Senin, 17 Mei 2021

Central Vista: India’s Modi blasted for $2.8bn project amid COVID - Al Jazeera English

New Delhi, India – Almost the entire Indian capital, ravaged by a ferocious second wave of the coronavirus and forced to go under a lockdown, has come to a standstill – except for a “vanity project” undertaken by India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, triggering widespread criticism.

The $2.8bn Central Vista Redevelopment Project, currently under way in the heart of New Delhi, includes the construction of a new triangular-shaped parliament building, a new residential complex to house the prime minister and the vice president, and the refurbishment and construction of important bureaucratic and security office buildings for the federal government.

The project is spread over a 3.2km-stretch between the sprawling presidential residence on the city’s Raisina Hills and India Gate, a war memorial, in what is known as Lutyens’ Delhi, named after the British architect Sir Edwin Lutyens who designed most of the buildings in the early 20th century when India was under the British rule.

Multiple notices seen at the redevelopment site along the Rajpath road in New Delhi [Money Sharma/AFP)]
In a controversial order earlier this year, the Supreme Court designated the project as an “essential service”.

But the opposition parties have questioned the timing and necessity of what it calls Modi’s “vanity project”, being undertaken when India is reporting a record number of coronavirus infections and deaths amid accusations of the federal government’s apathy and inaction in controlling the pandemic.

In a letter to Modi on Wednesday, 12 opposition leaders, including Congress party president Sonia Gandhi and West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, asked the prime minister to stop the “Central Vista construction and [use] the money for oxygen and vaccines”.

A day later, former Congress president Rahul Gandhi tweeted in Hindi that Modi is “missing, along with vaccines, oxygen and medicines”.

“All that remain are the Central Vista project, GST on medicines and the prime minister’s photos here and there,” Gandhi posted. GST refers to the indirect Goods and Services Tax imposed in 2017 by Modi’s government.

In another letter to Modi last week, 76 public intellectuals from across the world, including scholar Gayatri Spivak, artist Anish Kapoor, writer Orhan Pamuk, and Glenn Lowry, director of New York’s Museum of Modern Art, criticised the “extravagant project” in the “midst of a devastating pandemic, endangering workers, and squandering scarce resources that could be used to save lives”.

Modi’s government has called the allegations “bizarre”. In a series of tweets, Urban Affairs Minister Hardeep Singh Puri claimed the government has allocated “nearly twice” the money spent on the project for COVID-10 vaccination.

But many public health experts have also chastised the government for spending such an exorbitant amount of money on “vanity” projects.

“There is a time for everything. Now is not the time for the Central Vista but to use all our resources to save lives and help people to get over the trauma that COVID-19 has inflicted on us,” Sujatha K Rao, former secretary of health and family welfare, told Al Jazeera.

Slum dwellers fear eviction

Barely 7km (4 miles) from the project site lies a slum dwelling called Yamuna Khadar along the Yamuna river’s floodplains in eastern Delhi’s Mayur Vihar neighbourhood.

Ashok, 49, sits outside his shanty, watching the mounds of mud dug out from the Central Vista project and dumped outside their homes for the past few months.

Mud dug out from Central Vista project being dumped near slums along the Yamuna river [Suchitra/Al Jazeera]
The slum dwellers say they have been told by officials pouring the mud to relocate. Some say the police even threatened them to do so.

“I am scared that if I go to the hospital, by the time I get back, I will be evicted from this place,” says Ashok, coughing.

Ashok tested COVID-positive and is struggling to breathe. His daughter, Meena, is trying to source an oxygen cylinder or a hospital bed.

“Papa’s fever hasn’t gone down in days. We are tired of searching for hospitals. No hospital has an oxygen bed,” Meena says.

Rupam Kumari, another resident of Yamuna Khadar, recently recovered from COVID-19. She says their houses will submerge if it rains.

“Our houses constantly have mud from the construction and we had cough already due to COVID-19. Now it is worse with all the mud constantly acting as irritants,” she told Al Jazeera.

“Besides, the rainwater will make our houses submerged. We are very scared. We grew up here, we don’t want to leave.”

