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Ukraine hopes to sign ‘drone deals’ with seven Nato countries by end of year

Ukraine hopes to sign major defence deals with at least seven Nato countries by the end of the year, according to a top official, highlighting a new aspect of Kyiv’s foreign policy intended to show it can be a provider as well as a recipient of military hardware and expertise. Kyiv has signed “drone deals” with six countries in recent months. Three are Middle Eastern states, who became eager for Ukrainian support after being targeted with Iranian long-range Shahed drones after the US-Israeli war on Iran began in spring. These are the same weapons that have targeted Ukrainian cities relentlessly over the past four years. Azerbaijan has also signed an agreement with Kyiv, as well as the Nato members Latvia and Lithuania. “The initiative is called the drone deal, but it actually covers way more than just drones … what’s even more important is the experience and knowledge, the access to all the components that form the system here in Ukraine,” said Davyd Aloian, the deputy secretary of Ukraine’s security council and one of those in charge of the deals. The drone diplomacy began during Trump’s war on Iran, when Tehran attacked US allies across the region. Most of the Gulf countries turned out to be unprepared for the threat from drones, even though Iran was mostly using a much less sophisticated version of the Shahed than the upgraded models that Russia uses in Ukraine. In some cases, expensive Patriot missiles were used to bring down Shaheds, when cheap interceptor drones should be able to do the job – but only if combined with the required knowledge and experience. “The interceptor drone is only a drone. It doesn’t mean that you will be able to shoot down Shaheds with it,” said Aloian. “You need the drones, but you also need sub-components, sensors, ground stations and, even more importantly, the radar systems,” said Aloian. In the aftermath of the attacks, Aloian said one country in the region bought interceptor drones from a western company that had developed the product in cooperation with Ukrainian manufacturers. After the delivery, Kyiv received repeated requests to help with advice on how best to operate the systems. In the end, three Gulf countries – Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Qatar – signed agreements with Ukraine. Kyiv offered the countries a broad assessment of what would be needed on operational and tactical levels to make the weapons effective. Mike Kofman, an analyst at the Carnegie Endowment International Peace in Washington DC, said it was on this big-picture integration that Ukraine can be most useful. “They can provide an ecosystem of products for organising air defence or developing a strike drone capability,” he said. Delivery of the drones themselves is not yet part of the agreement, as Ukraine’s industry is subject to tight controls and focused on the country’s defence needs. Diplomats and analysts said that, to some extent, the “drone diplomacy” had been an attempt to make new allies and ensure Ukraine stayed on the agenda at a time when attention was shifting to the Middle East. But as the most experienced country in the world at defending from drone attacks, as well as using drones in attack against Russia, Kyiv feels it has a lot to offer. “Initially, we do an assessment by a group of experts and provide a report to the partner explaining what they will need,” said Aloian. It’s then up to the partner countries to decide whether they want to place orders for Ukrainian products that can be manufactured depending on available capacity in future, or procure them elsewhere. Aloian said the focus would now move on to Nato partners, where particularly those located closer to Russia or Ukraine have had to pay increasing attention to defending from drones. In Latvia, the government fell in May after a political scandal that began after two long-range Ukrainian drones, pushed off course by Russian electronic warfare measures, hit an oil storage facility. Soon after, Latvia signed the drone deal with Ukraine, and last week announced that a joint drone production facility would open soon in the east of the country. Lithuania, where air raid sirens sounded after a similar incident in which Ukrainian drones were pushed off course and into the country’s airspace, has also signed an agreement. Aloian said several more Nato countries had already expressed interest and that some agreements may be signed at the Nato leaders summit in Ankara this week. The target was to sign agreements with at least seven Nato countries by the end of the year, he said. More ambitious and less certain to succeed are Kyiv’s attempts to build a European analogue to the Patriot missile system that would be capable of defending against Russian ballistic missiles – the weakest point in Ukraine’s air defences given the expense and scarcity of the US-built Patriot systems. Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has made production of such a missile a top priority, and Aloian said discussions between European partners were taking place on a political level and among major arms companies. Whatever the fate of specific initiatives, what is clear is that as Europe realises it will have to organise its own security with less US support in future, there is an increasing realisation that Ukraine must be part of the picture. Alyona Getmanchuk, Ukraine’s ambassador to Nato, said she had noticed a huge difference in how allies spoke about Ukraine since she took up the job last summer. “When I arrived at Nato and talked about Ukraine’s potential as a security provider there was often a look of hesitancy in people’s eyes,” she said. “Now some of the same people often start conversations by saying this. It’s become fashionable to talk about Ukraine in this way.”

