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8,000 patients need evacuating from Gaza — WHO

By - Mar 06,2024 - Last updated at Mar 06,2024

Palestinians check the rubble of the Al Faqawi family home which was hit in an overnight Israeli air strike in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on Tuesday (AFP photo)

GENEVA — An estimated 8,000 patients need evacuating out of the Gaza Strip, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Tuesday, voicing frustration that few have so far been transferred outside the besieged territory.

The WHO said moving such patients out of Gaza would relieve some of the strain on the medics and hospitals that are struggling to keep functioning in a war zone.

“We estimate that 8,000 Gazans need to be referred outside Gaza,” Rik Peeperkorn, the WHO representative in the Palestinian territories, told a press briefing in Geneva via video-link from Jerusalem.

Of those, an estimated 6,000 are related to the conflict, including patients with multiple trauma injuries, burns and amputations, he said.

The other 2,000 are regular patients, he said, noting that before the war began, 50 to 100 patients a day were referred from Gaza to East Jerusalem and the West Bank, of which around half were cancer patients.

The Gaza war began after the October 7 surprise attack by Hamas, according to an AFP tally of Israeli figures.

Israel’s retaliatory bombardment and ground offensive in Gaza have killed more than 30,600 people, most of them women and children, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.

‘Enormous stress’

Only 2,293 patients were referred outside Gaza for medical treatment between October 7 and February 20.

Peeperkorn said the process involved not just the WHO but also the authorities in Gaza, Israel and Egypt, plus the hospital directors.

He said the WHO had been pushing for a streamlined medical evacuation system since November and “we don’t understand... why is it essentially not happening”.

He said Egypt, other Middle Eastern countries and some in Europe had offered to receive patients and their companions.

“We would like to see, and are pushing for, an organised, sustained medevac. First of all for the patients who need it and deserve to get better treatment,” said Peeperkorn.

“But it would also help to relieve some of the enormous stress these collapsing health services are under in Gaza.”

Peeperkorn said that 23 out of 36 hospitals in the Gaza Strip were not functioning, with the rest only partially or minimally operational.

Since the start of the conflict, 1,500 amputations have been performed, he added, pointing to numbers from the Gaza health ministry.

US vice president calls for ‘immediate ceasefire’ in Gaza

By - Mar 04,2024 - Last updated at Mar 04,2024

SELMA, United States — US Vice President Kamala Harris called on Sunday for a proposed six-week ceasefire deal in the Hamas-Israel war to be accepted, while criticising Israel over insufficient aid deliveries into Gaza.

“Given the immense scale of suffering in Gaza, there must be an immediate ceasefire for at least the next six weeks, which is what is currently on the table,” Harris said during a speech in Selma, Alabama.

A senior US official on Saturday had said that Israel had broadly accepted the deal, which would see a six-week cessation of hostilities if Hamas agrees to release the most vulnerable hostages it holds.

“This will get the hostages out and get a significant amount of aid in,” Harris said, calling on Hamas to accept the deal.

“Hamas claims it wants a ceasefire. Well, there is a deal on the table. And as we have said, Hamas needs to agree to that deal.”

She also issued the sharpest criticism to date of Israel by a top US official, calling on the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to take steps to increase aid into Gaza.

“The Israeli government must do more to significantly increase the flow of aid. No excuses,” Harris said.

She added that Israel “must open new border crossings” and “must not impose any unnecessary restrictions on the delivery of aid”.

Harris delivered her remarks at the foot of the Edmund Pettus Bridge, where a march by hundreds of peaceful activists was violently suppressed by police on March 7, 1965.

The event, known as “Bloody Sunday”, further catalyzed support for Black rights and helped lead a few months later to the passage of the Voting Rights Act, a federal law prohibiting racial discrimination in voting.

