Senin, 31 Agustus 2020

The latest on Kenosha police shooting of Jacob Blake - CNN International

On a call with reporters Monday, the Trump Campaign sought to prebuttal remarks expected later from Vice President Joe Biden in Pittsburgh where Biden is expected to argue President Trump “can’t stop the violence” in American cities “because for years he has fomented it.” 

The call, which was led by Trump Campaign Communications Director Tim Murtaugh, also featured Senior Adviser to the campaign Jason Miller, New York Police Benevolent Association President Pat Lynch, and Butler County Sheriff Michael Slupe. Slupe opened the call with the explosive claim that the people that are protesting now are not President Trump supporters but rather Joe Biden supporters.

“They are ruining America,” Slupe said Monday. “They're not peaceful demonstrators as they keep saying, peaceful means quiet, holding up a sign. These demonstrators are burning buildings, looting businesses, ruining their towns.”

Miller kicked off his portion of the call telling reporters, “I'd like to start out by pointing out the Joe Biden is clearly rattled after months of hiding in his basement and failing to stand up for the radical left wing mob that's taking over his campaign.”

“Biden has got his poll numbers tanking and his allies are panicking there's several good stories on this today, the Hill, Politico and others, and this is the only reason why finest leaving his Delaware basement,” Miller continued. “But Joe Biden's trapped. He can't condemn the radical left wing mob and groups like Antifa even the ‘Defund the Police’ movements because they're his political base.” 

Murtaugh closed the call with a full-throated defense of the president’s supporters, following a series of tweets that seemed to indicate the president’s support for acts of violence against protesters in Portland. 

“The President has never condoned violence of any kind, in American cities, American on American violence is unwarranted, uncalled for, and should be condemned wholly and fully,” he said.

The President has yet to condemn a 17 year old supporter who allegedly shot and killed two protesters last week in Kenosha, Wisconsin. 

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2020-08-31 23:04:00Z
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'He probably would have been killed.' Donald Trump DEFENDS accused double murderer Kyle Rittenhouse - Daily Mail

Donald Trump DEFENDS accused double killer Kyle Rittenhouse saying 17-year-old was 'very violently attacked' before he opened fire in Kenosha and refuses to condemn vigilantes

  • President Donald Trump defended the actions of Kyle Rittenhouse in Kenosha, Wisconsin, saying the 17-year-old 'probably would have been killed' 
  • 'He was trying to get away from them I guess, it looks like, and he fell on then they very violently attacked him,' Trump said to DailyMail.com 
  • 'I guess he was in very big trouble. He probably would've been killed. It's under investigation,' he said in his press briefing
  • Rittenhouse left his home in Illinois to patrol streets of Kenosha with an illegal AR-15
  • He tripped and fell while running in the street then was hit over the head by protester Anthony Huber, who had a skateboard and wanted to disarm him
  • Rittenhouse, in response, opened fire and ended up killing Huber, one other person and injuring a third
  • Trump goes to Kenosha on Tuesday 

President Donald Trump defended the actions of Kyle Rittenhouse in Kenosha, Wisconsin, saying the 17-year-old 'probably would have been killed' by an angry mob if he hadn't fired at them with the illegal gun he was carrying.

'He was trying to get away from them I guess, it looks like, and he fell on then they very violently attacked him,' Trump said in response to a question from DailyMail.com on Monday.

'It was something that we are looking at right now and it's under investigation, but I guess he was in very big trouble. He probably would've been killed. It's under investigation,' he added during his press briefing.

Rittenhouse is charged with two counts of 'intentional homicide,' a charge in Wisconsin state law which is the same as murder in most other states, for his actions in Kenosha that left two people dead and one wounded.

President Donald Trump heads to Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Tuesday as the city struggles with racial tension and is still operating under a curfew

President Donald Trump heads to Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Tuesday as the city struggles with racial tension and is still operating under a curfew

President Trump defended the actions of Kyle Rittenhouse, saying the 17-year-old 'probably would have been killed' by an angry mob if he hadn't fired at them with the illegal gun he was carrying.

President Trump defended the actions of Kyle Rittenhouse, saying the 17-year-old 'probably would have been killed' by an angry mob if he hadn't fired at them with the illegal gun he was carrying.

Democratic nominee Joe Biden condemned President Trump's words.

'The President declined to rebuke violence,' he said in a statement after Trump's press conference. 

