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US says ‘specific steps’ agreed to end Syria violence after Israeli strikes hit Damascus

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Israel’s military struck the Syrian defence ministry in Damascus and government forces in southern Syria on Wednesday, as deadly sectarian fighting in the mostly Druze province of Suweida continued for a fourth day.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said its forces were “working to save our Druze brothers and to eliminate the regime’s gangs”. The Syrian foreign ministry accused Israel of “treacherous aggression”.

More than 300 people are reported to have been killed in Suweida since Sunday, when clashes between Druze militias and Bedouin tribes erupted.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said he was “very worried” about the violence in the south but believed it would end within hours. “We have agreed on specific steps that will bring this troubling and horrifying situation to an end tonight,” he wrote on X on Wednesday evening.

Syria’s foreign ministry said the country “welcomes the efforts made by the US and Arabian sides” to “resolve the current crisis” peacefully.

Israel has not yet commented on the ceasefire bid.

Syrian troops have started to withdraw from Suweida, according to Syria’s state news agency Sana. It says the military is leaving the city as part of an agreement between the Syrian government and the Suweida’s religious leaders, following the “completion of the army’s pursuit of outlaw groups”.

The Israeli military began striking Syrian security forces and their weapons on Monday, after they were deployed to the city of Suweida for the first time since Sunni Islamist-led rebels overthrew President Bashar al-Assad in December.

Minority groups including the Druze – whose religion is an offshoot of Shia Islam with its own unique identity and beliefs – are suspicious of interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa and his government, despite his pledges to protect them.

Their fears have been heightened by several outbreaks of sectarian violence over the past eight months, including one in May in which dozens of people were reportedly killed in clashes between Druze, security forces, and allied Islamist fighters in Damascus and Suweida.

In the wake of that fighting, the government reached an agreement with Druze militias to hire local security forces in Suweida province from their ranks.

Netanyahu has said he is committed to preventing harm to the Druze in Syria because of their deep ties to those living in Israel and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz wrote on X on Wednesday afternoon that “the warnings in Damascus” had ended and that the Israeli military would “continue to operate vigorously in Suweida to destroy the forces that attacked the Druze until they withdraw completely”.

He later posted that “the painful blows have begun”, above a video clip showing a TV presenter diving under a desk live on camera as an Israeli air strike hits the nearby entrance to the Syrian defence ministry in Umayyad Square, in central Damascus.

Fadi Al Halabi, a London-based Syrian filmmaker who is visiting Damascus, said he was nearby when he heard the Israeli fighter jets approach.

“People’s faces were so afraid. Everyone started running in the street. No-one knew where to go. Suddenly the air strikes began, targeting some of the most crowded areas, including the ministry of defence,” he told the BBC.

The Israeli military said it also struck a “military target in the area” of the presidential palace in the capital, as well as armoured vehicles loaded with heavy machine guns and weapons on their way to Suweida, and firing posts and weapons storage facilities in southern Syria.

Syria’s foreign ministry said the strikes targeted government institutions and civilian facilities in Damascus and Suweida and killed “several innocent civilians”. “This flagrant assault, which forms part of a deliberate policy pursued by the Israeli entity to inflame tensions, spread chaos, and undermine security and stability in Syria, constitutes a blatant violation of the United Nations Charter and international humanitarian law,” it added.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a UK-based monitoring group, meanwhile reported that the humanitarian situation in Suweida city had rapidly deteriorated.

It cited sources as saying there were clashes in several area of the city and that tanks had attacked the national hospital, causing panic among the scores of casualties from the fighting being treated there. They also said there were acute shortages of water and medical supplies.

Later, the Syrian health ministry said government forces had entered the hospital and found “dozens of bodies” after “outlaw groups withdrew”, according to the official Sana news agency.

A man named Hosam told the BBC he was in the centre of Suweida city and had witnessed civilians coming under fire from artillery and snipers.

“I lost my neighbour today on the street. One of the snipers shot him. We tried to get an ambulance to take him to hospital, but we couldn’t,” he said.

The SOHR says more than 300 people have been killed since Sunday in Suweida province.