 

US envoy in Beirut for talks on Israel-Lebanon border hostilities

By - Mar 04,2024 - Last updated at Mar 04,2024

Beirut, March 4, 2024 — A US envoy was meeting on Monday with Lebanese officials in a push to halt violence along the border with Israel, as Hamas ally Hezbollah said ending the Gaza war would stem hostilities.

Israel and Lebanon’s powerful Iran-backed Hizbollah movement have exchanged near-daily fire since October in the wake of the Hamas-Israel war, raising fears all-out conflict could spread across the region.

As Washington’s envoy Amos Hochstein arrived in Beirut, Israeli medics said a missile from Lebanon killed a foreign worker near the border and wounded at least seven others, the latest casualties in months of escalating clashes.

Hochstein met with Lebanon’s Hizbollah-allied parliament speaker Nabih Berri, and was set to hold talks with other officials including Prime Minister Najib Mikati and army chief Joseph Aoun.

Hizbollah’s deputy chief Naim Qassem meanwhile reiterated that the group, which says it is acting support of Gazans and Hamas, would stop its attacks on Israel once the Gaza offensive ends.

Violence on the Israel-Lebanon border began a day after Hamas’s October 7 sudden attack that triggered the ongoing war in Gaza.

“Stop the assault on Gaza and war will end in the region,” Qassem said of Israel’s military campaign against Hamas.

International mediators should seek to “stop the assault” on the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip rather than attempting “to prevent support” for Palestinian militants from Hezbollah, he added.

Hochstein’s visit coincides with mediation efforts in Cairo towards a truce between Israel and Hamas, after the United States stepped up pressure for a halt in fighting and more aid to enter the besieged Palestinian territory.

Israeli defence minister Yoav Gallant has said there will be no let-up in Israeli action against Hizbollah even if a Gaza ceasefire is secured.

During a January visit, Hochstein had said both Lebanon and Israel “prefer” a diplomatic path to end hostilities.

In recent months, Western envoys including top diplomats from France, Britain and Germany have converged on Beirut to urge restraint and discuss potential solutions.

In October 2022, Hochstein brokered a maritime accord between Israel and Lebanon — which have no diplomatic ties — paving the way for both countries to exploit potential offshore gas reserves.

The cross-border fighting has displaced tens of thousands on both sides and has killed at least 296 people in Lebanon, most of them Hizbollah fighters but also including 46 civilians, according to an AFP tally.

In Israel, at least 10 soldiers and seven civilians have been killed.

Iran’s conservatives dominate elections marked by low turnout

By - Mar 04,2024 - Last updated at Mar 04,2024

Iranian Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi speaks during a press conference in Tehran on Monday (AFP photo)

TEHRAN — Iran’s conservatives and ultra-conservatives secured a large majority in parliamentary elections, officials said on Monday, in a vote marked by a turnout of 41 per cent, the lowest since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

“Around 25 million people participated, with a turnout of 41 percent” in Friday’s elections, Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi told a Tehran press conference.

Candidates categorised as conservative or ultra-conservative on pre-election lists won more than two-thirds of the seats, with around 15 per cent of contests headed for a second round.

The vote, which also chose members of the key Assembly of Experts, was the first since nationwide protests broke out following the September 2022 death in custody of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini.

Amini, an Iranian Kurd, had been arrested for allegedly flouting the Islamic republic’s strict dress code for women.

The elections, in which a vetting process barred many hopefuls including moderates and reformists from running, took place as Iran suffers a severe economic crisis deepened by international sanctions.

Vahidi said the vote happened “despite the ill-wishers of the nation, including intelligence services and terrorist groups, trying very hard to undermine security”.

He also said that “in spite of the heavy and unprecedented propaganda of the enemies and the use of all tools to discourage and dissuade people from voting, and despite some economic problems, the people showed a magnificent presence”.

Iranian authorities, fearing low turnout, had attempted to rally voters, with supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei saying before the election that Iran’s “enemies want to see if the people are present”.

In contrast, a coalition of parties called the Reform Front had said it would not take part in “meaningless, non-competitive and ineffective elections”.

