Sabtu, 13 April 2024

Middle East crisis live: Iran’s state media says vessel ‘linked to Israel’ seized by Revolutionary Guards - The Guardian

Iran’s state news agency IRNA said on Saturday that its Revolutionary Guards had seized the MSC Aries vessel it said was “linked to Israel” and it was being transferred to Iran’s territorial waters, reports Reuters.

A Guards navy special forces helicopter boarded the Portuguese flagged vessel and seized it, IRNA added.

The Israeli army says the body of missing Israeli boy has been found in the occupied West Bank after he was killed in a “terrorist attack.”

The disappearance of 14-year-old Binyamin Achimair sparked a large settler attack on a Palestinian village on Friday and Saturday, AP reported.

The killing of the teen and the settler rampages marked the latest in an escalation of violence in the territory, at a time when Israel is waging war on Hamas in the Gaza Strip

“Security forces are continuing the pursuit after those suspected of carrying out the attack,” the army said Saturday.

Dutch airline KLM will no longer fly over Israel and Iran, Dutch press agency ANP reported on Saturday, citing a KLM spokesperson.

KLM, the Dutch arm of Air France-KLM, said the move was a precaution, referring to the rising tensions between Iran and Israel, but added that it would continue flying to Tel Aviv, on Israel’s Mediterranean coast.

Iran will bear consequences if it escalates violence in the region, an Israeli military spokesperson said on Saturday, according to Reuters.

“Iran will bear the consequences for choosing to escalate the situation any further,” R Adm Daniel Hagari said in a statement.

“Israel is on high alert. We have increased our readiness to protect Israel from further Iranian aggression. We are also prepared to respond.”

Reuters report that the comments by Hagari came after the statement was made in reference to the seizure of a vessel between the United Arab Emirates and Iran.

The latest figures from the Gaza health ministry, which is run by Hamas, said 52 Palestinians were killed and 95 injured in Israeli strikes in the past 24 hours.

According to the statement, at least 33,686 Palestinians have been killed and 76,309 have been injured in Israeli strikes on Gaza since 7 October.

The ministry does not distinguish between combatants and non-combatants.

Iran’s state news agency IRNA said on Saturday that its Revolutionary Guards had seized the MSC Aries vessel it said was “linked to Israel” and it was being transferred to Iran’s territorial waters, reports Reuters.

A Guards navy special forces helicopter boarded the Portuguese flagged vessel and seized it, IRNA added.

Here are some of the latest images on the newswires of protests in recent days:

A video seen by the Associated Press (AP) shows commandos raiding a ship near the strait of Hormuz by helicopter on Saturday, an attack a Middle East defence official attributed to Iran amid wider tensions between Tehran and the west.

According to the AP, the video showed the attack earlier reported by the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO). Earlier updates from the UKMTO offered no details about the boarding in the Gulf of Oman off the Emirati port city of Fujairah, except that the vessel had been “reported to have been seized by regional authorities”.

Iran did not immediately acknowledge seizing any vessel, nor was there any report carried by state media about the incident.

The defence official, who spoke on condition of anonymity with the AP to discuss intelligence matters, shared the video with the news agency. In it, the commandos are said to have descended on to a stack of containers sitting on the deck of the vessel.

An image made from a video provided to the Associated Press by a Middle East defence official shows a helicopter raid targeting a vessel near the strait of Hormuz on Saturday. The defence official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence matters.

The AP say that a crew member on the ship could be heard saying: “Don’t come out.” He then tells his colleagues to go to the ship’s bridge as more commandos come down on the deck. It adds that, one commando can be seen kneeling above the others to provide them potential cover from fire.

Though the AP could not immediately verify the video, it said that it corresponded to known details of the boarding, and the helicopter involved appeared to be one used by Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guards, which has carried out other ship raids in the past.

The AP report that the vessel involved is likely the Portuguese-flagged MSC Aries, a container ship associated with London-based Zodiac Maritime. Zodiac Maritime is part of Israeli billionaire Eyal Ofer’s Zodiac Group, it adds. Neither MSC nor Zodiac immediately responded to a request for comment by the AP.

According to the news agency, MSC Aries had been last located off Dubai heading toward the strait of Hormuz on Friday and the ship had turned off its tracking data, which has been common for Israeli-affiliated ships moving through the region.

The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) has published an update on an incident 50 nautical miles northeast of the United Arab EmiratesFujairah (see 09:26 BST and 09:38 BST).

In a post on X, the UKMTO wrote that the vessel has been “reported to have been seized by regional authorities”.

The search for a missing Israeli teenager resumed on Saturday in the occupied West Bank, where settler attacks on Palestinian villages have left at least one dead and dozens injured, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP) citing sources on both sides.

The Israeli army said it was still looking for Benjamin Achimeir, 14, who went missing early on Friday from Malachi Hashalom, an outpost near the city of Ramallah.

According to AFP, Israeli security forces and hundreds of volunteers formed a huge search party to look for the teen.

Violence erupted on Friday afternoon when Jewish settlers who were part of the manhunt raided the village of al-Mughayyir, about 500 metres (yards) west of Malachi Hashalom, according to an AFP reporter.

The settlers fired off shots and torched numerous homes and cars in the village, while residents responded by throwing stones, said AFP reporters.

Mayor Amin Abu Alyah said “settlers raided the town with the excuse of searching for the missing Israeli boy,” adding that “the army arrived to back them up.”

Arafat Abu Alia, a resident of al-Mughayyir, said the Israeli army had told residents to gather on the outskirts of their village. “More than 10 houses and 50 vehicles were burnt,” he told AFP.

At least one person was killed and 25 wounded, the Palestinian health ministry said on Friday.

Overnight, the official Palestinian news agency reported that five Palestinians were injured in another settler attack in the Abu Falah village near Ramallah.

A British maritime organisation warned Saturday that a vessel may have been boarded by an unknown party near the crucial strait of Hormuz, reports the Associated Press (AP).

