Category: Foreign

  • Sanders seeks halt to $735m arms sale to Jewish State

    Sanders seeks halt to $735m arms sale to Jewish State

    United States (U.S.) Senator Bernie Sanders has submitted a resolution to block the $735 million sale of precision-guided missiles to Israel as pressure mounted in the Democratic Party for an immediate ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.

    The joint resolution of disapproval (JRD) — similar to the House version submitted by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Wednesday — is almost certain not to pass, given strong support for Israel in both the House and Senate.

    The legislation is expected to spark further debate on the issue of Israel in Congress, where a growing number of Democrats have been taking a more critical stance against the longtime ally.

    “At a moment when U.S.-made bombs are devastating Gaza, and killing women and children, we cannot simply let another huge arms sale go through without even a congressional debate,” said Sanders, an independent who votes with Democrats, upon submitting the resolution to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

    The top panel’s chair, Sen. Bob Menendez, said he opposed the measure and added that he was not certain the JRD could be brought to a vote as it was filed on the last of 15 days where Congress can still block the sale before US President Joe Biden is allowed to sign off.

    Democratic and Republican leaders of the Senate Foreign Relations and House Foreign Affairs committees backed the $735 million purchase during an informal review before May 5 — five days before the fighting in Gaza began.

     

  • Israel, Hamas agree Gaza truce

    Israel, Hamas agree Gaza truce

    Israel and Hamas agreed to cease fire across the Gaza Strip border as of 2 a.m. today, an official with the Palestinian Islamist faction said, bringing a potentially tenuous halt to the fiercest fighting in decades.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said his security cabinet had voted unanimously in favour of a “mutual and unconditional” Gaza truce proposed by Egypt, but added that the hour of implementation had yet to be agreed.

    Within minutes of the announcements, in the countdown to the ceasefire, the sides were trading blows again. Sirens warned of incoming rockets in Israeli border communities, and a Reuters reporter heard an air strike in Gaza.

    There was no immediate word of casualties.

    Amid growing global alarm at the bloodshed, U.S. President Joe Biden urged Netanyahu on Wednesday to seek de-escalation. Egypt, Qatar and the United Nations ventured mediation.

    A Hamas official told Reuters the ceasefire would be “mutual and simultaneous”.

    Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi had ordered two security delegations into Israel and the Palestinian territories to work towards upholding the ceasefire, Egyptian state TV reported. It also confirmed the 2 a.m. hour.

    Rocket attacks by Hamas and allied Islamic Jihad had resumed after an eight-hour pause earlier yesterday, as Israel continued shelling that it said aimed to destroy the factions’ military capabilities and deter them from future confrontation after the current conflict.

    Israeli Defence Minister Benny Gantz said on Twitter that the Gaza offensive had yielded “unprecedented military gains”.

    Since the fighting began on May 10, health officials in Gaza say 232 Palestinians, including 65 children, have been killed and more than 1,900 wounded in aerial bombardments. Israel said it has killed at least 160 combatants in Gaza.

    Authorities put the death toll in Israel at 12, with hundreds of people treated for injuries in rocket attacks that have caused panic and sent people rushing into shelters.

    Yesterday, Biden discussed Gaza with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and the White House said reports of moves toward a ceasefire were “encouraging”.

    UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric confirmed that UN Middle East Envoy Tor Wennesland is in Qatar, adding: “We are actively engaged with all the relevant parties for an immediate ceasefire.”

     

     

  • Nigeria has World Bank’s largest portfolio of more than $12b, says Malpass

    Nigeria has World Bank’s largest portfolio of more than $12b, says Malpass

    World Bank Group President David Malpass and Vice President for Western Africa, Ousmane Diagana, in a media roundtable on Thursday, speak on its portfolios in Nigeria, fuel subsidies and more. With the portfolio, programmes under implementation cover a variety of sectors, access to electricity, water, education, health and agriculture. Excerpts:

    In 2020, Nigeria requested for a 3-billion-naira loan from the World Bank. We were able to get 1.5 billion. How soon are we expecting the balance of 1.5 and–or is there any change, delay, in the payment of that 1.5 billion?

