Egypt’s Dar al-Ifta Authorizes Using Zakat for Purchasing COVID-19 Vaccines

Dar al-Ifta in Cairo, Egypt (file photo: Reuters)
Dar al-Ifta in Cairo, Egypt (file photo: Reuters)
TT

Egypt’s Dar al-Ifta Authorizes Using Zakat for Purchasing COVID-19 Vaccines

Dar al-Ifta in Cairo, Egypt (file photo: Reuters)
Dar al-Ifta in Cairo, Egypt (file photo: Reuters)

Egypt’s Dar al-Ifta announced it is permissible to use the Zakat funds to buy the coronavirus vaccine in order to ensure “preservation of the self,” which is one of the higher overall objectives of Islamic law.

Dar al-Ifta said that establishing a health system comes within this goal, which also aims to maintain people's health and provide vaccines against COVID-19.

The fatwa also authorized the use of the money to treat patients, according to the statement.

The development of the virus and its effects necessitate efforts and funds to ensure a strong health system, with all its mechanisms, tools, devices, treatment, and means of protection, according to Dar al-Ifta.

The statement also explained that one of the most important aspects of protecting the livelihood of individuals and communities is the elimination of deadly diseases and pandemics.

The Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population confirmed 1,022 new coronavirus cases and 59 virus-related deaths, while there were 677 recovered cases.

Egypt has reported a total of 153,741 cases, 121,072 recoveries and 8,421 deaths.

Meanwhile, the government denied reports claiming the coronavirus vaccine will be distributed according to the social class of citizens, confirming that the map circulating on media regarding the distribution of the vaccine is “untrue.”

The cabinet asserted that the state will provide the vaccine to all citizens without discrimination, pointing out that the process of distributing the vaccine is not based on social hierarchy.

It asserted that priority will be given to the most vulnerable groups, such as medical staff, people with chronic diseases, and the elderly.



Unexploded Bombs Littering Gaza Threaten Recovery for Decades, UN Warns

Palestinians examine the destruction after an Israeli strike on a residential building in Rafah, Gaza Strip on March 3, 2024. © Hatem Ali, AP
Palestinians examine the destruction after an Israeli strike on a residential building in Rafah, Gaza Strip on March 3, 2024. © Hatem Ali, AP
TT

Unexploded Bombs Littering Gaza Threaten Recovery for Decades, UN Warns

Palestinians examine the destruction after an Israeli strike on a residential building in Rafah, Gaza Strip on March 3, 2024. © Hatem Ali, AP
Palestinians examine the destruction after an Israeli strike on a residential building in Rafah, Gaza Strip on March 3, 2024. © Hatem Ali, AP

War-torn Gaza is heavily contaminated by unexploded ordnance, which frequently kill and maim people and could threaten recovery efforts far into the future, the UN said Friday.

Unexploded ordnance, ranging from undetonated bombs or grenades to simple bullets, has become a common sight in the Gaza Strip since the start of Israel's war in the Palestinian territory, sparked by Hamas's unprecedented attack on October 7, 2023.

The United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS) said it had data suggesting that since the start of the conflict, more than 1,000 people had been killed in Gaza due to "indirect conflict", from the remnants of war, AFP reported.

Julius Van der Walt, UNMAS chief in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, stressed that that number was certainly a severe under-estimate.

Half of the known casualties were children, he told reporters in Geneva.

Speaking along side him at a press conference on mine action work worldwide, Narmina Strishenets of Save the Children UK, also highlighted the heavy toll on youngsters.

A report by the organization published last year found that in 2024, the use of explosive weapons in Gaza left an average of 475 children each month with potentially lifelong disabilities, including amputations.

Today, Strishenets said, Gaza has "the largest cohort of child amputees" in the world.

- 'High density' -

Van der Walt said UNMAS had so far been unable to conduct an extensive survey of the full scope of the problem, but "the evidence already suggests a high density of explosive ordnance contamination across the Gaza Strip".

So far, UNMAS had identified "more than 1,000 items of explosive ordnance", during missions conducted over the past 2.5 years.

Compared to Gaza's small geographic size, that means there is about one piece of explosive ordnance "every 600 metres", he pointed out.

And those are only the items that have been found.

"We have barely scratched the surface in understanding what is the level of contamination," he acknowledged.

Adding to the danger was Gaza's very high population density.

Prior to the conflict, Gaza was one already of the most densely-populated places on Earth, with around 6,000 people per square kilometre, Van der Walt said, pointing out that the war had effectively halved the space available, and doubled the density.

"Explosive weapons are being used all across the territories, including in densely-populated refugee camps," he said, pointing to a recent case where explosive ordnance was found inside a tent where people had been living for several weeks.

