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British nationals in Afghanistan are being told to leave immediately as the country moves into what the UN has described as a “deadlier and more destructive phase”.

The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office on Friday evening issued an advisory against all travel to Afghanistan.

It added: “If you are still in Afghanistan, you are advised to leave now by commercial means because of the worsening security situation.”

Since the withdrawal of western forces, violence in the country has increased
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Since the withdrawal of foreign forces, violence in the country has increased

It comes after Taliban fighters recaptured Zaranj in southern Nimroz, the first provincial capital to have fallen to the extremist group since it briefly held Kunduz in the north in 2016.

The Taliban posted images on social media that showed insurgents inside the local airport, as well as posing for photographs at the entrance of the city.

Nimroz is a sparsely populated region that is mostly desert, and the provincial capital has about 50,000 residents.

At least 1,000 civilians have been killed in Afghanistan during the past month, and more than half of Afghanistan’s 421 districts and district centres are now in Taliban hands, along with lucrative border crossings into Iran, Tajikistan and Pakistan.

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At a special meeting of the UN Security Council on Friday, Deborah Lyons, the UN envoy to Afghanistan, said the fighting and resultant human toll were worsening.

“The war in Afghanistan has entered a new, deadlier, and more destructive phase,” she said.

“The provincial capitals of Kandahar, Herat, and Lashkar Gah in particular have come under significant pressure.

“This is a clear attempt by the Taliban to seize urban centres with the force of arms.”

Internally displaced Afghans who fled their home due to fighting between the Taliban and Afghan security personnel, are seen at a camp in Daman district of Kandahar province. Pic: AP
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The fighting has forced hundreds of thousands of Afghan civilians from their homes. Pic: AP

She added: “The human toll of this strategy is extremely distressing – and the political message is even more deeply disturbing.”

She said that 104 civilians were killed in just 10 days in Lashkar Gah, the capital city of Helmand province, as insurgents sweep across the country following the withdrawal of foreign troops earlier this year.

Also on Friday, Afghan government forces joined US aircraft in attacking Taliban positions in Helmand, where the militants control nine out of the 10 city districts.

Afghan journalists films the vehicle in which director of Afghanistan's Government Information Media Center Dawa Khan Menapal was shot dead in Kabul. Pic: AP
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Dawa Khan Menapal had previously been a deputy spokesman for President Ashraf Ghani. Pic: AP
A bullet hole is seen on the vehicle in which director of Afghanistan's Government Information Media Center Dawa Khan Menapal was shot dead. Pic: AP
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Dawa Khan Menapal was shot dead while he was in his car during Friday prayers. Pic: AP

Meanwhile, the Taliban assassinated Dawa Khan Menapal, the chief of the Afghan government’s press operations for local and foreign media and previously a deputy spokesman for President Ashraf Ghani.

Mr Menapal was murdered while in his car during Friday prayers in Kabul, the Afghan capital.

It comes days after an attempt to kill the country’s acting defence minister, Bismillah Khan Mohammadi, in a Taliban bombing that left eight people dead and 20 wounded.

The minister was unharmed.

Last month the Taliban took control of the town of Spin Boldak, near one of the country’s busiest border crossings with Pakistan.

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Thousands of people cross daily, alongside a steady stream of trucks bringing goods to the land-locked country from the Arabian Sea port city of Karachi.

However, the Taliban closed the crossing on Friday over a visa dispute, claiming Pakistan was abiding by Kabul government requirements for Afghans travelling into Pakistan. Previously, travel documents were rarely required.

“The border will stay closed until Pakistan allows all Afghans to cross on the bases of our old procedure,” said a Taliban statement.

On Friday, at least 1,500 people were waiting on both sides to pass through, with more than 600 trucks, many loaded with perishable fresh foods, backed up on both sides of the border.

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Police fire tear gas at protesters during day of strikes in France

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Police fire tear gas at protesters during day of strikes in France

Hundreds of thousands of people have taken part in anti-austerity protests and strikes in France.

The demonstrators included teachers, train drivers, pharmacists, and hospital staff.

A third of primary school teachers were on strike nationwide on Thursday, and nearly half walked out in Paris, the FSU-SNUipp union said.

Regional trains were heavily affected, while most of the country’s high-speed TGV services were working, officials said.

Police charge during a demonstration in Paris. Pic: Reuters
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Police charge during a demonstration in Paris. Pic: Reuters

There were clashes on the margins of the rallies, but the level of violence was not as high as interior minister Bruno Retailleau had feared. Some 80,000 police and gendarmes were deployed.

