Texas Weekly Online

Ukraine strikes Russian Black Sea energy hub Novorossiysk

Ukraine strikes Russian Black Sea energy hub Novorossiysk

The Ukrainian military reports that it has struck a Russian ⁠warship and ‌a drilling rig in the Black Sea. Kyiv’s drone forces ⁠commander, Robert Brovdi, said on Monday that the overnight attack targeted ⁠the Admiral Makarov missile carrier in ⁠the port of Novorossiysk, which is Russia’s largest oil exporting outlet on the Black Sea. Ukraine has increased its attacks on Russian energy infrastructure in a bid to disrupt export revenues that feed into Moscow’s war chest. Recommended Stories list of 3 itemsend of list Russian authorities said at least eight people, including two children, were injured in Novorossiysk, without specifying whether the port was struck. Videos posted on Telegram and verified by Al Jazeera’s verification unit showed a fire at one of the oil port’s docks in the city. Novorossiysk Mayor Andrei Kravchenko said debris from drones had fallen on two locations in the city, including a residential area. Russia’s military said in the early morning that air defence units had downed 148 Ukrainian drones over a three-hour period. It added that officials said emergency crews were restoring power to nearly half a million households in ⁠outages linked to air attacks. Ukraine has concentrated drone attacks around the port of Novorossiysk throughout the war but has ramped up its efforts to halt Russian energy exports recently [File: Reuters] A Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC) terminal is located in the Novorossiysk port area. It exports oil from Kazakhstan, and its shareholders include major US oil companies, such as Chevron and ExxonMobil. Advertisement Ukraine has significantly intensified its attacks on Russia’s energy facilities, including the largest oil exporting hubs ‌on both the Baltic and Black seas, as it seeks to reduce Moscow’s revenues from the sales of oil, the lifeblood of its economy. The Kremlin has tried to boost its exports after United States President Donald Trump gave it a temporary waiver from sanctions to ease supply constraints as the US-Israeli war on Iran upends oil markets following a de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Kyiv officials complained that Russia will use the additional revenue to buy new weapons to hit Ukraine harder. Later on Monday, Russia reported that Ukrainian drones had attacked the CPC terminal. The export facility, which handles 1.5 percent of global oil supplies, reported damage to mooring, loading and storage infrastructure, the Reuters news agency reported. “The Kyiv regime deliberately attacked facilities of the international oil transportation company Caspian Pipeline Consortium in order to inflict maximum economic damage on ⁠its largest shareholders – energy companies from the United States and Kazakhstan,” ⁠the Russian Ministry of Defence said in a statement. The Black Sea strikes come a day after Ukrainian drones struck Russia’s Baltic Sea port of Primorsk, one of Russia’s main oil exporting outlets, and the NORSI oil refinery in the western region of Nizhny Novgorod. Alexander Drozdenko, governor of northwestern Russia’s Leningrad region, said a fuel reservoir in the Primorsk port area leaked when it was hit by shrapnel. Ukrainian drones also repeatedly struck ⁠Russia’s Baltic Sea port of Ust-Luga last month, damaging several buildings in the sprawling ⁠complex of oil-processing facilities and export terminals. Odesa has been targeted numerous times by Russian strikes (EPA) In Ukraine, an overnight Russian drone attack on the southern port city of Odesa on Monday killed two women and a toddler, authorities said. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a post on X that 16 people were wounded, including a pregnant woman and two children. Russian strikes also hit energy infrastructure in the Chernihiv, Sumy, Kharkiv and Dnipro regions, Zelenskyy said. More than 300,000 households were without electricity in the Chernihiv region in the north after distribution facilities were damaged in attacks, according to the regional power utility. Zelenskyy said that over the past week, Russia launched at Ukraine more than 2,800 attack drones, nearly 1,350 glide bombs and more than 40 missiles. Adblock test (Why?)

Where are Iran’s power plants that Trump has threatened to destroy?

Where are Iran’s power plants that Trump has threatened to destroy?