The warning from the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) offered no details about the boarding in the Gulf of Oman off the Emirati port city of Fujairah.

The incident comes amid heightened tensions between Iran and the west, particularly after a suspected Israeli strike on the Iranian consulate in Syria.

According to the AP, Iran did not immediately acknowledge seizing any vessel, nor was there any report carried by state media about the incident. However, Iran since 2019 has engaged in a series of ship seizures and had attacks on vessels attributed to it amid ongoing tensions with the west over its rapidly advancing nuclear program.

The Gulf of Oman is near the strait of Hormuz, the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf through which a fifth of all oil passes. Fujairah, on the United Arab Emirates’ eastern coast, is a main port in the region for ships to take on new oil cargo, pick up supplies or trade out crew.

Reuters report that the UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) has received a report of an incident 50 nautical miles northeast of the United Arab EmiratesFujairah and authorities were investigating.

We will update with more information as soon as it becomes available.

An explosive device was detonated in a car in an upmarket neighbourhood of Damascus, Syrian state media said on Saturday, quoting a police source.

According to a report by Agence France-Presse (AFP), it was not immediately clear who was responsible for the blast or who it targeted, but it came with tensions high in Syria’s capital after Iran vowed retaliation for an airstrike on 1 April that it blamed on Israel.

Both Damascus and Tehran blame Israel for the consular raid, but it has not commented.

“The explosion heard a short while ago in the Mazzeh area resulted from an explosive device detonating in a car in al-Huda square,” Syria’s official Sana news agency said, quoting a Damascus police command source.It added that there were no injuries.

The incident happened in the Mazzeh area, where Iran’s embassy and other foreign missions are located.

The Netherlands will close its embassy in Tehran on Sunday as a “precaution”, the Dutch Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Saturday, citing the rising tensions between Iran and Israel.

According to a report by news agency Reuters, the ministry added that it would decide on Sunday whether the embassy would reopen on Monday.

Ireland and Spain have reiterated their intention to forge an alliance of countries that will soon recognise Palestine as a nation state.

The Irish taoiseach, Simon Harris, and Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, vowed on Friday to muster international support for a two-state solution in Israel and Palestine.

The two leaders held bilateral talks in Dublin to inject momentum into a diplomatic offensive inside and outside the EU.

Recognition of Palestinian statehood “is coming much closer”, Harris told a joint press conference. Ireland would move with Spain and other countries “when the time is right”, he said, without giving a timeline or naming the other countries.

“When we move forward, we would like to do so with as many others as possible to lend weight to the decision and to send the strongest message. The people of Israel deserve a secure and peaceful future. So do the people of Palestine. Equal sovereignty, equal respect, in a region where people of all faiths and all traditions live together in peace.”

You can read more of the report by Rory Carroll in Dublin, Sam Jones and Lisa O’Carroll here:

Australian airline Qantas said on Saturday it would redirect its long-haul flights between Perth and London to avoid Iran’s airspace amid soaring Middle East tensions.

A Qantas spokesperson told AFP the airline would temporarily adjust the flight paths due to “the situation in parts of the Middle East”.

“We’ll reach out to customers directly if there’s any change to their booking,” the spokesperson said.

According to AFP, the Perth-London flight, which is usually a non-stop 17-and-a-half hour journey, will now stop in Singapore to refuel, allowing it to carry a full load of passengers on an alternate route.

The return service – London to Perth – will continue to fly non-stop on a readjusted path due to prevailing winds. AFP report that all other flights are not affected.

Qantas joins other airlines including Lufthansa and its subsidiary Austrian Airlines in redirecting flights to avoid Iranian airspace.

The move comes after Iran blamed Israel for a strike in Syria this month that killed two Iranian generals, and threatened reprisals.

US president Joe Biden has said he expects an Iranian attack on Israel “sooner rather than later” and issued a last-ditch message to Tehran: “Don’t.”

“We are devoted to the defence of Israel. We will support Israel. We will help defend Israel and Iran will not succeed,” Biden told reporters on Friday.

Earlier the White House national security spokesperson John Kirby warned that the threat of a significant Iranian attack on Israel remains “viable” despite Washington-led efforts, including calls to Tehran from the UK and Germany, to deter a serious escalation in the conflict in the Middle East.

The White House comments came as several countries, including India, France, Poland and Russia, warned their citizens against travel to the region and Israel’s defence minister, Yoav Gallant, said his country was “prepared to defend [itself] on the ground and in the air, in close cooperation with our partners”.

You can read more on this story by Peter Beaumont, Julian Borger and Patrick Wintour here:

Six months after the surprise attacks it launched into Israel, triggering the Gaza conflict, Hamas is weakened and divided but far from defeated, experts, officials and sources close to the militant Islamist organisation say.

Hamas remains in de facto control of swaths of Gaza, including the parts where much of the territory’s population is now concentrated, and has re-established a presence elsewhere. In recent days, Hamas “operatives” armed with batons have been sighted keeping order on the streets of Khan Younis, the southern city from which Israeli forces withdrew just last week. On Wednesday, rockets targeting a kibbutz in Israel were launched by militants from Jabaliya in northern Gaza.

Few members of the organisation’s top echelons have been harmed so far and much of its extensive tunnel network remains intact. However, the organisation’s ability to effectively govern is much reduced, its military stores are depleted, and thousands of fighters are dead.

The months-long war has also led to new tensions between Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas leader in Gaza, and leaders based overseas, mainly in Qatar and Turkey. In recent weeks, bitter arguments have broken out over what would be acceptable terms for a ceasefire and over the future strategy of Hamas, well-informed sources in direct contact with senior Hamas figures said.

You can read the full piece by Jason Burke here:

It has gone 9am in Gaza and 10am in Tel Aviv. This is our latest Guardian live blog on the Israel-Gaza war and the wider Middle East crisis.

The US president has said he expects an Iranian attack on Israelsooner rather than later” and issued a last-ditch message to Tehran not to launch one.