Officers in the capital threw tear gas to disperse troublemakers dressed in black who hurled beer cans and stones at them. Police also stopped people targeting banks.

There were brief clashes at other protests as well, including in Nantes, and in Lyon, where three people were reportedly injured.

The French interior ministry said more than 180 people had been arrested in the unrest.

Authorities said over 450,000 people demonstrated outside Paris while another 55,000 marched in the capital. But the CGT union said a million people took part in the strikes and protests.

A protest in Nantes. Pic: Reuters
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A protest in Nantes. Pic: Reuters

What’s driving the unrest?

Protesters and unions want President Emmanuel Macron and his new prime minister, close ally Sebastien Lecornu, to scrap looming budget cuts.

They have called for the previous government’s fiscal plans to be axed, for more spending on public services, and for the wealthy to pay more tax.

But Mr Macron and Mr Lecornu, who is a member of his centrist Renaissance party, are also under pressure from investors who are concerned about the deficit in the EU’s second-largest economy.

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Sebastien Lecornu with Emmanuel Macron. Pic: AP
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Sebastien Lecornu with Emmanuel Macron. Pic: AP

The country’s budget deficit last year was almost double the EU’s 3% ceiling.

But even though he wants to reduce that, Mr Lecornu – who is reliant on other parties to push through legislation – will face a battle to get enough parliamentary support for a 2026 budget.

His predecessor, Francois Bayrou, was ousted by parliament last week over his plan for €44bn (£38bn) of budget cuts.

The new prime minister has not yet said what he will do about Mr Bayrou’s plans, but has shown a willingness to compromise.

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Gaza could be ‘real estate bonanza’, Israeli minister Bezalel Smotrich says

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Gaza could be 'real estate bonanza', Israeli minister Bezalel Smotrich says

A controversial Israeli minister has said Gaza could be a “real estate bonanza” – and that a business plan for redeveloping it had been sent to the US president.

Bezalel Smotrich, the country’s far-right finance chief, told a Tel Aviv conference he had “started negotiations” with the US on how to share the proceeds of any future deal.

The comments echo controversial remarks by Donald Trump in February, when he said America would take over Gaza and redevelop it into the “riviera of the Middle East” – with its population going to “various domains”.

He later shared a AI-generated video showing it as a Dubai-style city, featuring exotic beaches, skyscrapers, luxury yachts and people partying.

Mr Smotrich told the urban regeneration event “there’s a business plan set by the most professional people there is and is on President Trump’s table and how this thing turns into a real estate bonanza. I’m not kidding; it pays off”.

The minister, who is sanctioned by countries including the UK, Canada and Australia, claimed discussions were already under way on how cash from redeveloping Gaza’s shattered landscape would be allocated.

Mr Smotrich said Israel had “paid a lot of money for this war, so we need to divide how we make a percentage on the land marketing later in Gaza”.

He added: “We’ve done the demolition phase, which is always the first phase of urban renewal. Now we need to build; it’s much cheaper.”

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Tanks roll into Gaza as Israeli offensive begins

Any effort to forcibly displace Gaza’s population for a building project would almost certainly breach the Geneva Convention and cause international outrage – as Mr Trump found when he mooted his plan earlier this year.

Israel’s offensive in Gaza ratcheted up this week as it launched a major ground offensive to seize all of Gaza City and destroy Hamas.

Thousands are heading south with whatever they can in an effort to avoid being killed in the fighting.

The operation has prompted widespread condemnation, with UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper calling it “utterly reckless and appalling”.

Ms Cooper – who helped greet the pro-Israel President Trump when he landed in Britain on Tuesday – said it would “only bring more bloodshed, kill more innocent civilians & endanger the remaining hostages”.

With no sign of an imminent ceasefire in Gaza and the situation increasingly dire, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer is expected to shortly announce Britain’s recognition of a Palestinian state.

It is believed he could make the declaration at the weekend to avoid causing division on the issue while President Trump is in the country.

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Sky News analysis shows major escalation in war

The two leaders are holding talks today at Chequers, with the prime minister under pressure to urge Mr Trump to use his influence over Israel to rein in its new offensive.

The prime minister said in July that recognition would come unless Israel met certain conditions, including taking “substantive steps” to end the war and commit to long-term peace.

France, Canada and Australia are also set to recognise a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly next month, while Ireland, Spain and Norway all took the step last year.

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What does recognising a Palestinian state mean?
Sadiq Khan calls out Gaza ‘genocide’

Israel says the recognition of a Palestinian state is unacceptable, rewards Hamas, and makes it harder to create the conditions needed to free the remaining hostages.

