BBC on the scene at Israeli hospital struck by Iranian missile
A hospital in the Israeli town of Beersheba has been hit as Iran fired a barrage of missiles at the country, with the conflict between the two nations continuing into a seventh day.
Iran said it had targeted a military site close to the hospital, not the facility itself. With strikes being reported in several locations across Israel, the country’s health ministry said 271 people had been injured.
After visiting the Soroka Medical Centre on Thursday, Israel’s Defence Minister Israel Katz said Iran’s supreme leader “can no longer be allowed to exist”.
Meanwhile, Israel’s military said it had targeted Iran’s nuclear sites including the “inactive” Arak heavy water reactor and Natanz facility.
Israel’s deputy foreign affairs minister said Iran’s hit on the Soroka hospital was “deliberate” and “criminal”.
In a post on X, Sharren Haskel said the site that was the main medical centre for Israel’s entire Negev region.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would “exact the full price from the tyrants in Tehran”.
While Israel’s Defence Minister Israel Katz told reporters: “[Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali] Khamenei openly declares that he wants Israel destroyed – he personally gives the order to fire on hospitals.”
BBC correspondents in the area described the scale of the damage as extensive, with debris and plumes of smoke floating through the air long after the blast.
Several wards were completely destroyed as fire spread through one of the buildings, causing windows to smash and ceilings to collapse, hospital authorities said.
Around 200 patients will be transferred to other hospitals centres, Prof Shlomi Codish, chief executive of the Soroka said.
“At the moment we don’t know if buildings or other wards might collapse,” he added.
On Thursday morning, an Iranian ballistic missile struck the business district of Ramat Gan, east of Tel Aviv – causing a large sheet of glass to fall several floors from a skyscraper and part of an electrical pylon to crash to the ground.
About 20 people are believed to have been injured by the blast in the area, authorities have said.
The Israeli military said it told people living in the cities of Iranian cities Arak and Khondab, which are near the reactor, to leave the area “as soon as possible,” in a post on X, prior to the attack.
The nuclear facilities that were attacked include a partially-built heavy-water research reactor.
Heavy-water reactors produce plutonium, which – like enriched uranium – can be used to make the core of an atom bomb.
Iranian media reported two projectiles hitting an area near the facility. There were no reports of radiation threats.
In a separate announcement, Israel’s military said it also struck a site in the area of Natanz, which it said contains “unique components and equipment used to develop nuclear weapons”.
Israel has alleged Iran has recently “taken steps to weaponise” its enriched uranium stockpile, which can be used for power plants or nuclear bombs. Iran has always claimed that its nuclear programme is entirely peaceful.
Iran’s armed forces said their response to the Israeli attack will have “no limits.”
It has lodged a complaint with the UN nuclear watchdog, accusing Israel of “continuing its aggression and actions contrary to international laws that prohibit attacks on nuclear facilities,” Iranian state media reported.
Reuters
Arak’s nuclear facility had been evacuated before the attack according to Iranian media
The latest attacks come at a critical time, as President Trump considers the possibility of direct American involvement in Israel’s campaign.
Iran’s deputy foreign minister Kazem Gharibabadi warned the US that Tehran will have “no other option but to use its tools to teach aggressors a lesson” if it intervenes in support of Israel.
The Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei rejected Trump’s calls to surrender, and Iran has threatened to strike American military interests in the Middle East in response.
Trump, so far, has given no clear indication of his next move. According to the BBC’s partner CBS, he has approved plans to attack Iran but has held off on a final decision about striking the country.
On Wednesday, Trump said, “I may do it, I may not do it”, when asked a question about US involvement in Iran.
Three men in their 20s have been given long jail terms for their part in the fatal shooting of award-winning hip-hop artist C Gambino in Gothenburg last year.
C Gambino, whose real name was Karar Ramadan, had been named hip-hop artist of 2023 in Sweden’s Grammis music awards a month before he was murdered, in what prosecutors described as a ruthless and premeditated shooting.
