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news.google.com Unclassified
Middle East war live: Mojtaba Khamenei calls for Strait of Hormuz to ‘remain closed’ - Financial Times

Middle East war live: Mojtaba Khamenei calls for Strait of Hormuz to ‘remain closed’  Financial Times

news.google.com Unclassified
Strait of Hormuz must remain closed as 'tool to pressure enemy,' Iran's new supreme leader says - CNBC

Strait of Hormuz must remain closed as 'tool to pressure enemy,' Iran's new supreme leader says  CNBC

Middle East Eye Pro-Iran
Israeli army issues expulsion orders for southern Lebanon

Israeli army issues expulsion orders for southern Lebanon The Israeli army has issued a forced evacuation order for Lebanese residents south of the Zahrani River, instructing them to flee north. The army's Arabic language spokesperson Avichay Adraee said in a statement on X that "any building used by Hezbollah for military purposes may become a target," warning residents that "any movement south may put your lives at risk". #عاجل ‼️ انذار عاجل إلى سكان جنوب لبنان pic.twitter.com/W7vedTLPVs March 12, 2026 >

news.google.com Unclassified
First purported statement attributed to Iran’s supreme leader released - CNN

First purported statement attributed to Iran’s supreme leader released  CNN

Middle East Eye Neutral
UK government's new counter-extremism measures called 'Prevent on steroids'

