Hezbollah says Lebanon move on army plan is 'opportunity,' urges Israel to commit to ceasefireNew Foto - Hezbollah says Lebanon move on army plan is 'opportunity,' urges Israel to commit to ceasefire

BEIRUT (Reuters) -Hezbollah official Mahmoud Qmati told Reuters on Saturday that the group considered Friday's cabinet session on an army plan to establish a state monopoly on arms "an opportunity to return to wisdom and reason, preventing the country from slipping into the unknown". Lebanon's cabinet on Friday welcomed a plan by the army that would disarm Hezbollah and said the military would begin executing it, without setting a timeframe for implementation and cautioning that the army had limited capabilities. But it said continued Israeli military operations in Lebanon would hamper the army's progress. Speaking to reporters after the meeting, Lebanese information minister Paul Morcos stopped short of saying the cabinet had formally approved the plan. Qmati told Reuters that Hezbollah had reached its assessment based on the government's declaration on Friday that further implementation of a U.S. roadmap on the matter was dependent on Israel's commitment. He said that without Israel halting strikes and withdrawing its troops from southern Lebanon, Lebanon's implementation of the plan should remain "suspended until further notice." Lebanon's cabinet last month tasked the army with coming up with a plan that would establish a state monopoly on arms and approved a U.S. roadmap aimed at disarming Hezbollah in exchange for a halt to Israeli military operations in Lebanon. Qmati said that Hezbollah "unequivocally rejected" those two decisions and expected the Lebanese government to draw up a national defense strategy. Israel last week signaled it would scale back its military presence in southern Lebanon if the army took action to disarm Hezbollah. Meanwhile, it has continued its strikes, killing four people on Wednesday. A national divide over Hezbollah's disarmament has taken centre stage in Lebanon since last year's devastating war with Israel, which upended a power balance long dominated by the Iran-backed Shi'ite Muslim group. Lebanon is under pressure from the U.S., Saudi Arabia and Hezbollah's domestic rivals to disarm the group. But Hezbollah has pushed back, saying it would be a serious misstep to even discuss disarmament while Israel continues its air strikes on Lebanon and occupies swathes of territory in the south. Hezbollah Secretary General Naim Qassem last month raised the spectre of civil war, warning the government against trying to confront the group and saying street protests were possible. (Reporting by Laila Bassam, Writing by Maya Gebeily, Editing by Jan Harvey and Sharon Singleton)

Hezbollah says Lebanon move on army plan is 'opportunity,' urges Israel to commit to ceasefire

Hezbollah says Lebanon move on army plan is 'opportunity,' urges Israel to commit to ceasefire BEIRUT (Reuters) -Hezbollah official ...
Japan says US trade deal not settled, awaits pharma, chip ordersNew Foto - Japan says US trade deal not settled, awaits pharma, chip orders

Japan's broad trade agreement with the United States is "not settled," as Washington has not issued expected presidential orders on tariffs for pharmaceuticals and semiconductors, Tokyo's top tariff negotiator said on Saturday. "While a presidential order has been issued concerning adjustments to general tariffs as well as automobile and auto parts tariffs, presidential orders for most-favoured-nation status for pharmaceuticals and semiconductors have not been issued," Ryosei Akazawa told reporters after returning from talks in Washington. "Therefore, it cannot be said that this is settled," said Akazawa, Japan's minister for economic policy, adding that Tokyo would continue to press for the remaining orders. Akazawa said Japan would begin a full analysis of the economic impact of the U.S. auto tariff changes and how Japan's competitive trade conditions compare to other countries. (Reporting by Tokyo Newsroom; Editing by William Mallard)

Japan says US trade deal not settled, awaits pharma, chip orders

Japan says US trade deal not settled, awaits pharma, chip orders Japan's broad trade agreement with the United States is "not settl...
Factbox-And the next Fed chair is? Trump's short listNew Foto - Factbox-And the next Fed chair is? Trump's short list

(Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump is considering three finalists for Federal Reserve chair to replace Jerome Powell, whom Trump has criticized all year for not cutting rates as he has demanded. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who is helping run the search, says the Fed's "policymaking arrogance" has caused missteps and on Friday called for a full review of how the central bank does its job, from how it sets interest rates to how it manages its police force. Here is a look at recent comments by the three candidates, as well as the current odds on each in online betting markets. CHRISTOPHER WALLER, 66, FED GOVERNOR Chief research economist at the St. Louis Fed until Trump put him on the Fed's Board of Governors in Washington 2020, Waller addressed Fed independence in his first speech as a Fed policymaker. He was earlier than most of his colleagues in pushing the Fed to raise rates to fight fast-rising inflation in 2021. He argued that rate hikes would not necessarily drive up unemployment, a forecast that proved correct. This year he has been ahead of his colleagues in calling for policy easing. He dissented in July when the Fed decided not to cut rates. Betting odds: 28% (Polymarket), 27% (Kalshi) Key quote: "Based on what I know today, I would support a 25-basis-point cut... While there are signs of a weakening labor market, I worry that conditions could deteriorate further and quite rapidly, and I think it is important that the (Fed's rate-setting committee) not wait until such a deterioration is under way and risk falling behind the curve in setting appropriate monetary policy." August 28, 2025, speech to the Economic Club of Miami. KEVIN HASSETT, 63, DIRECTOR OF THE NATIONAL ECONOMIC COUNCIL Hassett is an economist and long-time adviser to Republican officials and conservative think tanks who entered Trump's circle during the president's first term, leading the White House Council of Economic Advisers from 2017 to 2019. As the White House's chief economic adviser now, he is a strong advocate for Trump's tariffs and other economic policies. He has echoed Trump's criticism of the Powell-led Fed and supported Trump's firing of the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics after the agency in August sharply revised down job gains from previous months. Betting odds: 18% (Polymarket), 30% (Kalshi) Key quote: "The frustration that the president has is that he believes that other countries have cut rates and the U.S. hasn't and he worries, just as with the BLS, he worries that maybe there's some partisan calculus going on here... It's very disappointing that the Fed would be putting an explanation out there for these unusually high rates that there's this massive uncertainty and massive inflation coming from tariffs without actually showing us their work." August 3, 2025. KEVIN WARSH, 55, FORMER FED GOVERNOR, VISITING FELLOW AT STANFORD UNIVERSITY'S HOOVER INSTITUTION Appointed to the Fed by President George W. Bush in 2006, Warsh was Fed Chair Ben Bernanke's lead liaison to Wall Street during the 2007-2009 financial crisis. He soured on the centerpiece of the Fed's crisis-fighting bond-buying program, saying it inappropriately inserted the central bank into the fiscal realm. He quit in 2011, cutting short a term that would have run to 2018. Trump nearly picked him to be Fed chair in 2018 and later said he wished he had. Warsh has used public appearances and opinion pieces since then to ramp up his criticism of the Fed. Betting odds: 13% (Polymarket), 19% (Kalshi) Key quote: "We can begin reform at the Fed with a rate cut - which is just a first step to regime change... Take a little of this looseness out of financial markets by getting the Fed out of the fiscal business, out of the political business; shrink that and then redeploy some of that liquidity to people who need it most in the real economy. I think the Fed has the balance wrong; a rate cut is the beginning of the process to get the balance right. A strong real economy is what we need so this can be a golden age." July 17, 2025 in CNBC interview. (Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by William Mallard)

Factbox-And the next Fed chair is? Trump's short list

Factbox-And the next Fed chair is? Trump's short list (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump is considering three finalists for Federal ...
Displaced Bedouin families in limbo as Syrian government and Druze authorities remain at oddsNew Foto - Displaced Bedouin families in limbo as Syrian government and Druze authorities remain at odds

