Jumat, 27 Januari 2023

Gunman kills at least 5 people in East Jerusalem attack - Al Jazeera English

A gunman opened fire and killed at least seven people at a synagogue in East Jerusalem before being shot, raising fears of another round of deadly violence between the Israelis and Palestinians.

After Friday’s shooting, the Magen David Adom emergency service said it was treating 10 wounded, some in critical condition.

“What we understand happened was a car pulled up at the front of a synagogue, a gunman got out and opened fire,” Al Jazeera’s James Bays reported from the scene. “The figures we have now are seven people dead, including a 15-year-old boy.”

A second person was possibly in the car and the Israeli authorities were now searching that individual, Bays said.

There was no initial claim of responsibility. The emergency response agency reported a total of 10 gunshot victims, including a 70-year-old man and a 14-year-old boy.

Israeli police said the attack occurred in Neve Yaakov, a Jewish area in East Jerusalem. TV footage showed several victims lying on the road outside the synagogue being tended to by emergency workers.

“I heard a lot of bullets,” Matanel Almalem, an 18-year-old student who lives near the synagogue, told AFP news agency.

A police statement said there was “terror attack in a synagogue in Jerusalem … The shooting terrorist was neutralised [killed]”.

The attack followed a deadly Israeli raid in the occupied West Bank on Thursday in the Jenin refugee camp. Nine Palestinians were killed, including an elderly woman, after dozens of Israeli soldiers attacked a house containing suspected fighters, leading to several hours of intense fighting.

Gaza fighters then fired rockets and Israel carried out air raids overnight, but the exchange was limited.

‘A natural response’

In Gaza, Hamas spokesperson Hazem Qassem told the Reuters news agency Friday’s attack was “a response to the crime conducted by the occupation in Jenin and a natural response to the occupation’s criminal actions”. He stopped short of claiming the shooting.

The Palestinian Islamic Jihad also praised but did not take responsibility for the attack.

Israeli military raids have become commonplace over the last year with at least 200 Palestinians – fighters and civilians – killed.

Israeli civilians and troops have also been killed in attacks by Palestinians in Israel and the occupied territories.

Friday’s shooting came amid heightened tensions. Palestinians marched in anger as they buried the last of the Palestinians killed by Israeli troops the day earlier.

Scuffles between Israeli forces and Palestinian protesters erupted after the funeral for a 22-year-old Palestinian north of Jerusalem and elsewhere in the occupied West Bank.

Crowds of Palestinians waved the flags of both Fatah, the party that controls the Palestinian Authority, and Hamas, which rules Gaza. In the streets of the town called al-Ram, masked Palestinians threw stones and set off fireworks at Israeli police who responded with tear gas.

Israel’s far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir reportedly attended the scene soon after Friday’s attack.

There was no immediate response from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Israel’s opposition leader, former Prime Minister Yair Lapid, called it “horrific and heartbreaking”.

The shooting was the deadliest on Israelis since a 2008 attack killed eight people in a Jewish seminary, according to Israel’s foreign ministry. Given the location and timing, it threatened to trigger a tough response from Israel.

Defence Minister Yoav Gallant scheduled a meeting with his army chief and other top security officials.

Months of violence in the West Bank have heightened concerns the already unpredictable conflict may spiral out of control, triggering a broader confrontation between Palestine and Israel.

Israeli security forces deploy at the site of Friday’s attack [Ahmad Gharabli/AFP]

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2023-01-27 20:15:00Z
1756175329

Palestinian militants 'ready to die' as prospect of all-out war increases after West Bank clashes - Sky News

The alleyways that run inside the Balata refugee camp are narrow, claustrophobic and full of uncollected rubbish.

Posters celebrating dead militants are stuck to the walls. Children are everywhere - more than half the population of the camp is under 25.

We were escorted to meet fighters from Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigade, one of the largest and oldest militant groups in the West Bank.

They are a proscribed terror group by Israel, the EU and US, but not the UK.

Out front, I turned a corner and they were there - dressed all in black, M16 assault rifles in hand and balaclavas covering their faces.

They are young men, heavily armed and say they are ready to die defending their land.

We made our introductions and then moved down another alleyway - an Israeli military lookout post was on the hill above us; snipers watch every move in the camp below.