'He wouldn't even repudiate one of his supporters who is charged with murder because of his attacks on others. He is too weak, too scared of the hatred he has stirred to put an end to it. So once again, I urge the President to join me in saying that while peaceful protest is a right — a necessity — violence is wrong, period. No matter who does it, no matter what political affiliation they have. Period,' he added.

President Trump heads to Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Tuesday as the city remains a tinderhouse of tensions - those who want justice for Jacob Blake, those who want Rittenhouse prosecuted, and those defending the actions of the police when it comes to both men: one black, one white.

Trump visit with law enforcement officials after the shooting of Blake sparked riots throughout the city. Blake, a black man, was shot seven times in the back by a white cop in front of his three young children Sunday afternoon, leaving the father-of-six paralyzed from the waist down.

Kenosha remains under a 7 p.m. curfew with more than 1,500 National Guard members on the scene. 

But the incident and ensuring demonstrations prompted self-styled militia men to take to the streets with their own weapons because they don't trust the police to keep the city safe. 

Among those vigilantes on Tuesday night was 17-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse, a white teenager who'd come from his home in Antioch, Illinois, to patrol the streets with an AR-15. It is illegal for someone under 18 to openly carry a weapon in Wisconsin.

Rittenhouse was part of a group of armed civilians protecting a service station in Kenosha. There was a scuffle between them and the protesters. Shots were fired and 36-year-old Joseph Rosenbaum falls to the ground with a gunshot wound to the head that would be fatal.

Video posted on social media shows a man whom police believe to be Rittenhouse make a call on a cellphone and say: 'I just shot someone.' 

He flees and is pursued by many protesters, at least one of whom is armed with a handgun. Rittenhouse falls to the ground and the crowd rushes in to seize his weapon.

He was hit over the head by protester Anthony Huber, 26, who had a skateboard and wanted to disarm him.

Rittenhouse then starts firing into the group and ended up killing Huber and wounding Gaige Grosskreutz. 

He was not arrested until the following day, back in Illinois, despite approaching police with his hands in the air while other protesters yelled that he'd just shot multiple people.

He is in custody in Illinois. A judge will decide at a hearing on Sept. 25 whether Rittenhouse will be extradited to Wisconsin, where he would be tried as an adult. He faces six felony charges that include first-degree intentional homicide and first-degree reckless homicide, and a misdemeanor charge for possession of a dangerous weapon by a minor.

Rittenhouse's attorney Lin Wood said the 17-year-old vigilante was 'attacked' with 'lethal force' and 'had the right to defend himself.'

Kyle Rittenhouse, 17, was patrolling the streets with an AR-15. He fell over, was hit with a skateboard by other protesters who tried to disarm him, and opened fire, wounding one person and killing two. He is now being held on murder charges
Kyle Rittenhouse, 17, was patrolling the streets with an AR-15. He fell over, was hit with a skateboard by other protesters who tried to disarm him, and opened fire, wounding one person and killing two. He is now being held on murder charges

Kyle Rittenhouse, 17, was patrolling the streets with an AR-15. He fell over, was hit with a skateboard by other protesters who tried to disarm him, and opened fire, wounding one person and killing two. He is now being held on murder charges

Jacob Blake was shot seven times in the back in front of his three kids despite being unarmed
Jacob Blake was shot seven times in the back in front of his three kids despite being unarmed

Jacob Blake was shot seven times in the back in front of his three kids despite being unarmed 

The president also refused to condemn vigilantes when pressed on the self-styled militia by DailyMail.com. 

'I think everything should be taken care of with law enforcement but we have to give our cops back, our police back their dignity,' he said.   

He defended the actions of police, saying sometimes they make a mistake - 'they choke' - and that decision gets played over and over again on the evening news. 

'You have bad cops - we have to take care of them. In other cases, they choke,' he said. 'They have a quarter of a second to make a decision and sometimes they make the wrong decision. They make the wrong decision, you know if they make a wrong decision and the other direction, they're probably dead so they choke and that goes on the evening news for weeks.'

'They are very tough on bad cops but sometimes, a cop or a police person who was a good police person, right? Good. But they choke,' he added. 'They have a quarter of a second to make some of these decisions and they make the wrong decision that is very devastating but I will say this, I honor law enforcement. We wouldn't be here right now if it wasn't for law enforcement.'

Meanwhile, outrage has built nationwide over the different treatment by cops of Rittenhouse, the white armed teen compared to their treatment of black unarmed Blake. 

