Smuggled Starlink dishes throw lifeline to some in war-torn Sudan

Smuggled Starlink dishes throw lifeline to some in war-torn Sudan
Starlink has become a lifeline for some in a country where the Internet has gone down regularly since war erupted last April between Sudan’s army and paramilitary force. (Shutterstock/File)
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Updated 03 April 2024
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Smuggled Starlink dishes throw lifeline to some in war-torn Sudan

Smuggled Starlink dishes throw lifeline to some in war-torn Sudan
  • Starlink has become a lifeline for some in a country where the Internet has gone down regularly since war erupted last April between Sudan’s army and paramilitary force
  • The kits have made their way into the country “illegally via Libya, South Sudan and Eritrea,” one device reseller told AFP on condition of anonymity

TAMBOUL, Sudan: On a street corner in the Sudanese town of Tamboul, dozens of people tap feverishly on their phones, calling loved ones and moving money through online apps.
At the center of their huddle is a bright white dish that connects to the Internet via Starlink, the satellite system owned by Elon Musk’s SpaceX rocket company.
Starlink has become a lifeline for some in a country where the Internet has gone down regularly since war erupted last April between Sudan’s army and paramilitary force.
But the system, which can bring connectivity where there is no land-based network, is not officially available in Sudan.
Instead, the kits have made their way into the country “illegally via Libya, South Sudan and Eritrea,” one device reseller told AFP on condition of anonymity.
The cost for dishes and subscriptions can run into the hundreds of dollars, well out of reach for most Sudanese.
The fees are paid by Sudanese overseas or entrepreneurs like Mohamed Bellah, who runs an Internet cafe in a village some 120 kilometers (75 miles) south of Khartoum.
“You can make your money back in three days,” he told AFP, saying the investment was worth every penny.
The conflict between the army of Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) of his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo has displaced millions and killed many thousands.
The banking system has collapsed and millions can now access money only via the Bank of Khartoum’s app, Bankak.
Officials have not offered an explanation for the blackouts, though a near-total shutdown in February was widely blamed on the RSF.
Now people like Issam Ahmed, huddled around the dish in Tamboul, some 140 kilometers (90 miles) southeast of Khartoum, are reliant on Starlink.
He has been anxiously waiting for family news and financial support from his son, who works in Saudi Arabia.
“He sent me money through the bank app and I just transferred it to a currency dealer who will give me cash,” Ahmed told AFP.
Starlink, which is available in more than 70 countries, allows users on high-cost tariffs to take their dishes with them across national boundaries.
Musk made a big play of deploying the system in war-torn Ukraine and during protests in Iran in 2022.
But he has made no such gesture on Sudan and none of the tariffs advertised on Starlink’s website would allow the kind of usage seen there. SpaceX has not responded to AFP’s requests for clarification.
The Sudanese government, which is loyal to the army, banned Starlink devices in December.
But by that stage, the RSF had already started exploiting the business opportunities.
In Qanab Al-Halawein, a village southeast of Khartoum, RSF forces charge for access to their own dish.
They “set up the dish in the square every morning and leave in the evening with all the money they have made,” one resident told AFP on condition of anonymity.
An Internet cafe owner in another village said RSF personnel came “every day” and took 150,000 Sudanese pounds ($140 for currency dealers) in exchange for allowing the cafe to offer Starlink.
The army caught on and partly backtracked on its ban, announcing in late February it would donate some Starlink dishes to residents in Omdurman, part of greater Khartoum.
But the vast region of Darfur in Sudan’s west, home to around a quarter of its 48 million people, has been particularly hit by the war-time blackout.
Huge areas have been without any connection for nearly a year and use of the dishes has spread rapidly in a region largely controlled by the RSF.
“Without (Starlink) we could have never figured out how to receive money,” Mohammed Beshara told AFP via text message from the Otash camp in South Darfur.
But for Beshara and thousands like him, it takes money to get money.
He pays roughly $3 an hour for the connection and currency dealers take commissions for every Bankak transaction.
For desperate Tamboul residents like 43-year-old Arij Ahmed, paying commissions is a necessary sacrifice.
She walks five kilometers (three miles) with her 12-year-old son to the Starlink dish “every week, when my husband in Qatar gets his pay cheque and he sends us a transfer,” she told AFP.
And every week, she hopes to get enough money to survive until her next connection.


