Saturday, November 25, 2023

Gaza has become a moonscape in war. When the battles stop, many fear it will remain uninhabitable

ISABEL DEBRE
Thu, November 23, 2023 







 Smoke rises following Israeli airstrikes on Gaza City, Thursday, Nov. 9, 2023. Israel's military offensive has turned much of northern Gaza into an uninhabitable moonscape. When the war ends, any relief will quickly be overshadowed by the dread of displaced
families for their future. (AP Photo/Abed Khaled, File)

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel's military offensive has turned much of northern Gaza into an uninhabitable moonscape. Whole neighborhoods have been erased. Homes, schools and hospitals have been blasted by airstrikes and scorched by tank fire. Some buildings are still standing, but most are battered shells.

Nearly 1 million Palestinians have fled the north, including its urban center, Gaza City, as ground combat intensified. When the war ends, any relief will quickly be overshadowed by dread as displaced families come to terms with the scale of the calamity and what it means for their future.

Where would they live? Who would eventually run Gaza and pick up the pieces?

“I want to go home even if I have to sleep on the rubble of my house,” said Yousef Hammash, an aid worker with the Norwegian Refugee Council who fled the ruins of the urban refugee camp of Jabaliya for southern Gaza. “But I don't see a future for my children here.”

The Israeli army’s use of powerful explosives in tightly packed residential areas — which Israel describes as the unavoidable outcome of Hamas using civilian sites as cover for its operations — has killed over 13,000 Palestinians and led to staggering destruction. Hamas denies the claim and accuses Israel of recklessly bombing civilians.

“When I left, I couldn’t tell which street or intersection I was passing,” said Mahmoud Jamal, a 31-year-old taxi driver who fled his northern hometown of Beit Hanoun this month. He described apartment buildings resembling open-air parking garages.

Israel’s bombardment has become one of the most intense air campaigns since World War II, said Emily Tripp, director of Airwars, a London-based conflict monitor. In the seven weeks since Hamas’ unprecedented Oct. 7 attack, Israel unleashed more munitions than the United States did in any given year of its bombing campaign against the Islamic State group — a barrage the U.N describes as the deadliest urban campaign since World War II.

In Israel’s grainy thermal footage of airstrikes targeting Hamas tunnels, fireballs obliterate everything in sight. Videos by Hamas’ military wing feature fighters with rocked-propelled grenades trekking through smoke-filled streets. Fortified bulldozers have cleared land for Israeli tanks.

“The north of Gaza has been turned into one big ghost town," said Mkhaimer Abusada, a political scientist at Al-Azhar University in Gaza City who fled to Egypt last week. “People have nothing to return to.”

About half of all buildings across northern Gaza have been damaged or destroyed, according to an analysis of Copernicus Sentinel-1 satellite data by Corey Scher of the CUNY Graduate Center and Jamon Van Den Hoek of Oregon State University. With the U.N. estimating 1.7 million people are newly homeless, many wonder if Gaza will ever recover.

“You’ll end up having displaced people living in tents for a long time," said Raphael Cohen, a senior political scientist at the RAND Corporation, a research group.

The war has knocked 27 of 35 hospitals across Gaza out of operation, according to the World Health Organization. The destruction of other critical infrastructure has consequences for years to come.

“Bakeries and grain mills have been destroyed, agriculture, water and sanitation facilities,” said Scott Paul, a senior humanitarian policy adviser for Oxfam America. “You need more than four walls and a ceiling for a place to be habitable, and in many cases people don’t even have that.”

Across the entire enclave, over 41,000 homes — 45% of Gaza’s total housing stock — are too destroyed to be lived in, according to the U.N.

“All I left at home was dead bodies and rubble,” said Mohammed al-Hadad, a 28-year-old party planner who fled Shati refugee camp along Gaza City's shoreline. Shati sustained nearly 14,000 incidents of war damage — varying from an airstrike crater to a collapsed building — over just 0.5 square kilometers (0.2 square miles), the satellite data analysis shows.

Southern Gaza — where scarce food, water and fuel has spawned a humanitarian crisis — has been spared the heaviest firepower, according to the analysis.

But that’s changing. In the past two weeks, satellite data shows a spike in damage across the southern town of Khan Younis. Residents say the military has showered eastern parts of town with evacuation warnings.

