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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Joe Coughlan

Middle East crisis: Netanyahu speaks to Pope after three killed in Israeli strike on Gaza church – as it happened

A view of the damage to the Holy Family church in Gaza City following an Israeli strike on the church
A view of the damage to the Holy Family church in Gaza City following an Israeli strike on the church Photograph: Omar Al-Qattaa/AFP/Getty Images

Clossing summary

This blog will be closing shortly. Here is an overview of today’s developments:

  • Israel has granted two senior Christian leaders rare access to Gaza after an Israeli strike on the Palestinian territory’s only Roman Catholic church killed three people. Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Catholic Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, and his Greek Orthodox counterpart, Theophilos III, led a delegation on Friday to the Holy Family Church, whose shelling the day before sparked international condemnation.

  • Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu also called Pope Leo on Friday, the Vatican said, in relation to the Israeli strike on the Holy Family Church. During the call, the pope renewed his appeal for a ceasefire and an end to the war in Gaza, and expressed his concern over the “dramatic” humanitarian situation in the Palestinian territory, a Vatican statement said.

  • Gaza’s civil defence agency said on Friday that Israeli strikes killed 14 people in the north and south of the war-ravaged Palestinian territory.

  • Israel will allow limited access by Syrian forces into the Sweida area of southern Syria for the next two days because of instability in the area, an Israeli official said on Friday, Reuters reports. A spokesperson for Syria’s interior ministry, Noureddin al-Baba, previously on Friday denied earlier reports that government forces are being deployed to Sweida province, Syrian state news agency reported, according to Reuters.

  • Armed tribes allied with Syria’s Islamist-led government clashed with Druze fighters outside Sweida on Friday a day after government troops withdrew from the Druze-majority city, a monitoring group said. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported “clashes west of Sweida pitting tribal fighters and Bedouin supported by the authorities on one side, against Druze fighters on the other”.

  • Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi told his European counterparts on Friday they have no grounds for reactivating UN sanctions after they threatened to do so in coming months unless there is progress in nuclear talks. France, Britain and Germany told Iran on Thursday that they would restore UN sanctions unless it reopened talks on its nuclear programme immediately and produced concrete results by the end of August. The foreign ministers of the so-called E3, along with the EU’s foreign policy chief, held their first call with Araqchi since Israel and the US attacked Iranian nuclear facilities a month ago.

Updated

Al Jazeera reports that a one-year-old girl has died of malnutrition in Deir el-Balah in Gaza, a medical source at the city’s Al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital said.

Doctors Without Borders warned last week that its teams on the ground in Gaza were witnessing surging levels of acute malnutrition in the besieged and war-ravaged Palestinian territory.

The medical charity said levels of acute malnutrition had reached an “all-time high” at two of its facilities in the Gaza Strip.

It said it now had more than 700 pregnant and breastfeeding women and nearly 500 children with severe and moderate malnutrition currently enrolled in ambulatory therapeutic feeding centres in both clinics.

Sirens sounded in Netiv HaAsara, in southern Israel, at the northern border with the Gaza Strip, Israeli military said on Friday, Reuters reports.

The military added that a projectile that crossed from the northern part of the Gaza Strip was intercepted.

Pope Leo appeals to Netanyahu for ceasefire after strike on Gaza church

The Vatican said Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu initiated his call with Pope Leo on Friday, the Vatican said, the day after Israeli fire on the Holy Family Church in Gaza City killed three people and provoked international condemnation, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reports.

The Vatican said in a statement that Leo was at his summer residence in Castel Gandolfo, south of Rome.

The statement said:

During the conversation, the Holy Father renewed his appeal to revive negotiations and reach a ceasefire and the end of the war.

He once again expressed his concern for the dramatic humanitarian situation of the population in Gaza, whose heartbreaking toll is borne particularly by children, the elderly and the sick.

Finally, the Holy Father reiterated the urgency of protecting places of worship and especially the faithful and all people in Palestine and Israel.

Netanyahu has said Israel “deeply regrets” the strike, and blamed a “stray round”.

He repeated this regret in the conversation with the pope, which was “friendly”, a spokesperson for Netanyahu told AFP, adding that the two men agreed to meet soon.

Four people accused of plotting to damage two Voyager aircraft at a Royal Air Force base in a demonstration allegedly carried out by members of Palestine Action face trial in 2027.