Trump said he was going to Kenosha on Tuesday despite pleas from Democratic Gov. Tony Evers of Wisconsin that he stay away. Evers warned it could heighten tensions and increase violence in the town of 100,000 which has seen its ranks swell with supporters of the Black Lives Matters movement and armed civilian vigilantes. 

'It will also increase enthusiasm and it could increase love and respect for our country, and that's why I am going because they did a fantastic job,' Trump said at his press briefing on Monday.

Evers, a Democrat, said Sunday in a letter to President Trump that he is not welcome in Kenosha.

He urged him to reconsider his trip, writing: 'I, along with other community leaders who have reached out, are concerned about what your presence will mean for Kenosha and our state.'  

Kenosha Mayor John Antaramian, also a Democrat, also asked Trump not to come.

'While presidents are always welcome to come to this great city, this is not the best time for a visit,' Antaramian said in a statement Sunday. 'We are hurting today and we are focused on healing, coming together as a community and rebuilding. There is a lot of listening we need to do in Kenosha and I worry that a visit from the president will delay this important work.'   

Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers sent a letter Sunday to Trump claiming the president is not welcome in Kenosha after the White House announced plans Saturday for a visit to the city. 'I, along with other community leaders who have reached out, are concerned about what your presence will mean for Kenosha and our state,' he wrote in the letter

Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers sent a letter Sunday to Trump claiming the president is not welcome in Kenosha after the White House announced plans Saturday for a visit to the city. 'I, along with other community leaders who have reached out, are concerned about what your presence will mean for Kenosha and our state,' he wrote in the letter

'There is a lot of listening we need to do in Kenosha and I worry that a visit from the president will delay this important work,' Kenosha Mayor John Antaramian said in a statement Sunday

'There is a lot of listening we need to do in Kenosha and I worry that a visit from the president will delay this important work,' Kenosha Mayor John Antaramian said in a statement Sunday

Trump, meanwhile, has insisted his actions 'saved' the city of Kenosha.

'If I didn't INSIST on having the National Guard activate and go into Kenosha, Wisconsin, there would be no Kenosha right now. Also, there would have been great death and injury. I want to thank Law Enforcement and the National Guard. I will see you on Tuesday!,' he tweeted on Monday morning.

But he will not meet with the family of Jacob Blake, saying he refused to speak to them after they wanted their lawyer involved. The Blakes are represented by attorney Ben Crump, who also represented the family of George Floyd.

Trump did say he's spoken with the Blake family pastor. 

'I thought it would be better not to do anything where there are lawyers involved,' he said Monday at his press briefing. 'In they wanted to have lawyers involved and I thought that was inappropriate so I didn't do that, but I did speak with the pastor.' 

Jacob Blake's uncle, Justin Blake, told CNN that the family didn't want to meet with the president because he's a 'racist.'

'President Trump is a racist who stokes racial tensions. He has been stirring racial tensions since he got in the White House. Why, as Jacob's uncle, would I want to talk to him? Our focus is on Jacob and healing the community,' he said.

He said Jacob Blake's father has told him he 'has no interest in speaking with President Trump.' His only interest at the moment is his son's well-being and getting justice.

He said he did not talk to Jacob Blake's mother on the subject.

Meanwhile, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden said he hoped to visit Wisconsin soon.

'I'm checking it out now. We hope to be able to do that,' he said during a stop in Pittsburgh on Monday. 

In his speech earlier that day, Biden went after Trump calling him a 'toxic presence' and accused him of 'stoking violence in our cities' asking voters, 'Do you really feel safer under Trump?'  Biden also condemned riots and looting and called on Americans to 'stand against violence - in every form it takes.' 

Wisconsin is a crucial battleground state in November's election. Trump won it by less than 1 point in 2016 and both candidates want to see it in their column this fall.

Biden currently leads in state polling by 3.5 points in the RealClearPolitics polling average

Democrats were originally scheduled to hold their national political convention in Wisconsin this summer - with Biden giving his acceptance speech for the presidential nomination there - but they turned the convention into a virtual event because of the coronavirus pandemic.