"We're seeing an escalation by the [Israeli] occupation forces across camps in the West Bank, especially in Jenin and Balata," one of the militants tells me.

"Most of the operations are carried out by the Israeli special forces. Yesterday, two of our men were killed in clashes when they entered inside the camp."

The fighters are relaxed. This is their stronghold.

CCTV cameras seem to be everywhere, they joke it's like Paris or London; the militia has its own reconnaissance unit that watches for undercover Israeli special forces entering the camp.

Violent clashes have been more frequent in recent months - 2022 was the deadliest year since 2005 and already 2023, only a few weeks old, is more deadly still.

After nine Palestinians, mostly militants, were killed in an Israeli counter-terror raid on Thursday, the prospect of another all-out war is closer.

One of those killed was a 61-year old woman, Magda Obaid, caught in the crossfire.

The IDF says it's investigating her death, but the list of unexplained civilian fatalities is growing.

"I think because of the policies of the right-wing Israeli government there will be an escalation in the West Bank," the militant from Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades predicts.

Ibrahim Ramadan, governor of Nablus
Image: Ibrahim Ramadan, governor of Nablus, says people have 'no hope'
Poster in old city
Image: A poster of dead militants hangs above a fruit and veg stall

Read more:
Israel shoots down rockets fired from Gaza after deadly raid
Tensions rise as Israel hardens policies towards Palestinians

Talk of a new uprising, a third intifada, which has been so often threatened in recent years, is emerging again.

"I think that there is an intifada coming," Ibrahim Ramadan, governor of Nablus tells me.

"Why? There is not any hope among my people. The Palestinian people need hope, small hope for their freedom."

The deputy mayor of Nablus, Dr Husam Shakhshiris, is more sanguine but equally blunt in his assessment of the current situation.

"It [Nablus] is occupied by the state of Israel. The Israeli army is entering the city everyday," he says.

"We have two military camps on top [of the surrounding hills], we have seven settlements surrounding Nablus city connected by bus routes, and it's easy for the Israelis to close the city and prevent the movement in and out of the city."

As we walk around the city together, Dr Husam is clearly popular. Residents stop to greet him.

Unlike the militants we met, he has the wisdom of age and is thoughtful and considered in his words, but no less damning of Israel.

"How bad is it?" I ask him.

Dr Husam Shakhshiris
Image: Nablus's deputy mayor says the current situation is the worst he's ever seen

"This is bad. I see all the time in the past that there was hope to have a peace solution, to have a two-state solution implemented, especially after Oslo," says Dr Husam.

"Now we don't see this hope, we don't see a peaceful solution and we are stuck in these contours created by the policies of the state of Israel. They don't see or recognise our national right of self-determination.

"It is the worst situation in my life."

Violence in Israel and the West Bank goes in cycles.

Right now, any prospect of peace talks, or even a two-state solution, feels a long way off.

Neither side is in the mood to talk or to compromise, and so for many Palestinians fighting seems like the only route to more freedoms.

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2023-01-27 19:09:35Z
1753941782

Auckland floods: New Zealand city declares emergency after torrential rain - BBC

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New Zealand's largest city has declared a state of emergency after torrential rain prompted widespread flooding and evacuations.

The downpour in Auckland on Friday shifted houses, stalled traffic and cut power to homes and businesses.

The New Zealand Herald reported that a body had been found in Wairau Valley on Auckland's north shore.

An Elton John concert, expected to be attended by 40,000 fans, was cancelled minutes before it was due to start.

Footage online showed people trapped in waist-deep floodwater and rescuers carrying out evacuations on kayaks.

Other pictures showed grocery items floating down the aisles of several flooded supermarkets.

"Infrastructure and emergency services alike have been overwhelmed by the impacts of the storm," said Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown.

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Local media reported that fire crews have fielded over 1,000 calls for assistance. The New Zealand Defence Force is also helping with evacuations.

Flights into Auckland, as well as rail and ferry services within the city, have been delayed or cancelled due to the weather.

Major roads were also blocked off by the floods, causing long traffic queues on highways, with several traffic accidents reported.

