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How it happened: Two seismic weeks that toppled Syria’s government
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By JILL LAWLESS
LONDON - Half a century of rule by the Assad family in Syria crumbled with astonishing speed after insurgents burst out of a rebel-held enclave and converged on the capital, Damascus, taking city after city in a matter of days.
Opposition forces swept across the country and entered Damascus with little or no resistance as the Syrian army melted away. President Bashar Assad, Syria’s ruler for 24 years — succeeding his father, Hafez Assad — fled the country. Russian state media reported that he was in Moscow.
It’s a stunning development in Syria’s devastating 13-year conflict. Anti-government protests in 2011 met with a brutal crackdown, escalating into a civil war that has killed more than half a million people and displaced half of Syria’s prewar population of 23 million. Assad, backed by Iran and Russia, gradually regained control of more than two-thirds of Syria, leaving the rebels with one stronghold in the northwest of the country.
And there the conflict remained, largely frozen, for years until late November. Here’s a look at a seismic two weeks for the Middle East.
Wednesday, Nov. 27: Rebel offensive begins
Armed opposition groups launch a large-scale attack on areas controlled by government forces in northwestern Syria and claim to have wrested control of over 15 villages from government forces in northwestern Aleppo province. The government and its allies respond with airstrikes and shelling in an attempt to halt the insurgent advances.
The offensive is led by the jihadi group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS. Formerly the Syrian branch of al-Qaida and known as the Nusra Front, HTS later distanced itself from al-Qaida, seeking to market itself as a more moderate group. It is classed as a terrorist group by the United Nations and the U.S.
The attack on Aleppo follows weeks of simmering low-level violence, including government attacks on opposition-held areas. Turkey, a main backer of Syrian opposition groups, says the rebels began a limited offensive to stop the attacks, but it expanded as government forces began to retreat.
Thursday, Nov. 28: The offensive expands
The offensive expands to reach the countryside of Idlib province amid reports government troops are retreating.
Friday, Nov. 29: Rebels enter Aleppo
The insurgents enter Aleppo, Syria’s largest city, for the first time since they were pushed out in 2016 after a grueling military campaign by Syrian government forces backed by Russia and Iran. They meet with little resistance.
Saturday, Nov. 30: Aleppo falls under insurgent control
The rebels say they control Aleppo, raising a flag over the city’s citadel and occupying the international airport. The Syrian armed forces claim to have redeployed troops and equipment in preparation for a counterattack.
By evening, the insurgents have seized at least four towns in the central Hama province and claim to have entered the provincial capital.
Sunday, Dec. 1: The government fights back
The Syrian military launches a counterattack with troops and airstrikes on Idlib and Aleppo. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi visits Damascus, telling Assad that Tehran will support the counteroffensive.
But Assad receives little, if any, help from his allies. Russia is busy with its war in Ukraine, and Iran has seen its proxies across the region degraded by regular airstrikes. Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah, which at one point sent thousands of fighters to shore up Assad’s forces, has been weakened by a yearlong conflict with Israel.
Monday, Dec. 2-Wednesday, Dec. 4: Fighting rages near Hama
The insurgents push south, advancing to within 10 kilometers (6 miles) of Hama, the country’s fourth-largest city and a key crossroads in central Syria, about 200 kilometers (125 miles) north of Damascus. State media reports fierce fighting in the province, and both state media and a U.K.-based observer group say government forces, backed by Russian airstrikes, have recaptured some territory.
Turkey urges Assad to hold talks with the opposition.
Thursday, Dec. 5: Insurgents capture Hama
After several days of fighting the rebels sweep into Hama. Dozens of jubilant fighters are seen firing into the air in celebration in Assi Square, the site of massive anti-government protests in the early days of the uprising in 2011. The Syrian army says it has redeployed to positions outside the city to protect civilians.
Friday, Dec. 6: Rebels advance on Homs
Rapidly advancing now, the rebels seize two towns on the outskirts of Homs, Syria’s third-largest city. About 40 kilometers (25 miles) south of Hama, Homs is the gateway to Damascus and the location of one of Syria’s two state-owned oil refineries. Capturing it would cut the link between Damascus, Assad’s seat of power, and the coastal region where he enjoys wide support.
The government denies reports that its military has withdrawn from the city.
Top diplomats from countries including Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Turkey, Iran and Russia, hold talks on Syria in the Qatari capital, Doha.
Saturday, Dec. 7: Homs falls and Assad’s grip weakens
Opposition forces take Homs after government forces abandon it. The insurgents say they have encircled Damascus and are carrying out the “final stage” of their offensive.