Joe Biden’s comments came as the White House warned that the prospect of an Iranian attack on Israel in retaliation for the bombing of an Iranian consular building in Syria was “still a viable threat”.

The US has sought to deter Iran with concerted declarations of commitment to Israeli security, but also restricted the movements of its diplomats in Israel over security fears.

Biden said on Friday: “We are devoted to the defence of Israel. We will support Israel. We will help defend Israel and Iran will not succeed.”

Meanwhile, the first trucks carrying food aid entered Gaza through the newly opened northern crossing point, the Israeli military said on Friday.

The trucks were inspected at the Kerem Shalom crossing point near the Egyptian border before being transported inside Israel to the crossing, the military said.

In other developments:

  • Residents reported heavy Israeli fire in central Gaza on Friday, with authorities reporting dozens of new airstrikes in the area. The Hamas media office said 25 people were taken to hospital in Deir al-Balah city “as a result of an airstrike on a house of the al-Tabatibi family”. Israel’s military said its aircraft had struck more than 60 militant targets in Gaza over the previous day.

  • Dozens of angry Israeli settlers have stormed into a Palestinian village in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, shooting and setting houses and cars on fire. Palestinian health officials said one Palestinian man was killed and 25 others wounded in the attack. An Israeli rights group said the settlers were searching for a 14-year-old boy missing from their settlement. After the rampage, Israeli troops said they were still searching for the boy.

  • At least 33,634 Palestinians have been killed and 76,214 have been injured in Israeli strikes on Gaza since 7 October, according to the latest figures from the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.

  • France has warned its citizens to “imperatively refrain from travel in the coming days to Iran, Lebanon, Israel and the Palestinian territories”. The foreign minister, Stéphane Séjourné, also asked that family members of French diplomats in Iran be evacuated. India, meanwhile, advised its citizens against travelling to Iran and Israel until further notice in view of the “prevailing situation in the region”.

  • Australia’s foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, said she had urged her Iranian counterpart, Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, to “use its influence in the region to promote stability, not contribute to escalation”. Wong posted on X (formerly Twitter): “Further conflict will only add to the devastation in the Middle East.”

  • Poland’s government called the killing of a Polish aid worker by Israeli airstrikes in Gaza “murder” and said the case should be brought before an independent court in Israel. Poland’s deputy foreign minister, Władysław Teofil Bartoszewski, said Poland was demanding compensation from Israel over the death of Polish volunteer Damian Soból, 35, who was killed along with six other workers of the World Central Kitchen charity in an Israeli airstrike.

  • Germany will face a fresh call to revoke all arms sales to Israel on Thursday in a lawsuit that puts more pressure on Berlin amid a rising outcry over the war on Gaza. The lawsuit has been issued by four human rights groups on behalf of five named Palestinians who say they are in fear of their lives in Gaza and are suffering a form of collective punishment by Israel.

  • A Unicef spokesperson says she was on an aid mission on Tuesday when the UN-marked vehicle she was in was shot, she told Australia’s ABC News on Friday. Tess Ingram, an Australian, said the Israeli military and Hamas were aware of the convoy’s movements as part of the mission, but she did not see the source of the gunfire. “It appeared to come from the direction of the checkpoint towards civilians, who then turned and ran in the other direction,” she said.

  • A Turkish state television journalist was badly injured and another slightly hurt in Gaza, the TRT channel said, adding that the team’s vehicle had been targeted by an Israeli strike. The team from TRT Arabi, its Arabic-language channel, was preparing to broadcast from the Nuseirat camp, the broadcaster said. It called Friday’s attack “Israeli brutality” and said Sami Shahada, a freelance cameraman, had “lost a foot and is currently in surgery”.

  • China urged the US to play “a constructive role” in the Middle East after its top diplomat, Wang Yi, spoke with his US counterpart, Antony Blinken, over the phone on Friday. Blinken used the call to ask Beijing to use its influence to dissuade Iran from striking Israel, the US state department said.

  • An assessment conducted by a UN team in Khan Younis after the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the area in southern Gaza has reported “widespread destruction”. “Street and public spaces in Khan Younis are littered with unexploded ordnance posing a severe risk to civilians, especially for children,” said Stéphane Dujarric, the spokesperson for the UN’s secretary general, António Guterres. “Our team found unexploded 1,000-pound bombs lying on the main intersection and inside schools.”

  • The UK government’s continued refusal to suspend arms sales to Israel is inconsistent with previous wars and could make it complicit in war crimes, Oxfam has warned. Writing ahead of an open letter the charity is delivering to ministers, Oxfam said: “The prime minister and the foreign secretary have repeatedly defended the UK’s decision to continue arms sales. Yet in every previous escalation of violence in Gaza and against Palestinians in the region, the UK has at least revoked some licenses or otherwise suspended arms transfers to Israel.”

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiYmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRoZWd1YXJkaWFuLmNvbS93b3JsZC9saXZlLzIwMjQvYXByLzEzL21pZGRsZS1lYXN0LWNyaXNpcy1pc3JhZWwtZ2F6YS1oYW1hcy1pcmFuLWJpZGVu0gFiaHR0cHM6Ly9hbXAudGhlZ3VhcmRpYW4uY29tL3dvcmxkL2xpdmUvMjAyNC9hcHIvMTMvbWlkZGxlLWVhc3QtY3Jpc2lzLWlzcmFlbC1nYXphLWhhbWFzLWlyYW4tYmlkZW4?oc=5

2024-04-13 12:16:36Z
CBMiYmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRoZWd1YXJkaWFuLmNvbS93b3JsZC9saXZlLzIwMjQvYXByLzEzL21pZGRsZS1lYXN0LWNyaXNpcy1pc3JhZWwtZ2F6YS1oYW1hcy1pcmFuLWJpZGVu0gFiaHR0cHM6Ly9hbXAudGhlZ3VhcmRpYW4uY29tL3dvcmxkL2xpdmUvMjAyNC9hcHIvMTMvbWlkZGxlLWVhc3QtY3Jpc2lzLWlzcmFlbC1nYXphLWhhbWFzLWlyYW4tYmlkZW4

Sydney stabbing live: Nine-month-old baby undergoing surgery as six killed in mall - The Independent

Emergency services respond after multiple people stabbed at Sydney shopping centre

A nine-month-old baby has undergone surgery after being stabbed in a shock attack at a Sydney shopping mall, with six victims confirmed dead.

