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Israel drops flyers warning Lebanese against helping Hizbollah

By - Dec 16,2023 - Last updated at Dec 16,2023

A photo taken from a position in northern Israel along the border with Lebanon, shows smoke billowing following Israeli bombardment on hills close to the town of Marwahin in southern Lebanon on Saturday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — The Israeli forces dropped leaflets on parts of south Lebanon on Friday for the first time since the Israeli war on Gaza began, warning residents not to help Hizbollah, inhabitants said.

Since October 8, the frontier between Lebanon and Israel has seen deadly exchanges of fire, mainly between the Israeli forces and the Iran-backed Hizbollah movement, which says it is acting in support of Hamas.

"Early Friday morning, a drone dropped leaflets over the village that landed between the houses," said a resident of Kfarshuba near the border, requesting anonymity due to security concerns.

Another resident said leaflets were dropped twice after the wind blew many from the initial batch away.

"To the residents of south Lebanon, we inform you that the terrorist Hizbollah is infiltrating into your homes and your lands," read a copy of a leaflet seen by AFP.

"You must stop this terrorism for your own security," the text added, warning the population that assisting Hizbollah would expose them "to danger".

Residents along the Lebanese border have said the Israeli army has stepped up its bombardment of frontier villages in recent days.

Israel also dropped leaflets over parts of south Lebanon during a 2006 war with Hizbollah.

Since the cross-border exchanges of fire began in October, more than 120 people have been killed on the Lebanese side of the frontier, most of them Hizbollah fighters but also including a Lebanese soldier and 17 civilians, three of them journalists, according to an AFP tally.

More than 64,000 people have been displaced in Lebanon, mostly in the south, figures from the International Organisation for Migration show.

On the Israeli side, at least six soldiers and four civilians have been killed, authorities there have said.

Gaza 'integral part' of Palestinian state — Abbas

By - Dec 16,2023 - Last updated at Dec 16,2023

RAMALLAH, Palestinian Territories — Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said Gaza was an "integral part" of the Palestinian state during talks with a top US official at his West Bank headquarters on Friday, his office said.

The meeting came as Israel pressed its offensive in Gaza despite mounting international calls for restraint, with key backer the United States saying the war must not lead to a long-term Israeli occupation of the territory.

Abbas told visiting US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan that "Gaza is an integral part of the State of Palestine", his office said in a statement, adding that "the president underscored that separation or any attempt to isolate any part of it is unacceptable".

Abbas "emphasised the urgent need to halt the ongoing Israeli aggression, particularly the genocide being carried out these days upon the Palestinian people in Gaza", the statement added.

He said it was crucial to "spare civilians from the woes and devastation caused by the Israeli war machine".

Sullivan's visit to the region has also included meetings in Israel with prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and defence minister Yoav Gallant.

The United States, which provides billions of dollars in military aid to Israel, has strongly backed its response to Hamas’s attacks, but has voiced increasing concern over civilian casualties and the long-term plan for Gaza.

The war began after Hamas launched an unprecedented surprise attack on Israel on October 7. The health ministry in the Hamas-run Gaza Strip says the war has since killed more than 18,700 people, mostly women and children.

The United Nations General Assembly overwhelmingly supported a non-binding resolution calling for a ceasefire in Gaza, but Washington voted against it.

 

Israel bombs Gaza as rift with US grows

By - Dec 14,2023 - Last updated at Dec 14,2023

People look for survivors amid the rubble of destroyed buildings following Israeli bombardment in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip on Thursday (AFP photo)

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories — Israel bombarded the Gaza Strip on Thursday as a top White House adviser travelled to occupied Jerusalem with a rift growing over civilian casualties.

The war, now in its third month, began after the Palestinian resistance group's unprecedented October 7 attacks on Israel. Israel launched relentless bombardment and ground invasion that has left swathes of Gaza in ruins. According to the health ministry's latest toll, 18,608 people, mostly women and children, have been killed

Israeli air strikes across Gaza overnight killed at least 67 more, the health ministry said.