Amy Gardiner-Gibson, 29, Jony Cink, 24, Daniel Jeronymides-Norie, 36, and Lewis Chiaramello, 22, appeared for a hearing at London’s Old Bailey court on Friday ahead of a trial due to start in January 2027.

About £7m worth of damage was caused to the aircraft at the airbase in Oxfordshire on 20 June in an incident alleged to have a “terrorist connection”, the Old Bailey heard.

The four are charged with conspiracy to enter a prohibited place for a purpose prejudicial to the interests or safety of the UK and conspiracy to commit criminal damage. None of the defendants were asked to enter a plea at Friday’s brief hearing.

It has previously been alleged the defendants had been heavily involved in Palestine Action at the time.

British lawmakers voted to proscribe Palestine Action under anti-terrorism legislation earlier this month. The group has condemned the decision as “authoritarian” and a challenge to the ban will be heard at London’s high court on Monday.

Haroon Siddique is the Guardian’s legal affairs correspondent.

Two UK charities have transferred millions of pounds to an Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank with the endorsement of the charities regulator, the Guardian can reveal.

Documents show that the Kasner Charitable Trust (KCT), via a conduit charity, UK Toremet, has donated approximately £5.7m to the Bnei Akiva Yeshiva high school in Susya, in the Israeli-occupied territory.

As the budget of the school increased significantly as a result of the donations, the number of pupils, employees at the school and Susya residents have all increased.

Dror Etkes, an expert on Israeli settlement, said: “The school is likely the largest single source of employment in the settlement, and constitutes one of the main elements of the entire settlement’s existence.”

Susya was established in or around 1983, south of Hebron, adjacent to and impinging on the pre-existing Palestinian village of Khirbet Susiya (commonly known as just Susiya). In 1986, the Israeli authorities declared the main residential area of Susiya an archaeological site and evicted all of its residents, according to Amnesty International.

You can read more of Haroon Siddique’s report here: Two UK charities donate millions to Israeli settlement in occupied West Bank

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu called Pope Leo on Friday, the Vatican said, a day after an Israeli strike on Gaza’s sole Catholic church killed three people and injured several more, Reuters reports.

During the call, the pope renewed his appeal for a ceasefire and an end to the war in Gaza, and expressed his concern over the “dramatic” humanitarian situation in the Palestinian territory, a Vatican statement said.

Leo also stressed the urgent need to protect places of worship, the faithful, and all people in the Palestinian territories and Israel, the statement added.

Here are some of the latest images coming through from Gaza:

My colleague William Christou has this report on the week’s fighting in Syria:

Bahaa* had no choice but to keep on working as patient after patient came through the doors of the Sweida National hospital in southern Syria. Almost all bore similar injuries: gunshot wounds and bodies shredded by shrapnel from nearby exploding artillery.

“There were hundreds of wounded, no less than 200 bodies in the hospital. Many of them shot in the head, as if executed,” said Bahaa, a surgeon speaking of the events of this week in Sweida under a pseudonym for fear of retribution.

Videos filmed inside the hospital showed hallways lined with corpses, rooms stacked with body bags and corpses piled up outside. A second doctor from the intensive care unit said bodies had to be placed outside the morgue for lack of space.

The casualties, both civilian and military, were some of at least 516 civilians and fighters killed in four days of clashes in the Druze-majority province, according to figures given by the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).

At least 86 of those killed were field executions of Druze civilians by government fighters or allied militias, as well as three Bedouin civilians killed by Druze fighters, SOHR said.

The fighting, begun by a local dispute between Bedouin tribes and Druze fighters, quickly escalated and prompted Syrian government forces to intervene. Druze fighters resisted their entry into the province and clashes began with Syrian government forces.

Residents described four days of terror as fighting quickly took on a sectarian flavour – the violence was the most serious threat to Syria’s stability since March, when 1,500 mostly Alawite civilians were killed after a failed attack on government forces.

Syria’s president, Ahmad al-Sharaa, has pledged to protect the country’s minorities since the toppling of former Syrian president Bashar al-Assad in December. He now leads a country riven by sectarian divisions after 14 years of civil war, without the resources to engage in the transitional justice needed to heal it.

Rory Carroll is the Guardian’s Ireland correspondent.

Irish people have grown wary about a plan to ban imports from the occupied Palestinian territories after warnings of possible US retaliation.