Slum dwellers fear eviction as mud continued to be dumped near their shanties [Suchitra/Al Jazeera]
Dev Pal, a housing rights activist from the area, says the government is building a new parliament building as people continue to suffer.

“People who run the country will sit in the newly constructed parliament, built by demolishing their own voters’ households. Is this violation of fundamental rights not oppressive?” he asks.

Notions of colonial heritage

The advocates of Central Vista often speak of the project as some sort of “a victory that symbolises the removal of historical colonial oppression”. They also speak of the necessity for a new parliament, claiming the present one is outdated.

But historians want the people to dispel the myth that all the buildings in Lutyens’ Delhi were built by the British.

“The colonial history of the Vista lasted only 17 years. It is important to point this out because the structures destroyed or slated for demolition are all postcolonial, built by a free Indian state between the 1950s and 2011. None of them are ‘symbols of colonial oppression’,” historian and author Narayani Gupta told Al Jazeera.

Gupta says the project is “all about real estate and building contracts”.

“‘Heritage’ has for some decades now become a convenient concept on which projects of tourism development, of competitive ‘nationalisms’, have piggybacked,” she said.

Swapna Liddle, another author and historian, also says the interpretation of Central Vista as a colonial heritage is deeply flawed.

“The British looked at the history of India while building the Vista, they were trying to incorporate the history of Delhi into the Vista. If we look at the alignment of Rajpath, it aligns straight to the Old Fort and is parallel to Chandni Chowk (in Old Delhi),” she told Al Jazeera.

“The building materials like sandstones, the chhatri (dome-shaped pavilion) and chhajja (overhanging eave), the stupa-like build of the president’s house are very Delhi in their heritage. So it is wrong to call it a colonial heritage.”

The new parliament building is expected to be finished in November next year, followed by the prime minister’s residence a month later. The full project is expected to be finished by the end of 2026.

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2021-05-17 08:47:43Z
52781600230553

Minggu, 16 Mei 2021

Two dead as stand collapses at synagogue in Israeli settlement - Al Jazeera English

More than 150 also injured after bleacher collapses at an uncompleted synagogue in the occupied West Bank.

Israeli medics said at least two people were killed and more than 150 injured after a bleacher collapsed at an uncompleted synagogue in the occupied West Bank on Sunday, the eve of a major Jewish holiday.

The bleacher was packed with ultra-Orthodox worshippers and collapsed during prayers at the beginning of Shavuot. A spokesman for Magen David Adom told Channel 13 that paramedics had treated more than 157 people for injuries and pronounced two dead, a man in his 50s and a 12-year-old boy.

Rescue workers were on the scene, treating the injured and taking people to the hospital. The collapse comes weeks after 45 ultra-Orthodox Jews were killed in a stampede at a religious festival in northern Israel.

The Israeli military said in a statement that it dispatched medics and other search and rescue troops to assist at the scene. Army helicopters were airlifting the injured.

Amateur footage showed the collapse Sunday during evening prayers in Givat Zeev, an illegal West Bank settlement just north of Jerusalem.

The ultra-Orthodox synagogue was packed with hundreds of people.

Shavuot is a spring harvest festival that also marks the day in the Jewish calendar on which the Torah was given to Moses on Mount Sinai. It is traditionally marked with all-night Torah study and the consumption of dairy.

Israeli authorities traded blame.

The mayor of Givat Zeev said the building was unfinished and dangerous, and that the police had ignored previous calls to take action. Jerusalem police chief Doron Turgeman said the disaster was a case of “negligence” and that there would likely be arrests.

Deddi Simhi, head of the Israel Fire and Rescue Services, told Israel’s Channel 12 that “this building is not finished. It doesn’t even have a permit for occupancy, and therefore let alone holding events in it.”

Television footage from the scene showed the five-storey building was incomplete, with exposed concrete, rebar, and wooden boards, and plastic sheeting as windows. A sign in Hebrew pasted to a wall of the building warned that “for safety reasons entrance to the site is forbidden.”

Defence Minister Benny Gantz wrote on Twitter that “my heart is with the victims of the disaster in Givat Zeev”.

On April 29, a stampede at a religious festival in northern Israel killed 45 ultra-Orthodox Jews, the deadliest civilian disaster in the country’s history.

