Category: 2. World

  • At least 73 people seeking aid in Gaza killed by Israeli gunfire on Sunday, health ministry says

    At least 73 people seeking aid in Gaza killed by Israeli gunfire on Sunday, health ministry says



    CNN
     — 

    At least 73 people were killed and around 150 people injured by Israeli gunfire in Gaza while seeking aid on Sunday, according to the Palestinian health ministry.

    Some 67 people were killed in northern Gaza, the ministry said, while six others were killed in Khan Younis in the south of the Strip. It is unclear whether the 67 people reported killed in northern Gaza were all killed in the same place or in multiple incidents. It marks one of the highest reported death tolls among recent, repeated cases in which aid seekers have been killed.

    The Israel Defense Forces said that troops had “fired warning shots in order to remove an immediate threat posed to them” after “a gathering of thousands of Gazans was identified in the northern Gaza Strip.”

    “The IDF is aware of the claim regarding casualties in the area, and the details of the incident are still being examined,” the Israeli military said, without disclosing any casualty figures.

    The United Nations’ World Food Programme (WFP) said a 25-truck convoy carrying vital food assistance crossed the Zikim border on Sunday morning aiming to reach communities in northern Gaza.

    “Shortly after passing the final checkpoint beyond the Zikim crossing point into Gaza, the convoy encountered large crowds of civilians anxiously waiting to access desperately needed food supplies,” the WFP wrote on X. “As the convoy approached, the surrounding crowd came under fire from Israeli tanks, snipers and other gunfire.”

    Shooting near humanitarian missions, convoys and food distributions “must stop immediately,” the WFP added, and said the latest incident “underscores the increasingly dangerous conditions under which humanitarian operations are forced to be conducted in Gaza.”

    The Israeli military on Sunday also issued a warning to residents in a number of areas in northern Gaza, including the cities of Beit Lahia, Jabalya and Beit Hanoun.

    “These areas are active combat zones and extremely dangerous,” the IDF’s Arabic language spokesman, Avichay Adraee, said Sunday. “The Israel Defense Forces are operating in these areas with very intense force. For your safety, movement to these areas is strictly prohibited. Those who heard have been warned.”

    According to Dr. Mohammed Abu Salmiya, director of the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza, people were shot at by the Israeli army on Sunday morning while attempting to get aid northwest of Gaza City, which is in the north of the enclave.

    “Al-Shifa Medical Complex is in a catastrophic state due to the overwhelming number of martyrs, injuries and starving civilians,” Abu Salmiya told CNN in a statement.

    “There have been a large number of deaths and injuries among those seeking aid, and ambulances and civilian vehicles have not stopped arriving, transporting the wounded and the dead from the northwestern areas of Gaza,” he continued.

    “A significant number of civilians, and even medical staff, are arriving in a state of fainting or collapse due to severe malnutrition,” he said.

    The Palestinian Red Crescent said that its Al-Saraya Field Hospital in Gaza City received 120 injured people, some of them in critical condition, on Sunday. It said it also received two dead bodies.

    “Israeli forces targeted civilians waiting for aid arriving from the Zikim area, north of Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip. Due to the large number of casualties received by the hospital, new beds were urgently opened to ensure adequate treatment for the injured, as the hospital’s capacity is estimated at only 68 beds,” the Palestinian Red Crescent said.

    Meanwhile, residents in the central Gaza city of Deir Al Balah said they were forced to evacuate on Sunday after the IDF dropped flyers warning them to leave the area.

    “The planes came and dropped many leaflets on us; the entire sky was covered with leaflets on the houses, the streets and everywhere, stating that we had to evacuate from certain areas,” one resident, Thurayya Abu Qunneis, told CNN.

    “We are living on edge. We can’t sleep, eat or drink. There is no flour, no anything, and we are hungry,” she said. “We are dying, and our children are dying of hunger.”

    Another resident, Mohammad Al Najiri, told CNN: “We were sitting here in the morning when suddenly they sent us messages and warnings telling us to leave. Where should we go? There is no place to evacuate to… we don’t know where to go.”

    Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP) said in a statement Sunday that Israel’s evacuation orders “endanger vital humanitarian and primary healthcare sites… and are accelerating the systematic dismantling of Gaza’s already-decimated healthcare system,” adding that several humanitarian organizations’ offices were “ordered to evacuate immediately,” and nine clinics, five shelters and a community kitchen were forced to shut down amid the orders.