An Irish Times poll on Friday found that almost half of voters favour not passing the legislation or investigating the possible consequences for Ireland before passing it.

The bill would make Ireland the first EU member to curtail trade in goods produced in illegal Israeli settlements. Israeli and US diplomats have urged Ireland to abandon the move and Irish business leaders have warned that it will damage economic ties with the US.

In a poll in April a small majority favoured passing the legislation as soon as possible but the latest survey shows growing caution. Some 34% want the bill passed now, or strengthened to include services as well as goods, while 48% prefer waiting and weighing the consequences, or dropping the legislation altogether.

Earlier this week Mick Huckabee, the US ambassador to Israel, called the bill stupid and asked if the Irish had fallen into a vat of Guinness, causing “diplomatic intoxication”.

The bill has government and opposition support and is to go before the Dáil in autumn after scrutiny by a parliamentary committee.

Summary of the day so far

Gaza’s civil defence agency said on Friday that Israeli strikes killed 14 people in the north and south of the war-ravaged Palestinian territory.

The emergency service said fighter jets conducted airstrikes and there was artillery shelling and gunfire in the early morning in areas north of the southern city of Khan Younis.

Agency official Mohammed al-Mughayyir said 10 people were killed in two separate strikes in the Khan Younis area, with one hitting a house and the other tents sheltering displaced people.

In Gaza’s north, four people were killed in an airstrike in the Jabalia al-Nazla area, he added.

In other developments:

  • Israel will allow limited access by Syrian forces into the Sweida area of southern Syria for the next two days because of instability in the area, an Israeli official said on Friday, Reuters reports. A spokesperson for Syria’s interior ministry, Noureddin al-Baba, previously on Friday denied earlier reports that government forces are being deployed to Sweida province, Syrian state news agency reported, according to Reuters.

  • Armed tribes allied with Syria’s Islamist-led government clashed with Druze fighters outside Sweida on Friday a day after government troops withdrew from the Druze-majority city, a monitoring group said. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported “clashes west of Sweida pitting tribal fighters and Bedouin supported by the authorities on one side, against Druze fighters on the other”.

  • Two of Jerusalem’s most senior Christian clerics travelled to Gaza on Friday after a deadly Israeli strike on the Palestinian territory’s only Catholic church, the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem said. The Catholic Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Pierbattista Pizzaballa, and his Greek Orthodox counterpart, Theophilos III, headed an “ecclesiastical delegation” to meet local Christians after Thursday’s strike on the Holy Family Church in Gaza City, a statement read. The Israeli strike killed three people and injured 10 others including the parish priest, who used to receive daily calls from the late Pope Francis.

  • Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi told his European counterparts on Friday they have no grounds for reactivating UN sanctions after they threatened to do so in coming months unless there is progress in nuclear talks. France, Britain and Germany told Iran on Thursday that they would restore UN sanctions unless it reopened talks on its nuclear programme immediately and produced concrete results by the end of August. The foreign ministers of the so-called E3, along with the EU’s foreign policy chief, held their first call with Araqchi since Israel and the US attacked Iranian nuclear facilities a month ago.

  • A fire has torn through a newly opened shopping mall in the eastern Iraqi city of Kut, killing at least 61 people, as desperate families searched for missing relatives. Officials said many people suffocated in bathrooms, while one person said his five relatives died in a lift. The blaze – the latest in a country where safety regulations are frequently neglected – broke out late on Wednesday, reportedly starting on the first floor before rapidly engulfing the five-storey Corniche Hypermarket mall.

Here are some of the latest photos coming to us through the wires of the Middle East:

Conflict continues near Sweida on Friday

Armed tribes allied with Syria’s Islamist-led government clashed with Druze fighters outside Sweida on Friday a day after government troops withdrew from the Druze-majority city, the warring parties and a monitoring group said, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reports.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported “clashes west of Sweida pitting tribal fighters and Bedouin supported by the authorities on one side, against Druze fighters on the other”.

Combatants on both sides confirmed the exchange of fire to AFP correspondents.

Updated

Officials struggled on Friday to identify more than a dozen bodies pulled from a deadly shopping mall fire in Iraq, amid ongoing investigations into what caused the blaze, the Associated Press (AP) reports.

An Iraqi medical official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to comment, told the AP the final death toll was 63, including 18 bodies that could not be identified due to the severity of the burns and would undergo DNA testing.