The stampede at Mount Meron came after years of warnings that the holy site was unsafe for the tens of thousands of visitors it draws each year for the Lag Baomer holiday.

This year’s festivities were attended by about 100,000 people, most of them ultra-Orthodox Jews, after powerful ultra-Orthodox politicians reportedly pressured caretaker Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and others to lift attendance restrictions.

Experts had long warned the Mount Meron complex was inadequately equipped to handle the enormous crowds that flock there during the springtime holiday, and that the existing state of infrastructure was a safety risk.

The disaster triggered renewed criticism about the broad autonomy granted to the country’s politically powerful ultra-Orthodox minority.

Last year, many ultra-Orthodox communities flouted coronavirus safety restrictions, contributing to high outbreak rates in their communities and angering the broader, secular public.

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2021-05-16 21:11:15Z
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Israel-Gaza conflict: Israeli PM Netanyahu vows to keep using 'full force' as airstrike death toll reaches 42 - Sky News

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says his country's military campaign in Gaza will continue with "full force", as 42 people are reported to have died in an airstrike early on Sunday that flattened three buildings.

The most deadly single Israeli attack of the week-long conflict brings the number who have died in the Palestinian territory since the fighting erupted last Monday to 192, including 58 children.

Ten people in Israel have been killed, including a five-year-old boy and a soldier, as militants fired rockets from Gaza and some got through its 'Iron Dome' air defence system.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Israeli border police following violence in the Arab-Jewish town of Lod
Image: Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the Israeli military campaign in Gaza will continue with 'full force'

The PM's comments come as the UN Security Council met to discuss the violence, with the UN's secretary general Antonio Guterres calling for an immediate end to the violence.

Mr Netanyahu said in a televised speech: "Our campaign against the terrorist organisations is continuing with full force. We are acting now, for as long as necessary, to restore calm and quiet to you, Israel's citizens. It will take time."

Gaza health officials said 16 women and 10 children were among those killed in the airstrike on Sunday that destroyed several homes.

Israel's military said the deaths were "unintentional" and it had been targeting a militant tunnel system which collapsed, causing homes to collapse as well.

More on Benjamin Netanyahu

Palestinian militant groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad say 20 fighters have been killed since the violence broke out - but Israel claimed the real number was far higher as it released the names and photos of two dozen alleged operatives it said were "eliminated".

Opening a meeting of the UN Security Council to discuss the ongoing conflict, the organisation's secretary general Antonio Guterres said the hostilities were "utterly appalling" and the fighting must stop immediately.

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Israel bombs top Hamas leader's home

He said "the United Nations is actively engaging all sides towards an immediate ceasefire" but warned that the violence in Gaza "only perpetuates the cycles of death, destruction and despair, and pushes farther to the horizon any hopes of coexistence and peace".

The organisation's peace envoy Tor Wennesland called on the international community to "take action now to enable the parties to step back from the brink".

Listen and follow the Daily podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker

Palestinian and Israeli representatives went next, followed by other ambassadors and foreign ministers.

Also, Jordan's King Abdullah has said his kingdom was involved in intensive diplomacy to halt the violence.

Palestinian foreign minister Riyad al Malki told the Security Council that "there are no words that can describe the horrors that our people are enduring," listing families and children killed by Israeli airstrikes.

"Israel is killing Palestinians in Gaza, one family at a time," he said. "Israel is trying to uproot Palestinians from Jerusalem. It's expelling families, one home, neighbourhood at a time. Israel is executing our people, committing war crimes and crimes against humanity."

He added: "Each time Israel hears a foreign leader speak of its right to defend itself it is further emboldened to continue murdering entire families in their sleep."

Streaks of light are seen as Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts rockets launched from the Gaza Strip towards Israel, as seen from Ashkelon, Israel May 14, 2021. REUTERS/Amir Cohen
Image: Streaks of light are seen as Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts rockets launched from the Gaza Strip towards Israel, as seen from Ashkelon

Mr Malki's Palestinian Authority has no control over Hamas and the Gaza Strip, where the militants seized power in 2007.