    In another incident on Saturday, at least 32 people were killed while seeking aid near a distribution point run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, according to the Palestinian health ministry and witnesses.

    The Israeli military said troops had “identified suspects who approached them during operational activity in the Rafah area” about one kilometer from the aid site “at night-time when it’s not active.”

    The IDF said troops had called on the suspects “to distance themselves, and after they did not comply, the troops fired warning shots.” It said it was aware of reports regarding casualties and the incident was under review.

    According to Gaza’s Hamas-run Government Media Office, some 995 people have been killed while attempting to obtain food near aid distribution sites between May 27 and Sunday.

    The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said earlier this month that nearly 800 Gazans had been killed trying to access aid between late May and July 7.

    CNN’s Eugenia Yosef and Abeer Salman contributed to this report.

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  • Storms hit southern China mainland in wake of Typhoon Wipha – Reuters

    1. Storms hit southern China mainland in wake of Typhoon Wipha  Reuters
    2. Typhoon Wipha hits Hong Kong bringing on highest storm alert  The Guardian
    3. Over 100 Flights Canceled at Hong Kong Airports Due to Heavy Weather, Impacting Airlines Like Singapore, Korean, Japan, Emirates, Lufthansa, British and More  Travel And Tour World
    4. Tropical storm Wipha to make landfall in Vietnam Tuesday, heavy rain expected in Thailand  Nation Thailand
    5. Signal No. 3 now in force as Wipha moves away from Macau  Macau Business

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  • China starts construction on world’s largest hydropower dam in Tibet

    China starts construction on world’s largest hydropower dam in Tibet

    HONG KONG — Chinese Premier Li Qiang announced the start of construction on what will be the world’s largest hydropower dam, located on the eastern rim of the Tibetan plateau and estimated to cost around $170 billion, the official Xinhua news agency said.

    The project is part of China’s push to expand renewable energy and reduce carbon emissions.

    Consisting of five cascade hydropower stations, the dam will be located in the lower reaches of the Yarlung Zangbo River and could affect millions downstream in India and Bangladesh.

    Li described the hydropower project as a “project of the century” and said special emphasis “must be placed on ecological conservation to prevent environmental damage,” Xinhua said in its report on Saturday.

    Authorities have not indicated how many people the Tibet project would displace and how it would affect the local ecosystem, one of the richest and most diverse on the plateau.

    But according to Chinese officials, hydropower projects in Tibet will not have a major impact on the environment or on downstream water supplies. India and Bangladesh have nevertheless raised concerns about the dam.

    NGOs including the International Campaign for Tibet say the dam will irreversibly harm the Tibetan plateau and that millions of people downstream will face severe livelihood disruptions.

    The dam is estimated to have a capacity of 300 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity annually and is expected to help meet local energy demand in Tibet and the rest of China.

    The project will play a major role in meeting China’s carbon peaking and carbon neutrality goals, stimulate related industries such as engineering, and create jobs in Tibet, Xinhua said in December when the project was first announced.

    A section of the Yarlung Zangbo falls a dramatic 6,561 feet within a short span of 31 miles, offering huge hydropower potential.

    The Yarlung Zangbo becomes the Brahmaputra river as it leaves Tibet and flows south into India’s Arunachal Pradesh and Assam states and finally into Bangladesh.

    China has already started hydropower generation on the upper reaches of the Yarlung Zangbo, which flows from the west to the east of Tibet.

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  • India court acquits 12 men

    India court acquits 12 men

    A court in India has acquitted 12 men who had been convicted in the 2006 Mumbai train bombings that killed 187 people and injured more than 800.

    Judges had in 2015 sentenced five of the accused to death and the remaining seven to life imprisonment.

    On Monday, a two-judge bench of the Bombay High Court overturned the earlier order, ruling that the prosecution had “utterly failed” to establish that the accused had committed the offences for which they had been convicted.

    The prosecution can appeal against the order in a higher court.

    On 11 July 2006, seven blasts ripped through the busy commuter trains during the evening rush hour in one of India’s deadliest militant attacks.

    The bombs, packed into seven pressure cookers and put in bags, detonated within six minutes of each other.

    The blasts took place in the areas of Matunga, Khar, Mahim, Jogeshwari, Borivali and Mira Road, with most on moving trains and two at stations.

