Palestinians Evacuated from Gaza Face Tough Adjustment in Greece

Raghad al-Fara, 15 (L), Argwan al-Fara, 11 (C), and Shadia al-Fara, 44 (R), Palestinians who now live in Athens, pose for a portrait on November 24, 2025.  (Photo by Angelos TZORTZINIS / AFP)
Raghad al-Fara, 15 (L), Argwan al-Fara, 11 (C), and Shadia al-Fara, 44 (R), Palestinians who now live in Athens, pose for a portrait on November 24, 2025. (Photo by Angelos TZORTZINIS / AFP)
TT

Palestinians Evacuated from Gaza Face Tough Adjustment in Greece

Raghad al-Fara, 15 (L), Argwan al-Fara, 11 (C), and Shadia al-Fara, 44 (R), Palestinians who now live in Athens, pose for a portrait on November 24, 2025.  (Photo by Angelos TZORTZINIS / AFP)
Raghad al-Fara, 15 (L), Argwan al-Fara, 11 (C), and Shadia al-Fara, 44 (R), Palestinians who now live in Athens, pose for a portrait on November 24, 2025. (Photo by Angelos TZORTZINIS / AFP)

Raghad al-Fara is struggling to rebuild her teenage life in Athens, not least because she now moves around with crutches because of injuries suffered in the Gaza war.

Evacuated from the besieged Palestinian territory in February she now lives in a shelter for refugee women. "I never thought I would survive, let alone set foot on European soil," the 15-year-old told AFP.

Raghad is one of 10 Gazan minors suffering from "complex" orthopaedic and psychological injuries, according to Heracles Moskoff, secretary general for vulnerable persons at the migration ministry.

Injured during an Israeli bombing, she was evacuated with her mother Shadia and her younger sister Argwan.

The rest of the family — three other children and the father — remain in Gaza.

In total, 26 Palestinians arrived in Athens at the end of February, according to the Greek foreign ministry.

"When we learned that Greece agreed to host us, it was a relief," said Shadia al-Fara, the teenager's mother.

Sara Al-Sweirki, 20, who now also lives in Athens, is determined to "not just be a survivor."

"I want to be a girl my age like others, learn guitar and piano, and study," stressed the young woman, who left Gaza in September with her mother and brother.

Accepted by the private Deree American College of Greece, al-Sweirki will begin her studies in January.

She chose psychology "to help others overcome their traumas," she said.

Raghad could use such expertise. Her mother noted that the teenager still has not received psychological support "even though she wet the bed for months" due to the severe shock she experienced.

Raghad was injured in a July 2024 Israeli bombing in the Gaza city of Khan Younis that caused hundreds of casualties.

Her right leg and back were crushed under the rubble of a building.

"For two months, my daughter was on a respirator and for seven months, bedridden, unable to move," al-Fara recalled painfully.

Upon her arrival in Greece, Raghad was treated by an orthopedist and a physiotherapist at a children's hospital.

But she had to wait months for a support belt, and her mother, a former hairdresser, had to find orthopedic shoes on her own.

"Greece took responsibility for us but then abandoned us," Raghad's mother said, stating that the Greek state provides no financial assistance.

Even though the Palestinian community in Athens has asked the government to host more injured Gazans, there is "no political will" by the conservative Greek government, said Palestinian official Latif Darwesh.

"The current government has forgotten its historic friendship with the Palestinian people," Darwesh said.

Many Palestinian students found refuge in Greece in the 1980s, under the socialist administration of Andreas Papandreou, who cultivated close relations with late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.

Israel's tactics used against Gaza since the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023 set off the war, has heightened solidarity towards Palestinians among the Greek population.

The government of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has yet to recognize a Palestinian state, even though 74 percent of Greeks would support such a move, according to a recent study by aboutpeople, a Greek social research group.

Sara al-Sweirki does not know if she will stay in Athens "forever," though she acknowledges that "the future in Gaza remains very uncertain."

A truce agreement that came into effect on October 10 "does not mean reconstruction," said Shadia Al-Fara, who has enrolled her daughters in Greek school.

"We cannot return to live under tents with the fear of bombings resuming!" said the mother.

"My three other children in Gaza ask me to get them out of this hell" but Al-Fara says she feels "powerless" to help them.

Sara Al-Sweirki, meanwhile, looks to the future.

"My dream was interrupted" after October 7. "But now I am more determined than ever to pursue my goal (of studying)," she said.



EU Warns Israel Suspending Gaza NGOs Would Block 'Life-Saving Aid'

Palestinians walk along streets past tent camps for displaced people in Gaza City, Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2025. (AP)
Palestinians walk along streets past tent camps for displaced people in Gaza City, Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2025. (AP)
TT

EU Warns Israel Suspending Gaza NGOs Would Block 'Life-Saving Aid'

Palestinians walk along streets past tent camps for displaced people in Gaza City, Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2025. (AP)
Palestinians walk along streets past tent camps for displaced people in Gaza City, Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2025. (AP)

The EU warned Wednesday that Israel's threat to suspend several aid groups in Gaza under new registration rules would block "life-saving" assistance from reaching the population.

"The EU has been clear: the NGO registration law can not be implemented in its current form," EU humanitarian chief Hadja Lahbib posted on X, after Israel said several groups would be barred from January 1 for failing to comply with rules concerning the listing of their Palestinian employees.

