A two-tier plan aimed at ending the conflict between the United States and Iran has been presented to both sides, according to a source cited by Reuters. The proposal calls for an immediate ceasefire to be agreed upon today, followed by negotiations on a more permanent settlement. The plan is said to have been conveyed via Pakistan, described as the only country currently maintaining communication with both parties.
However, Iran has responded by asserting that the United States is not prepared to agree to a ceasefire. Iran’s vice president also accused Donald Trump of “madness” following reports of new strikes targeting a university in Tehran.
Separately, Iran confirmed that the intelligence chief of its Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) has been killed, according to state media. Israel has stated it will continue targeting Iranian leadership.
Here is what we know about the latest developments:
In Iran
- A US-Israeli attack near Tehran’s Sharif University of Technology damaged a fuel station, causing a petrol shortage in the neighbourhood, according to Iranian media. It also caused damage to the university’s mosque, the Tasnim news agency reported.
- The Fars news agency reported that four girls and two boys below the age of 10 were killed in the overnight US-Israeli attacks on a residential area in Tehran’s Baharestan county. The agency reported earlier that the attack killed at least 13 people.
- The Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran condemned a US-Israeli attack on its heavy water facility as a “crime against science and human health”. Iran’s Khondab heavy water production plant was hit on March 27, making it inoperable.
In the Gulf
- The UAE authorities reported that the air defence system in Fujairah responded after a missile and drone threat from Iran. A drone targeted a building belonging to telecommunications company Du, the state-run WAM news agency reported. A Ghanaian national in Abu Dhabi sustained “moderate injuries” from falling shrapnel, according to the city’s media office.
- UAE presidential adviser Anwar Gargash said any settlement of the war must guarantee access through the Strait of Hormuz, warning that a deal that fails to rein in Iran’s nuclear programme and its missiles and drones would pave the way for “a more dangerous, more volatile Middle East”.
- The Saudi Ministry of Defence said the country’s defence system intercepted two drones, without providing further details.
In the US
- In a Truth Social post on Sunday, Trump threatened to attack Iran’s civilian infrastructure, including bridges and power plants, if the Strait of Hormuz is not fully reopened. “Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!! Open the F****** Strait, you crazy b*******, or you’ll be living in Hell – JUST WATCH! Praise be to Allah,” he wrote, using profanities.
- Trump later set a specific deadline of 8pm ET (midnight GMT) on Tuesday, April 7.
In Israel
- Israeli media reported that the military intercepted Iranian missiles, with the attack setting off alarms across southern Israel, including in Beersheba. No casualties were reported.
- In northern Israel, more than 10 sites were hit in the city of Haifa, according to local media reports.
- According to the Ynet News outlet, a 34-year-old woman was “seriously injured” by interceptor missiles in Petah Tikvah following the latest Iranian attacks on central Israel.
In Lebanon, Gaza and the West Bank
- Lebanon: Israeli drones targeted Kfar Rumman in southern Lebanon, Al Jazeera correspondents reported.
- Gaza: According to the Wafa news agency, a Palestinian was killed, and others were wounded in an Israeli strike on a group of civilians near the Yarmouk Stadium in Gaza City on Sunday night.
- West Bank: Israeli forces fired at a Palestinian teenager, wounding him, and arrested three others in raids across the occupied West Bank, according to the Wafa news agency.
- Read more via Al Jazeera
