INTERNACIONAL
El líder de la minoría drusa de Siria denunció una “campaña genocida” y criticó al poder islamista

El líder espiritual de la minoría drusa de Siria denunció este jueves una “campaña genocida” contra su comunidad y arremetió contra el poder del presidente Ahmed al Sharaa, tras unos enfrentamientos de cariz confesional que dejaron más de 100 muertos en dos días, según una ONG.
Los enfrentamientos cerca de la capital, Damasco, y en el sur del país entre combatientes drusos y grupos armados vinculados al poder sunita ilustran la inestabilidad persistente en Siria, casi cinco meses después de que una coalición de rebeldes islamistas tumbara al régimen represivo de Bashar al Asad.
En un comunicado, el jeque Hikmat al Hajri denunció una “campaña genocida injustificada” contra “civiles”, y reclamó “una intervención inmediata de fuerzas internacionales”.
“Ya no confiamos más en una entidad que pretende ser un gobierno (…) Un gobierno no mata a su pueblo echando mano de sus propias milicias extremistas, para decir después de las masacres que la culpa es de elementos incontrolados”, declaró el líder religioso.
“Un gobierno protege a su pueblo”, enfatizó.
Al menos 100 personas murieron en dos días de violencia confesional, en su mayoría combatientes drusos, según informó el jueves en la tarde el Observatorio Sirio de Derechos Humanos (OSDH).
Según la ONG, 30 miembros de las fuerzas de seguridad del gobierno islamista y combatientes afiliados murieron, así como 21 combatientes drusos y 10 civiles durante enfrentamientos en los suburbios de Jaramana y Sahnaya, cerca de Damasco, el martes y el miércoles.

En la provincia de Sueida, bastión de la comunidad drusa cerca de Israel, otros 40 combatientes drusos murieron el miércoles, 35 de ellos en una emboscada, según el OSDH.
El ministro israelí de Defensa, Israel Katz, advirtió el jueves que su país reaccionará con “fuerza” si el gobierno sirio no protege a la población drusa.
“Si los ataques contra los drusos se reanudan y que el régimen sirio no logra impedirlos, Israel responderá con una fuerza significativa”, declaró Katz en un comunicado de su ministerio.
La ONU exhortó a “todas las partes a mostrar la mayor prudencia”.
El jefe de la diplomacia siria, Asaad al Shaibani, respondió por su parte que “cualquier llamado a una intervención extranjera, bajo cualquier pretexto o eslogan, llevará a un deterioro de la situación y a más divisiones”, según un mensaje publicado en la red X.
Los combates en Jaramana y Sahnaya, cerca de Damasco, donde viven cristianos y drusos, así como en la provincia meridional de Sueida, reavivaron la pesadilla de las masacres que a inicios de marzo dejaron un balance de 1.700 muertos en el oeste del país, en su gran mayoría miembros de la minoría alauita.
La violencia en aquella zona del país, montañosa y costera, se vio precipitada por ataques de hombres afines al clan Al Assad contra las fuerzas de seguridad.
Los drusos son una comunidad religiosa esotérica derivada del islam chiita, y está repartida entre Líbano, Siria e Israel.
Los alauitas son otra rama minoritaria del islam, a la que pertenece el ex dictador Al Assad, en un país, Siria, donde los musulmanes sunitas son mayoría.
Los combates de esta semana comenzaron el lunes con un ataque de grupos armados afines al poder en Jaramana, tras difundirse en redes sociales un mensaje de audio atribuido a un druso, y considerado blasfemo para con el profeta Mahoma. AFP no pudo verificar la autenticidad del mensaje en cuestión.
Con el argumento de querer defender a los drusos, Israel, país vecino de Siria con la que sigue técnicamente en guerra, amenazó con golpear al nuevo poder sirio, en caso de que prosiga la violencia contra esta comunidad.
El ministro israelí de Relaciones Exteriores, Gideon Saar, instó el jueves a la comunidad internacional a “cumplir su papel protegiendo las minorías en Siria -especialmente a los drusos- del régimen y sus bandas terroristas”.
Los drusos son numerosos en los Altos del Golán, que Israel arrebató a Siria en la Guerra de los Seis Días en 1967, y desde entonces mantiene ocupados.
(Con información de AFP)
Middle East,Civil Unrest,Sahnaya
INTERNACIONAL
WATCH: Lawmakers break down how billions in the ‘big, beautiful bill’ boost Trump’s immigration crackdown

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
President Donald Trump’s «big, beautiful bill» was signed into law earlier this month, with Republican lawmakers celebrating a broad range of GOP victories in the massive tax-and-spending legislation.
That includes billions of dollars aimed at Trump’s crackdown on illegal immigration in the U.S. Nearly $30 billion is marked for Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) alone, and $45 billion is going toward building up detention facility capacity.
House Republicans who spoke with Fox News Digital last week hailed that funding boost, even as critics of the Trump administration accuse the White House of taking too heavy a hand on the issue.
«Having that money to now be able to work on the wall along the southern border, to be able to hire more agents, to pay them more, to invest in the technology, to patrol and secure the border – it is hugely important,» Rep. David Kustoff, R-Tenn., told Fox News Digital. «If you ask President Trump, that was the most important issue of the 2024 election.»
COMER DISMISSES BIDEN DOCTOR’S BID FOR PAUSE IN COVER-UP PROBE: ‘THROWING OUT EVERY EXCUSE’
President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda got a huge boost in the «big, beautiful bill.» (Win McNamee/Getty Images and ICE)
Rep. Michael Guest, R-Tenn., who chairs the Subcommittee on Border Security and Enforcement on the House Homeland Security Committee, said the detention facility funding is particularly significant.
Guest urged ICE to use those funds to ramp up «targeted» enforcement against illegal immigrants.
It comes as many on the left and some on the right have urged the Trump administration not to go too far in rounding up suspected illegal immigrants who otherwise pose no known threat to the public.
148 DEMOCRATS BACK NONCITIZEN VOTING IN DC AS GOP RAISES ALARM ABOUT FOREIGN AGENTS