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Russia launches deadly missile and drone attacks on Kyiv

Russia struck Ukraine’s Kyiv region with ballistic missiles on Monday, killing at least eight people and wounding dozens, authorities said, on the eve of a Nato summit in Turkey. Kyiv’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko, said rescue crews were pulling residents from buildings ⁠shattered by the overnight barrage. Seven people were killed in Kyiv, and one in Bucha district northwest of the capital, authorities said, while at least 34 were wounded in Kyiv and its surrounding areas. Missiles and ⁠drones struck apartment ⁠blocks and other ⁠buildings on Monday, Tymur Tkachenko, head of the Kyiv region’s military administration, said. “The enemy is striking with ballistic missiles,” Tkachenko said on Telegram. Klitschko said air defences were in operation and urged people to remain in shelters. US president Donald Trump and Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy are expected to discuss the war on the sidelines of the Nato summit in the Turkish capital Ankara, which begins Tuesday. The assault was the second on the capital and its surroundings in less than a week and came as both sides increased long-range attacks, underlining the growing reach of the war more than four years after Russia launched its full-scale invasion. Ukraine has increasingly targeted energy facilities inside Russia and, in particular, Moscow-controlled territory in recent weeks in an effort to weaken the Kremlin’s war effort. In Russian-annexed Crimea, its governor, Mikhail Razvozhayev, said a Ukrainian strike near Sevastopol had temporarily cut electricity supplies. “Following an enemy attack on energy infrastructure near Sevastopol, our city was temporarily left without electricity,” Razvozhayev wrote on Telegram. Moscow’s mayor, Sergei Sobyanin, said on state-backed messaging app Max that several waves of drones bound for the Russian capital were shot down by Russian air defences. Zelenskyy said on Sunday that troops were continuing to fight for the strategic eastern town of Kostyantynivka, a gateway to key Ukrainian positions in the Donetsk region. Moscow said Friday it had taken the outpost, but Kyiv dismissed the announcement as a “lie”, saying that it was defending the town. “Fighting is also continuing for Kostyantynivka, which (Russian leader Vladimir) Putin has already claimed as his own, but it is obvious that he will never dare to appear there,” Zelenskyy said in his daily evening address. With Reuters and Agence France-Presse

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Ukraine war briefing: Trump to meet Zelenskyy at Nato summit as US says battlefield progress ‘frozen’

Donald Trump will meet with Volodymyr Zelenskyy while in Turkey this week for a Nato summit and make a renewed push to end the war in Ukraine, a ⁠senior US official ⁠said. “The battlefield has clearly frozen over the last ‌couple of months and neither ‌side is making a lot of progress,” said the offical, briefing reporters in Washington on condition of anonymity. “The president feels a real sense of ‌urgency to try to bring this to a stop.” Trump would also urge Nato allies to increase their defence spending, the official said, adding: “He will deliver that message in person.” Trump spoke with Russian president Vladimir Putin in a lengthy call on Sunday during which the US leader offered to help find ⁠a solution to the Ukraine war, a Kremlin aide has said. Zelenskyy, the Ukrainian president, said he had also spoken with Trump – including about the war’s 1,200km frontline – and the conversation was “very good”. The Ukrainian ⁠capital came under ⁠a Russian ⁠missile attack early on Monday ⁠and residents could be trapped ⁠under rubble in ‌a damaged ‌building, officials ‌said. Kyiv mayor Vitali Klitschko said a residential building ‌had been hit in the city’s historic Podil district. “People are trapped on ⁠the seventh to ninth floors,” he said on Telegram. Drone debris also ‌fell in other districts. Zelenskyy said ⁠on ⁠Sunday that ‌intelligence ‌indicated ‌Russia was preparing ‌a huge new strike, just days after at least 27 people were killed and dozens injured in Kyiv in what Klitschko called the worst Russian attack on the city during the war. The city of Sevastopol, on the Russian-occupied Crimean peninsula, was left without electricity on Monday after a Ukrainian attack on energy infrastructure, said the Moscow-appointed city governor, Mikhail Razvozhayev. One person was killed in a Ukrainian attack on Crimea, according to Moscow-installed officials early on Sunday. Two others were injured in the attack on northern Crimea, including one in a serious condition, regional governor Sergei Aksyonov said. Kyiv and Moscow’s troops were still battling for the key strategic eastern town of Kostyantynivka, Zelenskyy said on Sunday, after the Kremlin claimed to have captured it. “Putin has already claimed as his own, but it is obvious that he will never dare to appear there,” he said in his daily evening address. Meanwhile, Russia’s defence ministry claimed Ukraine had refused to halt ⁠shelling of Kostiantynivka to allow Russia to hand over the bodies of ⁠fallen Ukrainian soldiers. Ukraine’s ‌defence ministry and military did not immediately comment.

