Sabtu, 09 Maret 2024

Irish voters reject constitutional referendums on women and the family - Financial Times

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  1. Irish voters reject constitutional referendums on women and the family  Financial Times
  2. Irish referendums: Voters reject change in definition of family  BBC
  3. Govt looking at second major defeat in Care referendum  RTE.ie
  4. Varadkar admits defeat over bid to modernise Ireland’s constitution  The Guardian
  5. Irish government admits defeat over referendums on family and women's roles  Sky News

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2024-03-09 17:45:18Z
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Gaza aid ship expected to set sail from Cyprus - BBC

Picture of a crane loading a pallet of aid onto a shipWORLD CENTRAL KITCHEN/OPEN ARMS

A ship carrying desperately needed humanitarian aid is expected to set sail this weekend, bound for Gaza.

The Spanish vessel, Open Arms, is scheduled to depart from Cyprus - the closest EU country to Gaza - and hopes to use a newly opened shipping route.

With no functioning port and shallow waters, it is still unclear where the ship will dock when it reaches Gaza.

The UN says a quarter of the Strip's population is on the brink of famine and children are starving to death.

The ship, expected to reach Gaza in the next few days, belongs to the Spanish charity of the same name, Open Arms.

It will tow a barge loaded with 200 tonnes of food provided by US charity World Central Kitchen, Open Arms founder Oscar Camps told the Associated Press.

The ship is expected to depart Cyprus' Larnaca port this weekend, and will take around two to three days to reach an undisclosed location off the coast of Gaza, Mr Camps told the news agency.

He added that the final mile of the journey - which is about 216 nautical miles in total - would be "the most complicated operation", but added that he was not "concerned at all about security".

At the destination point, a team from the World Central Kitchen has been building a pier to receive the aid, he said. The group has 60 kitchens throughout Gaza, where it will be able to distribute the food.

"What initially appeared as an insurmountable challenge is now on the verge of realization," read a post on Open Arms' X account.

"Our tugboat stands prepared to embark at a moment's notice, laden with tons of food, water, and vital supplies for Palestinian civilians."

Picture of aid workers loading a pallet onto a ship
WORLD CENTRAL KITCHEN/OPEN ARMS

World Central Kitchen said it had been preparing for the aid trip for weeks, waiting for the shipping route to open.

The Pentagon later said it would take up to 60 days to complete and need about 1,000 troops to build - none of whom would go ashore.

The port will be able to receive large ships carrying food, water, medicine and temporary shelters, US officials said. Initial shipments will arrive via Cyprus, where Israeli security inspections will take place.

A Pentagon spokesman said the pier could help to deliver up to 2 million meals every day.

It is unclear whether, or how, the US' temporary pier and the EU's sea corridor will work together, as neither Mr Biden nor Ms Von der Leyen mentioned the other's plans.

Getting aid into the Gaza Strip has been increasingly difficult and dangerous - the World Food Programme paused its deliveries to northern Gaza last month, after its convoys endured "complete chaos and violence", the organisation said.

With land deliveries near impossible, several nations have turned to air drops, but the situation in Gaza is so dire, the drops are an inefficient way of getting supplies to people.

And on Friday there were reports that five people had been killed by a falling aid package, when its parachute failed to open properly.

Israel's military launched an air and ground campaign in the Gaza Strip after Hamas's attacks on Israel on 7 October, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 253 others were taken hostage.

More than 30,800 people have been killed in Gaza since then, the territory's Hamas-run health ministry says.

The conflict has created a growing humanitarian crisis, and the UN has warned that famine in Gaza is "almost inevitable".

At least 576,000 people across the Gaza Strip - one quarter of the population - are facing catastrophic levels of food insecurity and one in six children under the age of two in the north are suffering from acute malnutrition, a senior UN aid official warned last week.

Save the Children welcomed the recent international efforts to provide more aid into Gaza, but said children there "cannot wait" for the time it may take to build a temporary port to eat.