UK government's new counter-extremism measures called 'Prevent on steroids' Imran Mulla on Thu, 03/12/2026 - 10:49 Contentious 'community cohesion' proposals based on extremism definition introduced by former Conservative minister Michael Gove Britain's Housing Secretary Steve Reed speaks during a television interview at the Labour Party conference in Liverpool on 28 September 2025 (AFP) Off The British government has announced contentious new counter-extremism measures inspired by an extremism definition championed by former Conservative minister Michael Gove and denounced by critics as authoritarian. Earlier this week considerable fanfare surrounded Communities Secretary Steve Reed announcing a new, non-statutory, definition of anti-Muslim hostility. The definition was widely attacked by Reform and Tory politicians who said it undermines free speech. At the same time it was welcomed by some Muslim groups and criticised by others, who argued it was insufficiently strong. But alongside the definition, Reed also announced the adoption of another definition - which went relatively unnoticed in the national media.  The Labour government's "Protecting What Matters" policy, which the anti-Muslim hostility definition was unveiled as part of, introduces a raft of new measures on community cohesion and integration. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); The government will now adopt the expansive definition of extremism proposed by then-Communities Secretary Michael Gove in March 2024 under the previous Conservative government, which caused an outcry at the time. The definition describes extremism as: "The promotion or advancement of an ideology based on violence, hatred or intolerance, that aims to: a. Negate or destroy the fundamental rights or freedoms of others; or b. Undermine, overturn or replace the UK’s system of liberal parliamentary democracy and democratic rights; or, c. Intentionally create a permissive environment for others to achieve the former." This capacious understanding of extremism includes the act of advancing a violent ideology. But it also includes promoting an ideology which is deemed to create a permissive environment for people who want to undermine liberal parliamentary democracy and democratic rights. Embedded across government The "Protecting What Matters" policy document, published this week, says: "The previous government did not properly embed the 2024 extremism definition, which hindered its ability to counter extremism consistently and effectively." (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); When Gove announced the extremism definition in March 2024, just months before his government was voted out in July, he identified a number of Muslim organisations - including the Muslim Association of Britain (MAB), Cage and Mend - which he said the government planned to "hold to account" using the new definition because of their "Islamist orientation". Nigel Farage makes outlandish claim of Islamists 'embedded' within UK establishment Read More » The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), the largest body representing Muslims in the UK, said at the time it was concerned that some organisations affiliated with it would be targeted by the definition, describing the plans as "undemocratic, divisive, and potentially illegal". MAB and Mend both challenged Gove to repeat his remarks outside the House of Commons where he would not be protected by parliamentary privilege - which he did not do. The Labour government's new policy says it will "embed the 2024 extremism definition across government" so that "public bodies do not confer legitimacy, funding or influence on extremist groups". This suggests the definition will be used by government departments and officials to help them decide which groups they should engage with and fund. The policy also promises to "strengthen Charity Commission powers to tackle extremist abuse, including the power to shut down charities. "We will also introduce measures to tackle extremism in university campuses, including strengthening monitoring and oversight of Prevent compliance issues to enable enforcement action where necessary," it said. 'Deep sense of betrayal' On Thursday, Wajid Akhter, the general secretary of the MCB - Britain's largest umbrella organisation representing Muslim groups - told Middle East Eye that the new plan was a "repackaging" of "old failed counter-extremism policies". Akhter added: "True community cohesion is built on trust, fairness and shared citizenship, not through the narrow lens of securitisation and counter-terror legislation. This has caused a deep sense of betrayal in a community already under constant attack." 'Labour has adopted all of the last government’s initiatives on countering extremism with no discernible contribution of its own, - John Holmwood, University of Nottingham John Holmwood, emeritus professor of sociology at the University of Nottingham and co-author of the People's Review of Prevent, told MEE the new measures show "the emptiness at the heart of government policy". "Labour has adopted all of the last government’s initiatives on countering extremism with no discernible contribution of its own," he said. "In doing so, it allows the Conservative opposition to outflank it on the right and repudiate its own previous positions to say that Labour has not gone far enough. "It is called an action plan – close to two years after being elected – but scrutiny of what is proposed reveals it to be soundbites with no details of implementation." Holmwood added: "This is how the country drifts into authoritarianism while trumpeting the protection of democracy." 'Prevent on steroids' The policy says: "We are seeing rising extremism from a range of quarters – from Islamist extremism to the Extreme Right Wing – and the nature of this threat is fast changing." It says that "Islamist extremism is a predominant threat", and describes Islamism as a "political ideology; its proponents seek to impose their interpretation of religion and ‘sharia’ as law by state power, and, in various manifestations, justify acts of terror to achieve their goal of a global Islamist state – their version of a ‘caliphate’ or ‘Islamic state’". Major report urges overhaul of Prevent and narrower terror definition Read More » Mohammed Abdul Aziz, director of the Muslim Communities Development Trust, told MEE the policy "feels like the discredited Prevent strategy on steroids. This will not help community cohesion in the UK but will only aggravate it further."  This comes just months after the publication of a major review by the Independent Commission on UK Counter-Terrorism Law, Policy and Practice in November, which recommended an overhaul of the Prevent counter-extremism programme. A staggering 90 percent of the 58,000 people reported to Prevent since 2015 were ultimately judged not to be counterterrorism concerns.  And new Prevent data from 2025 revealed that a significant nine percent of people referred to the programme were considered suicide risks. The commission's chair Sir Declan Morgan, a former lord chief justice of Northern Ireland, said at the report's launch that the "premise underlying" Prevent was wrong, calling for the policy to more narrowly "focus on those who pose a significant risk to public security".  The government's new policy suggests this is unlikely to happen in the foreseeable future. UK Politics News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0

Times of Israel Pro-Israel
Man kidnaps daughters to West Bank; officers rescue them, arrest him

After reported incident of domestic violence in Ashdod, father allegedly grabs children, aged 1 and 3, and heads to Palestinian village; cops track him, return kids to mother The post Man kidnaps daughters to West Bank; officers rescue them, arrest him appeared first on The Times of Israel.

Al-Monitor Pro-Iran
US military 'not ready' to escort tankers through Hormuz Strait: energy secretary

The US military is currently "not ready" to escort tankers through the critical Strait of Hormuz because all its assets are focused on striking Iran, Energy Secretary Chris Wright said Thursday. Wright's comments came as an attack on two oil tankers off Iraq killed at least one person, and oil prices briefly soared past $100. Since launching the war on Iran, US President Donald Trump has sought to calm the markets by offering US Navy escorts for oil tankers and reinsurance facilities for shipping companies -- but no escorts have so far taken place.