The Israeli ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan, said Israel's response to indiscriminate attacks by Hamas strictly adhered to international law and that the country was taking "unparalleled steps to prevent civilian casualties".

He said: "Israel uses its missiles to protect its children. Hamas uses children to protect its missiles."

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

'It's like a jail cell': Growing up in Palestine

The meeting was taking place as UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson condemned antisemitism after the Met Police said it was investigating a video appearing to show racist language being shouted from a convoy of cars in the St John's Wood area of London on Sunday.

Mr Johnson tweeted: "There is no place for antisemitism in our society. Ahead of Shavuot, I stand with Britain's Jews who should not have to endure the type of shameful racism we have seen today."

Later, officers said four men had been arrested over the incident.

Analysis: Neither side seem in the mood to stop the violence

By Dominic Waghorn, diplomatic editor

This is the third UN Security Council meeting in a week, and a UN General Assembly meeting is likely soon too, as well as plenty of US and European diplomacy.

But until both Israel and Hamas want to stop fighting, all this is unlikely to achieve much. Even behind closed doors, the Security Council was unable to reach agreement on action last week.

With the cameras on, this latest gathering was never likely to be more successful, for all the posturing and grandstanding instead.

We are used to Russia blocking progress at the UN, normally over Syria and being lambasted for it by the US. This time it is the other way around.

Fourteen member states wanted a fairly innocuous press statement issued last week calling for an end to hostilities. America alone blocked it.

America is taking its cue from Israel, and Israel seems to be saying they need more time.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Palestinian and Israeli representatives address UN

Israelis refer to it as mowing the grass. Taking action to reduce the threat from Hamas at regular intervals. That threat has grown. Hamas has managed to fire almost 3,000 missiles in a week.

Israel's military is now making the most of this window of opportunity to neutralise Hamas' capability. It will have an eye on its northern border too, wanting to send a stern message to the Shia militia Hezbollah, not to try the same.

Hamas may also not want the conflict to end quite yet. It is posing as the champion of Jerusalem and Palestinian rights there. That will increase its political power and ability to recruit and radicalise.

Egypt is acting as mediator and warning that Israel's targeting of Hamas leaders is not helping its efforts to broker a ceasefire.

For all the talk and handwringing in New York and elsewhere this week, military priorities are likely to dictate progress towards a cessation in violence and for now neither side seem in the mood.

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2021-05-16 21:22:30Z
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Israel-Gaza conflict: Israeli PM Netanyahu vows to keep using 'full force' in Gaza as overnight airstrike death toll reaches 42 - Sky News

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said his country's military campaign in Gaza will continue with "full force", as 42 people are reported to have died in an overnight airstrike that flattened three buildings.

The most deadly single Israeli attack of the week-long conflict brings the number who have died in the Palestinian territory since the fighting erupted last Monday to 192, including 58 children.

Nine people in Israel have been killed, including a five-year-old boy and a soldier, as militants fired rockets from Gaza.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Israeli border police following violence in the Arab-Jewish town of Lod
Image: Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the Israeli military campaign in Gaza will continue with 'full force'

The PM's comments come as the UN Security Council meets to discuss the violence, with the UN's secretary general Antonio Guterres calling for an immediate end to the violence.

Mr Netanyahu said in a televised speech: "Our campaign against the terrorist organisations is continuing with full force. We are acting now, for as long as necessary, to restore calm and quiet to you, Israel's citizens. It will take time."

Gaza health officials said 16 women and 10 children were among those killed in the airstrike early on Sunday that destroyed several homes.

Israel's military said the deaths were "unintentional" and it had been targeting a militant tunnel system which collapsed, causing homes to collapse as well.

More on Benjamin Netanyahu

Palestinian militant groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad say 20 fighters have been killed since the violence broke out - but Israel claimed the real number was far higher as it released the names and photos of two dozen alleged operatives it said were "eliminated".

Opening a meeting of the UN Security Council to discuss the ongoing conflict, the organisation's secretary general Antonio Guterres said the hostilities were "utterly appalling" and the fighting must stop immediately.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Israel bombs top Hamas leader's home

He said "the United Nations is actively engaging all sides towards an immediate ceasefire" but warned that the violence in Gaza "only perpetuates the cycles of death, destruction and despair, and pushes farther to the horizon any hopes of coexistence and peace".