More than 65,000 people in Gaza have now been killed in the war, according to the Hamas-run health ministry. The figure does not specify the number of Hamas members killed.

At least 63 people were killed on Wednesday, with most of the casualties in Gaza City, local health authorities said.

The Hamas terror attack on Israel in October 2023 saw around 1,200 people killed and 251 people taken hostage. Forty-eight remain in Gaza, but fewer then half are thought to still be alive.

A report this week from a UN commission said Israel was committing genocide in Gaza – a claim the country vehemently denies as “distorted and false”.

Sky News analysis shows thousands of families remain in crowded tent camps in Gaza City, with the UN estimating last week that a million people remain there.

Israel, however, believes 40% of the population has already fled south and on Wednesday opened a new evacuation route for 48 hours.

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‘Kill zone’ around crucial Ukrainian city as Russian forces try to squeeze defenders out

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'Kill zone' around crucial Ukrainian city as Russian forces try to squeeze defenders out

Ukraine’s defence of the crucial city of Pokrovsk, which has held out for more than a year despite fierce Russian assaults, could be coming to an end as invading forces squeeze the resistance out.

Elsewhere, Ukraine’s troops are facing attacks along the frontline, with Moscow reportedly using a pipeline to move personnel in the northeast near Kupyansk as it seeks to create even more pressure on Kyiv’s stretched resources.

It comes after Volodymyr Zelenskyy used an exclusive interview with Sky News to call on Donald Trump to take a “clear position” on a sanctions package for Russia and security guarantees for Ukraine.

Sky News has a look at what has been happening at some key parts of the frontline.

‘Kill zone’ as around Pokrovsk

Ukrainian forces have been engaged in a bitter struggle to hold the key logistics hub of Pokrovsk for more than a year, with Russian troops at times attempting to encircle the defenders there.

The situation there is worsening, says Dr Marina Miron, an expert at the defence studies department at King’s College London.

She cited reports that Russian forces are controlling all supply routes and have “created a kill zone” using drones, making it very difficult for Ukraine to resupply its troops there.

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Sky’s exclusive interview with Zelenskyy: What are the key takeaways?

A road and rail node, Pokrovsk had a pre-war population of around 60,000 people. It’s viewed by Russia as “the gateway to Donetsk”.

Capturing it would severely hamper Ukrainian supply lines and endanger crucial cities like Kramatorsk and Sloviansk.

“It will take time because what the Russians are trying to do essentially is to squeeze the Ukrainians out,” Dr Miron told Sky News.

“They don’t want to storm the city as it’s too difficult and too manpower intensive – assuming a lot of losses.” Instead, they are trying to surround it completely, she added.

This reflects a “changed approach”, Dr Miron says, with the Russian military appearing to favour slower encirclement operations rather than the high-casualty assault waves with which places like Bakhmut were captured.

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Battles in the northeast

Meanwhile, Russian forces have advanced near Kupyansk in northeast Ukraine, not far from the fortress city of Kharkiv, the Institute for the Study of War thinktank reported on Monday.

Like other targets along the Ukrainian frontline, Kupyansk is a key transport and logistics hub, being the location at which several major rail lines converge.

“It seems like they are pretty close,” Dr Miron said, discussing the positions of Russian forces around Kupyansk.

The aftermath of a Russian drone attack in Kharkiv. Pic: Reuters
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The aftermath of a Russian drone attack in Kharkiv. Pic: Reuters

Earlier this week, Ukraine’s military said Russia had moved personnel to the area via a pipeline, but said the exit from the pipe is under control of Ukrainian defenders.

“A counter-sabotage operation is underway in the city, and search and strike operations are underway around the city,” the Kyiv’s General Staff said on Telegram on Saturday.

A Ukrainian gunner on the Pokrovsk defensive line fires a self-propelled howitzer towards Russian forces. Pic: Reuters
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A Ukrainian gunner on the Pokrovsk defensive line fires a self-propelled howitzer towards Russian forces. Pic: Reuters

Ukrainian police try to persuade residents to evacuate Pokrovsk. Pic: Reuters
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Ukrainian police try to persuade residents to evacuate Pokrovsk. Pic: Reuters

Kupyansk, which was recaptured by Ukrainian troops in their counteroffensive in autumn 2022, has been largely destroyed in the course of the war and continues to face attacks.

Dr Miron said it’s likely that the push towards Kupyansk is part of an effort by Moscow to retake some of those lost territories, or perhaps an effort to seize land that it can then use as a bargaining chip in any future negotiations.

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