They include 69 Druze fighters and 40 civilians, 27 of whom were summarily killed by interior ministry and defence ministry forces, according to the group.

At least 165 members of the government forces and 18 Bedouin tribal fighters have also been killed in the clashes, while 10 members of government forces have been killed in Israeli strikes, it says.

The BBC is not able to verify the SOHR’s casualty figures.

The fighting between Bedouin tribes and Druze militias in Suweida is said to have been sparked by the abduction of a Druze merchant on the highway to Damascus last Friday.

On Sunday, armed Druze fighters reportedly encircled and later seized a neighbourhood of Suweida city that is inhabited by Bedouin. The clashes soon spread into other parts of Suweida province, with tribesmen reportedly launching attacks on nearby Druze towns and villages.

Syria’s interior ministry later announced that its forces and those of the defence ministry would intervene and impose order, saying the “dangerous escalation comes in light of the absence of relevant official institutions”.

Earlier this year, Israel’s prime minister demanded the complete demilitarisation of Suweida and two other southern provinces. He said Israel saw President Sharaa’s Sunni Islamist group, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), as a threat. HTS is a former al-Qaeda affiliate that is still designated as a terrorist organisation by the UN and UK, but no longer by the US.

The Israeli military has already carried out hundreds of strikes across Syria to destroy the country’s military assets since the fall of the Assad regime.

And it has sent troops into the UN-monitored demilitarised buffer zone between the occupied Golan Heights and Syria, as well as several adjoining areas and the summit of Mount Hermon.

[BBC]



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Kishan, Hardik, spinners hand India record win

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Ishan Kishan raced to a 20-ball half-century [Cricinfo]

Ishan Kisha set things up with a 20-ball half-century, Hardik Pandya made a 27-ball half-century and picked up  two wickets. Varun Chakravarthy took three wickets in his first ten balls.

India posted a 200-plus total, and didn’t let Namibia get anywhere near them. Their 93-run win was their biggest in T20 World Cups..

And yet, because of the expectations India have carried into this tournament and the scrutiny that follows them everywhere, this match was also about all the things they didn’t do. When Kishan was taking Namibia’s seamers apart, 300 was a not unrealistic possibility. When Hardik was at the crease, 240 seemed on the cards.

That they only made 209 was down mainly to one man. Namibia captain Gerhard  Erasmus, bowling offspin with the widest imaginable range of release points – high-arm and round-arm, sometimes from well behind the bowling crease – made the most of a Delhi pitch with just a bit of grip in it to take 4 for 20 from his four overs. This included two in his final over, the 19th, which also featured a run-out. And that over began a late and only partially explicable collapse from India, who lost 5 for 4 off the last 11 balls of their innings.

For most part, it was normal service for India against an Associate team. But Erasmus and that late collapse briefly brought the contest to life, and perhaps gave India’s future opponents – including Pakistan, who face them on Sunday and have an artful round-arm spinner of their own – a few ideas.

With a stomach bug ruling out Abhishek Sharma, who had been discharged from hospital on the eve of the match, a door reopened for Sanju Samson. He began his World Cup debut with a flurry of effortless hits – three sixes and a crisp drive for four over extra-cover – before falling for 22 off 8, chipping a Ben Shikongo slower ball straight to deep midwicket.

It was brief, exhilarating, and ultimately told us nothing new. Samson plays a high-variance style at the top of the order, and of late his trigger movement – which takes him deep into his crease and leg-side of the ball – has been getting him into early trouble. He adopted the same trigger in this game, whether he was striking the ball sweetly or being dismissed off a shot he didn’t fully commit to.

In Ruben Trumpelmann and JJ Smit, Namibia have a pair of left-arm quicks who can put big teams in trouble on their day. This wasn’t their day; their angle and lengths kept feeding Kishan’s leg-side repertoire, and he took both bowlers apart while rushing to 61 off 24.

India were 86 for 1 after six overs – their biggest powerplay in a T20 World Cup game – and brought up their 100 in 6.5 overs – no team has got to that mark quicker in a T20 World Cup game.

India seemed on course for a monumental total.