In the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where violence since October 7 has surged to levels unseen in nearly two decades, the Palestinian health ministry said "a young man died from his wounds" as a result of ongoing Israeli "aggression" in Jenin, a fighters' stronghold.

US President Joe Biden, whose government has provided Israel with billions of dollars in military aid, delivered his sharpest rebuke of the war on Wednesday. He said Israel's "indiscriminate bombing" of Gaza was eroding international support.

But Israeli occupation’s embattled Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to carry on “until victory, nothing less than that”, and Foreign Minister Eli Cohen said the war would continue “with or without international support”.

On Thursday, Biden’s National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan was due in Jerusalem for talks with Netanyahu and his war Cabinet, a sign of the US pressure.

Sullivan told a Wall Street Journal event ahead of his trip that he would discuss a timetable to end the war and urge Israeli leaders “to move to a different phase from the kind of high-intensity operations that we see today”.

Qatar-based Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh said on Wednesday that “any arrangement in Gaza or in the Palestinian cause without Hamas or the resistance factions is a delusion”.

A poll by the Palestinian Centre for Policy and Survey Research showed Haniyeh had the support of 78 per cent of people in the Palestinian territories, compared with 58 per cent before the war.

CNN reported, citing US intelligence, that nearly half of the air-to-ground munitions used by Israel in Gaza since October 7 have been unguided, which can pose a greater threat to civilians.

International pressure is mounting on Israel to better protect non-combatants. This week, the UN General Assembly overwhelmingly supported a non-binding resolution for a ceasefire.

While Washington voted against, the resolution was supported by allies Australia, Canada and New Zealand. In a rare joint statement, the three countries said they were “alarmed at the diminishing safe space for civilians in Gaza”.

 The UN estimates 1.9 million out of Gaza’s 2.4 million people have been displaced.

The head of the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees, Philippe Lazzarini, said on Wednesday that Gazans were “facing the darkest chapter of their history”.

He said they are “now crammed into less than one-third” of the territory, and hinted there could be an exodus to Egypt, “especially when the border is so close”.

Cold wintery rain has lashed the makeshift tents where the homeless struggle to survive without sufficient food, drinking water, medicines or fuel for cooking.

“Where do we migrate to? Our dignity is gone. Where do women relieve themselves? There are no bathrooms,” said Bilal Al Qassas, 41, who fled to the southern city of Rafah which has become a vast camp.

Despite the needs, aid distribution has largely stopped in most of Gaza, except on a limited basis in the Rafah area, the UN says.

 

Disease spreading

 

Samar Mohammed, a 38-year-old teacher, fled with her family to a friend’s home in Rafah. They have been told they could pay thousands of dollars in bribes to get out, “but haven’t found anyone we trust not to steal from us”, she said.

The UN warned the spread of diseases, including meningitis, jaundice and upper respiratory tract infections, had intensified.

Fewer than one-third of Gaza’s hospital are partly functioning, the UN says, and Hamas authorities said vaccines for children have run out, with “catastrophic health repercussions”.

The World Health Organisation called for the “protection of all people inside” Kamal Adwan hospital in north Gaza. The Hamas-controlled health ministry said Israeli forces had opened fire on wards of the facility.

The Palestinian health ministry said 10 people have been killed since Tuesday when Israeli forces began raiding Jenin, where the Israeli military says it has seized weapons, dismantled explosives laboratories, tunnel shafts and other military facilities.

The Hamas-Israel war has led to increased popular support for Hamas in the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967.

In Israel, the army is coming under growing pressure to limit troop deaths, it says 116 have been killed in Gaza, and secure the release of remaining hostages.

 

Some attackers of US embassy in Iraq 'linked to security services'

By - Dec 14,2023 - Last updated at Dec 14,2023

BAGHDAD — Iraq said on Thursday it had arrested several attackers who fired rockets at the US embassy last week amid high tensions over the Hamas-Israel  war and found some had links to security services.