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Sara Duterte: why is the Philippines vice-president facing an impeachment trial?

The impeachment trial of Philippine vice-president Sara Duterte begins Monday, in a case that will determine whether she can run for the presidency in 2028, and which comes amid rising public anger over alleged government corruption. Sara Duterte is the daughter of former president Rodrigo Duterte, who is awaiting trial for alleged crimes against humanity at The Hague. She is facing allegations she misused public funds, amassed unexplained wealth, bribed officials and threatened the lives of the nation’s president, Ferdinand Marcos Jr, and the first lady. She has previously denied the allegations. Duterte was impeached on similar grounds last year but avoided a trial after she successfully petitioned the supreme court to declare the move unconstitutional on a technicality. In May, she was impeached again by the House of Representatives. The Senate will now judge whether there is merit to the case. Why is this trial significant? More than 6,000 police officers, including anti-riot squads, were deployed to secure the Senate on Monday, where pro-and anti-Duterte demonstrators were expected to converge, in a sign of how politically volatile the trial is seen. The outcome of the impeachment trial could directly affect the next election in the Philippines. A guilty verdict would bar Sara Duterte from public office and derail her 2028 presidential bid. She is currently seen as the frontrunner in the race. Many see her case in the context of an ongoing political feud between the Duterte and Marcos families, with some analysts suggesting that Marcos is seeking to block Duterte’s presidential ambitions. The two families joined forces when Duterte stood as Marcos’ vice-presidential running mate in the 2022 elections, which they won in a landslide, but big rifts have since emerged. The arrest of Rodrigo Duterte and pending trial at the international criminal court is a major flashpoint. An overwhelming majority in the lower house, dominated by allies of president Marcos, voted to bring Duterte’s case to trial. What are the charges? The charges include allegations relating to the misuse of funds under her office as vice-president, discrepancies in financial statements, bribery and cash payments to officials. Charges also relate to alleged threats to the lives of the president and his wife, based on a November 2024 press conference. Duterte later said the comments were misinterpreted. She has generally denied the charges but has refused to publicly answer the allegations in detail ahead of the trial. Her supporters have accused Marcos and his key aides of politically persecuting the vice-president. She did not immediately respond to the Guardian’s request for comment. How will a decision be reached? A conviction requires two-thirds of the Senate to vote for it. Maria Ela L Atienza, political science professor at the University of the Philippines (UP), said given the current composition of the Senate, there is a 50/50 chance Duterte will be convicted. However, all the evidence has yet to be presented and public opinion will also be a powerful factor for senators’ votes, she said. Duterte’s trial is expected to go for months. Once both parties finish presenting their evidence, the impeachment court will deliberate and vote on each charge. While impeachment complaints against high-ranking officials are common in the Philippines, to date no politician has ever been convicted. What has been the reaction to the case? The trial has proven “divisive” and heightened political polarisation, said Jean Encinas-Franco, a professor of political science at the UP. Filipinos are getting fed up with perceived corruption, with protests consistently calling for not only the conviction of the vice-president, but transparency for all, including Marcos’ promises of accountability after a massive scandal around “ghost” flood protection projects. “People are getting impatient with political leaders,” said Atienza of the political mood “However, there are also allies and supporters of the vice-president conducting their own protests and propaganda, claiming that the vice-president and her family … are victims and being targeted by the Marcos administration,” she said.