Israel has urged those in southern Gaza to move again, toward a slice of territory called Muwasi along the coast. As of Thursday, Israel and Hamas were still working out the details of a four-day truce that would allow more humanitarian aid to enter Gaza and facilitate an exchange of Palestinian prisoners for Israeli hostages.

Displaced Palestinians said four days won't be enough.

“This is our nakba," said 32-year-old journalist Tareq Hajjaj, referring to the mass displacement of an estimated 700,000 Palestinians during the 1948 war surrounding Israel's creation — an exodus Palestinians call the “nakba,” or “catastrophe.”

Although publicly Palestinians reject the idea of being transferred outside Gaza, some privately admit they cannot stay, even after the war ends.

“We will never return home,” said Hajjaj, who fled his home in Shijaiyah in eastern Gaza City. “Those who stay here will face the most horrific situation they could imagine.”

The 2014 Israel-Hamas war leveled Shijaiyah, turning the neighborhood into fields of inert gray rubble. The $5 billion reconstruction effort there and across Gaza remains unfinished to this day.

“This time the scale of destruction is exponentially higher,” said Giulia Marini, international advocacy officer at Palestinian rights group Al Mezan. “It will take decades for Gaza to go back to where it was before.”

It remains unclear who will take responsibility for that task. At the recent security summit in Bahrain, Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi vowed Arab states would not “come and clean the mess after Israel.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants the army to restore security, and American officials have pushed the seemingly unlikely scenario of the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority taking over the strip.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, regarded by many Palestinians as weak, has dismissed that idea in the absence of Israeli efforts toward a two-state solution.

Despite the war's horrors, Yasser Elsheshtawy, a professor of architecture at Columbia University, hopes reconstruction could offer an opportunity to turn Gaza's ramshackle refugee camps and long deteriorating infrastructure into “something more habitable and equitable and humane," including public parks and a revitalized seafront.

But Palestinians say it's not only shattered infrastructure that requires rebuilding but a traumatized society.

“Gaza has become a very scary place,” Abusada said. "It will always be full of memories of death and destruction."
"Free Palestine" protesters demonstrate at Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

Hanh Nguyen
Thu, November 23, 2023 

Fatih Aktas/Anadolu via Getty Images


Pro-Palestine protesters demonstrated during the annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade on Thursday morning, some staging a sit-in on the parade route.

According to ABC 7 New York, about 30 protesters dressed in white coveralls doused in reddish juice – presumably to mimic blood – and adorned with words like "Racism," "Colonialism," "Consumerism" and "Ethnic Cleansing" ran into the streets, shouting "Free Palestine" or sitting down on the pavement. Some also brandished a banner that read, "Liberation for Palestine and Planet" featuring images of a cut watermelon and sunflower, symbols for Palestine and Ukraine.

Floats for LEGOs, Minions and "Dragon Ball" veered around the protesters. A few activists could be seen taken into police custody, reports ABC News. Many onlookers could be heard booing.


Separately, other protesters not dressed in jumpsuits marched along chanting, "Not another nickel, not another dime. No more money for Israel's crimes," while holding signs and banners that read, "Genocide Then, Genocide Now." Some flashed Palestinian flags.


The theme of protesting the war during a consumerist holiday with roots in colonialism was not lost on many who took to social media to add their voices to the protest.

On Wednesday, Israel and Hamas agreed to a four-day ceasefire to enable the exchange of prisoners.


Pro-Palestine protesters disrupt Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

Jessica Wang
Thu, November 23, 2023

Several individuals were taken into custody.

Pro-Palestine protesters temporarily interrupted Macy's annual Thanksgiving Day Parade on Thursday morning, donning white jumpsuits and appearing to glue themselves to the pavement to call attention to the ongoing Israel-Hamas war.

The protestors demonstrated along Sixth Avenue and held banners that read "Free Palestine" and "Liberation for Palestine and Planet," according to footage captured by Fox 5 and Newsday, among other outlets. Their jumpsuits had "colonialism," "capitalism," and "racism" written on them.

The New York Police Department couldn't confirm how many protesters were involved, but told EW that several individuals were taken into custody.


John Lamparski/WireImagePalestinian supporters demonstrate outside of Fox studios during the 97th Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade


Climate coalition Seven Circles Alliance has claimed responsibility for the demonstrations, citing the need to "bring attention to the ongoing ethnic cleansing and genocide of Palestinians" in a video shared on Instagram. "Confronting the issues of capitalism, along with colonialism and imperialism, head-on is urgently required by environmental and social justice groups, as well as everything in between," they said.