A shocking video has shown the suspect armed with a large knife, while shoppers take cover in shops as one brave individual attempts to ward him off on an escalator.

The attacker, who is believed to be a 40-year-old male who was known to law enforcement, was also shot dead by a police inspector. While his identity has not been confirmed, police understand he was acting alone and the incident is not terror-related.

Over the course of his rampage, four women and one man were killed in the shopping centre, while another women died in hospital. Another eight people remain in hospital around Sydney.

One eyewitness reported seeing a baby with stab wounds, with the “terrified” mother attempting to console her child as they were taken to an ambulance. Other witnesses reported hearing gunshots as they hid inside stores, with one saying of the attacker: “He had a nice big blade on him. He looked like he was on a killing spree.”

Emergency services were called to Westfield Bondi Junction just before 4pm local time following the reports, New South Wales Police said in a statement.

1713010514

Prince and Princess of Wales ‘shocked and saddened’ by attack

Prince William and Kate have sent their condolences to the victims of the Bondi shopping mall attack, and said they were “shocked and saddened” by the news.

Holly Evans13 April 2024 13:15
1713009767

Witness saw knifeman running and chasing after victims

Ayush Singh, 25, was working in a cafe in the mall when he saw the attack and then heard gunshots as police responded.

“I saw the guy with the knife running and chasing people. As he walked just past beside me I heard two or three gunshots and the guy was neutralised,” he told Reuters.

“People around me were terrified. There were some old ladies I helped to get them inside a safe place inside the cafe.”

Two other witnesses told Reuters they heard shots. “Even 20 minutes after people were rushed out of the mall, I saw SWAT teams of people sweeping the surrounding streets,” one witness said.

(AFP via Getty Images)
Holly Evans13 April 2024 13:02
1713008815

Shopping mall worker recalls stabbed mother’s ‘unforgettable’ scream

An employee who worked within the Westfield Bondi Junction shopping centre recalled seeing a mother screaming after she and her baby were stabbed.

“She’s screaming really, really loudly. She’s running back and forth not knowing what to do,” the witness told Nine News.

“Then she comes back to the pram and picks up her baby and there’s just blood all over her back. The scream was unforgettable, it was the scariest thing I’ve ever seen.

“My co-worker took me, we locked all the doors, had to turn off all the lights and doors.”

Holly Evans13 April 2024 12:46
1713008027

Police confirm Sydney mall attacker was ‘known to law enforcements’

Police confirm Sydney mall attacker was ‘known to law enforcements’

The Sydney knifeman was a 40-year-old and his attack is not thought to be terror-related, New South Wales Police Commissioner Karen Webb said. Six people have died after being stabbed at Westfield Bondi shopping centre on Saturday (13 April). The attacker was shot dead by a police officer at the scene. Ms Webb told a press conference: “Later this evening we became aware of who we believe the offender is and we believe that he is a 40-year-old man.” She added: “If in fact it is the person that we believe it is, then we don’t have fears for that person holding an ideation – in other words, that it’s not a terrorism incident. “He is known to law enforcement but we are waiting to identify him formally.”

Holly Evans13 April 2024 12:33
1713007289

Emotional eyewitness says ‘I thought I was going to die’

A tearful eyewitness told ABC News: “I was hiding in the backroom. I was hearing gunshots. It’s just the worst thing ever, who does that to people?

“I saw a woman lying on the floor in Chanel.

“I didn’t see him properly, I was running. It’s just insanity - I wasn’t expecting it.

“I thought I was going to die. Every moment was playing through my head, I was so scared.”

(AFP/Getty)
Holly Evans13 April 2024 12:21
1713006451

Sixth victim reported to be mother of nine-month-old baby

The mother of a nine-month-old baby, who has undergone surgery in hospital, is reported to be the sixth victim killed in the stabbing attack, the Guardian have reported.

Commissioner Karen Webb told reporters that four women and one man were killed in the shopping centre, and another women died in hospital.

Another eight people remain in hospital around Sydney.

Holly Evans13 April 2024 12:07
1713006013

Officer who shot attacker has shown ‘enormous bravery’

She told reporters: “She’s doing well, under the circumstances. She showed enormous courage and bravery so she will process that. So, we just talked about that she’s OK, her family is OK, she’s got everything she needs for the time being. She will be formally interviewed tomorrow, no doubt.”

Webb said the officer, who has not been officially named by police, is a senior officer of inspector rank.

Holly Evans13 April 2024 12:00
1713005250

Attacker believed to be a 40-year-old male

The attacker who killed six people inside a shopping mall is understood to be a 40-year-old male, New South Wales commissioner Karen Webb has said. His full identity has not yet been released.

“Later this evening, we became aware of who we believe the offender is and we believe that he is a 40-year-old man. However, we are waiting to formally identify him and we cannot speak yet on his identification,” she told reporters.

“Let me assure you that we are confident that there is no ongoing risk and we are dealing with one person who is now deceased.

“He was known to law enforcement and police “do not have fears for that person hiding an ideation. In other words that it is not a terrorism incident”.

Sydney attacker is believed to be a 40-year-old male
Sydney attacker is believed to be a 40-year-old male (X)
Holly Evans13 April 2024 11:47
1713005016

Nine-month-old baby has undergone surgery, says police chief

New South Wales commissioner Karen Webb says the attacker entered the shopping centre at 3.30pm local time and attacked a number of people.

Among those were four women and one man who were killed in the shopping centre, while another women died in hospital.

