Merkel Bids Israel Farewell After 16 Years of Support

German Chancellor Angela Merkel addresses parliament on June 24. (AP)
German Chancellor Angela Merkel addresses parliament on June 24. (AP)
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Merkel Bids Israel Farewell After 16 Years of Support

German Chancellor Angela Merkel addresses parliament on June 24. (AP)
German Chancellor Angela Merkel addresses parliament on June 24. (AP)

Germany's outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel is visiting Israel on a farewell tour Sunday, after a 16-year term during which she cultivated warm relations with the Jewish state.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett has said he and Merkel would discuss "regional threats and challenges, especially the Iranian nuclear issue", and maintaining Israel's "strength in all spheres".

It is Merkel's eighth and final visit to Israel as chancellor, as she prepares to retire from politics, reported AFP.

She arrived late Saturday, the Israeli foreign ministry said.

Merkel had initially planned to visit in August, but delayed her trip amid the chaotic exit of US and allied forces, including Germans, from Afghanistan.

The 67-year-old trained physicist is to receive an honorary doctorate from Haifa's Technion -- Israel Institute of Technology.

She will also visit the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial and meet Israeli tech leaders, Bennett's office said.

The veteran of German politics will be the guest of the recently sworn-in Bennett, who ended Benjamin Netanyahu's 12 straight years as premier.

Merkel congratulated Bennett on taking office in June, saying Germany and Israel were "connected by a unique friendship that we want to strengthen further".

Merkel's administration advocated for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

But she stressed Israel's security as a crucial priority of German foreign policy.

Germany and Israel forged strong diplomatic ties in the decades after World War II, with Berlin committed to the preservation of the Jewish state in penance for the Holocaust.

In 2008, Merkel stood before the Israeli parliament to atone on behalf of the German people in a historic address.

Her administration backed Israel's "right to defend itself" in May, as Israel bombed Gaza in response to rockets fired by militants from the blockaded enclave.

Israeli strikes killed 260 people in Gaza including combatants, Palestinian health authorities said.

Thirteen people in Israel died including a soldier, according to the Israeli police and army.

- 'Reality of apartheid' -
Advocates for the Palestinians have urged Germany to demand an end to Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip that began in 1967.

More than 600,000 Israeli settlers have moved into the West Bank and east Jerusalem, which Palestinians hope will become part of a future state.

Israel has maintained a blockade on Gaza's two million residents since Hamas seized control in 2007.

Omar Shakir, Israel and Palestine director at Human Rights Watch, criticized Merkel for regarding Israel's 54-year occupation as "temporary".

"Maintaining this fiction has allowed the Merkel government to avoid dealing with the reality of apartheid and persecution of millions of Palestinians," he said in a statement.

"The new German government should put human rights at the center of its Israel and Palestine policy," he added.

After Merkel's Christian Democratic Union performed poorly in elections last month, the center-left Social Democrats (SPD) appear poised to head a new coalition as party negotiations continue.

A rare point of difference between Germany and Israel is a 2015 deal that Berlin signed to lift sanctions on Iran in exchange for greater supervision of its nuclear program.

Israel is opposed to efforts by Germany, the United States and other signatories to revive the deal after then US president Donald Trump withdrew from it in 2018.



Colombian Leader Says US Prevented Him from Meeting Mamdani

President of Colombia Gustavo Petro speaks during a United Nations Security Council meeting on the Middle East, at UN Headquarters in New York, on June 10, 2026. (Photo by ANGELA WEISS / AFP)
President of Colombia Gustavo Petro speaks during a United Nations Security Council meeting on the Middle East, at UN Headquarters in New York, on June 10, 2026. (Photo by ANGELA WEISS / AFP)
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Colombian Leader Says US Prevented Him from Meeting Mamdani

President of Colombia Gustavo Petro speaks during a United Nations Security Council meeting on the Middle East, at UN Headquarters in New York, on June 10, 2026. (Photo by ANGELA WEISS / AFP)
President of Colombia Gustavo Petro speaks during a United Nations Security Council meeting on the Middle East, at UN Headquarters in New York, on June 10, 2026. (Photo by ANGELA WEISS / AFP)

Colombian President Gustavo Petro accused the United States of trampling his freedom by preventing him from meeting New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani, a fellow critic of US President Donald Trump.