During the broadcast, President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden dialed in to chat with Al Roker and urged viewers to "come together" this holiday season. "We can have different political views, but we have one view: the one view is we're the greatest nation in the world," the president said. "We should focus on that, and we should focus on dealing with our problems and being together, and stop the rancor."

Pro-Palestinian protesters disrupt Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City

Stephen Sorace
FAUX NEWS
Thu, November 23, 2023

Groups of pro-Palestinian protesters disrupted the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City, with some chanting and singing "Palestine will be free" while others glued themselves to the street along the parade route.

One group of protesters took to the parade route in midtown Manhattan and unfurled a banner reading, "Liberation for Palestine and Planet." They called for an end to fossil fuels while supporting Palestinians in Gaza.

The protesters wore white jumpsuits, doused themselves with red liquid and glued their hands to the street to try to disrupt the parade. The crowd lining the sidewalk could be heard drowning out the chants with boos.

NYPD officers were seen removing the protesters from the street and taking them away from the scene so that the parade could continue.

PRO-PALESTINIAN RALLIES IN NYC AND DC INTERRUPT CROWDED HUBS DURING RUSH-HOUR COMMUTE

On another part of the parade route, protesters waving Palestinian flags and holding pro-Palestinian signs were singing a variety of chants, including "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free."



Some protesters chanted "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free."

Some chanted, "There is only one solution, intifada revolution," while others called for a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war.

They also chanted, "There is only one solution, intifada revolution."

In another act of protest, an individual aboard a Native American float whipped out a Palestinian flag during the parade’s broadcast on television.

The float from the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe, also known as the People of the First Light, was passing Macy’s flagship store on 34th Street in midtown Manhattan when a male individual unfurled a small Palestinian flag and raised it above his head.

Savannah Guthrie and Hoda Kotb, who were announcing the floats at that point during NBC’s broadcast of the parade, said that the "float represents the promise of the future guided by the knowledge of our shared heritage."

Pro-Palestinian protests have broken out across many U.S. cities and college campuses in recent weeks, with many demanding a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war.

Last week, pro-Palestinian protesters in New York City converged near Penn Station and blocked access to the main train hub in and out of the city. Other pro-Palestinian protesters in San Francisco and Boston also temporarily blocked traffic on bridges during rush hour.

Israel vowed to wipe out Hamas after the militant group launched its Oct. 7 surprise attack, in which at least 1,200 people died in Israel and around 240 were taken captive by militants back to Gaza.

More than 11,000 people have been killed in Gaza since the war began, according to the Health Ministry in Hamas-run Gaza.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Pro-Palestinian protesters disrupt Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

AARON KATERSKY and NADINE EL-BAWAB
Thu, November 23, 2023 

Pro-Palestinian protesters disrupt Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade was temporarily halted when a group of about 30 pro-Palestinian protesters ran into the street and apparently glued themselves to the pavement of the parade route in New York City.

The protesters were demonstrating along Sixth Avenue when a handful of them jumped the barricades and ran into the street along 49th Street.

PHOTO: People demonstrate during the 97th Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, in Manhattan, New York City, Nov. 23, 2023. (Brendan Mcdermid/Reuters)

MORE: Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade: Through the Years

In videos posted online, protesters can be seen demonstrating on Sixth Avenue near 34th Street.

They chanted "no more nickels, not another dime, no more money for Israel's crimes" and "Free free Palestine." They were also holding up Palestinian flags and papers that said "genocide then, genocide now."

The protesters are later heard yelling, "Viva, viva Palestina."

Officials said the protesters were taken into custody.

President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden called into the parade to give their thanks and urged Americans to "come together."

"We have to remind ourselves how blessed we are to live in the greatest nation on the face of the earth," the president said. "Today is about coming together, giving thanks for this country we call home. And thanks to all the firefighters, police officers, first responders and our troops, some of whom are stationed abroad."

MORE: 'We have to come together': Biden calls into Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

The first Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade took place in 1927. It's been a holiday tradition ever since.


Pro-Palestinian Protesters Briefly Disrupt Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

Kelby Vera
Updated Thu, November 23, 2023 

A group of pro-Palestinian protesters interrupted New York City’s annual Thanksgiving’s Day Parade by gluing themselves to the parade route.

