Israeli police have confiscated books and arrested Palestinian booksellers following a raid on two famous East Jerusalem bookshops.
The raid on The Educational Bookshops happened on Sunday and hundreds of titles relating to the ongoing conflict in the region were bagged up and taken away, with police accusing the pair of inciting terrorism.
That charge was reduced to a public order offence.
Mahmoud Muna, who went to university in England, and his nephew Ahmad, appeared in Jerusalem Magistrates Court on Monday morning.
They have since been detained in prison for another 24 hours and will have to serve five days of house arrest once released.
The prosecution demanded the men be held for a further eight days to allow police time to examine the books, but the judge decided they should only remain in prison until Tuesday.
A small group of protesters gathered outside holding signs such as “cowards confiscate books” and “Palestinian books matter”.
Image: People protested outside the court. Pic: AP
Speaking following the hearing, their lawyer, Nasser Odeh, said: “We made it clear that this is a very dangerous and legally unprecedented move, forming part of a new policy adopted by the Israeli police in Jerusalem, which seeks to suppress freedom of speech and Palestinian intellectual life, preventing people from educating themselves and others.”
The bookshops, along with a third at The American Colony Hotel, are east Jerusalem cultural institutions, popular with locals, diplomats, foreign journalists and tourists.
Murad Muna, the brother of Mahmoud, said there was “no reason” to arrest them.
“The books we sell are international books, there is many books that are written by Israeli authors. There is no logical reason to arrest them.”
Mahmoud’s 11-year-old daughter was in the shop at the time. Her mother, Mahmoud’s wife, attended the court session along with at least a dozen diplomats.
“She saw everything, she was really shocked but we talked last night before bed and told her that everything will be fine, your Dad is strong and you don’t have to worry,” May Muna told Sky News.
“They took books with Palestinian flags, they even took a colouring book for kids.”
Germany’s Ambassador to Israel criticised the police actions, writing on X: “I, like many diplomats, enjoy browsing for books at Educational Bookshop. I know its owners, the Muna family, to be peace-loving proud Palestinian Jerusalemites, open for discussion and intellectual exchange.”
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In a statement, Jerusalem Police said their officers arrested the two men “suspected of selling books containing incitement and support for terrorism”.
Israeli police posted a picture on X of a colouring book titled From The River To The Sea.
The phrase is a reference to territory between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea – an area that today includes all of Israel.
It’s interpreted by many Israelis as an antisemitic statement calling for the elimination of the country, but Palestinian activists say it’s an aspirational call for human rights and peaceful co-existence.
Police also raided another Palestinian-owned bookstore in east Jerusalem last week.
Most of Jerusalem‘s Palestinians live in the east of the city. The area was captured by Israel in 1967 – a move not recognised internationally – and Palestinians want it as the capital of a future state.
The US president last week suggested moving Palestinians out of Gaza so the US can “own” and rebuild it following the devastation caused by the Gaza war.
The idea has been dismissed and derided by the vast majority of the international community.
A woman brought in for cremation at a Thai temple was found alive in her coffin.
The 65-year-old had been taken to Wat Rat Prakhong Tham, a Buddhist temple on the outskirts of Bangkok, after she appeared to stop breathing two days earlier.
Her family had travelled hundreds of miles with her body in the coffin and were preparing for her to be cremated.
However, moments before the service began a shocked temple manager, Pairat Soodthoop, said he heard a faint knock coming from inside the coffin.
Image: Ambulance workers lift the woman in her coffin. Pic: AP
“I was a bit surprised, so I asked them to open the coffin, and everyone was startled,” he said.
“I saw her opening her eyes slightly and knocking on the side of the coffin. She must have been knocking for quite some time.”
The cremation was due to be live-streamed by the temple.
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Thairath, the nation’s best-selling newspaper, named the woman in question as Chonthirat Sakulkoo, and said she was brought in by her brother, Mongkol Sakulkoo.
The brother said she had been bedridden for about two years before her health deteriorated further and she became unresponsive, appearing to have stopped breathing, according to Mr Soodthoop
Image: The woman in her coffin. Pic: AP
So, the brother placed her in a coffin and drove her 300 miles (500km) from their home in Phitsanulok province, in the north of the country, to the capital, Bangkok.
The Bangkok Post reported that the woman’s brother had been told by local officials that his sister had died.
The woman had wished to donate her organs to a hospital in the Thai capital, but her brother was turned away as he did not have the relevant paperwork.
Instead, he went to the temple, which offers a free cremation service.
After the woman was discovered alive she was assessed and sent to Bang Yai Hospital, Thairath reported, where she was treated for hypoglycemia, before being released back to her brother.
