Palestinian fears grow amid rising Israeli settler attacks

There’s been a dramatic rise in violence carried out by extremist Israeli settlers against Palestinian civilians in the occupied West Bank this year, with more than 100 incidents reported a month according to the UN. It warns that some 400 people have been driven from their land since the start of 2022.

Smashed cars and homes and shops set ablaze. Recent months have seen some of the worst ever scenes of settler violence in the occupied West Bank.

Some have turned deadly.

Posters in remembrance of 19-year-old Qusai Maatan, showing him astride his white Arabian horse, now surround a small roundabout in the village of Burqa, set among olive trees in the rolling hills north-east of Ramallah.

“He had a deeply caring nature. He’d always greet me warmly and check on me in a thoughtful way,” says his grandfather, Abdul Moneim Maatan, his voice cracking. “His absence leaves a huge void.”

On the evening Qusai was shot dead by an armed settler, his family say he had gone for a picnic with friends at the edge of the village. Locals describe how a confrontation with radical Israelis living nearby escalated quickly. Stones were thrown and at least one settler opened fire. In an unusually strong rebuke, Israel’s closest ally, the US, described what happened here as “Jewish terrorism”.

Two Israeli settlers and at least five Palestinians were arrested by Israeli security forces, who say they are still investigating the incident.

Settler attacks have become more common, says a young relative of Qusai, who is afraid to give her name.

“No-one knows who the next Qusai is going to be,” she adds. “No-one is going to protect us. If, God forbid, there are any other confrontations or attacks, our government can’t legally do anything.”

While the Palestinian Authority (PA) governs in big Palestinian cities, Israel retains near exclusive control of 60% of the West Bank (known as Area C), presiding over law enforcement, planning and construction. An estimated 370,000 Palestinians live in Area C, which includes Burqa, and half a million Israeli citizens. Israel’s new government, its most right-wing and nationalist to date, has openly declared its intention to double the number of settlers to one million.

Most of the world sees settlements as illegal under international law, though Israel disagrees.

Already 2023 has set an all-time record for settlement construction in the West Bank and for the legitimisation of outposts, according to settlement watchdog Peace Now. Outposts are often set up with a wink and a nod from Israeli authorities but without official permission.

In recent months, the Israeli government – which includes long-time settler activists in key cabinet posts – has completed or begun to legalise 15 settler outposts that were previously illegal under Israeli law, Peace Now says.

What looks like an official signpost leads me to the settler outpost of Oz Zion in an olive grove on a hilltop above Burqa. It was built on privately owned, officially registered land belonging to Palestinians in the village. There is a collection of white, prefabricated buildings, a rudimentary play area for the young children of six families which I am told now live here, and a pen of sheep.

“Our vision is that all of the land of Israel will be settled with Jews. It’s our basic right. Our right is in the Bible,” says Yehuda Lieber, a 26-year-old father of two. He is encouraged by the fact that some of those in government share his ideology and believes that eventually Israel will retroactively authorise his outpost.

“We have an expectation from the government that was elected by right-wing votes to settle the land, expand the settlements, and not hurt them,” he says.

With a series of new outposts recently set up, he tells me the settlers’ strategy is to block Palestinian statehood. Creating an independent Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza, with East Jerusalem as its capital, is a long-time goal of the internationally backed two-state solution to end the decades-old Israel-Palestinian conflict.

“What we’re doing here and in other places that exist is to halt the establishment of the Palestinian state, which is being built in practice without asking anyone,” Mr Lieber says.

Anti-occupation groups argue that as settlers have become emboldened by the current Israeli coalition government, settler attacks on Palestinians and their property have risen to a record high. The trend comes against the background of a surge in tensions in the West Bank this year, with near-nightly Israeli military raids and a spate of Palestinian assaults.

It has been the deadliest year for Palestinians and Israelis here for nearly two decades. More than 180 Palestinians have been killed in the territory – mostly fighters, but also many civilians, according to figures collated from PA sources. On the Israeli side, some 32 people have been killed, nearly all civilians – about half in the West Bank, excluding East Jerusalem.

Some deadly Palestinian militant attacks have led to violent rampages carried out in revenge by settlers, as seen in Huwara in February, following the shooting of two brothers from a nearby settlement, and Turmus Ayya in June, after four settlers were killed outside a petrol station. Both of those assaults left a Palestinian dead. The top Israeli military spokesman recently commented that the spike in settler attacks, which he called “nationalist terrorism”, was in turn driving Palestinians to attack Israelis.

