Home
Israeli strikes kill 45 Palestinians and damage Red Cross office in Gaza
- Details
- Written by Super User
- Category: MENA
- Hits: 569
GAZA -
At least 45 Palestinians were killed and a Red Cross office was damaged in Gaza as Israeli forces pounded the besieged territory and engaged in close-quarter combat with Hamas, Reuters reported.
The Red Cross said that its Gaza office was damaged when “heavy calibre projectiles” fired by the Israeli military landed in Mawasi near Rafah on Friday afternoon, killing at least 25 people living in tents around the compound and wounding 50.
The Israeli shelling struck two places in the area which is filled with tents housing Palestinians driven from their homes elsewhere in Gaza by unrelenting bombardment. One of these locations is near a field hospital run by the Red Cross.
Relatives of the people killed near the hospital told the Associated Press that the Israelis drew people out by firing a “sound bomb” and then struck them with a deadly volley.
Mona Ashour’s husband rushed out to investigate and was instantly killed. “Then they hit with the second one which was a little closer to the entrance of the Red Cross,” she said.
Another eyewitness, Hasan al-Najjar, told the news agency that his sons were killed helping people who panicked after the first strike.
“My two sons went after they heard the women and children screaming,” he said at the hospital. “They went to save the women and they struck with the second projectile, and my sons were martyred. They struck the place twice.”
The locations of the attacks provided by the Red Cross appear to be just outside a “safe zone” designated by the Israelis in Muwasi.
"This grave security incident is one of several in recent days. Previously stray bullets have reached ICRC structures," the humanitarian organisation said in a post on X on Friday without mentioning Israel. "We decry these incidents that put the lives of humanitarians and civilians at risk.”
The Red Cross field hospital, which has 60 beds, was opened in mid-May to provide emergency surgeries, obstetric, paediatric and outpatient care, according to a press release at the time that shows white tents covering a vast area.
Two Israeli tanks climbed a hilltop above Mawasi and sent down "balls of fire that hit the tents of the poor people displaced in the area", a resident told Reuters.
Israeli forces have bombed locations in the vicinity of the “humanitarian zone” in Muwasi before as well.
They have been pushing to complete the capture of Rafah despite repeated condemnation by Tel Aviv’s Western allies and the UN.
The Israeli military said the incident was under review. "An initial inquiry conducted suggests that there’s no indication that a strike was carried out by the IDF in the humanitarian area in Al-Mawasi," it said.
The military earlier claimed its forces were conducting "precise, intelligence-based" actions in the Rafah area, where troops were involved in close-quarter combat with Hamas.
Israeli airstrikes, meanwhile, killed three Palestinians in Khan Younis and at least seven in Beach Camp on Friday. Five Palestinians were also killed in an attack on Gaza City.
Israel's war on Gaza has killed more than 37,400 people so far, according to the local health ministry, and left nearly the entire population of 2.3 million homeless and destitute.
The UN said on Friday it is Israel’s responsibility, as the occupying power in Gaza, to restore public order and safety so humanitarian aid can be delivered, amid warnings of imminent famine.
Israel launched a ground and air assault on Gaza after Hamas attacked southern Israel on 7 October last year and killed around 1,200 soldiers and civilians and took nearly 250 hostage.
Israel pounds central Gaza camps, deepens invasion of Rafah
- Details
- Written by Super User
- Category: MENA
- Hits: 527
By Nidal Al-Mughrabi
CAIRO - Israeli forces pounded areas in the central Gaza Strip overnight, killing three people and wounding dozens of others, according to medics, while tanks deepened their invasion into Rafah in the south, residents said.
Israeli planes struck a house in Al-Nuseirat camp, killing two people and wounding 12 others, while tanks shelled areas in Al-Maghazi and Al-Bureij camps, wounding many other people, health officials said. Nuseirat, Maghazi, and Bureij are three of Gaza's eight historic refugee camps.
In Deir al-Balah, a city packed with displaced people in the central Gaza Strip, an Israeli air strike killed one Palestinian and wounded several others on Thursday, medics said.