US President Donald Trump has issued a direct ultimatum to Iran: reopen the Strait of Hormuz by 8pm Eastern Time in the United States on Tuesday, April 7 (midnight GMT on April 8), or face the destruction of national power plants and bridges. This echoes an earlier March 21 ultimatum in which he threatened to attack Iran’s power plants – “the biggest one first” – if the strait was not fully reopened within 48 hours. President Trump has since extended that deadline several times, citing progress in negotiations he claims the US is having with Iran to end the ongoing war. Iran denies it is holding direct talks with the US. While Trump has made grand statements such as “they’re going to lose every power plant and every other plant they have in the whole country”, he has not mentioned specific targets. The US president has also threatened to destroy the country’s bridges. Over the weekend, a US-Israeli strike hit the B1 bridge in the city of Karaj, west of Tehran. The major highway link, described as the tallest bridge in the Middle East, had been scheduled to be inaugurated soon. It sustained significant damage in the strike. Legal experts say that targeting civilian sites amounts to “collective punishment”, which is prohibited under the laws of war. Where are Iran’s power plants? Iran operates hundreds of power plants which, together, form one of the largest electricity systems in the Middle East, supplying energy to 92 million people. Most of the country’s power plants are close to major population centres and industrial hubs. The majority of Iran’s population lives in the western half of the country, with Tehran, Mashhad and Isfahan the three largest cities. (Al Jazeera) Iran has a mixture of gas, coal, hydro, nuclear and oil-fired power plants, but most are gas-fired. In the north and centre of the country, clusters of gas-fired plants supply electricity to the country’s largest population centres, including Tehran, Karaj, Isfahan and Mashhad. Advertisement Another major concentration of power plants lies along the Gulf coast. These plants sit close to major gasfields and ports, allowing large thermal stations to run on abundant natural gas. The coast is also home to the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant, Iran’s only nuclear power facility, which has a capacity of 1,000MW. The US and Israel have repeatedly hit this nuclear power plant, raising risks of radioactive contamination far beyond Iran’s borders, the state-run Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran (AEOI) has warned. A satellite image shows new reactors under construction at the Bushehr site in Iran in this handout image dated January 1, 2025 [Maxar Technologies/Handout via Reuters] Iran also operates a handful of hydropower dams concentrated along the Karun River, the country’s most important source of hydroelectric generation. Electricity generated from all these plants is fed into a national transmission network operated by Iran Grid Management Company, which distributes power to cities, industries and homes across the country. The map below shows all of Iran’s power stations with a capacity of 100MW or more. A 100MW power plant can typically supply electricity to roughly 75,000 to 100,000 homes, depending on consumption patterns. Iran’s largest power plant by capacity is the Damavand Power Plant located in the Pakdasht area, roughly 50km (31 miles) southeast of Tehran, with a capacity of some 2,900MW, enough to power more than two million homes. Which are Iran’s most important power plants? Iran’s largest power plants include: Damavand (Pakdasht) Power Plant – Near Tehran.Fuel: Natural gas (combined-cycle).Capacity: 2,868MW. Shahid Salimi Power Plant – Neka, along the Caspian Sea coast.Fuel: Natural gas.Capacity: 2,215MW. Shahid Rajaee Power Plant – Near Qazvin.Fuel: Natural gas.Capacity: 2,043MW. Karun-3 Dam – Khuzestan Province.Fuel: Hydropower.Capacity: 2,000MW. Kerman Power Plant – Kerman.Fuel: Natural gas.Capacity: 1,912MW. Other smaller but strategically important power plants include: Ramin Power Plant – Ahvaz, Khuzestan.Fuel: Gas.Capacity: 1,903MW. Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant – On the Gulf.Fuel: Nuclear.Capacity: 1,000MW. Bandar Abbas Power Plant – Near the Strait of Hormuz.Fuel: Oil.Capacity: 1,330MW. How does Iran generate its electricity? Iran’s electricity system relies heavily on large thermal power plants fuelled by natural gas. The country has one of the world’s largest natural gas reserves, and this fuel forms the backbone of its power system. Advertisement In 2025, 86 percent of Iran’s electricity came from natural gas. Oil-fired plants provide a smaller share, generating roughly seven percent of electricity. Some power stations switch to diesel or fuel oil when natural gas supplies are tight, especially during winter demand peaks. (Al Jazeera) Hydropower accounts for about five percent of electricity. Large dams on rivers such as the Karun River generate power by using flowing water to spin turbines. Nuclear energy contributes around two percent of the country’s electricity, mainly from the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant, Iran’s only operational nuclear reactor. Renewables such as solar and wind play a very small role, together accounting for less than one percent of electricity generation. Overall, more than 90 percent of Iran’s electricity comes from fossil fuels, making it one of the most gas-dependent power systems in the world. Adblock test (Why?)