Official figures from Israel’s internal security agency registered a 15% increase in individual Palestinian attacks on civilians and soldiers across Israel and the Occupied Territories in the first seven months of the year compared to the same period last year. In 2022, the agency counted 1,317 uses of fire or pipe bombs, shootings, arson, and stabbings compared to 1,522 in 2023.

Israeli security forces have come under increased scrutiny with the rise in settler violence. They are often criticised for failing to intervene effectively and sometimes for apparently supporting acts of harassment.

The UN’s humanitarian agency (OCHA) says it has registered over 700 incidents this year where settler violence has resulted in Palestinian casualties, damage to property or both. The number is the highest since it began recording such acts in 2006.

“Just to give you an idea, in 2021 there was an average of one incident of settler violence a day that we were recording. In 2022, there were two incidents of settler violence and in 2023 we have an average of three incidents of settler violence a day,” says Andrea De Domenico, head of OCHA in the occupied Palestinian territory.

Mr de Domenico warns that Palestinian Bedouin and other herding communities in Area C are particularly vulnerable.

“We’re seeing more and more pressure on Palestinian communities to leave their land,” he tells me. “Recently there are three communities that have been completely removed.”

At the start of August, the remaining families from al-Qabun, a herding community in the central West Bank, dismantled their homes and sheep pens to move to safer places. A total of 89 people were forced away, blaming Israeli demolition threats and settler intimidation.

“They used to stop outside our house at midnight and honk their car horns or send kids to harass us. They would scare the sheep and block them in, or empty out our water tank,” says Ammar Abu Alia.

He worries for the future as he squeezes more than 100 of his flock into a pen on land which he is only able to rent temporarily. “What will we do?” he asks. “We’ll be forced to sell. We’ll have no livelihood.”

Like the rest of her extended family, Nida Abu Alia – Ammar’s sister – is now living in cramped accommodation in a village close to the land they lived on for generations. The mother of nine is bitter about the relative lack of attention paid to her community’s plight.

“People said that this is Area C, but that’s not right. It’s the land of Palestine,” she says. “Our displacement is a great loss. People must realise what’s happening. If they don’t, we will lose a lot.”

Human rights groups warn that the forced transfer of Palestinians from their homes on occupied land could amount to a war crime by Israel, if it is proven that official steps amount to coercion.

At the same time, settlers and their supporters in the Israeli government are seeking to take advantage of the new political reality. Huge investment is planned to expand settlements and improve their infrastructure, cementing a Jewish presence in the West Bank and changing the landscape.

With their own leaders too weak to effect a serious change in course and a sense that settlers enjoy impunity, Palestinian anger and resentment is growing.

The ongoing developments only look set to deepen bitter hostilities.

Source: BBC

Palestinian fears grow amid rising Israeli settler attacks

There’s been a dramatic rise in violence carried out by extremist Israeli settlers against Palestinian civilians in the occupied West Bank this year, with more than 100 incidents reported a month according to the UN. It warns that some 400 people have been driven from their land since the start of 2022.

Smashed cars and homes and shops set ablaze. Recent months have seen some of the worst ever scenes of settler violence in the occupied West Bank.

Some have turned deadly.

Posters in remembrance of 19-year-old Qusai Maatan, showing him astride his white Arabian horse, now surround a small roundabout in the village of Burqa, set among olive trees in the rolling hills north-east of Ramallah.

“He had a deeply caring nature. He’d always greet me warmly and check on me in a thoughtful way,” says his grandfather, Abdul Moneim Maatan, his voice cracking. “His absence leaves a huge void.”

On the evening Qusai was shot dead by an armed settler, his family say he had gone for a picnic with friends at the edge of the village. Locals describe how a confrontation with radical Israelis living nearby escalated quickly. Stones were thrown and at least one settler opened fire. In an unusually strong rebuke, Israel’s closest ally, the US, described what happened here as “Jewish terrorism”.

Two Israeli settlers and at least five Palestinians were arrested by Israeli security forces, who say they are still investigating the incident.

Settler attacks have become more common, says a young relative of Qusai, who is afraid to give her name.