Demonstrators ended up diverting Thursday’s procession after several people from a 30-person protest jumped over barriers near West 45th Street and fixed themselves to 6th Avenue around 10 a.m., according to ABC News.

The protesters, who were wearing fake-bloodied jumpsuits with the words “colonialism,” “racism,” “militarism” and “ethnic cleansing” on them, were detained by New York Police Department officers.

During the skirmish, Thanksgiving Day floats, bands and balloons were redirected from 6th Avenue to their final destination at Macy’s in Herald Square.


Pro-Palestinian protesters interrupted the Thanksgiving Day parade in New York City on Thursday.

Pro-Palestinian protesters interrupted the Thanksgiving Day parade in New York City on Thursday.

Protesters wave Palestinian flags as performers move along 6th Avenue.

Protesters wave Palestinian flags as performers move along 6th Avenue.

After demonstrators glued themselves to 6th Avenue, the parade was diverted around them.

After demonstrators glued themselves to 6th Avenue, the parade was diverted around them.

New York City police officers take pro-Palestinian protesters into custody during the Thanksgiving Day parade.

New York City police officers take pro-Palestinian protesters into custody during the Thanksgiving Day parade.

The protesters' jumpsuits had been doused in fake blood.

The protesters' jumpsuits had been doused in fake blood.

The demonstrators wore jumpsuits with the words “colonialism,” “racism,” “militarism” and “ethnic cleansing” on them.

The demonstrators wore jumpsuits with the words “colonialism,” “racism,” “militarism” and “ethnic cleansing” on them.

Video from the scene taken by Newsday reporter Matthew Chayes showed a green dinosaur balloon sponsored by the Sinclair Oil Corp. floating behind them at the time.

According to WABC-TV in New York City, parade spectators booed the protesters once they were aware of the disruption.

The television station also reported disturbances at West 49th Street and at West 59th Street. Fox 5 New Yorkreported that protesters wearing “Free Palestine” shirts were detained near West 55th Street.

Police presence was high during this year’s Thanksgiving Day parade, which was expected to draw 3 million people.

Though there were no credible threats ahead of the event, NYPD Deputy Commissioner of Intelligence and Counterterrorism Rebecca Weiner told CBS News the department was ready to handle any disruptions that might arise.

“We will not compromise on public safety, absolutely not. Not in this environment, not when there’s so much going on,” Weiner said, pointing to public tension over the ongoing Israel-Hamas war.

President Joe Biden made a call for unity while he and first lady Jill Biden spoke to NBC’s Al Roker by phone during the parade.

“We have to come together,” he told Roker. “We can have different political views, but we have one view. The one view is we’re the finest, the greatest nation in the world. We should focus on that. And we should focus on dealing with our problems and coming together ... and stop the rancor. We have to bring the nation together.”

Olafimihan Oshin
THE HILL
Thu, November 23, 2023



More than two dozen pro-Palestinian protesters briefly disrupted the annual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the militant group Hamas.

New York ABC affiliate WABC reported the protest happened at Sixth Avenue at West 45th Street about 10 a.m. Thursday. Protesters reportedly jumped over the barricades, ran into the streets and glued themselves to the parade route.

The demonstrators, about 30 of them, wore white jumpsuits sprayed with fake blood and labeled with words like “colonialism” and “consumerism,” according to WABC.

Their protest began 90 minutes after the annual parade began. Spectators started to jeer the demonstrators once they realized what was happening.

Authorities arrested the demonstrators and took them into custody after they refused to leave the area.

Disturbances were also reported at two locations at West 49th and West 59th streets, WABC reported.

This staged protest is similar to one that occurred in 2014, where police arrested seven people protesting the court’s decision to indict a police officer in the fatal shooting of Black teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., WABC noted.

The Hill has reached out to the NYPD for more information.

It’s been a month since Hamas’s surprise attack against Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,200 people and the taking of around 240 hostages by the militant group.

In response, Israel has launched a series of airstrikes and a ground invasion in Gaza, resulting in the death of at least 13,000 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry.

The incident comes days after Israel and Hamas agreed to implement a temporary cease-fire for four days to allow for the safe transfer of hostages and the delivery of humanitarian aid into Gaza.

The militant group has agreed to release 50 hostages, all women and children. With the transfer of hostages, Palestinian prisoners will also be released from Israeli jails.
Jubilation in the West Bank in defiance of Israeli orders - as Palestinian prisoners freed

The Israelis had issued orders banning celebrations for this homecoming.