A salvo of rockets was launched early Friday at the US embassy in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, the latest in a flurry of such attacks amid the war in Gaza.

The attack caused no reported casualties or damage, and there was no immediate claim of responsibility, but a US spokesperson said "indications are the attacks were initiated by Iran-aligned militias".

Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al Sudani's office on Thursday reported several arrests over the attack and said that "unfortunately, preliminary information indicates that some of them are connected to certain security services".

The search continued for "all those involved in this attack", said Sudani's office in a statement, vowing that "the hand of justice will reach them".

"Such attacks cannot be condoned or tolerated due to the serious threat they pose to the country's security and stability," it said, adding that they cause "damage to Iraq's reputation and dignity".

The statement, issued by Special Forces Maj. Gen. Yehia Rasool, did not name the suspects or what security services they were linked to.

But a security official in Baghdad, speaking anonymously due to the sensitivity of the matter, reported 13 people had been arrested, including members of the security forces.

The United States leads an international coalition battling militants in Iraq and neighbouring Syria. Its forces have come under repeated attack in recent weeks and have launched several strikes against Iran-linked fighters.

Pro-Iran groups have justified their attacks by pointing to US support for Israel.

In Iraq, most attacks were claimed by the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, a loose formation of armed groups affiliated with the Hashed Al Shaabi coalition, whose former paramilitaries are now integrated into Iraq’s regular armed forces.

Sudani, brought to power by a pro-Tehran coalition, faces a difficult balancing act between the United States and Iran.

Sudani’s office said he spoke Tuesday with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and stressed “Iraq’s commitment to protecting diplomatic missions and coalition advisers”.

The premier vowed to pursue the perpetrators “without any external interference”.

‘Gate of Tears’: Iran-aligned Houthis a growing threat in the Red Sea

By - Dec 14,2023 - Last updated at Dec 14,2023

Yemeni coast guard members loyal to the internationally-recognised government ride in a speed boat and a patrol boat cruising in the Red Sea off of the government-held town of Mokha in the western Taiz province, close to the strategic Bab Al Mandab Strait, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

PARIS — The spike in attacks claimed by Iran-backed Houthi rebels in the Red Sea is dangerously increasing tensions in a bottleneck for international maritime trade and fuelling fears of an uncontrolled regional spillover of Yemen’s longstanding conflict.

Since the start of the war between Hamas and Israel, Yemen’s Houthi rebels have threatened to attack any ship heading to Israeli ports and stepped up their raids.

On Tuesday, Houthi rebels claimed responsibility for a missile strike on a Norwegian-flagged tanker, an attack the Iran-backed group said was part of its military campaign against Israel.

Last month, they seized an Israel-linked cargo vessel, the Galaxy Leader, and its 25 international crew.

The Houthis, who control much of Yemen but are not recognised internationally, are part of the Iran-backed so-called “axis of resistance” arrayed against Israel.

They say they are defending the Palestinians from an Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip, and have launched a series of drones and missiles towards Israel. US and French warships patrolling the Red Sea have shot down Houthi missiles and drones several times since the militants began the attacks.

A vital link between the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea, the Red Sea is a key trade route for global shipping and energy supplies.

Some 40 per cent of international trade passes through the Strait of Bab Al Mandeb, or the “Gate of Tears”, a narrow waterway which separates the Arabian Peninsula from the Horn of Africa.

“This is a rather dangerous moment for the stability of this strategic region,” said Camille Lons, a researcher at the European Council on Foreign Relations.

Fabian Hinz of the International Institute for Strategic Studies added: “The Houthis have the capacity to cause considerable damage.”

While warships passing through the Red Sea are well equipped and can retaliate, commercial vessels do not have the same protections. “The US Navy cannot escort every civilian vessel in the Red Sea,” said Hinz.

 

Iran influence 

 

In recent years ties have grown between the Houthi rebels and Iran but the extent of their cooperation and coordination remains a major question.