The Israeli military said on Wednesday forces were continuing their operations across the enclave targeting militants and military infrastructure in what it described as "precise, intelligence-based" activities.
More than eight months into the war in Gaza, Israel's advance is now focused on the two last areas its forces had yet to storm: Rafah on Gaza's southern edge and the area surrounding Deir al-Balah in the centre. The operations have forced more than a million people to flee since May, the vast majority already displaced from other parts of the enclave.
In Rafah, near the border with Egypt, Israeli tanks stationed deep in the western and central areas of the city stepped up bombardment, forcing more families living in the far coastal areas to flee northward. Some residents said the pace of the raid has been accelerated in the past two days.
"The tanks took control of most of the areas in Rafah. People living by the beach have also started to leave toward Khan Younis and central areas in fear because of the continued bombardment," said Abu Wasim, a resident from Rafah's Al-Shaboura neighbourhood, who quit his home over a week ago before tanks rolled in reaching the heart of the city.
Rafah housed over half of Gaza's 2.3 million people until May 7 when Israeli forces began the ground offensive into the city. Fewer than 100,000 are now believed to be left behind.
There has been no sign of let-up in the fighting as efforts by international mediators, backed by the United States, have failed to persuade Israel and Hamas to agree to a ceasefire.
The armed wings of Hamas and Islamic Jihad said fighters battled Israeli forces with anti-tank rockets and mortar bombs, and have in some areas detonated pre-planted explosive devices against army units.
On Thursday, Israeli authorities freed 33 Palestinians who had been detained during the past months by Israeli forces in different areas of the enclave. The freed detainees were admitted into Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip after they complained of torture and mistreatment by Israeli jailers.
Israel denies mistreatment of Palestinian detainees. Palestinian and international human rights groups have criticised what they say is Israel's ill-treatment of Gaza detainees and repeatedly demanded it disclose their whereabouts and information about their well-being.
Israel's ground and air campaign was triggered when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing around 1,200 people and seizing more than 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.
The offensive has left Gaza in ruins, killed more than 37,400 people, according to Palestinian health authorities, and left nearly the entire population homeless and destitute.
Since a week-long truce in November, repeated attempts to arrange a ceasefire have failed, with Hamas insisting on an end to the war and full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he will agree only to temporary pauses and will not end the war until Hamas is eradicated and the hostages are freed.
The angry mothers who could topple Netanyahu
- Details
- Written by Super User
- Category: MENA
- Hits: 550
TEL AVIV - The first time Eliran Mizrahi was injured in Gaza, he refused to leave the battlefield. The reservist wanted to continue defending his country and the search for the missing hostages.
When he was wounded a second time during his seven-month stint in heavy urban warfare, he was told by a doctor that he could not return to the front line, partly on account of his PTSD.
Yet an emergency call-up came again last week for an engineer who had started the war with the task of clearing bodies from the site of the Nova music festival.
Before he could be deployed, the 40-year-old father of four children killed himself.
The tragic case has shocked a nation where many are now starting to question the direction of the government’s war strategy as the conflict in Gaza enters its ninth month with no end or “day after” plan in sight, and as casualties among the overstretched defence forces mount.
Anger has boiled over onto the streets, spearheaded by the mothers of serving soldiers, as the war plan is in tatters and the prime minister’s grip on power increasingly precarious.
Protesters are demanding an immediate deal to bring the remaining 120 Israeli hostages home from Gaza and fresh elections to replace a government they no longer trust.
Many have called for an end to a conflict they do not now see as having a clear purpose.
A “week of resistance”, which began on Saturday night in Tel Aviv with tens of thousands attending one of the largest antigovernmental protests since the war began, will continue over the next few days with demonstrations outside the Knesset and prime minister’s residence.
On the rally frontlines is a group of mothers of troops who have denounced the government for playing politics with their children’s lives.
They have accused Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of prolonging the war to appease hard-right and religious members of his fragile coalition to ensure its survival.
“We, the parents of active combat soldiers, blame you for sacrificing our children on the altar of politics,” they wrote in a recent letter to the prime minister and his now disbanded war cabinet.
