Attempted Killing of Security Official Rekindles Tensions in Libya’s Misrata

Al-Dbeibah during the opening of the Municipal Hotel in Misrata last week (Al-Dbeibah’s Office)
Al-Dbeibah during the opening of the Municipal Hotel in Misrata last week (Al-Dbeibah’s Office)
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Attempted Killing of Security Official Rekindles Tensions in Libya’s Misrata

Al-Dbeibah during the opening of the Municipal Hotel in Misrata last week (Al-Dbeibah’s Office)
Al-Dbeibah during the opening of the Municipal Hotel in Misrata last week (Al-Dbeibah’s Office)

A state of cautious tension has gripped the western Libyan city of Misrata following an attempted assassination of Colonel Mustafa al-Har, who is tasked with running the Anti-Terrorism and Subversive Activities Office in the central region, amid accusations pointing to figures linked to the Benghazi, Ajdabiya and Derna Shura Councils of Revolutionaries.

Local media reported that unidentified gunmen opened heavy fire on al-Har while he was in his car in Misrata on Wednesday evening. There has been no official comment from the interim Government of National Unity, headed by Prime Minister Abdulhamid al-Dbeibah.

At the same time, a statement circulated, attributed to residents of Misrata, declaring their disavowal of certain figures whom they said were “calling for discord and fueling divisions.”

Those named included Abdul Salam al-Zoubi, Deputy Minister of Defense in al-Dbeibah’s government, and Ali al-Sallabi, Secretary-General of the International Union of Muslim Scholars.

In the statement — which bore no official signature — residents of Misrata from social, political and military circles announced their disavowal of 40 individuals described as “groups seeking discord and corruption.”

They said those named represented only themselves and that their actions did not reflect the city’s authenticity or its “honorable history in building the state.”

Libya’s Attorney General Al-Siddiq al-Sour had no immediate public comment.

The statement warned that “anyone who dares to undermine the security of the city or civil peace in the country will face a firm and harsh response.”

Residents also called for the identities of those who attacked Colonel al-Har to be disclosed and for them to be brought to justice, in order to avert strife and preserve social peace.

Amid the tensions, Libyan political analyst Mohammed Ghashout said the situation in Misrata was “sliding into a very dangerous trajectory.”

He urged the city and its residents to abandon what he described as “extremist councils that fled Benghazi, Ajdabiya and Derna,” warning that “allowing the city to be hijacked by those who provide them with safety and refuge will turn them into time bombs that will explode in Misrata before any other city in the western region.”

Ghashout added that “the attack on the General Intelligence headquarters in recent days — amid the silence of the city’s residents and security services — during which extremist elements revealed their faces and intentions, did not stop there.

Brigadier Mustafa al-Har of the General Intelligence was subjected to kidnapping, beating and humiliation, and he is now in critical condition.”

The rising tension and anger in Misrata come after an armed group affiliated with the Defense Ministry of the interim unity government took control of the headquarters of the General Intelligence Service, which is affiliated with the Presidential Council, in developments that triggered a wave of anger and protests inside the city, home to al-Dbeibah and a number of senior security officials.



Israeli Strike Kills World Cup Screening Organizer in Gaza Just Before Kickoff

Palestinians watch a broadcast of the 2026 FIFA World Cup match between Argentina and Egypt in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, 07 July 2026. (EPA)
Palestinians watch a broadcast of the 2026 FIFA World Cup match between Argentina and Egypt in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, 07 July 2026. (EPA)
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Israeli Strike Kills World Cup Screening Organizer in Gaza Just Before Kickoff

Palestinians watch a broadcast of the 2026 FIFA World Cup match between Argentina and Egypt in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, 07 July 2026. (EPA)
Palestinians watch a broadcast of the 2026 FIFA World Cup match between Argentina and Egypt in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, 07 July 2026. (EPA)

An Israeli strike on Gaza just before the kickoff of the Egypt-Argentina World Cup match killed a top Palestinian aid official who helped organize public screenings of the game across the enclave, according to local health officials.