    The bombs appeared to have targeted first-class compartments, as commuters were returning home from the city’s financial district.

    Indian security agencies blamed the attack on Islamist militants backed by Pakistan, an allegation the country denied.

    The accused, who were arrested shortly after the blasts, have been in jail since then. One of them, Kamal Ansari, who had been sentenced to death, died of Covid in 2021.

    In 2015, a special court convicted the men of murder, conspiracy and waging war against the country. The prosecution appealed to confirm the death sentences, while the defence sought acquittal.

    In July 2024, the Bombay High Court formed the two-judge bench to expedite the hearings.

    Reports say that over the next six months, the court conducted more than 75 sittings and examined 92 prosecution witnesses and over 50 defence witnesses.

    In the 667-page order on Monday, the court noted that the defence had questioned the credibility of the witnesses produced by the prosecution, as well as the confessional statements made by the accused.

    It also acknowledged the defence’s contention that the recovered evidence was not maintained in a “sealed condition throughout”.

    Follow BBC News India on Instagram, YouTube, X and Facebook


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  • Syrian government starts evacuating Bedouin families from Sweida in bid to end weeklong clashes – The Washington Post

    1. Syrian government starts evacuating Bedouin families from Sweida in bid to end weeklong clashes  The Washington Post
    2. Bedouins tell BBC they could return to fighting Druze in Syria  BBC
    3. Syria clears Bedouin fighters from Suwayda city, declares halt to clashes  Al Jazeera
    4. Calm reported in Syria’s Sweida, Damascus says truce holding  Reuters
    5. Clashes rage in Syria’s Druze town despite ceasefire declaration  Dawn

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  • China Goes Ahead With $167 Billion Tibet Mega-Dam Despite India Relations Risks

    China Goes Ahead With $167 Billion Tibet Mega-Dam Despite India Relations Risks

    The massive economic stimulus and boost to clean power from a 1.2 trillion yuan ($167 billion) mega-dam in Tibet has proven convincing enough for Chinese leaders to set aside concerns about potential damage to biodiversity and the impact on relations with India.

    Chinese Premier Li Qiang launched construction of the hydropower project, which is three times the size of the Three Gorges Dam, on the lower reaches of the Yarlung Tsangpo river on Saturday. He also unveiled the China Yajiang Group, a new company that will manage the dam’s development, according to the official Xinhua News Agency.

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  • How a far-right ‘Japanese First’ party gained new ground

    How a far-right ‘Japanese First’ party gained new ground

    Shaimaa Khalil

    Tokyo correspondent

    Reuters Japan's Sanseito party leader Sohei Kamiya, standing in front of his party's banner holding an orange mic, speaks to supporters on 20 July, the last day of campaigningReuters

    Sohei Kamiya, who launched Sanseito in 2020, has threatened that Japan would become a “colony” if it did nothing to “resist foreign pressure”

    For three years, a once fringe opposition party held just one seat in Japan’s 248-seat upper house.

    But on Sunday, Sanseito emerged as one of the biggest winners of Japan’s election – walking away with 14 seats.

    The party was born in 2020 during the Covid-19 pandemic, where it gained prominence with YouTube videos that spread conspiracy theories about vaccinations.

    More recently, it has built its platform on a nationalist “Japanese First” agenda, warning against a “silent invasion of foreigners”.

    Sanseito’s rise in popularity reflects growing unease over immigration and overtourism – issues the ruling government also sought to address with a new committee it created days before the election.

    But do these gains signal an enduring shift to the right in Japan?

    What is the ‘Japanese First’ policy?

    Launching in early 2020, Sanseito gained attention among conservatives with its series of YouTube videos centred on anti-vaccine and anti-masking rhetoric.

    It won its first seat in the upper house in 2022, following a campaign in which it fashioned itself as an “anti-globalist” party. Supporters at rallies spoke of a world where a cabal of globalists and financial institutions were conspiring to lord over powerless citizens.

    In its recent campaign, the party made populist pledges such as consumption tax cuts and an increase in child benefits. But it’s been most well known for its nationalist “Japanese First” platform rallying against immigrants, with its leader Sohei Kamiya previously saying that he had drawn inspiration from US President Donald Trump’s “bold political style”.

    Sanseito’s promises have won it the support of young conservatives online – cutting into the ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s (LDP) conservative support base.