UN says UNRWA aid agency will continue work in all Palestinian territories

UN says UNRWA aid agency will continue work in all Palestinian territories
Updated 34 sec ago
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UN says UNRWA aid agency will continue work in all Palestinian territories

UN says UNRWA aid agency will continue work in all Palestinian territories
  • Israel decided to ban UNRWA following accusations some of its staff belong to Hamas
  • UNRWA has long been the lead agency in coordinating aid to Gaza

UNITED NATIONS: The United Nations said Thursday its humanitarian relief agency UNRWA would continue working in all Palestinian territories, including east Jerusalem, despite Israeli legislation coming into force that cuts ties with the organization.
Israel decided to ban the UN agency for Palestinian refugees following accusations some of its staff belong to Hamas.
“UNRWA clinics across the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, are open. Meanwhile, the humanitarian operations in Gaza continues, including with UNRWA work there,” said Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for UN chief Antonio Guterres.
UNRWA has long been the lead agency in coordinating aid to Gaza.
A series of investigations found some “neutrality related issues” at UNRWA — but stressed Israel had not provided evidence that a significant number of its staff belonged to “terrorist” organizations.
“UNRWA will continue to deliver on its mandate... until they’re no longer able to do so,” Dujarric said.
However he clarified that no staff were present at the agency’s headquarters in East Jerusalem, which mainly deals with administration. Palestinian employees are however working from other locations, while foreign employees had to leave Israel.
“We had taken precautions,” Dujarric said. “All the equipment inside, files, computers, everything had been removed, our vehicles as well.”


Hamas confirms death of its military chief Mohammed Deif

Hamas confirms death of its military chief Mohammed Deif
Updated 25 min 41 sec ago
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Hamas confirms death of its military chief Mohammed Deif

Hamas confirms death of its military chief Mohammed Deif
  • “The Al-Qassam Brigades announce to our great people the martyrdom of a group of distinguished fighters and heroic commanders,” Abu Obeida, Hamas’ spokesman announced
  • In videos, Deif had appeared masked or shown in silhouette, and photos of him were rare

GAZA CITY: Hamas confirmed on Thursday the death of its military chief Mohammed Deif, accused by Israel of being one of the masterminds behind the October 7 attack and whose killing it announced last year.
“The Al-Qassam Brigades announce to our great people the martyrdom of a group of distinguished fighters and heroic commanders,” Abu Obeida, spokesman for Hamas’ armed wing, announced in a video statement, naming “commander Mohammed Deif, chief of staff of the Al-Qassam Brigades (and) commander Marwan Issa, deputy chief of staff” among them.
Israel had accused Deif of being one of the key architects of October 7, along with Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, who was killed on October 16, 2024.
On August 1 last year, the Israeli military announced it had killed Deif in an air strike in Gaza the month before.
The military said fighter jets had struck Khan Yunis on July 13 and “following an intelligence assessment, it can be confirmed that Mohammed Deif was eliminated in the strike.”
He was killed along with one of his top commanders, Rafa Salama, the military said.
“Deif initiated, planned, and executed the October 7th massacre,” the military added.
Deif became head of Hamas’s armed wing, the Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, in 2002.
He was among Israel’s most wanted men for nearly three decades and on a US list of “international terrorists” since 2015.
Deif, whose real name is Mohammed Diab Al-Masri, was born in the Khan Yunis refugee camp in 1965.
In videos, Deif had appeared masked or shown in silhouette, and photos of him were rare.
In January 2024, Israel released a picture of Deif showing him with one eye missing, without specifying when it was taken.
His enemies dubbed Deif the “cat with nine lives” after his many close calls with death.
In 2014, Israel launched an air strike on Gaza, killing Deif’s wife and a seven-month-old son.
Deif is said to have played a key role in the huge network of tunnels built beneath Gaza.
In May, the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court requested a warrant for his arrest, along with Sinwar, for war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Until Thursday, Hamas had not confirmed his death.


Tears of joy for Thai hostages freed in Gaza

Tears of joy for Thai hostages freed in Gaza
Updated 30 January 2025
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Tears of joy for Thai hostages freed in Gaza

Tears of joy for Thai hostages freed in Gaza
  • Five Thais were released along with three Israelis held by Hamas
  • “It is confirmed, my son did not die. Thank you God,” Wiwwaeo Sriaoun said as she heard the confirmation that her son Watchara Sriaoun was among those freed