ABTAA, Syria (AP) — The classrooms at a school building in Abtaa, in Syria's southern province of Daraa, have turned into living quarters housing three or four families each. Because of the lack of privacy and close quarters, the woman and children sleep inside, with the men bedding down outside in the courtyard. The Bedouin families evacuated their villages duringsectarian fightingmore than a month ago in neighboring Sweida province. Since then, the central government in Damascus has been in a standoff with local Druze authorities in Sweida, while the displaced have been left in a state of limbo. Munira al-Hamad, a 56-year-old from the village of al-Kafr in the Sweida countryside, is staying with her family in the school, which is set to reopen this month. If that happens, she doesn't know where her family will go. "We don't want to live in tents. We want the government to find us houses or someplace fit to live," she said. "It's impossible for anyone to return home. Just because you're Muslim, they'll see you as the enemy in Sweida." Conflict displaces tens of thousands What began last month with small-scale clashes between local Sunni Muslim Bedouin clans and members of the Druze sect — who are a minority in Syria but the majority in Sweida — escalated into heavy fighting between Bedouins and government fighters on one side and Druze armed groups on the other.Israel intervenedon the side of the Druze, launching airstrikes. Hundreds of civilians, mostly Druze, were killed and Sweida has remained under what residents describe as a siege since then, with limited aid and supplies going in. Amnesty International reported this week that it had documented 46 cases of "Druze men and women deliberately and unlawfully killed," in some cases by "government and government-affiliated forces in military and security uniforms." Although the fightinghas subsided, more than 164,000 people remain displaced by the conflict, according to U.N. figures. They include Druze internally displaced within Sweida and Bedouins who fled or were evacuated from the province and now see little prospect of going back, raising the prospect of permanent demographic change. Al-Hamad said her family "remained under siege for 15 days, without bread or anything coming in" before the Syrian Arab Red Crescent evacuated them. Her cousin and a neighbor were attacked by armed men as they fled and had their cars stolen with all the belongings they were transporting, she said. Jarrah al-Mohammad, 24, said dozens of residents trekked overnight on foot to escape when the fighting reached their village, Sahwat Balata. Nine people from the area were gunned down by Druze militants, including three children under the age of 15, all of them unarmed, he said. The Associated Press could not independently verify the account. "No one has gone back. There are houses that they burned and destroyed and stole the furniture," he said. "We can't return to Sweida — there's no longer security between us and the Druze … And we're the minority in Sweida." At a hotel in the Damascus suburb of Sayyida Zeinab that has been converted into a shelter for the displaced, Hamoud al-Mukhmas and his wife, Munira al-Sayyad, are mourning their 21- and 23-year-old sons. They said the two were shot and killed by militants, along with Hamoud's niece and cousin, while unarmed and trying to flee their home in the town of Shahba. Al-Sayyad is unhappy in the hotel room, where she has no kitchen to cook for her younger children. The family said food aid is sporadic. "I need assistance and I need money — we don't have a house," al-Mukhmas said. "I don't think we'll go back — we'd go back and find the Druze living in our houses." Few answers from the government Government officials have insisted that the displacement is temporary, but have not offered any "clarity on for how long people will be displaced, what are the mechanisms or plans or strategies that they have in order to bring them back," said Haid Haid, a senior research fellow at the Arab Reform Initiative and the Chatham House think tank. Returning the displaced to their homes will likely require a political solution that appears to be far off, given that the government in Damascus and de facto authorities in Sweida are not even holding direct talks, he said. SheikhHikmat al-Hijri, a prominent Druze leader in Sweida, is calling for independence for southern Syria — a demand rejected by Damascus — and recently announced the formation of a "national guard" formed from several Druze armed factions. Government officials declined to comment on their plans for addressing the displacement. For some, the situation recalls unpleasant memories from Syria's nearly 14-year civil war, when fighters and civilians opposed to former President Bashar Assad were evacuated from areas retaken from rebels by government forces. Thegreen busesthat transported them became for many a symbol of exile and defeat. Intercommunal tensions now harder to solve The Bedouins in Sweida, who historically work as livestock herders, consider themselves the original inhabitants of the land before the Druze came in the 18th century, fleeing violence in what is now Lebanon. The two communities have largely coexisted, but there have been periodic tensions and violence. In 2000, a Bedouin killed a Druze man in a land dispute and government forces intervened, shooting Druze protesters. After a 2018 Islamic State group attack on the Druze in Sweida that killed more than 200 people, the Druze accused the Bedouins of helping the militants. The latest escalation began with a Bedouin tribe in Sweida setting up a checkpoint and attacking and robbing a Druze man, which triggered tit-for-tat attacks and kidnappings. But tensions had been rising before that. A Bedouin man displaced from al-Kafr, who spoke on condition of anonymity out of security fears, said that his brother was kidnapped and held for ransom in 2018 by an armed group affiliated with al-Hijri. On July 12, a day before the clashes started, he said, a group of armed men came to the family's home and threatened his father, forcing him to sign a paper giving up possession of the house. The Druze "are not all bad people," he said. "Some of them supported us kindly, but there are also bad militants." He threatened that "if the state does not find a solution after our homes have been occupied, we will take our rights into our own hands." Al-Sayyad, the mother of the two young men killed, also took a vengeful tone. "I want the government to do to these people what they did to my sons," she said. Haid said that intercommunal tensions could be resolved with time but have now become secondary to the larger political issues between Damascus and Sweida. "Unless there is some sort of dialogue in order to overcome those difference, it's difficult to imagine how the local disputes will be solved," he said.

Displaced Bedouin families in limbo as Syrian government and Druze authorities remain at odds

Displaced Bedouin families in limbo as Syrian government and Druze authorities remain at odds ABTAA, Syria (AP) — The classrooms at a school...
Iran paves over mass grave of 1979 revolution victims, turning it into a parking lotNew Foto - Iran paves over mass grave of 1979 revolution victims, turning it into a parking lot