Another eight people remain in hospital around Sydney, including a nine-month-old baby, who has been in surgery, she says.

Holly Evans13 April 2024 11:43
1713004809

Woman describes fear as attacker turned towards her

A woman has described her fear after the attacker turned towards her while on his killing rampage.

She told Sky News: “I saw a dead body and there was blood around the body, and there was another body,” she said.

“I looked again to that guy and he was turning, coming towards Lulu [Lemon store], that was when I was scared the most.”

She said she screamed to her partner to lock themselves inside a changing room.

Holly Evans13 April 2024 11:40

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMicWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmluZGVwZW5kZW50LmNvLnVrL25ld3Mvd29ybGQvYXVzdHJhbGFzaWEvc3lkbmV5LXdlc3RmaWVsZC1ib25kaS1qdW5jdGlvbi1zdXNwZWN0LXVwZGF0ZS1iMjUyODIxMi5odG1s0gEA?oc=5

2024-04-13 11:24:09Z
CBMicWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmluZGVwZW5kZW50LmNvLnVrL25ld3Mvd29ybGQvYXVzdHJhbGFzaWEvc3lkbmV5LXdlc3RmaWVsZC1ib25kaS1qdW5jdGlvbi1zdXNwZWN0LXVwZGF0ZS1iMjUyODIxMi5odG1s0gEA

Six killed in Sydney shopping center stabbing attack including suspect, say police - The Independent

A man stabbed five people to death at a busy Sydney shopping center on Saturday before he was fatally shot, police said.

The attack, which took place at Westfield Shopping Centre at Bondi Junction at around 4pm local time, left several people were injured, including a baby.

The attack was carried out by a single person who started stabbing people at random. He attacked nine people before a police inspector shot him, assistant police commissioner Anthony Cooke told reporters.

He said the suspect acted alone and there was “no continuing threat”.

“A man walked into Westfield at Bondi Junction, he left the centre very shortly after and returned,” Mr Cooke said.

“As he moved through the centre he engaged with about nine people. It is clear that during that engagement he caused harm to those people, we believe by stabbing them with a weapon he was carrying.”

“Very clearly a range of reports were made on the incident, police attended promptly. A single unit officer, inspector of police, was nearby, attended, went into the centre directed by a range of people.”

“She confronted the offender who had moved, by this stage, to level five.”

“As she continued to walk quickly behind to catch up with him he turned to face her, raised a knife, she discharged a firearm and that person is now deceased.”

A woman cries as she comes out of the Westfield Bondi Junction shopping mall after a stabbing incident in Sydney on April 13, 2024 (AFP via Getty Images)

Mr Cooke said police didn’t know who the offender was yet and there was no indication of motivation.

He said there was “nothing that we are aware of at the scene that would indicate any motive or any ideology”.

When asked whether police were ruling out terrorism, he said: “We’re not ruling anything out.”

Mr Cooke said the police inspector, a senior officer, was alone when she confronted the suspect and engaged him soon after her arrival on the scene, “saving a range of people’s lives”.

At least eight people, including the child, were taken to a local hospital, New South Wales Ambulance said in a statement.

“We’ve responded a total of 40 resources to the scene who remain on scene still,” it said . “That included a total of four medical teams.”

“New South Wales Ambulance assessed and transported eight patients to various hospital facilities across Sydney and assessed a total of six patients who have been deemed deceased on scene.”

Ambulances make their way outside the Westfield Bondi Junction shopping mall after a stabbing incident in Sydney on 13 April 2024 (AFP via Getty Images)

An eyewitness described the police officer shooting the attacker to state broadcaster ABC.

“If she did not shoot him, he would have kept going, he was on the rampage,” said the man, who did not give his name. “She went over and was giving him CPR. He had a nice big blade on him. He looked like he was on a killing spree.”

Roi Huberman, an ABC sound engineer who also witnessed the attack, told the news network that he took shelter in a store during the incident.

“And suddenly we heard a shot or maybe two shots and we didn’t know what to do,” he said. “Then the very capable person in the store took us to the back where it can be locked. She then locked the store and then she then let us through the back and now we are out.”

Families walk out of the Westfield Bondi Junction shopping mall after a stabbing incident in Sydney on 13 April 2024 (AFP via Getty Images)

Another witness said he was in a cafe with his two small children when he saw a man “stabbing people indiscriminately”.

ABC News Australia spoke to the witness, who did not want to be identified, and reported: “He saw a bloke in a green shirt start stabbing people indiscriminately, he handed off his kids to his wife who escaped before he started trying to help a woman who had been stabbed outside.”

“He said he saw screaming, screaming and it didn’t seem that long before we heard the boom, boom, boom of the gunshot and we thought and hoped that it was the police. The security guard, he said, was dying 10 metres away.”

“He grabbed towels there, and there were three people dying right around him.”

“It was just carnage, was how he described the situation as it unfolded, he was very much there after he sent his children and his wife to safety.”

“The first responders didn’t realise they were coming in to see multiple critical people, and added the cops were just unreal.”

Additional reporting by agencies

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiZWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmluZGVwZW5kZW50LmNvLnVrL25ld3Mvd29ybGQvYXVzdHJhbGFzaWEvc3lkbmV5LXdlc3RmaWVsZC1zdGFiYmluZy1pbmNpZGVudC1iMjUyODE2OC5odG1s0gEA?oc=5

2024-04-13 09:43:26Z
CBMiZWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmluZGVwZW5kZW50LmNvLnVrL25ld3Mvd29ybGQvYXVzdHJhbGFzaWEvc3lkbmV5LXdlc3RmaWVsZC1zdGFiYmluZy1pbmNpZGVudC1iMjUyODE2OC5odG1s0gEA

Jumat, 12 April 2024

Israel braced for Iranian attack as US moves 'additional assets' in region - Sky News

Israel remains braced for an attack from Iran as the US moves "additional assets" to the Middle East.