The Houthis say they manufacture their drones domestically, although analysts say they contain smuggled Iranian components.

“The big question of course is the exact nature of Iranian involvement in these strikes,” said Hinz.

“Houthi equipment is mostly Iranian technology, but we know very little about Tehran’s involvement in decision-making.”

Many experts insist on the degree of autonomy of the Yemeni rebels.

Lons said that Houthis “don’t answer to Tehran like the Lebanese Hizbollah does, the jewel in the crown of Iranian proxies in the region”.

“The Houthis would exist with or without Iran,” Franck Mermier, a Yemen expert at the French National Centre for Scientific Research, told AFP.

“They have a religious and ideological closeness to Iran, but they are Yemeni fighters first and foremost”, he said.

“I’m not sure the Iranians push the button on every attack,” added Mermier.

In contrast to Hizbollah’s creation during Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war, Iran had had no role in the birth of the Houthi movement.

The rebels adhere to a branch of Shiite Islam known as Zaidism.

 

‘Unpredictable and dangerous’ 

 

At the weekend Israeli National Security Adviser Tzachi Hanegbi urged the international community to rein in the Yemeni rebels.

“If the world does not take care of it,” Hanegbi warned, “we will take action.”

Analysts said that the tensions could get out of hand quickly.

“The Houthis are totally unpredictable and dangerous. And the processes that trigger war are always unpredictable,” said Mermier.

“So far the Houthis have struck without attracting massive retaliation, but it can get out of hand,” added Mermier.

Lons said that so far Iran has demonstrated it has no interest in letting the situation escalate regionally.

“However, Tehran has less leverage over groups like the Houthis,” added Lons.

Noam Raydan, an analyst at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said in a note to clients that since the capture of the Galaxy Leader some companies have been re-routing their ships around the Cape of Good Hope, opting for a longer and costlier route.

“The risk of major disruption to global trade will remain high as long as commercial ships operated by various nationalities are being targeted,” she said.

UN agency warns of food ‘catastrophe’ in war-ravaged Sudan

Nearly 18 million people across Sudan are facing acute hunger — WFP

By - Dec 14,2023 - Last updated at Dec 14,2023

People queue for bread in front of a bakery in Omdurman on July 15 (AFP photo)

PORT SUDAN, Sudan — The World Food Programme warned on Wednesday that Sudan faces a “hunger catastrophe” if it cannot deliver regular food aid there, eight months after fighting erupted between rival generals.

“Parts of war-ravaged Sudan are at a high risk of slipping into catastrophic hunger conditions by next year’s lean season,” the WFP said in a statement.

It said this could happen if the UN agency is unable to expand access and deliver regular food assistance to people trapped in conflict hotspots including the capital Khartoum.

On April 15, army chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, who commands the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), turned their guns on each other.

Two years after the former allies jointly engineered a 2021 coup that derailed a fragile democratic transition, their power struggle has killed more than 12,190 people, according to a conservative estimate by the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project.

The United Nations has recorded seven million people displaced across Sudan, which, combined with the lack of good harvests, means hunger stalks large parts of the African country.

The vast Darfur region in the west and Kordofan in the south, as well as the capital Khartoum, where the conflict first erupted, are at risk.

“Nearly 18 million people across Sudan are facing acute hunger... more than double the number at the same time a year ago,” the WFP said on Wednesday.

A new food analysis for Sudan, “once described as East Africa’s future breadbasket”, the statement said, “shows the highest levels of hunger ever recorded during the harvest season [October through February], typically a period where more food is available”.

On Sunday, the head of the UN’s humanitarian response in Sudan told AFP the world body had been able to reach only a fraction of the nearly 25 million people needing aid.

But assistance to even those four million could soon stop if the chronic lack of funding continues, Clementine Nkweta-Salami said in an interview.