Auckland Emergency Management said on Twitter at 18:00 local time (06:00 GMT) that "severe weather" was affecting the region, with several areas affected by significant flooding.

Two hours later, the national weather authority estimated that 15cm of rain had fallen in the previous 11 hours. The record for a 24-hour period stands at 16.2cm.

The authority has forecast heavy rains in various parts of Auckland for at least the next five days.

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2023-01-27 10:39:43Z
1755297433

Tyre Nichols: Memphis braces for police video release - BBC

Candlelight vigil in memory of Tyre Nichols at the Tobey Skate Park in Memphis, TennesseeGetty Images

The city of Memphis is bracing for the release on Friday of a video of an arrest that led to a motorist's death.

Tyre Nichols, 29, died days after the 7 January encounter with five ex-police officers who now face murder charges.

Bodycam video of the incident shows the officers "defied humanity" in their interactions with Nichols, the city's police chief said.

"You're going to see a disregard for human life," Memphis Police Chief Cerelyn Davis told CNN.

The video of the incident is scheduled to be released in four separate clips on Friday evening local time.

Ms Davis and an attorney for the family both likened the video to 1991 footage of Los Angeles police officers beating black motorist Rodney King, an event that caused outrage around the world and forced reforms in the LAPD.

"I would say it's about the same, if not worse," said Ms Davis, who is the first black woman to serve as police chief in Memphis.

Mr Nichols' mother, RowVaughn Wells, told CNN in a separate interview on Friday that she felt like she had been living "a nightmare" since her son's death.

She said he was beaten "to a pulp" by the officers.

The Tennessee city is said to be on edge since the incident and police there have increased patrols.

From left: Demetrius Haley, Desmond Mills, Jr, Emmitt Martin III, Justin Smith and Tadarrius Bean
MPD

Mr Nichols, a black man, was stopped by five police officers, who are also black, on his way home after taking photos of a sunset at a local park , an attorney for the family said.

Officials say he was suspected of reckless driving, though Ms Davis said on Friday that has not been substantiated.

A first confrontation occurred as Mr Nichols attempted to flee on foot when officers approached his car, the local authorities said.

They said a second confrontation happened when officers tried to arrest him.

Mr Nichols later complained of shortness of breath and was taken to hospital, police said, where he was listed in a critical condition.

A lawyer for Mr Nichols' family said the bodycam footage showed Mr Nichols being pepper-sprayed, struck with a stun gun, restrained and kicked.

All five of the officers face charges of second-degree murder, aggravated assault, aggravated kidnapping, official misconduct and official oppression.

Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley, Desmond Mills Jr, Emmitt Martin III and Justin Smith were booked into jail on Thursday. They all joined the Memphis Police Department in the last six years, and were fired last week.

'Failing of basic humanity'

President Biden released a statement on Thursday appealing for calm as authorities prepare to release the footage on Friday evening, local time.

"I join Tyre's family in calling for peaceful protest," he said. "Outrage is understandable, but violence is never acceptable."

Nichols's mother also called for peaceful demonstrations at a vigil for her son on Thursday.

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The Nichols family and their legal team privately reviewed the video footage of the arrest earlier this week.

"He was a human piñata," lawyer Antonio Romanucci said of its contents. "It was an unadulterated, unabashed, non-stop beating of this young boy for three minutes."

In a news conference on Thursday, lawyers for two of the ex-officers said their clients planned to fight the charges.

"No-one out there that night intended for Tyre Nichols to die," said a lawyer for one of the men.

Officials said Mr Nichols "succumbed to his injuries" on 10 January, but provided no further details. An official cause of death has not yet been disclosed.

His family say he will be remembered as a "good kid" who enjoyed photography and skateboarding.

The father-of-one, who worked at the parcel delivery company FedEx, had Crohn's disease and suffered severe weight loss, relatives say.

Reverend Al Sharpton, a US civil rights leader, told the BBC the alleged crime was particularly painful because of the officers' race.

"We fought to put blacks on the police force," he said. "For them to act in such a brutal way is more egregious than I can tell you."

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"I do not believe these five black police officers would have done this had he been a young white man," he added.

California-based trial lawyer Adanté Pointer said instances of black men being killed by black officers rarely make the news.

