the military and the RSF.

The latest attack on El-Fasher and its surroundings on Wednesday included two famine-hit camps for displaced people where RSF fighters staged a massive offensive in April that left hundreds of people dead.

According to the UN high commissioner for human rights, at least 89 civilians died in RSF attacks in and around the city in just 10 days, including 16 who were brutally executed.

According to the UN’s children’s agency, the RSF besieged and transformed it into “an epicentre of child suffering, with malnutrition, disease, and violence claiming young lives every day.”

260, 000 civilians were trapped inside the city and living in “desperate conditions” as a result of the siege, including 130, 000 children, according to UNICEF, which released a statement on Wednesday. According to the report, an estimated 6, 000 children are at risk of dying from severe acute malnutrition.

More than 40, 000 people have been killed in the conflict, more than 14 million have fled their homes, and some families are attempting to survive as famine sweeps parts of the nation.

According to the UN and other rights organizations, it has experienced blatant atrocities, including rape and killings for ethnic reasons.