The U.N. special envoy for Syria, Geir Pedersen, seeks urgent talks in Geneva to ensure an “orderly political transition,” as Syrian state media denies Assad has fled the country.
Sunday, Dec. 8: Assad is toppled
Syrian state television airs a video statement by a group of men saying that President Bashar Assad has been overthrown and all prisoners have been set free. HTS commander Abu Mohammed al-Golani visits the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus and calls Assad’s fall a victory for “the Islamic nation.”
Russian officials and Iranian state TV say Assad has left Syria. Russian state news agencies later report he and his family are in Moscow and were granted asylum.
Prime Minister Mohammed Ghazi Jalali says Syria’s government is ready to “extend its hand” to the opposition and hand over its functions to a transitional government.
‘Orphanage city’ helps children in Gaza as the war grinds on
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By Ziad Taleb
OCCUPIED GAZA - Some Palestinian orphans in Gaza have gotten a glimmer of hope as the tragedies triggered by the grinding nearly year-long war continue to deplete the Strip.
The latest death toll has surpassed more than 41,000 people, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health – the majority of them women and children – while most of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million have been forcibly displaced and trapped in only 10 per cent of the territory, but in this grim situation, new initiatives aim at radiating even the slightest sliver of light amid the darkness of war.
In the Al-Mawasi area, west of Khan Younis, teacher Mahmoud Kallakh set up a camp aimed at providing some relief to families who had lost their men and breadwinners.
The Al-Baraka orphanage camp currently hosts 400 Palestinian families displaced to this area of southern Gaza. In an interview with our correspondent in Gaza, Ziad Taleb, Mr. Kallakh said that the initiative works to provide care to families in what he described as an “orphanage city”, including shelter, food and drink, medical care alongside educational and social services, with help, including from the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
“We have a dedicated medical centre and a school sponsored by the United Nations, through UNICEF, which thankfully provided the necessary resources for the school, embracing students, providing them with stationery and paying teachers’ salaries,” Mr. Kallakh said. “We want to establish this school completely, to replace these small tents, to create a more comfortable environment for students to receive their education.”
More than 17,000 orphans in Gaza
The number of children served here is just a drop in the sea of orphaned children in Gaza who are in need of protection. The number of unprotected orphans in Gaza now ranges between 17,000 and 18,000, many of whom are unaccompanied by any family members.
Taleen Al-Hinnawi lost her father as a result of the war and is trying to adjust to her new life in Al-Baraka orphanage camp. Signs of shock and sadness filled her face as she spoke to UN News, telling us about her father.
“Baba [Arabic for dad] was very affectionate,” she said. “I don’t feel like Baba was martyred.”
The young girl’s outlook on life has completely changed.
The war is trying “to wipe out entire families”, she said.
Taleen said she wished to return to her home in Gaza City “so life can return to normal, study like everyone else and memorise the Quran like everyone else. Before that, we lived in our house. We never bothered anyone, and we kept to ourselves.”
‘We lost them’
“This war took away from me my father and my only brother.”
With these words, young Nada Al-Gharib began telling her story. She and her mother were also injured in the strike on the tent where the family was sheltering in Khan Younis. They were trapped inside for three days.
Nada said her family had been displaced from northern Gaza to Khan Younis “because that’s what the occupation demanded of us”.
“We came here, we were trapped. My father and my only brother were martyred, and my mother and I were injured,” she explained.
‘We are like siblings here’
After they managed to leave the tent, Nada and her mother went to the industrial area west of Khan Younis, where they received treatment and were trapped again. They passed through Israeli checkpoints, she recalled, as they crossed into Rafah, which they also fled, and finally ended up at the Al-Baraka orphanage camp.
She and her mother found a second home in this camp, she said, “because everyone around us has the same story and pain”.
“We are like siblings here,” she said. “All mothers are like our mothers, and all children are our siblings. We love each other here very much. We love our lives. Even though it’s hard and the loss [of our loved ones] is hard for us, we try to live for them.”
Nada said her father was a great, kind man who loved his family very much.
“He would never let us do anything difficult,” she said. “Now, things are difficult. We have to fetch water and do things that men are supposed to do, but we have no other choice because we lost them.”
Escalating hostilities
UNICEF says the escalation of hostilities in the Gaza Strip is catastrophically affecting children and families, with children dying at an alarming rate. More than 14,000 children have been killed, according to estimates by the Palestinian Ministry of Health, and thousands more have been injured.
An estimated 1.9 million people – about 9 out of 10 Gazans – have been internally displaced, more than half of them children, without adequate water, food, fuel and medicine.