The organisation's peace envoy Tor Wennesland called on the international community to "take action now to enable the parties to step back from the brink".

Listen and follow the Daily podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker

Palestinian and Israeli representatives went next, with a further 20 ambassadors and foreign ministers due to speak as the session continues into the evening, including the UK.

Also, Jordan's King Abdullah has said his kingdom was involved in intensive diplomacy to halt the violence.

Palestinian foreign minister Riyad al Malki told the Security Council that "there are no words that can describe the horrors that our people are enduring," listing families and children killed by Israeli airstrikes.

"Israel is killing Palestinians in Gaza, one family at a time," he said. "Israel is trying to uproot Palestinians from Jerusalem. It's expelling families, one home, neighbourhood at a time. Israel is executing our people, committing war crimes and crimes against humanity."

He added: "Each time Israel hears a foreign leader speak of its right to defend itself it is further emboldened to continue murdering entire families in their sleep."

Streaks of light are seen as Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts rockets launched from the Gaza Strip towards Israel, as seen from Ashkelon, Israel May 14, 2021. REUTERS/Amir Cohen
Image: Streaks of light are seen as Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts rockets launched from the Gaza Strip towards Israel, as seen from Ashkelon

Mr Malki's Palestinian Authority has no control over Hamas and the Gaza Strip, where the militants seized power in 2007.

The Israeli ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan, said Israel's response to indiscriminate attacks by Hamas strictly adhered to international law and that the country was taking "unparalleled steps to prevent civilian casualties".

He said: "Israel uses its missiles to protect its children. Hamas uses children to protect its missiles."

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

'It's like a jail cell': Growing up in Palestine

The meeting was taking place as UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson condemned antisemitism after the Met Police said it was investigating a video appearing to show racist language being shouted from a convoy of cars in the St John's Wood area of London on Sunday.

Mr Johnson tweeted: "There is no place for antisemitism in our society. Ahead of Shavuot, I stand with Britain's Jews who should not have to endure the type of shameful racism we have seen today."

The Metropolitan Police said the vehicle allegedly involved had been identified and the force was making enquiries to locate the occupants.

"This sort of behaviour will not be tolerated," the force said.

Analysis: Neither side seem in the mood to stop the violence

By Dominic Waghorn, diplomatic editor

This is the third UN Security Council meeting in a week, and a UN General Assembly meeting is likely soon too, as well as plenty of US and European diplomacy.

But until both Israel and Hamas want to stop fighting, all this is unlikely to achieve much. Even behind closed doors, the Security Council was unable to reach agreement on action last week.

With the cameras on, this latest gathering was never likely to be more successful, for all the posturing and grandstanding instead.

We are used to Russia blocking progress at the UN, normally over Syria and being lambasted for it by the US. This time it is the other way around.

Fourteen member states wanted a fairly innocuous press statement issued last week calling for an end to hostilities. America alone blocked it.

America is taking its cue from Israel, and Israel seems to be saying they need more time.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Palestinian and Israeli representatives address UN

Israelis refer to it as mowing the grass. Taking action to reduce the threat from Hamas at regular intervals. That threat has grown. Hamas has managed to fire almost 3,000 missiles in a week.

Israel's military is now making the most of this window of opportunity to neutralise Hamas' capability. It will have an eye on its northern border too, wanting to send a stern message to the Shia militia Hezbollah, not to try the same.

Hamas may also not want the conflict to end quite yet. It is posing as the champion of Jerusalem and Palestinian rights there. That will increase its political power and ability to recruit and radicalise.

Egypt is acting as mediator and warning that Israel's targeting of Hamas leaders is not helping its efforts to broker a ceasefire.

For all the talk and handwringing in New York and elsewhere this week, military priorities are likely to dictate progress towards a cessation in violence and for now neither side seem in the mood.

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2021-05-16 18:13:12Z
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Madeleine McCann ‘killed in Portugal – not Germany’, claims prosecutor - Express

Madeleine McCann: Cressida Dick provides update on case

Madeleine disappeared in 2007 aged three during a family holiday to Portugal. Her parents continue to hold out hope she will be found alive.

