Rabu, 13 Maret 2024

Freed Israeli hostage demands world do more for those still held in Gaza - BBC

Itay Regev

An Israeli hostage freed from Gaza three months ago has accused the world of forgetting those still held by Hamas and urged the Israeli government to do whatever it takes to bring them home.

Itay Regev, 19, told the BBC he was held in "horrific" conditions by "very, very vicious" captors and he did not think he would get out alive.

He was kidnapped from the Nova music festival with his sister and a friend.

Talks on a ceasefire and hostage exchange have been ongoing for weeks.

But as yet there is no deal, with reported sticking points including Hamas's demand for a permanent ceasefire and Israeli troop withdrawal from Gaza, which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called "delusional".

However, Itay - who was released along with his sister, Maya, and 103 other hostages in return for some 240 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails during a brief truce in November - is clear about what needs to happen.

"I think we should do anything we possibly can to get them out of there, whatever the cost... It's people's lives," he said, speaking to the BBC in London in his first UK interview.

"I'm sure if anyone had their child kidnapped, they wouldn't really care about what price needed to be paid. We need to return the hostages at any cost."

About 130 hostages, including Itay's friend Omer, are still being held in Gaza. Israeli officials have said they believe about 30 of those still in Gaza are dead.

Itay is in London to raise their plight with British MPs - he said he was there to "scream their cries from Gaza" - and wants the international community to do more to secure their release.

"The hostages have been there for five months now. The answer is unequivocally, no they're not doing enough," he said.

"For five months not to see the sunlight and you don't know what's happening with your family, for five months to be in horrific conditions and hungry... They have to be taken out of there as quickly as possible. They have the horrible feeling of not knowing what their fate will be from one second to the next."

Describing his 54 days of captivity, Itay said he had to come to terms with the fact that he might be killed.

"We were very, very hungry. I didn't have a shower for 54 days. My captors were very, very vicious. They didn't care. I had wounds in my legs, big holes in my legs.

"And you lived there in a horrific sense of fear. Every second that you live with this feeling is a terrible feeling, that you don't really know if you're going to wake up in the morning, or in a minute, if a missile is going to fall on you, if they're going to come in with a Kalashnikov and start spraying us with bullets. The conditions are very, very difficult there."

Israeli troops inspect brunt cars in aftermath of nova festival attack
Reuters

The war began when Hamas gunmen attacked southern Israel on 7 October, killing about 1,200 people and seizing 253 hostages. More than 31,200 people have been killed in Gaza since then, the Hamas-run health ministry says.

During their early morning assault, Hamas attackers stormed the Nova music festival site near the Israel-Gaza perimeter fence.

More than 360 young partygoers were shot, beaten or burnt to death. Another 40 were taken hostage, including Itay.

He remembers hearing rockets and shooting as gunmen encircled the festival, followed by screaming.

"We went in a vehicle trying to escape the place and after five minutes, we encountered a van of terrorists spraying all the vehicles with bullets without any mercy. I got shot in my leg. My sister also got shot in the leg," he said.

"And the terrorists got out of the van. They pulled me out, they tied my hands, and simply started driving into Gaza."

He said he thought he would be murdered when he was taken, with Hamas fighters making throat-slitting gestures at him.

"I saw my sister Maya injured and crying. Maya also that day said goodbye to me and told me if I come out of this alive, tell our parents that she loves them. This is a day I will never forget for the rest of my life."

Initially, he was taken to a house with a tunnel entrance inside and then, he believes, to a hospital.

"We entered Gaza and the terrorists started shouting and screaming and celebrating. It was like a big party. They brought us into the house and in the middle of that house there was a shaft. They made us go down into it."

He said he was taken to a hospital where a "very, very anxious" doctor and several Hamas fighters were present. The doctor took the bullet from his leg without any anaesthetic or painkillers, he said.

"They put the forceps into my leg and they pulled out the bullet without anaesthetics. They told me to be quiet because if I wasn't quiet they'll kill me. In all that time there was more abuse, slaps to the face, spitting."

Itay and Maya after their release
Reuters

He was separated from Maya, who was also given medical treatment. Her dangling foot was re-attached in surgery, but sideways, at an unnatural angle.