Joe Biden said he expects an attack "sooner, rather than later" and simply told Tehran "don't", with warnings growing of retaliation for the killing last week of a senior officer in Iran's embassy in Syria.

The White House said the threat of an imminent attack on Israel is real and viable, while at least three other countries have updated their travel advice, including France, Russia and India.

As Mr Biden pledges the US is "devoted" to Israel's defence, an official has told Sky News "additional assets" are being moved to the region to boost "deterrence efforts" and protect American forces.

According to Sky's US partner NBC News, most of the assets involved are already deployed in the area and are just being moved around.

Sky's US correspondent Mark Stone said no further details have been provided.

An Iranian missile unveiling from February this year. Iran's Defence Ministry/WANA via Reuters
Image: An Iranian missile unveiling from February this year. Pic: Iran's Defence Ministry/WANA via Reuters

"I think the consensus among experts is that the Iranians will respond, but they will almost certainly respond against Israel directly rather than any American military in the region," Stone added.

"Nevertheless, what that response will look like and what it will mean in terms of an Israeli response, we don't know yet."

Israel did not claim responsibility for the airstrike on 1 April that killed Brigadier General Mohammad Reza Zahedi, a senior commander in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps' overseas Quds Force.

Read more:
Israelis living near Gaza border 'terrified' of Iran attack
Three sons of Hamas leader killed in Israeli strike
Key element in path to peace still missing

Iranians burn an Israeli flag during a rally marking Quds Day and the funeral of members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps who were killed in a suspected Israeli airstrike on the Iranian embassy last week. Pic: Reuters
Image: Iranians burn an Israeli flag during the funeral of officials killed in a suspected Israeli airstrike. Pic: Reuters

But Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said Israel "must be punished and shall be" for an operation he said was equivalent to an attack on Iranian soil.

Six other officers were also killed as they attended a meeting in the Damascus embassy compound.

Iran has missiles capable of hitting Israel, which has in recent weeks bolstered its air defences.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Analysis: Will Iran attack Israel?

The Israeli military has called back reservists in preparation for any escalation along its northern border, where it exchanges fire almost daily with Iran-backed militants Hezbollah.

While there have been no formal security instructions in Israel, some parents said their children have been told to take books home for the Passover school holidays in case of possible lesson disruptions.

Follow Sky News on WhatsApp
Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

Late on Friday, Israel said around 40 rocket launches were identified crossing into Israel from Lebanon, most of which were intercepted.

Meanwhile, Israel's bombardment of Gaza has killed 33,634 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run health ministry - which followed the 7 October attack.

At least 1,100 Israelis were killed in the 7 October attack, the Israeli military has said.

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMibGh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2lzcmFlbC1icmFjZWQtZm9yLWlyYW5pYW4tYXR0YWNrLWFzLXVzLW1vdmVzLWFkZGl0aW9uYWwtYXNzZXRzLWluLXJlZ2lvbi0xMzExMzg3NNIBcGh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2FtcC9pc3JhZWwtYnJhY2VkLWZvci1pcmFuaWFuLWF0dGFjay1hcy11cy1tb3Zlcy1hZGRpdGlvbmFsLWFzc2V0cy1pbi1yZWdpb24tMTMxMTM4NzQ?oc=5

2024-04-13 00:12:43Z
CBMibGh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2lzcmFlbC1icmFjZWQtZm9yLWlyYW5pYW4tYXR0YWNrLWFzLXVzLW1vdmVzLWFkZGl0aW9uYWwtYXNzZXRzLWluLXJlZ2lvbi0xMzExMzg3NNIBcGh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2FtcC9pc3JhZWwtYnJhY2VkLWZvci1pcmFuaWFuLWF0dGFjay1hcy11cy1tb3Zlcy1hZGRpdGlvbmFsLWFzc2V0cy1pbi1yZWdpb24tMTMxMTM4NzQ

Sudan civil war: The children living between starvation and death in Darfur - BBC

Qisma Abdelrahman Ali AbbakarMohamed Zakaria/BBC

The woman with sad eyes and a quiet voice is just one of the millions of people living in camps for those forced to flee their homes in Sudan, where a civil war broke out a year ago between the army and an armed paramilitary group. The country now faces what the UN says is the "world worst hunger crisis".

Qisma Abdirahman Ali Abubaker goes through the motions of waiting in line to pick up her food ration, but her heart is not in it.

The small bag does not have to stretch as far as it used to for her family.

Three of her children have died of disease and malnutrition in the past four months, she says. The oldest was three, another was two years old, the last was a six-month-old baby.

Ms Abubaker has taken refuge at Zamzam Camp for displaced people in Northern Darfur, part of a region in the west of the country, amid warnings of a catastrophic nutrition crisis there.

It is the oldest and largest such camp in the country, but there is fresh desperation and grief as Sudan's war grinds into its second year.

The medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) says it found in January that at least one child in the camp dies every two hours. With little food, clean water or healthcare, illnesses that could once be treated now kill.

MSF is one of the last international humanitarian agencies still on the ground in Darfur.

It has just completed a mass screening of vulnerable women and children in Zamzam and shared the results exclusively with the BBC.

The agency found that three out of every 10 children under five were acutely malnourished, as well as a third of pregnant and breastfeeding mothers, confirming fears of a "catastrophe" that an earlier survey had suggested.

This is double the threshold for a nutrition emergency, and probably just the tip of the iceberg of Sudan's hunger crisis, says Abdalla Hussein, MSF operations manager for Sudan.

"We have not reached all the children in Darfur, not even in North Darfur, we're talking about only one camp," he told me at the MSF regional headquarters in Kenya's capital, Nairobi.

Zamzam camp
Mohamed Zakaria/BBC

Access to Darfur is extremely difficult for foreign journalists as well as aid agencies, but we worked with a local cameraman, and Ms Abubaker told him her story.

She could not afford to take her children to hospital or buy medicine.

"My first child died on the way home from the pharmacy, and the second child died after six days due to malnutrition," she says.