The disappearance sparked a huge manhunt involving Portuguese, British and eventually German police.

According to The Mirror, German prosecutor Hans Christian Wolters is confident she died in Portugal.

He had previously said there is “concrete evidence” indicating she was killed by ‘Christian B’, a convicted German sex offender.

However, thus far Mr Wolters has declined to make this publicly available.

Maddie

Madeleine McCann disappeared in 2007 (Image: PA)

Maddie

Madeleine was on holiday in Portugal with her parents when she vanished (Image: GETTY)

‘Christian B’ is currently serving a seven-year jail sentence for the 2005 rape of a 72-year-old American woman in Portugal.

His lawyer, Friedrich Fulscher, insists he was not involved in Madeleine's disappearance.

In July 2020 German authorities investigated a Hanover allotment near where 'Christian B’ used to stay.

It was reported they were looking for any evidence, potentially including computer hard drives, connected to the case.

READ MORE: Madeleine McCann update: Detective speaks out on disappearance

Maddie

German prosecutor Hans Christian Wolters is confident Madeleine died in Portugal (Image: GETTY)

However, Mr Wolters said they did not expect to find Madeleine's body on site.

He commented: “Since Christian B did not have the allotment at the time of Maddie’s disappearance, he could not have buried a body there.”

Madeleine was on holiday in Portugal’s Algarve region, along with her parents and two younger siblings, when she disappeared.

Kate and Gerry McCann were dining at a restaurant with friends 55 meters away from the rental property.

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Madeleine McCann: Maddie to turn 18 - we live in hope, say parents [INSIGHT]
Madeleine McCann's parents 'still believe' they will see her again [HOPE]

Maddie

Madeleine vanished from a holiday complex in Portugal (Image: GETTY)

Maddie

A police officer outside the McCann's family home in 2007 (Image: GETTY)

They regularly checked in on the children and at 10pm Ms McCann noticed Madeleine was missing.

In June 2020 German prosecutors said they “assumed” Madeleine is dead.

He Wolters, from the Braunschweig Public Prosecutor's Office, commented: “We are assuming that the girl is dead.

“With the suspect, we are talking about a sexual predator who has already been convicted of crimes against little girls and he's already serving a long sentence.”

Madeleine McCann: Expert on missing person investigation

The suspect lived in the Algarve region regularly between 1995 and 2007.

Clarence Mitchell, the family’s spokesman, described the new German lead as “potentially very significant”.

He added: “Of all the thousands of leads and potential suspects that have been mentioned in the past, there has never been something as clear cut as that from not just one, but three police forces.”

The Metropolitan Police said they are continuing to treat the case as a “missing persons” investigation as they lack “definitive evidence” on whether Madeleine is alive.

Maddie

A Portuguese police officer searching near where Madeleine went missing (Image: GETTY)

British, German and Portuguese police have put up a £20,000 reward for information leading to a conviction over Madeleine's disappearance.

Last week the McCann's paid tribute to their daughter on what would have been her 18th birthday.

They said: “Happy 18th birthday Madeleine. We love you and we’re waiting for you and we’re never going to give up.”

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2021-05-16 15:55:25Z
52781596359959

Israeli PM Netanyahu vows to keep using 'full force' in Gaza as overnight airstrike death toll reaches 42 - Sky News

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said his country's military campaign in Gaza will continue with "full force", as the number killed in an overnight airstrike rose to 42.

The comments come as the UN Security Council meets to discuss the violence, with the UN's secretary general Antonio Guterres calling for an immediate end to the fighting.

Mr Netanyahu said in a televised speech: "Our campaign against the terrorist organisations is continuing with full force. We are acting now, for as long as necessary, to restore calm and quiet to you, Israel's citizens. It will take time."

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Israeli border police following violence in the Arab-Jewish town of Lod
Image: Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the Israeli military campaign in Gaza will continue with 'full force'

His comments came as Gaza health officials said 16 women and 10 children were among those killed in the airstrike - the most deadly single attack so far - bringing the number who have died in Gaza since last Monday to 190, including 54 children.

