Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Palestinians will not be allowed to return to homes in northern Gaza, says IDF

 For all those who insisted this wasn't land grab. How wrong you were.

Brig Gen Itzik Cohen said in a briefing that aid would only be allowed to enter south of Gaza Strip, not the north

 in Jerusalem and  in Beirut
Wed 6 Nov 2024 19.17 GMT

Palestinians will not be allowed to return to homes in northern Gaza, says IDF

Brig Gen Itzik Cohen said in a briefing that aid would only be allowed to enter south of Gaza Strip, not the north

Israeli ground forces are getting closer to “the complete evacuation” of northern Gaza and residents will not be allowed to return home, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has said, in what appears to be the first official acknowledgment from Israel it is systematically removing Palestinians from the area.

In a media briefing on Tuesday night, the IDF Brig Gen Itzik Cohen told Israeli reporters that since troops had been forced to enter some areas twice, such as Jabaliya camp, “there is no intention of allowing the residents of the northern Gaza Strip to return to their homes”.

He added that humanitarian aid would be allowed to “regularly” enter the south of the territory but not the north, since there are “no more civilians left”.

What humanitarian aid is that?






Six In The Morning Wednesday 6 November 2024

 



‘It’s like living in a prison’: inside the besieged Palestinian village isolated from the rest of the West Bank

Since the 7 October attack, and the ensuing war in Gaza, restrictions in Beit Iksa have become even more suffocating

By  in Beit Iksa, West Bank

In January this year, four-year-old Ruqayya Jahalin, her mother and her five siblings were waiting in a taxi at the checkpoint that is the only way in and out of their home, the occupied West Bank village of Beit Iksa.

Inspections by the Israeli military or border police mean it often takes a long time for Palestinians to enter the besieged village, but everything seemed normal until, out of nowhere, the border police started shooting indiscriminately, hitting Ruqayya in the back.

According to a report by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, Aisha, her mother, screamed for help, but could not leave the van for fear she would also be shot. The driver called for an ambulance, but the security personnel wouldn’t let the vehicle, nor the girl’s father, pass the checkpoint; after 15 minutes, Ruqayya died in her desperate mother’s arms.

Ukrainian troops clash with N. Korean units for the first time in Russia, official says

Ukrainian soldiers have clashed with North Korean units that were recently deployed to support Russia for the first time, Ukraine's defence ministry confirmed Tuesday. The fighting took place in Russia's Kursk border region. 

Ukrainian troops have for the first time engaged with North Korean units that were recently deployed to help Russia in the war with its neighbor, Ukraine's defense minister said Tuesday.

Another Kyiv official said Ukraine's army fired artillery at North Korean soldiers in Russia's Kursk border region.

The comments were the first official reports that Ukrainian and North Korean forces have engaged in combat, following a deployment that has given the war a new complexion as it approaches its 1,000-day milestone.

Retrieved nuke fuel debris from reactor within safety limits

THE ASAHI SHIMBUN

November 6, 2024 at 14:08 JST


The operator of the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant reported on Nov. 5 that the radiation level of retrieved fuel debris from a reactor that melted down in 2011 is within the threshold for safe handling.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. said that the trial removal of debris from the No. 2 reactor will be completed on or after Nov. 7.

On Nov. 2, TEPCO placed the device that collected the fuel debris in an isolation box set up outside the containment vessel.

Israel’s wartime row: What’s behind the rift between Netanyahu and Gallant?


The prime minister has sacked his defiant defence minister in an attempt to settle a schism at the pinnacle of power.

As Americans cast their votes in a monumental presidential election, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu quietly ousted Defence Minister Yoav Gallant.

The two figures shared an openly divisive relationship following the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on October 7, 2023.

Netanyahu has long attempted to absolve himself of responsibility for the security lapse.

China welcomes Myanmar's embattled leader on first visit since coup

Jonathan Head

South East Asia Correspondent

Myanmar’s military leader Min Aung Hlaing is on his first visit to China since he ousted the elected government led by Aung San Suu Kyi in February 2021.


The significant losses his regime has suffered in the civil war at the hands of poorly-armed insurgents has raised questions over how long he will remain at the helm.


So, the invitation to visit China - an important ally, neighbour and Myanmar's largest trading partner - is significant, although it is not a state visit.