The Washington Post reported Wednesday that Petro was scheduled to meet with Mamdani while in New York for meetings at the United Nations, AFP said.

But Bogota canceled the encounter after US officials warned it would violate the visa ban imposed on Petro last year during a row with Trump, anonymous sources told the Post.

Petro can currently only enter the United States with a diplomatic visa for official business only.

He said on Thursday that he was never informed that he would face restrictions on his movements.

"I consider it undemocratic that my freedom to speak with the mayor of New York was restricted...and that my freedom of thought was restricted by not allowing me to give a lecture to which I was invited in Boston," he wrote on X.

Democrat Mamdani was elected mayor in November on a "socialist," migrant-inclusive platform seen as a repudiation of Trump's hardline policies.

Petro, Colombia's first left-wing president, has repeatedly crossed swords with Trump on issues ranging from migrant deportations to deadly US strikes on suspected drug boats to Petro's own record on combatting cocaine trafficking.

In an interview with AFP last week the Colombian leader, who is in his last weeks in office, accused Washington of allying itself with the very drug traffickers it claims to combat by supporting right-wing lawyer Abelardo de la Espriella to succeed Petro.

De la Espriella, who is tipped to beat Petro's preferred candidate, left-wing senator Ivan Cepeda in a June 21 presidential runoff, made his name representing drug traffickers, paramilitaries and a pyramid scheme kingpin.

He has promised to deepen ties with the United States "like never before" if elected.


US Forces Shoot Down Two Iranian Attack Drones

A photo published by Fars news agency, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard, showing rocket launchers being fired from a speed boat during military drills in the Strait of Hormuz (archive photo).
A photo published by Fars news agency, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard, showing rocket launchers being fired from a speed boat during military drills in the Strait of Hormuz (archive photo).
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US Forces Shoot Down Two Iranian Attack Drones

A photo published by Fars news agency, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard, showing rocket launchers being fired from a speed boat during military drills in the Strait of Hormuz (archive photo).
A photo published by Fars news agency, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard, showing rocket launchers being fired from a speed boat during military drills in the Strait of Hormuz (archive photo).

US forces shot down two Iranian one-way attack drones as ‌Tehran ‌appeared to ‌attempt ⁠to strike commercial ships ⁠transiting the Strait of Hormuz, a US official ‌told Reuters ‌on Thursday, ‌in ‌the latest clashes between the two ‌nations, Reuters said.
"Traffic flow through the ⁠strait ⁠continues," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.


Three Civilians Dead in Latest Russia, Ukraine Strikes

Smoke rises above the city after a Russian strike on a residential area in Kharkiv, Ukraine, 10 June 2026, amid the ongoing Russian invasion. (EPA)
Smoke rises above the city after a Russian strike on a residential area in Kharkiv, Ukraine, 10 June 2026, amid the ongoing Russian invasion. (EPA)
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Three Civilians Dead in Latest Russia, Ukraine Strikes

Smoke rises above the city after a Russian strike on a residential area in Kharkiv, Ukraine, 10 June 2026, amid the ongoing Russian invasion. (EPA)
Smoke rises above the city after a Russian strike on a residential area in Kharkiv, Ukraine, 10 June 2026, amid the ongoing Russian invasion. (EPA)

Three civilians died in Russian and Ukrainian border regions, officials said on Friday, as the two sides lobbed overnight strikes at each other in the latest exchange of fire in the grinding war.

In Russia, two civilians were killed and two wounded in the border region of Bryansk after Kyiv struck the settlement of Suzemka with artillery, acting governor Egor Kovalchuk said in a post to Telegram.

In Ukraine, a 44-year-old woman working as a rail station operator died on her way to a shelter during a drone attack in the border region of Sumy, the head of Ukrainian Railways said.

Another woman, a station attendant, was wounded in the attack, Oleksandr Pertsovkyi said.

Three people were wounded in separate strikes on Ukraine's southern Mykolaiv region.

In recent months, Kyiv has carried out an increasing number of attacks on Russian territory, in response to nearly daily bombardments by Moscow since it sent troops into Ukraine in February 2022.