Sky News
Fri, 24 November 2023 



Israel delivered its side of the bargain in scenes of chaos.

The prelude - barrage after barrage of tear gas. Then the coach appeared.

Inside we saw them, the freed Palestinian prisoners revelling in their liberation. The crowd shouted "God is great!".

The Israelis had issued orders banning celebrations for this homecoming.

They were comprehensively ignored. The euphoria could not be supressed.

Hamas has exacted a price for returning a handful of hostages, not just the prisoners themselves but the scenes that accompanied them too.

Atop the bus a Palestinian youth waved green flags the colours of Hamas.

They will claim this as a victory and despite Israel's best efforts this will strengthen Hamas in the West Bank.

The prisoners defied orders not to talk to cameras and were carried aloft through the crowd.

None of the prisoners listed for release have killed people but they have blood on their hands, say Israelis, for attacking Israeli police, soldiers and civilians with knives or other weapons.

For Israelis they are terrorists, for Palestinians they are heroes of the resistance against the hated Israeli occupation.

There had been a tense build up all day.

Israelis moved in to clear the area using tear gas and stun grenades. Some in the crowds were terrified.

At the start of the afternoon we had filmed a mother and father and their young daughters arrive waving while Palestinian flags.

Later we saw them fleeing the tear gas the girls in tears.

"The Israelis want nothing but violence," their father told us.

Tension built as darkness fell.

As Hamas flags were marched into the crowd there were cheers of support for the Hamas military wing that carried out the 7 October attacks.

The Israelis responded with rounds of tear gas and in return Palestinians pelted stones from catapults.

There were casualties as youths were carried to ambulances. But what Palestinians will remember is the scenes of jubilation that will be repeated now in coming nights

Their brothers and sisters released into freedom.

And Hamas taking the credit.

Israeli forces fire tear gas at West Bank crowds celebrating release of Palestinian prisoners

Sky News
Updated Fri, 24 November 2023 


The Israeli military has fired tear gas and stun grenades at crowds in the West Bank - as they celebrated the release of Palestinian prisoners in a hostage deal.

It came as thousands gathered near Ramallah on Friday evening to await the release of 39 women and children following a truce agreement in which Hamas also freed 24 hostages.

Sky's international affairs editor Dominic Waghorn, speaking from the scene, said there had been tension and chaos as a coach carrying some of the prisoners arrived.


The Israeli military were seen firing tear gas, stun grenades and possibly rounds of live ammunition as they attempted to push people back.

He said it came in response to some members of the crowd waving green Hamas flags and chanting pro-Hamas slogans as they celebrated.

There were also angry scenes as protesters shouted "we want our prisoners" as they waited for the release.

But there was also "jubilation" and a "carnival atmosphere" as the detainees were freed.

Sky News' team at the scene witnessed some of the prisoners, mostly women and teenage boys, in a coach, some making V for victory signs and smiling as they were driven past.

Several of those released were then lifted onto the shoulders of jubilant members of the crowd.

Israel is expected to release 150 Palestinian prisoners over the four-day truce - all of them women, children and teenagers.

Most will return to homes in the West Bank and Jerusalem following periods of incarceration lasting between a few months and several years.


‘This is collective punishment:’ West Bank Palestinians under curfew say they are being punished for something they did not do

Tara John, CNN
Thu, November 23, 2023 

Palestinian educator Tarik Betar has known only a life of repression and indignity, he told CNN, with longstanding restrictions, checkpoints and curfews, put in place by the Israeli military in the 1990s, meaning he is unable to walk across his street in the West Bank city of Hebron.

Betar, who works at the local polytechnic college, said those restrictions became a chokehold the day Hamas militants from Gaza attacked Israel, killing at least 1,200 people. The 47-year-old is one of thousands of Palestinians living in nearly a dozen neighborhoods in Israeli-controlled areas of Hebron, who have been effectively “imprisoned at home” by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) since October 7, according to Israeli human rights group B’Tselem.

A full curfew was imposed that day on those neighborhoods, which surround Hebron’s old city, where Palestinians were not allowed to leave their homes, according to B’Tselem and other residents. It was partially lifted two weeks later, allowing Palestinians to leave the area between 8 and 9 a.m. and return home between 4 and 5 p.m. on Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday, said Betar.


Residents and activists have complained about running out of food, adults missing work, of being fearful and facing threats from settlers for opening their windows or letting their children out onto the street, and being prevented from returning home in time for curfew as they attempt to pass some of the dozens of checkpoints that populate the area.