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2020-08-31 22:50:35Z
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Biden accuses 'weak' Trump of stoking violence - BBC News - BBC News

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  1. Biden accuses 'weak' Trump of stoking violence - BBC News  BBC News
  2. US election: Biden accuses 'weak' Trump of stoking violence  BBC News
  3. Trump hits back at Biden saying 'he's blaming the police more than rioters'  Daily Mail
  4. US election: Donald Trump's Soviet-style personality cult is a dystopian nightmare for America – Henry McLeish  The Scotsman
  5. Scared that Trump can come back to beat Biden? Good.  The Washington Post
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-08-31 21:31:27Z
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US election 2020: Joe Biden asks if Americans want the 'toxin' that is Donald Trump as president - Sky News

Joe Biden has come out fighting as he asked Americans if they wanted the "toxin" that is Donald Trump to continue leading the nation.

The Democratic presidential nominee, speaking in a rare public appearance away from his hometown, criticised the president for his handling of the pandemic, police shootings, protests and job losses.

Speaking in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Mr Biden said: "The incumbent president is incapable of telling us the truth, incapable of facing the facts, incapable of healing.

Joe Biden arrived in Pennsylvania ahead of his campaign speech in Pittsburgh
Image: Joe Biden arrived in Pennsylvania ahead of his campaign speech in Pittsburgh

"He doesn't want to shed light, he wants to generate heat. And he's stoking violence in our cities.

"Ask yourself, do I look like a radical socialist with a soft spot for rioters? Really? I want a safe America, safe from COVID.

"Safe from crime and looting. Safe from racially motivated violence. Safe from bad cops. Let me be crystal clear, safe from four more years of Donald Trump."

Donald Trump has accepted the Republican presidential nomination
Image: Mr Trump accepted the Republican nomination - and attacked what he called the 'radicalism' of Joe Biden

He told voters that he is "in this campaign for you" and that he does "not think about myself" - unlike Mr Trump, he said.

More from Donald Trump

The former vice-president has used the campaign so far to highlight Mr Trump's handling of the pandemic, but he broadened his attack on Monday to several other issues, including law and order - one of the president's main focuses.

"Does anyone believe there will be less violence in America if Donald Trump is re-elected?" he asked the crowd.

Mr Biden accused the president of failing to protect the nation as violent protests have dominated several cities over the past few months following the police shootings of a number of black Americans.

"He failed to protect this nation so he's trying to scare America," he said as he added that Mr Trump has "no problem with right-wing militia" who are "more heavily armed than the police" taking over the protests.

Mr Biden dismissed Mr Trump as incapable of tackling the violence "because for years he's fomented it" and said the president does not want to stop it because it plays to his base.

Donald Trump says he will go to Kenosha
Trump says he will 'probably go' to Kenosha

In reaction to the president saying Mr Biden will not condemn the violence, the Democrat said: "It's lawlessness, plain and simple. And those who do it should be prosecuted."

He also accused Mr Trump of playing a "subservient role" to Russian president Vladimir Putin, and said he had a plan for economic recovery, a plan to tackle COVID-19 and increasing murder rates.

He added that he had a clean energy strategy and emphasised he would not ban fracking "no matter how many times Donald Trump lies about me".

preview image
Trump: Biden will 'demolish' the American dream

The president has been a "toxic presence" who is "poisoning" how Americans talk to each other and view each other, he said.

"Will we rid ourselves of this toxin or make it a permanent part of our nation's character?"

As he finished his speech he quoted Pope John Paul II, saying: "Be not afraid, fear never builds the future but hope does."

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2020-08-31 19:35:11Z
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Biden accuses Trump of stoking violence in US cities - Financial Times

Joe Biden accused Donald Trump of stoking violent unrest in US cities in a speech that lambasted the “lawlessness” of rioters and looters as he sought to neuter the President’s law-and-order message in the final stretch of the election campaign.

Mr Biden, the Democratic presidential candidate, delivered an address in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on Monday, in which he accused Mr Trump of “multiplying” recent crises, including the coronavirus pandemic and the violence at anti-racism protests that erupted after George Floyd was killed by a police officer in late May.

Mr Biden’s remarks came after two protesters were shot dead in Kenosha, Wisconsin, last week, and a shooting in Portland, Oregon, over the weekend in which one person was killed amid clashes between Trump supporters, protesters and police. Mr Trump is set to visit Kenosha on Tuesday.

The former vice-president issued one of his most forceful condemnations of the violent unrest that has broken out in some US cities, describing it as senseless and calling for perpetrators to be punished.

“Rioting is not protesting, looting is not protesting, setting fires is not protesting . . . it’s lawlessness, plain and simple,” Mr Biden said. “Those who do it should be prosecuted.”