    The weekend’s election result also underscores voters’ frustration with the LDP’s leader and Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, who has struggled to inspire confidence as Japan struggles against economic headwinds, a cost-of-living crisis and trade negotiations with the United States.

    Jeffrey Hall, a lecturer in Japanese Studies at Kanda University of International Studies, says support for more right-wing parties had drawn conservative voters away from the LDP.

    “Prime Minister Ishiba is considered not conservative enough by many supporters of the former Prime Minister [Shinzo] Abe,” he says. “They think that he just doesn’t have the nationalistic views on history, he doesn’t have the strong views against China that Abe had.”

    Instead, voters are turning to Sanseito and other opposition parties to “vent their frustrations and show the LDP they will pay for turning away from the conservative ideals the party once stood for”, says Rintaro Nishimura, an associate at The Asia Group’s Japan Practice – naming the bill that was passed under Kishida to promote LGBTQ awareness as an example.

    “The success of [opposition parties in] this cycle shows that voters are sick of the status quo establishment politics,” he says.

    This was also shown in the votes for another small opposition party, the centre right Democratic Party For People, who won 16 seats in Sunday’s election – a big jump from its previous 5 seats.

    But for Sanseito, despite its gains this election, it still falls short of the minimum number of seats required to submit budget bills in the upper house. And in the more powerful lower house, it holds just three seats.

    Who is Sohei Kamiya?

    Kamiya, 47, was at one point of his political career a member of the long-ruling LDP. During the 2012 general election, the party’s then-president Shinzo Abe personally campaigned on his behalf – though he eventually lost the race.

    Kamiya launched Sanseito in March 2020, and was the party’s only candidate to be elected into the upper chamber in 2022.

    The former Self-Defence Force reservist has openly credited Trump for shaping his approach, and has railed against the political and financial elite.

    Like the US president, Kamiya drew attention with his “often inflammatory and controversial remarks” on the campaign trail, says Mr Nishimura.

    “His comments were spread across social media in a very well coordinated campaign,” he says.

    “Under globalism, multinational companies have changed Japan’s policies for their own purposes,” Kamiya said at a recent rally in Kagoshima. “If we fail to resist this foreign pressure, Japan will become a colony!”

    Earlier this year, he faced backlash after calling gender equality policies a mistake, saying they would encourage women to work and prevent them from having more children.

    When asked about the party’s appeal to men, he said it might be due to him being “hot-blooded”, claiming “that resonates more with men”.

    However, Mr Nishimura says that exit polls have showed that Sanseito’s support did not come necessarily from just younger men, but that they received consistent support from across the working population, or those aged between 20 to 50.

    There was a slant towards male voters, but not “disproportionately so”, added Mr Nishimura.

    Following Sunday’s election, Kamiya vowed to secure “50 to 60 seats” in future elections so that “[the party’s] policies will finally become reality”.

    He also appeared to try to walk back some of his earlier statements, clarifying in an interview with Nippon TV after the vote that his nationalist policy was not meant to “completely ban foreigners”.

    Why is there so much anger over immigration?

    The number of foreign residents in Japan hit a record 3.8 million at the end of 2024. That figure marks an increase up 10.5% from the previous year, according to immigration authorities – but still makes up just 3% of the country’s total population.

    Tourist numbers also hit an all-time high of about 36.9 million last year, according to the National Tourism Organisation.

    Sanseito has seized on the growing unease over immigration, blaming the ruling LDP for policies that have allowed more foreigners into the country.

    Anti-immigration rhetoric often surfaces in countries dealing with a weakening economy, says Mr Hall.

    “Misbehaviour and bad manners by some tourists” have added fuel to the fire, creating an impression of a “big foreign problem”, he adds.

    “[Sanseito] tapped into the frustration over immigration and the perhaps unwarranted feeling that immigrants were rising too much in number,” he says.

    Japan has traditionally been wary of immigration, but faced with an ageing population, the government had eased immigration laws in recent years in an effort to boost manpower.

    Some Japanese people have been frustrated by the influx of foreigners and have blamed them for rising crime and inflation, among other things.

    On Tuesday, less than a week before the election, authorities set up a new committee aimed at easing citizens’ concerns, pledging to shape a “society of orderly and harmonious coexistence with foreign nationals.”

    But it now appears to have come too late – and Sanseito’s ascent may signal a turning point in Japan’s political landscape.