Gaza grandmother loses her family due to Israeli attacks

Gaza grandmother loses her family due to Israeli attacks

NewsFeed Azza Odwan shares her experience living under Israeli bombardment in Gaza and the devastating loss of her loved ones, including her grandson, with whom she traveled to Egypt so he could receive urgent medical care. Published On 6 Apr 20266 Apr 2026 Click here to share on social media share2 Share googleAdd Al Jazeera on Googleinfo Adblock test (Why?)

UK police arrest seven protesters near RAF base used by US

UK police arrest seven protesters near RAF base used by US

The activists were protesting the alleged use of the RAF base as a departure point for US aircraft involved in the US-Israel war on Iran. Published On 5 Apr 20265 Apr 2026 British police have arrested seven people on suspicion of supporting the banned group Palestine Action at a protest near a Royal Air Force (RAF) air base in eastern England used by United States forces. The five men and two women arrested at a peace encampment just outside the Lakenheath airbase had gathered with other activists on Sunday to protest the alleged use of the base as a departure point for US aircraft involved in the US-Israeli war on Iran. Recommended Stories list of 3 itemsend of list The Lakenheath Alliance for Peace, which organised the protest, said the seven had been arrested wearing clothing with the message: “We oppose genocide, we support Palestine Action.” Police said the protesters had been arrested “on suspicion of supporting a proscribed organisation”. Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s Labour government banned Palestine Action as a “terrorist” organisation last year, making it a criminal offence to belong to or support the group. In February, a court ruled the ban was “disproportionate” and interfered with the right to free speech. But the government has appealed, and the ban remains in effect in the meantime. More than 2,700 people have been arrested and hundreds charged over rallies in support of the group, according to protest organisers Defend Our Juries. Police said in a statement on the latest arrests that they had a duty to enforce the law “as it currently stands, not as it might be in the future”. Two protesters were also arrested on Saturday at Lakenheath and charged with obstructing public thoroughfares, police said. Advertisement US President Donald Trump has railed against Starmer for what he calls insufficient support in the US-Israel war on Iran, straining the countries’ longtime alliance. The United Kingdom has authorised the US to use British military bases to carry out “defensive” operations against Iran and protect the vital Strait of Hormuz, through which about 20 percent of the world’s oil passes in peacetime. Adblock test (Why?)