All three men were convicted of aiding and abetting murder, and two of them were cleared of murder, as the Gothenburg court ruled it could not be established beyond reasonable doubt who had fired the fatal shots.
The gun that killed C Gambino has never been found and a car used in the shooting was later found burned out.
C Gambino’s murder has been linked to a local gangland conflict, although the motive remains a mystery. Prosecutors said there was no evidence to suggest that he was part of any criminal network.
For several years Sweden’s biggest cities have been beset by gang violence that have claimed dozens of lives, often involving children recruited to carry out violent attacks.
The rapper, who was 26, was shot at a multistorey car park in Gothenburg in June 2024 in what the court said was a carefully planned attack and had the character of a “pure execution”.
Investigators were unable to find DNA traces of the attackers but did map their movements from mobile phones around the time of the shooting.
The prosecutor also told Swedish public broadcaster SVT that police had been able to use hours of CCTV footage from the car park and elsewhere.
Videos showed the killers’ vehicle entering the car park more than a week before the shooting, and then waiting for hours before the attack took place as C Gambino returned home from the gym late in the evening.
Although he was able to raise the alarm, emergency services who arrived at the scene were unable to use their communication system and had to shout to each other, SVT reported.
The artist died in hospital about an hour afterwards.
In its verdict, the court gave a 22-year-old man a life sentence in jail, while two others aged 21 and 20 were handed terms of 15 and a half years and 12 and a half years respectively,
A fourth man, aged 19, was convicted of setting fire to their car.
Another gang-related case concluded on Wednesday with a 14-year-old boy found guilty of shooting dead a man in his home on the order of one of Sweden’s most notorious gangs, Foxtrot.
Two other boys were convicted: one for conspiracy and another for preparing the murder in Skurup in southern Sweden. None of the three will face punishment because they are below the age of criminal responsibility, which is 15 in Sweden.
The victim of the Skurup murder was targeted because his son had refused to carry out an attack for the Foxtrot gang.
Police in Iraqi Kurdistan have meanwhile arrested a key figure in the Foxtrot gang, according to Swedish radio.
The suspect is described as close to gang leader Rawa Majid and has been linked to a number of killings in Sweden, including the Skurup shooting.
The town of Torre Pacheco in southern Spain has seen several nights of unrest
A total of 14 people have been arrested and extra police have been deployed after an attack on a pensioner sparked anti-migrant unrest in a small town in southern Spain.
Three people of North African origin have been detained on suspicion of attacking the 68-year-old man in Torre Pacheco last Wednesday.
The unrest began after a video circulated on social media, inflaming the town of 40,000 people which is home to a large immigrant population.
The pensioner and police later said the video was unrelated to the incident but social media calls to find and attack the perpetrators multiplied quickly.
By Friday groups armed with batons could be seen roaming the streets of Torre Pacheco.
One far-right group called “Deport Them Now” called for attacks on people of North African origin. Further messages on social media have called for renewed attacks on immigrants over three days this week.
A leading member of the extremist group was detained in the north-eastern town of Mataró on suspicion of spreading hate speech.
The 68-year-old victim of last Wednesday’s attack, named locally as Domingo Tomás Domínguez, told Spanish media he was thrown to the ground and hit while taking his morning walk.
A photo circulating on social media showed his face bearing extensive bruising.
Police said the motive for the attack was unclear. Mr Domínguez said he was not asked to hand over money or his belongings and did not understand the language his attackers were speaking.
Police presence has been beefed up, with more than 130 officers from both the local police in the province of Murcia and Guardia Civil.
The three people arrested on suspicion of attacking the pensioner are all of Moroccan origin and in their early 20s, according to Spanish media, and none are residents of Torre Pacheco.
One of the suspects was arrested on Monday as he prepared to take a train from the Basque region to cross the border to France.