“We blame you for the senseless deaths of soldiers. We blame you for the numerous injuries to our children, both physically and mentally,” they said.
Blood of dead troops
The mothers’ signature move is to dye their palms bright red to symbolise the blood of dead troops.
On Saturday night, they gathered on the Hahalacha motorway bridge in central Tel Aviv holding their red hands in the air alongside signs saying, “Parents of combat soldiers scream loudly – enough!” Cars on the busy thoroughfare below tooted their horns in support.
The country was reeling with the news that ten young soldiers – eight of them in one armoured vehicle – had died that morning, in one of the deadliest days for Israeli forces in the conflict.
“Shame! Shame! Shame!” shouted the mothers at the government.
Such open dissent is rare in a security-conscious country like Israel that prizes national defence as one of its most important civic duties.
‘Bring our sons home’
Hagar Moshe Kedem, whose son is deployed with a combat unit in Gaza, explained that while parents had supported the first six months of the war out of the dire need to protect the country after the Hamas terror attacks, many no longer understood the goal of the fighting.
“We want to put pressure on the government to make a settlement that will bring back the hostages and our sons home. We don’t want them to still be in Gaza,” she said.
“Our prime minister is talking about total victory but there is no such thing. Many people are suffering, also in Gaza, also in Israel. We don’t want the war to keep going. We need a deal now because people are dying there every day.”
Talks on a US-backed three-stage peace plan that would initially see a limited Israeli hostage for Palestinian prisoner exchange during a temporary truce have reportedly stalled over Hamas’s demands for concrete guarantees of a permanent ceasefire and Israeli troop withdrawal from Gaza.
Washington has blamed the terrorist group for the impasse and says that Israel has accepted the deal, even though Mr Netanyahu’s government has not publicly backed it.
Doubt has gripped Israeli society that Mr Netanyahu, goaded by his hard right security and finance ministers, who want to continue the war, is fully committed to securing an agreement.
Janna, who asked for her surname not to be revealed as she has three sons in the military, said that the war began as a “fight for our existence” but that now soldiers were being “kept captive by politicians, by extremists,” whose judgement was in question.
“Now we feel like it is political. [The government] is being led by ceding to the right-wing parties, the religious ones, all those they don’t sacrifice their children. Their children are not running from house to house with rifles,” she said.
Janna said that today’s parents drew inspiration from the “Four Mothers” anti-war movement founded in the late 1990s, that spurred the public to successfully push for the recall of Israeli troops from southern Lebanon.
Israeli public opinion remains divided over the war but ongoing mass protests suggest the mothers’ views strike a chord within a significant section of the population.
Hostage-for-ceasefire deal
A new poll by the Jewish People Policy Institute released on Monday finds that some 60 per cent want the country to “accept” the hostage-for-ceasefire deal and almost three quarters expressed a “very low” or “fairly low” level of trust in the government.
Israel’s colourful and raucous demonstrations are generally peaceful affairs although there have been violent clashes with the police on the fringes.
While the large crowds may not directly trigger the downfall of the government, one of their causes – the fate of a draft bill to address exemptions from mandatory military service for ultra-Orthodox, or Haredi, young men – has the potential to break Mr Netanyahu’s coalition apart.
The contentious policy dates back to the founding of Israel in 1948 when a few hundred students of the Torah were allowed to avoid conscription.
Since then, Haredi communities have boomed to about 13 per cent of the country’s 9½ million citizens, meaning that tens of thousands do not face the draft while receiving government subsidies for religious study. An all-time high of 66,000 were exempted over the last year.
Resolving the thorny issue has eluded governments for decades but now, as the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) strains under a lack of manpower during the longest war the country has faced since the country’s foundation, it has deepened the faultlines in Israeli society.
It has ignited accusations of “draft dodging” among those shouldering the unequal economic, social and emotional burden of the intensive conflict – who were further incensed by the government’s decision on Sunday to delay retirement for reservists to meet shortfalls.