On Monday, Azar Mansouri, the head of the coalition, said she hoped “this election will be a lesson and the authorities in the country will find out before it is too late that the continuation of this path will cause irreparable damage to this country”, according to reformist newspaper Shargh.

 

45 seats for second round 

 

Of the 290 seats in parliament, 45 will go to a second round of voting to be held in either April or May, including 16 of 30 seats in the capital Tehran, according to the spokesman for Iran’s elections authority Mohsen Eslami.

Over 200 out of 245 elected members are conservatives or ultra-conservatives, including the two who garnered the most votes in Tehran, Mahmoud Nabavian and Hamid Rasaee.

The current speaker of parliament, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, also a conservative, came in fourth while 35-year-old TV host Amir Hossein Sabeti secured the third place.

Centrist candidate Mohammad Bagher Nobakht, who criticised conditions in Iran ahead of the election as “not favourable”, did not gain enough votes to secure a seat.

The parliamentary elections use a list system, with large multi-member constituencies. The highest ranked candidates, up to the number of seats available, are elected.

A candidate must get at least 20 per cent of all valid votes in their constituency to be elected in the first round.

Across the country, 11 women garnered enough votes to enter parliament in the first round of the elections compared to 16 who currently sit in the unicameral legislature.

Eslami also said all the new members had been chosen for the 88-seat Assembly of Experts which is tasked with electing, supervising and, if necessary, dismissing the supreme leader, who has the final say in all matters of state in Iran.

Khamenei, now 84, has held the post since 1989.

The most high-profile absentee of the assembly election was moderate former president Hassan Rouhani who was barred from taking part after 24 years as a member.

Iran’s 2020 parliament was elected during the Covid pandemic with a turnout of 42.57 per cent, at the time the lowest since 1979.

In the 2016 parliamentary elections, turnout was above 61 per cent in the first round.

Children starving to death in northern Gaza hospitals — WHO chief

By - Mar 04,2024 - Last updated at Mar 04,2024

Palestinians inspect the debris of a house destroyed by Israeli bombing in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Monday (AFP photo)

GENEVA — An aid mission to two hospitals in northern Gaza found horrifying scenes of children dying of starvation, amid dire shortages of food, fuel and medicines, the World Health Organisation said Monday.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the agency's visits over the weekend to the Al Awda and Kamal Adwan hospitals "were the first since early October 2023 despite our efforts to gain more regular access to the north of Gaza".

The findings were "grim", he said on X, adding that "the situation at Al Awda was particularly appalling, as one of the buildings is destroyed".

The Kamal Adwan hospital, the only paediatrics hospital in northern Gaza, was overwhelmed with patients, he said.

"The lack of food resulted in the deaths of 10 children," Tedros said.

In all, the Gaza health ministry has said at least 16 children have died of malnutrition in aid-deprived northern Gaza.

The United Nations warned last week that famine in the Gaza Strip was "almost inevitable" because of the war that has been raging in the Palestinian territory since Hamas fighters carried out an unprecedented surprise attack inside Israel on October 7.

Israel's offensive against the Palestinian territory has killed more than 30,500 people, mostly women and children, according to the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza.

In addition to the dire lack of food at the two northern hospitals, Tedros also cautioned on X that "the lack of electricity poses a serious threat to patient care, especially in critical areas like the intensive care unit and the neonatal unit".

During the weekend mission, the UN health agency delivered 9,500 litres of fuel to each hospital, along with some essential medical supplies, he said.

"This is a fraction of the urgent lifesaving needs."

The WHO chief reiterated an appeal to Israel to "ensure humanitarian aid can be delivered safely, and regularly".

Iran conservatives secure bulk of seats in elections — media

By - Mar 03,2024 - Last updated at Mar 03,2024

Mohsen Qomi, candidate for the Assembly of Experts casts his ballot at a polling station in Iran's capital Tehran during elections to select members of parliament and a key clerical body on Friday (AFP photo)

TEHRAN — Iranian conservatives secured the bulk of seats in elections for a key clerical body and the national legislature, local media reported on Sunday, estimating a record low turnout.

