Indonesian volunteers report Israeli strikes on Palestinians fleeing assault on north Gaza

Special Indonesian volunteers report Israeli strikes on Palestinians fleeing assault on north Gaza
Smoke rises following an Israeli attack near the Indonesian Hospital in northern Gaza. (Reuters)
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Updated 10 October 2024
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Indonesian volunteers report Israeli strikes on Palestinians fleeing assault on north Gaza

Indonesian volunteers report Israeli strikes on Palestinians fleeing assault on north Gaza
  • About 400,000 Palestinians trapped in north Gaza as Israeli military launches new strikes
  • Workers at Indonesian hospital choose to stay with patients despite Israel’s evacuation orders

JAKARTA: Palestinians fleeing northern Gaza after being ordered to do so by the Israeli military are being shot at as they evacuate, Indonesian hospital volunteers report, as hundreds of thousands of civilians are trapped in the area.

The Israeli forces issued evacuation orders on Sunday morning for large parts of northern Gaza and instructed residents to seek refuge in the overcrowded “safe zone” in the southern area of Al-Mawasi, ahead of new ground and air attacks.  

The Indonesia Hospital in north Gaza, which is funded by the Indonesian NGO Medical Emergency Rescue Committee, or MER-C, was among the medical centers ordered to evacuate.

MER-C volunteers said the people who tried to flee were targeted by Israeli forces on the routes designated as humanitarian zones. 

“We have Indonesian volunteers there, and when they reported to us we could hear the sound of guns being fired sporadically as people started to evacuate to the south,” Sarbini Abdul Murad, chairman of MER-C’s board of trustees in Jakarta, told Arab News.  

“What Israel is doing is just like the beginning of their war on Gaza, asking residents to evacuate according to the military’s orders, but shooting them while they are evacuating,” he said. “Now it’s the same, they issue the designated routes for evacuation but shoot people on their journey.” 

The Indonesia Hospital was functioning partially before Sunday’s evacuation orders. More than two dozen patients remained under the care of about 40 medical workers who chose to stay. 

“Health workers are still there even though they are also ordered to leave the hospital. They are doing so for the sake of humanity, because many residents are also staying, refusing to evacuate,” Murad said. 

“Many people are also in critical condition, so the health workers are staying because they are very needed by the people. All the patients being treated are victims of Israeli attacks.” 

Dozens of people were reported to have been killed and wounded in north Gaza this week, as Israel launched new strikes, which it said were aimed at preventing Palestinian fighters from regrouping in the area. 

“Israel didn’t keep its promise. When they issued the orders for evacuation, it was also written that there will be humanitarian routes … but in reality, Israel shot and bombed the refugees who are evacuating,” Fikri Rofiul Haq, a MER-C volunteer at the Indonesian hospital, said in an audio message shared on social media.

“Israel also threatened that anyone who stays in the hospital will be killed or captured … Israel is destroying all health facilities in northern Gaza, because there are only three functioning hospitals left.” 

About 400,000 people are trapped in north Gaza, Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the UN relief agency for Palestine, UNRWA, wrote on X on Wednesday. 

He said many refused to leave “because they know too well that no place anywhere in Gaza is safe.” 

More than a year since Israel launched its war on Gaza, its military has killed at least 42,000 people and injured more than 97,000. The real death toll is feared to be much higher, with estimates published by the medical journal The Lancet indicating that as of July it could be more than 186,000.


Caabu Press Release: A momentous day of joy for Syrians

Caabu Press Release: A momentous day of joy for Syrians
Updated 7 sec ago
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Caabu Press Release: A momentous day of joy for Syrians

Caabu Press Release: A momentous day of joy for Syrians

The departure of the Assad family from power in Syria after 53 years is a momentous moment for all Syrians. It allows a new horizon for Syrians who have suffered so much for years even decades under one of the most brutal regimes in history.
 
Caabu Director, Chris Doyle observed that: “To topple this tyrannical leadership in less than two weeks with relatively little bloodshed is extraordinary and bodes well for Syria’s future. It is clear that all components of Syrian society agreed that Assad had to go. Moreover, whilst the uppermost echelons of this mafia regime have gone, the state has survived which will be vital in keeping services going and saving the country from a collapse reminiscent of Iraq.”
 
International actors including the UK must get behind a proper political process to support a Syrian-led political transition in Syria that is inclusive with respect for all communities. This must ensure that the interests of the Syrian people are given priority above those of external powers who have all too often polarised Syrian society and played a negative even destructive role in Syria.
 
The donor community must assist in the transition process in a responsible fashion. The immediate humanitarian needs of the Syrian people must be addressed. But the Syrian economy needs to be reignited.  Donor states can help in a phased lifting of sanctions, but also stimulation small and medium business across the country.  The benefits of any transition must be felt across all sectors of society in all areas of the state.