WFP Country Director and Representative in Sudan Eddie Rowe said on Wednesday it was urgently calling “on all parties to the conflict for a humanitarian pause and unfettered access to avert a hunger catastrophe”.

However, getting the warring parties to negotiate remains difficult and both sides have been blamed for breaking truces agreed in the past.

And on December 1, at the request of the Sudanese authorities, the UN Security Council ended the world body’s political mission in the country.

The United Nations Integrated Transition Assistance Mission in Sudan was put in place in 2020 to help support a move to democracy following the fall the previous year of veteran Islamist autocrat Omar Al-Bashir.

 

Israel under pressure from allies as Gaza war rages on

Gaza health ministry says run out of children's vaccines

By - Dec 14,2023 - Last updated at Dec 14,2023

Palestinian boys stand in their makeshift tent at a camp set up on a schoolyard in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip where most civilians have taken refuge, on Wednesday, as Israel continues with its war against the besieged enclave (AFP photo)

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories — Israel was facing mounting international pressure on Wednesday over its war in Gaza, with even key backer the United States criticising the "indiscriminate" bombing.

The Israeli war has left Gaza in ruins, killing more than 18,600 people, mostly women and children, according to the latest toll from the health ministry, and causing "unparalleled" damage to its roads, schools and hospitals.

The UN General Assembly overwhelmingly backed a non-binding resolution for a ceasefire on Tuesday.

But more air strikes hit Gaza and gun battles raged through the night, especially in Gaza City, the biggest urban centre, and Khan Yunis and Rafah in the south, AFP correspondents said.

Cold autumn rains lashed the territory, where millions have been displaced and many are living in makeshift plastic tents, as vital supplies of food, drinking water, medicines and fuel have run low in more than two months of siege and war.

Camped with thousands of others in the grounds of the Al Aqsa Martyrs hospital in central Gaza, Ameen Edwan said his family was unable to sleep.

"Rainwater seeped in. We couldn't sleep. We tried to find nylon covers but couldn't find any, so we resorted to stones and sand" to keep the rain out, he told AFP.

Air raid sirens wailed in Sderot and other southern Israeli communities near Gaza as Palestinian fighters kept firing rockets, most of which have been intercepted by air defences.

The Israeli forces said an air strike had hit a fighter cell in Gaza City's Shejaiya district "that was en route to launch rockets toward Israel".

In Khan Yunis, a centre of heavy urban com bat in recent days, a family gathered to mourn the death in a strike of Fayez Al Taramsi, a father of seven.

“How are we going to live after him?” one of his daughters said, crying and clutching his bloodied shirt. “He brought us to life.”

The health ministry in the Gaza Strip said on Wednesday it had exhausted its supply of children’s vaccines, warning of “catastrophic health repercussions”.

The announcement came more than two months into the Israeli war on Gaza as international aid organisations have warned about the dire conditions in the crowded Palestinian territory.

The ministry did not specify which vaccinations had run out, and its claim could not be independently verified.

Tedros Ghebreyesus, head of the World Health Organisation, warned on Sunday that “Gaza’s health system is on its knees and collapsing”, with 14 of 36 hospitals only partially functioning and supplies running low.

“The risk is expected to worsen with the deteriorating situation and approaching winter conditions,” he said.

The Gaza health ministry called on international institutions to deliver urgently needed vaccines “to prevent disaster”.

 

‘Diminishing safe space’ 

 

The UN General Assembly passed a resolution on Tuesday demanding a ceasefire, backed by 153 of 193 nations, surpassing the 140 or so that have routinely condemned Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.

While the United States voted against the resolution, it was supported by allies Australia, Canada and New Zealand, who, in a rare joint statement, said they were “alarmed at the diminishing safe space for civilians in Gaza”.

Biden told a campaign event that Israel had “most of the world supporting it” immediately after the October 7 surprise attack, but that “they’re starting to lose that support by the indiscriminate bombing that takes place”.

Toning down his comments at a later news conference, the US president reiterated support for Israel and said only that “the safety of innocent Palestinians is still of great concern”.