“No-one knows who the next Qusai is going to be,” she adds. “No-one is going to protect us. If, God forbid, there are any other confrontations or attacks, our government can’t legally do anything.”

While the Palestinian Authority (PA) governs in big Palestinian cities, Israel retains near exclusive control of 60% of the West Bank (known as Area C), presiding over law enforcement, planning and construction. An estimated 370,000 Palestinians live in Area C, which includes Burqa, and half a million Israeli citizens. Israel’s new government, its most right-wing and nationalist to date, has openly declared its intention to double the number of settlers to one million.

Most of the world sees settlements as illegal under international law, though Israel disagrees.

Already 2023 has set an all-time record for settlement construction in the West Bank and for the legitimisation of outposts, according to settlement watchdog Peace Now. Outposts are often set up with a wink and a nod from Israeli authorities but without official permission.

In recent months, the Israeli government – which includes long-time settler activists in key cabinet posts – has completed or begun to legalise 15 settler outposts that were previously illegal under Israeli law, Peace Now says.

What looks like an official signpost leads me to the settler outpost of Oz Zion in an olive grove on a hilltop above Burqa. It was built on privately owned, officially registered land belonging to Palestinians in the village. There is a collection of white, prefabricated buildings, a rudimentary play area for the young children of six families which I am told now live here, and a pen of sheep.

“Our vision is that all of the land of Israel will be settled with Jews. It’s our basic right. Our right is in the Bible,” says Yehuda Lieber, a 26-year-old father of two. He is encouraged by the fact that some of those in government share his ideology and believes that eventually Israel will retroactively authorise his outpost.

“We have an expectation from the government that was elected by right-wing votes to settle the land, expand the settlements, and not hurt them,” he says.

With a series of new outposts recently set up, he tells me the settlers’ strategy is to block Palestinian statehood. Creating an independent Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza, with East Jerusalem as its capital, is a long-time goal of the internationally backed two-state solution to end the decades-old Israel-Palestinian conflict.

“What we’re doing here and in other places that exist is to halt the establishment of the Palestinian state, which is being built in practice without asking anyone,” Mr Lieber says.

Anti-occupation groups argue that as settlers have become emboldened by the current Israeli coalition government, settler attacks on Palestinians and their property have risen to a record high. The trend comes against the background of a surge in tensions in the West Bank this year, with near-nightly Israeli military raids and a spate of Palestinian assaults.

It has been the deadliest year for Palestinians and Israelis here for nearly two decades. More than 180 Palestinians have been killed in the territory – mostly fighters, but also many civilians, according to figures collated from PA sources. On the Israeli side, some 32 people have been killed, nearly all civilians – about half in the West Bank, excluding East Jerusalem.

Some deadly Palestinian militant attacks have led to violent rampages carried out in revenge by settlers, as seen in Huwara in February, following the shooting of two brothers from a nearby settlement, and Turmus Ayya in June, after four settlers were killed outside a petrol station. Both of those assaults left a Palestinian dead. The top Israeli military spokesman recently commented that the spike in settler attacks, which he called “nationalist terrorism”, was in turn driving Palestinians to attack Israelis.

Official figures from Israel’s internal security agency registered a 15% increase in individual Palestinian attacks on civilians and soldiers across Israel and the Occupied Territories in the first seven months of the year compared to the same period last year. In 2022, the agency counted 1,317 uses of fire or pipe bombs, shootings, arson, and stabbings compared to 1,522 in 2023.

Israeli security forces have come under increased scrutiny with the rise in settler violence. They are often criticised for failing to intervene effectively and sometimes for apparently supporting acts of harassment.

The UN’s humanitarian agency (OCHA) says it has registered over 700 incidents this year where settler violence has resulted in Palestinian casualties, damage to property or both. The number is the highest since it began recording such acts in 2006.

“Just to give you an idea, in 2021 there was an average of one incident of settler violence a day that we were recording. In 2022, there were two incidents of settler violence and in 2023 we have an average of three incidents of settler violence a day,” says Andrea De Domenico, head of OCHA in the occupied Palestinian territory.

Mr de Domenico warns that Palestinian Bedouin and other herding communities in Area C are particularly vulnerable.

“We’re seeing more and more pressure on Palestinian communities to leave their land,” he tells me. “Recently there are three communities that have been completely removed.”