He added: “Violence will not bring change, only destruction. It’s wrong in every way. It divides instead of unites. It makes things worse across the board not better.

“Fires are burning, and we have a president who fanned the flames, rather than fighting the flames. We must not burn, we have to build.”

Mr Biden tried to counter a week of attacks on his candidacy at last week’s Republican convention, when the president and his party claimed that the country would succumb to “mob rule” if the Democrats win the election.

“This president long ago forfeited any moral leadership in this country,” Mr Biden said.

“He can’t stop the violence — because for years he has fomented it. He may believe mouthing the words law and order makes him strong, but his failure to call on his own supporters to stop acting as an armed militia in this country shows you how weak he is.” 

Mr Biden also accused Mr Trump of mishandling the pandemic, adding that the president was a leader “who sows chaos rather than providing order”.

Mr Trump has made stamping out unrest a central theme of his re-election campaign, as he tries to paint Mr Biden as soft on crime and convince voters that he can restore order to cities run chiefly by Democrats.

Mr Trump said on Monday morning he still intends to visit Kenosha despite calls from Tony Evers, the state’s Democratic governor, to cancel his trip, warning that the presence of the US president there could escalate the unrest. The Democratic mayor of Kenosha, John Antaramian, told NPR that he would prefer the president not to visit the city “at this point in time”.

In an appearance on Monday morning’s Fox & Friends on the Fox News channel, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said Mr Trump did not intend to change his plans.

“This president will go to Kenosha, Wisconsin. He loves the people of Wisconsin and he looks forward to speaking directly to them and unifying the state,” Ms McEnany said.

She added that the administration had “not been able to connect yet” with the family of Jacob Blake, the black man who was paralysed after being shot multiple times by a police officer in Kenosha last week, which touched off the protests.

In tweets on Monday, Mr Trump said his actions had spared the small Midwest city from a higher death toll and accused local Democratic officials of having “lost control” of their own supporters.

He has also been highly critical of Ted Wheeler, the Democratic mayor of Portland, where protesters and law enforcement officers have been squaring off all summer in increasingly tense encounters.

“Portland is a mess, and it has been for many years. If this joke of a mayor doesn’t clean it up, we will go in and do it for them!” Mr Trump tweeted.

He added: “The Radical Left Mayors & Governors of Cities where this crazy violence is taking place have lost control of their “Movement”. It wasn’t supposed to be like this, but the Anarchists & Agitators got carried away and don’t listen any more — even forced Slow Joe out of basement!”

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2020-08-31 15:44:00Z
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Former Indian President Pranab Mukherjee dies at 84 - Al Jazeera English

Former Indian President Pranab Mukherjee has passed away at the age of 84, his family said.

Mukherjee died of multiple organ failure on Monday after being admitted to hospital weeks ago, having also contracted coronavirus.

A senior leader of India's Congress party who served in multiple cabinets during five decades, Mukherjee had emergency surgery for a blood clot in his brain on August 10 at New Delhi's Army Hospital Research and Referral after suffering a fall.

The hospital said he tested positive for COVID-19 after the surgery and his condition was critical. He remained in a coma after the surgery.

The hospital said his health began declining on Monday after a lung infection resulted in septic shock.

His son, former legislator Abhijeet Mukherjee tweeted on Monday evening that he had died.

"His demise is passing of an era," the office of Indian President Ram Nath Kovind said in a Twitter post.

'A colossus in public life'

Mukherjee served as president from 2012 to 2017, at the end of a long period when the Congress party held power.

The office is largely ceremonial in India, with executive powers resting with the prime minister.

Before that, he had been minister of finance, defence and foreign affairs for three separate prime ministers and helped manage their fractious governing coalitions.

Mukherjee was a college teacher in West Bengal state before first running for public office in 1969.

He became a protege of then-Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and was loyal to her during the Internal Emergency she had proclaimed from 1975 to 1977, when elections were suspended and civil liberties were curbed. Many of her opponents were imprisoned.

He lost his position as finance minister after Indira Gandhi was assassinated in 1984 and her son Rajiv Gandhi became prime minister.

Mukherjee formed his own party, but later reconciled with Rajiv Gandhi and returned to the Congress party in 1989.

After Rajiv Gandhi's assassination in 1991, Mukherjee joined the Cabinets of his successors, PV Narasimha Rao and Manmohan Singh.