    “I think for years now, people said Japan doesn’t have a populist right, or doesn’t have a populist far right,” says Mr Hall. “But I think [the result] has proven that there is a possibility for this to happen in Japan, and it’s probably here to stay.”

    However, Mr Nishimura notes that it has been “notoriously hard” for populist parties to firmly establish themselves as a presence in Japanese politics because of the “fickle” electorate.

    “If they see that a party they supported isn’t living up to their expectations, they will revert to the established choices or move onto newer alternatives.”

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  • Air India flight skids off Mumbai runway amid heavy rainfall – Samaa TV

    1. Air India flight skids off Mumbai runway amid heavy rainfall  Samaa TV
    2. Runway closed as Air India jet skids off during landing  tribune.com.pk
    3. Air India plane from Kochi overshoots runway while landing at Mumbai airport; ‘minor damages’ to air strip  Deccan Herald
    4. Air India plane veers off runway at Mumbai airport; passengers, crew safe  Press Trust of India
    5. Air India Plane Skids Off Runway While Landing In Rain At Mumbai Airport, No Injuries Reported  Zee News

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  • Israeli forces launch ground and air assault on Deir al-Balah in central Gaza

    Israeli forces launch ground and air assault on Deir al-Balah in central Gaza

    Israeli forces launch ground and air assault on Deir al-Balahpublished at 08:07 British Summer Time

    Rushdi Abualouf
    Gaza correspondent, reporting from Istanbul

    Israeli forces have launched a ground and air assault on the city of Deir al-Balah in central Gaza, prompting fresh waves of displacement among civilians already uprooted by the ongoing conflict.

    The operation began early on Monday, just hours after the Israeli military issued evacuation warnings to residents of six residential blocks in the south-western part of the city.

    The area is currently packed with thousands of displaced people from Rafah and Khan Younis, in southern Gaza.

    Local journalists told the BBC that Israeli tanks and military vehicles pushed into the city from the Kisufim checkpoint under heavy artillery and air cover.

    Dozens of shells reportedly struck the Abu al-‘Ajin and Hikr al-Jami’ neighbourhoods, as ground forces moved in.

    Footage shared on social media showed flashes of explosions and the sound of sustained gunfire as Israeli troops advanced.

    Thousands of residents fled the city overnight towards the coastal area of al-Mawasi, near Khan Younis, which has become one of the few remaining zones of relative refuge in southern Gaza.

    There are growing fears among local residents that the latest military push could be part of an effort to carve out a new corridor that would isolate Deir al-Balah from the surrounding central Gaza region.

    If confirmed, this would be the third such axis, following the establishment of Israeli military routes through the Netzarim corridor in southern Gaza City and the Morag axis in Rafah.

    The BBC has asked the Israeli military for comment.

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  • Israeli forces launch ground assault on Deir al-Balah in central Gaza for first time

    Israeli forces launch ground assault on Deir al-Balah in central Gaza for first time

    Israeli forces launch ground and air assault on Deir al-Balahpublished at 08:07 British Summer Time

    Rushdi Abualouf
    Gaza correspondent, reporting from Istanbul

    Israeli forces have launched a ground and air assault on the city of Deir al-Balah in central Gaza, prompting fresh waves of displacement among civilians already uprooted by the ongoing conflict.

    The operation began early on Monday, just hours after the Israeli military issued evacuation warnings to residents of six residential blocks in the south-western part of the city.

    The area is currently packed with thousands of displaced people from Rafah and Khan Younis, in southern Gaza.

    Local journalists told the BBC that Israeli tanks and military vehicles pushed into the city from the Kisufim checkpoint under heavy artillery and air cover.

    Dozens of shells reportedly struck the Abu al-‘Ajin and Hikr al-Jami’ neighbourhoods, as ground forces moved in.

    Footage shared on social media showed flashes of explosions and the sound of sustained gunfire as Israeli troops advanced.

    Thousands of residents fled the city overnight towards the coastal area of al-Mawasi, near Khan Younis, which has become one of the few remaining zones of relative refuge in southern Gaza.

    There are growing fears among local residents that the latest military push could be part of an effort to carve out a new corridor that would isolate Deir al-Balah from the surrounding central Gaza region.

    If confirmed, this would be the third such axis, following the establishment of Israeli military routes through the Netzarim corridor in southern Gaza City and the Morag axis in Rafah.

    The BBC has asked the Israeli military for comment.

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