Public outrage
Mr Netanyahu is now caught between public outrage and the Haredi factions of his government for whom draft exemptions are a red line.
He also faces an imminent ruling by the Supreme Court on whether the current policy violates the notion of equality, and which could order the immediate conscription of the ultra-Orthodox.
His efforts to revive a bill that is regarded as unsuitable by both sides of the debate has been seen as an attempt to keep the issue out of the hands of the judges and met with disdain.
After winning a vote last week to punt the legislation to the parliament’s foreign and defence committee, Mr Netanyahu was pictured standing in the chamber, a copy of Plutarch’s The Rise And Fall Of Athens in his left hand, with a beaming smile on his face.
The viral “grin”, on the same day four young soldiers perished in a booby-trapped building in southern Gaza, stoked national anger.
“Bibi is smiling”, “Our kids are dying” read two banners at a demonstration outside the Knesset in Jerusalem on Monday night.
The draft law was “spit in the face” of serving soldiers, said Noorit Felsenthal Berger, whose two youngest sons are fighting in Gaza.
“Did you see the face of Bibi Net after the vote? At the same time that he was gloating, there were four soldiers killed. It’s unbelievable,” she said.
“They are letting a whole population of ultra-Orthodox keep studying, and our sons are having to go on shedding their blood to end this war.”
Political opponents have seized the moment. “That smile will bury his political career. This smile will remove him from our lives,” opposition leader Yair Lapid said at Saturday’s mass protest in Tel Aviv.
The controversy also puts the prime minister on a collision course with the military and his defence minister who voted against the bill last week.
“People understand why they’re here,” a serving commander told IDF chief Herzi Halevi in Gaza this weekend, reported Hayom. “They can’t understand why only they are here.”
Haredi conscription was a “clear need”, he responded.
As politicians prevaricate, the toll on the nation intensifies.
More than 300 soldiers have died during the Gaza ground operation and close to 4,000 injured. Veterans have complained of government neglect.
The defence ministry’s rehabilitation department told a Knesset committee on Monday it has treated 8,663 additional patients since October – 42 per cent for limb injuries, 21 per cent for PTSD or other mental health problems.
Aviram Atias, a friend of Eliran Mizrahi, told the hearing he no longer sleeps in the same bed with his wife because he wakes up screaming in the middle of the night.
‘Did everything for Israel’
Avichai Levy, an IDF soldier who also suffers from PTSD, said “How many Eliran Mizrahi’s do you need? Why lie to us? My friends are experiencing missiles and gunfire all day long. All the ministers are ignoring us. They have all turned their backs on us.”
The IDF initially denied Mizrahi the right to a military burial but relented under pressure from his grieving family who said a “joyful, funny” man had returned home “angry”, “broken” and plagued by nightmares.
“He had rockets fired at him, he saw his friends die, and he brought bodies back, and he still did everything for Israel,” Mr Mizrahi’s sister, Hila, told Channel 13. “I think that the respect he deserves is to be buried in a coffin with an Israeli flag on it and for soldiers to salute him.”
UN reports ‘shocking’ rise in violations against children in conflict in 2023
- Details
- Written by Super User
- Category: MENA
- Hits: 641
THE UNITED NATIONS - Violence against children caught in armed conflict reached “extreme levels” last year, with a “shocking” 21 per cent increase in extreme violations, UN Secretary-General António Guterres said in a report published on Thursday.
Children were killed and maimed in unprecedented numbers in places such as Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories, notably Gaza; Burkina Faso, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sudan and Ukraine, his annual report on Children and Armed Conflict revealed.
The alarming increase was due to the evolving nature, complexity, and intensification of armed conflict, as well as the use of explosive weapons in populated areas, the report said.
UN chief ‘appalled’
The UN verified nearly 33,000 grave violations affecting more than 22,500 children, mainly boys, in 26 situations worldwide.
The highest numbers were for killing and maiming, with 11,649 children affected - a 35 per cent increase over last year’s report. This was followed by the recruitment and use of 8,655 children and the abduction of 4, 356 more.