    Malpass: Thanks. And I’m going to turn to Ousmane, as well, but I wanted to say one thing, which is Nigeria has huge potential. And with some of the improvements in the economic policies, the growth can be rapid for people across Nigeria. We’ve encouraged efforts that would reduce the subsidies for fossil fuels, that would encourage trade across borders, where Nigeria could be doing more in that area.

    And very importantly, the multiple exchange rates have been a burden on the people of Nigeria, and we’ve encouraged the elimination of the official rates and the unification of rates so that money and investment and remittances can flow in and out of Nigeria with less friction. So, our program remains strongly supportive of the people of Nigeria and of Nigeria. Let me turn to Ousmane for some specifics on Nigeria.

    MR. OUSMANE DIAGANA: Thank you very much, David.

    As we speak, we have probably the largest portfolio of the World Bank in Nigeria. More than $12 billion. Those are programs under implementation covering a variety of sectors, access to electricity, water, education, health, agriculture.

    Especially for this year, indeed, we have prepared a pipeline–we had a pipeline of a number of programs and we have delivered about $2 billion for Nigeria in order to help the population have access to critical services but also to support governments and institutions to provide some technical assistance to a variety of stakeholders.

    The conversation of when Nigeria continues around some of the critical reforms that I think Nigeria has been waiting for some time. And we have seen progress and producing the will continue in Nigeria as a very important partner for the Bank and also the role that it plays in Africa clearly–we make any investment in Nigeria will have also some positive externalities for African countries.

    Thank you.

    MR. MALPASS: Yeah, can I underscore that last point of Ousmane’s, as well, that throughout Africa, if one of the major economies can do well, it has very positive synergy with its neighbors, and that’s one of our primary goals, to have successful economies that then bring synergy with neighbors, because that’s a way that there can be massive progress in Africa.

    Major undertakings

    MR. MALPASS: I want to quickly go through several of our major undertakings. As you know, COVID-19 has taken a toll on lives and livelihoods and economies, so it’s the highest priority in the various meetings and in our work. It’s devastating the poor and the job losses are immense. And also, the reversals in education are a giant challenge.

    Over the last ten years, the World Bank Group has invested over $200 billion in Sub-Saharan Africa and, as I announced on Tuesday at the summit in Paris, in just the next five years, we intend to invest and mobilize about $150 billion in Africa to support the continent’s recovery. And a large portion of that is through grants and long-term zero interest rate loans from IDA, which provides a strong net-positive flow for Africa. So, we’re working full speed on an ambitious IDA20 replenishment, to be concluded by December 2021, and that will be critical for the concessional financing and grants that the IDA countries in Africa need. So, that gives you the context for the funding support that we’re doing both for the public sectors and the private sectors through IFC in Africa. So, it’s an all-out effort by the World Bank to provide as much support as possible during the crisis.

    One of the areas of our work has been on vaccines themselves. Since the outbreak of the crisis, we have invested more than $24 billion in Africa to support health and economic recovery. Our Board authorized $12 billion for the vaccination efforts. And as of today, 18–as of today, there have been 38 African countries that have requested support on vaccination efforts, and 18 of those from West and Central Africa. We have six projects already approved by the World Bank Board, that includes Cote d’Ivoire, The Gambia, Cabo Verde, and more are scheduled to be approved over the next few weeks, several weeks. And so, this effort is moving along fast from the World Bank standpoint, providing financing for countries to both purchase vaccines or receive vaccines from other intermediaries, and, importantly, to distribute those vaccines to people within their countries.

