Jumat, 14 Mei 2021

TikTok: How Israeli-Palestinian conflict plays out on social media - BBC News

Palestinian protesters take a selfie, May 2021
Getty Images

As fighting between Israel and Palestinian militants escalates on the ground, TikTok has become a forum for airing tensions.

Once known primarily for viral dance trends, the video app has also become a key platform for sharing news. The Chinese-owned site has a vast, mostly younger audience, with an estimated 700 million active monthly users worldwide.

Footage of rocket fire over Israel, destruction in Gaza and Palestinian protests have all gone viral on the site. It has brought the conflict to people's phone screens around the world.

But there are also concerns that it and other social media sites are spreading falsehoods or extremism.

This week's violence in Gaza and Israel is the worst since 2014.

It came after weeks of rising Israeli-Palestinian tension in East Jerusalem, which culminated in clashes at a holy site revered by both Muslims and Jews. Hamas, the militant group that rules Gaza, began firing rockets after warning Israel to withdraw from the site, triggering retaliatory air strikes.

Even before the latest fighting broke out, tensions between Palestinians and Israelis have played out on TikTok.

In April, a video of teenagers in East Jerusalem slapping two Orthodox Jewish boys on public transport went viral on the app. Police arrested two suspects the following week.

Israeli army walking near tanks
Reuters

Protest clips also began to appear on TikTok. Users posted videos under the hashtag #SaveSheikhJarrah, in reference to the threatened evictions of Palestinian families in a neighbourhood in East Jerusalem. Such videos are now being viewed and shared around the globe.

Chris Stokely-Walker, author of TikTok Boom: China, the US and the Superpower Race for Social Media, told the BBC that TikTok's ease of use and colossal popularity allowed the rapid spread of its content.

"Creating tools for video through the app are so simple that anybody from a 12-year-old to a 90-year-old can actually do it themselves without all that much technical nous," he said. "It's also the size of the audience - we know that TikTok has something like 732 million monthly active users worldwide. So if you're posting something then the likelihood is it will be seen by a lot of people."

Users of TikTok - as well as other social media sites like Facebook, Instagram and Twitter - are using the #SaveSheikhJarrah hashtag alongside footage of clashes with Israeli security forces, as well as the situation on the ground in Gaza.

One video allegedly showing people fleeing Israeli strikes in Gaza, posted under the hashtag by US-based news site Muslim, has more than 44 million views on TikTok.

Another post by TikTok user Sabrina Abukhdeir - with more than 1.5 million views - showed crying Palestinian children and the destruction of a high-rise block in Gaza.

"You guys know what to do," she wrote, urging people to share the video.

Palestinians demonstrating in the occupied West Bank
Reuters

Supporters of Israel have also posted on TikTok. One video allegedly showing an Israeli soldier shielding a Palestinian woman from rocks thrown by Palestinian protesters has been viewed more than 1.5 million times on the app.

And the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has a strong presence online. It has 1.3 million followers on Twitter and more than 70,000 on TikTok, where it has been posting videos of its forces in action and scenes from inside Israel.

One video asking viewers "What would you do if this was your city?" has more than 300,000 views on the site.

Dr Gabriel Weimann at Haifa University in Israel said there was a battle of "hearts and minds" online - and that as of now "it's not an equal war".

"From the Israeli side you see a counter flow, which I must say is less powerful, not organised at all, and if you ask me less persuasive," he told the BBC. "Maybe because in Israel nobody thought that TikTok would be a powerful or important platform."

This month a video went viral on both TikTok and Twitter showing Jews dancing and cheering while a tree burns in the Al-Aqsa mosque compound in Jerusalem. Social media users claimed they were celebrating the destruction of the mosque.

In reality, they were gathered to celebrate Jerusalem Day, and the mosque was not damaged in the fire. Israeli police said it was due to fireworks set off by Palestinian protesters, while demonstrators said it was due to stun grenades used by officers.

On Thursday night, Israel's Defence Minister Benny Gantz asked Facebook and TikTok to remove posts from their sites which he said could encourage violence.

"These are measures that will directly prevent the violence that is being intentionally stirred through social media by extremist elements that are seeking to do damage to our country," he reportedly said. "We are in a moment of social emergency, and we expect your assistance."

The executives of both companies promised to "act quickly and effectively to prevent incitement on their networks", according to Israel National News.

Shaydanay Urbani works for First Draft News, an organisation set up to counter mis-and disinformation online.