While more than half of the violations were committed by non-State armed groups, including those designated as terrorist by the UN, government forces were the main perpetrators of killings and injuries, attacks on schools and hospitals, and the denial of humanitarian access.
The conflict in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories has led to a 155 per cent increase of grave violations against children, the report found.
“I am appalled by the dramatic increase and unprecedented scale and intensity of grave violations against children in the Gaza Strip, Israel and the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, despite my repeated calls for parties to implement measures to end grave violations,” Mr. Guterres wrote.
Annual blacklist
The annual report contains an annex of parties that commit grave violations. As has already been widely reported, for the first time, the Israeli armed and security forces were included for killing and injuring children and attacking schools and hospitals.
Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad were also added to the list for the first time for killing, wounding and abducting children.
The report noted that the war in Sudan led to a “staggering” 480 per cent increase in grave violations.
The Sudanese Army and rival military the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have been battling for more than a year and both are on the blacklist for killing and maiming children and attacking schools and hospitals.
The RSF also recruited and used children in addition to committing rape and other sexual violence against them.
‘We are failing children’
Despite the multiplying and escalating crises detailed in the report, more than 10,600 children formerly associated with armed forces or groups received protection or reintegration support last year.
The UN commenced or sustained engagement with parties to conflict in places such as Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Iraq, Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory, Mali, Mozambique, Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, Syria, Ukraine and Yemen.
In some cases, this engagement led to the adoption of measures aimed at better protection for children.
Virginia Gamba, Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict, said the report is “a wake-up call”.
“We are failing children,” she said. “I call on the international community to recommit to the universal consensus to protect children from armed conflict and I call on States to fulfil their primary responsibility to protect their populations and respect all norms and standards applicable in the conduct of armed conflict situations.”
Main News
Error: No articles to display
latest news
- New blood test can spot breast cancer at earliest stages, scientists
- Sole bidders Saudi Arabia confirmed as hosts of 2034 men’s World Cup
- Nagasaki survivor accepts Nobel Peace Prize, calls for nuclear free world
- Countering Collapse in Haiti
- Crude oil price and production movements, OPEC
- IFAD, Nepal launch $120 million programme to help over 250,000 people
- DiEM25 challenges EU’s inhumane practices towards migrants
- Malibu wildfires forced thousands to evacuate their homes
- DRC: Senior army officials must be investigated for possible crimes
- Netanyahu describes corruption charges against him as ‘ocean of absurdity’ at trial
- Authorities disrupt migrant smuggling supply chain
- Israeli tanks '16 miles from Damascus' as overnight raids 'destroy Assad army's assets'
- In Haiti, women suffer the consequences of gang violence
- ICC arrest warrants for top Israeli officials are step toward justice
- Poland: Brutal Pushbacks at Belarus Border
- Sudan: War Crimes in South Cordovan, HRW
- Europeans politicians quick to promote hate against Syrian refugees
- Pentagon announces $988 million Ukraine Security Assistance package
- Trump says Russia, Iran in 'weakened state,' calls on Putin to make Ukraine deal
- $1.7 billion in airline funds blocked by governments
- 12 Ways to improve circulation for healthy blood flow, Doctors
- Action against ‘phone phishing’ gang in Belgium, Netherlands: 8 arrests
- $282 million program targeting agriculture and food systems
- What’s happening in Syria? The key developments as Assad flees to Russia
- UK nearly as divided as the US, report finds
Europe
DiEM25 challenges EU’s inhumane practices towards migrants
Authorities disrupt migrant smuggling supply chain
ICC arrest warrants for top Israeli officials are step toward justice
Poland: Brutal Pushbacks at Belarus Border
Europeans politicians quick to promote hate against Syrian refugees
Action against ‘phone phishing’ gang in Belgium, Netherlands: 8 arrests
UK nearly as divided as the US, report finds
Starmer rejects choice between EU and US allies
French government at risk of collapsing over 2025 budget
Belgium convicted of crimes against humanity for acts committed during colonisation
23rd International Economic Forum on Africa Monday 9 December
Putin Approves New Budget With Record Defence Spending
UK MPs back Assisted dying bill after emotionally-charged Commons debate
Ireland goes to polls with three parties neck and neck
Putin full of praise for ‘intelligent and experienced’ Trump
UK to continue selling arms to Israel despite Lebanon ceasefire, Starmer says
Crackdown on illegal streaming network with 22 million users worldwide
France says Israel's Netanyahu has immunity from ICC arrest warrant
Number of Europeans diagnosed with HIV rose in 2023 with new cases in most countries
Georgian prime minister suspends EU membership talks until end of 2028
Russian missile fired at Ukraine carried warheads without explosives
Russia advances in Ukraine at fastest monthly pace since start of war
Why are news outlets not covering crackdown on pro-Palestinian journalists in UK?
