-
US Navy veterans battle PTSD with psychedelics
-
'Unheard of': Dodgers in awe of iron man Yamamoto
-
UK police probe mass train stabbing that wounded 10
-
'It's hard' - Jays manager Schneider rues missed chances in World Series defeat
-
Women's cricket set for new champion as India, South Africa clash
-
Messi scores but Miami lose as Nashville level MLS Cup playoff series
-
Dodgers clinch back-to-back World Series as Blue Jays downed in thriller
-
Vietnam flood death toll rises to 35: disaster agency
-
History-making Japan golf twins push each other to greater heights
-
Death becomes a growing business in ageing, lonely South Korea
-
India's cloud seeding trials 'costly spectacle'
-
Chiba wins women's title, Malinin leads at Skate Canada
-
Siakam sparks injury-hit Pacers to season's first NBA win
-
Denmark's fabled restaurant noma sells products to amateur cooks
-
UK train stabbing wounds 10, two suspects arrested
-
Nashville top Messi's Miami 2-1 to level MLS Cup playoff series
-
Fergie, her daughters and the corgis hit by Andrew crisis
-
'I can't eat': Millions risk losing food aid during US shutdown
-
High price of gold inspires new rush in California
-
'Swing for the fences': Carney promises bold budget as US threat grows
-
UK police arrest two after 'multiple people' stabbed on train
-
NBA Hawks lose guard Young for four weeks with knee sprain
-
50 dead as Caribbean digs out from Hurricane Melissa
-
Forever Young gives Japan first Breeders' Cup Classic triumph
-
Mbappe's Real Madrid extend Liga lead, Villarreal move second
-
Salah savours 'great feeling' after 250th Liverpool goal
-
Ethical Diamond surges to upset win in $5 million Breeders' Cup Turf
-
Kinghorn kicks Toulouse to Top 14 summit
-
Mbappe extends Real Madrid's Liga lead in Valencia rout
-
All Blacks sink 14-man Ireland 26-13 in Chicago Test
-
World champ Malinin takes lead at Skate Canada
-
Liverpool snap losing streak as Salah hits 250 goals in Villa win
-
Salah's 250th Liverpool goal sinks Villa as Arsenal cruise at Burnley
-
Morant suspended by Grizzlies after rebuking coaching staff
-
Spalletti begins Juve tenure with win at Cremonese but Napoli held
-
Frank refuses to condemn Van de Ven, Spence for snub in Spurs defeat
-
France superstar Dupont extends Toulouse deal
-
Egypt officially opens grand museum near pyramids
-
French fraud watchdog reports Shein for 'childlike' sex dolls
-
Scotland thrash USA before All Blacks' clash
-
Five things to know about the Grand Egyptian Museum
-
Bayern rest stars but ease past Leverkusen before PSG clash
-
Dead quiet: Paris Catacombs close for renovations
-
Families separated, children killed as survivors flee Sudan's 'apocalyptic' El-Fasher
-
Napoli held by Como as Spalletti begins Juve adventure
-
Southampton boss Still vows to fight on as pressure mounts
-
Borthwick hails 'ball of energy' Pollock as England down Australia
-
Egypt opens grand museum in lavish, pharaonic ceremony
-
Joao Pedro strikes at last as Chelsea edge past Spurs
-
Ohtani to open for Dodgers in World Series deciding game seven
Israeli troops leave West Bank's Jenin with Gaza talks deadlocked
Israeli forces appeared to be winding down a deadly 10-day raid in a flashpoint city in the occupied West Bank on Friday, as key ally Germany warned against treating the territory like Gaza.
There was no official confirmation from the Israeli military that it had withdrawn from Jenin, a bastion of Palestinian armed groups, but AFP journalists reported residents returning to the city following the fighting.
The reported pull-out came with Israel at loggerheads with its main ally the United States over talks aimed at forging a truce in the Gaza war, now nearly in its 12th month.
On Thursday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken urged both Israel and Hamas to finalise a truce deal, saying: "I think based on what I've seen, 90 percent is agreed."