The UN agency is calling for an immediate and lasting humanitarian ceasefire, rapid, safe and unhindered humanitarian access to all children and families in need inside Gaza, including in the northern Strip, the immediate, safe and unconditional release of all abducted children and an end to any grave violations against children, including killing and maiming.
Israeli strike on UN school kills 'at least 39 people'
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OCCUPIED GAZA STRIP - At least 39 people have reportedly been killed in an Israeli strike on a UN school in the Gaza Strip carried out early on Thursday morning.
Israeli forces the attack, which happened early on Thursday in the Nuseirat refugee camp area, was targeting what it called a "Hamas compound" inside the school.
Information about the strike in the Nuseirat area remained contradictory on Thursday morning, and details could not immediately be independently verified.
Hamas-affiliated media said 39 people had been killed and dozens wounded, but did not offer a source for the figures.
The Israeli military said its fighter jets struck the school run by the United Nations agency providing aid to the Palestinians, known by the acronym UNRWA.
The Israeli military claimed Hamas and the Islamic Jihad used the school as cover for their operations, but did not immediately offer evidence.
"Before the strike, a number of steps were taken to reduce the risk of harming uninvolved civilians during the strike, including conducting aerial surveillance, and additional intelligence information," the Israeli military claimed.
The Nuseirat refugee camp is in the middle of the Gaza Strip. It is a built-up Palestinian refugee camp in central Gaza dating back to the 1948 Arab-Israeli war.
The Israeli military published a graphic of the school, which clearly had ‘UN’ written on its roof. The graphic described the strikes targeting two areas of the building on its upper floors.
The war began with Hamas' October 7 attack inside Israel that killed at least 1,200 people with 250 others taken hostage.
The Israeli military campaign in the Gaza Strip has killed at least 36,000 Palestinians, with hundreds of others killed in operations in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
The Israeli military said on Wednesday that forces were operating "both above and below ground" in eastern parts of Deir al-Balah and the Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza.
It said the operation began with airstrikes on militant infrastructure, after which troops began a "targeted daylight operation" in both areas.
Doctors Without Borders said at least 70 bodies and 300 wounded people, mostly women and children, were brought to a hospital in central Gaza on Tuesday and Wednesday after a wave of Israeli strikes.
The international charity said on Wednesday in a post on X that Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah is struggling to treat "a huge influx of patients, many of them arriving with severe burns, shrapnel wounds, fractures, and other traumatic injuries".
Israel has routinely launched airstrikes in all parts of Gaza since the start of the war and has carried out massive ground operations in the territory's two largest cities, Gaza City and Khan Younis, that left much of them in ruins
The military waged an offensive earlier this year for several weeks in Bureij and several other nearby refugee camps in central Gaza.
Troops pulled out of the Jabaliya camp in northern Gaza last Friday after weeks of fighting caused widespread destruction.
First responders have recovered the bodies of 360 people, mostly women and children, killed during the battles.
Israel sent troops into Rafah last month in what it said was a limited incursion, but those forces are now operating in central parts of Gaza's southernmost city.
More than one million people have fled Rafah since the start of the operation, with many heading towards central Gaza.
Modi’s BJP loses majority in India election shock, needs allies for government
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By Yashraj Sharma
NEW DELHI - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) lost its national majority after suffering major losses in key states, marking a dramatic shift in a political landscape it has dominated for the past decade.
The BJP emerged, comfortably, as the country’s single-largest party in the Lok Sabha, the lower house of India’s parliament. But as India’s election authorities counted 640 million votes within a day on Tuesday, after a six-week-long election, the BJP fell well short of its performances from 2014 and 2019.
Unlike both those elections, when the BJP won clear majorities on its own in a house of 543 seats, it ended up with 240 seats this time around. The halfway mark is 272 seats.
By contrast, the opposition INDIA alliance, led by the Congress party, won 223 seats, significantly higher than exit polls had predicted. Released on June 1 after the final phase of India’s election cycle, the exit polls had suggested that the BJP would outdo its 2019 tally of 303 seats.
Modi and his party are still likely to be able to form India’s next government – but will be dependent on a clutch of allies whose support they will need to cross the 272-seat mark. The BJP with its allies, in a coalition known as the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), won 283 seats.
“India will likely have an NDA government, where the BJP does not have a majority on their own, and coalition politics will come into real play,” said Sandeep Shastri, the national coordinator of the Lokniti Network, a research programme at the New Delhi-based Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS).
On Tuesday evening, Modi claimed, in his first comments after the results were declared, victory for his NDA coalition. “We will form the next government,” he said, speaking to thousands of supporters gathered at the BJP’s party headquarters in New Delhi.