Starmer and Lammy are ‘monstrous war criminals’, Palestinian lawyer
Storm Bert brings severe flooding across UK
Asia
Nagasaki survivor accepts Nobel Peace Prize, calls for nuclear free world
IFAD, Nepal launch $120 million programme to help over 250,000 people
Embezzling property tycoon scrambles to raise $9bn to avoid death sentence
Pakistan: Everything we know about clashes between Imran Khan supporters and police
India: Mosque survey dispute erupts into deadly clashes
Taliban detained journalists over 250 times since takeover, UN
Philippines summons VP Duterte over threat to have Marcos killed
Four troops killed in Pakistan as protesters demand release of ex-PM Khan
Thousands of Imran Khan supporters defy arrest to head to capital
Pakistan sealing off capital ahead of planned rally by Imran Khan supporters
Fighting between armed sectarian groups in Pakistan kills at least 33 people
Rise in Afghan opium cultivation reflects economic hardship
Volcano erupts in Bali spewing five-mile ash cloud
New Delhi becomes world’s most polluted city as AQI levels reach 1,000
Pakistan’s toxic smog cover is now visible from space
Chinese driver 'angry about divorce settlement' ploughs into crowd leaving 35 dead
Taliban to attend UN climate conference for first time
Suicide bomber kills 24 in explosion at Pakistan train station
China unveils new heavy rocket that looks similar to SpaceX Starship
North Korea’s new ICBM missile records longest flight time yet
Japanese youth committed to fight poverty and hunger with IFAD
Japan's government in flux after election gives no party majority
Indan Muslims face discrimination after restaurants forced to display workers’ names
IFAD and Thailand sign agreement for new regional office in Bangkok
Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the Japanese organization Nihon Hidankyo
Africa
DRC: Senior army officials must be investigated for possible crimes
Sudan: War Crimes in South Cordovan, HRW
Angola: US President Biden must demand immediate release of five critics
Wife of 'abducted' Ugandan opposition figure says he won't get justice
S.Africa opposition seeks to revive impeachment proceedings against Ramaphosa
Namibia may elect its first-ever female president in elections this week
Botswana turns to cannabis as diamonds are’s for ever
Influencers and social media beat mainstream media in Kenya
Mali’s ruling military appoints new prime minister
Regenerative Agriculture and Peace-building in South-central Somalia
Wits University unveils pan-African AI centre
'The UK will never forget Sudan,' says David Lammy
Sudan’s displaced have endured ‘unimaginable suffering, brutal atrocities’
Nearly half the world’s 1.1 billion poor live in conflict settings
Sudan war deaths are likely much higher than recorded
Africa’s mineral deposits can power the energy transition
The joint force of the AES ready to launch large-scale operations to secure Sahel
Mystery still surrounds death of revered UN chief Hammarskjöld, 63 years after plane crash
IFAD and Sierra Leone partner to boost farm productivity
Mozambique: End violent post-election crackdown ahead of 7 November Maputo march
Africa: Richer countries must commit to pay at COP29
Sudan’s ‘living nightmare’ continues as 11 million flee war
‘Alarming’ situation in Great Lakes Region of DR Congo
Climate change worsened rains in flood-hit African regions, scientists
African progress backslides as coups and war persist
Americas
Countering Collapse in Haiti
Malibu wildfires forced thousands to evacuate their homes
In Haiti, women suffer the consequences of gang violence
Pentagon announces $988 million Ukraine Security Assistance package
Trump says Russia, Iran in 'weakened state,' calls on Putin to make Ukraine deal
Musk dealt legal defeat in battle over $56 billion Tesla pay deal
Autonomous Systems Impact on Modern Warfare
US, Israel, China, and the Shifting Arms Trade in the Middle East
Support the Court, HRW