"They are already dying from malnutrition and saving their lives is a matter of hours or days - not weeks," the charity said in a statement.

Doctors Without Borders said the US plan for a temporary pier was a "glaring distraction from the real problem", urging Israel to facilitate the flow of supplies.

Additional reporting by Tiffany Wertheimer

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2024-03-09 03:49:06Z
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Partner of MH370 passenger believes there was 'intentional' cover up of flight's disappearance - Sky News

A woman whose partner was on the Malaysia Airlines flight that went missing in 2014 has claimed there was an "intentional effort to cover up what happened".

Ten years ago, Sarah Bajc woke up to the news that MH370 had disappeared on its way from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

The Boeing 777 had 239 people on board when it disappeared, including her partner Philip Wood.

While satellite data analysis suggested that the plane had likely crashed somewhere in the southern Indian Ocean, off the coast of western Australia, two major searches failed to make any breakthroughs.

Speaking to Sky News on Friday, Ms Bajc said that the last ten years have "been a blink, and it's also been forever because we still don't have closure".

"So even though I've moved on with my life, the other family members have all moved on with their lives, the reality is that the story has just stayed open," she added.

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From 2018: The enduring mystery of MH370

The 58-year-old said she was "certain that there was some intentional effort to cover up what happened" to flight MH370, and added: "Whether the disappearance of the plane was intentional or accidental, I don't know.

More on Mh370

"But it's absolutely true in my mind that the reason it hasn't been solved, that the mystery hasn't been solved, is because somebody doesn't want us to know what happened.

"Whether that's to cover up incompetence or bad decision making or an accident or whatever, I don't know.

"But you can't have a giant commercial aeroplane full of passengers go totally silent within minutes of taking off."

File pic: AP
Image: Malaysia, Australia and China launched an underwater search which was called off in January 2017. File pic: AP

'I don't hold a lot of hope'

Ms Bajc also said she was "delighted" to hear that there are plans to launch new searches for the flight and hopes "we can all put closure to the mystery".

Anwar Ibrahim, the Malaysian prime minister, said earlier this week that his government is willing to re-open an investigation into the disappearance of MH370 if there was a case to do so.

But Ms Bajc - who now lives in Panama with her husband Ernesto, where they run a beach resort - downplayed the new search.

"The reality is that they had 95% surety that the first targeted zone would have the plane and they didn't find the plane," she said.

"I don't hold a lot of hope because, again, I don't believe there's really any hard evidence that points to the plane having gone into the water.

"It was data points that could have easily been fabricated that they're basing all of that on."

Read more from Sky News:
The West has lost patience with Israel over aid into Gaza
British teen driving for Ferrari ahead of Saudi Grand Prix

File pic: AP
Image: 239 people were onboard MH370 when it disappeared. File pic: AP

'Good night, Malaysian three seven zero'

Around 40 minutes after MH370 took off on 8 March 2014, Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah signed off the plane's last transmission with "good night, Malaysian three seven zero" as they entered Vietnamese air space.

The plane's transponder was turned off shortly after, meaning it could not be easily tracked.

But military radar showed the plane left its flight path to fly back over northern Malaysia and Penang Island.

It then flew out into the Andaman Sea towards the tip of the Indonesian island of Sumatra, before turning south where all contact was lost.

Malaysia, Australia and China launched an underwater search for the plane, which was called off in January 2017.

US firm Ocean Infinity, contracted by Kuala Lumpur, also carried out a three-month search in 2018 to no avail.

Since 2014, more than 30 pieces of suspected debris have been collected along the coast of Africa and on islands in the Indian Ocean.

Only three wing fragments were confirmed to be from MH370, which have been used in drift pattern analysis.

