Jumat, 21 Mei 2021

Israel PM Benjamin Netanyahu threatens 'new level of force' if Hamas launches attack, as ceasefire appears to hold - Sky News

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has threatened "a new level of force" if Hamas breaks the ceasefire agreed on Friday, as it appeared to have so far held.

Speaking after the truce came into effect at 2am (12am UK time) on Friday, Mr Netanyahu warned: "If Hamas thinks we will tolerate a drizzle of rockets, it is wrong."

He vowed to respond with "a new level of force against any expression of aggression against communities around Gaza and any other part of Israel".

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Palestinians celebrate in Gaza as the ceasefire comes into effect at 2am on Friday

Eleven days of violence between the two sides came to an end after Egypt and the US helped broker a peace deal.

Mr Netanyahu announced it had accepted Egypt's deal late on Thursday, but said that "the reality on the ground will determine the future of the campaign".

Hamas also confirmed it would agree, but rocket salvoes continued and Israel carried out at least one airstrike until the ceasefire started in the early hours.

Pic: AP
Image: A Palestinian worker starts clearing the streets in Gaza City. Pic: AP
Beit Hanoun - northern Gaza Strip. Pic: AP
Image: Rubble is cleared in Beit Hanoun, northern Gaza Strip. Pic: AP

The fighting, which engulfed Israel, Gaza and the West Bank, was the worst seen in the region since 2014.

More on Gaza

Most of the fatalities were Palestinian - at least 230, according to Gaza health officials - while 12 died in Israel.

The ceasefire faced its first test this afternoon, when tens of thousands of Palestinians attended Friday Prayers at the Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem - where tensions first began.

Palestinians threw stones at Israeli police, who fired stun grenades and tear gas in return, in an echo of the scenes that triggered the 11-day day conflict.

Twenty Palestinians were arrested at the gates, although it is not clear what started the clashes at the mosque - a holy site for both Muslims and Jews - who refer to it as the Temple Mount.

An Israeli Police foreign spokesman confirmed that "riots broke out after Friday prayers", adding that "hundreds of people threw rocks and petrol bombs at police officers".

They said Israeli forces "dispersed rioters" and there will be "heightened security continuing in the area".

People run as the Israeli police fire tear gas and grenades outside the Al Aqsa Mosque
Image: People run as the Israeli police fire tear gas and grenades outside the Al Aqsa Mosque
JERUSALEM
Image: Tens of thousands of Palestinians rallied at the compound after Friday prayers

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson tweeted to welcome news of the ceasefire.

He wrote: "Leaders in the region must now work to find a durable solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that prevents terrorism, ends the cycle of violence and delivers a sustainable and just peace."

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab described it as "an important step to ending the cycle of violence and loss of civilian life".

He added: "Hamas must end all attacks on Israel. It is also now important for Israel to facilitate rapid humanitarian access in and out of Gaza."

Several airlines suspended flights to the region after two airports were targeted, but Virgin Atlantic said on Friday it expected to resume services from London to Tel Aviv on Monday.

Israel is on the UK government's "green travel list", which means people arriving from there do not have to quarantine on return.

Streets in Gaza were bustling after the ceasefire came into force
Image: Streets in Gaza were bustling after the ceasefire came into force

Following news of the ceasefire on Friday morning, Palestinians left their homes and returned to the streets of Gaza, as some shouted "Allahu akbar" and others whistled from their balconies in celebration.

Cars packed the roads, with drivers honking their horns and waving flags from the windows. Some men fired rifles into the air, while others set off firecrackers.

Mosque loudspeakers hailed what they described as "the victory of the resistance achieved over the occupation during the battle of the Sword of Jerusalem".

One man clutching an AK-47 assault rifle told Reuters: "Our fingers are on the triggers, and we are ready to fight again, but now we will celebrate with our people."

Spontaneous celebrations also broke out in east Jerusalem and across the occupied West Bank.