Israel's military said soon after that the deaths were "unintentional" and it had been targeting a militant tunnel system, which collapsed, causing the home to collapse as well.

Opening a meeting of the UN Security Council to discuss the ongoing conflict, the organisation's secretary general Antonio Guterres said the hostilities were "utterly appalling" and the fighting must stop immediately.

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Israel bombs top Hamas leader's home

He said "the United Nations is actively engaging all sides towards an immediate ceasefire" but warned that the violence in Gaza "only perpetuates the cycles of death, destruction and despair, and pushes farther to the horizon any hopes of coexistence and peace".

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The organisation's peace envoy Tor Wennesland called on the international community to "take action now to enable the parties to step back from the brink".

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Palestinian and Israeli representatives went next, with a further 20 ambassadors and foreign ministers due to speak as the session continues into the evening, including the UK.

Palestinian foreign minister Riyad al Malki told the Security Council: "Each time Israel hears a foreign leader speak of its right to defend itself it is further emboldened to continue murdering entire families in their sleep."

He added: "Israel is building an apartheid system against Palestinians throughout the country."

Streaks of light are seen as Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts rockets launched from the Gaza Strip towards Israel, as seen from Ashkelon, Israel May 14, 2021. REUTERS/Amir Cohen
Image: Streaks of light are seen as Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts rockets launched from the Gaza Strip towards Israel, as seen from Ashkelon

Mr Malki's Palestinian Authority has no control over Hamas and the Gaza Strip, where the militants seized power in 2007.

The Israeli ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan, said Israel's response to indiscriminate attacks by Hamas strictly adhered to international law and that the country was taking "unparalleled steps to prevent civilian casualties".

He said: "Israel uses its missiles to protect its children. Hamas uses children to protect its missiles."

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'It's like a jail cell': Growing up in Palestine

The meeting was taking place as UK prime minister Boris Johnson condemned anti-Semitism after the Met Police said it was investigating a video appearing to show racist language being shouted from a convoy of cars in the St John's Wood area of London on Sunday.

Mr Johnson tweeted: "There is no place for antisemitism in our society. Ahead of Shavuot, I stand with Britain's Jews who should not have to endure the type of shameful racism we have seen today."

Analysis: Neither side seem in the mood to stop the violence

By Dominic Waghorn, diplomatic editor

This is the third UN Security Council meeting in a week, and a UN General Assembly meeting is likely soon too, as well as plenty of US and European diplomacy.

But until both Israel and Hamas want to stop fighting, all this is unlikely to achieve much.

Even behind closed doors, the Security Council was unable to reach agreement on action last week.

With the cameras on, this latest gathering was never likely to be more successful, for all the posturing and grandstanding instead.

We are used to Russia blocking progress at the UN, normally over Syria and being lambasted for it by the US. This time it is the other way around.

Fourteen member states wanted a fairly innocuous press statement issued last week calling for an end to hostilities.

America alone blocked it.

America is taking its cue from Israel, and Israel seems to be saying they need more time.

Israelis refer to it as mowing the grass. Taking action to reduce the threat from Hamas at regular intervals.

That threat has grown. Hamas has managed to fire almost 3,000 missiles in a week.

Israel's military is now making the most of this window of opportunity to neutralise Hamas' capability.

It will have an eye on its northern border too, wanting to send a stern message to the Shia militia Hezbollah, not to try the same.

Hamas may also not want the conflict to end quite yet. It is posing as the champion of Jerusalem and Palestinian rights there.

That will increase its political power and ability to recruit and radicalise.

Egypt is acting as mediator and warning that Israel's targeting of Hamas leaders is not helping its efforts to broker a ceasefire.

For all the talk and handwringing in New York and elsewhere this week, military priorities are likely to dictate progress towards a cessation in violence and for now neither side seem in the mood.

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2021-05-16 15:41:13Z
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John Kerry: US climate envoy criticised for optimism on clean tech - BBC News

America’s climate envoy John Kerry has been ridiculed for saying technologies that don’t yet exist will play a huge role in stabilising the climate.

Speaking on the BBC’s Andrew Marr show, he said the US was leading the world on climate change - and rapidly phasing out coal-fired power stations.