    Unfortunately, the supply of vaccines has been limited. The delays are deepening. The inequality, the divide that’s going on in the world and is a serious problem for fragility and for people’s lives and livelihoods, and I’ve repeatedly urged countries that expect to have excess vaccine supplies to release their excess as soon as possible to developing countries that have delivery programs in place. This is a very important connection that needs to be made week-by-week now. We’re at the crisis stage. We have been–of the COVID pandemic, and there has to be a matching between the countries that have access and the countries that have delivery programs that are ready to go. I’ve emphasized the need for transparency on that, because one of the big gaps is in knowing who has excess vaccines, which manufacturers have deliveries available, and which countries have programs that are ready to actually put shots, put jabs in people’s arms.

    So, in that spirit, the World Bank yesterday launched–we launched a comprehensive online portal that provides easy access to information. I tweeted about it this morning. I encourage everyone to click on the website and see how the countries are–how the vaccination programs are set up in each of the now 22 programs that we have in place, and it’s going to mount week by week. We hope to reach 50 programs by midyear, which have clear documentation, clear explanation of the connection to the deliveries in countries.

    This builds on the assessments that we did earlier in the year and late last year, 140 assessments of the capacity to actually deliver vaccines. So, this becomes the critical path in the vaccination effort for the countries that have excess vaccines to free up their options, their control, their export limitations so that the vaccines can go to developing countries that have programs and the World Bank has active, transparent programs that reach people arms, and they’re available now and they’re transparently disclosed on the website. And we encourage other intermediaries and other participants in the global vaccination effort to do the same in terms of transparency.

    I want to turn to debt sustainability. It also has a very important transparency aspect to it. The contracts are burdened by collateralization, by non-disclosure clauses, and by restraints on comparable treatment as countries look to restructure their debt contract. This is a major problem in West Africa. And as COVID-19 persists into 2021, the debt situation will certainly deteriorate further.

    Comprehensive debt solutions, we think, involve four elements which we have proposed: One is debt suspension; then, there is debt reduction; there is the resolution of debt; and there’s transparency, debt transparency. So, in all four areas, there needs to be much more progress. We supported the DSSI, but recognize that there was only partial–for many of the major creditors, there was only partial participation. And during 2020, and now into 2021, large profits are being withdrawn from Africa, even during the crisis, and there’s no real prospect for cancellation of those debts.

    One of the themes of the Paris Conference two days ago, on Tuesday, was the call by African heads of state for cancellation of debts, but that’s not the direction that the world is moving at this point. A permanent solution is necessary for this overhang of debt stocks for countries that have unsustainable debt levels. World Bank is working closely with the IMF to try to implement the G-20 common framework for debt reduction. The success of that hinges on full participation by the private sector, and also improvements in debt transparency. The full private sector participation is an essential part of any path to lasting debt sustainability. Let me give you some examples.

    It’s not sufficient that Chad or Ethiopia, which have asked for common framework treatment–merely for them to seek comparable treatment from private creditors. The private creditors themselves must do their fair share and deliver debt relief in a timely manner and on fully comparable terms to official bilateral creditors. That process is underway, but has moved very slowly and it means continuing burden of unsustainable debt on countries within Africa.

    The private creditors need to recognize that a successful debt restructuring is a beneficial outcome for all parties involved. It brings relief to the people of the country, as we are trying to do in Chad, and it also benefits the private sector, because it limits their losses compared to a scenario of outright default. So, in the longer term, we want to–we, the World Bank and the countries of Africa are working to try to have a stable and thriving economic growth prospect for the people of Africa and the business opportunities that are available there. But without the private creditors fully on board, the common framework won’t be able to provide sustainable solutions for Chad, Ethiopia, or Zambia, the three countries that have asked for common framework treatment.