One of Hebron's old city's many checkpoints is photographed on November 17. - Tara John/CNN

When Betar’s wife fell ill and was struggling to breathe last week, the curfew prevented the couple from walking out to see a doctor, so an ambulance had to be called. “I am not allowed to open my door or my window… I called the ambulance, and they arrived after two hours and 57 minutes exactly,” he said, explaining that the medics had to gain Israeli permission to enter the area and navigate a series of checkpoints to get to his home.

B’Tselem describes the “blanket movement ban” as a “collective punishment” against Palestinians “because we’re talking about taking civilians, who did nothing wrong, and placing extreme limitations that disrupts every aspect of their daily lives with no reason,” Dror Sadot, B’Tselem’s spokesperson, told CNN.

The IDF said there had been “a significant increase in terrorist attacks” in the West Bank since the war began and that its troops had been conducting “nightly counterterrorism operations to apprehend suspects, some of them are part of the Hamas terrorist organization.”

While it did not address the curfew directly in the statement, the IDF said that “as part of the security operations in the area, dynamic checkpoints have been put up over different places. The mission of the IDF is to maintain the security of all residents of the area, and to act to prevent terrorism and activities that endanger the citizens of the State of Israel.”

Tarik Betar's home is seen in the old city of Hebron on November 17. - Tara John/CNN
Increased separation

Israel has occupied the West Bank since seizing the territory from Jordanian military occupation in 1967. It later agreed to transfer limited control over parts of the territory to the Palestinian Authority, after agreements signed in the 1990s. But Israel has continued to build settlements there, considered illegal under international law, encroaching into land that Palestinians and the international community view as territory for a future Palestinian state. Israel views the West Bank as “disputed territory,” and contends its settlement policy is legal.

The West Bank has seen a surge in settler attacks this year, including one that an Israeli military commander called a “pogrom.” The issue has concerned United States officials, with President Joe Biden saying that the US was prepared to issue visa bans against “extremists attacking civilians in the West Bank,” in a Washington Post op-ed over the weekend.

Even by the standards of the West Bank, the situation in Hebron is complicated. A predominantly Palestinian city, it has Israeli settlements right in the center. The result is both a physical and legal segregation between the hundreds of Jewish settlers and the thousands of Palestinians who live on the streets around the old city.

As Betar’s home is meters away from one of the West Bank’s most contested and holiest places, known to Jews as the Cave of the Patriarchs and to Muslims as the Ibrahimi Mosque, he is restricted from turning right when he exits his front door.

People pray on the exterior wall of the Cave of the Patriarchs on November 17 in Hebron, West Bank. - Tara John/CNN

His neighborhood began to hollow out after a 1994 massacre when a Jewish settler walked into the Ibrahimi Mosque and killed 29 people, say residents, prompting Israel to introduce a policy of separation in the area, according to a 2019 United Nations report.

That policy hardened following the second Palestinian intifada between 2000 and 2005 and increasing Jewish settler-Palestinian violence that saw the deployment of new checkpoints, restrictions on the movement of Palestinians and closure of shops.

Thousands of Palestinians have since been forced to leave the area amid the settler attacks and “constant raids and incursions into their homes by Israeli forces, which often include the temporary takeover of parts of the homes,” the report added.

The old city is now a warren of restrictions and limits for the Palestinians living there. Some areas around Israeli settlements and the Jewish side of the Cave of Patriarchs, close to Betar’s home, have been entirely closed off to Palestinians for decades, according to a map by B’Tselem and conversations with residents.

The Palestinian population in the area has meanwhile shrunk to an estimated 33,000 people, says Sadot, B’Tselem’s spokesperson, and she and other activists worry restrictions are being used as a pretext to push Palestinians out altogether.

The post-October 7 restrictions are “not happening in a political vacuum,” Sadot said. Last year, Israel gained its most right-wing government in history, with some government ministers, like National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, supporting the annexation of the West Bank. Ben Gvir himself lives in Kiryat Arba, a settlement on the outskirts of Hebron.