Erasmus brought himself on in the eighth over and struck with his first ball, cramping Kishan on the pull to have him caught at deep midwicket.

The wicket transformed the game, as he and left-arm spinner Bernard Scholtz pulled the scoring rate back dramatically. They bowled six overs in tandem from the eighth to the 13th, conceding just 30 runs and picking up two more wickets, with Suryakumar Yadav and Tilak Varma falling in the attempt to hit out.

With the seamers returning, and Hardik and Shivam Dube getting stuck into Scholtz in his final over, India seemed to put their mid-innings lull behind them, scoring 65 from overs 14 to 18. And when Erasmus brought himself back in the 19th, it seemed like he was taking a massive risk, bowling offspin against two set batters with fearsome end-overs records. Hardik pulled the first ball of that over for his fourth six, bringing up his fifty and India’s 200.

The next ball could have gone for six too, only for substitute fielder Dylan Leicher to take a spectacular running, juggling, in-out-in catch on the deep square leg boundary.

Pandemonium ensued. Dube was run out in a mix-up with Rinku Singh. Axar Patel played all around Erasmus’ final delivery, a slow, low-arm grubber. The collapse continued through the final over with Smit – who, along with Trumpelmann, bowled superbly at the death, both nailing their yorkers with a high degree of efficiency – which brought three runs and two wickets.

This was still a daunting total, but imagine the look on Namibia’s face if you’d told them they’d only be chasing 210 when Kishan was blazing away.

Left-right openers Jan Frylinck and Louren Steenkamp looked briefly impressive, both hitting flurries of boundaries off Arshdeep Singh – who went for 36 in three powerplay overs – before falling in the 20s.

They did a good enough job for Namibia to start the eighth over at 67 for 1. Then Varun struck with his first ball, ripping a wrong’un through Steenkamp, bringing a hefty dose of perspective to anyone who might have harboured visions of an upset.

By the time he had bowled ten balls, he had taken three wickets, and the contest was effectively over. Erasmus was still there on the burning deck, having slog-swept Axar for a pair of sixes in ninth over, but the left-arm spinner had his revenge in his next over, and that was pretty much it.

Zane Green and Trumpelmann dragged the game deeper with a seventh-wicket stand of 17 off 27 balls, but once Jasprit Bumrah – playing his first match of the tournament after recovering from illness – ended it with a pinpoint yorker, the end was swift, with Hardik topping off an excellent evening with wickets off successive balls in the 18th over.

Brief scores:
India 209 for 9 in 20 overs (Ishan Kishan 61, Sanju Samson 22, Tilak Varma 25, Suryakumar Yadav 12, Hardik Pandya 52, Shivam Dube 23; Ben Shikongo 1-41, JJ Smit 1-50, Gerhard Erasmus 4-20, Bernard Scholtz 1-41) beat Namibia 116 in 18.2 overs  (Louren Steenkamp 29, Jan Frylink 22, Jan Nicol Loftie-Eaton 13, Gerhard Erasmus 18, Zane Green 11; Varun Chakravarthy  3-07, Axar Patel  2-20, Hardik Pandya 2-21, Arshdeeep Singh 1-36, Shivam Dube 1-11, Jasprit Bumrah 1-20) by 93 runs

[Cricinfo]

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Moscas star as Italy dismantle Nepal for first World Cup win

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Anthony Mosca and Justin Mosca steered Italy to a dominant win [Cricinfo]

In only their second World Cup outing, Italy claimed a clinical first win, silencing a largely Nepal supporting crowd in Mumbai. After the bowlers restricted Nepal effectively on a worn surface, Italy’s opening pair, the Sydney-raised brothers, Justin and Anthony Mosca, then rampaged to the target on their own, both notching half-centuries to seal victory with more than seven overs to spare.

Nepal, having run England so close in their opening match, came in as the favoured side – in terms of both their pedigree at global events and the backing in the stands. But they struggled to get going with the bat after being inserted, with Aasif Sheikh’s 27 off 24 the top score of an underpowered effort. Italy’s spin attack were superb, Crishan Kalugamage , Ben Meneti and JJ Smuts claiming combined figures of 6 for 49 from their 12 overs.