    And this–okay, so, I wanted to go through that in some detail, because we’re at an important turning point in the common framework and we are urgently trying to implement it successfully so that we can have sustainability in debt. This builds on very strong World Bank financing, including to Chad. Over the next decade, the World Bank plans to put as much as $1.4 billion into Chad. This will strengthen Chad’s ability to sustain a moderate debt burden, if that can be achieved. So, that’s the overall goal, to bring Chad to a moderate debt level. But so far, the participation by creditors has been limited and we’re working on that in detail.

    Okay. I want to also mention, and I’m happy to take questions on these areas–but I want to mention climate change. This is a critical part of the World Bank efforts. We are working with countries to strengthen their capacity to absorb and adapt and transform their systems in response to climate change. We’ve announced the elements of our climate change action plan.

    These include–and importantly, we want to integrate climate and development so it works for the people of the countries. We want to have actual results in terms of success, successful adaptation and successful mitigation efforts within the climate sphere. There needs to be electricity access, and so that means growth in the production of electricity, but in ways that are cleaner and that are lower carbon emitting as we go along. So, that’s a major effort underway and the elements have been announced and we’ll be releasing the plan itself and also participating actively in countries’ nationally determined contributions, the NDCs that are part of the Paris Agreement, as we, the World Bank, work to align our financing with the Paris Agreement. And we’re also participating actively in the runup to COP26.

    I wanted to mention also, and I’m sorry to be so brief on very important issues, the work that we’re doing on fragile, conflict, and violent states. Eleven of the 22 countries in the West Africa Region are now affected by FCV, and more than 70 percent of the population live in FCV countries. So, this is the–we’re scaling up our financial aid to the G-5, the Sahel countries: Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, and Niger through IDA to support the conflict prevention and also the resilience and emergency responses that are needed. Our aid to those five, we expect to reach $8.5 billion for the fiscal years 2021, 2022, and 2023. So, that is starting now for the next two or so–little more than two calendar years from now.

    Let me conclude, very nice to be with you today. We know that the road to recovery will be a long one. The countries in the Region have applied lessons from previous crises, such as the Ebola outbreak in 2014. Many countries have strengthened their social safety nets to help protect the poor, and the World Bank is working actively–World Bank Group is working actively on those efforts and we think those are important preparations for future crises and the ability to get money to people during a crisis is a critical part of preparation.

    And we want to also move faster on the key reforms that each of the countries is facing that will help draw in new investment. So, that gives you some description of the expanse of our work and I look forward to your questions.

    Do you believe that we are in danger of having a lost decade in Africa? And what can we do to avoid it, or what debt relief will have to do with the solution?

    MR. MALPASS: Yeah, thank you. Well, the COVID itself was a historically large setback, and it was particularly harmful for people–for the poorest and most vulnerable. And so, from that standpoint, we recognize that it will take years to claw back some of the losses.

    I mentioned earlier the education system. So, by having the advanced economies close down, and then the education systems–often, schools closed–children weren’t able to move forward, and that’s a critical part of the future of every country, and especially in Africa with the youth.

    So, we’re working very hard to avoid a lost decade; so, I want to say that. And I don’t think–I think there are still pathways forward in order to avoid having all of the setbacks extend in Africa. So, I want to give some specifics on that.

    One is from the vaccination effort. So, we have to get vaccination started in more countries, and that means getting the supply, and that means those countries with excess releasing the supply. And that means using programs that are ready, that are on the shelf, that are on websites, and fully disclosed as the World Bank programs are, to get vaccinations to people across their countries. So, that’s a key starting point.

    And then, I wanted to say a second vital area is on debt. Oftentimes, the term “lost decade” is applied to Latin America, and I worked throughout the 1980s on the Latin debt crisis. And we’re trying hard to avoid the situation that occurred in that crisis where, year after year, the debts were rescheduled, they were pushed forward into the future, but never actually reduced. And so, the new investment couldn’t come in because they were–they realized that they were going to end up be used to pay previously contracted debt. So, there needs to be a mechanism for those countries in Africa that have unsustainable debt burdens, for them to have actual debt reduction, debt relief.