"A lot of the things we have seen are old media taken out of context," she told the BBC. "[Stories] circulating from a totally different time and a totally different place."

One of the most prominent examples - according to the New York Times - was footage shared widely of Palestinians allegedly faking a funeral. The video was viewed hundreds of thousands of times on TikTok and seemed to show a group of people carrying a corpse on their shoulders before dropping it when a siren sounded, and the corpse springing into life and running away.

But in fact, the New York Times said, the original video appeared over a year ago on YouTube with a caption saying it was a Jordanian family faking a funeral.

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2021-05-14 23:07:23Z
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Trump supporter to replace Liz Cheney in top Republican role - Sky News

Two days after Liz Cheney was fired from one of the most senior roles in the Republican Party, she has been replaced by New York Representative Elise Stefanik, an outspoken supporter of former president Donald Trump.

At the age of just 36, Stefanik is assuming the position of Republican House Conference Chair, placing her in third place in the party's hierarchy in the United States House of Representatives. She also becomes the most senior woman in the party, taking over that accolade from the person she replaced, Ms Cheney.

She won a comfortable victory for the job against the only other challenger, fellow Representative Chip Roy. Ms Stefanik will now have a crucial role in running the operations of the Party in the House of Representatives.

Liz Cheney has been removed from her senior role in Republican leadership
Image: Liz Cheney was removed from her senior role in Republican leadership

She said she was "truly honoured and humbled" to have been selected.

"I am excited to lead our unified team... to combat Biden and Pelosi's far-left agenda!" she added, referring to President Joe Biden and the Speaker of the House, Democrat Nancy Pelosi.

"I believe that voters determine the leader of the Republican Party and President Trump is the leader they look to. I support President Trump."

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The replacement of Ms Cheney by Ms Stefanik is seen as an important indicator of the present state of the Republican Party.

The contrast between the two politicians is obvious. Ms Cheney is considered a conservative politician with a track record of voting against, for instance, gay rights and immigration. Yet she has doggedly criticised Mr Trump over recent months.

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Ms Stefanik, meanwhile, was considered a moderate when she entered national politics, but has morphed into a loyal follower of the former president.

So while Ms Cheney lost her job for her refusal to support Mr Trump's unsubstantiated claims that the presidential election was a fraud, Ms Stefanik was among those who voted against certifying the election. And that was probably the key to her success.

Despite a long-term record of opposing liberal and moderate policies, Mr Roy had voted to endorse the result of the presidential election. And that, in the view of many Republican politicians, was the fundamental difference between the two candidates.

Liz Cheney, in the purple dress, has been a vocal critic of Donald Trump. Pic: Associated Press
Image: Liz Cheney, in the purple dress, has been a vocal critic of Donald Trump. Pic: AP

Ms Stefanik's promotion is the latest demonstration of Mr Trump's enduring influence over his party. Despite his electoral defeat, he remains its most popular figure and the most likely person to earn the Republican nomination for the next presidential election.

Mr Trump, who had derided Ms Cheney as "a horrible human being", welcomed the election of Ms Stefanik as an "overwhelming victory" and said "the Make America Great Again movement is strong".

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2021-05-14 20:47:55Z
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Israel Gaza violence: Clashes spread to West Bank - BBC News

Israeli forces clash with Palestinian demonstrators
Getty Images

Violent clashes between Israeli troops and Palestinians have spread across much of the occupied West Bank, following days of hostility in Gaza.

At least 10 Palestinians are reported to have died in the West Bank unrest, while hundreds have been injured.

Israeli forces used teargas, rubber bullets and live fire, as Palestinians threw petrol bombs.

The confrontations in the West Bank mark a broadening out of some of the worst violence in the region in years.

The conflict began on Monday and followed weeks of spiralling Israeli-Palestinian tension in East Jerusalem. The increased hostilities culminated in clashes at a holy site revered by both Muslims and Jews. Hamas - the militant Islamist group which rules Gaza - began firing rockets after warning Israel to withdraw from the site, triggering retaliatory air strikes.

At least 126 people have been killed in Gaza and eight have died in Israel since the fighting began.

Many towns and cities in the occupied West Bank were convulsed by angry protests on Friday, prompting international calls for calm.

There were running battles between Israeli soldiers and young Palestinians, who appear newly emboldened by the events of the past week, the BBC's Arab affairs editor Sebastian Usher says.