But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu denied this in an interview with Fox News, saying: "It's not close."
Washington, along with fellow mediators in the talks Qatar and Egypt, has been pushing a proposal to bridge gaps between both sides which trade blame for the failure to reach a deal.
Netanyahu insists on an Israeli military presence on the border between Gaza and Egypt along the so-called Philadelphi Corridor.
Hamas is demanding a complete Israeli withdrawal, saying it agreed months ago to a truce agreement outlined by US President Joe Biden.
- 'No solution' -
In Israel on Friday, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said that "a purely military approach is no solution to the situation in Gaza", referring to the recovery of six more dead hostages announced on Sunday.
She also warned against calls by hardline right-wing members of Israel's cabinet for the military to take a similar approach to the West Bank as in Gaza.
"When members of the Israeli government themselves call for the same approach in the West Bank as in Gaza, that is precisely what acutely endangers Israel's security," Baerbock told reporters.
Her Israeli counterpart Israel Katz said Iran wanted to "arm" the West Bank "just like" Gaza.
"Nobody wants a deal for the hostages' release and a ceasefire more than Israel", he added and blamed Hamas for the impasse in talks.
The October 7 attack on Israel by Hamas resulted in the deaths of 1,205 people, mostly civilians including some hostages killed in captivity, according to official Israeli figures.
Of 251 hostages seized by Palestinian militants during the attack, 97 remain in Gaza including 33 the Israeli military says are dead. Scores were released during a one-week truce in November.
Israel's retaliatory offensive in Gaza has so far killed at least 40,878 people, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory.
Most of the dead are women and children, according to the UN rights office.
Netanyahu is under increasing pressure both internationally and domestically, with Israelis enraged and grief-stricken after the bodies of the six hostages were retrieved from Gaza.
He said they were "executed" with a bullet "to the head".
At Israeli protests in several cities, the premier's critics have blamed him for hostages' deaths, saying he has refused to make necessary concessions for striking a ceasefire deal.
In addition to the Gaza war, Israel also faces increased anger from Palestinians in the West Bank, a territory it occupied in 1967.
- Roads churned up -
The military launched coordinated raids across the northern West Bank on August 28 with soldiers supported by armoured vehicles and bulldozers.
There was no immediate confirmation from the military of the end of what it said on Friday was "counterterrorism activity in the area of Jenin".
Palestinian health ministry figures put the death toll for the Israeli incursion at 36.
Many homes in Jenin camp were damaged or destroyed by Israeli bulldozers which also churned up road surfaces.
On Friday, after the pull-out, Jenin residents used bulldozers of their own to begin clearing the rubble.
One resident told AFP he returned to his family home of 20 years to find it had been raided by soldiers.
"Thank God (the children) left the day before. They went to stay with our neighbours here," said Aziz Taleb, a 48-year-old father of seven.
"If they had stayed, they would have been killed without warning or anything."
During the Jenin operation, Israeli forces killed 14 militants, arrested 30 suspects, dismantled "approximately 30 explosives planted under roads" and conducted four aerial strikes, the Israeli military statement said.
One soldier was killed in Jenin, where most of the Palestinian fatalities occurred.
Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad have said at least 14 of the dead were militants.
- Polio vaccinations -
Itamar Ben-Gvir, Israel's far-right national security minister, posted on X Friday that he had asked Netanyahu to make the defeat of Hamas "and other terrorist organisations" in the West Bank one of the aims of the war in Gaza.
Israel's bombardment of the Gaza Strip has left it in ruins, with the destruction of water and sanitation infrastructure blamed for the spread of disease.
The humanitarian crisis has led to Gaza's first polio case in 25 years, prompting a massive vaccination effort launched on Sunday with localised "humanitarian pauses" in fighting.
Gaza's health ministry and a spokeswoman from the UN agency for Palestinian refugees said on Friday that medical teams vaccinated 161,188 children on the first day of the second phase of the anti-polio campaign.
burs-lsb-srm/dcp
S.Spengler--VB