"This case exemplifies that it is not simply a white versus black issue, but instead that this is a power dynamic that plays itself out no matter the race of the police officers," he told the BBC.

The FBI and the Department of Justice have opened a civil rights investigation into Mr Nichols' death.

The officers involved are members of a special team known as Scorpion - short for "Street Crimes Operation to Restore Peace in Our Neighborhoods".

The unit, which was created to police high-crime areas, is now under review, along with all of the city's specialised units, according to the city's police chief.

Protests have also broken out this week in the southern city of Atlanta, Georgia, where some are demonstrating against the establishment of a police training facility in the city and the killing by law enforcement of an environmental protester who is alleged to have shot a state trooper.

The demonstrations led Georgia's Republican Governor Brian Kemp to declare a state of emergency, which mobilises up to 1,000 National Guard troops to respond to the protests.

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2023-01-27 16:36:07Z
1732556083

Israel hits militant sites in Gaza after rockets fired following deadly raid - BBC

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Israel has carried out air strikes on Gaza in response to rocket fire as tensions soar in the wake of a deadly army raid in the occupied West Bank.

Six rockets were fired, reports from Israel say, with Israel attacking what it said were militant sites.

There were no reports of injuries on either side.

Militants warned of a response after nine Palestinians were killed in the Jenin raid, which Israel said was to thwart "imminent terrorist attacks".

Two rockets were fired around midnight (22:00 GMT Thursday) but were intercepted by Israel's anti-rocket Iron Dome system, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said. Air strikes swiftly followed, targeting what the IDF said was an "underground rocket manufacturing site" in the central Gaza Strip belonging to the Islamist militant group Hamas, which governs the territory.

A second salvo of rockets was fired hours later, landing in open ground, shot down or falling back down in Gaza, the military said. Israel subsequently hit a site which it said was "a significant centre of Hamas terrorist activities" in the northern Gaza Strip.

A leader of the militant Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) in Gaza said the group had fired the rockets, Reuters news agency reported. Israel's policy is to hold Hamas responsible for all attacks from there.

The overnight exchange followed the deadliest incident of its kind in years after Israeli forces entered the West Bank city of Jenin to arrest a PIJ "terror squad". The IDF said it was acting on "precise intelligence" about plans by the cell to attack Israelis.

Forces surrounded a building in the city's urban refugee camp where an intense gun battle erupted. Israel said three armed suspects were "neutralised" after they opened fire, while a fourth suspect surrendered. The IDF said troops were shot at by other Palestinian gunmen and returned fire, hitting targets.

PIJ and Hamas said their fighters had targeted the troops with gunfire and improvised explosive devices.

The Palestinian health ministry said two civilians, including a 61-year-old woman, were among those killed. Twenty people were also wounded, four of them seriously, it said.

The Palestinian presidency accused Israel of a "massacre" and later announced it had ended co-ordination with Israel on security matters.

A 10th Palestinian was meanwhile shot and killed during a confrontation with Israeli troops in the town of al-Ram, near Jerusalem, as residents protested against the Jenin raid, Palestinian officials said.

At least 30 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces in the West Bank so far this year, including militants and civilians, as the military continues operations there.

Last year in the West Bank more than 150 Palestinians were killed, nearly all by Israeli forces. The dead included unarmed civilians, militant gunmen and armed attackers.

A series of attacks by Palestinians and Israeli Arabs targeting Israelis, as well as militant gunfire at troops during arrest raids, meanwhile killed more than 30 people including civilians, police and soldiers. 

Map of Israel and the occupied West Bank, showing the location of Jenin

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2023-01-27 15:06:37Z
1753941782

Hidden heels help President Putin stand taller | News - The Times

President Putin has become the subject of jibes on social media after he was pictured apparently wearing a pair of heels to increase his height.

Putin, who is thought to be about 5ft 7in, posed for photographs with students of Lomonosov Moscow State University.

In the images, which show Putin among mostly taller young people, his shoes appear to have extra-thick heels.

Putin’s shoes had noticeably chunky heels

Putin’s shoes had noticeably chunky heels

REUTERS

Putin and his predecessor for one term, Dmitry Medvedev, have long been the subject of reports about attempts to conceal their stature.