But they still managed to communicate. Maya's request to see her brother was refused by her captors, but they passed on a note from her. Itay wrote back and they communicated in this way throughout their ordeal.

Maya, who was unable to walk when she was released, is now undergoing extensive rehabilitation on her leg.

Itay, who turned 19 last week, is happy to have his freedom but struggles when others like his friend Omer are still held hostage there.

"Why is Omer still there and I'm here? Sometimes I feel bad about it. I would simply do anything to bring him back," he said.

"I was there with him and I know exactly how he is feeling and I want to shout his cry on his behalf because he can't do it himself. He's helpless."

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2024-03-13 17:29:46Z
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US House passes bill that could ban TikTok nationwide - BBC

TikTok content creators gather outside the Capitol on 22 March 2023Getty Images

The US House of Representatives has passed a landmark bill that could see TikTok banned in America.

It would give the social media giant's Chinese parent company, ByteDance, six months to sell its controlling stake or the app will be blocked in the US.

While the bill passed overwhelmingly in a bipartisan vote, it still needs to clear the Senate and be signed by the president to become law.

Lawmakers have long held concerns about China's influence over TikTok.

ByteDance is based in Beijing and is subject to a national security law requiring it to share data with Chinese officials.

Mike Gallagher, a Wisconsin Republican who co-authored the bill, said the US could not "take the risk of having a dominant news platform in America controlled or owned by a company that is beholden to the Chinese Communist Party".

TikTok has tried to reassure regulators that it has taken steps to ensure the data of its 150 million users in the US has been walled off from ByteDance employees in China.

However, an investigation by the Wall Street Journal in January found the system was still "porous", with data being unofficially shared between TikTok in the US and ByteDance in China. High-profile cases, including one incident where ByteDance employees in China accessed a journalist's data to track down their sources, have stoked concerns.

After the vote on Wednesday, a spokesperson for the company accused lawmakers of jamming through a "ban" following what they called a "secret" process.

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Speaking ahead of the vote, Hakeem Jeffries - the top Democrat in the House - welcomed the bill, saying it would decrease "the likelihood that TikTok user data is exploited and privacy undermined by a hostile foreign adversary".

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said the chamber would now review the legislation.

Its prospects in the upper chamber of Congress are unclear in the wake of Republican White House candidate Donald Trump speaking out against the bill.

The former president, who tried to ban the app during his term in office, changed his position after a recent meeting with Republican donor Jeff Yass, who reportedly owns a minor stake in ByteDance.

Mr Trump's opposition was echoed by some House members on Wednesday. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican, wrote on social media that the bill could allow Congress to force the sale of other corporations by claiming to be protecting US data from foreign adversaries.

Some Democrats are also opposed to a ban, fearing it could alienate the app's youthful userbase as the party struggles to retain its hold over younger voters.

Hakeem Jeffries
Getty Images

But the leaders of the Senate intelligence committee welcomed the House vote. Mark Warner, a Democrat, and Marco Rubio, a Republican, said they were determined to shepherd the bill through the chamber.

"We are united in our concern about the national security threat posed by TikTok - a platform with enormous power to influence and divide Americans whose parent company ByteDance remains legally required to do the bidding of the Chinese Communist Party," they said in a statement.

After the vote, TikTok appeared to renew its push to have users lobby Congress, sending another notification urging them to contact their representatives. A similar move last week saw congressional offices bombarded with calls, a move that some staffers told the BBC had hardened opposition to the company.

Outside the White House on Wednesday a handful of supporters gathered to protest against the bill. Tiffany Yu, a young disability advocate from Los Angeles, told the BBC the platform was vital to her work.

"Fifteen years ago I only dreamed of reaching 30 to 40 people," she says. Now, she has millions. Another demonstrator, Ophelia Nichols, highlighted the bill's negative impact on US businesses.

"Shame on them, at the House," she said.

Content creator Mona Swain, 23, said her earnings from the app were paying her mother's mortgage and for her siblings' college educations.

"To be put out of work at such a crazy time in my life and just in a lot of other creators' lives, it's really, really scary right now," Ms Swain told Reuters.