The blast turned what was supposed to be a moment of celebration — the live screening of a potential Argentina upset by an Arab team — into a reminder of how the near-daily Israeli strikes across Gaza are continuing to kill civilians despite a truce reached in October.

The bomb hit a car in the Sabra neighborhood of Gaza City at dusk Tuesday, killing passersby Mohamed al-Wahidi, an official at the Egyptian Committee in Gaza, 10-year-old boy Hamza al-Deri and his 8-year-old brother Fari. Ahmed Daghmush, 33, the driver of the car, was also killed. That’s according to Dr. Mohamed Abu Selmiya, the director of Shifa Hospital which received the four bodies.

The Israeli military said that al-Wahidi, who helped organize the soccer screenings, was not a target of the strike. It said the strike was aiming for a Hamas fighter and that it was checking if Daghmush was the target of the strike.

Daghmush is a taxi driver not known to be affiliated with any armed group, Abu Selmiya said.

An Israeli strike hit the same street half an hour earlier, causing no casualties.

The Egyptian Committee for which al-Wahidi worked is the relief arm of the Egyptian government, which provides food, shelters and other assistance to Palestinians in Gaza. The committee also organized the initiative to put up screens across Gaza to watch football matches, it said.

Many in the Palestinian diaspora live right across the border in Egypt, which was a key mediator of the Israel-Hamas ceasefire.

Team Egypt's Gaza fanbase has only grown since the start of the tournament, as coach Hossam Hassan has spotlighted the plight of the Palestinian people in press briefings and on the pitch. He dedicated his team’s victory over Australia on Friday to both Egyptians and Palestinians and waved a Palestinian flag on the pitch.

In a Monday briefing before the match against Argentina, Hassan urged the world to do more for the Palestinian people.

“I urge you, I urge all media officers, all athletes worldwide, regardless of their identities, maybe we can convey a collective message that is as follows, let the Palestinian people be, let them exist, let them live a life of their own," he said.

Israel’s military says its strikes target fighters and it regrets harm to civilians. At least 1,027 people, including 258 children, have been killed since the truce took effect in October. Five Israeli soldiers have been killed in that time.

The Palestinian death toll from the Israel-Hamas war stands at 73,098, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which is part of the Hamas-led government and is staffed by medical professionals who maintain detailed records viewed as generally reliable by United Nations agencies and independent experts. It does not distinguish between civilians and militants but says women and children make up around half of all fatalities.

The war began when Hamas-led fighters attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing around 1,200 people and taking 251 others hostage.


Trump’s Board of Peace Planning Pilot ‘Humanitarian Zone’ in South Gaza, Says Official

 Buildings that were destroyed during the Israeli ground and air operations stand in the northern Gaza Strip as seen from southern Israel, Thursday, July 2, 2026, on the 1,000th day of war since the Hamas-led attack on Israel sparked the war in Gaza. (AP)
Buildings that were destroyed during the Israeli ground and air operations stand in the northern Gaza Strip as seen from southern Israel, Thursday, July 2, 2026, on the 1,000th day of war since the Hamas-led attack on Israel sparked the war in Gaza. (AP)
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Trump’s Board of Peace Planning Pilot ‘Humanitarian Zone’ in South Gaza, Says Official

 Buildings that were destroyed during the Israeli ground and air operations stand in the northern Gaza Strip as seen from southern Israel, Thursday, July 2, 2026, on the 1,000th day of war since the Hamas-led attack on Israel sparked the war in Gaza. (AP)
Buildings that were destroyed during the Israeli ground and air operations stand in the northern Gaza Strip as seen from southern Israel, Thursday, July 2, 2026, on the 1,000th day of war since the Hamas-led attack on Israel sparked the war in Gaza. (AP)

US President Donald Trump's Board of Peace is planning a pilot "humanitarian zone" in southern Gaza which would aim to accommodate tens of thousands of vetted Palestinian civilians, a board official told AFP.