The baby fell sick and died three days later.

Ms Abubaker's family are smallholder farmers like many in Darfur. They have struggled to grow enough food, and the violence and insecurity of the war has severely disrupted farming.

"People are sick and hungry," she tells the BBC. "The displaced people are jobless and the only people who have money are [government] employees. Ninety per cent of the people are sick."

Zamzam was already fragile, formed by those caught up in ethnic violence 20 years ago, and almost entirely dependent on humanitarian aid.

But the food supplies stopped with the war. Most aid agencies evacuated as the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) took over large swathes of the region.

Fighters for the RSF and its allied militias are accused of looting hospitals and stores, something which the RSF has consistently denied.

Getting new supplies transferred across conflict lines has proved almost impossible. Aid workers say the Sudanese military authorities are too slow to issue visas and internal travel permits.

And the army has blocked land routes from neighbouring Chad, saying it needs to stop weapons shipments to the RSF.

That barrier has eased slightly for food supplies - the World Food Programme recently managed to bring in two convoys - but not nearly enough.

The lack of food combines with a breakdown in health services.

Across the country only 20-30% of health facilities are still functional.

Zamzam camp
Mohamed Zakaria/BBC

One of those is the Babiker Nahar Paediatric hospital in the city of Fasher, near Zamzam Camp, which has a therapeutic feeding centre for children and intensive care treatment for the worst cases.

Both wards were full on the day our cameraman visited.

Babies with tubes in their noses whimpered quietly in their mothers' arms.

Amin Ahmed Ali fed her tiny son serum through a syringe - she has six-month-old twins slowly recovering from weeks of dysentery. Other children ate from packets of calorie-rich food.

Dr Ezzedine Ibrahim says that the hospital was dealing with cases of malnutrition before the war, but now "the numbers have doubled".

"Every month and the next month the numbers increase, despite the fact that we in Northern Darfur we had a system, a full nutritional programme which continued but it lapsed because of the war."

This is about as good as it gets for child healthcare in Darfur, other places are even more cut off and desperate.

A regional emergency worker sent us images from areas in the region that aid workers have called a "black hole" in humanitarian assistance.

There is a photo of a three-year-old emaciated little girl from Kalma IDP Camp in Southern Darfur, named as Ihsan Adam Abdullah. She is said to have died last month.

Another photo shows an equally wasted little boy, from Genubia Camp in Central Darfur. His mother, Fatima Mohamed Othman, recorded a video pleading for help to feed her 10 children - anything, she says, even "something small - they are living between starvation and death".

MSF is about to open a 50-bed tent hospital in Zamzam and is appealing for other international aid agencies to return to share the heavy humanitarian load.

"We need a massive mobilisation of humanitarian aid to reach the population that is cut off," says Mr Hussein, as well as access with "permits and visas to be simplified and the borders to be opened", and respect for humanitarian personnel and civilian infrastructure.

Without these basic conditions it will not be possible to turn the tide on this colossal crisis, and many many more children will die.

More on Sudan's civil war:

Map of Sudan, showing which areas are controlled by which group
1px transparent line

Around the BBC

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiMGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3dvcmxkLWFmcmljYS02ODc4ODY1MNIBNGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3dvcmxkLWFmcmljYS02ODc4ODY1MC5hbXA?oc=5

2024-04-13 01:05:35Z
CBMiMGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3dvcmxkLWFmcmljYS02ODc4ODY1MNIBNGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3dvcmxkLWFmcmljYS02ODc4ODY1MC5hbXA

Is this Kim Jong Un's secret lover? North Korean pop star rumoured to have given birth to his love-child is sp - Daily Mail

  • Hyon Song-wol has been rumoured to have had a secret love child with Kim
  • The former singer now works in the dictator's personal secretariat 

A North Korean pop star has been spotted out with Kim Jong-un amid rumours that she's his secret flame and gave birth to his love child.

Having left her role in North Korea's premier girl group, the Moranbong Band, Hyon Song-wol now works in the dictator's personal secretariat.

Last week she was spotted with Kim in Pyongyang, where she was seen glued to her phone while the other aides frantically took notes.

Now a retired spymaster says that their relationship is more than professional, and that she and the despot have a love child.

Choe Su-yong, formerly of the National Intelligence Service (NIS) in neighbouring South Korea, said the child was named Kim Il-bong.

A North Korean pop star (circled) has been spotted out with Kim Jong-un amid rumours that she's his secret flame and gave birth to his love child
Having left her role in North Korea 's premier girl group, the Moranbong Band, Hyon Song-wol (seen circled) now works in the dictator's personal secretariat

Choe recently told the Korea Times that Kim Jong-un also has a legitimate son with his wife, Ri Sol-ju, but the boy is too 'pale and thin' for public life.

Speaking to the Chosun Ilbo newspaper, he described the contrast between the half brothers.

He said: 'The illegitimate son, Kim Il-bong, is sturdy, but the first son born to Kim's wife is skinny to the extent of being described in North Korean terms as pitiful.'

According to the ex-spy, Kim Jong-un met Hyon Song-wol when he was still at school in Switzerland.

Choe said that Hyon served the future tyrant and his sister, Kim Yo-jong, as a nanny-cum-caretaker, but a relationship formed and continued on their return to North Korea.

Kim's father and predecessor, Kim Jong-il, disapproved of the match and ordered him to break it off, according to a South Korean report from 2012.

But after his father's death, 'the son is thought to have rekindled the relationship' the report said.

Michael Madden, founder of North Korea Leadership Watch, said there was good reason to believe that the duo first bonded in Switzerland.

He said: 'One thing we can say, I think, with a fairly good degree of confidence in its accuracy, is that they had a close relationship when he was studying in Switzerland.

'What ended up happening was that members of these elite performing arts troupes went and sort of lived in the house with them, and looked after and took care of them.

'There's a very good chance that Hyon Song-wol might have resided with Kim Jong-un and Kim Yo-jong when they lived in Switzerland, or she might have gone to visit them.'