If the bill does manage to secure approval in the Senate, President Joe Biden has promised to sign it as soon as it lands on his desk, which could prompt a diplomatic spat with China.

ByteDance would have to seek approval from Chinese officials to complete a forced divestiture, which Beijing has vowed to oppose. Foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said on Wednesday that the move would "come back to bite the US".

"Although the United States has never found evidence that TikTok threatens US national security, it has not stopped suppressing TikTok," he told reporters.

"This kind of bullying behaviour that cannot win in fair competition disrupts companies' normal business activity, damages the confidence of international investors in the investment environment, and damages the normal international economic and trade order."

But White House Spokesperson Karine Jean Pierre insisted that the bill merely sought to ensure that ownership of major technology platforms operating in the US "wouldn't be in the hands of those who can exploit them".

Even if ByteDance does secure approval to sell its stake in TikTok, it is unclear whether any of its competitors have the funding to launch a bid for the platform. The company has previously valued the app at around $268bn. The price tag could scare off some investors.

But analysts told the BBC there would be plenty of potential buyers in the US. What deal might ultimately succeed is another question, given the cost and anti-monopoly concerns weighing on the tech sector.

"All the big social media companies would be interested but I think they would face a lot of anti-trust hurdles… There are other firms in the social media space that are smaller like Snapchat that would be interested but wouldn't be able to afford it," Emarketer analyst Jasmine Enberg told the BBC.

When the Trump administration ordered a sale in 2020, some of the biggest firms in the US emerged to explore bids, which then reportedly valued the firm at about $50bn.

Microsoft ultimately lost out to a team that included Walmart and software giant Oracle, led by Larry Ellison and Safra Catz, who had ties with the Trump administration. The deal fell apart amid legal challenges and the change-over to a new administration.

Today, TikTok's reach and advertising revenue have increased significantly. Research firm Emarketer estimates TikTok will bring in about $8.66bn in ad revenue from the US this year, compared with less than $1bn in 2020.

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2024-03-13 20:02:18Z
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Russia 'prepared' for nuclear war, warns Vladimir Putin - Financial Times

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  1. Russia 'prepared' for nuclear war, warns Vladimir Putin  Financial Times
  2. Putin makes another rambling threat: What is the truth behind Russia’s nuclear arsenal?  The Independent
  3. How many nuclear weapons does Russia have and who controls them?  Reuters
  4. Putin Says Russian Nuclear Weapons ‘More Advanced’ Than in U.S.  The Moscow Times
  5. Putin compares western elites to 'VAMPIRES' who 'fill their bellies with human flesh'  GB News

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2024-03-13 11:34:16Z
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Navalny ally Leonid Volkov vows to continue fight against Putin after hammer attack in Vilnius - The Guardian

Leonid Volkov, a longtime aide to the late Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, has vowed to continue the struggle against Russian President Vladimir Putin after being attacked with a hammer outside his home in Lithuania.

“We will work and we will not give up,” he said in a video clip posted on Telegram early on Wednesday, claiming that the attack that left him with a broken arm was a “characteristic bandit hello” from Putin’s henchmen.

Volkov, 43, was briefly hospitalised after the assault late on Tuesday, which sparked outrage from the Lithuanian government.

“The man attacked me in the yard, hit me on the leg about 15 times. The leg somehow is OK. It hurts to walk ... However, I broke my arm,” Volkov said in the Telegram post. “They literally wanted to make a schnitzel out of me.”

Volkov is one of Russia’s most prominent opposition figures and was a close confidant of Navalny, working as the late leader’s chief of staff and as chair of his Anti-Corruption Foundation until 2023.

Navalny spokeswoman Kira Yarmysh earlier said that “someone broke a car window and sprayed teargas in his [Volkov’s] eyes” before hitting him with a hammer.

The attack comes almost a month after the sudden death of Navalny in an Arctic prison, which Volkov and Navalny’s widow Yulia blamed directly on the Russian president.

The day before he was attacked, Volkov wrote on social media: “Putin killed Navalny. And many others before that”, echoing similar claims made by Navalny’s allies, as well as US president Joe Biden.