Palestinians take to the streets to celebrate a ceasefire agreement between the Israeli government and the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas. Pic: AP
Image: The Palestinian flag is seen out of a car window in Gaza. Pic: AP
Palestinians take to the streets to celebrate a ceasefire agreement between the Israeli government and the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas. Pic: AP
Image: Palestinians take to the streets in Gaza. Pic: AP

The ceasefire came days after US President Joe Biden called for a "significant de-escalation" and followed mediation bids by Egypt, Qatar and the UN.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken promised to visit the region in the coming days to "to discuss recovery efforts and working together to build better futures for Israelis and Palestinians," according to the state department.

From the White House, Mr Biden sent his "sincere condolences to all the families, Israeli and Palestinian, who have lost loved ones" in the fighting.

A family in Ashkelon sit in the kitchen of their house damaged by a rocket from Gaza
Image: A family in Ashkelon sit in the kitchen of their house damaged by a rocket from Gaza

Mr Biden said Israel's Iron Dome defence system, developed in collaboration with the US, had saved "countless lives" since the crisis began and that he had pledged his "full support" to Mr Netanyahu to help replenish it and ensure his country's security in future.

The Iron Dome was used to intercept many of the thousands of rockets Hamas launched at Israel, whilst Israel retaliated with days of heavy airstrikes on the Gaza Strip.

Mr Biden said that the US would work with the UN and other international partners to provide "rapid humanitarian assistance" and assist with "reconstruction efforts" in Gaza.

A destroyed building in Jabalia, northern Gaza. Pic: AP
Image: A destroyed building in Jabalia, northern Gaza. Pic: AP

Back in the region, both sides appear to be framing the ceasefire as a victory.

The Israeli cabinet announcement said the truce had been agreed unanimously and that the campaign had made "great achievements" - some of them "unprecedented".

Hamas said its "resistance" was a "new victory and a new equation".

Its representative in Lebanon, Osama Hamdan, said the group, viewed as a terrorist one in several countries, had obtained guarantees from mediators that the attacks on Gaza would stop.

It also claimed guarantees over the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood in Jerusalem and Al-Aqsa mosque - the issues largely blamed for starting the fighting.

Now the fighting has subsided and Palestinians can return to their homes, Hamas faces the daunting challenge of rebuilding a territory already suffering from poverty, widespread unemployment and a raging coronavirus outbreak.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Israeli border police following violence in the Arab-Jewish town of Lod
Image: Benjamin Netanyahu has been criticised over the truce

The aerial bombardment means Palestinians now have limited or no access to water, according to the UN and aid agencies.

Gaza was already an impoverished region but officials said electricity was down to three to four hours per day, with 16,800 housing units damaged.

About 1,800 are unfit to live in and 1,000 were destroyed, according to the housing ministry.

The World Health Organisation said Israeli attacks have damaged at least 18 hospitals and clinics - with one health facility destroyed. Nearly half of essential drugs have also run out.

Meanwhile, Save the Children said 50 schools have been damaged across the area, and at least six have been destroyed. The advocacy group added that the education of almost 42,000 children will be disrupted while repairs take place.

The UK government has said it will provide a £3.2m aid package for civilians in Gaza.

Israel has repeatedly insisted it goes to great lengths to avoid civilian casualties, including giving warning of strikes, and claims Hamas uses people as "human shields".

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Children getting trauma care killed in Gaza strikes

Meanwhile, Mr Netanyahu has come in for criticism from some political rivals - with one calling the ceasefire "embarrassing".

Sky's correspondent Mark Stone, who is in the region, said the elusive two-state solution was as far away as ever but that both sides are likely to gain politically.

Mr Netanyahu can portray himself as the "defender of the nation" after previously fighting for his political life, Stone said.

Hamas, meanwhile, will look to gain an advantage over Fatah - which runs the West Bank - in claiming to be the defender of the Palestinian cause.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Israeli and Palestinian leaders have a responsibility to address the root causes of the conflict.

He added: "Gaza is an integral part of the future Palestinian state and no effort should be spared to bring about real national conciliation that ends the division."