Authorities were still counting ballots two days after Friday's vote for members of parliament and for the Assembly of Experts, which selects the Islamic republic's supreme leader.

The vote was the first since protests broke out over the September 2022 death of Mahsa Amini, 22, an Iranian Kurd who had ben arrested for allegedly violating the strict dress code for women.

The election, in which a vetting process barred many hopefuls from running, took place with Iran suffering a severe economic crisis deepened by international sanctions.

The official IRNA news agency put the turnout at around "41 per cent" among 61 million eligible voters. No official figure had yet been announced. 

The reformist daily Shargh predicted the next parliament would be "in the hands of radical conservatives" who "took advantage of the opportunity created by the low participation".

Etemad, another reformist newspaper, reported that turnout was lower in Iran's bigger cities than its smaller ones, and that there was a significant number of "blank votes". 

Fears of a low turnout had swirled ahead of the elections after a state TV poll found more than half of respondents were indifferent about the elections.

 

 ‘Wake-up call’ 

 

Turnout in the capital Tehran was around 25 per cent, according to Iranian media, which reported that ultraconservative candidates secured 12 of the 30 parliament seats alloted to the capital.

Some seats have gone to a second round, which will take place in either April or May, IRNA reported.

The pro-government Iran Daily said authorities should see the low turnout as a “wake-up call and redouble their efforts to fortify their support base”.

Reformist daily Ham Mihan said that “the soul of the elections was lost” and that turnout was “far from victorious” which could have “political repercussions” for Iran’s system.

Political analyst Mohammad Mohajeri said conservatives and ultraconservatives will emerge as the main winner in the elections due to “sharp decline in the participation rate”.

A record figure of 15,200 hopefuls were competing for seats in the 290-member parliament. 

Another 144 candidates sought a place in the 88-member Assembly of Experts, which is exclusively made up of male Islamic scholars.

By allowing a large pool of candidates, the government wanted “to create local competition and increase participation” to help attract voters, journalist Maziar Khosravi earlier told AFP. 

Iran’s 2020 parliament was elected during the COVID pandemic with a turnout of 42.57 per cent — at the time the lowest since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. 

Former moderate president Hassan Rouhani cast his ballot on Friday despite his disqualification from running for the Assembly of Experts after 24 years of membership. 

Another former president, the reformist Mohammad Khatami, was among those who did not vote, according to a coalition of parties called the Reform Front. 

In February, Khatami had said on his official website that Iran is “very far from free and competitive elections”. 

'Who will call me mother?': Gazan woman mourns twin babies killed in strike

By - Mar 03,2024 - Last updated at Mar 03,2024

Rania Abu Anza (centre) the mother of twin babies Naeem and Wissam, killed in an overnight Israeli air strike, mourns their death ahead of their burial in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Sunday (AFP photo)

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories — As men searched for survivors beneath a Gaza home pummelled by an air strike, Rania Abu Anza gazed down on Sunday at two children who did not survive: Her infant twins.

The Palestinian woman said she had gone through multiple rounds of fertility treatment to achieve her dream of becoming a mother, only to have it taken away by the carnage in the Gaza Strip. 

"Who will call me mother from now on? Who will call me mother?" she said through tears on Sunday as she clutched her lifeless babies, the face of one still spattered with blood. 

The health ministry in Gaza said Wissam and Naeem, not yet six months old, were among 14 people killed in the overnight strike in the southern Gaza city of Rafah, which it blamed on Israel. 

All of the dead were members of the Abu Anza family. 

They joined the 30,410 fatalities, most of them women and children, reported by the ministry since Israel launched military operations to eliminate Hamas last October. 

The campaign came in response to the Palestinian group's unprecedented October 7 attack on southern Israel that resulted in the deaths of around 1,160 people, according to an AFP tally of official figures. 