His national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, will travel to Israel on Thursday to meet Israeli premier Netanyahu, who has said there is “disagreement” with Washington over how a post-conflict Gaza would be governed.

 

Gaza City hospital raid 

 

The UN vote came after Philippe Lazzarini, head of its Palestinian refugee agency, described the situation in Gaza as “hell on earth”.

The UN estimates 1.9 million of the territory’s 2.4 million people have been displaced and are receiving goods from only around 100 aid trucks per day.

Its hospital system is in ruins, and Hamas authorities said on Wednesday that vaccines for children had run out, warning of “catastrophic health repercussions”.

UN satellite analysis agency UNOSAT said 18 per cent of Gaza’s infrastructure had been destroyed based on an image that was already more than two weeks old.

The World Bank in a new analysis warned that “the loss of life, speed and extent of damages... are unparalleled”.

Already by mid-November, almost half of all roads and around 60 per cent of communication infrastructure, health and education facilities had been damaged or destroyed, it said.

Hamas said Israeli forces raided a hospital in Gaza City on Tuesday. UN humanitarian agency OCHA had earlier reported fighting nearby and said about 3,000 displaced people were trapped inside.

The UN World Health Organisation’s chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he was “extremely worried” by reports of the raid, adding that his agency “urgently calls for the protection of all persons inside the hospital”.

Fears of a wider conflict continued to grow, with daily exchanges of fire along Israel’s border with Lebanon, where Hizbollah is based, and other Iran-backed groups targeting US and allied forces in Iraq and Syria.

Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels have repeatedly launched missiles and drones toward Israel and cargo ships in nearby waters that they suspect are working with Israel.

Dubai deal hailed as 'beginning of end' for fossil fuels

By - Dec 14,2023 - Last updated at Dec 14,2023

COP28 President Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber (centre) applauds among other officials before a plenary session during the United Nations climate summit in Dubai on Wednesday (AFP photo)

DUBAI — The world for the first time on Wednesday approved a call to transition away from fossil fuels as UN negotiations in Dubai tackled the top culprit behind climate change, but at-risk countries said far more action was needed.

After 13 days of talks and several sleepless nights in a country built on oil wealth, the Emirati president of the COP28 summit quickly banged a gavel to signal consensus among 194 countries and the European Union.

"You did step up, you showed flexibility, you put common interest ahead of self-interest," said COP28 President Sultan Al Jaber.

Describing the deal as bringing "transformational change", Jaber said: "We have helped restore faith and trust in multilateralism, and we have shown that humanity can come together."

EU climate chief Wopke Hoekstra called the agreement "long, long overdue", saying it had taken nearly 30 years of climate meetings to "arrive at the beginning of the end of fossil fuels".

Toughening language from an earlier draft that was roundly denounced by environmentalists, the agreement calls for "transitioning away from fossil fuels in energy systems, in a just, orderly and equitable manner".

It asks for greater action “in this critical decade” and recommits to no net greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 in hopes of meeting the increasingly elusive goal of checking warming at 1.5ºC above pre-industrial levels.

The planet has already warmed by 1.2 degrees and scientists say 2023 was likely the warmest in 100,000 years, as storms, droughts and lethal wildfires expand around the world.

 

Islanders still alarmed 

 

John Silk, the negotiator from the Marshall Islands, had warned that the earlier draft marked a “death warrant” for his Pacific archipelago, which is just 2.1 metres above sea level.

Silk likened the final agreement to a “canoe with a weak and leaky hull, full of holes” but added: “We have to put it into the water because we have no other option.”

The small islands did not block the Dubai deal, but a representative from Samoa criticised the language as too weak after contending the group had not arrived yet in the room at Dubai’s sprawling Expo City when Jaber declared consensus.

“We have made an incremental advancement over business as usual when what we really needed is an exponential step change in our actions,” Samoan Chief Negotiator Anne Rasmussen said on behalf of the island nations, drawing a standing ovation and polite applause from Jaber.