Reuters
Religious leaders in the town have called for peace
The worst of the unrest occurred at the weekend, when groups of youths – some hooded – attacked vehicles and businesses. Clashes were also reported between far-right groups and people of North African origin.
On Sunday night journalists witnessed several dozen youths hurling glass bottles and other objects at riot police.
In a CCTV video shared by several Spanish outlets, a group of men, some armed with bats and sticks, could be seen vandalising a kebab shop on the same night.
Torre Pacheco mayor Pedro Ángel Roca called on the “migrant community not to leave their homes and not to confront rioters”.
Many of the town’s residents of migrant origin work in the area’s booming agricultural sector, and some have complained of no longer feeling safe in the town. The mayor said they had been living in Torre Pachecho for more than 20 years.
Users of an extreme-right Telegram group reportedly called on people to flock in from other parts of Spain and take part in “hunts” of North Africans over three days this week. Their channel has since been shut down.
Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska attributed the violence to anti-immigration rhetoric from far-right groups and parties such as Vox – Spain’s third largest political force.
Reuters
About 130 officers have been deployed as part of the combined police and Civil Guard operation
Vox leader Santiago Abascal denied responsibility for the riots and blamed “mass immigration” policies for allowing the alleged perpetrators of last week’s attack to enter the country.
Talking about migration, Abascal said: “It has stolen our borders, it has stolen our peace, and it has stolen our prosperity.”
Murcia prosecutors have opened an investigstion for hate crimes into the regional president of Vox, José Ángel Antelo, who last week said the violence was the “fault” of Spain’s two main parties – the Popular Party (PP) and Socialist Party (PSOE).
Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said on X: “What we are seeing in Torre-Pacheco challenges us all. We must speak out, act firmly, and defend the values that unite us. Spain is a country of rights, not hate.”
The body of Nigeria’s former President Muhammadu Buhari, who died aged 82 in a London clinic on Sunday, is due to be flown home later to be buried in his hometown in Katsina state.
Katsina state governor Dikko Radda, who returned to Nigeria on Monday morning after being with Buhari’s family in London, said Buhari would be buried in Daura town, 50 miles (80km) from Katsina city on Tuesday.
Nigeria’s Vice-President Kashim Shettima is in London and will accompany Buhari’s remains back to Nigeria.
“Based on my discussions with the family and close people that are with the corpse, preparations are ongoing in order to bring the body back to Nigeria,” said Radda.
”What I have gathered so far is that the corpse will arrive 12pm tomorrow [Tuesday] and the burial will happen by 2pm,” he added.
He said the burial, initially expected on Monday, had been delayed to allow more people to attend.
Buhari’s home in Daura is already filled with mourners as friends, family and well-wishers await the arrival of his corpse.
The vice-president also confirmed Daura to be Buhari’s final resting place in a post on social media after arriving in London on Monday morning.
He said that Buhari had died after a brief illness without revealing any further details, however the former president had suffered from ill-health for many years.
Even though he’s a former president, there will not be a state funeral. In line with Islamic teachings, Buhari will be buried as quickly as possible in a simple ceremony, Islamic cleric Abdullahi Garangamawa told the BBC.
Tributes have continued to pour in for the late army general who led Nigeria twice – first as military leader and an elected president after becoming the first opposition leader to defeat an incumbent, in 2015.
Former President Goodluck Jonathan, defeated by Buhari in 2015, described the late leader as someone who “was selfless in his commitment to his duty and served the country with character and a deep sense of patriotism”.
Former military ruler, General Ibrahim Babangida, who overthrew Buhari in a 1985 coup, also showered praises on the octogenarian.
“He is a man who, even in retirement, remained a moral compass to many, and an example of modesty in public life,” Babangida noted.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, who is expected to attend the funeral prayer in Daura, has declared a seven-day national mourning period in honour of his predecessor.
In an official condolence statement released on Sunday evening, Tinubu said the nation would pay its final respects to the former leader with dignity and honour, starting with the lowering of all national flags to half-mast across the country from Sunday.