Taiwan military sets up emergency response ahead of Chinese drills

Taiwan military sets up emergency response ahead of Chinese drills
Updated 49 min 44 sec ago
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Taiwan military sets up emergency response ahead of Chinese drills

Taiwan military sets up emergency response ahead of Chinese drills
  • China expected to launch another round of exercises waters around the island
  • Taiwan’s military has activated its ‘combat readiness exercises’ at strategic locations

TAIPEI: Taiwan’s military set up an emergency response center and raised its alert level on Monday, saying China has set up seven zones of reserved airspace and dispatched naval fleets and coast guard boats to waters around the island.
China, which claims democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory, had been expected to launch another round of exercises in response to Taiwan President Lai Ching-te’s trip to the Pacific, which included stopovers in Hawaii and the US territory of Guam, security sources had told Reuters.
China has set up seven “temporary reserved areas” of airspace to the east of its eastern Fujian and Zhejiang provinces, Taiwan’s defense ministry said in a statement, adding those zones are valid from Monday to Wednesday.
Such zones are temporarily reserved and allocated for a particular user during a set period, though other flights can pass through with permission from controllers, according to international rules.
China’s defense ministry did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
Taiwan’s military said it has activated its “combat readiness exercises” at strategic locations and its naval and coast guard boats are closely monitoring the Chinese military activities.
“Any unilateral and irrational, provocative actions could seriously destroyed peace and stability in the Indo Pacific and that will not by welcomed by the international community,” Taiwan’s defense ministry said.


Dozens of schools in Delhi get bomb threats – report

Dozens of schools in Delhi get bomb threats – report
Updated 09 December 2024
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Dozens of schools in Delhi get bomb threats – report

Dozens of schools in Delhi get bomb threats – report
  • Schools, railway stations and airports this year have been subject to hundreds of bomb threats, which have later turned out to be hoaxes
  • Airlines and airports in India received 999 hoax bomb threats from the start of the year until mid-November

NEW DELHI: At least 40 schools received a bomb threat by email in Delhi on Monday demanding $30,000, ANI news agency said, while police officials conducted initial searches on school premises.
Schools, railway stations and airports this year have been subject to hundreds of bomb threats, which have later turned out to be hoaxes.
Airlines and airports in India received 999 hoax bomb threats from the start of the year until mid-November, and 12 people had been arrested during the same period, government data shows.
Two schools got the threatening email on Sunday night, which said multiple bombs were planted inside buildings and would be detonated if the sender was not paid $30,000, according to ANI.
Many other schools received the emails on Monday morning, prompting school authorities to call parents to take the students home for the day.
Parents were seen picking their children up from the gates of some schools as police checked school premises for suspicious items.
Police officials in Delhi did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Reuters.
In May, more than 50 schools in Delhi and the adjoining suburb of Noida received similar bomb threat emails that turned out to be hoaxes.


Tonga’s prime minister quits moments ahead of no-confidence motion in parliament

Tonga’s prime minister quits moments ahead of no-confidence motion in parliament
Updated 09 December 2024
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Tonga’s prime minister quits moments ahead of no-confidence motion in parliament

Tonga’s prime minister quits moments ahead of no-confidence motion in parliament
  • Siaosi Sovaleni, who took office in 2021, did not specify a reason for his departure but his resignation halted the no-confidence motion expected on Monday

WELLINGTON: Tonga’s Prime Minister Siaosi Sovaleni abruptly resigned in parliament on Monday ahead of a planned no-confidence vote in his leadership, capping a period of fraught relations between his government and Tonga’s king.
Sovaleni, who took office in 2021, did not specify a reason for his departure but his resignation halted the no-confidence motion expected on Monday. It was not immediately clear who would succeed him.
His resignation comes less than a year before a national election in Tonga, a South Pacific island nation of 105,000 people, and it highlighted the occasional tensions between Tonga’s monarchy and elected lawmakers in a still-young democracy after reforms that transferred powers from the royal family and nobles to regular citizens in 2010.
A statement on the Tongan Parliament Facebook page said Sovaleni, 54, quit “for the good of the country and moving Tonga forward.” Video from Tonga’s parliament on Monday showed the leader making brief and emotional remarks in Tongan before the no-confidence vote was scheduled to take place.
Sovaleni’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. His leadership had survived a previous no-confidence vote in September 2023.
In recent months, Sovaleni’s tenure was marked by difficult relations with Tonga’s head of state, King Tupou VI. Although the sovereign’s predecessor ceded power voluntarily in the 2010 democratic reforms, Tupou VI retains powers to dissolve parliament, appoint judges and veto laws.
The king at times made his dissatisfaction with Sovaleni apparent, including by withdrawing confidence in him as defense minister in February. Some lawmakers at first decried the king’s pressure on Sovaleni and his foreign minister as unconstitutional, but both eventually resigned their posts in April — although Sovaleni remained prime minister.
A month earlier, Sovaleni had been photographed at a traditional ceremony of apology to the king, but neither side publicly addressed the event. When Tonga hosted the Pacific Islands Forum Leaders’ Meeting in August, the king was traveling abroad and did not attend the conference — a significant event for the small Pacific nation — which analysts said was a snub to Sovaleni and his government.
Speaking to Radio New Zealand on Monday, Sovaleni did not signal a particular reason for his departure. Asked whether his decision was prompted by disagreements with the king, Sovaleni said that “differences in views” were normal.
“I’m not sure whether that’s the reason,” he said, according to RNZ, adding that he still did not know why he and Tonga’s foreign minister had lost the king’s confidence earlier this year.
“But we still provide respect to his majesty,” Sovaleni told RNZ. “Whatever we do, we always consider that relationship. So maybe you can ask someone else.”
His successor will be selected by Tonga’s 26 lawmakers in a vote. The parliament is made up of 17 lawmakers elected by the public and nine who are nobles, elected by a group of hereditary chiefs.
Sovaleni entered parliament in 2014 and had been a minister since 2019. He led Tonga as the tourism-dependent country struggled to rebound from the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, growing threats from climate change and a catastrophic 2022 volcanic eruption and tsunami, which battered beachfront resorts, homes and businesses around Tonga’s 171 islands.
A former senior public servant who also worked in the private sector before entering politics, Sovaleni is the son of a former Tongan deputy prime minister. He attended high school in New Zealand and studied at the University of Oxford and the University of the South Pacific, attaining master’s degrees in computer science and business.