US climate envoy John Kerry said that no side can ever achieve everything in negotiations and praised the deal as a sign a war-torn world can come together for the common good.

“I think everyone has to agree this is much stronger and clearer as a call on 1.5 than we have ever heard before, and it clearly reflects what the science says,” Kerry said.

Seeking to avoid the geopolitical tensions that have strained cooperation on other issues, Kerry met ahead of COP28 with his counterpart from China, leading to a joint call by the world’s two largest emitters to step up renewable energy.

A Chinese envoy said on Wednesday that wealthy nations must still do more to help the developing world, a stance shared by Brazil, which will hold the 2025 climate talks in the Amazon.

But the Dubai summit at its opening reached an agreement on another major part of the accord, setting up a loss and damage fund to compensate countries hit hard by climate change.

 

‘Elephant in room’ 

 

The text stopped short of backing appeals during the summit for a “phase-out” of oil, gas and coal, which together account for around three-quarters of the emissions responsible for the planetary crisis.

Environmentalists virtually all saw the agreement as a step forward, although many cautioned that there will still far more to do.

“We are finally naming the elephant in the room. The genie is never going back into the bottle and future COPs will only turn the screws even more on dirty energy,” said Mohamed Adow, director of the Power Shift Africa think tank, referring to the annual UN climate meetings known as Conferences of the Parties.

“Some people may have had their expectations for this meeting raised too high, but this result would have been unheard of two years ago, especially at a COP meeting in a petrostate,” he said.

The agreement also made more explicit the near-term goals in the goal of ending net emissions by 2050.

It called for the world to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 43 per cent by 2030 compared with 2019 levels.

But Jean Su of the Centre for Biological Diversity, while seeing progress, said there were still “cavernous loopholes” including recognition of a role for “transitional fuels”, seen as code for natural gas.

The agreement tackles only fossil use in energy, not in industrial areas such as production of plastics and fertiliser.

The deal backs a phase-down of “unabated” coal power, meaning it preserves a role for the dirty but politically sensitive energy source if there is use of carbon capture technology, panned by many environmentalists as unproven.

 

Palestinian economy severely impacted by Hamas-Israel war — World Bank

By - Dec 13,2023 - Last updated at Dec 13,2023

Palestinians check the destruction following Israeli bombardment in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip on Tuesday, amid ongoing battles between Israel and Hamas (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — The Hamas-Israel war in Gaza is having a severe impact on the Palestinian economy, the World Bank said on Tuesday, adding that a sharp economic contraction is likely this year and next.

"The loss of life, speed and extent of damages to fixed assets and reduction in income flows across the Palestinian territories are unparalleled," the World Bank said in a statement.

The conflict, now dragging into its third month, has resulted in the death of more than 18,400 people in Gaza, the majority of them women and children, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

The UN estimates 1.9 million of Gaza's 2.4 million people have been displaced by the war, half of them children.

UN agencies and aid groups fear the Palestinian territory will soon be overwhelmed by starvation and disease, and are pleading with Israel to boost efforts to protect civilians.

In a new analysis published on Tuesday, the World Bank estimated that, as of mid-November, around 60 per cent of information and communication infrastructure as well as health and education facilities had been damaged or destroyed.

And 70 per cent of commerce-related infrastructure had been crippled or ruined.

Almost half of all primary, secondary and tertiary roads were also damaged or destroyed, and more than half a million people were living without a home due to the conflict.

Beyond the immediate human cost, the Hamas-Israel  conflict has also “severely impacted the Palestinian economy”, the World Bank said.

Gaza’s contribution to the overall Palestinian economy, which includes the West Bank, had already shrunk from around 36 per cent in 2005 to just 17 per cent last year, according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics.

The Hamas-Israel war has pushed Gaza’s unemployment rate up to around 85 per cent, while its decision to shut the door to Palestinian workers from the West Bank has put almost 200,000 people out of work.