Hours before the attack Volkov also told independent Russian news outlet Meduza that he was worried for his safety after Navalny’s death. “The key risk now is that we will all be killed. Why, it’s a pretty obvious thing,” the outlet quoted him as saying.

Images published by the Navalny team after the attack showed Volkov’s face and legs covered in blood, while another photo showed a car with its window smashed.

Lithuanian police spokesperson Ramunas Matonis confirmed to the news agency AFP that a Russian citizen had been assaulted near his home in the capital, Vilnius, at around 10pm on Tuesday.

The suspects had not been identified and more details about the assault were expected on Wednesday morning, he said.

Lithuania’s foreign minister, Gabrielius Landsbergis, described the reported attack as “shocking”.

“News about Leonid’s assault are shocking. Relevant authorities are at work. Perpetrators will have to answer for their crime,” Landsbergis wrote on X.

Volkov had recently urged Russians to turn out in big numbers for an election day protest ahead of the upcoming presidential elections.

The incident marks the first attack on Navalny’s allies since they left Russia more than three years ago. Volkov and other key members of the Navalny team have lived in Lithuania since Russian authorities classified Navalny’s groups as “extremist” organisations in 2021. Most of Navalny’s closest allies are on Moscow’s wanted list and would face long-term prison sentences if they entered Russia.

Berlin police last year also opened an investigation into the suspected poisoning of two independent Russian journalists visiting the city for a conference organised by the Russian Kremlin critic Mikhail Khodorkovsky.

Agence France-Presse contributed to this report

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2024-03-12 22:04:00Z
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Biden and Trump set for election rematch after securing party nominations - BBC

Viewers watch a 2020 presidential debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump. The two will likely face off again in the 2024 US presidential election.Getty Images

US President Joe Biden and his predecessor Donald Trump have both passed the delegate thresholds to clinch their parties' nominations for the election in November.

Four states, one American territory and Democrats living abroad held their primaries on Tuesday.

The result means US voters face a rematch of the 2020 presidential election in eight months' time.

The nominations will be made official at party conventions this summer.

The 81-year-old president said on Tuesday evening that he was "honoured" voters had backed his re-election bid "in a moment when the threat Trump poses is greater than ever".

Citing positive economic trends, he asserted the US was "in the middle of a comeback" but faced challenges to its future as a democracy, as well as from those seeking to pass abortion restrictions and cut social programmes.

"I believe that the American people will choose to keep us moving into the future," Mr Biden said in a statement from his campaign.

Incumbency gave Mr Biden a natural advantage and he faced no serious challengers for the Democratic nomination.

Despite persistent concerns from voters that his age limits his ability to perform the duties of the presidency, the party apparatus rallied around him.

Meanwhile, Mr Trump, 77, remains very popular with the Republican voter base, which has propelled him to victory in primary after primary over well-funded rivals.

His campaign for a second term in the White House has zeroed in on stricter immigration laws, including a pledge to "seal the border" and implement "record-setting" deportations.

Graphic showing delegates won in Republican race

Mr Trump has also vowed to fight crime, boost domestic energy production, tax foreign imports, end the war in Ukraine and resume an "America first" approach to global affairs.

Tuesday night's results do not come as a shock, as both men have dominated their races so far.

Both their re-nominations seemed all but predetermined, despite polling that indicates Americans are dissatisfied with the prospect of another showdown between Mr Biden and Mr Trump in November.

The US presidential primaries and caucuses are a state-by-state competition to secure the most party delegates.

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More on the US election

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The Democrats and the Republicans have slightly different rules for their primaries, but the process is essentially the same.

Each state is allocated a certain share of party delegates, which are awarded either as a whole to the winning candidate or proportionally, based on the results.

A Republican candidate must secure at least 1,215 of their party's delegates during the primary season to win their presidential nomination, while a Democrat must secure 1,968.

On Tuesday, Republicans held primaries in Mississippi, Georgia and Washington State, and a caucus in Hawaii.

Democrats, meanwhile, held primaries in the states of Georgia, Washington and Mississippi, as well as in the Northern Mariana Islands and for Democrats living abroad.

Graphic showing delegates won in Democratic race

Mr Biden and Mr Trump's main competitors had dropped out before Tuesday's primary contests, so the results had been all but certain.