Meanwhile, there were protests at the Jordanian and Lebanese borders with Israel, in support of the Palestinians, on Friday. One man died after being hit by Israeli shell fire while protesting, state media in Lebanon reported.

Map showing Israel and the Gaza Strip
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The Israeli military said it conducted an operation overnight to destroy a network of Hamas tunnels that it dubbed "the metro", but no troops had entered Gaza. It added that - over the course of Thursday evening and Friday morning - 220 more projectiles were fired from the Gaza Strip.

In southern Israel, an 87-year-old woman died after falling on her way to a bomb shelter near Ashdod. Other areas including Ashkelon, Beersheba and Yavne were also targeted.

Image shows protests in the West Bank on Friday
Getty Images

Gaza's health ministry said 31 children were among those killed since fighting began, and many other civilians have died. Another 950 Gazans have also been wounded. Israel says dozens of those killed in Gaza were militants, and some of the deaths were caused by misfired rockets from Gaza.

On Friday, the United Nations said that an estimated 10,000 Palestinians had left their homes in Gaza since Monday because of the conflict.

The conflict has also seen Jewish and Israeli-Arab mobs fighting within Israel itself, prompting the president to warn of civil war. Defence Minister Benny Gantz ordered the security forces to suppress the internal unrest on Thursday, and more than 400 people were arrested.

Police say Israeli Arabs have been responsible for most of the trouble and have rejected the accusation that they are standing by while gangs of Jewish youths target Arab homes.

In Gaza, Palestinians fearing an incursion by Israeli troops have been fleeing areas close to the border with Israel. Residents who had left Shejaiya in Gaza City said shells had been falling on homes.

"We felt like we were in a horror movie," said local resident Salwa Al-Attar, who escaped the bombardment with her family. "The planes were above us, and the tanks and navy were bombing - and we could not move. The children, women and men were screaming."

In a statement released early on Friday morning, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the military operation against Palestinian militants would continue for "as long as necessary". He added that Hamas would pay a heavy price, as would other "terrorist groups".

A Hamas military spokesman said the group was ready to teach Israel's military "harsh lessons" should it decide to go ahead with a ground incursion.

On Thursday, Israel's military called up 7,000 army reservists and deployed troops and tanks near its border with Gaza. It said a ground offensive into Gaza was one option being considered but a decision had yet to be made.

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A swirling array of conflicts

Analysis by Paul Adams, diplomatic correspondent in Jerusalem

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has spoken of Israel waging a battle on two fronts.

But he may not have been doing justice to the swirling array of conflicts currently raging across Israel, Gaza and the West Bank. Rarely in recent years has violence erupted in all of these places at the same time.

A week ago, the fear that Palestinians in east Jerusalem might be evicted to make way for Jewish settlers, coupled with repeated raids by Israeli security forces on the area surrounding Jerusalem's al-Aqsa mosque, galvanised opinion among Israeli Arabs and triggered waves of rocket attacks by Hamas.

Long-simmering resentments among Israel's Arab minority exploded in several of the country's mixed cities. Violent gangs, Jewish and Arab, exploited the tension.

By Friday, the violence had circled back to the West Bank where the death toll in clashes with the Israeli army has crept up.

Jerusalem, land rights, holy places and decades of unresolved conflict: this week's spasm of violence has highlighted them all.

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As fighting entered its fifth day, United Nations Secretary General António Guterres called for "an immediate de-escalation and cessation of hostilities in Gaza and Israel".

His plea echoed that of other diplomats - including from Israel's ally the US - but appeals to Israeli and Palestinian leaders have so far failed to produce a ceasefire agreement.

Rockets are seen in the night sky fired towards Israel from Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip on May 14, 2021
AFP

A senior Hamas official has said the group is ready for a "reciprocal" ceasefire if the international community pressures Israel to "suppress military actions" at the disputed al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem.

However, a senior adviser to Mr Netanyahu told the BBC that international calls for restraint were misplaced.

"We didn't want this conflict, but now that it's started it has to end with a sustained period of quiet," said Mark Regev. "That can only be achieved by Israel taking out Hamas - their military structure, their command and control."

What caused the violence?

The fighting between Israel and Hamas was triggered by days of escalating clashes between Palestinians and Israeli police at a holy hilltop compound in East Jerusalem.

The site is revered by both Muslims, who call it the Haram al-Sharif (Noble Sanctuary), and Jews, for whom it is known as the Temple Mount. Hamas demanded Israel remove police from there and the nearby predominantly Arab district of Sheikh Jarrah, where Palestinian families face eviction by Jewish settlers. Hamas launched rockets when its ultimatum went unheeded.