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2024-03-08 22:04:21Z
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Haiti crisis: heavy gunfire reported close to Port-au-Prince’s national palace - The Guardian

Heavy gunfire was seen on Friday near Haiti’s national palace in its capital of Port-au-Prince, according to reports by news agency EFE, as political turmoil sparked by prime minister Ariel Henry’s absence continued.

Haiti entered a state of emergency last Sunday after fighting escalated, armed gangs broke inmates out of prison and an estimated 10,000 people were displaced while Henry was in Kenya seeking a deal for an international force to fight Haiti’s gangs.

US ABC News reported that gangs had launched a large-scale assault against multiple government buildings in or near downtown Port-au-Prince early on Friday evening, according to a law enforcement source.

The source said the attack was coordinated and swift, with different groups simultaneously targeting multiple government buildings including the presidential palace, the interior ministry and a police headquarters for Haiti’s western district, which includes Port-au-Prince.

The broadcaster said people witnessed intense gunfire and heard large explosions, and that hundreds fled the area as the gangs engaged in fierce battles against police.

Two police stations near the national palace were attacked, CNN reported.

Henry, who is also acting president, was in Kenya when the gang onslaught began on 29 February and has been unable to return to Port-au-Prince. The US earlier this week called on him to expedite a political transition as armed gangs seek his ouster.

A special forces police officer turned gang kingpin called Jimmy “Barbecue” Chérizier has said the mission of the criminal groups is to overthrow Haiti’s unpopular prime minister and liberate the country’s 11.7 million citizens from what he calls his anti-democratic rule.

On Friday, Guy Philippe, who helped lead a coup in Haiti in 2004 and returned to the Caribbean island last year after serving a prison sentence in the US, demanded that Henry step down and said he wanted to become president.

“He should resign,” Philippe, a 56-year-old former police chief, said in an interview with Reuters. “I think he should stay where he is now … and let Haitians decide their fate.”

Philippe said he would seek to implement an amnesty for gang leaders were he to take power.

Henry’s spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In 2004, Philippe was one of the main leaders in the successful overthrow of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. He won a Senate seat in 2016 but was arrested and extradited to the US before he could be sworn in.

Philippe was deported from the US to Haiti in November after serving six years of a prison sentence for money laundering derived from drug trafficking.

Since his return to Haiti, Philippe has traveled the country rallying support and calling for the government to step down.

Reuters contributed to this report

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2024-03-09 05:34:00Z
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Jumat, 08 Maret 2024

MH370 pilot's final message before Malaysia Airlines plane mysteriously vanished - The Independent

The final words of a pilot onboard the Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 that went missing ten years ago have been revealed in a new documentary.

First Officer Fariq Abdul Hamid, who was a co-pilot with Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah, spoke the final words to ground controllers in Malaysia before the plane vanished into Vietnamese airspace, the BBC documentary Why Planes Vanish: The Hunt for MH370, shows.

Mr Fariq said “alright, goodnight” 12 minutes after the initial communication system went offline, and just two minutes before the final transponder was deactivated.

Today marks 10 years to the day (8 March) the aircraft with 227 passengers and 12 crew members disappeared.

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2024-03-08 13:42:00Z
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State of the Union: Biden draws election battle lines in fiery speech - BBC

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President Joe Biden delivered a fiery State of the Union address on Thursday, taking repeated swipes at Donald Trump and covering the broad themes of his re-election campaign.

Mr Biden used the term "my predecessor" to refer to Mr Trump 13 times in a speech that lasted more than an hour.

He accused his likely election opponent of "bowing down" to Russia and criticised him over the Capitol riot.

Mr Biden also covered immigration, abortion, the economy and Gaza.

The atmosphere in the House chamber was raucous at times, with loud cheering from Democrats and heckling from some Republicans.

It was a spectacle more typical of a political convention than a State of Union address - a constitutionally mandated report that is usually heavy on pageantry and policy.

But this is an election year and the stakes for Mr Biden were high. He was feisty and confrontational as he sought to draw the battle lines for his nascent campaign.