“My worry is that more people will leave,” Hisham Sharibati, a human rights activist who lives outside Hebron’s old city, told CNN. He explained a curfew was previously installed during the second Palestinian intifada, which saw shop owners leave by the droves. “Now we are having curfew again – it’s a big risk.”
‘An unannounced war’

The restrictions on Palestinians’ movement are in stark contrast to the freedoms afforded an estimated 700 hardline Jewish settlers, living in areas of the old city and still free to move about with the military’s protection. They are also accused of behaving with impunity and violence towards Palestinians and their property.

Palestinian human rights activist Issa Amro, who lives in the area and campaigns against Israeli occupation, told CNN that on October 7 Israeli soldiers and settlers detained him for 10 hours and physically abused him, sharing pictures with CNN of his swollen and cut wrists, injuries which he says were caused by plastic zip-ties.

“We sent activists to try find him, and a lawyer called the army to find his whereabouts,” his attorney Michael Sfard told CNN on the phone. Since his release, Amro has barricaded himself into his house, in fear of further violence from soldiers and settlers. He said they attempted to evict him the week of October 20. “There is an unannounced war in the West Bank,” Sfard told CNN.

When asked about Amro’s allegations, the IDF in a statement to CNN said: “Issa Amro’s application regarding the restriction of his presence in the territory was received and is under consideration. The IDF operates in accordance to international law.”

Issa Amro is seen in the garden of his house in Hebron. - Courtesy of Issa Amro

On a hill in Tel-Rumaida, close to Amro’s home, Yishai Fleisher, the international spokesperson for the Jewish Community of Hebron, approached CNN’s team with a rifle slung over his soldier. Fleisher agreed that Amro had been detained, but said he had been held by IDF soldiers.

“They were IDF soldiers,” he said, adding that Amro “should be behind bars, he’s a criminal of the worst kind – just happens to be a front, a slick with liberal language.”

Amro’s attorney, Sfard, said in the statement that “if there was a shred of evidence that he has been engaging in any criminal activity he would immediately be sent for a long time in prison. The fact that Issa is not in prison means that all the efforts by the settlers and their supporters and by the occupation to frame him have all failed. All they have left is to incite and spread lies about Issa.”

The West Bank has thousands of years of Jewish history and many Jewish holy sites; religious-national settlers, like those in Hebron, believe these have always been part of the Land of Israel, as promised to the Jewish people in the Old Testament. Settlers believe Hebron should be under Israeli sovereignty as “it is an integral part of Jewish history,” Fleisher said.

About 500,000 Jewish settlers now live in the West Bank, according to Peace Now, an Israeli group that advocates for peace and monitors settlements. Many of these settlements are heavily guarded, fenced-off areas that are completely off limits to Palestinians.

Most of the world considers these settlements illegal under international law and Israel has been criticized for allowing their expansion – and, in some cases, supporting them with tax breaks and state-funded security.
A ghost town

The Israeli-controlled area feels like a town with no people. During CNN’s visit to the desolate and heavily guarded old city last week , the only signs of life came from the Israeli soldiers at their posts, a few reservists, and a handful of settlers and their children. One Muslim family emerged later in the evening, passing a guard post.

The once-bustling market streets and thoroughfares now stand empty, apartment windows are closed and covered in metal grates, and a dead cat lies decomposing on a road.

Palestinian resident Ahmad, who declined to provide his last name for fear of repercussions, says his family moved to the area when he was seven. Even back then, it was too dangerous for Palestinian children to play outside, he said, adding: “It was not a childhood.”

A view of the city of Hebron from the old city on November 17. - Tara John/CNN

In “normal” times, the threat of settler attacks was high, but now his family is too scared to leave their home, he said. “It’s a really dangerous thing, the settlers really hate us,” he said.

The curfew introduced after October 7 left him unable to work until November, depleting his savings, he said. He now stays with relatives in the Palestinian-controlled side of Hebron during the week, so he can earn an income as a barista, and bring home food when the checkpoints open on Sunday.

“They are doing collective punishment,” he told CNN. “I know the media attention is on Gaza, for good reason, but the world does not know what the settlers and the IDF are doing over here,” he said.

Betar grew up in the home he currently lives in, as did his father and grandfather. It is why he is refusing to leave. The past month has however pushed him to the brink.

His house has no yard, so he had fenced up the roof so his five children could run around. But since the Hamas attacks, soldiers on roof positions have told them to remain inside the house.

“Eat, go to the bathroom and study on Zoom – this is their lives now,” he told CNN. “My home is very small, we have no space to play, no space to go walk freely now.”

It now takes him hours to do a simple supermarket shop due to the three checkpoints he has to pass to get home, in narrow timeslots.