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Rodríguez defends Venezuela’s emergency earthquake response as number of bodies expected to soar

Venezuela’s interim president has defended her country’s emergency response to the twin earthquakes that have killed more than 3,000 people, vowing the country would not descend into social unrest. Many Venezuelans have expressed anger at what they see as the US-backed government’s inadequate response to the 24 June disaster before international teams arrived. Delcy Rodríguez, speaking during a military ceremony marking Venezuela’s independence day, said: “There will be no social unrest here – what we have here is deep social solidarity.” Thousands of public officials and rescue teams had been sent to help dig out victims and find survivors, she added. On Sunday night, Venezuela’s information ministry said the number of people killed in the quakes had risen to 3,342, while the number of people injured had passed 16,700. One of Latin America’s worst earthquake disasters, the shocks collapsed scores of buildings, leaving thousands homeless, especially in the coastal La Guaira area north of the capital, Caracas. Eleven days after the double shocks, international rescue teams were wrapping up operations to find more survivors while families were still trying to dig out bodies of loved ones from the wreckage. Rosa López’s 25-year-old son-in-law, José Antonio Toledo, was found under the building where he was working as a security guard when the quakes struck. Crews took his body to a local hospital, where staff turned them away because there was no space. The body was sent to another facility and eventually transferred to an open parking lot. A forensic doctor helped the family find him days later, on Saturday. But once they identified his body, they didn’t know what to do with it because they couldn’t afford the $450 (£350) that a funeral home was charging. At almost midnight on Saturday, López got word that the mayor’s office was offering them a free space at a local cemetery, but they had to move quickly so as not to lose the spot. An hour later, López and her daughter trudged up a hill leading to the cemetery and buried Toledo. “He was an exemplary person, a boy who liked helping people,” López said. They saved him from a mass grave, but many fear that is coming as they search for the bodies of their loved ones. The number of bodies found is expected to soar. Forensic technician Joel Mirabal has worked for seven days straight since the 7.2 and 7.5 magnitude earthquakes struck. The 45-year-old estimates that in 60% to 70% of cases, there is a relative or neighbour available to identify a body when he comes to collect it. Even so, it’s a struggle, he said, with many relying on tattoos, scars or familiar clothing. “They don’t look even 10% like what they were in real life,” he said of the victims. If a body cannot be identified, it goes to forensic specialists working at La Guaira seaport. Private companies have donated large cooling containers to help preserve the bodies, but the number of dead keeps growing. “Obviously, mass graves will have to be created,” Mirabal said. “The collapse is massive, and the bodies are buried under many layers of debris.” Mirabal said he and other forensic technicians anticipate spending up to three months collecting bodies.

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Calls for killing of Trump at funeral of Iran supreme leader Ali Khamenei