'We can say pretty reliably that they have a very close relationship,' he added.

Choe Su-yong, formerly of the National Intelligence Service (NIS) in neighbouring South Korea, has said Kim shares an illegitimate child with  singer Hyon Song-wol
Hyon Song-wol (left) is seen with Kim Jong Un at a public event in Korea
Hyon Song-wol stands behind Kim Jong Un and his daughter Kim Ju-ae at a recent New Year's event in Korea

Mr Madden – a fellow of the Stimson Center in Washington DC – said the genesis of the love child rumours went back to 2012, when Hyon performed on stage pregnant.

And while he's sceptical of the rumours, he believes a historic tryst between the two could have happened.

He said: 'If Hyon Song-wol has a love child and is a mistress, that would bring scandal to Kim Jong-un, right?

'So why would he be bringing her out in any kind of public capacity?'

He continued: 'The one thing I have heard that might have a degree of credibility, because it's more nuanced, is there's a rumour that Hyon Song-wol might have taken Kim Jong-un's virginity.'

However, he added: 'Who the f*** knows?'

Mr Madden estimated that Hyon was about seven years older than Kim.

She would have had a high security clearance, he said, because her music career would have obliged her to perform at 'elite secret functions'.

He said: 'She's an elite pop star in North Korea. I've likened to her to Lana Del Rey.'

Today she is a deputy director in the state's Propaganda and Agitation Department, though her real job is working directly under the dictator.

Mr Madden said: 'She works for Kim Jong-un's personal secretariat.

'The personal secretariat is equivalent to the Prime Minister's staff that works in Number 10 Downing Street that's not part of the civil service.

'She coordinates his schedule, protocol, security arrangements, things like that.

'She also seems to play a very, very large role in North Korean television events and media packaging.'

As for Kim's wife - Ri Sol-ju - very little is known about her, including her exact age, who her parents are and what her life was like before marrying Kim.

This picture taken on November 18, 2022 and released from North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) shows North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un (left) with his wife Ri Sol Ju (second right) and daughter Ju Ae (second left) as they attend the test-firing of the new intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) 'Hwasong Gun 17' type in North Korea

Even her name remains a mystery, as observers believe Ri is actually a pseudonym designed to keep her life before marriage a secret.

She was first pictured on Kim's arm in 2012 at a concert and North Korea subsequently confirmed she was Kim's wife, but said nothing else about her.

She then appeared with him multiple times between 2012 and 2014 before largely disappearing from public view until recent, when her presence has became much more pronounced.

Sources speaking in the South Korean media when she was first identified said she is a former cheerleader and singer, and gave her date of birth as some time between 1985 and 1989.

She was said to have been pictured in 2005 visiting South Korea during the Asian Athletics Championships as part of the North Korean cheerleading squad.

Others said she was a singer with the Unhasu orchestra who may have performed for Kim and his father, Kim Jong-il, during a New Year concert in 2010.

'There is a possibility Jong-un chose her as his wife after seeing her at the concert hall,' the Chosun Ilbo newspaper said at the time.

There was a North Korean singer by the name of Ri Sol-ju, the BBC reported, but it has never been confirmed if she and Kim's wife are the same person.

Elsewhere, the BBC reported that Ri was hastily married to Kim in 2009 as part of a succession plan drawn up by Kim Jong-il after he suffered a stroke.

It is believed she gave birth to their first child the following year with subsequent births taking place in 2013 and possibly in 2016, after she disappeared from public.

According to US basketball star Dennis Rodman, who is an unlikely friend of Kim, their middle child is called Ju-ae, after he let the information slip in an interview.

Nothing is known about the other children.

Before marrying Kim, Ri was reportedly sent to Kim Il-sung University, the country's most prestigious, to study a six-month course in being the first lady.

It has also been reported that she obtained a science degree from the same university years earlier.

According to a past AFP report, Ri was born in the northeastern province of North Hamkyong to an academic father and a doctor mother.

That would make her part of the political elite, since such positions are reserved only for those who are most loyal to the regime.

She is also said to be related to Ri Pyong-chol, a former air force general and close advisor of Kim Jong-un.

Ri is also known for her love of fine fashion, which is unusual in North Korea.

This picture taken on February 8, 2023 and released from North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) shows North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un (right), his daughter Ju Ae (centre) and wife Ri Sol Ju (left) attending a military parade celebrating the 75th anniversary of the founding of the Korean People's Army

When she was first described by the country's press she was said to be wearing 'a trim black suit in the Chanel tradition' and once gifted a Dior bag to Kenji Fujimoto, Kim Jong-il's sushi chef.

Fujimoto claimed to have met her and described her as 'just so charming... I cannot describe her voice, it's so soft...'.

South Korean diplomats who travelled to the North for talks with Kim Jong-un recently said Ri joined him at the negotiating table.

They said the pair were an affectionate couple and 'seemed equal'.

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiXmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtMTMzMDAzNjcvS2ltLUpvbmctVW5zLXNlY3JldC1sb3Zlci1IeW9uLVNvbmctd29sLmh0bWzSAWJodHRwczovL3d3dy5kYWlseW1haWwuY28udWsvbmV3cy9hcnRpY2xlLTEzMzAwMzY3L2FtcC9LaW0tSm9uZy1VbnMtc2VjcmV0LWxvdmVyLUh5b24tU29uZy13b2wuaHRtbA?oc=5

2024-04-12 08:30:52Z
CBMiXmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtMTMzMDAzNjcvS2ltLUpvbmctVW5zLXNlY3JldC1sb3Zlci1IeW9uLVNvbmctd29sLmh0bWzSAWJodHRwczovL3d3dy5kYWlseW1haWwuY28udWsvbmV3cy9hcnRpY2xlLTEzMzAwMzY3L2FtcC9LaW0tSm9uZy1VbnMtc2VjcmV0LWxvdmVyLUh5b24tU29uZy13b2wuaHRtbA