Rep. Michael Guest urged the funding be used for «targeted» enforcement. (Getty Images)
«I think targeted enforcement, making sure that they’re going after the worst of the worst – those individuals who have either committed crimes in the United States or we learn after they released into the interior that they had committed crimes in their country origin, [or] those people who have final orders of removal,» Guest said.
«Those are the people that I believe that ICE needs to be targeting. Those are the people where you see widespread support from the American public that they want to get off the street.»
Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., pointed out that ICE had been asking for that funding for some time.
«Tom Homan has done a tremendous job. He’s indicated for a while he needs more money to keep doing his job. And he’s being fought by everybody, particularly the sanctuary cities, to prevent that from happening,» Norman said. «The least we can do is provide the funding, and we did it.»
And Rep. Derrick Van Orden, R-Wis., said he hoped the increased border and immigration crackdown would help fight the ongoing drug crisis still plaguing the U.S.

Rep. Ralph Norman said border czar Tom Homan has «done a tremendous job.» (Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc)
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
«So in order to have a secured border, in order get rid of these criminal, illegal aliens that are raping and murdering American citizens on the regular, we have to have a very strong immigration enforcement system,» Van Orden said.
Reps. Brandon Gill, R-Texas, and Andrew Clyde, R-Ga., highlighted the funding for Trump’s border wall and for more ICE personnel, respectively.
The bill passed the House earlier this month and was signed into law by Trump on the Fourth of July.
In addition to funding immigration operations, it also extends key parts of Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), rolls back some Biden administration-era green energy subsidies, and imposes new work requirements for federal aid.
INTERNACIONAL
Ukraine sees sweeping protests over bill weakening anti-corruption agencies

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Ukrainians are taking to the streets after the passage of a controversial bill threatening the autonomy of two anti-corruption agencies.
The legislation gives the general prosecutor — who is appointed by the president — increased authority over the country’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) and the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAPO).
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is now facing the largest protests since Russia’s 2022 invasion. Demonstrators gathered outside the presidential administration in Kyiv, while other protests took place in smaller cities across the country.
Ukrainians protest in the first wartime rally against a newly passed law, which curbs independence of anti-corruption institutions, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in central Lviv, Ukraine, on July 22, 2025. (REUTERS/Roman Baluk)
UKRAINE’S ZELENSKYY NAMES NEW PRIME MINISTER FOR FIRST TIME SINCE RUSSIA’S WAR BEGAN
The vote came one day after two NABU officials were arrested over alleged ties to Russia, according to Reuters. The outlet said that Ukraine’s domestic security agency, which carried out the arrests, also conducted background checks.
«I gathered all heads of Ukraine’s law enforcement and anti-corruption agencies, along with the Prosecutor General. It was a much-needed meeting — a frank and constructive conversation that truly helps,» Zelenskyy wrote on X. «We all share a common enemy: the Russian occupiers. And defending the Ukrainian state requires a strong enough law enforcement and anti-corruption system — one that ensures a real sense of justice.»

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni (not pictured) hold a joint press conference during the Ukraine Recovery Conference 2025 (URC2025) at Roma Convention Center La Nuvola, on July 10, 2025, in Rome, Italy. (Antonio Masiello/Getty Images)
SENATE MOVES TO REIN IN TRUMP ADMINISTRATION’S FLUCTUATING UKRAINE POLICY
«In effect, if this bill becomes law, the head of SAPO will become a nominal figure, while NABU will lose its independence and turn into a subdivision of the prosecutor general’s office,» the agencies said in a joint statement on Telegram, according to the Associated Press.
European Commissioner for Enlargement Marta Kos expressed concern over the vote, saying «the dismantling of key safeguards protecting NABU’s independence is a serious step back.»
Zelenskyy said in another X post, following a meeting that included NABU Director Semen Kryvonos, SAPO Prosecutor Oleksandr Klymenko, Prosecutor General Ruslan Kravchenko, and Head of the Security Service of Ukraine Vasyl Maliuk, that «anti-corruption infrastructure» needs to be «cleared» of «Russian influence.»

Protesters hold placards during a rally against a law that restricts independence of anti‑corruption institutions on July 22, 2025, in Kyiv, Ukraine. (Ivan Antypenko/Suspilne Ukraine/JSC «UA:PBC»/Global Images Ukraine via Getty Images)
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
The Ukrainian government’s latest move risks endangering its bid to join the European Union, as a crackdown on internal corruption is a requirement. Additionally, it could strain the warming relationship between Zelenskyy and President Donald Trump, who has accused the Ukrainian leader of being a «dictator without elections.»
Both the U.S. and the E.U. have backed activists in Ukraine demanding independent institutions be established and empowered to clean up corruption, according to Axios. However, the pressure dropped significantly after Russia invaded Ukraine.
INTERNACIONAL
«Vemos personas que se desmayan en la calle»: más de 100 organizaciones internacionales alertan sobre una «hambruna masiva» en Gaza

Estados Unidos apuesta a un alto el fuego
Negociaciones trabadas
Israel,Franja de Gaza,Hamas
- POLITICA3 días ago
Expulsada del Gobierno, Victoria Villarruel empieza a tomar distancia, pero no tiene proyecto político para este año
- POLITICA3 días ago
La CGT evalúa adelantar a octubre el recambio de sus autoridades y define una movilización contra Milei
- POLITICA2 días ago
🗳️ El chamuyo de las elecciones en la Provincia: se postulan, pero no a asumen