Libya Talks Pause without Naming Transitional Government

Libyan delegates attend the opening of the Libyan Political Dialogue Forum hosted in Gammarth on the outskirts of Tunisia’s capital, Tunis. (AFP)
Libyan delegates attend the opening of the Libyan Political Dialogue Forum hosted in Gammarth on the outskirts of Tunisia’s capital, Tunis. (AFP)
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Libya Talks Pause without Naming Transitional Government

Libyan delegates attend the opening of the Libyan Political Dialogue Forum hosted in Gammarth on the outskirts of Tunisia’s capital, Tunis. (AFP)
Libyan delegates attend the opening of the Libyan Political Dialogue Forum hosted in Gammarth on the outskirts of Tunisia’s capital, Tunis. (AFP)

Talks on Libya’s future adjourned on Sunday without naming a new government to oversee a transition to possible elections next year, and acting UN envoy Stephanie Williams said there was a lot of work still to do.

The 75 participants chosen by the United Nations to meet over the past week in Tunis had already agreed to hold presidential and parliamentary elections on Dec. 24 next year.

However, the talks ended without any agreement on a unified executive authority that Williams had said was required to reach elections.

“Ten years of conflict cannot be resolved in one week,” she said at a news conference after the talks finished.

Delegates will resume talks online next week to discuss a reformed structure and role for the executive authority, Williams added. They will also discuss the question of a constitutional basis for the election.

The talks come as part of a wider peacemaking process along with a military ceasefire agreed between the two main sides in the war: the Government of National Accord (GNA) and Khalifa Haftar’s Libyan National Army (LNA).

However, many Libyans are skeptical about a process that has followed nearly a decade of chaos and bloodshed and repeated previous efforts to resolve the country’s divisions.

Since 2014 the country has been split between rival factions based in Tripoli, seat of the GNA, and eastern Libya, where the LNA is based.

The GNA emerged from a UN-backed political agreement in 2015, but was spurned by eastern factions. Last year, Haftar launched an LNA offensive on Tripoli which the GNA turned back in June with support from Turkey.



Report: Israel Built and Defended a Secret Base in Iraq for Iran War

A F-35 fighter jet flies during a graduation ceremony for Israeli Air Force pilots at Hatzerim Airbase, in southern Israel, June 29, 2023. (Reuters)
A F-35 fighter jet flies during a graduation ceremony for Israeli Air Force pilots at Hatzerim Airbase, in southern Israel, June 29, 2023. (Reuters)
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Report: Israel Built and Defended a Secret Base in Iraq for Iran War

A F-35 fighter jet flies during a graduation ceremony for Israeli Air Force pilots at Hatzerim Airbase, in southern Israel, June 29, 2023. (Reuters)
A F-35 fighter jet flies during a graduation ceremony for Israeli Air Force pilots at Hatzerim Airbase, in southern Israel, June 29, 2023. (Reuters)

Israel set up ‌a clandestine military outpost in the Iraqi desert to support its air campaign against Iran and launched airstrikes against Iraqi troops who nearly discovered it, the Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday, citing people familiar with the matter including US officials.

Israel built the installation, which housed special forces and served as a logistical hub ‌for the ‌Israeli air force, with the knowledge ‌of ⁠the US just ⁠before the start of the US-Israeli war against Iran, the newspaper said.

It also included search-and-rescue teams positioned to assist any downed Israeli pilots, the Journal said.

Reuters could not independently verify the report. ⁠There was no immediate response from ‌the Israeli prime ‌minister's office to a Reuters request for comment.

The ‌base was almost discovered in early ‌March after Iraqi state media said a local shepherd reported unusual military activity, including helicopter movements in the area.

Iraqi troops were dispatched to ‌investigate, but Israeli forces used airstrikes to keep them at a ⁠distance ⁠and prevent the site from being discovered, the paper said, citing one of the sources.

The Journal cited a complaint filed with the United Nations later in March in which Iraq said the attack involved foreign forces and airstrikes and attributed it to the US. The WSJ cited a person familiar with the matter as saying the United States was not involved in the attack.