Al-Monitor Pro-Iran
'One war too many': Lebanese angry with Hezbollah for attacking Israel

When an air strike hit their Beirut neighbourhood, people were angry with Israel, but they reserved their deepest rage for Hezbollah, for dragging Lebanon into the Middle East war. Israel and the United States launched huge strikes on Iran on February 28, killing its supreme leader and sparking a massive retaliatory campaign. Iran-backed Hezbollah, already weakened by war, attacked Israel in support of its sponsors, pulling Lebanon into a new cycle of strikes, death and mass displacement.

news.google.com Pro-Israel
Trump says Strait of Hormuz in ‘great shape’ after ships targeted - The Hill

Trump says Strait of Hormuz in ‘great shape’ after ships targeted  The Hill

news.google.com Unclassified
Iran’s New Supreme Leader Says Hormuz Strait Should Stay Closed - Bloomberg

Iran’s New Supreme Leader Says Hormuz Strait Should Stay Closed  Bloomberg

Middle East Eye Pro-Iran
Israeli military reissues expulsion orders for Beirut southern suburbs

Israeli military reissues expulsion orders for Beirut southern suburbs The Israeli army has reissued an expulsion order for Beirut's southern suburbs, known as Dahiyeh. In a statement on X, the military instructed residents of the neighbourhoods of Haret Hreik, Ghobeiri, Laylaki, Hadath, Burj al-Barajneh, Tahwitat al-Ghadir and Chiyah to flee. Dahiyeh - home to hundreds of thousands of residents, many of them Hezbollah voters - has borne the brunt of Israeli attacks on the city since the military launched renewed air and ground operations in Lebanon.  On 5 March, the Israeli army issued expulsion orders for the entire area ahead of a wave of strikes. Israeli finance minister Bezalel Smotrich warned that the suburbs would "look like Khan Younis".

news.google.com Unclassified
Iran's New Supreme Leader's Hormuz Mention And A Warning In First Remarks - NDTV

Iran's New Supreme Leader's Hormuz Mention And A Warning In First Remarks  NDTV

The Independent Neutral
Ships declare themselves Chinese in the Strait of Hormuz to avoid attacks

At least 19 commercial ships around the region had been damaged in the war as of Thursday

news.google.com Neutral
First week of Iran war cost U.S. over $11 billion, military told lawmakers - CBS News

First week of Iran war cost U.S. over $11 billion, military told lawmakers  CBS News

Al-Monitor Pro-Israel
Lebanon summons Iran envoy over Hezbollah-IRGC attacks: What to know

The move comes after Hezbollah launched over 200 rockets toward Israel, just as Iran fired a barrage of missiles, triggering a violent Israeli escalation in Lebanon.

news.google.com Neutral
JPMorgan says go long energy stocks, short the market until Strait of Hormuz reopens - CNBC

JPMorgan says go long energy stocks, short the market until Strait of Hormuz reopens  CNBC

Mehr News Agency Pro-Iran
Iran's new Leader issues message

TEHRAN, Mar. 12 (MNA) – The third Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Mojtaba Khamenei has issued his first ever message.

news.google.com Pro-Iran
How the Iran War Is Disrupting the Strait of Hormuz - Bloomberg

How the Iran War Is Disrupting the Strait of Hormuz  Bloomberg

Al Jazeera Pro-Iran
Al Jazeera reporter sees destruction in Tehran neighbourhood

Al Jazeera’s Tohid Asadi shows the aftermath of US-Israeli airstrikes on a residential neighbourhood in Iran.

news.google.com Unclassified
US destroys aging Iranian warplanes, video shows - Fox News

US destroys aging Iranian warplanes, video shows  Fox News