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — A desert-like patch of sand and scrawny trees in the largest cemetery in Iran's capital has been the final resting place for decades for some of the thousands killed in the mass executions that followedIran's 1979 Islamic Revolution. Now, Lot 41 at the sprawlingBehesht-e Zahra cemeteryin Tehran is becoming a parking lot, with their remains likely beneath asphalt. Images from Planet Labs PBC show the parking lot being laid over the site, where opponents of Iran's nascent theocracy and others were rapidly buried following their executions at gunpoint or by hanging. The site, long monitored by surveillance cameras searching for any sign of dissent or remembrance at what officials have referred to as the "scorched section," has seen state-sponsored demolition in the past, with grave markers vandalized and overturned. Iranian officials have acknowledged the recent decision to build the parking, without going into detail about those buried there. That's as a United Nations special rapporteur in 2024 described Iran's destruction of graveyards as an effort to "conceal or erase data that could serve as potential evidence to avoid legal accountability" over its actions. "Most of the graves and gravestones of dissidents were desecrated, and the trees in the section were deliberately dried out," said Shahin Nasiri, a lecturer at the University of Amsterdam who has researched Lot 41. "The decision to convert this section into a parking lot fits into this broader pattern and represents the final phase of the destruction process." Last week, both a Tehran deputy mayor and the cemetery's manager acknowledged the plans to create a parking lot on the site. "In this place, hypocrites of the early days of the revolution were buried and it has remained without change for years," Tehran's deputy mayor Davood Goudarzi told journalists in footage aired by state television. "We proposed that the authorities reorganize the space. Since we needed a parking lot, the permission for the preparation of the space was received. The job is ongoing in a precise and smart way." Satellite images show construction The satellite photos show the work began in earnest at the start of August. An Aug. 18 image shows about half of Lot 41 freshly paved over, with construction material still on site. Trucks and piles of asphalt can be seen at the site, suggesting work continued. The reformist newspaper Shargh quoted Mohammad Javad Tajik, who oversees the Behesht-e Zahra cemetery, as saying the parking lot would help people visit a neighboring lot, where authorities plan to bury those killed in theIran-Israel war in June. A major airstrike campaign by Israelkilled prominent military generals and others, with government officials putting the death toll atmore than 1,060 people killed, with an activist group putting it at over 1,190. The decision to repurpose the graveyard appears to clash with Iran's own regulations, which allow for a cemetery to repurpose land where internments took place after more than 30 years — as long as families of the dead agree with the decision. An outspoken lawyer in Iran, Mohsen Borhani, publicly criticized the decision to pave over the graveyard as neither moral nor legal in an interview with Shargh. "The piece was not only for executed and political people. Ordinary people were buried there, too," he reportedly said. It remains unclear whether human remains sit beneath the layer of asphalt or if Iranian authorities moved the bones of the dead there. However, Iran has destroyed other graveyards in recent years for those killed in its 1988 mass execution that saw thousands put to death, leaving their bones there. Authorities have also vandalized cemeteries for theBaha'i, a religious minority in the country long targeted, and those home to protesters who have died in recent nationwide protests against Iran's theocracy from the 2009 Green Movement to the2022 Mahsa Amini demonstrations. "Impunity for atrocities and crimes against humanity has been building for decades in the Islamic Republic," said Hadi Ghaemi, the executive director of the New York-based Center for Human Rights in Iran. "There is a direct line between the massacres of the 1980s, the gunning down of demonstrators in 2009, and the mass killings of protesters in 2019 and 2022." Massive cemetery is the final resting place for many Behesht-e Zahra, or the "Paradise of Zahra," opened in 1970 on what was then the rural outskirts of Tehran. As hundreds of thousands of Iranians flooded into the capital under the shah as the country's oil wealth skyrocketed, pressure on Tehran's cemeteries had grown to a point that the burgeoning metropolis needed a place for all of its dead as well. The cemetery has long been a resting place for some of the most famous Iranians since — and a point where history turned for the country. On his return to Iran in 1979 after years in exile,Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeinitraveled first to the cemetery, where some of those killed in the uprising against the shah had been buried. Khomeini's cleric courts later issued death sentences for those now interred at Lot 41. After his death in 1989, Iran built a towering, golden-domed mausoleum for Khomeini connected to the cemetery. As Behesht-e Zahra grew, Lot 41 found itself surrounded by an ever-expanding number of lots for burials. Nasiri said his research with others suggests there are 5,000 to 7,000 burial sites within Lot 41 of those Iran "considered religious outlaws," whether communists, militants, monarchists or others. "Many survivors and family members of the victims are still searching for the graves of their loved ones," Nasiri said. "They seek justice and aim to hold the perpetrators accountable. The deliberate destruction of these burial sites adds an additional obstacle to efforts of truth-finding and the pursuit of historical justice."

Iran paves over mass grave of 1979 revolution victims, turning it into a parking lot

Iran paves over mass grave of 1979 revolution victims, turning it into a parking lot DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — A desert-like patch ...

 

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