    And that’s what we’re working on with–that’s what we’re trying to do with my call a year ago–over a year ago–was for a debt moratorium. The G-20 put forward the debt suspension initiative, which delayed the payments but kept the interest rates compounding on that debt. And now, we have the common framework, where it faces the obstacles from the debt being–much of the key debt being collateralized, being nondisclosed as far as the contracts, and these are obstacles to successful debt restructuring and raises the concern or the possibility of a lost decade; so, we’re working on that.

    And then third, and my final point, is on the economic advancements themselves. Many countries have key things that they could be doing in terms of digitalization, in terms of trade facilitation, in terms of unification of exchange rates, in terms of the business climate being improved, in terms of infrastructure, which is so vital. All of those things could be done more.

    And I would like to cite Sudan. We are making progress in Sudan. And you know on Monday there was a major conference in Paris on the progress on Sudan. We were able to clear our arrears, then the African Development Bank’s arrears. And now, the IMF’s arrears are on track to being cleared. And that enables the international system to help Sudan. And then, in order to accomplish that, Sudan was taking very important steps to help itself through the unification of the exchange rate and other reforms that are really working.

    And so, I encourage each country to work to avoid the last decade that is still a risk for the continent.

  • Spain accuses Morocco of ‘blackmail’ after Ceuta migrant crisis

    Spain accuses Morocco of ‘blackmail’ after Ceuta migrant crisis

    Agency Reporter

    Spain’s defence minister on Thursday accused Morocco of engaging in “blackmail” after thousands of migrants surged into the Spanish territory of Ceuta in North Africa.

    “We will not accept the slightest blackmail or questioning of the territorial integrity [of Spain],” Defence Minister Margarita Robles told Spanish broadcaster RNE on Thursday.

    The situation in Ceuta was largely back to normal on Thursday, after more than 8,000 migrants, including some 2,000 minors, had arrived in the Spanish exclave – and therefore the European Union – between Monday and Tuesday.

    The migrants had managed to swim around the border fence to Ceuta after Morocco suddenly suspended security controls along the Mediterranean coastline without explanation.

    By Wednesday evening, some 5,600 of these migrants had already been sent back to Morocco.

    The view in Madrid is that Morocco allowed the migrants to cross unimpeded because the government was angry over Spain’s medical aid to a leader of the Western Sahara secessionist movement.

    READ ALSO: China jails 29 Taiwanese deported from Spain for fraud

    Robles described Morocco’s action as “aggression against Spain and the EU.”

    She accused Rabat of violating international law and of abusing young people and even children “to play politics”.

    Spanish media said the Moroccan government is annoyed that Madrid allowed the entry of Brahim Ghali, the secretary-general of the Polisario Front movement.

    The movement seeks the independence of North Africa’s disputed Western Sahara. Morocco took over Western Sahara in 1975 after Spain withdrew from the region.

    It claims the area as part of its territory. The Polisario Front seeks the territory’s independence.

    Ghali has been treated in Spain for the Coronavirus (COVID-19) since April. (dpa/NAN)

  • Berlin police in mass raid on suspected child pornographers

    Berlin police in mass raid on suspected child pornographers

    Agency Reporter

    Police in Berlin has conducted a mass raid on suspected users and producers of child pornography in the city on Wednesday.

    The police said more than 40 apartments and other rooms in the German capital were searched from early Wednesday morning.

    The raids were in connection with the suspected use and distribution of child pornography.

    Early this month, police in the southern state of Bavaria raided 49 premises in connection with the production of child pornography and identified 51 suspects.

    READ ALSO: Seven arrested for kidnap, pornography

    Also this month, a child porn darknet platform thought to have had more than 400,000 members and internationally oriented was shut down.