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2021-05-21 11:57:49Z
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Israel PM Benjamin Netanyahu threatens 'new level of force' if Hamas launches attack, as ceasefire appears to hold - Sky News

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has threatened "a new level of force" if Hamas breaks the ceasefire agreed on Friday, as it appeared to have so far held.

Speaking after the truce came into effect at 2am (12am UK time) on Friday, Mr Netanyahu warned: "If Hamas thinks we will tolerate a drizzle of rockets, it is wrong."

He vowed to respond with "a new level of force against any expression of aggression against communities around Gaza and any other part of Israel".

Eleven days of violence between the two sides came to an end after Egypt and the US helped broker a peace deal.

Mr Netanyahu announced it had accepted Egypt's deal late on Thursday, but said that "the reality on the ground will determine the future of the campaign".

Hamas also confirmed it would agree, but rocket salvoes continued and Israel carried out at least one airstrike until the ceasefire started in the early hours.

Pic: AP
Image: A Palestinian worker starts clearing the streets in Gaza City. Pic: AP
Beit Hanoun - northern Gaza Strip. Pic: AP
Image: Rubble is cleared in Beit Hanoun, northern Gaza Strip. Pic: AP

The fighting, which engulfed Israel, Gaza and the West Bank, was the worst seen in the region since 2014.

More on Gaza

Most of the fatalities were Palestinian - at least 230, according to Gaza health officials - while 12 died in Israel.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson tweeted to welcome news of the ceasefire.

He wrote: "Leaders in the region must now work to find a durable solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that prevents terrorism, ends the cycle of violence and delivers a sustainable and just peace."

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab described it as "an important step to ending the cycle of violence and loss of civilian life".

He added: "Hamas must end all attacks on Israel. It is also now important for Israel to facilitate rapid humanitarian access in and out of Gaza."

Several airlines suspended flights to the region after two airports were targeted, but Virgin Atlantic said on Friday it expected to resume services from London to Tel Aviv on Monday.

Israel is on the UK government's "green travel list", which means people arriving from there do not have to quarantine on return.

Israel and Hamas both claimed victory as the ceasefire took hold.

Early on Friday morning, Palestinians left their homes and returned to the streets of Gaza, as some shouted "Allahu akbar" and others whistled from their balconies in celebration.

Cars packed the roads, with drivers honking their horns and waving flags from the windows. Some men fired rifles into the air, while others set off firecrackers.

Streets in Gaza were bustling after the ceasefire came into force
Image: Streets in Gaza were bustling after the ceasefire came into force

Mosque loudspeakers hailed what they described as "the victory of the resistance achieved over the occupation during the battle of the Sword of Jerusalem".

One man clutching an AK-47 assault rifle told Reuters: "Our fingers are on the triggers, and we are ready to fight again, but now we will celebrate with our people."

Spontaneous celebrations also broke out in east Jerusalem and across the occupied West Bank.

Palestinians take to the streets to celebrate a ceasefire agreement between the Israeli government and the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas. Pic: AP
Image: The Palestinian flag is seen out of a car window in Gaza. Pic: AP
Palestinians take to the streets to celebrate a ceasefire agreement between the Israeli government and the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas. Pic: AP
Image: Palestinians take to the streets in Gaza. Pic: AP

The ceasefire will face its first test this afternoon, when tens of thousands of Palestinians will attend Friday Prayers at the Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem - where tensions first began.

A holy site for both Jews and Muslims, prayers at the mosque could be accompanied by protests or celebrations, which could spark tensions with police similar to the ones seen that led to the fighting.

The ceasefire came days after US President Joe Biden called for a "significant de-escalation" and followed mediation bids by Egypt, Qatar and the UN.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken promised to visit the region in the coming days to "to discuss recovery efforts and working together to build better futures for Israelis and Palestinians," according to the state department.

From the White House, Mr Biden sent his "sincere condolences to all the families, Israeli and Palestinian, who have lost loved ones" in the fighting.