Vietnam’s gig workers slammed by rising fuel costs amid fallout of Iran war

Vietnam’s gig workers slammed by rising fuel costs amid fallout of Iran war

Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam – After a long day of ferrying passengers to and fro recently, e-hailing driver Nguyen was dejected to find he had spent half of his earnings on fuel. “I drove for around seven or eight hours, making around 240,000 Vietnamese dong [$9.11] and then I paid 120,000 Vietnamese dong [$4.56] on petrol,” Nguyen, a motorcyclist who connects with passengers via the locally developed super-app Be, told Al Jazeera, asking not to be identified by his real name. Recommended Stories list of 4 itemsend of list “I can’t survive with this amount of money in the city.” In Vietnam, the ripples of the US-Israel war on Iran are hitting many gig workers hard. The Southeast Asian country normally sources about 80 percent of its crude oil from Kuwait, but shipments have dried up amid Iran’s effective blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, driving up fuel prices. Diesel prices have more than doubled, while petrol prices have risen almost 30 percent, making getting from point A to point B an increasingly expensive proposition in cities such as Ho Chi Minh City, home to more than 7 million motorcycles. “Because the petrol price is so high, so many drivers are turning off the app, going home and just not working,” Nguyen said. “After today, I will turn off the app and stop working for a few days to see if the price goes down or if the government is helping in any way.” A Be driver picks up a passenger at Thu Duc Metro Station in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, on March 30, 2026 [Govi Snell/Al Jazeera] Vietnam’s government has rolled out a series of emergency measures to cushion the blow for citizens. Advertisement Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh last month announced that an environmental tax on diesel, petrol, and aviation fuel would be suspended until April 15 to help stabilise prices. Nguyen Khac Giang, a Vietnamese-born visiting fellow at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, said authorities had been forced to act to stave off rising disgruntlement among citizens. “There are a lot of complaints and frustrations about rising living costs, because gas prices are everything in Vietnam,” Giang told Al Jazeera. “It’s not only necessary in terms of making the population feel relief about the rise of gas prices, but at the same time, it will keep the macroeconomic stability intact, given the turbulence outside Vietnam.” Despite the government sacrificing an estimated $273m in revenue via the tax cut, signs of strain are mounting across the economy. Public transportation is stretched to capacity in major cities, while domestic carriers such as Vietnam Airlines and Vietjet Air have slashed flights. “As a very, very open economy, Vietnam is super vulnerable to international shocks,” Giang said. Gig workers have been particularly exposed due to the double whammy of heavy fuel consumption and minimal labour protections. “Their income is changeable due to factors beyond their control,” Do Hai Ha, a research fellow at the University of Melbourne who has studied Vietnam’s gig platforms, told Al Jazeera. “They have no chance to negotiate with the platforms.” Many drivers have had no choice but to work longer hours as they are “excluded from labour protection, so there’s no guarantee in terms of minimum wages or overtime pay”, Do said. A commuter refuels at a petrol station in  Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, on March 27 [Govi Snell/Al Jazeera] Companies, too, are feeling the crunch. Anh Dao, who collects fares on Ho Chi Minh City’s bus route 13, said the bus operator has been losing money due to the surge in fuel prices, despite raising ticket prices by 3,000 Vietnamese dong ($0.11). “As we already signed the contract, we cannot just stop running the buses,” she told Al Jazeera. For one fisherman in the coastal region of Binh Thuan, about 200km (124 miles) from Ho Chi Minh City, rising fuel costs have prompted a frantic search for cheaper options to power his basket boat. “Now that fuel prices are rising, it’s having a big impact,” the fisherman told Al Jazeera, asking not to be identified by name. The middlemen he does business with have been citing weak demand to justify offering lower prices for his catch, he said. Advertisement “What I was usually able to sell for 800,000 Vietnamese dong [$30] is now only selling for 650,000 Vietnamese dong [$24],” he said. Families kept apart For some low-income families, the rising costs are reshaping daily life in other ways. After a weeklong trip to the Mekong Delta region, Uyen Pham, a communications manager for the Saigon Children’s Charity, said she has seen the strain firsthand. “Several parents noted that the cost of bottled cooking gas has nearly doubled,” Pham told Al Jazeera. “Most of our beneficiary families have always relied on wood-fired stoves or a hybrid of wood and gas to save money. With the recent price hike, they are now strictly limiting their gas usage even further, relying almost entirely on wood to cut every possible expense.” For many parents, the rising fuel costs have also meant less time with family. “Many parents in remote areas must leave their children with grandparents to work in cities,” Pham said. “Rising fuel prices directly increase their commuting costs, while manual labour wages remain stagnant. This pinches their take-home pay and, in some cases, reduces how often they can afford to travel home to see their children.” For the government in Hanoi, the price volatility has intensified the focus on greater energy independence, Giang, the visiting fellow, said. “The longer-term question this crisis has enacted is a very important question about the strategic autonomy of Vietnam in terms of energy dependencies, especially when we are a net importer of oil,” he said. Policymakers will need to “more aggressively accelerate Vietnam’s energy independence by building more refineries,” Giang said, “because now we only have two refineries, which is not enough for the Vietnamese market.” With long-term solutions likely to take years to come