At the start of August, the remaining families from al-Qabun, a herding community in the central West Bank, dismantled their homes and sheep pens to move to safer places. A total of 89 people were forced away, blaming Israeli demolition threats and settler intimidation.

“They used to stop outside our house at midnight and honk their car horns or send kids to harass us. They would scare the sheep and block them in, or empty out our water tank,” says Ammar Abu Alia.

He worries for the future as he squeezes more than 100 of his flock into a pen on land which he is only able to rent temporarily. “What will we do?” he asks. “We’ll be forced to sell. We’ll have no livelihood.”

Like the rest of her extended family, Nida Abu Alia – Ammar’s sister – is now living in cramped accommodation in a village close to the land they lived on for generations. The mother of nine is bitter about the relative lack of attention paid to her community’s plight.

“People said that this is Area C, but that’s not right. It’s the land of Palestine,” she says. “Our displacement is a great loss. People must realise what’s happening. If they don’t, we will lose a lot.”

Human rights groups warn that the forced transfer of Palestinians from their homes on occupied land could amount to a war crime by Israel, if it is proven that official steps amount to coercion.

At the same time, settlers and their supporters in the Israeli government are seeking to take advantage of the new political reality. Huge investment is planned to expand settlements and improve their infrastructure, cementing a Jewish presence in the West Bank and changing the landscape.

With their own leaders too weak to effect a serious change in course and a sense that settlers enjoy impunity, Palestinian anger and resentment is growing.

The ongoing developments only look set to deepen bitter hostilities.

Source: BBC

REBIRTH BEIRUT PRESENTS “WINKS” – A VIBRANT EXHIBITION TO EMBRACE LIFE’S LIGHTNESS AND JOYBY ARTIST SAMIR TAMARI

Rebirth Beirut is thrilled to announce its upcoming art exhibition, “Winks,” featuring the remarkable works of artist Samir Tamari and curated by Dr. Tony Karam. The exhibition is set to take place at Rebirth Beirut’s cultural space in the heart of Beirut’s vibrant Gemmayze district. The opening night will be Friday September 1st from 6 to 9 PM and the exhibition will remain open from 2nd to 9thSeptember between 5 and 8 PM (closed on Sunday). Born in Beirut, Lebanon, Samir Tamari discovered his passion for art at a young age, nurturing his talent through formal education in Art and Advertising Techniques in Montreal, Canada. Tamari’s artistic philosophy is encapsulated in his statement, “I am not a painting’s technician; I paint to express myself.” The exhibition’s theme, “Winks,” serves as an invitation to embrace life’s lightness and joy through ideas and colors. Mr. Gaby Fernaine, President and Founder of Rebirth Beirut, expressed his enthusiasm for hosting such a meaningful exhibition: “At Rebirth Beirut, we take immense pride in promoting art and culture in the city as we believe it is the best image that we can give to Beirut’. The artist himself shared his thoughts on his creations: “Life is a game,” and “That’s all folks.” These iconic paintings, brought to life with thoughtful precision, encapsulate the essence of the exhibition’s theme. Tamari encourages us to take life with a wink, to enjoy its fleeting moments, and to remember that, ultimately, our existence is a brief journey in the vast expanse of time. Part of the proceeds from the exhibition will go towards supporting Rebirth Beirut’s initiatives, including the rehabilitation of traffic lights, street lighting, and other development projects that serve the beautiful capital of Beirut.

Source: National News Agency – Lebanon

King says countering dangerous impact of smoking a priority, urges protecting school students

His Majesty King Abdullah on Monday urged the government to devise a comprehensive strategy to counter smoking, especially to protect schools students. During a meeting held at Al Husseiniya Palace, King Abdullah said countering the danger of smoking is a priority, as the current situation is not acceptable, stressing the need to enforce the Public Health Law to combat smoking, especially among youth. His Majesty also called for intensifying inspection campaigns in public places to ensure the smoking ban is observed, noting that the health of Jordanians must be above all considerations. The King urged raising further awareness of the dangers of smoking, calling on the government to update the relevant data and statistics, to allow for a more accurate examination of the issue. Speaking at the meeting, Prime Minister Bisher Khasawneh reiterated the government’s commitment to intensifying inspection in public institutions to ensure the enforcement of smoking bans, in accordance with the Public Health Law. Health Minister Feras Hawari outlined indicators of smoking and health in Jordan, highlighting the negative impact of smoking on youth, as well as the increased threat of negative smoking on children. The minister pointed to the need to step up regulations to control the spread of new types of smoking that encourage more age groups to take it up. Education and Higher Education Minister Azmi Mahafzah highlighted measures that will be implemented as of this academic year to curb smoking, as law enforcement officers will be assigned to the premises of the ministry, education directorates, and schools, in partnership with the Health Ministry, adding that efforts will also be undertaken to raise students’ awareness. Director of the Office of His Majesty Jafar Hassan and Interior Minister Mazen Farraya attended the meeting.