Yet, analysts said that the electoral verdict raised questions about the BJP’s strategy. As India’s long-drawn-out election campaign played out, Modi, India’s charismatic and polarising prime minister, had increasingly turned to fearmongering over an alleged plot by the opposition to hand over the nation’s resources to Muslims, at the cost of its majority Hindus.
Meanwhile, the opposition had tried to corner Modi on his government’s economic track record. While the country is the world’s fastest-growing major economy, voters told pollsters ahead of the election that high inflation and unemployment were key concerns for them.
The BJP’s campaign slogan, “Abki baar, 400 paar” (This time, more than 400), set a target of 400 seats for its alliance, and 370 seats for the BJP itself.
That pitch carried a “tone of overconfidence”, said Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay, a Modi biographer, at a time when many in the Indian public were dealing with the lived realities of soaring prices, joblessness and income inequality so wide that it is now worse than during British colonial rule.
The result was the “sleepwalking of the BJP into a disaster”, said Asim Ali, a political analyst and columnist.
“Today, Modi has lost his face. He is not that ‘undefeated person’ and his invincible aura is not there any more,” said Ali.
Forming the next government
In some ways, the election verdict carries echoes of 2004, when another incumbent BJP government under then-Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee was widely expected to win a landslide mandate by exit polls.
Instead, the Congress marginally edged the BJP in wins and formed the government with its allies.
But 2024 is not 2004. Despite the setbacks, the BJP is still, by far, the largest party in parliament, and in a position to form the next government along with its NDA allies. Congress, the largest opposition party, won 99 seats, less than half of the tally the BJP is expected to end up with when all votes are counted.
It is a point Modi emphasised in his public address on Tuesday evening.
“All our opponents, put together, did not win as many seats as the BJP alone,” he said, to loud chants of “Modi, Modi” from his supporters.
Still, two regional parties will now hold the key to the office of the prime minister of India: Janata Dal-United, led by Nitish Kumar in the state of Bihar, and the Telugu Desam Party, led by Chandrababu Naidu in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh.
The TDP won 16 seats and the JD(U) 12. Both the parties have also previously been in alliance with the Congress party.
While the BJP has made noticeable inroads in southern India – especially Kerala, where it won its first-ever Lok Sabha seat – its overall numbers were hit by major losses in the central Hindi-speaking states, which it had comfortably won in the last election.
In Uttar Pradesh, India’s biggest state and a key determinant of who rules nationally, the Hindu-nationalist party lost in the Faizabad parliamentary district, home to the controversial Ram Temple, built on the ruins of the 16th-century Babri Masjid. Modi had consecrated the temple in January.
The consecration of the Ram Temple was at the forefront of the BJP’s campaign to mobilise Hindu voters. The party also lost the key seat of Amethi, where federal Minister Smriti Irani is staring at defeat. Irani had pulled off a spectacular win over Rahul Gandhi, the scion of the Gandhi family, by 55,000 votes in 2019.
This year, Gandhi contested from neighbouring Rae Bareli constituency and won the seat by a margin more than twice the size by which Modi won his seat, Varanasi, also in Uttar Pradesh.
Overall, the BJP won just 33 seats out of Uttar Pradesh’s 80, a significant drop from the 62 it won in 2019 and its tally of 71 from 2014. The regional Samajwadi Party, a part of the opposition INDIA alliance, won 37 seats, while the Congress won six others.
The BJP also suffered losses in Maharashtra, India’s second-most politically critical state. With most votes counted, the INDIA alliance won 30 of the state’s 48 seats. Only Uttar Pradesh has more seats – 80. In 2019, the BJP alone had won 23 seats in Maharashtra, with its allies winning another 18.
Along with Maharashtra, three other states that have been epicentres of India’s agrarian crisis, with major farm protests, also saw losses for the BJP compared with 2019: Haryana, Rajasthan and Punjab. The BJP governs the states of Haryana and Rajasthan.
Congress celebrations
As soon as the initial trends trickled in on Tuesday morning, Congress supporters thronged the party headquarters in New Delhi. Supporters were seen sporting white T-shirts with photos of Rahul Gandhi on the back, as they waved the party flags, their eyes glued to giant screens broadcasting results live.
“Now, at least Indian people will have a voice to raise against the cruel BJP, who ruled us for the last 10 years. More seats mean we have a good say and a strong opposition,” said Suresh Verma, a Congress supporter.
The changed composition of India’s next parliament might also affect how laws are passed. Critics have accused the BJP government of ramming laws through parliament without discussions and debate.