Messi scores as Inter Miami open new stadium with a draw in the MLS

Messi scores as Inter Miami open new stadium with a draw in the MLS

Miami captain scored his team’s first goal after David Beckham said the Nu Stadium was a ‘dream come true’ for Miami. Published On 5 Apr 20265 Apr 2026 Lionel Messi marked the opening of Inter Miami’s gleaming new stadium with a goal as the Major League Soccer (MLS) champions battled to a 2-2 draw against Austin FC. Inter Miami’s co-owner, David Beckham, was among the star-studded crowd as the club’s 26,000-capacity Nu Stadium made its debut on Saturday, marking the end of a more-than-a-decade-long journey to find a permanent home. Recommended Stories list of 4 itemsend of list “To see this stadium come to life, after years and years of trying to get this stadium up and running in Miami, is something that’s very special,” Beckham said shortly before kickoff. “I came to America in the MLS 20 years ago, and I made a lot of promises. And 13 years ago, I made a lot of promises again, announcing I was coming to Miami. “Today it’s just a dream come true for us.” Inter Miami fans wave flags in Nu Stadium before the team’s first MLS match at their new home stadium [Rebecca Blackwell/AP] While the match kicked off in celebratory fashion, with Beckham joining billionaire Inter Miami managing owner Jorge Mas in a pre-game ribbon-cutting ceremony, Austin refused to follow the script. The Texas club, who went into the game with only one win from five matches, stunned the home crowd after only six minutes, with Guilherme Biro nodding in a corner from Facundo Torres to make it 1-0 to the visitors. Messi, though, did not take long to open his account in his new surroundings. Right-back Ian Fray burst down the flank and crossed for Messi, who equalised with a rare headed goal to make it 1-1 four minutes later. Advertisement Inter Miami dominated possession thereafter and carved out a string of chances, with Mateo Silvetti twice going close with a shot in the 34th minute before heading wide four minutes later. But Austin’s dogged defence and speed on the counter continued to pose problems for the hosts, and they once again took the lead after 53 minutes. Messi was dispossessed deep in the Austin half by Joseph Rosales, who released Myrto Uzuni, who in turn sent substitute Jayden Nelson clean through on goal to score. With Miami increasingly desperate, coach Javier Mascherano sent on veteran striker Luis Suarez in the 73rd minute. The Uruguayan duly delivered eight minutes later, prodding home from close range after a Messi corner was flicked on by German Berterame in the Austin defence. Suarez thought he had scored a dramatic winner when he finished from close range after Messi’s free-kick came back off the woodwork, but it was ruled out for offside. Adblock test (Why?)