Private prisons in US stand to cash in from Trump’s mass deportation plan
G7 Foreign Ministers’ Meeting Statement
War Crimes Weapons: Made in the USA
Trump Cabinet and executive branch of different ideas and eclectic personalities
Trump Says He Will Impose 25% Tariff on Canada and Mexico on Day one
Prosecutors drop election interference and documents cases against Trump
Number of children recruited by gangs in Haiti soars by 70%, UNICEF
Archaeologists discover 4,000-year-old canals used to fish by predecessors of ancient Maya
Democrats in Congress urge Biden to sanction Israelis over West Bank violence
Susan Sarandon opens up on exile from Hollywood after PRO-Palestine remarks
What could Trump’s election win mean for Ukraine and the Middle East
Trump deploys garbage truck to trash Biden gaffe at Wisconsin rally
US calls on Israel to tackle ‘catastrophic humanitarian crisis’ in Gaza
Vinicius's Ballon d’Or snub sparks fury in Brazil amid claims of racism
CNN guest thrown off air after telling Mehdi Hasan:‘I hope your beeper doesn’t go off’
Pentagon warns North Korea as 10,000 troops set to join Russia’s war
Australia & Pacific
Australia passes world-first ban on social media for under 16s into law
New Zealanders save over 30 stranded whales by lifting them on sheets
Commonwealth leaders say 'time has come' for discussion on slavery reparations
Generational export reforms to boost AUKUS trade and collaboration
Australia lawmaker calls opposition leader racist over opposition to Gaza refugees
Agreement strengthens AUKUS submarine partnership
Passionate welcome for WikiLeaks founder Assange as he lands in Australia
Violent protests return to New Caledonia as pro-independence leader extradited
EU and Australia accelerate their digital cooperation
Over 2,000 people thought to have been buried alive in Papua New Guinea landslide
Over 670 people died in a massive Papua New Guinea landslide, UN
Macron says extra security to stay in riot-hit New Caledonia as long as needed
New Caledonia riots: Tourists evacuated, President Macron to visit
Hundreds more French police start deploying to secure New Caledonia
France declares state of emergency in New Caledonia as protests rage
Australia’s 2024 National Defence Strategy
Sydney rocked by second mass stabbing as knifeman attacks bishop
Three dead, 1,000 homes destroyed in Papua New Guinea quake
Australia and UK sign defense and security treaty
Australia tightens student visa rules as migration hits record high
Global food crisis and the effects of climate change need urgent action, IFAD
Indonesia, Australia to sign defence pact within months
Australia to ban doxxing after pro-Palestinians publish information about hundreds of Jews
Australia launches inquiry into why Cabinet documents relating to Iraq war remain secret
Australia says AI will help track Chinese submarines under new Aukus plan
MENA
Netanyahu describes corruption charges against him as ‘ocean of absurdity’ at trial
Israeli tanks '16 miles from Damascus' as overnight raids 'destroy Assad army's assets'
What’s happening in Syria? The key developments as Assad flees to Russia
Who is Abu Mohammed al-Golani, leader of insurgency that toppled Syria’s Assad?
Syrian leader Bashar Assad in Moscow, State news agency
IFAD and Kuwait agree to strengthen efforts to support small-scale farmers
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
-
Future of car-plane, see it to believe it
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D4uSWtazRCM
-
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
-
Sangoku dance
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Df1SkeiPEAo -
flying 3 kites wonder!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nr9KrqN_lIg
-
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
-
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
-
Outdoor 'bubble pod' hotel unveiled
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9IPBKlWf-cA