A family in Ashkelon sit in the kitchen of their house damaged by a rocket from Gaza
Image: A family in Ashkelon sit in the kitchen of their house damaged by a rocket from Gaza

Mr Biden said Israel's Iron Dome defence system, developed in collaboration with the US, had saved "countless lives" since the crisis began and that he had pledged his "full support" to Mr Netanyahu to help replenish it and ensure his country's security in future.

The Iron Dome was used to intercept many of the thousands of rockets Hamas launched at Israel, whilst Israel retaliated with days of heavy airstrikes on the Gaza Strip.

Mr Biden said that the US would work with the UN and other international partners to provide "rapid humanitarian assistance" and assist with "reconstruction efforts" in Gaza.

"We will do this in full partnership with the Palestinian Authority, not Hamas, in a manner that does not permit Hamas to simply restock its military arsenal," he said.

"I believe the Palestinians and Israelis equally deserve to live safely and securely and enjoy equal measures of freedom, prosperity and democracy."

A destroyed building in Jabalia, northern Gaza. Pic: AP
Image: A destroyed building in Jabalia, northern Gaza. Pic: AP

Back in the region, both sides appear to be framing the ceasefire as a victory.

The Israeli cabinet announcement said the truce had been agreed unanimously and that the campaign had made "great achievements" - some of them "unprecedented".

Hamas said its "resistance" was a "new victory and a new equation".

Its representative in Lebanon, Osama Hamdan, said the group, viewed as a terrorist one in several countries, had obtained guarantees from mediators that the attacks on Gaza would stop.

It also claimed guarantees over the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood in Jerusalem and Al-Aqsa mosque - the issues largely blamed for starting the fighting.

Now the fighting has subsided and Palestinians can return to their homes, Hamas faces the daunting challenge of rebuilding a territory already suffering from poverty, widespread unemployment and a raging coronavirus outbreak.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Israeli border police following violence in the Arab-Jewish town of Lod
Image: Benjamin Netanyahu has been criticised over the truce

The aerial bombardment means Palestinians now have limited or no access to water, according to the UN and aid agencies.

Gaza was already an impoverished region but officials said electricity was down to three to four hours per day, with 16,800 housing units damaged.

About 1,800 are unfit to live in and 1,000 were destroyed, according to the housing ministry.

The World Health Organisation said Israeli attacks have damaged at least 18 hospitals and clinics - with one health facility destroyed. Nearly half of essential drugs have also run out.

Meanwhile, Save the Children said 50 schools have been damaged across the area, and at least six have been destroyed. The advocacy group added that the education of almost 42,000 children will be disrupted while repairs take place.

The UK government has said it will provide a £3.2m aid package for civilians in Gaza.

Israel's high-tech missile defence system has helped keep damage on its side comparatively low, shooting down many of the rockets in mid-air.

Among the 12 dead in Israel were a five-year-old boy, a 16-year-old girl and a soldier.

In Gaza, 65 children were killed, according to its health ministry.

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Children getting trauma care killed in Gaza strikes

Israel has repeatedly insisted it goes to great lengths to avoid civilian casualties, including giving warning of strikes, and claims Hamas uses people as "human shields".

Hamas and the smaller militant group Islamic Jihad said at least 20 of its fighters were killed, but Israel put it at least 130.

Meanwhile, Mr Netanyahu has come in for criticism from some political rivals - with one calling the ceasefire "embarrassing".

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Israel's UK ambassador: 'Millions of Israelis have been in bomb shelters'

Sky's correspondent Mark Stone, who is in the region, said the elusive two-state solution was as far away as ever but that both sides are likely to gain politically.

Mr Netanyahu can portray himself as the "defender of the nation" after previously fighting for his political life, Stone said.

Hamas, meanwhile, will look to gain an advantage over Fatah - which runs the West Bank - in claiming to be the defender of the Palestinian cause.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Israeli and Palestinian leaders have a responsibility to address the root causes of the conflict.

He added: "Gaza is an integral part of the future Palestinian state and no effort should be spared to bring about real national conciliation that ends the division."