When Medvedev was being groomed for the presidency in 2008, a journalist in Yekaterinburg said that officials granting accreditation for a visit had urged press photographers to shoot the politician from a low angle. Spin doctors also advised Medvedev to take

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2023-01-27 00:01:00Z
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Tyre Nichols: Biden urges calm over Memphis police murder case - BBC

Mr Nichols taking a selfieReuters

President Joe Biden is urging protests in Tennessee to remain peaceful as officials plan to release video of an arrest that led to a motorist's death.

Bodycam video of the encounter with Tyre Nichols, 29, will be published on Friday and lawyers for his family said it will show him being severely beaten.

Five now-fired police officers face murder charges after Mr Nichols died days after a traffic stop 7 January.

The city is said to be on edge and police there have increased patrols.

"I'm sickened by what I saw," Tennessee Bureau of Investigation director David Rausch said on Thursday after reviewing the footage, describing the officers' actions as "absolutely appalling".

From left: Demetrius Haley, Desmond Mills, Jr., Emmitt Martin III, Justin Smith and Tadarrius Bean
MPD

Mr Nichols, a black man, was stopped by five police officers, who are also black, on his way home after taking photos of a sunset at a local park, an attorney for the family said.

Officials say he was suspected of reckless driving.

A first confrontation occurred as Mr Nichols attempted to flee on foot when officers approached his car, the local authorities said.

They said a second confrontation happened when officers tried to arrest him.

Mr Nichols later complained of shortness of breath and was taken to hospital, police said, where he was listed in a critical condition.

A lawyer for Mr Nichols' family said the bodycam footage showed Mr Nichols being pepper-sprayed, struck with a stun gun, restrained and kicked.

He likened the incident to the notorious footage of Los Angeles police officers beating black motorist Rodney King more than 30 years ago.

All five of the officers face charges of second-degree murder, aggravated assault, aggravated kidnapping, official misconduct and official oppression.

Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley, Desmond Mills Jr, Emmitt Martin III and Justin Smith were booked into jail on Thursday. They all joined the Memphis Police Department in the last six years, and were fired last week.

'Failing of basic humanity'

President Biden released a statement on Thursday appealing for calm as authorities prepare to release the footage on Friday evening, local time.

"I join Tyre's family in calling for peaceful protest," he said. "Outrage is understandable, but violence is never acceptable."

The city's police chief Cerelyn Davis, the first black woman in that role in Memphis, also called for calm amid what she said was a "failing of basic humanity toward another individual".

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The Nichols family and their legal team privately reviewed the video footage of the arrest earlier this week.

"He was a human piñata," lawyer Antonio Romanucci said of its contents. "It was an unadulterated, unabashed, non-stop beating of this young boy for three minutes."

In a news conference on Thursday, lawyers for two of the ex-officers said their clients planned to fight the charges.

"No-one out there that night intended for Tyre Nichols to die," said a lawyer for one of the men.

Officials said Mr Nichols "succumbed to his injuries" on 10 January, but provided no further details. An official cause of death has not yet been disclosed.

His family say he will be remembered as a "good kid" who enjoyed photography and skateboarding.

The father-of-one, who worked at the parcel delivery company FedEx, had Crohn's disease and suffered severe weight loss, relatives say.

Reverend Al Sharpton, a US civil rights leader, told the BBC the alleged crime was particularly painful because of the officers' race.

"We fought to put blacks on the police force," he said. "For them to act in such a brutal way is more egregious than I can tell you."

This video can not be played

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

"I do not believe these five black police officers would have done this had he been a young white man," he added.

California-based trial lawyer Adanté Pointer said instances of black men being killed by black officers rarely make the news.

"This case exemplifies that it is not simply a white versus black issue, but instead that this is a power dynamic that plays itself out no matter the race of the police officers," he told the BBC.

The FBI and the Department of Justice have opened a civil rights investigation into Mr Nichols' death.

The officers involved are members of a special team known as Scorpion - short for "Street Crimes Operation to Restore Peace in Our Neighborhoods".

The unit, which was created to police high-crime areas, is now under review, along with all of the city's specialised units, according to the city's police chief.

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2023-01-27 03:30:24Z
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