KUMPHAWAPI, Thailand: The families of Thai farm workers held for over a year in Gaza cheered and wept with relief Thursday as they were freed in a hostage-prisoner exchange between Israel and Hamas.
Five Thais were released along with three Israelis held by Hamas as part of a ceasefire deal aimed at ending the Gaza war.
When Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, 31 Thais were abducted, with 23 released by the end of that year and two confirmed dead in May.
“It is confirmed, my son did not die. Thank you God,” Wiwwaeo Sriaoun said as she heard the confirmation that her son Watchara Sriaoun was among those freed.
“I will hug him when I see him. I want to see if his health is OK, I am worried about his health,” she added between sobs.
“Thank you, thank you God he did not die. We trust in God.”
Around 10 family members had gathered to support Wiwwaeo as she waited for news at the modest house on the family rubber farm in northeast Udon Thani region.
Before her son’s release was confirmed, Wiwwaeo spent the day watching news on a tablet computer, hoping for a good outcome.
“Come, come home back to your father, mother and daughter,” she said as she watched.
When Watchara appeared on screen, the family erupted into cheers and shouts of elation.
“It’s him, it’s really him! He does not look thin at all, he looks the same weight but his hair is shorter than before. They probably cut his hair,” his mother said.
After a video call with her son, Wiwwaeo said he appeared well but traumatized by his experience.
“I think he was in fear. He thought he could not return home. I see his fear. He is glad seeing me and his father but I know he is still in fear,” she said.
Watchara was freed along with Pongsak Tanna, Sathian Suwannakham, Surasak Lamnau and Bannawat Saethao, according to the office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
One Thai citizen remains in captivity.
Hailing from the poor, rural region of Udon Thani, Watchara moved to Israel three years ago to work as a farmer for better wages.
“My friend called around 10:00 p.m. and said the ambassador told her five Thais will be released, and my friend said my son could be one,” Wiwwaeo told AFP as she waited for news of the release.
“I could not sleep from then until now. I was up until 3:00 am and my husband and I went out for rubber tapping and since then I have been monitoring the news.”
In Buriram, another part of northeast Thailand, the family of freed hostage Pongsak were similarly elated, sobbing with relief as his release was confirmed.
“I’m so happy,” his father Wilas Tanna said through tears, in footage posted on social media platform X by a Channel News Asia correspondent.
Watchara’s younger brother, who was also working in Israel, returned to Thailand after Watchara was kidnapped.
“We told him to come back because we were worried,” his mother told AFP.
Watchara’s aunt Ratana Sriaoun said that after earlier disappointments, the family refused to believe he was coming home until they had official confirmation.
“I am so happy, finally I get to see my nephew,” she told AFP.
“I can’t put these feelings into words. My heart is full, and my tears are of pure joy.”
Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra said she was “elated,” thanking Qatar, Egypt, Iran, Turkiye and the United States for their work to secure the releases.
The foreign ministry said the five would be taken for medical screening and treatment, and were expected to return to Thailand within 10 days.
The Southeast Asian nation has about 30,000 citizens in Israel, most of them working in the agricultural sector, where they earn significantly higher salaries as farm laborers than they would at home.
A total of 46 Thai workers have been killed since the October 2023 attacks, according to the foreign ministry in Bangkok.
Thailand’s labor ministry said last week that the country will expand its workforce in Israel by 13,000 positions.


Israel shoots down Hezbollah drone

Israel shoots down Hezbollah drone
Updated 30 January 2025
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Israel shoots down Hezbollah drone

Israel shoots down Hezbollah drone
  • Air defense system destroys surveillance UAV launched towards Israel
  • Israeli troops have continued demolition and bulldozing operations in the eastern sector of southern Lebanon

BEIRUT: The Israeli Air Force on Thursday said that it shot down a Hezbollah surveillance drone launched toward Israel.

A ground-based air defense system was used to intercept the drone, and no warning sirens were sounded at the time.

The incident is the first of its kind since the ceasefire agreement between Hezbollah and Israel came into effect on Oct. 27.

Israeli army spokesman Avichay Adraee said that Israeli forces “will not allow any Hezbollah activity from Lebanon to take place, and will take action to remove any threat against Israel and its citizens.”

Israeli troops have continued demolition and bulldozing operations in the eastern sector of southern Lebanon. The deadline for the total Israeli withdrawal from the border area has been extended until Feb. 18 with US approval.

Troops used machine-gun fire and grenades to prevent residents of several border villages in the central sector from returning to their homes.

Israeli artillery targeted the outskirts of Shebaa, while troops set a poultry farm on fire in Tallat Nahas-Deir Mimas. 

Israel seeks to remain in several strategic positions in the eastern sector, including the Owaida hill.

The Israeli army is still stationed in the Mfailha area, west of Mays Al-Jabal, and is bulldozing and destroying houses, according to residents trying to enter their town.

Israeli bulldozers removed mounds of earth, and expanded the bulldozing operations to include electricity poles, walls, and trees.

An Israeli drone on Wednesday night struck a house at the northern entrance of Yohmor Chkeif with a guided missile. Israel had previously targeted the property before the land war in southern Lebanon.