Despite Gaza’s small contribution to the economic figures, the World Bank now expects the overall Palestinian economy to contract by 3.7 per cent this year, down sharply from its pre-war forecast of a 3.2 per cent increase.

Next year, the situation is expected to be even worse.

Whereas the World Bank previously anticipated growth of 3 per cent in 2024, it now expects an overall contraction of 6 per cent — on the assumption that the severity of the conflict decreases next year.

If the war drags on, the economic impact could deteriorate further.

 

Surge in Gaza inflation 

 

Following the onset of the war, prices in Gaza jumped by 12 per cent, on average, in October, the Bank said, reflecting “pent-up demand for products that are increasingly difficult to find on the local markets”. 

By contrast, consumer inflation in the West Bank rose by just 0.1 per cent over the same period.

In response to the conflict, the World Bank unveiled financial support on Tuesday to provide “emergency relief for the affected people of Gaza”.

The development lender announced an additional $20 million in funds for medical care, humanitarian needs, and financing for food vouchers and parcels in the besieged Palestinian territory.

This comes on top of the $15 million it has already delivered, it added.

 

Yemen rebels claim attack on Norway-flagged tanker: spokesman

By - Dec 13,2023 - Last updated at Dec 13,2023

In this 2008 image released by the US Navy Visual News Service the guided-missile destroyer USS Mason steams through the Atlantic Ocean. A missile fired by Yemen's Iran-backed Houthi rebels struck a Norwegian-flagged tanker off Yemen on Monday (AFP photo)

DUBAI/WASHINGTON — Yemen's Houthi rebels claimed responsibility on Tuesday for a missile strike on a Norwegian-flagged tanker a day earlier off Yemen's coast in the Red Sea.

"The naval forces of the Yemeni Armed Forces carried out a qualitative military operation against the Norwegian ship Strinda, which was loaded with oil" bound for Israel, military spokesman Yahya Saree said.

The Strinda "reported damage causing a fire on-board, but no casualties at this time", CENTCOM said in a post on X, formerly Twitter, adding that a US Navy destroyer had heard the ship's mayday call and was giving assistance.

The night-time attack occurred as the chemical tanker passed through the Bab-el-Mandeb, the strait between Yemen and northeast Africa. The strait leads to the Red Sea, a key route toward the Suez Canal.

The Houthis, who control much of Yemen and are part of an "axis of resistance" arrayed against Israel, have launched a series of drones and missiles since the start of the Israeli war on Gaza more than two months ago.

In a statement posted on Saturday on social media, the Houthis said they “will prevent the passage of ships heading to the Zionist entity” if food and medicine are not allowed into besieged, Hamas-ruled Gaza.

Regardless of which flag ships sail under or the nationality of their owners or operators, Israel-bound vessels “will become a legitimate target for our armed forces”, the statement said.

US and French warships patrolling the Red Sea have shot down Houthi missiles and drones several times since the militants began the attacks.

A French frigate shot down two drones over the weekend using short- to medium-range surface-to-air missiles, a military source told AFP, asking not to be named.

A British warship is also part of the coalition efforts to protect shipping.

Yemen has a long coastline along the Gulf of Aden and the southern Red Sea, a strategic waterway to Israel in the north.

In a helicopter assault, the Houthis captured a commercial car carrier, the Galaxy Leader, on November 19 and forced it to the Hodeidah Port in Yemen, where it has remained. The ship was reportedly empty at the time.

Armed attackers seized another vessel, the M/V Central Park, on November 26 off the coast of Yemen but were apprehended when the USS Mason destroyer arrived on the scene.

The USS Mason shot down an air drone last week when the unmanned vehicle was headed near the ship, US officials said. Its intended target was unknown.

The Strinda, a 144 metre tanker, was built in 2006 and was sailing toward the Suez Canal at the time of the attack.

The vessel is owned by Mowinckel Chemical Tankers AS, a company headquartered in Bergen, Norway.

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