Source: Jordan News Agency

3.5 magnitude earthquake recorded near Dhiban, Madaba

The Jordan Seismological Observatory early Monday reported a seismic event measuring 3.5 on the Richter scale. The earthquake was centered in the northeastern vicinity of Dhiban, a city located within the Madaba Governorate. According to the observatory’s data, the tremor was registered precisely at 3:09 AM local time, at a depth of approximately 7 kilometers beneath the Earth’s surface. The event is categorized as a minor earthquake, falling within the lower range of seismic intensity. Consequently, its effects were likely perceivable only by individuals residing in proximity to the epicenter.

Source: Jordan News Agency

Army shoots down drone at eastern borders

The Eastern Military Zone on Sunday shot down a drone trespassing into Jordanian land from Syrian territory. An official military source at the Jordan Armed Forces – Arab Army said that border guards, in coordination with the Anti-Narcotic Department, found the drone and transferred it to the authorities. The Jordanian armed forces are taking strong and resolute measures against any threat on the border and any attempt to disrupt or destabilize the security of the country and intimidate its citizens, the source reiterated.

Source: Jordan News Agency

A Fraudster Arrested For Throwing Himself In Front Of Citizens’ Cars In Basra

The Basra police arrested a fraudster who threw himself in front of citizens’ cars.

A statement of the Basra Governorate Police Command stated that the detachments of Aziziyah Police Station and the Rescue Police Department, in cooperation with the Relations and Media Department, arrested a fraudster who threw himself in front of the cars of citizens, where the operation takes place after throwing himself on the car to be transferred to the hospital, and the accused claims that he was injured as a result of the imaginary accident that he fabricated, he asks the owners of the cars for sums of money without asking for any legal procedures.

It added: “The necessary legal measures have been taken against him in accordance with the law.”/ End

Source: National Iraqi News Agency

Three Wanted Terrorists Arrested In Baghdad

Detachments of the Intelligence Agency in Baghdad, Al-Karkh, arrested three wanted persons for terrorist cases, one of whom belonged to the so-called Yarmouk Division within the terrorist gangs of ISIS.

The intelligence agency stated in a statement: “The arrest of the wanted persons took place in a tight ambush, based on accurate intelligence information and after investigation and information gathering.”

The statement added that: “During interrogation, the defendants openly confessed to belonging to ISIS terrorist gangs.”/ End

Source: National Iraqi News Agency

Basra And Khuzestan Discuss Procedures And Services Provided To Arbaeen Visitors At Shalamcheh Border Crossing

The head of the Arbaeen Visit Committee, Assistant Governor of Basra, Hassan Al-Najjar, discussed with the Assistant Governor of Iranian Khuzestan, Hayati, in the presence of the Consul General of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Ali Abedi, the most important procedures for receiving and distributing visitors coming from Iran through Shalamcheh border crossing, and the level of services provided to them.

Al-Najjar affirmed the high cooperation between the two sides and their determination to make the Arbaeen visit a success this year.

For his part, the Deputy Governor of Khuzestan, Hayati, expressed his thanks and appreciation on behalf of his government, to the people and government of Iraq, especially the local government of Basra, for their efforts to serve the visitors intending to visit the Master of Martyrs (al-Hussein) .