Former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley, Mr Trump's last remaining rival, dropped out earlier this month after losing 14 states to Mr Trump on Super Tuesday.

Though several more states have yet to hold their primary contests, with Mr Trump and Mr Biden over the delegate threshold, the 2024 general election is now effectively under way.

The US presidential election will be held on 5 November 2024.

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2024-03-13 03:43:34Z
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Ukraine knocks out Russian refinery in major attack - EURACTIV

Ukraine pounded targets in Russia on Tuesday (12 March) with dozens of drones and rockets in an attack that inflicted serious damage on a major oil refinery and sought to pierce the land borders of the world’s biggest nuclear power with armed proxies.

Russia and Ukraine have both used drones to strike critical infrastructure, military installations and troop concentrations in their more than two-year war, with Kyiv hitting Russian refineries and energy facilities in recent months.

Russia said Ukrainian proxies had sought to cross the Russian border in at least seven attacks that Russian forces had repelled.

The Russian-speaking Ukrainian proxies said they had breached the border, a claim denied by Russia.

In one of the biggest Ukrainian drone attacks on Russia to date, Moscow said it downed 25 Ukrainian drones over regions including Moscow, St. Petersburg, Belgorod, Kursk, Bryansk, Tula and Oryol. Waves of drone attacks continued through the day, the defence ministry said.

Russian officials reported attacks on energy facilities, including a fire at Lukoil’s NORSI refinery and a drone destroyed on the outskirts of the town of Kirishi, home to Russia’s second-largest oil refinery.

Gleb Nikitin, governor of the Nizhny Novgorod region, said emergency services were working to put out a blaze at the NORSI refinery.

“A fuel and energy complex facility was attacked by unmanned aerial vehicles,” Nikitin said on Telegram.

Industry sources told Reuters on condition of anonymity that the main crude distillation unit (AVT-6) at NORSI was damaged in the attack, which means that at least half of the refinery’s production is halted. Lukoil declined to comment.

NORSI refines about 15.8 million tonnes of Russian crude a year, or 5.8% of total refined crude, according to industry sources.

It also refines about 4.9 million tonnes of gasoline, 11% of Russia’s total, 6.4% of diesel fuel, 5.6% of fuel oil and 7.4% of the country’s aviation fuel, according to industry sources.

Hitting Russian energy

Striking Russian oil facilities is a problem for President Vladimir Putin as he faces off against the West over Ukraine, with domestic gasoline prices sensitive ahead of a 15-17 March presidential election.

Russia imposed a six-month ban on gasoline exports on 1 March.

Along with Iran, Saudi Arabia and the US, Russia has vast energy reserves but has, since oil was discovered in the wilds of Western Siberia in the 1960s, often relied on Western technology to exploit and refine its crude.

The Kremlin said the Russian military was doing everything necessary and that what it calls its military operation in Ukraine would continue.

Russia says it has destroyed more than 15,000 Ukrainian-launched drones since the start of the war.

Border attack

Russia said its forces prevented incursions from Ukraine in the western Belgorod and Kursk regions and inflicted heavy losses on the attackers, after Ukraine-based armed groups said they had launched cross-border raids.

“Ukrainian terrorist formations, supported by tanks and armoured combat vehicles, attempted to invade the territory of the Russian Federation simultaneously,” the Russian defence ministry said.

At least two Ukraine-based armed groups purporting to be made up of Russians opposed to the Kremlin said they had launched an incursion across Russia’s western border on Tuesday.

Russia denied that the groups, which Moscow casts as puppets of the Ukrainian military and US Central Intelligence Agency, had penetrated its territory, but said the border had come under attack in several places.

The governor of Belgorod, Vyacheslav Gladkov, said one member of the region’s territorial self-defence unit had been killed, although he gave no details on what had happened.

The TASS news agency cited the Federal Security Service (FSB) as saying Russian forces had killed 100 people and destroyed multiple armoured vehicles when fighting off attempted incursions.

Russia’s defence ministry said Ukraine had fired eight RM-70 rockets and one Tochka-U missile at the Belgorod region.

Read more with Euractiv

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2024-03-13 05:25:28Z
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