The Israeli military did not immediately respond to AFP's request for comment on the Rafah strike. 

 

'All of them children' 

 

While Rania Abu Anza waited to bury her son and daughter, back at the rubble of the family home men shouted the names of those they hoped had survived: "Yasser! Ahmed! Sajjar!" 

Israel says its campaign is intended to eliminate Hamas fighters, but Shehda Abu Anza, who said the home belonged to his uncle, insisted it housed only civilians. 

“They were sleeping at eleven-o-clock at night. All of them children. Honestly there was no military presence in the house, only civilians,” he said. 

“No soldiers, only civilians.” 

Another relative, Arafat Abu Anza, bemoaned the lack of equipment to extract possible survivors. 

“There are 15 people in the house... I’m cleaning the area. We are trying to extract people, to see where they are. Four floors fell.” 

Nearly 1.5 million Palestinians have sought refuge in Rafah, raising fears of mass casualties should Israel go ahead with a planned invasion of the city. 

Mediators are trying to lock in a truce that would at least temporarily halt the fighting before the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which begins on March 10 or 11, depending on the lunar calendar. 

A senior Hamas official told AFP the group had sent a delegation to Cairo, and Egyptian state-linked media said envoys from the United States and Qatar had also arrived for talks on Sunday. 

Any deal will come too late for Rania Abu Anza, who recounted the chaos of the strike and how she was told her children were gone. 

“I started shouting, ‘My children, my children,’” she said. 

 

Turkish Cypriot leader rules out any talks without equal status

By - Mar 03,2024 - Last updated at Mar 03,2024

Members of the United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus (UNFICYP) from the British army's 71 Engineer Regiment patrol along the buffer zone in Nicosia on February 24 (AFP photo)

ANTALYA, Turkey — Turkish Cypriots will not sit at any negotiating table unless their sovereignty and equal status is recognised, the leader of the breakaway self-declared state in northern Cyprus told AFP on  Sunday.

This year marks the 50th anniversary since an Athens-backed coup aimed at uniting Cyprus with Greece triggered a Turkish invasion that divided the island in 1974.

Only Ankara recognises the statehood of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, which was proclaimed by Turkish Cypriot leaders in 1983.

Efforts to reunify the island have been at a standstill since the last round of United Nations-backed talks collapsed in 2017.

"We are saying, after all these years, and all these fatal negotiations which proved nothing, we are only able to resume or to restart negotiations if our sovereign equality and equal international status is reaffirmed or acknowledged," TRNC leader Ersin Tatar said on the margins of an annual diplomacy gathering in Turkey's Mediterranean resort of Antalya.

"Otherwise, we are not going to sit at the negotiating table again, because there is no point," he added.

For Tatar, European Union member the Republic of Cyprus has walked away from negotiations after the collapse of every reunification attempt.

"Because in the past there have been many attempts where we sat again at the table, and at the end of the day the table collapsed — they walked out as the Republic of Cyprus and we just stayed as a community with no gain whatsoever," he said.

"And every time we sit [at talks] we lose something. That's how we feel," he said.

"So unless we get our sovereignty right, the acknowledgement of our sovereignty, we are not going to get involved in any negotiations."

Tatar on Sunday also ruled out any prospect of reunification for the divided island.

"There is no hope for reunification. We are talking about a two-state solution. This is our new policy after many many years of unfortunately fruitless negotiations," he said.

Tatar said that despite political impediments, the TRNC was able to extend its relationship with many countries with Turkey’s support.

“Obviously we have difficulties, but we have no alternative.

“The alternative is to give up, and we will never give up because giving up sovereignty and being basically amalgamated into a pure Greek republic would mean that that would be the end of us.”

After years of tension over immigration, energy rights and maritime borders, Greece and Turkey restarted high-level talks in December when President Recep Tayyip Erdogan paid his first visit to Athens since 2017.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis is set to visit Ankara in May.