Taking aim at Trump

Unsurprisingly, many of his barbs were aimed at Mr Trump given he is almost certain to be his opponent in November's general election.

"My predecessor failed the most basic duty any president owes the American people - the duty to care," he said in reference to Mr Trump's handling of the Covid pandemic. "That is unforgivable."

He criticised Mr Trump for his recent comments about Russia and Nato, and said that he sought to "bury the truth" about the 6 January 2021 attack on the US Capitol.

He blamed him for the Supreme Court decision to overturn the Roe v Wade ruling which guaranteed abortion rights and for blocking bipartisan immigration reforms.

Mr Trump, meanwhile, had promised to react in real time to the speech on his Truth Social platform. "Biden is on the run from his record and lying like crazy to try to escape accountability for the horrific devastation he and his party have created," he wrote.

"They continue the very policies that are causing this horror show to go," he said.

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Mr Biden aggressive approach on Thursday may have been born, at least in part, out of necessity. At 81, he is the oldest president in US history and has been beset by questions about his age and mental acuity.

His approval ratings are the lowest of any modern president seeking re-election. He is in a statistical dead heat with Mr Trump, however, who also is viewed negatively by voters.

Even when Mr Biden addressed his age, he did so with a jab at Mr Trump, who at 77 is only a few years younger than him.

"I know it may not look like it, but I've been around for a while," he said. After rattling off a list of positive attributes he said defined America, he added a kicker.

"Some other people my age see a different story: an American story of resentment, revenge and retribution."

A punchy exchange on immigration

Mr Biden regularly ad-libbed responses to what was at times a hostile audience on the Republican side of the chamber. He quipped, parried and expressed mock surprise at their outbursts.

When the topic turned to immigration, a subject of political vulnerability for the president, he was once again ready to engage. But here, he stumbled.

After Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene accused him of ignoring the murder of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley, allegedly by an undocumented Venezuelan immigrant, Mr Biden held up a button with her name on it - one Ms Greene had given him as he walked in.

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After seemingly mispronouncing her name as "Lincoln" Riley, he said she was murdered by an "illegal" - a term criticised by immigrant-rights groups.

Mr Biden went on to call for Republicans to support the bipartisan immigration legislation passed by the Senate and accused Mr Trump of "playing politics" by opposing the bill for electoral gain. The damage, however, may have been done.

A sales pitch for November

When Mr Biden wasn't throwing haymakers at his opponent, he sought to highlight what he characterised as a record of accomplishment during his first term and outline a sales pitch for his re-election.

"I inherited an economy that was on the brink," he said, "and now our economy is the envy of the world."

Figures on the American economy have been trending up for months now. The public perception of the economy, however, has been much darker.

Mr Biden nodded at this split, calling the US economic revival "the greatest story never told".

Whether the president's words will be enough to change minds, however, remains to be seen.

It was a speech geared toward the American middle class - the voters of moderate means who make up the bulk of the electorate.

It included a variety of new proposals, most of which would require congressional legislation to enact - an unlikely scenario unless Democrats retake the House of Representatives in November.

He pitched a tax credit for new home buyers, who have seen their purchasing power eroded by higher mortgage rates. He also called for expanding a cap on prescription drug spending to every American who has health insurance and raising taxes on corporations.

Walking the line on Gaza

Mr Biden opened his speech with a call for military aid to Ukraine, but the bulk of his discussion of foreign policy came towards the end when he turned his attention to the Middle East.

The Gaza war has divided Democrats, with a vocal portion of the president's liberal flank calling for the US to use every means at its disposal to push for a ceasefire. Some took to the Washington streets on Thursday evening in an unsuccessful attempt to block the president's motorcade from reaching the Capitol.

Mr Biden said his administration was working towards a ceasefire that would last "at least 6 weeks," and he detailed a new plan - announced earlier in the day - for the US to construct a temporary seaport in Gaza to allow humanitarian aid to enter by ship.