Needing to score at little more than a run a ball, Italy were in no mood to get bogged down. Anthony Mosca hammered his second ball for a towering six over midwicket and, after a slower start, Justin soon joined his brother in targeting the boundary. Justin was the first to 50, from 37 balls, with Anthony bringing up the milestone from just 28 balls with another blazing slog-sweep moments later. It was Anthony who completed the Italian job with a single into the covers to spark jubilation on the sidelines.

The Wankhede is used to dominant displays from a team in blue, but few would have expected such a thrashing to be handed out by the Azzurri. Not least because they came into this match without their captain, Wayne Madsen, and having suffered a heavy defeat to Scotland in their opening match in Kolkata. Nepal, meanwhile, we looking to record their third win in T20 World Cups – and first since 2014.

Given their strengths, Nepal might have fancied their chances defending a low total on the same surface where spin played such a key role in Wednesday’s game between West Indies and England – but any such thoughts were quickly dispelled. Anthony Mosca, the elder brother, was particularly brutal in taking apart an experienced Nepal attack, while both openers used the crease intelligently to target scoring opportunities.

Having needed a few balls to get in, Justin Mosca took 14 off Karan KC’s second over, then the brothers traded sixes off Lalit Rajbanshi’s only over to raise Italy’s 50 at the end of the fourth over. Even the early introduction of Nepal’s trump card, legspinner Sandeep Lamichhane, could not slow the Moscas’ advance, as Anthony cleared long-off and then dragged past short fine leg to leave Italy 68 for 0 at the end of the powerplay.

From there, with 56 required off 84, they could tick along towards individual milestones – and by reaching the target in tandem, they recorded the highest partnership between siblings in all T20 internationals, beating the 119 added by Kathryn and Sarah Bryce for Scotland against Netherlands at the 2019 Women’s T20 World Cup qualifier.

Italy’s victory was a family affair, with Harry Manenti – younger brother of Ben – standing in for the injured Madsen as captain. “Our goal was always to compete at this level,” Harry said afterwards. “We didn’t quite nail it the other day [against Scotland] but we showed the world what we’ve got.”

T20 isn’t the format that naturally lends itself to catenaccio – the famed Italian approach to football which is focused on defence – but Italy went about restricting Nepal superbly after opting to bowl first. The surface was the same as that used for West Indies’ win over England the night before, and stroke-making looked to be a challenge as Ben Manenti started with a maiden over to Kushal Bhurtel.

Bhurtel took eight balls to get off the mark, found the boundary with his ninth and then was dismissed from his tenth, miscuing a slash off Ali Hasan straight to cover point. Nepal were 10 for 1 after three overs, but got going with Aasif Sheikh picking up back-to-back boundaries in Hasan’s second over. Paudel then got the crowd on their feet with sixes off JJ Smuts and Grant Stewart, as they ended the powerplay in better shape on 46 for 1.

However, Italy returned to spin and reapplied the defensive press. Paudel was dismissed in Crishan Kalugamage’s first over, hoicking a googly to long-on, and two balls later both set batters were gone: Aasif Sheikh overbalanced against Manenti’s arm ball, leaving his toe on the line as Gian-Piero Meade whipped off the bails.

A hard-running partnership of 44 off 39 ensued between Aarif Sheikh and Dipendra Singh Airee. Just three boundaries were scored between the end of the powerplay and the fifth ball of the 18th over as Nepal scrambled to get a score on the board. Airee had helped take down Adil Rashid as they gave England a scare, but he struggled for timing this time around before being bowled by Italy’s legspinner, Kalugamage smuggling a googly through the gap to hit off stump.

That triggered a disastrous collapse, from 93 for 3 to 102 for 8. Lokesh Bam hauled Ben Manenti to deep midwicket, Aarif Sheikh picked out deep backward square leg off Smuts and Kalugamage bagged a third when Gulsan Jha holed out to long-on. Some shoddy running did for Nandan Yadav. Karan KC nailed the returning Hasan for six and four to briefly re-energise the Nepali support in the stands, but two wickets in three balls at the start of the 19th saw them bowled out short of their allocation.