Palestinian anger had already been stoked by weeks of rising tension in East Jerusalem, inflamed by a series of confrontations with police since the start of Ramadan in mid-April.

Map showing key holy sites in Jerusalem
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It was further fuelled by Israel's annual celebration of its capture of East Jerusalem in the 1967 Middle East war, known as Jerusalem Day.

The fate of the city, with its deep religious and national significance to both sides, lies at the heart of the decades-old Israel-Palestinian conflict. Israel in effect annexed East Jerusalem in 1980 and considers the entire city its capital, though this is not recognised by the vast majority of other countries.

Palestinians claim the eastern half of Jerusalem as the capital of a hoped-for state of their own.

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2021-05-14 19:00:49Z
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Husband pays tribute to ‘wonderful’ Brit wife murdered by burglars as he cradles their baby at funeral... - The Sun

THE husband of a Brit mum tortured to death by burglars has paid tribute to his "wonderful" wife in an emotional funeral eulogy.

Heartbroken Charalambos "Babis" Anagnostopoulos, 32, told mourners at the funeral of Caroline Crouch, that their 11-month-old daughter now faces the agony of growing up not remembering her mother.

Caroline was strangled by raiders at her home in an upmarket suburb of Athens.
Caroline was strangled by raiders at her home in an upmarket suburb of Athens.Credit: Tim Stewart
Friends and family arriving with flowers at the funeral
Friends and family arriving with flowers at the funeralCredit: Athena
Wreaths left outside the Agia Paraskevi church on Alonnisos
Wreaths left outside the Agia Paraskevi church on AlonnisosCredit: Athena
Caroline was killed by burglars in front of her husband Charalambos and their baby daughter
Caroline was killed by burglars in front of her husband Charalambos and their baby daughterCredit: Tim Stewart
The young mum's coffin arriving the church for her funeral
The young mum's coffin arriving the church for her funeralCredit: Athena
Caroline's husband arrived clutching daughter Lydia
Caroline's husband arrived clutching daughter LydiaCredit: Ta Nea
He then went to Caroline's funeral where he delivered a eulogy to her
He then went to Caroline's funeral where he delivered a eulogy to herCredit: ΕΡΤ ΒΟΛΟΥ

The 20-year-old was tortured by a sadistic gang into revealing where cash and valuables were kept after they burst into the couple's Athens home just before dawn.

Earlier a hearse carrying Caroline's coffin, accompanied by her distraught mum, was taken by ferry to the island of Alonnisos, where she grew up.

When coffin arrived on the island it was taken to the its main church, Ayia Paraskevi, where islanders gathered for the funeral.

Caroline’s helicopter pilot husband later arrived on a helicopter provided by the aviation business he works for.

He was pictured clutching little Lydia in his arm's as he walked from the aircraft to a car waiting to take him to the funeral.

Throughout the service and burial grieving Charalambos held Lydia tightly is in arms as they bid farewell to Caroline.

'ALWAYS BE NEAR ME'

He then delivered his parting words to his beloved wife, speaking about the joy she brought but also the pain their daughter will now feel.

"I was lucky that I met you, very lucky that you loved me and even more lucky that you are the mother of my child," he said.

“Lydia will grow up not remembering her wonderful mother, but Caroline who was the joy of life will always be near me, through Lydia."  

The Sun Online was told that because of health problems, Caroline's doting dad, David, could not attend the service.

With her buried in the cemetery, next to the family's villa, it was hoped that one day he could visit her, friends said.  

Earlier, local mayor Petros Vafinis paid tribute to Caroline, who went to school on the island, where her British dad settled with his Filipino wife.

“The whole island is going to be at the funeral. Everyone will be there,” Alonissos’ he told The Sun Online.

'MUCH LOVED'

“Caroline was much loved and we are as shocked here as everyone in Greece by this horrible crime. 

"The municipality is putting on buses to take people up to the village where the cemetery is.”

Caroline was raised and schooled on Alonissos where her British dad, David, had built a dream villa after falling in love with the island.

The former gas and oil executive had previously lived in Athens where he met Susan, a Filipino teacher.

Caroline moved to the island when she was a little girl, attending the local Greek school and joining the girl scouts.  