Mukherjee was awarded India's highest civilian honour, the Bharat Ratna, in 2019.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, from the rival nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, said Mukherjee "left an indelible mark on the development trajectory of our nation.

"A scholar par excellence, a towering statesman, he was admired across the political spectrum," Modi said on Twitter.

Current President Ram Nath Kovind called Mukherjee "a colossus in public life" who served India "with the spirit of a sage".

Mukherjee is survived by two sons and a daughter. His wife died in 2015.

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2020-08-31 14:12:00Z
CAIiEDcp8HtJxQtzrbcw7qwr-Q8qFAgEKgwIACoFCAowhgIwkDgw0O8B

Historic first direct flight between Israel and UAE in wake of deal to normalise relations - Sky News

An Israeli passenger plane with anti-missile technology and "peace" painted on its fuselage has made geopolitical and aviation history, flying from Israel to the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

LY971 took off from Ben Gurion International Airport in Israel bound for Abu Dhabi at just after 11am on Monday, marking the latest stage in the normalisation of diplomatic relations between the Jewish state and a key Gulf Arab nation.

A delegation of Israeli government officials were joined on board the El Al flight by an American delegation led by Donald Trump's son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner.

Jared Kushner
First commercial flight from Israel to UAE

Mr Trump's administration has claimed credit for brokering the deal in which the UAE has become the first Gulf Arab country to recognise Israel.

Speaking before the flight took off, Mr Kushner said: "Well, this is a historic flight, we hope that this will start an even more historic journey for the Middle East and beyond..."

He continued: "I prayed yesterday at [Jerusalem's Western] wall that Muslims and Arabs from throughout the world will be watching this flight, recognising that we are all children of God and that the future does not have to be pre-determined by the past."

"This is a very hopeful time and I believe that so much peace and prosperity is possible in this region and throughout the world," Mr Kushner said.

More from Israel

The flight passed through the airspace of Saudi Arabia and over its capital Riyadh, marking another historic moment.

The Saudi government does not have diplomatic ties with Israel but did grant the plane it overfly rights.

Trump hails deal between UAE and Israel
Israel strikes breakthrough deal with UAE

The normalisation deal, in which the UAE and Israel will open embassies and establish commercial, defence and tourism ties, was made public in a surprise announcement earlier this month.

It is being framed by the Americans and the Israelis as a "pathway to peace" in the region and has received cautious support from around the world, including from the British government.

At the weekend, the UAE government repealed a law, in place since 1972, which boycotted Israel. A direct phone service between the two nations has also been established.

However, the Palestinians who represent the central component of any quest for regional stability and peace have been left out of the process.

Dr Saeb Erekat of the PLO speaks to Sky News
Palestinian response to Israel-UAE deal

Senior officials from the Palestinian Authority have described the deal as a betrayal by an Arab nation because the UAE broke with a long-standing convention that recognition of Israel would only come in return for the formation of a Palestinian state.

Speaking at a meeting of the Palestinian Authority, Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammed Shtayyeh said: "It has hurt us very much to see an Israeli plane landing today in the Emirates in clear and blatant violation of the Arab position regarding the Arab-Israeli conflict."

Reflecting the fact that no other Arab countries have yet followed the UAE in its decision, he said: "We salute the clear Arab position that reject free normalisation with Israel... despite the pressure exerted on some Arab countries by the Americans."

Effigies of Trump and Netanyahu are burned in Nablus after a breakthrough deal between the UAE an Israel.
Palestinians burn Trump effigy after Israel deal

The normalisation deal materialised after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu agreed to shelve plans to annex parts of the Palestinian territories which it illegally occupies in the West Bank.

There are two broader geopolitical contexts to the deal.

Israel and the UAE share a common enemy in Iran. The alliance strengthens the American-led axis against the malign influence that they believe Iran poses.

Dr Anwar Gargash, UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs
'Win-win' deal for Israel and UAE

And in the context of peace between Israel and the Palestinians, the move is designed to pressure the Palestinians to agree to Mr Trump's controversial peace plan.

The Palestinians continue to reject all talks with the Israelis and Americans on the basis that the plan proposed by the US president denies them a capital city in east Jerusalem and much of the West Bank land they were promised in the Oslo Accords signed in 1993.

The Trump plan instead creates Palestinian enclaves within a greater Israel.