    Several men were arrested as suspected operators in Germany. The darknet platform’s shared images and videos also included recordings of the most serious sexual abuse of young children. (dpa/NAN)

  • 73-year-old body exhumed to solve mystery of cold case in Australia

    73-year-old body exhumed to solve mystery of cold case in Australia

    Agency Reporter

    Police in South Australia (SA) said that a 73-year-old body has been exhumed in an attempt to solve one of the country’s oldest cold cases.

    The remains of the Somerton Man were unearthed from a grave in Adelaide’s West Terrace Cemetery, marked `the unknown man’ on Wednesday morning.

    The Somerton Man was found slumped against a wall at Somerton Beach in the suburbs of Adelaide on Dec. 1, 1948.

    His identity and cause of death had remained a mystery ever since, sparking speculation that he was a spy and making it one of Australia’s most notorious cold cases.

    SA police in April announced that Attorney-General Vickie Chapman had given them the green light to exhume the body in the hope that a DNA profile could be developed.

    Des Bray, a detective superintendent from the Major Crimes Investigation Branch, said that the exhumation was done with dignity and respect.

    “The Somerton Man is not just a curiosity or a mystery to be solved, he’s somebody’s father, son, perhaps grandfather, uncle, brother and that’s why we’re doing this and trying to identify him,’’ he told News Corp Australia.

    READ ALSO: Australian study shows 26 butterflies at great risk of extinction

    Following the recovery of the remains, Forensic Science SA will attempt to recover a DNA profile from the man.

    “If a DNA profile can be obtained a forensic case meeting will be held to formulate the most appropriate DNA strategy, which will then require considerable investigation work to have any chance of identifying the man or where he originated from.’’

    Previous requests to recover the man’s remains were denied but Forensic Science SA assistant director of operations Anne Coxon saying that doing so was now worthwhile because technology is light years ahead of the techniques available when this body was discovered in the late 1940s.

    “Tests of this nature are often highly complex and will take time, however, we will be using every method at our disposal to try and bring closure to this enduring mystery,’’ she told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). (Xinhua/NAN)

  • China to relax birth policy: Sources

    China to relax birth policy: Sources

    Agency Reporter

     

    China says it will be careful in relaxing its birth policies for fear of harming social stability, policy sources said.

    It said this even as the latest census highlights the urgency to address the country’s declining birth trends and ageing population.

    Expectations for birth policy reforms are rising after the 2020 census last week showed China’s population grew at its slowest in the last decade since the 1950s as births declined and ageing accelerated.

    A fertility rate of 1.3 children per woman in 2020, on par with ageing societies like Japan and Italy, underscores the risk for China.

    China, the world’s second-biggest economy, may already be in irreversible population decline without having first accumulated the household wealth of G7 nations.

    Top leaders are working out a broader plan to cope with demographic challenges, the sources said, including more effective ways to encourage childbearing by easing financial burdens on couples, rather than simply removing birth curbs.

    READ ALSO: China population hits over 1.4b

    Raising the retirement age, which Beijing has said will be done gradually, will help slow a decline in the workforce and eventually ease pressures on the under-funded pension system, they said.

    China introduced a controversial “one-child policy” in the late 1970s but relaxed restrictions in 2016 to allow all couples to have two children as it tried to rebalance its rapidly aging population.

    The change, however, failed to halt declining births.

    The sources said they expect Beijing to encourage more childbearing under the current policy framework, before fully lifting birth restrictions over the next 3-5 years.

    They added that removing birth restrictions could have unintended consequences: a limited impact on city dwellers, who are reluctant to have more children due to high costs, while rural families could expand faster, adding to poverty and employment pressures. NAN

  • Israel kills 42 in Gaza as Netanyahu warns war will go on

    Israel kills 42 in Gaza as Netanyahu warns war will go on

    Agency Reporter 

    Israeli airstrikes on Gaza City flattened three buildings and killed no fewer than 42 people yesterday, Palestinian medics said.

    Despite the heavy death toll and international efforts to broker a cease-fire, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the fourth war with Gaza’s Hamas rulers would rage on.