Beside the coffin of the assassinated former Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei at a packed prayer hall in Tehran on Sunday there were calls for the killing of Donald Trump. Iran is staging a week of mass funeral processions ⁠for Khamenei, who was killed along with other members of his family on the first day of the US and Israeli war on 28 February. The funeral was delayed because of the war. The funeral prayers for the former supreme leader and four other family members created a political spectacle at Tehran’s Imam Khomeini Grand Mosalla that melded grief with calls for revenge. Many people had stayed in the mosque overnight or arrived well before dawn to be ready for the start of the prayer reading at 8am. Holding Iranian flags and pictures of their martyred leader, and waving red flags symbolising vengeance the crowds were vastly larger and more militant than on Saturday, the first day of this elaborately conceived funeral designed to impress on the world that Iran has social resilience and determination to preserve its independence. “From now on the shroud is our garment. I swear by your blood; Trump’s murder is our responsibility,” Mohammad Rasouli, a poet, said at a poetry recitation immediately before the prayer reading at the farewell ceremony. He asked: “Why is the most bastard man in the world still alive? The world is no longer a good place for Trump. Why should we not kill the man who killed our imam? It would be a disgrace if we did not.” His scripted and authorised remark led to a mixed reaction, but most cheered enthusiastically. Khalil Shirgholami, Iran’s ambassador to Armenia, said on X: “You can kill people, but you can’t kill ideals. You killed Ayatollah Khamenei, but in reality you broke a bottle of perfume, the fragrance of which has now spread everywhere. “You will never understand this because you have no civilisation, no history, no honour.” Mohammed Bagher Zolghadr, the secretary of the national security council, said: “People are shouting two slogans in farewell to their leader: resistance against enemies and revenge for the blood of the martyred leader of Iran.” The main funeral prayers were led by Ayatollah Ja’far Sobhani, a 97-year-old cleric from Qom, but readings were given not just for Khamenei but for three other members of his family, including his daughter-in-law Zahra Haddad Adel, and his 14-month-old granddaughter Zahra Mohammadi Golpaygani. The size of the granddaughter’s coffin was one of the most poignant sights at the ceremony. The absence from public view of Mojtaba Khamenei, Iran’s new supreme leader, since the death of his father, was made more conspicuous on Sunday when, unlike his three brothers, he was not seen in the mosque. Appointed as supreme leader 10 days after his father’s death, Mojtaba has not appeared in public or recorded any audio message for three months, and did not attend his wife’s funeral last Thursday. His brothers, Mustafa, Massoud and Meysam, stood alongside one another beside their father’s coffin. Most senior members of the Iranian government, including its political, military and judicial wings, also attended, suggesting Iranian officials have some kind of assurance that the ceasefire agreed with the US precludes any attack on the ceremony. The al-Quds force commander Esmail Qaani and IRGC commander Ahmad Vahidi were also in full view, something that was inconceivable in the early days of the war. However, the determination to protect Mojtaba Khamenei at all costs may be understandable given the mindset of some Americans, revealed by Laura Loomer, a sometime confidante of President Trump. On social media she described the funeral as a “target-rich environment” while the US conservative commentator Mark Levin said the funeral had “been an opportunity lost”. The streets surrounding the mosque were festooned with pictures of Mojtaba accompanying his father, while clerics had set up stalls distributing thick books containing collections of his speeches. Officials acknowledge that Mojtaba was injured in the attacks, but have said no permanent facial disfigurement or amputation occurred as a result of the deadly blast on the first day of the US-Israeli attacks. On the stage where the coffins lay, mourners chalked up messages of love and grief for their killed leader, and messages of loyalty to his successor. One in English read: “Kill Trump.” Many in the funeral crowd, as they stood in heat above 36C, waved red flags. The chant “No compromise, no surrender, only revenge” frequently filled the vast courtyard. The space, said to hold 30,000 people, had been filled well before dawn. Some men dressed in white burial shrouds (kaffan) to demonstrate their willingness to die as martyrs for the “master of martyrs”. The mosque itself, despite 40 years of construction, remains incomplete, with swathes of the building under tarpaulin. Sanctions have delayed the construction, making the building a monument to the years of conflict with the west. No official attendance figures were given but unofficially authorities claimed more than 2 million attended the opening day of the ceremony. The ceremony includes a mass procession on Monday in Tehran before the body is taken to the holy city of Qom, then transported to two holy cities in Iraq and then to its final resting place, Mashhad, where Khamenei was born in 1939. Inadvertently, Trump played into the hands of the Iranian leadership when he expressed surprise at seeing mourners in tears saying: “I thought they hated him.” He speculated: “Perhaps they are fake tears.” But the mourners’ grief appeared genuine, stricken by the loss of their spiritual leader and figurehead of Iran for nearly four decades. Many revealed they had travelled large distances with little income to be involved in the final farewell. Pilgrims were sleeping on the floor for three days in Tehran in makeshift dormitories in school classrooms or oil industry offices, or private houses. Mosques, districts and friends set up stalls surrounding the mosque area operating long into the night offering watermelons, kebab wraps and fruit juice to passersby. “We will fight the Americans with pitchforks if necessary,” said Leila Ahmadi from Boyer-Ahmad as she cheerfully served tea. After midnight in Tehran, thousands of mourners filled the streets of the capital carrying flags and banners of Khamenei. There have been fiercely passionate nightly street rallies in many of the major squares in Tehran. One who attended, Husain Dehghan, a 70-year-old book translator, explained: “The people had a sense of grief after the terrorist assassination of our leader so it is a sense of solidarity and a way to exchange information. “People have been in a devastating state of shock from losing their leader. I know the west calls him a dictator, and he was not popular with every Iranian, but for the majority there was respect and affection for him. “It is completely unacceptable to assassinate the major leader of another country when there was no declared war. In the middle of negotiations to start a war is pure deceit, and it shows the importance of Israel in US thinking. The aim may have been to subject Iran to US colonialism, but this is a nation with a long history and when a country is attacked, it is motivated since its survival is at stake.” Referring to the mass protests against the regime that were brutally suppressed earlier this year, he added: “That is true of many of the young people that protested in January; they realise the Americans and Israelis do not have the goodwill of people in mind when they talked of regime change.” Another long-term resident, Ibrahim Kalim, said: “I was very nearly killed in the street by an Israeli bomb. It was a matter of seconds. “You cannot know the effect at night of counting 20 or more bombs landing just miles from you and trying to judge if they are coming closer as the house shakes, or the effect of seeing Israeli jet planes flying overhead. At one level it is humiliating. “Many might want reform here, but it has to be a reform we shape. The Americans do not understand this. It is perfectly human to disagree with your government, and defend the nation in which you have been born if it is attacked.” But only miles away in the middle-class northern Tehran district, a different cafe scene was under way with families without hijabs going to restaurants. Culturally this part of Tehran is not hugely different from the Emirates. All Iranians are going through tough economic times, but the pain is not equally distributed The disparity in wealth between those who attend the funeral and those who do not is striking.