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2020-08-31 13:11:05Z
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Passenger on Tui flight from Zante says she 'did not feel safe' - The Telegraph

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  1. Passenger on Tui flight from Zante says she 'did not feel safe'  The Telegraph
  2. Coronavirus: 'Covidiots' criticised on Tui quarantine flight  BBC News
  3. Entire Tui flight from Zante to Cardiff forced to quarantine after 7 test positive for Covid-19  Evening Standard
  4. Entire flight from Zante to Cardiff must self-isolate after seven confirmed coronavirus cases  Wales Online
  5. Zante in Greece gets midnight curfew and four-person limit on restaurant tables after TUI coronavirus flight  The Sun
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-08-31 14:59:30Z
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Israel and UAE in historic direct flight following peace deal - BBC News

Israeli El Al plane which will fly to Abu Dhabi (31/08/20)
image copyrightEPA

The first commercial flight from Israel to the UAE has landed, marking a major step in normalising relations after the announcement of a peace deal.

The El Al airliner made the three-hour trip, carrying a delegation of Israeli and US officials.

The flight was allowed to cross Saudi Arabian airspace, normally blocked to Israeli air traffic.

The UAE has become only the third Arab country in the Middle East to recognise Israel since its founding in 1948.

On Saturday the UAE repealed a law boycotting Israel which had been in place since 1972, and earlier this month the two countries opened direct telephone services for the first time.

The agreement to normalise relations - brokered by the US - was made public in a surprise announcement on 13 August.

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Flight LY971 - numbered to represent the UAE's international dialling code - carried delegates including Donald Trump's son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner and Israel's National Security Adviser Meir Ben-Shabbat.

Israeli and US delegates, including Jared Kushner (centre), board the Israel-UAE flight (31/08/20)
image copyrightReuters

Mr Kushner led secret talks which resulted in the Israel-UAE agreement.

Speaking to the media after landing in Abu Dhabi, Mr Kushner described the deal between the countries as a "historic breakthrough" and said it was a "tremendous honour" to have joined the flight.

"What happened here was three great leaders came together and they started writing a new script for the Middle East. They said the future doesn't have to be predetermined by the past," he said

The joint teams will meet Emirati representatives to develop areas of co-operation between Israel and the UAE. The return flight will be numbered LY972, after Israel's international dialling code.

Presentational grey line
Analysis box by Tom Bateman, Middle East correspondent

Monday's three-hour flight has taken more than 70 years to make, and it marks a new turning point in relations between Israel and the Arab world.

There are big prizes for all three players: Israel's historic need to boost regional recognition of the Jewish state (could Saudi Arabia one day do so too?); the Emiratis' glittering finance hubs can benefit from open links with the region's security and cyber superpower; while a US president under pressure at home gets to tout his role as peacemaker in the Middle East.

These are truly significant achievements and further shift the dynamics in a deeply polarised region. But the deal is striking for another reason - it leaves the Palestinians feeling as sidelined as ever.

They believe it breaks years of Arab solidarity - and leverage - against Israel's occupation of land they want for a future state; while ordinary Palestinians feel more and more hemmed in as Israeli settler numbers grow.

They see not only betrayal, but a blind eye being turned by the Emiratis to their reality on the ground.

Presentational grey line
In a tweet in Hebrew, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailed the advent of the flight as an example of "peace for peace" - alluding to his long-held disbelief in the notion that only trading occupied land will bring peace between Israel and Arab countries.

While it was welcomed by much of the international community, the UAE's recognition of Israel without the precondition of the creation of a Palestinian state was denounced by the Palestinians as a betrayal of their cause.

In return for official relations with the UAE, Mr Netanyahu agreed to suspend controversial plans to annex parts of the occupied West Bank - land claimed by the Palestinians for a future state of their own.

Mr Kushner on Monday said his message to Palestinians was "one of hope".

"We've put an offer to their leadership on the table that will enable them to have a state and self-determination and an economic plan that could revitalise their economy, but we can't want peace more than they want peace and so when they are ready the whole region is very excited to help lift them up and move them forward but they can't be stuck in the past," he said.

"Peace will be ready for them and opportunity will be ready for them as soon as they're ready to embrace it."

Before the UAE, Egypt and Jordan were the only other Arab countries in the Middle East to officially recognise Israel, after signing peace treaties in 1978 and 1994 respectively.

Mauritania, a member of the Arab League in north-west Africa, established diplomatic relations with Israel in 1999 but severed ties in 2010.

Related Topics

  • United Arab Emirates
  • Israel
  • Air travel

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2020-08-31 12:56:15Z
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