Asked if Turkish-Greek rapprochement could have a positive impact on the island, Tatar said he hoped Greece would say to the Greek Cypriots that “enough is enough, let’s wake up to the reality of Cyprus that there are two peoples and the states”.

“And the best way forward after all these years is cooperation of the two states so that we can have prosperity and enjoy the resources of the eastern Mediterranean,” he added.

“I think if we were to find a solution, Cyprus can be probably bigger [economically] than Dubai.”

Tatar said the Turkish Cypriots could not forget about past events which triggered the Turkish military operation five decades ago.

“In 1974 Turkey came in with troops, and now we will be celebrating the 50th year in July. So it’s not easy for us to forget all this, especially with Europe now in Gaza” where Israel and Hamas are engaged in a nearly five-month war.

“Therefore, we have to be very careful.”

 

Calls for probe, ceasefire follow Israeli gunfire near aid convoy

By - Mar 02,2024 - Last updated at Mar 02,2024

Palestinians stand amid the rubble of a mosque that was destroyed in Israeli strikes in Deir El Balah in central Gaza on Saturday (AFP photo)

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories — World leaders have called for an investigation and a ceasefire nearly five months into the Gaza war after dozens of desperate Palestinians were killed rushing an aid convoy.

Israeli troops opened fire as Palestinian civilians scrambled for food supplies during a chaotic melee on Thursday that the Hamas-run territory's health ministry said killed more than 100 people in Gaza City.

The deaths came after a World Food Programme official had warned: "If nothing changes, a famine is imminent in northern Gaza."

Gaza's health ministry called it a "massacre", and said 115 people were killed and more than 750 wounded.

A UN team that visited some of the wounded in Gaza City's Al Shifa hospital on Friday saw a "large number of gunshot wounds", UN chief Antonio Guterres's spokesman said.

The hospital received 70 of the dead and treated more than 700 wounded, of whom around 200 were still there during the team's visit, spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.

"I'm not aware that our team examined the bodies of people who were killed. My understanding from what they saw in terms of the patients who were alive getting treatments is that there was a large number of gunshot wounds," he said.

The aid convoy deaths helped push the number of Palestinian war dead in Gaza to 30,228, mostly women and children, according to the latest toll from the territory’s health ministry.

 

US to ‘insist’ on more aid 

 

“The Israeli army must fully investigate how the mass panic and shooting could have happened,” German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock wrote on social media platform X.

Her French counterpart Stephane Sejourne said: “There will have to be an independent probe to determine what happened.”

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, meanwhile, said that “every effort must be made to investigate what happened and ensure transparency”.

Aerial footage of the incident made clear “just how desperate the situation on the ground is”, a US State Department spokesman said.

Despite warnings from within his administration that air drops “are a drop in the bucket” compared with what is needed, Biden said Washington would begin deliveries from the sky “in the coming days”.

“We need to do more, and the United States will do more,” he told reporters at the White House.

Biden said Thursday’s deaths happened because Gazans were “caught in a terrible war, unable to feed their families”, adding he would “insist” Israel let in more aid trucks.

Reacting to the announcement, the International Rescue Committee (IRC) said the very fact air drops were “being considered is testament to the serious access challenges in Gaza”.

US official Samantha Power, who oversees USAID, told reporters in Ramallah that an average of just 96 aid trucks were entering Gaza each day, “a fraction of what is needed”.

The aid convoy deaths dealt a blow to efforts to broker a new truce in Gaza to get more aid in and free the remaining Israeli hostages held by Palestinian militants.

Biden had previously said the convoy deaths would complicate truce talks, but told reporters Friday he was still “hoping” for a deal by the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, starting on March 10 or 11, depending on the lunar calendar, though he acknowledged it remained uncertain.

“We’ll get there, but we’re not there yet, we may not get there,” he said, without elaborating, as he headed to his helicopter.