Image: The woman in her coffin. Pic: AP
Asked how he felt to learn that his sister is still alive, Mr Sakulkoo said he was indifferent, according to the newspaper.
Mr Soodthoop, said the temple would cover her medical expenses.
Flights have been cancelled over ash clouds from Hayli Gubbi, a long-dormant volcano in Ethiopia, erupted for the first time in recorded history.
Plumes from the volcanopushed across the Red Sea through Oman and Yemen into Indiaon Monday evening, leading airlines Air India and Akasa Air to cancel some flights.
Air India cancelled 11 flights, and Akasa scrapped flights to destinations such as Jeddah, Kuwait, and Abu Dhabi, while carrier IndiGo said on social media that it was monitoring the situation “in coordination with international aviation bodies”.
The India Meteorological Department said that ash clouds from Hayli Gubbi, northern Ethiopia, are moving towards China, and are expected to clear Indian skies by 7.30pm (2pm in the UK).
It comes after the Ethiopianvolcano erupted for the first time in recorded history on Sunday morning, leaving the neighbouring village of Afdera covered in dust.
Image: No eruptions were ever recorded at Hayli Gubbi until Sunday. Pic: Afar Government/AP
Image: Pic: Afar Government/AP
The eruption sent ash plumes up to 8.7 miles (14km) high, according to the Reuters news agency.
Mohammed Seid, a local administrator, told the Associated Press at the time that there were no casualties but that it could cause issues for livestock herders.
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“While no human lives and livestock have been lost so far, many villages have been covered in ash and as a result their animals have little to eat,” he added.
Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelenskyy are set to hold talks over the Ukraine peace plan.
US and Ukrainian officials have held discussions in Geneva about a controversial 28-point proposal drawn up by America and Russia, which has since been countered by an amended deal drawn up by Kyiv’s European allies.
The White House said there were still a “couple of points of disagreement” as of Monday night, but spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said there was a “sense of urgency” to strike an agreement.
“The president wants to see this deal come together, and to see this war end,” she added.
Mr Zelenskyy echoed that message, saying “there is still work for all of us to do to finalise the document”.
“We must do everything with dignity,” he said in his nightly video address, adding: “The sensitive issues, the most delicate points, I will discuss with President Trump.”
Image: Karoline Leavitt speaks with reporters at the White House. Pic: AP
It comes after Mr Trump, who had accused Ukraine of not being grateful enough for US military support while the Geneva talks were under way, suggested the process could be moving in the right direction.
He had earlier given Kyiv until Thursday to agree to the plan, but US Secretary of State Marco Rubio downplayed the deadline, saying officials could keep negotiating.
Moscow, however, has already signalled its opposition to the European version of the peace plan.
It would halt fighting at present front lines, leaving discussions of territory for later, and also include a NATO-style US security guarantee for Ukraine.
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Russian drones devastate Kharkiv
The talks in Geneva, Switzerland, had begun with Mr Rubio denying the original plan was written by Russia.
It appeared to include a number of longstanding Kremlin demands that have proved impossible for Kyiv, including sacrificing territory Russian forces have not even seized since the war began.
Ms Leavitt has also insisted the US is not favouring the Russians.
Image: Ukrainian troops fire near the frontline town of Pokrovsk. Pic: Reuters
Starmer to lead talks of Ukraine’s allies
Ukraine’s allies in the so-called “coalition of the willing” will hold a virtual meeting today, chaired by Sir Keir Starmer.
The British prime minister said the alliance was focused on achieving a “just and lasting peace”.
It “matters for all of us, because the conflict in Ukraine has had a direct impact here in the UK”, he added.
Russia and Ukraine report overnight attacks
The talks will begin hours after the governor of Russia’s Rostov region reported three people had been killed and 10 more injured in a Ukrainian attack overnight.
The Russian defence ministry said 249 Ukrainian drones were downed over Russian regions in total.
Meanwhile, Russian drone strikes in Kyiv left at least two dead and triggered fires on residential buildings – forcing evacuations, and leaving several people injured.
Image: Drone strikes rocked Kyiv in the early hours of Tuesday. Pic: Ukrainian emergency services/Telegram
The war was also a topic of discussion in a call between Mr Trump and China’s Xi Jinping on Monday.
Mr Xi urged “all parties” in the conflict to “reduce differences”, according to Chinese state news agency Xinhua.
He reiterated that China supported all efforts conducive to peace.
China has remained a consistent ally of Russia throughout its invasion of Ukraine, and is the top buyer of Russian oil, along with India.