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2021-05-21 10:30:00Z
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Coronavirus: Spain to lift restrictions for UK and Japanese travellers - BBC News

Benidorm beach, Sep 2020
Getty Images

Spain has said it is officially lifting restrictions for UK travellers from Monday, when a decree takes effect.

The government says the UK and Japan will be on a list of countries whose residents are not affected by restrictions on non-essential travel to the EU. They will not need a PCR test.

But the UK government still strongly advises against non-essential travel to Spain and most other EU countries.

UK tourists going to Spain will still have to quarantine on their return.

The EU is currently deciding on an expanded "white list" of countries whose citizens can enter the EU freely.

Only seven, with very low Covid infection rates, are on the list now.

Those countries are: Australia, Israel, New Zealand, Rwanda, Singapore, South Korea and Thailand.

The BBC has been told a final EU decision on expanding the list has been delayed for another two weeks.

Portugal already open

Portugal is the main destination on the UK's short "green" list of countries that are free of the quarantine requirement. Tourism in Portugal and Spain relies heavily on British visitors in the summer, and travellers from England, Scotland and Wales began flying to Portugal last Monday.

Spain will allow people from other non-EU countries who have been vaccinated against Covid-19 to enter the country from 7 June, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said. They will include US citizens.

Mr Sánchez said the lifting of these curbs should allow Spain's summer tourism to reach 30-40% of 2019 levels.

The EU has decided that visitors should be allowed to come from countries with an incidence rate of below 75 cases per 100,000 people.

Under those terms, UK travellers would be eligible but there are ongoing concerns about the Indian Covid-19 variant.

Some EU countries are hesitating over the UK, as they want to see how the surge of British cases related to the Indian variant plays out.

EU envoys have also recommended that non-essential travel should be allowed from outside the EU for people who have been fully vaccinated. However, they say it should be up to member states to decide on measures they impose, such as Covid tests or quarantine.

EU agrees travel certificate

On Thursday EU politicians agreed on the technicalities of an EU Digital Covid Certificate - essentially a health passport for EU citizens to travel inside the 27-nation bloc. It will show a traveller's vaccination record.

The EU has been racing to get the certificate ready for summer tourism, as countries emerging from months of lockdown are desperate to revive their hospitality industries.

The EU certificate is now "well on track to be ready end of June, as planned," an official statement said.

Thwarted by bureaucracy

Currently UK citizens travelling to amber list countries - that is, most of the EU - can face unexpected border obstacles, despite completing the formalities.

Lis Nixon from Oxfordshire told the BBC on Thursday that she was turned away at the Iberia desk at Heathrow, despite having an urgent family reason to visit Spain. Her son, daughter-in-law and grandson live in Estella, Spain, and needed her there, she said.

"The woman at the desk said I needed authorisation from the Spanish consulate. There's nothing in all of the government advice that says I need to do that. When I try phoning the consulate, it says the mailbox is full. The phone number says you need to book an appointment, so you just go round in circles.

"So, I couldn't get through this morning. The woman at the airport said they'd been only having this problem with UK passport holders," she said.

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2021-05-21 09:37:03Z
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Palestinians celebrate ceasefire with Israel after 11 days of bombing - The Times

Flag-waving Palestinians took to the streets of Gaza overnight to celebrate a ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas that came into force in the early hours.

A last flurry of rockets and airstrikes followed the announcement of the deal, approved by a late-night meeting of the Israeli security cabinet. Hamas had already said that it was prepared to stop firing missiles at Israel if its opponent did the same.

From 2am the sound of bombs was replaced by the sound of fireworks. Crowds in Gaza gathered outside the home of Mohammed Deif, the one-armed, one-eyed leader of Hamas’s military wing who had once again escaped repeated Israeli attempts to kill him.

The deal contained no elements beyond a mutual agreement to stop hostilities

The deal contained no elements beyond a mutual agreement to stop hostilities

ABED RAHIM KHATIB/GETTY IMAGES

The reaction in Israel was more muted. The Israeli right wing accused Binyamin

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2021-05-21 08:10:00Z
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Kamis, 20 Mei 2021

Biden administration targets crypto transfers in tax crackdown plan - Financial Times

Cryptocurrency transfers of more than $10,000 will have to be reported to US tax authorities under new Biden administration proposals that come amid a tightening of the regulatory environment for digital coins.