He stressed: Iran is ready to provide everything that would support these efforts and the continuation of joint cooperation between the two sides until the return of the last visitor from the Arbaeen visit./ End

Source: National Iraqi News Agency

A donor-funded school among 33 Palestinian structures demolished by Israel in West Bank, Jerusalem – OCHA

In the two weeks between 8 and 21 August, the Israeli occupation authorities demolished a donor-funded school in the Ramallah governorate and 33 other Palestinian structures in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, today said the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in the occupied Palestinian territory in its bi-weekly Protection of Civilians Report. It said that on 17 August, Israeli authorities demolished a donor-funded school serving students from the displaced herding community of Ein Samiya, near Ramallah. The school served 17 children, aged between six and 12, from the Ein Samiya community. In early May, members of the community, comprising 132 people, including 68 children, moved to areas where they reportedly felt safer, citing settler violence as the primary reason for leaving. According to the report, since 2010, the Israeli authorities have carried out 41 demolition/confiscations against 22 schools in Area C of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, citing the lack of building permits. In addition to the above school, the Israeli authorities demolished, confiscated, or forced people to demolish an additional 33 structures in East Jerusalem and Area C of the West Bank, including 10 homes, citing the lack of Israeli-issued building permits, which are almost impossible to obtain. As a result, 22 Palestinians, including 10 children, were displaced, and the livelihoods of more than 100 others were affected. Three of the affected structures were provided by donors in response to a previous demolition in Isteih community in Jericho and Humsa al Farsheh community in the Nablus district. Twenty-nine of the affected structures were demolished in Area C, including four structures demolished in Ein Shibli, near Nablus, located in an Israeli-declared nature reserve, where Palestinian construction is prohibited. Another two structures were demolished in Humsa al Farsheh community located in an area closed for military training purposes, a firing zone, where Palestinian construction in prohibited. This designation applies to some 18 percent of West Bank territory, primarily in the Jordan Valley. Four other structures were demolished in East Jerusalem, resulting in the displacement of two households, comprising nine people, including three children. Two of the demolished structures in East Jerusalem were destroyed by their owners to avoid the payment of fines to the Israeli authorities. On 8 August, Israeli forces raided Askar Refugee camp in Nablus, in Area B, and demolished on punitive grounds the home of a family member accused of killing two Israeli settlers in February. A female-headed household comprising four people, including a child, was displaced. During the demolition that lasted for more than six hours, a total of 197 Palestinians were injured by Israeli forces, including 75 children. Since the beginning of 2023, 16 homes and one agricultural structure have been demolished on punitive grounds, compared with 14 structures in all of 2022 and three in 2021. Punitive demolitions are a form of collective punishment and as such are illegal under international law, said OCHA. In addition to the demolitions, on 22 August, Israeli forces shot and killed a 17-year-old Palestinian child during a search-and-arrest operation in al Zababida town in the Jenin district, The Israeli occupation forces killed six Palestinians, including one child, during Israeli army incursions across the West Bank, some of which involved exchanges of fire with Palestinians. The number of Palestinians killed in the West Bank and Israel by Israeli forces so far in 2023 reached 172 and has surpassed the total number killed in all of 2022, amounting to 155, which already saw the highest fatalities in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, since 2005. During the reporting period, 559 Palestinians, including at least 148 children, were injured by Israeli forces across the West Bank, including 21 people by live ammunition. Most injuries (192) were reported during a punitive demolition that lasted for more than six hours in Askar Refugee Camp during which Israeli forces used live ammunition, rubber-coated metal bullets, and tear gas canisters, and Palestinians threw stones. Since the beginning of the year, a total of 705 Palestinians have been injured with live ammunition by Israeli forces in the West Bank, almost double the number in the equivalent period in 2022 (411). Four Palestinians were also injured by Israeli settlers who also damaged Palestinian property in another 19 instances across the West Bank. According to the OCHA report, Israeli forces restricted the movement of Palestinians in various locations across the West Bank, disrupting the access of thousands of Palestinians to livelihoods and services.

Source: En – Palestine news & Information Agency – WAFA

3 Suspects Arrested And Weapons And Narcotics Seized In Their Possession East Of Baghdad

Baghdad Al-Rusafa police forces arrested three suspects and seized weapons and narcotics in their possession, east of Baghdad.

A statement of Rusafa Police Command stated, “The detachments and patrols of the Baghdad Rusafa Police Command, represented by the Seventh Emergency Regiment, carried out security practices during which they managed to arrest three suspects who have weapons and narcotic substances in their possession within the sector of responsibility, and the necessary measures were taken with the seized materials.”/ End

Source: National Iraqi News Agency