The Corniche Hypermarket mall in the town of Kut in Wasit province, a five-story building containing restaurants, shops and a supermarket, had opened just days before the blaze, which officials said broke out late Wednesday on the second floor in an area selling perfume and cosmetics.

Civil defence crews were able to rescue 45 people from the burning building. Officials said that most of those who died were trapped on the upper floors.

While the cause of the fire has not yet been determined, officials blamed lack of safety standards in the building for the scale of the tragedy.

The UN refugee agency said it is “very concerned” about the impact of hostilities in Syria’s southern city of Sweida on its aid operations, Reuters reports.

UNHCR spokesperson William Spindler told reporters in Geneva on Friday:

The situation in Sweida is very concerning. It is very difficult for us to operate there ... at the moment our capacity to deliver aid is very limited. We are calling on all parties to allow humanitarian access.

Israel to allow 'limited access' by Syrian forces into Sweida, Reuters reports

Israel will allow limited access by Syrian forces into the Sweida area of southern Syria for the next two days because of instability in the area, an Israeli official said on Friday, Reuters reports.

The official, who declined to be named, told reporters:

In light of the ongoing instability in south west Syria, Israel has agreed to allow limited entry of the (Syrian) internal security forces into Sweida district for the next 48 hours.

A spokesperson for Syria’s interior ministry, Noureddin al-Baba, previously on Friday denied reports that government forces are being deployed to Sweida province, Syrian state news agency reported on Friday, according to Reuters.

It came after Reuters previously reported that a Syrian interior ministry spokesperson said Syrian security forces are preparing to redeploy to Sweida to quell fighting by the Druze and Bedouin tribes.

The Associated Press (AP) also reported on Friday that Syrian government security forces agreed with some of the Druze factions that they would re-enter the area to impose stability and protect state institutions, according to two Syrian officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to speak publicly.

The reports from the two news agencies were unable to be independently verified.

Updated

Two of Jerusalem’s most senior Christian clerics travelled to Gaza on Friday after a deadly Israeli strike on the Palestinian territory’s only Catholic church, the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem said, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reports.

The Catholic Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Pierbattista Pizzaballa, and his Greek Orthodox counterpart, Theophilos III, headed an “ecclesiastical delegation” to meet local Christians after Thursday’s strike on the Holy Family Church in Gaza City, a statement read.

The Israeli strike killed three people and injured 10 others including the parish priest, who used to receive daily calls from the late Pope Francis.

Updated

The UN rights chief has called for “independent, prompt and transparent investigations into all violations” after the days of clashes seen in the southern Syrian city of Sweida, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reports.

OHCHR high commissioner Volker Turk said in a statement:

Those responsible must be held to account.

It is crucial that immediate steps are taken to prevent recurrence of such violence.

Revenge and vengeance are not the answer.

Syria denies reports of troops being redeployed to Sweida, Reuters reports

A spokesperson for Syria’s interior ministry, Noureddin al-Baba, denied reports that government forces are being deployed to Sweida province, Syrian state news agency reported on Friday, according to Reuters.

Reuters previously reported on Friday that a Syrian interior ministry spokesperson said Syrian security forces are preparing to redeploy to Sweida to quell fighting by the Druze and Bedouin tribes.

The Associated Press (AP) also reported on Friday that Syrian government security forces agreed with some of the Druze factions that they would re-enter the area to impose stability and protect state institutions, according to two Syrian officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to speak publicly.

The reports from the two news agencies were unable to be independently verified.

Israel has said it warned the Syrian government to withdraw from the south and that it would not allow the Islamist rulers to build up on its borders.

Updated

Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi told his European counterparts on Friday they have no grounds for reactivating UN sanctions after they threatened to do so in coming months unless there is progress in nuclear talks.

Araghchi said on X:

If EU/E3 want to have a role, they should act responsibly and put aside the worn-out policies of threat and pressure, including the ‘snap-back’ for which they (have) absolutely no moral (or) legal grounds.

France, Britain and Germany told Iran on Thursday that they would restore UN sanctions unless it reopened talks on its nuclear programme immediately and produced concrete results by the end of August, Reuters reports.

The foreign ministers of the so-called E3, along with the EU’s foreign policy chief, held their first call with Araqchi since Israel and the US attacked Iranian nuclear facilities a month ago.