That will not be easy any more, said Shastri. “It is going to be a much tougher ride in the parliament, very clearly, for the BJP.”
Beyond parliament, analysts said a weakened mandate could affect the functioning of India’s other democratic institutions, which critics have accused the BJP of appropriating for partisan politics.
“Under brute majority, institutions have collapsed in India under the BJP. The power system was very centralised at the top, and India needs these kinds of coalition-based governments for its democracy to survive,” Ali said.
What next for the BJP?
Once the immediate dust settles over these results, the BJP will introspect and the dominant duo of Modi and Amit Shah, India’s home minister who is widely seen as the prime minister’s deputy, will face tougher questions.
“There will be questions on imagining Modi as a leader of the alliance, where he would have to listen to non-BJP leaders much more,” said Shastri of the CSDS.
Ali, the political analyst, also noted that “the BJP failed to read the ground”, and a set of yes-men around Modi potentially blindsided his party. “It is like the king was only told the tales that he wanted to hear,” he said.
“It’s really important for the BJP that there is a feedback mechanism and decentralisation of the power.”
Over the past decade under a majority BJP government, India has slid on several democratic indices amid accusations of a crackdown on dissent, political opposition and media. Modi did not address any news conferences in the last decade as a prime minister.
With coalition partners to keep a check on the BJP, there “will be breathing space for the Indian civil society and the government’s critics”, said Mukhopadhyay, the biographer.
To many Indian Muslims, the outcome comes as a relief.
Watching the results from his shanty in northeastern New Delhi, Akbar Khan, a 33-year-old waste picker, said he was delighted. While all of Delhi’s seats are currently being led by the BJP in trends, Khan said that “the people came out on streets and have fought this election against the [incumbent] government”.
Khan, who also works with waste picker communities in states like Bihar and Jharkhand, said, “The economically backward castes and classes are hugely upset with Modi, and his divisive politics have not borne any fruits in their kitchen.”
As a Muslim, Khan said, he was upset by Modi’s Islamophobic remarks during the re-election campaign, where he equated the community with “infiltrators” and described them as people “who have more children”.
“Indians needed to vote against this hate from Modi and the BJP,” he said.
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Israel responds to Hezbollah rocket attack with airstrikes on south Lebanon
Egypt: Education Restricted for Refugee
At least 25 killed in counter air strikes by Syrian army on rebels in north-west
UNRWA suspends aid delivery to Gaza after lorries looted at gunpoint
Who are the Syrian rebels HTS and why are they advancing?
Syrian rebels capture centre of Aleppo in major blow to Assad regime
World Central Kitchen stops work in Gaza after three aid workers killed by Israeli strike
Lebanon must elect president during 60-day truce with Israel as part of ceasefire
Abbas clarifies PA presidency succession plan but experts unconvinced
At least 10 killed in Israeli air strike on Beit Lahia
UN calls for accountability and investigations in Israel-Hezbollah conflict
Saudi Arabia approves 2025 budget with estimated $315bn
Lebanon faces $25bn reconstruction bill after Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire
Israeli military to remain in Gaza for years, food minister says
Israeli government orders officials to boycott left-leaning paper Haaretz
In East Jerusalem, record number of homes destroyed to drive out Palestinian residents
Biden: Israel and Hezbollah Ceasefire deal can be blueprint to end Gaza war
Heavy rain and high waves wash away tents of Gaza's displaced
Saudi NEOM gigaproject a 'generational investment,' minister
Videos
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Future of car-plane, see it to believe it
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D4uSWtazRCM
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Mehdi Hasan: Islam is a peaceful religion
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jy9tNyp03M0 -
Python swallows antelope whole in under an hour
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x0rk5zh7RaE
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Sangoku dance
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Df1SkeiPEAo -
flying 3 kites wonder!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nr9KrqN_lIg
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Korea has talent
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tZ46Ot4_lLo&feature=related -
Paul Potts sings Nessun Dorma
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1k08yxu57NA
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Susan Boyle - Britain's Got Talent
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxPZh4AnWyk -
Twist and Pulse - Britain's Got Talent
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1RDiBxbT_CA -
Shaheen Jafargholi (HQ) Britain's Got Talent
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYDM3MIzEHo
High-Quality clip of 12-year-old singer Shaheen Jafargholi auditioning on Britain's Got Talent 2009. First he sings Valerie by The Zutons, as performed by Amy Winehouse, but, after Simon interrupts him and asks for a different song, he just blew everyone away. -
David Calvo juggles and solves Rubik's Cubes
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lhkzgjOKeLs
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Outdoor 'bubble pod' hotel unveiled
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9IPBKlWf-cA