Syria Sets First Cabinet Reshuffle Since Assad Ouster, State Media Reports

This handout photo provided by Syria's SANA news agency's Telegram channel on May 9, 2026, shows Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa meeting with the Lebanese Prime Minister (unseen) at the People's Palace in Damascus. (SANA / AFP)
This handout photo provided by Syria's SANA news agency's Telegram channel on May 9, 2026, shows Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa meeting with the Lebanese Prime Minister (unseen) at the People's Palace in Damascus. (SANA / AFP)
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Syria Sets First Cabinet Reshuffle Since Assad Ouster, State Media Reports

This handout photo provided by Syria's SANA news agency's Telegram channel on May 9, 2026, shows Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa meeting with the Lebanese Prime Minister (unseen) at the People's Palace in Damascus. (SANA / AFP)
This handout photo provided by Syria's SANA news agency's Telegram channel on May 9, 2026, shows Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa meeting with the Lebanese Prime Minister (unseen) at the People's Palace in Damascus. (SANA / AFP)

Syrian interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa announced a series of government changes in late-night presidential decrees published by state news agency SANA.

Sharaa appointed Khaled Zaarour as information minister, replacing Hamza Mustafa, who was moved to the foreign ministry. As agriculture minister, he named Bassel Sweidan, ‌who also ‌heads a committee tasked with ‌reaching ⁠settlement agreements with business ⁠tycoons linked to the Assad-era elite.

Sharaa replaced governors in the provinces of Homs, al-Quneitra and Deir Ezzor, the eastern province where most of Syria’s oil ⁠fields are located.

The reshuffle ‌is the ‌first since the ouster of former President ‌Bashar al-Assad and comes around ‌a year and a half into the five-year transitional period set out in Syria’s constitutional declaration.

No official reason was ‌given for the changes, but protests and social media campaigns ⁠have ⁠emerged in recent months over worsening economic conditions and what critics describe as poor government performance.

Sharaa also appointed a new secretary-general for the presidency, a post previously held by one of his brothers, a move that had drawn criticism from opponents who accused the administration of favoring nepotism over merit.


Israel Has Deported Two Gaza Flotilla Activists

This combination of file pictures created on May 9, 2026 shows Spanish activist Saif Abu Keshek (L) and Brazil's activist Thiago Avila arriving in court, in the Israeli coastal city of Ashkelon on May 5, 2026. (Photo by ilia YEFIMOVICH / AFP)
This combination of file pictures created on May 9, 2026 shows Spanish activist Saif Abu Keshek (L) and Brazil's activist Thiago Avila arriving in court, in the Israeli coastal city of Ashkelon on May 5, 2026. (Photo by ilia YEFIMOVICH / AFP)
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Israel Has Deported Two Gaza Flotilla Activists

This combination of file pictures created on May 9, 2026 shows Spanish activist Saif Abu Keshek (L) and Brazil's activist Thiago Avila arriving in court, in the Israeli coastal city of Ashkelon on May 5, 2026. (Photo by ilia YEFIMOVICH / AFP)
This combination of file pictures created on May 9, 2026 shows Spanish activist Saif Abu Keshek (L) and Brazil's activist Thiago Avila arriving in court, in the Israeli coastal city of Ashkelon on May 5, 2026. (Photo by ilia YEFIMOVICH / AFP)

Israel has deported two foreign activists taken off a Gaza-bound flotilla, the foreign ministry said on Sunday.

Saif Abu Keshek, a Spanish national of Palestinian origin, and Brazilian Thiago Avila were among dozens of activists aboard a flotilla intercepted by the Israeli navy in international waters off the coast of Greece on April 30.

The pair were seized by Israeli forces and brought to Israel for questioning, while the others were taken to the Greek island of Crete and released.

"Saif Abu Keshek and Thiago Avila, from the provocation flotilla, were deported today from Israel," following an investigation the Israeli foreign ministry posted on X on Sunday.

Israel would "not allow any breach" of the blockade on Gaza, it added.

Spain, Brazil and the United Nations had all called for the men's swift release.

On Wednesday an Israeli court rejected an appeal contesting the pair's detention, with the rights group representing them calling the ruling as "unlawful."

The flotilla had set sail from France, Spain and Italy with the aim of breaking Israel's blockade of Gaza and delivering humanitarian aid to the war-ravaged Palestinian territory.

The Global Sumud Flotilla's first voyage last year was also intercepted by Israeli forces off the coasts of Egypt and Gaza.

Israel controls all entry points into Gaza, which has been under an Israeli blockade since 2007.

Throughout the Gaza war that started in October 2023, there have been shortages of critical supplies in the territory, with Israel at times cutting off aid entirely.