South Korea opposition accuse ruling party of ‘second coup’

South Korea opposition accuse ruling party of ‘second coup’
Updated 09 December 2024
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South Korea opposition accuse ruling party of ‘second coup’

South Korea opposition accuse ruling party of ‘second coup’
  • President Yoon Suk Yeol plunged the country into political chaos with his attempt to scrap civilian rule
  • His declaration of martial law lasted just six hours after lawmakers managed to vote the measure down

SEOUL: South Korea’s opposition on Monday accused the ruling party of staging a “second coup” by clinging to power and refusing to impeach President Yoon Suk Yeol over his declaration of martial law.
Yoon plunged the country into political chaos with his attempt to scrap civilian rule, which lasted just six hours after lawmakers scuffled with soldiers in the parliament building and managed to vote the measure down, forcing Yoon into an embarrassing U-turn.
The president and a slew of top officials are now being investigated for insurrection, but a bid to impeach Yoon failed Saturday after a boycott by the ruling party, who claim the wildly unpopular leader has agreed to hand power to the prime minister and party chief.
“This is an unlawful, unconstitutional act of a second insurrection and a second coup,” Democratic Party floor leader Park Chan-dae said, urging the ruling party to “stop it immediately.”
Under South Korea’s constitution, the president remains head of government and commander in chief of the army unless he or she is incapacitated, resigns or steps down.
In such a case, power would be handed to the prime minister on an interim basis, until elections could be held.
Claiming that Yoon can remain in office but has delegated his powers to the prime minister and leader of his ruling People Power Party — who is not an elected official — is “a blatant constitutional violation with no legal basis,” Park said.
“Their attitude of placing themselves above the Constitution mirrors that of insurrectionist Yoon Suk Yeol,” he added.
Investigators have already detained the former defense minister, raided his offices, slapped a host of top officials with travel bans, and on Monday called in the general who was made martial law commander for further questioning.
Yoon himself could be called in for questioning, police said Monday, adding that they are “considering” whether to ban him from traveling, as their investigation gathered speed.
“There are no human or physical restrictions to the subject of an investigation,” said Woo Jong-soo, head of the National Investigation Headquarters of the National Police Agency.
Police will investigate “in accordance with the law and principles — without any exceptions.”
The defense ministry confirmed Monday that the embattled Yoon remained at the head of the country’s security apparatus, despite the apparent power vacuum in the country — which remains technically at war with the nuclear-armed North.
“Legally, (control of military forces) currently lies with the commander in chief,” defense ministry spokesperson Jeon Ha-kyou said.
Yoon, 63, has apologized for “anxiety and inconvenience” caused by his declaration of martial law but has not stepped down, saying instead he would entrust decisions about his fate to his party — and accept all political and legal responsibility for the martial law fiasco.
There is no constitutional basis supporting the ruling party’s claim that Yoon can stay in office but hand over his power to unelected party officials, said Kim Hae-won, a constitutional law professor at Pusan National University Law School.
“It seems to resemble an unconstitutional soft coup,” he said.
“If there are issues with the President, there are ways laid out in the Constitution such as suspending the president from his duties, and then move on to proceedings set out in the Constitution, such as impeachment,” he said.
The opposition has already said they will try again to impeach the president, with leader Lee Jae-myung saying another vote would be held on Saturday.
Huge crowds are expected to gather again outside the National Assembly building.
Yoon’s approval rating hit 11 percent, a historic low for the unpopular president, according to a new Gallup poll commissioned by local media.