US cancels $1.1bn of Somalia’s debt in ‘historic’ financial agreement


Commitment by Mogadishu’s largest single lender is latest in series of deals to forgive ‘unsustainable’ $4.5bn debt

Wed 6 Nov 2024 14.10 GMT

Somalia has announced that more than $1.1bn (£860m) of outstanding loans will be cancelled by the US, a sum representing about a quarter of the country’s remaining debt.

The announcement is the latest in a series of agreements in which Somalia’s creditors have committed to forgiving its debt obligations.

Most of Somalia’s debt had built up during the era of Siad Barre’s military dictatorship, which collapsed in the early 1990s and triggered a ruinous three-decade civil war.




Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Late Night Music: Deep Progressive Techno #26

Watch live: 2024 US presidential election updates and first results | DW News

Six In The Morning 5 November 2024

 

North Korean troops reportedly on Russian front lines amid escalation fears

A combat role for Pyongyang’s troops risks the entry of a third state into the conflict prompted by Moscow’s invasion in 2022.

Thousands of North Korean troops are now on the ground in Russia ready to support its war on Ukraine, including in the front-line Kursk region, South Korea has reported.

Over 10,000 North Korean soldiers have arrived in Russia, Seoul’s defence ministry said on Tuesday. The report follows similar announcements from Ukraine and the United States, with fears rising that the deployment of Pyongyang’s forces on the battlefield could mark an escalation of the war to include a third state.


‘Collapse is how we win’: US far right aims to make gains on election division

Among extremists, election results matter less than chaos and destruction – they hope ‘civil war kicks off’ either way

Tue 5 Nov 2024 16.05 GMT


‘Collapse is how we win’: US far right aims to make gains on election division

Among extremists, election results matter less than chaos and destruction – they hope ‘civil war kicks off’ either way

While Russian disinformation and election denialism are seeding mistrust in the American electoral process, some far-right extremists are already heralding this divisive election season as an unbridled victory for their cause.

To them, who wins or loses is less important than the effect: with already two assassination attempts on Donald Trump and both mainstream parties more at rhetorical war than ever before, they see signs of hope the US government is beginning to lose control of the country.

For example, one popular Telegram account on the fringes of the far right gleefully asked followers in a survey what they think the outcome of the election could be.

Sweden jails activist who burned Quran for inciting hatred

Far-right activist Rasmus Paludan caused outrage when he burned a copy of the Quran in 2022. A judge said his actions went beyond reasonable criticism of Islam and were intended to defame Muslims.

A Swedish court has sentenced a far-right activist to four months in jail for inciting hatred against Muslims at two protests in 2022.

Rasmus Paludan sparked protests around the world when he staged demonstrations against Islam in Malmo that saw him burn a copy of the Quran.

The court said he made offensive remarks directed at Muslims, Arabs and Africans at these rallies.

Nigeria court frees 119 protesters, some facing death penalty, after government drops charges

A Nigerian court freed 119 people including minors on Tuesday, after the authorities dropped charges against them arising from deadly protests in August against economic hardship.

The accused had faced charges including treason and inciting a military coup and had been arraigned in batches of 76 and 43 last Friday. One of the charges carried the death penalty.

President Bola Tinubu on Monday ordered the release of all minors detained during anti-government protests in August and dropped the charges against them.

Service industry takes stand against customer abuse in 'polite' Japan

The Japanese are often said to be well-regarded for their etiquette and social graces.

But if this is especially true for those working in Japan's service industry, the same cannot always be said of their customers.

Famously once referred to as "gods" by the firms that serve them, some shoppers are seemingly taking advantage of their exalted status b

Mystery fires were Russian 'test runs' to target cargo flights to US


Paul Kirby
Europe digital editor

Frank Gardner
BBC security correspondent

A series of parcel fires targeting courier companies in Poland, Germany and the UK were dry runs aimed at sabotaging flights to the US and Canada, Polish prosecutors say.


Katarzyna Calow-Jaszewska revealed late last month that four people had been arrested and authorities across Europe were investigating the incidents.

Western security officials have now told US media they believe the fires - which happened in July - were part of an orchestrated campaign by Russia’s military intelligence agency, the GRU.

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