News
Eleven Killed in Gaza Strikes as Ceasefire Tensions Persist
Eleven Palestinians were killed in Israeli strikes on Gaza on Sunday morning, according to local civil defence and health officials, underscoring the fragility of an already strained ceasefire.
The Israel Defense Forces said the strikes targeted militant positions in response to alleged ceasefire violations by Hamas. It stated that fighters were killed after emerging from a tunnel into an area of the strip under Israeli military control.
The Palestinian Red Crescent reported that a strike on a tent encampment in northern Gaza killed at least six people, while another attack in the south left five dead.
Since the ceasefire came into force on 10 October, both Israel and Hamas have accused each other of near-daily breaches. Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry says at least 600 people have been killed during this period.
Earlier this month, local officials reported that at least 32 people died in a broader wave of Israeli air strikes across the territory.
The latest escalation comes as preparations continue for the second phase of a US-brokered ceasefire agreement.
Last month, US President Donald Trump announced the creation of a new body, the Board of Peace, which has been granted a mandate from the United Nations Security Council to establish an international force. The mission is intended to secure border areas in Gaza and oversee the disarmament of Hamas.
The board, scheduled to hold its first meeting in Washington on 19 February, is also tasked with supervising the formation of a technocratic Palestinian government and coordinating post-war reconstruction efforts.
As part of the next phase of the ceasefire plan, Indonesia — a member of the Board of Peace — has announced plans to deploy 8,000 troops to Gaza.
The conflict was triggered by the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which around 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken hostage.
Israel responded with a military campaign in Gaza that has since resulted in more than 71,820 deaths, according to the territory’s health ministry.
Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu travelled to Washington last week for talks with Trump, with discussions focusing in part on efforts to curb Iran’s nuclear programme — which Tehran maintains is solely for civilian use.
Netanyahu was expected to urge the US administration to pursue an agreement aimed at halting Iran’s uranium enrichment and limiting its ballistic missile capabilities, as broader regional security concerns continue to shape diplomatic efforts alongside the ceasefire process.
News
US Court Unseals Purported Jeffrey Epstein Suicide Note
A US judge has ordered the release of a handwritten document said to have been written by disgraced financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein shortly before his death in prison in 2019.
The note, which was unsealed on Wednesday, was reportedly discovered by Epstein’s former cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione, after Epstein allegedly attempted suicide in July 2019, about a month before he was later found dead in his jail cell.
Authorities ruled Epstein’s death a suicide at the time as he awaited trial on federal sex-trafficking charges, though the case has remained the subject of widespread public scrutiny and conspiracy theories.
According to the newly released court filing, the handwritten note contains several short statements, including: “They investigated me for month – FOUND NOTHING!!!” and “It is a treat to be able to choose one’s time to say goodbye.”
The note also reportedly says: “Watcha want me to do – Bust out cryin!! NO FUN – NOT WORTH IT!”
The document, consisting of just seven handwritten lines, offers limited context and leaves uncertainty about its intended meaning.
The note had previously been sealed as part of criminal proceedings involving Tartaglione, who was being held in the same jail unit as Epstein while awaiting trial for four murders. Tartaglione, a former police officer, was later convicted in the killings.
Epstein had at one point accused Tartaglione of assaulting him in jail, allegations Tartaglione denied. The former inmate publicly discussed the existence of the note during a podcast appearance last year.
Court filings released alongside the note included a May 2021 letter from former Tartaglione attorney John A Wieder, who described the document as “the original” note that US District Judge Kenneth M Karas had ordered submitted to the court.
The United States Department of Justice did not immediately comment on the release of the document.
Epstein, who had longstanding connections to wealthy and influential figures, was arrested in 2019 on charges of sexually exploiting underage girls. His death inside a Manhattan federal jail before trial ended the criminal proceedings against him but intensified public interest in the broader investigation surrounding his associates and activities.
News
WHO Says Global Risk Remains Low Despite Hantavirus Cruise Ship Outbreak
Health authorities are intensifying efforts to trace passengers exposed to hantavirus following an outbreak aboard the expedition cruise ship MV Hondius that has left three people dead and several others ill after the vessel travelled through remote regions of South America.
The outbreak has sparked an international response as passengers from the ship have already returned to countries including the UK, South Africa, the Netherlands, the United States and Switzerland.
According to health officials, three passengers died either while onboard or after leaving the ship, while four others were medically evacuated for treatment. The World Health Organization confirmed that eight cases linked to the vessel — three confirmed and five suspected — have so far been identified.
Despite the seriousness of the outbreak, the WHO stressed that the virus does not pose the same level of global threat as highly contagious respiratory diseases.
“This is not Covid, this is not influenza, it spreads very, very differently,” said Maria Van Kerkhove during a briefing on Thursday.
Experts believe the outbreak involves the Andes strain of hantavirus, one of the rare hantavirus strains capable of spreading between humans. However, officials say the risk of widespread international transmission remains low because the virus is far less contagious than illnesses such as COVID-19 or Measles.
Hantavirus infections are usually linked to rodents, with people becoming infected after inhaling virus particles from rodent urine, saliva or droppings. Investigators are still working to determine how the outbreak on board began.
The cruise had reportedly visited remote wildlife areas in South America, raising the possibility that a passenger may have been exposed to the virus before boarding or during excursions ashore.
Health experts say some of the cases on the ship may have resulted from close human contact in the vessel’s confined environment. Cruise ships often involve shared dining spaces, cabins and indoor facilities that can increase the risk of infection spreading among passengers.
Previous outbreaks involving the Andes strain in parts of Argentina and Chile have shown that human-to-human transmission can occur, although usually after prolonged close contact.
Symptoms of hantavirus often begin with fever, fatigue, headaches and muscle aches before progressing in severe cases to breathing difficulties and serious lung complications.
Authorities across several countries are now monitoring passengers and close contacts as part of efforts to prevent further spread while reassuring the public that the overall risk remains low.
News
Trump Pauses ‘Project Freedom’ Mission in Strait of Hormuz Days After Launch
Donald Trump has announced a pause in a planned U.S. military operation aimed at escorting stranded commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, just 50 hours after unveiling the initiative.
The operation, dubbed “Project Freedom,” had been introduced on Sunday as a response to escalating tensions with Iran, which has effectively restricted access to the vital waterway amid its conflict involving Israel.
The strait is one of the world’s most critical transit routes, carrying roughly 20% of global oil and gas supplies. Iran’s threats to vessels navigating the passage have driven sharp increases in oil prices and raised concerns about broader economic disruption.
However, in a post on Truth Social, Trump said the mission would be put on hold “for a short period of time,” without providing detailed reasoning for the sudden shift.
The decision came shortly after senior administration officials, including Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, had publicly reinforced the plan, describing it as a demonstration of U.S. leadership and stability in safeguarding global commerce.
Reports from U.S. media outlets suggested that a potential diplomatic framework with Iran may be emerging, raising hopes that a negotiated solution could ease tensions and reopen the strait without military intervention.
Despite that, Trump signalled caution about the prospects of a deal, warning that any agreement remains uncertain.
In his latest comments, he said that assuming Iranian cooperation was “a big assumption,” adding that failure to reach a deal could lead to renewed military action at a level “much higher and intensity” than earlier operations, including Operation Epic Fury.
The abrupt pause has left the situation largely unchanged on the ground. More than 1,000 vessels remain stranded in the Gulf region, with crews still awaiting safe passage.
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