The US proposal, unveiled a day after China signalled a regulatory crackdown of digital currencies, is part of a broad set of proposals aimed at curbing tax evasion.

The price of bitcoin, the most actively traded cryptocurrency, fell 5 per cent after the US announced its proposal.

It followed a chaotic few hours of bitcoin trading on Wednesday when China’s central bank warned financial institutions about accepting cryptocurrencies as payment or offering related services and products. The price of bitcoin fell as much as 30 per cent after the comments before eventually recovering.

Jay Powell, chair of the US Federal Reserve, weighed in on cryptocurrencies on Thursday, saying that US authorities should be “paying attention to private-sector payments innovators who are currently not within the traditional regulatory arrangements applied to banks, investment firms, and other financial intermediaries”.

He singled out financial operators offering so-called stablecoins, those whose value is tied to the dollar, as posing particular risks to financial stability.

The US Treasury said cryptocurrency posed a “significant detection problem by facilitating illegal activity broadly including tax evasion”, echoing comments from the European Central Bank this week, which said that cryptocurrencies’ “potential use for illicit purposes” were a cause for concern.

The US proposal is part of a Treasury report showing how Joe Biden’s White House plans to close the so-called “tax gap” by strengthening the Internal Revenue Service. The report is the latest in a series of White House proposals that would lead to the wealthiest Americans paying significantly more tax.

The Biden administration intends to close the tax gap — the difference between taxes owed to the US government and those actually paid — by investing nearly $80bn in the IRS and expanding the revenue service’s ability to identify wealthy individuals who avoid paying taxes owed.

The proposals include new disclosure requirements for financial institutions, which would need to share information with the IRS about the total amounts flowing into and out of bank accounts, in addition to existing reporting.

According to the Treasury, the overall “tax gap” was $600bn last year, and is forecast to rise to some $7tn in the next decade if left unaddressed. The Treasury said roughly 99 per cent of taxes due on wages were paid each year, but compliance on “less visible” sources of income that were more likely to be associated with higher earners — such as proprietorship or rental incomes — was estimated to be far lower.

Treasury estimates suggest the proposed IRS overhaul would raise $700bn in extra tax revenue in the next 10 years, and $1.6tn in the following decade.

The Treasury said under the president’s proposals, audit rates would not rise for people making less than $400,000 a year.

The proposals are part of Biden’s $1.8tn American Families Plan, an ambitious legislative package that, if approved by Congress and signed into law, would usher in a major expansion of federal funding for child care, higher education and family and medical leave in the US.

The White House has proposed paying for the plan, in part, with roughly $1.5tn in tax increases on wealthy Americans — including a near doubling of levies on capital gains for people earning more than $1m. The proposed tax increases have sparked a backlash among some critics on Wall Street and in corporate America.

The plans to crack down on tax evasion may prove more politically palatable for lawmakers in Washington, particularly Republicans who have raised red flags about any reversal to Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cuts.

The American Families Plan, set out by the White House last month, is the third component of Biden’s far-reaching economic agenda, following the $1.9tn fiscal stimulus bill, which was signed into law in March, and the $2.3tn infrastructure proposals that are being debated on Capitol Hill.

Republicans have largely rejected the president’s proposals, accusing Democrats of wasteful spending that risks driving up inflation. GOP senators have offered a nearly $600bn counterproposal to the president’s infrastructure package, though Republican lawmakers have in recent days suggested they are open to a package with a price tag closer to between $800bn and $900bn.

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2021-05-20 18:46:30Z
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Israel agrees ceasefire with Hamas in Gaza after hundreds of deaths - BBC News - BBC News

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2021-05-20 21:42:45Z
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What's behind the migrant crisis between Morocco and Spain? | Inside Story - Al Jazeera English

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2021-05-20 17:30:02Z
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