The whole of the island will be at the funeral, said a local mayor
The whole of the island will be at the funeral, said a local mayorCredit: Athena
Mourners with flowers at the funeral
Mourners with flowers at the funeralCredit: Athena
The hearse with Caroline Crouch's body boarding the ferry
The hearse with Caroline Crouch's body boarding the ferryCredit: Athena
Baby Lydia, 11 months, is taken from the crime scene in Athens
Baby Lydia, 11 months, is taken from the crime scene in AthensCredit: Athena

Officers described seeing Caroline's body tied to a pole where the intruders had tortured her in the family's attic bedroom, reports Pro Thema.

Her 11-month-old daughter was "half on her, screaming and hitting her mother with her hands to wake her up".

Charalambos has told investigators he begged for their lives as the brutal thieves held a gun to the baby's head and demanded to know where they kept their cash and jewels.

He is believed to have suffered hypoxia - a potentially fatal lack of oxygen - before wriggling free and calling police in the early hours of Sunday.

Detectives have reportedly drawn up a "red list" of 100 suspects including foreigners and Greek nationals who have recently been freed from jail.

They are also probing possible links to five other robberies last year, which were also characterised by shocking levels of violence.

Officers suspect the gang may have been tipped off that the couple had £13,000 in banknotes stashed in the house.

The crooks may have been tipped off that the couple had a stash of banknotes at home
The crooks may have been tipped off that the couple had a stash of banknotes at homeCredit: Tim Stewart
Police at the crime scene in a suburb of Athens
Police at the crime scene in a suburb of AthensCredit: Rex
Police believe the gang watched the family from this path, and entered through a basement window at 4.30am
Police believe the gang watched the family from this path, and entered through a basement window at 4.30amCredit: Athena

The money was to pay for builders after they bought a plot of land and was reportedly hidden in a Monopoly box.

Police believe the gang had information on the land sale and believed they would find a large amount of money in the house, in an upmarket Athens suburb, Skai.gr reports.

But according to newsit.gr murder cops are looking at whether the information came from within the couple’s inner circle.

A distraught Charalambos told investigators the terrified couple pleaded with the depraved gang not to hurt them and their baby, as his wife screamed for help.

INNER CIRCLE

The gang kept torturing her, convinced more money was hidden in the house.

“They kept telling me ‘where is the money, eh?’. I told them right away where I had hidden the money, so that the torment could end quickly.

"I heard my wife constantly screaming for help tied to the bed as I was tied up. The baby was crying, my wife was crying."

The thieves eventually escaped with more than £30,000 in cash and jewellery.

The young mum fought for the life of her baby cops have said
The young mum fought for the life of her baby cops have saidCredit: Tim Stewart
Caroline may have been strangled with her own t-shirt
Caroline may have been strangled with her own t-shirtCredit: Supplied as a technical service. No is implied or inferred.

The three robbers forced their way into the family's two storey house at 4.30am after breaking a CCTV camera and hanging the family's dog by its own leash.

A fourth criminal kept watch outside the home as the other three found the couple sleeping with their child in an attic bedroom.

A police spokesperson told the local news outlet The Dawn that police believe the suspects broke into the house through a window in the basement after spending several hours observing the family.

A post-mortem examination was taking place yesterday and it is believed she may have been strangled with her own T-shirt.

Meanwhile police are colleting DNA samples from the couple's clothes and from Caroline's fingernails, which could lead them to the gang.

The gang subjected her to a prolonged attack
The gang subjected her to a prolonged attackCredit: Tim Stewart
Caroline was brought up in Greece
Caroline was brought up in GreeceCredit: Tim Stewart

Samples from Caroline Crouch's fingernails show evidence of her frantic struggle as she fought back against her torturers and are now being examined by investigators.

CCTV footage from nearby homes and businesses was also being examined and door to door enquiries were also taking place.

Another police officer quoted in Greek media claimed the gang had been identified and were well known.

“The three robbers are professionals. They have what we call a criminal past,” said the cop.

“That is, they are marked, they have gone through prisons and as it turned out, they are people with a strong anti-social element and a complete lack of emotions.”

He said the sadistic gang “used their hands” to kill the young mum despite having weapons in what was a “prolonged physical contact” with their victim.

The officer said the killers had the opportunity to walk away but didn’t.

“This clearly shows their intention to kill. In a robbery, the question is money. It was not necessary to kill to achieve the goal.

“They took the money, but they will be charged with murder. A crime that will send them behind bars for many years.

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2021-05-14 15:15:00Z
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