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We must protect Palestinian children from being killed | Letter

Your report (How children in West Bank are being killed by Israel ‘without accountability’, 29 June) resonated deeply. As the chief executive of Unicef UK, I have just returned from meeting Palestinian families and children across the West Bank – many of whom carried Unicef backpacks just like Mohammad al-Halaq in your report – who spoke of the rising fear and violence that have become part of their daily lives. I have worked in humanitarian development for more than two decades, but nothing could have prepared me for what I witnessed there. In Hebron’s militarised H2 area, movement is heavily restricted, children must pass checkpoints to get to school and their usual route is permanently closed. A group of mothers I met described routine humiliation and intimidation. The streets were empty, people afraid to be outside. Nearby, just days before my visit, a seven-month-old infant boy died after being shot by Israeli forces while sitting on his mother’s lap in the back of a car. He had not yet had the chance to take his first steps. These incidents are not isolated. Since January 2025, at least one Palestinian child has been killed on average every week in the West Bank. For nine-year-old Mohammad, and the many other children who have lost their lives, and rights, as part of escalating violence, there must be global outrage and condemnation. We cannot allow this to become normalised. Unicef calls on the Israeli authorities to take immediate and decisive action to protect Palestinian children in line with international law. We also call on UN member states with influence to use their leverage to ensure that children are protected and international law is respected. Dr Philip Goodwin Unicef UK • Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

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Gaza’s musicians reopen bomb-shattered conservatory – in tents

