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)
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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.



Iraq Hopes to Ship Oil to Türkiye by Pipeline as War Cuts off Exports

Technicians working at the Majnoon oil field in Basra, Iraq. (Reuters)
Technicians working at the Majnoon oil field in Basra, Iraq. (Reuters)
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Iraq Hopes to Ship Oil to Türkiye by Pipeline as War Cuts off Exports

Technicians working at the Majnoon oil field in Basra, Iraq. (Reuters)
Technicians working at the Majnoon oil field in Basra, Iraq. (Reuters)

Iraq is hoping to ship up to 250,000 barrels of oil per day to a port in Türkiye via a rehabilitated pipeline, its oil minister said, after the US-Israeli war on Iran cut off its main export route.

The amount would be just a fraction of the roughly 3.5 million barrels per day (bpd) that Iraq exported before the conflict, mostly through its southern Basra port and the Strait of Hormuz, where traffic has been severely disrupted by the war.

Authorities want to restore an old pipeline -- out of service for years -- that links the northern Kirkuk oil fields to the Turkish port of Ceyhan, where the oil could be shipped onwards to international buyers.

Oil Minister Hayan Abdel Ghani said late Sunday that the pipeline's rehabilitation is "complete, but there is a 100-kilometer section that needs to be inspected".

Teams will "conduct a hydrostatic test, which is the final phase of the pipeline's rehabilitation", hopefully "within a week", Ghani added, citing an export target of roughly 250,000 bpd.

The pipeline was damaged by the ISIS group in 2014.

Its use, however, requires "contact with the Turkish side and an agreement on logistical and technical issues", said oil expert Assem Jihad.

Initially, Baghdad wanted to send exports to the Ceyhan port via another pipeline that runs through Kurdistan.

But "so far, no agreement has been reached", Ghani said, as relations between the autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan and the federal government in Baghdad have deteriorated.

He acknowledged that "Iraqi oil exports were halted two or three days after the start of the war".

The country is also considering the possibility of transporting 200,000 bpd by tanker trucks, primarily via Jordan and Syria.

Iraq derives more than 90 percent of its revenue from oil.

Experts have warned that without this income, the state -- Iraq's largest employer -- will be unable to pay civil servants' salaries and risks a foreign currency shortage to finance imports or stabilise its exchange rate.


KSrelief Masam Project Clears 908 Mines Across Yemen in One Week

Saudi Arabia, through its humanitarian arm KSrelief, continues its efforts to clear mines in Yemen, enhancing civilian safety and supporting safe and dignified living conditions for Yemenis - SPA
Saudi Arabia, through its humanitarian arm KSrelief, continues its efforts to clear mines in Yemen, enhancing civilian safety and supporting safe and dignified living conditions for Yemenis - SPA
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KSrelief Masam Project Clears 908 Mines Across Yemen in One Week

Saudi Arabia, through its humanitarian arm KSrelief, continues its efforts to clear mines in Yemen, enhancing civilian safety and supporting safe and dignified living conditions for Yemenis - SPA
Saudi Arabia, through its humanitarian arm KSrelief, continues its efforts to clear mines in Yemen, enhancing civilian safety and supporting safe and dignified living conditions for Yemenis - SPA

The Project Masam for clearing landmines in Yemen, implemented by the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief), removed 908 mines from various areas of Yemen during the second week of March 2026, including three anti-personnel mines, nine anti-tank mines, 890 unexploded ordnance, and six IEDs, SPA reported.

The team conducted clearance operations across several governorates, removing mines, explosive devices, and unexploded ordnance.

In Aden Governorate, it dismantled two anti-tank mines, 215 pieces of unexploded ordnance, and two IEDs.

It also removed one anti-tank mine and seven pieces of unexploded ordnance in Al-Khawkhah District of Al-Hudaydah Governorate; three anti-personnel mines, three anti-tank mines, 513 pieces of unexploded ordnance, and two IEDs in Al-Mukalla District of Hadhramaut Governorate; and one piece of unexploded ordnance in Midi District of Hajjah Governorate.

The number of mines removed in March rose to 2,171, bringing the total cleared since the launch of the Project Masam to 548,123.

Saudi Arabia, through its humanitarian arm KSrelief, continues its efforts to clear mines in Yemen, enhancing civilian safety and supporting safe and dignified living conditions for Yemenis.


Germany Warns Major Israeli Ground Campaign in Lebanon Would Worsen Humanitarian Situation

A displaced woman and a child sit in a tent in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, 15 March 2026.  EPA/WAEL HAMZEH
A displaced woman and a child sit in a tent in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, 15 March 2026. EPA/WAEL HAMZEH
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Germany Warns Major Israeli Ground Campaign in Lebanon Would Worsen Humanitarian Situation

A displaced woman and a child sit in a tent in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, 15 March 2026.  EPA/WAEL HAMZEH
A displaced woman and a child sit in a tent in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, 15 March 2026. EPA/WAEL HAMZEH

Germany is enormously concerned by the developments in Lebanon, said a government spokesperson in Berlin on Monday, and warned that ‌a major Israeli ‌ground offensive ‌would ⁠significantly worsen the ⁠already tense humanitarian situation in the region.

"A glance at this part ⁠of the war ‌zone ‌fills us ‌with concern because we ‌see preparations for a major Israeli ground offensive, which ‌would significantly worsen the already tense humanitarian ⁠situation ⁠in the region," said the spokesperson.

The spokesperson added that Germany welcomed efforts to restart talks between Israel and Lebanon.