A French diplomatic source said the ministers had urged Iran to resume diplomacy immediately to reach a “verifiable and lasting” deal, threatening to use the so-called “snapback” mechanism if it failed to do so.

If Iran is found to be in violation of the terms, the “snapback” can be used to restore UN sanctions before the UN security council resolution enshrining the deal expires on 18 October. The process would take about 30 days.

Updated

The UN rights chief demanded on Friday that Syria’s interim authorities ensure accountability after days of deadly clashes in the southern city of Sweida that reportedly left nearly 600 people dead, Reuters reports.

OHCHR high commissioner Volker Turk said in a statement:

This bloodshed and the violence must stop, and the protection of all people must be the utmost priority, in line with international human rights law.

Israeli strikes kill 14 in Gaza

Gaza’s civil defence agency said on Friday that Israeli strikes killed 14 people in the north and south of the war-ravaged Palestinian territory, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reports.

The emergency service said fighter jets conducted airstrikes and there was artillery shelling and gunfire in the early morning in areas north of the southern city of Khan Younis.

Agency official Mohammed al-Mughayyir said 10 people were killed in two separate strikes in the Khan Younis area, with one hitting a house and the other tents sheltering displaced people.

In Gaza’s north, four people were killed in an airstrike in the Jabalia al-Nazla area, he added.

Media restrictions in Gaza and difficulties in accessing many areas mean AFP is unable to independently verify tolls and details provided by the agency and other parties.

There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military, which asked for exact coordinates to look into the reports when contacted by AFP.

Updated

Syrian government security forces agreed with some of the Druze factions that they would re-enter Sweida to impose stability and protect state institutions, according to two Syrian officials who spoke to the Associated Press (AP) on Friday on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to speak publicly.

Syrian government forces had largely pulled out of the Druze-majority southern province of Sweida after days of clashes with militias linked to the Druze religious minority that threatened to unravel the country’s fragile postwar transition.

William Christou is a Beirut-based journalist, focusing on human rights investigations and migration issues. He has written the below article on the conflict in southern Syria.

Bahaa* had no choice but to keep on working as patient after patient came through the doors of the Sweida National hospital in southern Syria. Almost all bore similar injuries: gunshot wounds and bodies shredded by shrapnel from nearby exploding artillery.

“There were hundreds of wounded, no less than 200 bodies in the hospital. Many of them shot in the head, as if executed,” said Bahaa, a surgeon speaking of the events of this week in Sweida under a pseudonym for fear of retribution.

Videos filmed inside the hospital showed hallways lined with corpses, rooms stacked with body bags and corpses piled up outside. A second doctor from the intensive care unit said bodies had to be placed outside the morgue for lack of space.

The casualties, both civilian and military, were some of at least 516 civilians and fighters killed in four days of clashes in the Druze-majority province, according to figures given by the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).

At least 86 of those killed were field executions of Druze civilians by government fighters or allied militias, as well as three Bedouin civilians killed by Druze fighters, SOHR said.

The fighting, begun by a local dispute between Bedouin tribes and Druze fighters, quickly escalated and prompted Syrian government forces to intervene. Druze fighters resisted their entry into the province and clashes began with Syrian government forces.

You can read more of William Christou’s piece here: ‘Shot in the head, as if executed’: four days of violence end with hundreds dead in southern Syria

Syrian security forces ready to deploy to Sweida, minister tells Reuters

Syrian security forces are preparing to redeploy to the Druze-majority Sweida city to quell fighting by the Druze and Bedouin tribes, the Syrian interior ministry spokesperson said on Friday, Reuters reports.

A ceasefire announced on Wednesday briefly ended days of bloody fighting that erupted when Bedouin and Druze fighters clashed in Sweida province, prompting the Syrian government to send in troops – further spiking violence.

The clashes drew in Israel, which said it would not allow Syria’s Islamist-led government to deploy troops to the south and struck Syrian troops in Sweida, the defence ministry and close to the presidential palace in Damascus.

Syrian troops withdrew from Sweida after the truce was announced but clashes sparked up again late on Thursday between the tribal Bedouin fighters and the Druze, part of a religious minority that also has followers in Lebanon and Israel.

Israel’s military carried out fresh strikes in Sweida province overnight. However, Israel on Friday denied reports on the Syrian state news agency that it had conducted further airstrikes near the city of Sweida late the previous day, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reports.