Adraee said that the Israeli air force aircraft destroyed an engineering vehicle that was used to rebuild Hezbollah’s terrorist infrastructure, “which violates the agreements between Israel and Hezbollah.”

An Israeli drone dropped explosives on a bulldozer that was helping ambulance teams pull the bodies of Hezbollah victims from the rubble in Yaroun.

Two people were injured after an Israeli drone dropped a bomb near their motorcycle on the outskirts of the town of Talusa.

The Israeli army still occupies nine villages — Aitaroun, Blida, Mays Al-Jabal, Odaisseh, Kfarkela, Hula, Markaba, Maroun Al-Ras, and Rab Al-Thalathine — in the central sector.

Activists on social media circulated calls on behalf of residents of border villages to gather next Sunday at specific points to return to the villages, accompanied by the Lebanese army.

Lebanon’s National News Agency reported that the Israeli army has carried out demolitions in the border towns of Dhayra and Al-Bustan in the Tyre district.

A large crane, overlooking Birkat Risha, Al-Bustan, Yarine, and Marwahin, installed concrete walls along the border line, amid intensive movements of soldiers, and mounds were erected overlooking the towns of Yarine, Zalloutiyeh, Umm Al-Tout, and Dhaira.

Media reports on Thursday said that Hezbollah has provided Lebanese authorities with the names of seven Lebanese people captured by the Israeli army in the border region: Kamel Younes, who was seized in the town of Blida; and Hassan Jawad, Youssef Abdallah, Ibrahim Al-Khalil, Mohammed Jawad, and Hussein Sharif, all detained in the town of Aita Al-Shaab; in addition to maritime captain Imad Amhaz, who was abducted by naval commandos in the coastal town of Batroun, northern Lebanon.

The Turkish Foreign Ministry on Wednesday night said that three Turkish nationals had been killed by an Israeli airstrike in the Lebanese-Israeli border area while attempting to cross illegally into Israel.

“We condemn in the strongest terms this unlawful attack that resulted in the death of our citizens,” the ministry said.

“Israel must immediately end its aggressive policies that disregard human life and escalate tensions in our region,” it added.

A Lebanese security source told Arab News that the Israeli airstrike occurred on Dec. 12 on Al-Sadana, Shebaa.

“At the time, the identities of the victims were not immediately known, as neighboring villages did not report any missing persons.

“However, when the Turkish Embassy began following up on the three missing citizens, Lebanese authorities discovered that the victims were Turkish nationals who had attempted to infiltrate Israel for work.

“Their civilian clothes and traces of blood were found at the scene, but their bodies were not recovered at the time. The three had previously tried to cross through another entry point, but failed.”


UAE inaugurates first French-made Rafale fighter jet in Paris

UAE inaugurates first French-made Rafale fighter jet in Paris
Updated 30 January 2025
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UAE inaugurates first French-made Rafale fighter jet in Paris

UAE inaugurates first French-made Rafale fighter jet in Paris
  • French-Emirati deal represents key defense agreement between the two allies
  • The UAE aims to enhance its defense capabilities by upgrading air force fleet

LONDON: The UAE Ministry of Defense has inaugurated its first French-made Rafale fighter jet, marking a significant enhancement to the capabilities of the Emirati Armed Forces.

The ministry said on Thursday that the move is part of a deal signed with French aerospace company Dassault Aviation, highlighting the strong strategic partnership between Paris and Abu Dhabi.

The French-made Rafale is regarded as one of the world’s most advanced multi-role combat aircraft.

The UAE aims to enhance its defense capabilities by upgrading the air force fleet with the acquisition of Rafale fighter jets to address regional and global security challenges, the Emirates News Agency reported.

The launch ceremony took place in Paris and was attended by Mohamed bin Mubarak Fadhel Al-Mazrouei, UAE minister of state for defense affairs, as well as Sebastien Lecornu, the French defense minister.

Al-Mazrouei said that the UAE’s “strategy focuses on acquiring the most advanced weaponry and systems that align with the evolving nature of modern warfare and technological advancements, enhancing the overall combat efficiency of our national defense system.”

The agreement with Rafale will feature a training program to qualify Emirati pilots and technicians, ensuring readiness levels among national personnel, WAM added.

Brig. Gen. Mohamed Salem Ali Al-Hameli of the UAE Air Force and Air Defense said that the Rafale aircraft features advanced technologies for reconnaissance and precise attacks on land and sea targets, making it a valuable addition to the UAE’s air force.

The €16.6 billion ($17.3 billion) deal between the UAE and Dassault Aviation is a key defense agreement in French-Emirati relations, involving the production of 80 advanced fighter jets with cutting-edge technologies.