Brief scores:
Italy 124 for 0 in 12.4 overs  (Anthony Mosca 62*, Justin Mosca 60*) beat Nepal 123 in 19.3 overs (Aasif Sheikh 20, Rohit Paudel 23, Dipendra Singh Airee 17, Aarif Sheikh 27, Karan KC 18; Ben Manenti 2-09, Ali Hasan 1-34,JJ Smuts 1-22, Crishan Kalugamage 3-18, Jasprit Singh 1-08) by 10 wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Kim Jong Un chooses teen daughter as heir, says Seoul

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has selected his daughter as his heir, South Korea’s spy agency told lawmakers on Thursday.

Little is known about Kim Ju Ae, who in recent months has been pictured beside her father in high-profile events like a visit to Beijing in September- her first known trip abroad.

The National Intelligence Service (NIS) said it took a “range of circumstances” into account including her increasingly prominent public presence at official events” in making this assessment.

The NIS also said it would keep close tabs on whether she will attend the North’s party congress later this month – its largest political event that is held once every five years.

The party Congress is where Pyongyang is expected to give more details about priorities like foreign policy, war planning and nuclear ambitions for the next five years.

On Thursday lawmaker Lee Seong-kwen told reporters that Ju Ae, who was previously described by the NIS as being “trained” to be a successor, was now at the stage of “successor designation”.

“As Kim Ju Ae has shown her presence at various events, including the founding anniversary of the Korean People’s Army and her visit to the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, and signs have been detected of her voicing her opinion on certain state policies, the NIS believes she has now entered the stage of being designated as successor,” Lee said.

Ju Ae is the only known child of Kim Jong Un and his wife, Ri Sol Ju. The NIS believes Kim Jong Un has an older son, but this son has never been acknowledged nor shown on North Korean media.

News of Ju Ae’s existence first emerged through an unlikely source: the American basketball player Dennis Rodman, who revealed to The Guardian newspaper back in 2013 that he “held baby Ju Ae” during a trip to the secretive state.

Ju Ae – who is believed to be 13 – made her first appearance on state television in 2022. She was shown inspecting North Korea’s latest intercontinental ballistic missile while holding her father’s hand.

She has since made frequent appearances on on state media, softening her father’s image of a ruthless dictator. She accompanied him to Beijing for China’s largest-ever military parade, where she was seen stepping off his armoured train at Beijing Railway Station.

She is often seen wearing her hair long, which is forbidden for her peers, and wearing designer clothes, which are out of reach for most in her country.

Another lawmaker, Park Sun-won said the role Ju Ae had taken on during public events indicated that she has started to provide policy input and is being treated as the de facto second-highest leader.

The North Korean power had passed down the three generations of the Kim family, and it is widely believed that Kim Jong Un will pass on the throne to Ju Ae.

In recent months, she was shown standing taller than her father, walking beside him, rather than following him.

In North Korea, where photos published by the state media are believed to carry a great symbolic weight, it is rare for individuals other than Kim Jong Un to be positioned equally prominently in the frame.

Although the South Korean spy agency now believes Ju Ae is the designated heir, it still raises questions.

It is puzzling why Ju Ae, a daughter, would be selected as the heir above an older son in North Korea’s deeply patriarchal society.

Many defectors and analysts had previously dismissed the idea of a woman leading North Korea as an unlikely scenario, referring to the country’s entrenched traditional gender roles. But Kim Jong Un’s sister – Kim Yo Jong – does offer a precedent for female authority in the regime.

Kim Yo Jong currently holds a senior position in the Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea, and is reported to have influence over her brother.

However, it is also a mystery why Kim Jong Un, who is still young and appears relatively healthy, is already designating a 13-year-old child as his heir now.

It is unclear what changes Ju Ae’s succession may bring to North Korea.

Many North Koreans hoped that Kim Jong Un, a Western-educated young man, would open their country up to the outside when he succeeded his father.

Yet such hope was unfulfilled. Whatever plans this teenager may have for her country, she would likely have the singular power to shape it however she likes.

[BBC]

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