Late on Thursday, he discussed the convoy deaths with the leaders of fellow truce mediators Egypt and Qatar, the White House said, adding the incident “underscored the urgency of bringing negotiations to a close”.

Accounts conflict on what exactly unfolded in Gaza City.

One witness, declining to be named for safety reasons, said the violence began when thousands of people rushed towards aid trucks, leading soldiers to open fire when “people came too close” to tanks.

Hossam Abu Safiya, director of Gaza City’s Kamal Adwan Hospital, said all the casualties admitted there were hit by “bullets and shrapnel from occupation forces”.

Israeli armed forces spokesman Daniel Hagari said troops had fired “a few warning shots” to try to disperse a “mob” that had “ambushed” the aid trucks.

“Thousands of Gazans” swarmed the trucks, “violently pushing and even trampling other Gazans to death, looting the humanitarian supplies”, he said.

It is not the first time that aid convoys have been looted in northern Gaza, where residents have been reduced to eating animal fodder to stave off starvation.

The health ministry said four more children had died of “malnutrition and dehydration” at Gaza City’s Kamal Adwan Hospital, taking the number of such deaths to 10.

Hamas’s military wing, meanwhile, said on Friday that seven hostages still held in Gaza had died because of Israeli military operations, an announcement AFP could not independently confirm.

Since the outbreak of the war in Gaza, violence has also surged in the occupied West Bank, with more than 400 Palestinians killed by Israeli troops or settlers, according to the Palestinian health ministry.

The official Palestinian news agency Wafa reported Israeli operations across the territory on Friday night, including near Ramallah, where it said a 16-year-old died after being shot in the head by Israeli forces.

Iran counts ballots in vote seen favouring conservatives

By - Mar 02,2024 - Last updated at Mar 02,2024

An Iranian man casts his ballot at a polling station in Tehran, during elections to select members of parliament and a key clerical body, in Saturday (AFP photo)

TEHRAN — Iran began counting ballots on Saturday after a vote for parliament and a key clerical body, with local media estimating a low turnout and conservatives expected to dominate.

Friday's elections were the first since widespread protests triggered by the September 2022 death in police custody of Mahsa Amini, 22, an Iranian Kurd. She had been arrested for allegedly violating the Islamic republic's strict dress code for women.

Iran has also been badly affected by international sanctions that have led to an economic crisis since the last elections in 2020.

State TV reported early Saturday the "start of vote counting" after polling stations closed at midnight. Voting hours had been extended several times during the day, the official IRNA news agency reported.

A record figure of 15,200 hopefuls were competing for seats in the 290-member parliament. Another 144 candidates sought a place in the 88-member Assembly of Experts, which is exclusively made up of male Islamic scholars.

The Assembly selects or, if necessary, dismisses Iran’s supreme leader. Many potential candidates for the chamber were disqualified.

Local Fars news agency estimated turnout at “more than 40 per cent”, among 61 million eligible voters.

President Ebrahim Raisi welcomed the voters’ “enthusiastic” participation as “another historic failure to [Iran’s] enemies”, according to IRNA.

Iran considers the United States, its Western allies and Israel enemies of the state and accuses them of seeking to intervene in its internal affairs.

Reformist daily Ham Mihan ran an opinion piece titled “The Silent Majority”, which said turnout was “estimated to be lower than” in previous elections.

Iran’s 2020 parliament was elected during the Covid pandemic with a turnout of 42.57 per cent — the lowest since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

A state TV poll had found more than half of respondents were indifferent about this year’s elections.

Candidates for parliament are vetted by a body, the Guardian Council, whose members are determined by the supreme leader.

The present parliament is dominated by conservatives and ultra-conservatives, and analysts expected a similar makeup in the new assembly.

Despite Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s appeal for people to cast ballots, many Iranians were split on whether or not to do so.

Former reformist president Mohammad Khatami was among people who avoided the poll, according to a coalition of parties called the Reform Front.

In February the conservative Javan daily quoted Khatami as saying Iran is “very far from free and competitive elections”.

 

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