At the same time, "humanitarian convoys risk detonation as they travel throughout the Gaza Strip, and early recovery efforts are essentially stalled before they can even begin", he said.

- $541 million -

Van der Walt pointed to an assessment that, in a best case scenario, it will cost around $541 million to address the explosive ordnance threat, if all necessary permissions are granted and the equipment required is accessible.

He warned that the contamination, including within mountains of debris, was so vast and so varied, that it was "very close to impossible to ... do a full assessment", and that ordnance would likely remain a problem for decades to come.

He pointed to the World War II bombs that continue to be discovered during construction projects in Britain.

"We can anticipate something along those lines" in Gaza, he said.


Main Suspect in Syria's Tadamon Massacre Arrested, Ministry Says

Amjad Yousef - Syria's Interior Ministry
Amjad Yousef - Syria's Interior Ministry
TT

Main Suspect in Syria's Tadamon Massacre Arrested, Ministry Says

Amjad Yousef - Syria's Interior Ministry
Amjad Yousef - Syria's Interior Ministry

Syria's Interior Ministry said on Friday it had arrested the main suspect in the 2013 Tadamon massacre, one of the worst acts of violence attributed to the former government of Bashar al-Assad, in which 288 civilians were killed.

The ministry released footage of Amjad Yousef’s arrest in the Al-Ghab Plain area of Hama province in western Syria, near his hometown. Yousef had been hiding there since the overthrow of Assad at the end of 2024, a security source told Reuters.

Yousef, 40, a former member of military intelligence under Assad, was thrust into the spotlight in April 2022 when the UK's Guardian newspaper published videos provided by two academics that they said showed him forcing blindfolded civilians to run towards a pit in the Tadamon neighborhood of southern Damascus before shooting them.

Annsar Shahoud, a researcher at the University of Amsterdam Holocaust and Genocide Center and one of the academics, spent four years documenting the massacre.

Posing as an online fangirl, Shahoud gained Yousef's trust and ultimately obtained his confessions both on video and audio recording.

Reuters was unable to reach Yousef for comment as he has been taken into custody.

The massacre is one of the most egregious documented incidents of violence attributed to the Assad government during the 14-year bloody war that began in 2011.

After Assad's fall at the end of 2024, civilians, media outlets and international organizations went to the site of the massacre to inspect it and interview witnesses. Locals refer to the site as "Amjad Yousef's Pit". It has been marked on Google Maps as "The Site of the Tadamon Massacre".

Ahmed Adra, a Tadamon resident and a member of the neighborhood committee, said victims' families had been celebrating in the streets since morning.

"We will take white roses and plant them at the site of the massacre and tell the victims that their memory is alive and that justice is being served," he told Reuters.

Shahoud said she now felt safe with Yousef in custody, but added the path to justice in Syria was unclear and did not include all perpetrators.

"I feel safe now, despite the distance, because I always felt for years that this person was after me," she told Reuters.


US Puts $10 Million Bounty on Iraq’s Kataib Sayyid al-Shuhada Leader

Members of Iraq's pro-Iran Hezbollah Brigades (Kataib Hezbollah) gather in a mourning procession for one of their comrades who was killed the previous day in a strike in Basra, during the funeral in Baghdad on April 8, 2026. (Photo by AHMAD AL-RUBAYE / AFP)
Members of Iraq's pro-Iran Hezbollah Brigades (Kataib Hezbollah) gather in a mourning procession for one of their comrades who was killed the previous day in a strike in Basra, during the funeral in Baghdad on April 8, 2026. (Photo by AHMAD AL-RUBAYE / AFP)
TT

US Puts $10 Million Bounty on Iraq’s Kataib Sayyid al-Shuhada Leader

Members of Iraq's pro-Iran Hezbollah Brigades (Kataib Hezbollah) gather in a mourning procession for one of their comrades who was killed the previous day in a strike in Basra, during the funeral in Baghdad on April 8, 2026. (Photo by AHMAD AL-RUBAYE / AFP)
Members of Iraq's pro-Iran Hezbollah Brigades (Kataib Hezbollah) gather in a mourning procession for one of their comrades who was killed the previous day in a strike in Basra, during the funeral in Baghdad on April 8, 2026. (Photo by AHMAD AL-RUBAYE / AFP)

The United States has placed a $10 million bounty on the leader of an Iranian-backed Shiite group in Iraq.

The US State Department’s Rewards for Justice program issued a notice it sought the leader of Kataib Sayyid al-Shuhada.

It said Hashim Finyan Rahim al-Saraji led the group, whose members “killed
Iraqi civilians and attacked US diplomatic facilities in Iraq.”

It also said Kataib Sayyid al-Shuhada attacked US military bases and personnel in Iraq and Syria.

Iraq has several Shiite groups backed by Iran that are part of the country’s Popular Mobilization Forces.