"IHL (international humanitarian law) leaves no room for doubt: aid must reach those in need," Lahbib wrote.


Hadhramaut Governor to Asharq Al-Awsat: UAE Has Started Withdrawing its Forces, Door Still Open to STC

Hadhramaut Governor Salem Ahmed al-Khanbashi. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Hadhramaut Governor Salem Ahmed al-Khanbashi. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
TT

Hadhramaut Governor to Asharq Al-Awsat: UAE Has Started Withdrawing its Forces, Door Still Open to STC

Hadhramaut Governor Salem Ahmed al-Khanbashi. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Hadhramaut Governor Salem Ahmed al-Khanbashi. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Hadhramaut Governor Salem Ahmed al-Khanbashi called on Wednesday inhabitants of the governorate who are involved with the Southern Transitional Council to "return home" and join their "brothers in the National Shield Forces".

In remarks to Asharq Al-Awsat, he pledged that they will be welcomed in the ranks and that their "affairs will be arranged."

He also confirmed that the United Arab Emirates has started withdrawing its forces from all positions they were stationed at, including Hadhramaut and al-Shabwah.

He said they pulled out from the al-Rayan airport and Balhaf in Shabwah.

The forces had a limited presence in the al-Rabwa and al-Dabba areas in Hadhramaut . Their role was limited to supervising the STC's security support forces, he explained.

Sources confirmed that the UAE started pulling out its forces from Shabwah on Tuesday at the request of Presidential Leadership Council (PLC) Chairman Dr. Rashad al-Alimi.

Al-Khanbashi stressed that the only way to resolve the current crisis lies in the withdrawal of the STC from Hadhramaut and Mahra.

"The door is still open and we hope our brothers in the STC will seize the opportunity to avert the eruption of any fighting in Hadhramaut and the rest of the country," he added.

"They should return to where they came from and then we can kick of political dialogue about any future formations without resorting to imposing a status quo by force," he stressed.

Moreover, he underlined the readiness of the National Shield Forces, which are overseen by al-Alimi, to deploy in Hadhramaut and Mahra, in line with the state of emergency that he declared on Tuesday.

An additional 3,000 Hadhramaut residents, who have military experience, are also prepared to support their brothers in the National Shield Forces, al-Khanbashi revealed.

He said that coordination with Saudi Arabia was at its highest levels.

The Kingdom views Hadhramaut and Mahra as part of its "strategic security depth," he went on to say. "Our shared borders stretch over 700 kms, so the security and stability of the two provinces are part of the Kingdom's strategic security."

Saudi Arabia does not want Hadhramaut and Mahra to turn into dangerous hubs that can threaten it, he continued.

Al-Khanbashi added that al-Alimi's orders on Tuesday came at the right time to prevent saboteurs from trying to undermine the situation.


Nearly 25 ISIS Fighters Killed or Captured in Syria, US Military Says

A US military patrol is seen in northeastern Syria. (Reuters file)
A US military patrol is seen in northeastern Syria. (Reuters file)
TT

Nearly 25 ISIS Fighters Killed or Captured in Syria, US Military Says

A US military patrol is seen in northeastern Syria. (Reuters file)
A US military patrol is seen in northeastern Syria. (Reuters file)

The US military said Tuesday that nearly 25 operatives of the ISIS group were killed or captured in Syria this month following an ambush that killed two US troops and an American civilian interpreter.

The US Central Command, which oversees the Middle East, said in a statement on X that 11 missions were carried out over the past 10 days and followed initial strikes against ISIS weapons sites and infrastructure on Dec. 19, which hit 70 targets across central Syria.

In the operations since, the US military and other forces from the region, including Syria, killed at least seven ISIS members, captured others and eliminated four weapons caches, US Central Command said.

“We will not relent,” Adm. Brad Cooper, who leads the command, said in the statement. “We are steadfast in commitment to working with regional partners to root out the ISIS threat posed to US and regional security.”

Targets ranged from senior ISIS members who were being closely monitored by military officials to lower-level foot soldiers, according to a US official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive military operations.

The official said a growing collaboration between the United States and Syria's relatively new government meant that US forces were able to attack ISIS in areas of the country where they previously did not operate. Syrian forces were the driving force behind some of the missions against the militant group this year, the official added.

The official compared the growing cooperation to that between the US and Iraq in fighting ISIS a decade ago and said the goal, like in Iraq, is to ultimately hand over the effort fully to the Syrians.

The latest operations followed a Dec. 13 ambush that occurred near the ancient city of Palmyra while American and Syrian security officials had gathered for a meeting over lunch. Two members of the Iowa National Guard and a civilian interpreter from Michigan were killed, while three other US troops and members of Syria’s security forces were wounded.

The gunman, who was killed, had joined Syria’s internal security forces as a base security guard and recently had been reassigned because of suspicions he might be affiliated with ISIS, Syrian officials said.

The initial retaliatory strike on ISIS targets in Syria, which included fighter jets from Jordan, was a major test for the warming ties between the US and Syria since last year's ouster of autocratic leader Bashar al-Assad.

President Donald Trump said Syria's new president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, was “extremely angry and disturbed by this attack."