    Netanyahu, in a televised address yesterday, said the attacks were continuing at “full-force” and will “take time.”

    Israel “wants to levy a heavy price” from the Hamas militant group, he said. He was flanked by his defence minister and political rival Benny Gantz in a show of unity.

    Since violence flared last Monday, at least 188 Palestinians, including 55 children, have been killed in the Gaza Strip. More than 1,200 others have been wounded. In the occupied West Bank, Israeli forces have killed at least 13 Palestinians.

    Israel has reported 10 dead, including two children, from the thousands of missiles fired from Gaza by Hamas and other Palestinian groups, many of which were intercepted by Israel’s Iron Dome air defence system.

    The Israeli air assault early yesterday was the deadliest single attack, marking the worst fighting since their devastating 2014 war in Gaza.

    The airstrikes hit a major downtown street of residential buildings and storefronts over the course of five minutes after midnight, destroying two adjacent buildings and one about 50 yards (meters) down the road.

    At one point, a rescuer shouted, “Can you hear me?” into a hole in the rubble. “Are you OK?” Minutes later, first responders pulled a survivor out and carried him off on an orange stretcher. The Gaza Health Ministry said 16 women and 10 children were among those killed, with more than 50 people wounded, and rescue efforts are still underway.

    Earlier, the Israeli military said it destroyed the home of Gaza’s top Hamas leader, Yahiyeh Sinwar, in a separate strike in the southern town of Khan Younis. It was the third such attack in the last two days on the homes of senior Hamas leaders, who have gone underground.

    Israel appeared to have stepped up strikes in recent days to inflict as much damage as possible on Hamas as international mediators work to end the fighting and stave off an Israeli ground invasion in Gaza.

    But targeting the group’s leaders could hinder those efforts. A United States (U.S.) diplomat has been deployed in the region to de-escalate tensions. The United Nations (UN) Security Council was also meeting yesterday.

    In its airstrikes, Israel has leveled a number of Gaza City’s tallest office and residential buildings, alleging they contain Hamas military infrastructure. Among them was the building housing The Associated Press office and those of other media outlets.

    The latest violence broke out in east Jerusalem last month, when Palestinian clashed with police in response to Israeli police tactics during Ramadan and the threatened eviction of dozens of Palestinian families by Jewish settlers.

    A focal point of clashes was the Al-Aqsa Mosque, a frequent flashpoint that is located on a hilltop compound that is revered by both Muslims and Jews.

    Hamas fired rockets toward Jerusalem last Monday, triggering the Israeli assault on impoverished Gaza, which is home to more than two million Palestinians and has been under an Israeli and Egyptian blockade since Hamas seized power from rival Palestinian forces in 2007.

    Speaking alongside Netanyahu yesterday, Israel’s military chief, Lt. Gen. Aviv Kohavi, said Hamas did not anticipate Israel’s overwhelming response to its rocket fire. “Hamas made a serious and grave mistake and didn’t read us properly.”

    The turmoil has spilled over, fueling protests in the occupied West Bank and stoking violence within Israel between its Jewish and Arab citizens, with clashes and vigilante attacks on people and property.

    Yesterday, a driver rammed into an Israeli checkpoint in the east Jerusalem neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah — where the Palestinian families had been threatened with eviction — injuring six officers before police shot and killed the attacker, Israeli police said.

    The violence also sparked pro-Palestinian protests in cities across Europe and the United States, with French police firing tear gas and water cannons at demonstrators in Paris.

    However, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called for an immediate ceasefire, saying in his address to the council that hostilities between the two parties were “utterly appalling” and urging them to “allow mediation efforts to intensify and succeed”.

    The UN Security Council (UNSC) had privately met twice last week over the worsening violence, but has so far been unable to agree on a public statement because the US – a strong ally of Israel – did not believe it would be helpful, diplomats said.