“The (Israeli military) is not aware of overnight strikes in Syria,” a spokesperson told AFP.

Updated

Opening summary

Hello and welcome back to the Guardian’s coverage of the Middle East.

Syrian security forces are preparing to redeploy to the Druze-majority Sweida city to quell fighting by the Druze and Bedouin tribes, the Syrian interior ministry spokesperson said on Friday.

It comes after the Syrian presidency accused “outlaw forces” – the term the government uses to refer to Druze factions in Sweida – of violating a renewed ceasefire that was announced late on Wednesday. The presidency said the forces had engaged in “horrific violence” against civilians including “crimes that completely contravene the obligations of mediation, directly threaten civil peace, and push towards chaos and security collapse”.

Syrian troops on Thursday pulled out of Sweida on the orders of the Islamist-led government, following days of deadly clashes that killed nearly 600 people, according to a war monitor.

Israel has said it warned the Syrian government to withdraw from the south and that it would not allow the Islamist rulers to build up on its borders.

The Israeli military carried out an airstrike on the outskirts of Sweida city as clashes between tribal fighters and Bedouin fighters intensified on Thursday night. The clashes started a wave of tit-for-tat retaliatory violence earlier on in the day after Syrian government forces withdrew from Sweida.

The United States said on Thursday it did not support recent Israeli strikes on Syria and had made clear its displeasure, while Syrian leader Ahmed al-Sharaa accused Israel of trying to fracture his country and promised to protect its Druze minority.

In other developments:

  • Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed regret after Israeli tank fire killed three people at a Catholic church in Gaza on Thursday, blaming a “stray” round for the deaths after a phone call with US president Donald Trump. The Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem said 10 others were also wounded in the attack on the Holy Family Church in Gaza City – the territory’s only Catholic house of worship – including parish priest Father Gabriel Romanelli.

  • A fire has torn through a newly opened shopping mall in the eastern Iraqi city of Kut, killing at least 61 people, as desperate families searched for missing relatives. Officials said many people suffocated in bathrooms, while one person said his five relatives died in a lift. The blaze – the latest in a country where safety regulations are frequently neglected – broke out late on Wednesday, reportedly starting on the first floor before rapidly engulfing the five-storey Corniche Hypermarket mall.

  • Qatar, Egypt and the US presented Israel and Palestinian Islamist militant group Hamas with an updated Gaza ceasefire proposal on Wednesday, Axios reported on Thursday, citing two sources. The two main updates in the latest proposal had to do with the scope of the Israeli military’s withdrawal from Gaza during a ceasefire and the ratio of Palestinian prisoners to be released for each Israeli hostage, Axios reported.

  • Top European diplomats told their Iranian counterpart on Thursday they were determined to reactivate UN sanctions if Tehran does not make progress on a nuclear deal, France’s foreign ministry said. The diplomats, from Britain, France, Germany and the European Union, told Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi of “their determination to use the ’snapback’ mechanism - which allows for the reimposition of all international sanctions against Iran - in the absence of concrete progress” towards a deal on Tehran’s nuclear programme “by the end of the summer”.

  • Four people were killed on Thursday in separate Israeli strikes on south Lebanon, the Lebanese health ministry reported, as Israel said it had targeted two Hezbollah members. The attacks are the latest despite a ceasefire between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah.

  • Europe’s largest missiles maker, MBDA, is selling key components for bombs that have been shipped in their thousands to Israel and used in multiple airstrikes where research indicates Palestinian children and other civilians were killed. A Guardian investigation with the independent newsrooms Disclose and Follow the Money has examined the supply chain behind the GBU-39 bomb, and the ways in which it has been deployed during the conflict.

  • Slovenia announced on Thursday that it would ban two far-right Israeli ministers from entering in what authorities said was a first in the EU. National Security minister Itamar Ben Gvir and finance minister Bezalel Smotrich will be declared “persona non grata,” the Slovenian government said in a statement, accusing them of inciting “extreme violence and serious violations of the human rights of Palestinians” with “their genocidal statements”.

  • Israel has refused to renew visas for the heads of at least three UN agencies in Gaza, which the UN humanitarian chief blames on their work trying to protect Palestinian civilians in the war-torn territory. Visas for the local leaders of the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, known as OCHA; the human rights agency OHCHR; and the agency supporting Palestinians in Gaza, Unrwa, have not been renewed in recent months, UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric confirmed.

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