The official said the zone could act as a "starting point" for the Palestinian technocratic committee meant to assume the day-to-day governance of Gaza's transitional phase out of war under Trump's 20-point plan.

The pilot zone, which the board is eyeing for Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, would be secured by multinational troops from the International Stabilization Force (ISF), a fledgling body which operates under the Board of Peace.

The National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG), the group of Palestinian technocrats established by the Board of Peace, would carry out screening and access control, supported by the ISF.

The concept of closed humanitarian zones, which has been discussed in various forms for several months, has raised serious reservations, with diplomats and NGO officials working in Gaza telling AFP on condition of anonymity that such a mechanism seems to them to be incompatible with international humanitarian law.

Movement in and out "will remain free for all unarmed civilians," the board official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

Efforts to advance the US-backed ceasefire plan for Gaza have been stalled for months, with the NCAG stuck in Cairo and yet to actually enter the territory.

Since the truce between Israel and Hamas came into effect last October, Israeli forces have expanded their presence in Gaza, and now control more than 60 percent of the territory.

"There's one pilot project we're looking at particularly, that maybe you can get the NCAG a starting point, you can enable tens of thousands to come if they wish voluntarily to this area, and you start giving them a space where they exercise effective governance and they're the administration," the official said.

- 'Buffer' -

The official said the board was "looking at Rafah" as a location for the project but remained vague on its exact positioning. He said that no building work had begun.

Rafah, which sits at Gaza's southern edge, was effectively razed by Israeli bombing during the war and the area is now largely under Israeli military control.

The ISF would act as a "kind of buffer" separating the Palestinian population from the Israeli military, the official said.

"A screening mechanism will ensure that armed individuals and fighters cannot enter these safe humanitarian zones," he said.

"This function will not be performed by the Israeli military, which will have no contact with the civilian population and no role in separating these areas from the rest of Gaza," the official said.

The Board of Peace was formally established earlier this year as part of the US-backed ceasefire plan for Gaza endorsed by the UN Security Council.

It aims to facilitate a transition away from Hamas rule while supporting the restoration of civilian administration and basic services.

Diplomats and NGO officials working in Gaza say that grouping civilians into demarcated areas subject to access controls could amount to forced displacement of the population, restrict Palestinians' freedom of movement and undermine the principle of impartiality.


Syria Says Damascus Blasts Killed One, Wounded 36

Syrian security personnel inspect a burned vehicles near the Four Seasons Hotel after two explosions rocked the area earlier while Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa was meeting French President Emmanuel Macron at the presidential palace, in Damascus, Syria, Tuesday, July 7, 2026. (AP)
Syrian security personnel inspect a burned vehicles near the Four Seasons Hotel after two explosions rocked the area earlier while Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa was meeting French President Emmanuel Macron at the presidential palace, in Damascus, Syria, Tuesday, July 7, 2026. (AP)
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Syria Says Damascus Blasts Killed One, Wounded 36

Syrian security personnel inspect a burned vehicles near the Four Seasons Hotel after two explosions rocked the area earlier while Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa was meeting French President Emmanuel Macron at the presidential palace, in Damascus, Syria, Tuesday, July 7, 2026. (AP)
Syrian security personnel inspect a burned vehicles near the Four Seasons Hotel after two explosions rocked the area earlier while Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa was meeting French President Emmanuel Macron at the presidential palace, in Damascus, Syria, Tuesday, July 7, 2026. (AP)

Syrian authorities said on Wednesday that the blasts that hit central Damascus during French President Emmanuel Macron's visit a day earlier killed one person and wounded dozens.

In a statement carried by state media, the Syrian health ministry said that "the final toll from the two explosions that occurred... near the Ministry of Tourism building in Damascus has reached one dead and 36 wounded".

The blasts near the hotel where Macron had spent the night came after his departure, and moments before Syrian state media announced his arrival at the presidential palace to meet with his Syrian counterpart Ahmed al-Sharaa.

Macron became the first head of state from the European Union to visit Syria since the fall of longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad in 2024.