    China voiced regret that the U.S. has blocked a UNSC statement on Israeli-Palestinian violence as it urged greater international efforts to stop the bloodshed.

    “We call upon the U.S. to shoulder its responsibilities, take a just position, and together with most of the international community support the Security Council in easing the situation,” said Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, who chaired Yesterday’s meeting as China is council president for May.

  • Leading conservatives enter Iran presidential race

    Leading conservatives enter Iran presidential race

    Iran’s judiciary chief Ebrahim Raisi and former parliamentary speaker Ali Larijani have registered to run in next month’s presidential election.

    The two conservatives, who have close ties with Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, are seen as the leading contenders to succeed Hassan Rouhani.

    Rouhani, a moderate, is not allowed to run for a third consecutive term.

    More than 300 other hopefuls have also applied to be candidates. They must all now be vetted by the Guardian Council.

    The 12 theologians and jurists on the council approved only six of the more than 1,600 candidates for the last election in 2017, which Rouhani won in the first round with 57% of the vote. Raisi came second with 38%.

    Since then there has been rising discontent in Iran over the state of the country’s economy, which has been crippled by U.S. sanctions reinstated in 2018 by then-President Donald Trump.

    He abandoned a nuclear deal negotiated by Rouhani that saw Iran limit its nuclear activities in return for sanctions relief. Iran stopped abiding by key commitments in response to the move.

    “I have come as an independent to the stage to make changes in the executive management of the country and to fight poverty, corruption, humiliation and discrimination,” the 60-year-old Raisi said in a statement on Saturday before registering his candidacy.

    Later, in an apparent dig at establishment figures like Larijani and candidates allied to Rouhani, the hard line cleric told journalists that “those who founded and partnered with the current situation can’t claim they can change it”.

    Reformists and human rights activists have expressed concerns about Raisi’s background, particularly his role in the mass executions of several thousand political prisoners in 1988.

    Raisi has said the executions were justified because the late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini issued a fatwa or religious ruling.

    Mr Larijani, a 63-year-old conservative former nuclear negotiator who currently serves as an adviser to Ayatollah Khamenei, said the other presidential contenders were not capable of fixing the economy, particularly those with military or judicial backgrounds.

    “The economy is neither a garrison nor a court that would be managed with shouts and orders,” he told a news conference after registering.

    Other candidates in the 18 June election include Rouhani’s First Vice-President, Eshaq Jahangiri; former Supreme National Security Council secretary and nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili; and Expediency Council Secretary Mohsen Rezaei, a former head of the Revolutionary Guards.

  • Amazing practices of the Arabs

    Amazing practices of the Arabs

    By Uwaifo Faith Abiodun

    The world just celebrated Eid-Al-fitr, a Muslim holiday aimed at celebrating the completion of Ramadan (the Muslim month of fasting).

    Islam originated from the Arabs who have amazing cultures. They pride themselves in their great hospitality, which is quite true for example; a stranger can appear in the home of an Arab uninvited and will be welcomed.

    The host provides the stranger with food and shelter for 72 hours, only after three days is the host allowed to question the presence of his strange guest. This gesture emanates from the Bedouin culture and has been passed down from generation to generation.

    Read Also: BREAKING: COVID-19: Bayelsa imposes curfew from 8pm to 6am

    The Arabs say the guest comes first, so they take time in taking good care of guests. It is then considered shameful not to offer food to guests in Arab homes, so it is normal to get laden with food when you visit an Arab home, they get to dress you the way they are and can even share their farm produce with you.

    The Arabs are so hospitable that you cannot pay the bills of anything you buy, your host insists on paying the bills.

    We cannot deny that even here in Nigeria, our Muslim brothers and sisters are similar concerning hospitality, anyone who has lived among the Muslims before can attest to this fact.

    They care not only for guests but also for the poor and the needy. We hope that this celebration of Eid-Al-Fitr will bring to the remembrance of our brothers what the celebration stands for.