Israel’s attack on UNRWA is central to its genocide of the Palestinians

Israel’s attack on UNRWA is central to its genocide of the Palestinians

It is time for the United Nations to accept that Israel’s attack on its agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) is an essential part of the Israeli genocide of the Palestinian people. This is not an accusation coming from a critic of Israel. It is a clear, on-the-record statement from the deputy mayor of Jerusalem, Arieh King, who, in January, invoked divine Jewish authority, proudly proclaiming, “God willing, we will expel, kill, eliminate, and destroy all UNRWA personnel.” As an agency founded specifically to serve Palestinian refugees after the creation of Israel in 1948, UNRWA has been involved in almost every aspect of the lives of millions of Palestinians. Its programmes span primary health, community mental health initiatives, education, relief and social services, mother and child healthcare, and refugee camp improvement. Moreover, UNRWA’s extensive and recently digitised archive contains property deeds and proof of land ownership, which can assist the Palestinians in securing compensation and the right of return, which many Israelis see as an existential threat to the Jewish state. UNRWA’s very existence, as a reminder of the Palestinians’ entitlement to a full range of inalienable rights, including the right to self-determination, has always made the physical and political destruction of the agency an imperative for successive Israeli governments. Numerous statements by Israeli officials attest to this, boastfully and as a matter of public record. Israel’s decades-long campaign against UNRWA was ratcheted up exponentially when the latest phase of the genocide began in October 2023. That is because UNRWA’s function to promote long and healthy lives for the Palestinians was diametrically opposed to Israel’s genocidal goals, which, according to the UN Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, include the imposition of conditions of life calculated to bring about their destruction in whole or in part. Advertisement In its provisional ruling in January 2024 in the genocide case brought by South Africa, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) found that Israel was not allowing the necessary humanitarian aid to enter Gaza. UNRWA’s Gaza-wide aid delivery infrastructure, which includes a vast food distribution network to more than a million people, if allowed to function, would have made Israel’s genocidal strategy of starvation and an aid embargo impossible to achieve. Key to the Israeli campaign against UNRWA was the dehumanisation of UNRWA staff as terrorists. The link between genocide and dehumanisation is well established. Within weeks of the October 2023 attacks, Israel launched a global disinformation campaign against UNRWA, baselessly accusing agency staff of involvement. The accusations against UNRWA were the mother of all lies in the service of genocide. Because of it, all of the agency’s major donors withdrew funding, severely hampering the agency’s ability to deliver services. In the following two and a half years, nearly 400 UNRWA staff members were killed by Israeli forces, and hundreds of its facilities were deliberately targeted, destroyed, or damaged in violation of international law. The Knesset passed laws effectively banning UNRWA’s international staff from Palestine in violation of the UN Charter. UNRWA’s headquarters in occupied East Jerusalem were attacked and eventually demolished. In August 2024, an independent investigation led by former French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna found Israel failed to provide any evidence to back its accusations against UNRWA. Some donors resumed support. Others, such as the United States and Sweden, disgracefully, did not. As Philippe Lazarinni prepares to leave office after a six-year term as UNRWA commissioner general, during which the systematic dismantling of the agency has taken place, his parting message is that UNRWA is on the verge of collapse. And he rightly points the finger of blame at the donor community for failing to give the agency the required financial and political support. But, shockingly, the UN system itself failed to defend the agency, and in particular the falsely accused UNRWA staffers who were dismissed on the basis of zero evidence. UN Secretary-General Antonio Gutteres bought into Israel’s false accusations, saying in a statement in January 2024 that he was “horrified” that UNRWA staff might be involved in the attacks. Lazarinni also justified the sacking of his staff before an investigation as “reverse due process” to protect the reputation of UNRWA. Advertisement The key objective of the genocide is to deprive the Palestinians of essential services, driving them off their ancestral lands and inflicting intergenerational trauma so that they never return. UNRWA, the living embodiment of the UN’s enduring responsibilities to the Palestinians, is mandated to oppose this multi-dimensional assault on the Palestinians. It cannot be allowed to go down in history as yet another victim of Israel’s genocide against the Palestinian people. It is time for UNRWA’s main donors to acknowledge that Israel’s existential attack on the agency is part of its ongoing genocide against the Palestinian people. As signatories to the genocide convention, they have a legal obligation to prevent and suppress genocidal acts. They can do so not only by opposing UNRWA’s dismantling but also by imposing economic, political and diplomatic sanctions on Israel. Failure to do so opens them to accusations of complicity in genocide. Their failure to act also sends a signal to Israel that just as it has enjoyed virtual impunity for the genocide in Gaza, so there will be impunity for the genocide which it is now inflicting on the West Bank and for the industrial-scale violations of international humanitarian law in Lebanon and Iran. The implications of this are grave for all of us: a world in which genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity are normalised. The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance. Adblock test (Why?)

