Houthis confirm death of chief of staff in Israeli airstrike

People in Sanaa during a rally in condemnation of Israeli strikes on Yemen and solidarity with Palestinians, in Sanaa on September 26, 2025. (File/AFP)
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Updated 16 October 2025
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Houthis confirm death of chief of staff in Israeli airstrike

  • Houthis confirm that their chief of staff, Mohammed al-Ghamari, was killed in an Israeli airstrike, along with his son and several companions

LONDON: The Houthis confirmed on Thursday the death of Major General Mohammed AbdulKareem Al-Ghamari, their chief of staff and one of the group’s most prominent military figures, following an Israeli airstrike.

An announcement from the group’s Armed Forces also reported the deaths of several of his companions and his 13-year-old son, Hussein, according to Houthi news agency SABA. 

Al-Ghamari had been previously reported wounded in the strike, but the group’s official statement on Thursday confirmed his death. 




Major General Mohammed AbdulKareem Al-Ghamari. (SABA)

Israeli officials said in June that Al-Ghamari was the target of an airstrike.

Since the onset of Israel’s military operations in Gaza in October 2023, which have been widely condemned as acts of genocide, the Houthi movement in Yemen has escalated its retaliatory attacks on Israeli targets. 

Their actions have been framed as acts of solidarity with Palestinians under siege. 

In response, Israel has conducted multiple airstrikes on Houthi-controlled areas in Yemen, intensifying the regional conflict.


Syria’s Kurds hail ‘positive impact’ of Turkiye peace talks

Updated 06 December 2025
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Syria’s Kurds hail ‘positive impact’ of Turkiye peace talks

  • “The peace initiative in Turkiye has had a direct impact on northern and eastern Syria,” said Elham Ahmad
  • “We want a dialogue process with Turkiye, a dialogue that we understand as Kurds in Syria”

ISTANBUL: Efforts to broker peace between Turkiye and the Kurdish militant group PKK have had a “positive impact” on Syria’s Kurds who also want dialogue with Ankara, one of its top officials said Saturday.
Earlier this year, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) ended its four-decade armed struggle against Turkiye at the urging of its jailed founder Abdullah Ocalan, shifting its focus to a democratic political struggle for the rights of Turkiye’s Kurdish minority.
The ongoing process has raised hopes among Kurds across the region, notably in Syria where the Kurds control swathes of territory in the north and northeast.
“The peace initiative in Turkiye has had a direct impact on northern and eastern Syria,” said Elham Ahmad, a senior official in the Kurdish administration in Syria’s northeast.
“We want a dialogue process with Turkiye, a dialogue that we understand as Kurds in Syria... We want the borders between us to be opened,” she said, speaking by video link to an Istanbul peace conference organized by Turkiye’s pro-Kurdish opposition DEM party.
Speaking in Kurdish, she hailed Turkiye for initiating the peace moves, but said releasing Ocalan — who has led the process from his cell on Imrali prison island near Istanbul where he has been serving life in solitary since 1999 — would speed things up.
“We believe that Abdullah Ocalan being released will let him play a much greater role... that this peace and resolution process will happen faster and better.”
She also hailed Ankara for its sensitive approach to dialogue with the new regime in Damascus that emerged after the ousting of Syrian strongman Bashar Assad a year ago.
“The Turkish government has a dialogue and a relationship with the Syrian government. They also have open channels with us. We see that there is a careful approach to this matter,” she said.
Turkiye has long been hostile to the Kurdish SDF force that controls swathes of northeastern Syria, seeing it as an extension of PKK, and pushing for the US-backed force to integrate into the Syrian military and security apparatus.
Although a deal was reached to that end in March, its terms were never implemented.
“In this historic process, as the Middle East is being reorganized, Turkiye has a very important role. Peace in both countries — within Turkish society, Kurdish society and Arab society.. will impact the entire Middle East,” Ahmad said.
Syria’s Kurdish community believed coexistence was “fundamental” and did not want to see the nation divided, she said.
“We do not support the division of Syria or any other country. Such divisions pave the way for new wars. That is why we advocate for peace.”