He had some harsh words for Israel, calling the civilian casualties in Gaza "heartbreaking" and saying it had a "fundamental responsibility" to protect innocent lives.

Mr Biden's speech, because it was delivered without any significant stumbles or gaffes, is a hurdle cleared for the president - and its content could serve as a guide to how his campaign plans to sell the American public on another four years of Democratic governance.

At the very least, it will probably convince nervous Democrats that their presumptive nominee is ready to go toe-to-toe with his Republican opponent in November.

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2024-03-08 05:21:56Z
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Biden to announce plan for US military to set up temporary Gaza aid port - Al Jazeera English

United States President Joe Biden will announce a plan to create a new port in Gaza to increase deliveries of humanitarian aid to the war-ravaged enclave, senior US officials told reporters.

The officials said Biden will make the announcement on Thursday night during his State of the Union speech, an annual address delivered to members of the US Congress.

Under the plan, the US military would set up the pier off the coast of Gaza, but US troops would not be on the ground, the officials said.

They did not provide further logistics of the plan, but one official said the US has “unique capabilities” and can do things from “just offshore”.

A United Nations spokesperson, Stephane Dujarric, said his organisation welcomed the announcement in a statement to the press.

“Any way to get more aid into Gaza, whether by sea or airdrop, is obviously good,” Dujarric told reporters. “We need more entry points, and we need a larger volume of aid to come in by land.”

However, he emphasised that the international community needs to focus on large-scale food deliveries by land, in order to address the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza.

An unnamed Israeli official, speaking to the Reuters news agency, likewise said Israel “fully supports” the construction of a “temporary dock” in Gaza.

The announcement has come as President Biden continues to face outrage for his administration’s political and material support for Israel in the war on Gaza.

The Biden administration has refused to call for a complete ceasefire and has continued to supply weapons to Israel for its war.

Israel’s bombardment and ground operations have killed at least 30,800 Palestinians since October 7, when the Palestinian group Hamas launched an attack on southern Israel that killed at least 1,139 people.

However, amid increasing political pressure, the administration has shifted its tone slightly in recent weeks.

Last week, Vice President Kamala Harris called for a temporary “ceasefire” for the first time, although she was only referring to a pause in fighting while Hamas and Israel negotiated a hostage exchange.

Over the weekend, the US began airdropping aid to Gaza, where Jamie McGoldrick, the UN’s Humanitarian Coordinator for the Occupied Palestinian Territory, told reporters on Wednesday that “children are dying from hunger”.

The UN has said that a state of famine in Gaza is “almost inevitable” and could be declared as early as next week. McGoldrick said that, while air drops and naval deliveries help to distribute aid, an increase in reliable ground deliveries is more urgently needed.

Aid groups have accused Israeli forces of restricting ground deliveries, both into and within Gaza. But Israel has denied it is impeding relief efforts.

‘Destroying the food system’

In a post on the social media platform X on Thursday, Sarah Leah Whitson, the executive director of the Washington-based Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN), called the latest Biden plan one of many “workarounds to Israel’s deliberate [and] persistent blockade of aid to Gaza”.

Earlier in the day, Michael Fakhri, the UN special rapporteur on the right to food, also warned that Israel’s actions go beyond short-term impediments, representing a broader assault on Gaza’s stability.

“Israel is not only denying and restricting the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza. Israel is destroying the food system in Gaza,” he said in a speech to the UN Human Rights Council.

Fakhri called it a “starvation campaign”.

For their part, the senior US officials said the new port “will provide the capacity for hundreds of additional truckloads of assistance each day”.

One official added that “significant capability will take a number of weeks to plan and execute”. Transporting supplies will also involve establishing a maritime corridor from Cyprus.

The officials said Israel had been informed about the plan, and the two countries were working together on security requirements.

They added the US was also coordinating with “partners and allies”, including the UN and aid organisations.

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2024-03-07 19:15:18Z
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