But he rejected a suggestion that Americans need to change their consumption patterns by, say, eating less meat.

He said: “You don't have to give up quality of life to achieve some of the things we want to achieve.

“I’m told by scientists that 50% of the reductions we have to make (to get to near zero emissions) by 2050 or 2045 are going to come from technologies we don’t yet have.”

But his faith in unknown technologies has left some leading engineers aghast.

'Not enough time'

Julian Allwood, professor of engineering and the environment at the University of Cambridge, told BBC News: "It's virtually impossible for new energy infrastructure technologies to have a significant effect on global emissions in the time we have left to act."

He warned that with every new energy-infrastructure technology so far, it's taken 30-100 years from invention to 5% penetration of existing markets.

Woman working from home during lockdown
Getty Images

"Firstly," he said, "the new idea is developed from laboratory through increasing pilot scales to initial introduction to national systems.

“We have to solve physical and operational issues, solve problems with integration, develop legal and environmental regulations, understand financing requirements and explore social consent as the first accidents occur.

“Growth then occurs at a linear rate, as government appetite for risk is constrained, and the incumbent technology fights to avoid closure."

He said no country has ever introduced a new electricity generating technology at an average rate faster than 2% of national demand per year.

“Despite politicians' wishful thinking," he continued, "the most important innovation opportunities will be not about new technologies, but new businesses in areas such as remote working."

Dr Jen Baxter, a spokeswoman for the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, agreed that John Kerry’s timescale “seems very optimistic”.

She said some vital existing technologies such as capturing carbon from power stations and sucking CO2 directly from the air are not yet ready for mass usage.

So, rather than putting faith in start-up technologies, the world should focus on existing technologies.

“We need to make use of every technology,” she said. “It’s going to be a massive amount of work and these time frames are going to be long.”

“There needs to be lifestyle changes, too - such as getting people on to public transport.”

The prominent British engineer, Baroness Brown, said the climate crisis couldn’t be solved without eating less meat.

'Frankly ridiculous'

Some scientists, though, applauded Mr Kerry’s techno-optimism.

Solar panels in France, 2018 photo
Reuters

The UK’s former chief scientist, Professor Dave King, is a leading voice in Mission Innovation - a global initiative working to accelerate clean energy innovation.

It’s spending $25bn of public money between the 25 nations in the coalition, rising to more than $40bn by 2025.

He said: "We need regulatory measures to bring the new technologies rapidly into the market place, and carbon pricing on oil, gas and coal extraction to speed up the process."

But he, too, agreed we also need lifestyle changes - and new rules to force clean technologies on to the market.

Craig Bennett from the UK Wildlife Trusts told BBC News Mr Kerry’s remarks were “frankly ridiculous”.

He said: “Of course we will benefit from new technologies, but they are most likely to be in industries that already exist such as renewables and energy storage - rather than some widget that we can’t imagine at the moment.”

“We also need some forms of behaviour change, like walking and cycling more and eating less meat. These policies deliver health benefits anyway.”

In his interview, Mr Kerry defended the US record on combating climate change, saying President Biden was leading the charge to get to net zero.

Smoke and steam from Belchatow coal-fired power station in Poland
Reuters

He said some 58 US coal-fired power stations were slated for closure, and said it was impossible to get finance to build new ones:

"The marketplace has made a decision about coal. You couldn’t build a new coal fired power plant in the United States because you can’t finance it, nor even in Europe and other places.

“We’ve been pushing very hard for countries to begin to move away from fossil fuel and towards alternative, renewable, sustainable energy sources and I think, again, the marketplace is going to make that happen."

He said it was US policy to switch to renewable energy sources as quickly as possible: "We are moving to alternative renewable energy. Our incentives are towards renewable alternative energy. Seventy-five percent of the electricity that’s new, that came online in the last years, came online through renewables.

“So, we’re going to do what we need to do to do our fair share of this and to take a leadership role and we’re doing that now."

He rejected pessimism on climate change and said: “We’ll not only get there (to Net Zero emissions), we’ll get there sooner than people think."

Follow Roger on Twitter @rharrabin

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2021-05-16 13:06:40Z
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