Body of crew member of capsized Iranian vessel found in Gulf

Iranian soldiers take part in the “National Persian Gulf day” in the Strait of Hormuz, on April 30, 2019. (File/AFP)
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Updated 28 December 2020
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Body of crew member of capsized Iranian vessel found in Gulf

  • The vessel capsized on Friday near the Strait of Hormuz
  • The crew members included six Iranians and one Indian

The body of one of seven missing crew members of a capsized Iranian transport vessel was found in the Gulf waters on Monday, the semi-official ISNA news agency reported.
The agency quoted a local maritime official as saying that the search was continuing for the remaining six crew members, whose vessel capsized on Friday near the Strait of Hormuz at the mouth of the Gulf.
The crew members included six Iranians and one Indian.


Israeli destruction of Gaza continues despite ceasefire

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Israeli destruction of Gaza continues despite ceasefire

  • At least 2,500 buildings demolished, NYT reports, using satellite imagery
  • It’s not selective destruction, it’s everything,’ says former Israeli commander

LONDON: Israel continues to destroy buildings and infrastructure in Gaza despite signing a ceasefire agreement more than two months ago, the New York Times reported.

At least 2,500 buildings have been demolished. While much of the destruction has taken place in Israeli-occupied Gaza, the NYT, using satellite imagery obtained from Planet Labs, showed that numerous buildings had been demolished in territory ostensibly controlled by Hamas, despite the terms of the ceasefire including an Israeli pledge to cease operations there. 

A UN report last year found that as much as 80 percent of Gaza’s buildings were either damaged or destroyed during the nearly two-year conflict that ravaged the enclave, with most of its population displaced.

Gaza-based political analyst Mohammed Al-Astal told the NYT: “Israel is wiping entire areas off the map.”

He added: “The Israeli military is destroying everything in front of it — homes, schools, factories and streets. There’s no security justification for what it’s doing.”

A former Israeli military official called the activity “absolute destruction.” Shaul Arieli, a former commander who served in Gaza in the 1990s, added: “It’s not selective destruction, it’s everything.”

A Hamas official based in Qatar said Israel’s actions violate the ceasefire. “The agreement isn’t vague, it’s clear,” Husam Badran told the NYT. “Destroying people’s homes and property isn’t allowed. They’re hostile actions.”