The three tents line a stretch of overcrowded, windswept sand, their windows open on to a view of the breaking waves of the Mediterranean. From inside comes the sound of singing, a strummed guitar, a violin and then a flute. But if the music evokes calm and harmony, the surroundings do not: rows of crowded makeshift shelters swelter in Gaza’s summer heat, young children picking their way through rubble, battered cars and pony carts clogging a potholed road. Above, Israeli military drones hum and buzz. The tents are the new home of the Gaza branch of Palestine’s national conservatory, dedicated to teaching classical, popular and traditional music. The institution, founded in 1993, once enjoyed well-equipped offices in Gaza City, three pianos and store rooms full of instruments and musical scores. Its alumni travelled the world to perform. That was before the war. The classrooms, practice rooms and auditorium were all destroyed in the relentless Israeli offensive that laid waste much of Gaza between October 2023 and October 2025. So too were the instruments, and the conservatory’s extensive archives. With a small group of former employees, Ahmed Abu Amsha, a musician and one of the teachers at the conservatory, is trying to rebuild the conservatory’s programmes. Originally from Beit Hanoun in the north of the Gaza and currently in the zone occupied by Israel, he now oversees activities in central Gaza, teaching guitar and supervising choirs. “Once, back before the war, music for many people was a means of entertainment and personal development … Now music has become an important tool for psychological relief. We work with lots of children who suffer from trauma and psychological distress caused by the war,” said Amsha. More than 72,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, were killed during the Israeli offensive and another thousand have died in Israeli strikes since a ceasefire nine months ago. The war was triggered by a surprise Hamas raid from Gaza into Israel, which killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took 250 people hostage. The territory remains divided, with 2.3 million Palestinians living under the rule of the militant Islamist movement in the roughly 40% now outside Israel’s control. Few have homes. Almost all the teachers and students of the conservatory were displaced during the war, most many times, and some injured or killed. “One of the most heartbreaking moments was the loss of one of my students, Yusuf Salman, who was one of the most disciplined, polite and talented students. He studied guitar with me … and was killed when a cafe was bombed. It was an extremely painful loss,” said Abu Amsha. So far, almost no reconstruction has taken place since October because Israeli restrictions remain in place on what can enter Gaza, and a proposed second phase of the ceasefire is stalled as negotiations over the disarmament of Hamas continue. Many in Gaza still go hungry and there is an acute shortage of clean water, fuel and medical supplies. Teachers from the conservatory face journeys of hours across rubble-filled roads to reach students such as Mohammad Khader, a 17-year-old who began learning the oud, the traditional Arabic instrument that is the ancestor of the guitar, at the conservatory 10 years ago. Displaced from his home in the north, Khader lives in a tent with his family near the central town of Deir-al-Balah. “Whenever I feel stressed or upset, I turn to music because it calms my nerves and gives me a sense of peace. I feel that I belong to music, just as music belongs to me, especially during this difficult period of our lives,” the teenager said. Demand for music lessons is so high and there are very few teachers, so Khader now instructs new students. “Before the war, education at the conservatory was more comprehensive and structured. We studied books and musical notation, and received both practical and theoretical classes. But now resources are very limited, and activities are mostly just focused on choirs and practical instrument training,” he said. The conservatory, named after Edward Said, the Palestinian-US scholar, public intellectual and activist who was also a fine classical pianist, has its overall headquarters in the occupied West Bank but its local branch has long been a prominent feature of Gaza’s cultural scene. Before the war, Israel sometimes granted the best students exit permits to travel outside Gaza to play in the Palestine Youth Orchestra, the conservatory’s touring ensemble. Others performed inside Gaza, giving concerts in both Arabic and western traditions. Osama Jahjouh, a flute teacher at the conservatory since 2012, lost all his instruments during the war. “When I was displaced after my home was destroyed, I lost three bags containing flutes and found myself without any musical instrument but I refused to give up. I returned once again to the idea of making a flute from plastic tubing, as I had done when a child. It was difficult, as flute making requires precise measurements for tone holes and placement but I managed to produce a playable instrument,” Jahjouh said. In the largest of the three tents used by the conservatory, a dozen young people have gathered to sing, play and listen. The sound of a series of maqams – scales, melodies and musical modes traditional in the Arab world – filter out across the shelters around. Some are played on the plastic hose flutes, others on salvaged or repaired instruments. Yara Abu Amsha has been learning the violin since moving to al-Mawasi about eight months ago. “I chose the violin because I felt it is closest to my personality and most expressive of my feelings. The violin is a deeply emotional instrument; its sound is calm and beautiful, and it has a great ability to convey emotions and feelings,” the 15-year-old said. “Music means a lot to me. Before the war, I didn’t think about it in this way but during the war I discovered that it has become a real refuge for us. Even if only for a short while, music gives us a chance to escape reality.”