Israel Swears in Unity Govt, PM Seeks West Bank Annexation

The coalition government was agreed last month between veteran right-wing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, and his centrist rival-turned-ally Benny Gantz, a former army chief | AFP
The coalition government was agreed last month between veteran right-wing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, and his centrist rival-turned-ally Benny Gantz, a former army chief | AFP
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Israel Swears in Unity Govt, PM Seeks West Bank Annexation

The coalition government was agreed last month between veteran right-wing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, and his centrist rival-turned-ally Benny Gantz, a former army chief | AFP
The coalition government was agreed last month between veteran right-wing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, and his centrist rival-turned-ally Benny Gantz, a former army chief | AFP

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu swore in his new unity government on Sunday, ending more than a year of political deadlock and another three-day delay.

The Knesset, Israel's parliament, passed a vote of confidence in Netanyahu's new administration to end over 500 days of upheaval.

Over the weekend, both Netanyahu and his rival-turned-partner Benny Gantz announced their appointments for the new government — the most bloated in Israeli history with an expected 36 cabinet ministers and 16 deputies.

Netanyahu and Gantz, a former military chief, announced last month they would be putting their differences aside to join forces to steer the country through the coronavirus crisis and its severe economic fallout.

Their controversial power-sharing deal calls for Netanyahu to serve as prime minister for the government’s first 18 months before being replaced by Gantz for the next 18 months. Their blocs will also have a similar number of ministers and mutual veto power over most major decisions.

Netanyahu said his government should apply Israeli sovereignty over West Bank settlements.

"The public wants a unity government and that's what the public is getting today," Netanyahu said at the start of the session in the Knesset in Jerusalem.

"It's time to apply the Israeli law and write another glorious chapter in the history of Zionism," Netanyahu said on the issue of Jewish settlements in the occupied Palestinian territory.

Such a move is seen likely to cause international uproar and inflame tensions in the West Bank, home to nearly three million Palestinians and some 400,000 Israelis living in settlements considered illegal under international law.

Netanyahu told the chamber that annexation "won't distance us from peace, it will bring us closer".

But while Netanyahu has set July 1 as a starting point for cabinet discussions on the highly contentious issue, there is no publicly stated deadline for annexation of land that Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war.



French Government Survives No-Confidence Vote Over Heatwave Handling

French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu speaks during a parliamentary session on a motion of censure against the government presented by Les Ecologistes (The Ecologists party) at the National Assembly in Paris, France, 06 July 2026. (EPA)
French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu speaks during a parliamentary session on a motion of censure against the government presented by Les Ecologistes (The Ecologists party) at the National Assembly in Paris, France, 06 July 2026. (EPA)
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French Government Survives No-Confidence Vote Over Heatwave Handling

French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu speaks during a parliamentary session on a motion of censure against the government presented by Les Ecologistes (The Ecologists party) at the National Assembly in Paris, France, 06 July 2026. (EPA)
French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu speaks during a parliamentary session on a motion of censure against the government presented by Les Ecologistes (The Ecologists party) at the National Assembly in Paris, France, 06 July 2026. (EPA)

The French government survived a vote of no-confidence in parliament on Monday over its handling of a severe heatwave in late June.

Backers of the motion said the government failed to do enough to blunt the effects of last month's ‌heatwave in a country ‌where 2,025 excess deaths ‌have ⁠been recorded so ⁠far. French health authorities warned the number would likely rise.

The motion, filed by France's Green Party, which needed 289 votes to pass, was backed by only 132 members of ⁠parliament.

"No one is fooled. This ‌motion will ‌not protect an isolated elderly person. It will ‌not cool down a hospital room. It ‌will not modernize a water supply network. On the contrary, it will add a political crisis to climate, healthcare and international ‌crises that the government already must deal with," French Prime Minister ⁠Sebastien ⁠Lecornu told lawmakers ahead of the vote.

The vote took place as firefighters battled a wildfire in southwestern France that has forced the evacuation of 10,000 people.

Early summer heatwaves in France and across western Europe have made the scorched land particularly vulnerable to wildfires this year, and temperatures are set to rise again.


Austrian Court Convicts Ex-intelligence Chief in Syria's Raqqa of Torture

Police officers stand guard in the town of Villach, Austria February 16, 2025. REUTERS/Borut Zivulovic/File Photo
Police officers stand guard in the town of Villach, Austria February 16, 2025. REUTERS/Borut Zivulovic/File Photo
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Austrian Court Convicts Ex-intelligence Chief in Syria's Raqqa of Torture

Police officers stand guard in the town of Villach, Austria February 16, 2025. REUTERS/Borut Zivulovic/File Photo
Police officers stand guard in the town of Villach, Austria February 16, 2025. REUTERS/Borut Zivulovic/File Photo

An Austrian court on Monday convicted a former Syrian intelligence chief in the city of Raqqa of offences including torture and sexual assault over the mistreatment of opponents of then-leader Bashar al-Assad more than a decade ago, Reuters reported.

The court in Vienna sentenced the primary defendant, identified as Khaled al-H, to eight years in prison after more than a dozen victims testified they were beaten, electrocuted or doused in hot and cold water while he was head of the General Intelligence Directorate in Raqqa from 2011 to 2013.


Britain Sanctions Russian Scientists Behind Chemical Attacks

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny died from poisoning in a Siberian prison camp in 2024 © KAREN MINASYAN / AFP
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny died from poisoning in a Siberian prison camp in 2024 © KAREN MINASYAN / AFP
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Britain Sanctions Russian Scientists Behind Chemical Attacks

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny died from poisoning in a Siberian prison camp in 2024 © KAREN MINASYAN / AFP
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny died from poisoning in a Siberian prison camp in 2024 © KAREN MINASYAN / AFP

Britain on Monday unveiled sanctions against seven Russian scientists and two research labs said to have helped develop chemical weapons used in two attacks.

The sanctions target those involved in developing the Novichok nerve agent used in a 2018 attack on a former Russian spy hiding in England and a chemical believed to have fatally poisoned Russian opposition activist Alexei Navalny in Siberia in 2024.

"These new measures directly hit two leading scientific research centres and key individuals involved in the development and production of toxic chemicals," the UK foreign ministry said in a statement.

Russian agents have been accused of poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in the southern city of Salisbury in March 2018 using the Soviet-developed nerve agent Novichok, AFP reported.

The Salisbury attack, the first offensive use of chemical weapons in Europe since World War II, caused an international outcry and prompted a mass expulsion of Russian diplomats by Western nations.

The Skripals survived, but a British woman died later after her partner picked up a discarded perfume bottle believed to have been used to carry the Novichok.

Navalny, an anti-corruption campaigner who rallied hundreds of thousands to the streets in protest at the Russian leadership, was President Vladimir Putin's fiercest domestic opponent for years.

He died in an Arctic prison colony in February 2024 while serving a 19-year sentence.

"Russia's repeated use of chemical weapons is a sickening violation of international law and a direct threat to global security," British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said.

The institutions hit were SC Signal, a Russian state scientific research institute and GNIII VM, the country's Scientific Research and Testing Institute for Military Medicine.

The individuals who were sanctioned included directors and technical specialists at the two research institutes, according to the foreign ministry.

The announcement came ahead of this week's NATO summit in Ankara, which opens on Tuesday and is set to focus on the Ukraine war.

The Foreign Office said Britain has now sanctioned over 3,400 individuals and organisations amid Moscow's war in Ukraine.