Kuwait’s power, water plants damaged as Iran keeps attacking Gulf states

Kuwait’s power, water plants damaged as Iran keeps attacking Gulf states

Bahrain and the UAE also reported attacks resulting in fires, which were put out quickly. Kuwait has said Iranian drone attacks damaged two power and water desalination plants and sparked a fire at an oil complex, without causing injuries. Gulf countries have borne the brunt of Tehran’s response to the US and Israeli strikes on Iran since February 28. Recommended Stories list of 4 itemsend of list Fatima Abbas Johar Hayat, a spokesperson for Kuwait’s Ministry of Electricity, Water and Renewable Energy, said on Sunday the “criminal aggression” caused “serious material damage” overnight to the two plants and the outage of two electricity-generating units. The attack is the latest to target civil infrastructure in Kuwait. Other drone attacks overnight caused a fire at the Shuwaikh Oil Sector Complex and “significant damage” to a government office complex. Reporting from Kuwait City, Al Jazeera’s Malika Traina referred to the incident as “devastating news” because “water desalination here and across the Gulf is extremely important. In Kuwait, around 90 percent of the country’s drinking water comes from these plants”. Alongside the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait has been at the “epicentre” of Iranian attacks over the past few days, said Al Jazeera’s Victoria Gatenby, reporting from Doha, Qatar. “The concern here in the region is that if President [Donald] Trump and the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, follow through on those threats to escalate attacks on Iran, the result may be that Tehran attacks similar facilities here in the Gulf,” said Gatenby. Gulf patience is not ‘unlimited’ Bahrain also faced Iranian attacks on Sunday. Advertisement Bahrain’s Gulf Petrochemical Industries Co said that several of its operational units were subjected to an attack by Iranian drones, while earlier in the day, the country’s national oil company, Bapco Energies, said an oil tank at one of its storage facilities was hit. Both attacks caused a fire but were later brought under control and extinguished, Bahraini media reported. No casualties were reported in either attacks, and damage from both was being assessed. Earlier, Bahrain’s Ministry of the Interior had reported on the Bapco Energies fire without specifying where the blaze had broken out. The Interior Ministry has said civil defence crews “extinguished a fire in the facility” that broke out “as a result of the Iranian aggression”. The announcement came an hour after Bahrain activated air raid sirens. Authorities in neighbouring Abu Dhabi on Sunday also stated they responded to several fires that broke out at the Borouge petrochemical plant, caused by falling debris from an interception. “Operations at the plant have been immediately suspended pending a damage assessment,” read a statement issued by Abu Dhabi Media Office. No injuries have been reported so far, it added. Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, intercepted missiles early on Sunday, the kingdom said. “Iran has said that it is only really attacking US military bases and US assets in the region, but we know from what’s been happening over the past five weeks and from what Gulf leaders have been saying that they have very much been targeting civilian infrastructure and critical energy infrastructure in this region as well,” said Gatenby. While Gulf countries have shown “incredible restraint” in the face of attacks over the past five weeks, it is not because they lack the ability to respond and, increasingly, countries are talking about the fact that their patience is not unlimited, said Gatenby. Saudi Arabia, in particular, has been talking in the past week about its right to self-defence under Article 51 of the UN Charter, she said. “The GCC countries continue to say their main priority is de-escalation and dialogue, but some others have been saying this defensive posture may have to change if they continue to be attacked,” said Gatenby. Adblock test (Why?)

Vehicles burn in Israel after being hit with Iranian projectile debris

Vehicles burn in Israel after being hit with Iranian projectile debris

NewsFeed Video captured vehicles on fire, a damaged house and emergency responders rushing to the scene in central Israel after debris from an intercepted Iranian projectile struck Ramat Gan. Published On 4 Apr 20264 Apr 2026 Click here to share on social media share2 Share googleAdd Al Jazeera on Googleinfo Adblock test (Why?)