He could instead walk across the road from his house to the café and souvenir shop. But Betar is not allowed in as the road itself is closed to Palestinians. Meanwhile, visitors, settlers and soldiers freely use the cafe.

“We’ve had enough ­­–– we want to enjoy our lives as any person in the West,” he said.
Wildfires gripped Canada last year. Now, US farmers are feeling the burn

Stephen Starr in Clark county, Ohio
Thu, November 23, 2023 

Photograph: Wim Wiskerke/Alamy


It was early November and Scott Haerr still had 2,500 acres of corn to harvest on his farm in south-west Ohio.

The harvest should be much further down the road – a dry spring was followed by adequate summer rain and heat, and then a dry fall meant no obvious delays were in the forecast. But the crop, he said, just hadn’t ripened on cue.

Related: Food, soil, water: how the extinction of insects would transform our planet

“We knew that we were well behind the normal crop stage when [the corn plants] did not pollinate until at least 10 days to two weeks after we normally should have, last July,” says Haerr. “Usually by mid-September, our early planted corn is mature enough to harvest. This year it was hard to find anything ready by 1 October.”

Haerr thought he might have to pause harvesting. “The moisture levels are really high,” he said.

Haerr was initially puzzled at the slow maturation but believes he has hit on the culprit: smoke from wildfires in Canada that lingered over Ohio and the wider eastern corn belt for days last June and July – a critical time for corn plant development.

While the corn he is harvesting is currently yielding well, Haerr fears its high moisture content could push the remainder of his harvest into winter when bad weather could damage some or all of the remainder of his crop.

“The fear is a storm or heavy wind could down this, that the weather shuts us down before we get the work done,” he said.

For a time last June and July, 18 states from New York to Montana were under air quality alerts as more than 600 wildfires burned out of control in Canada, which suffered its worst ever wildfire season in 2023. While the smoke created breathing difficulties for thousands of people, the growing cycle of crops suffered too.

Today’s corn hybrids are carefully engineered with specific temperature conditions in mind, meaning minor or unexpected changes to weather can result in negative knock-on effects.

Data from Pioneer Hi-Bred International, a major seed company, shows that low growth periods last June correspond to days of heavy wildfire smoke over Ohio, Indiana and elsewhere that fueled low solar radiation corn depends on to grow.

Today, the corn harvest in Ohio is lagging more than 8% behind the five-year average, though it had been as much as 20%. Currently, harvest progress in states closest to some of the worst of last summer’s wildfire smoke – Wisconsin (65%), Michigan (52%) and Ohio (70%) – lags far behind the national average of 88%.

The fear is a storm or heavy wind could down this, that the weather shuts us down before we get the work done
Scott Haerr

Corn is one of the world’s most important grains. Last year, the US exported $18.57bn worth of corn, most of which went to China where it is used to feed pigs that are harvested for tens of millions of Chinese consumers.

America’s biggest crop, corn is also used for ethanol fuel, animal feed and in the production of countless foodstuffs. America’s Corn Belt is centered in Iowa, Illinois, Minnesota and other states close to Canada. Corn, a grass, is more sensitive to lower light than the other major US crop – soybeans – because it requires more photosynthesis.

With wildfires more likely affecting America’s Corn Belt as the planet warms, a combination of the wrong conditions could disrupt the growing of a cornerstone food source for millions of people.

“Climate change is increasing the risk of drought and wildfires in certain areas of the world,” said Aaron Wilson, state climatologist of Ohio with Ohio State University.

“What brought us the cooler than average temperatures this year was that northerly [air] flow out of Canada, well it so happens that also brought the wildfire smoke.”

Corn growers are facing another concern as winter approaches: weak corn stalks.

“The plant is predetermined to maximize yield so if there’s a shortcoming of photosynthesis [during the growing period], it’s going to rob that energy from sugars that were stored up in the stalk … making it more susceptible to stalk rot,” said Kyle Poling, a field agronomist at Pioneer.

With the windiest period of the year approaching, weak corn plants in the eastern corn belt are at increased risk of being downed.

Experts, however, note that lower temperatures caused by wildfire smoke are not always a negative for crops. Reduced solar radiation as a result of smoke can help slow moisture being drawn from the soil into the atmosphere.

Poling says that while wildfire smoke may have played an indirect role in delayed maturation last summer, other factors were at play, too. “The smoke acted as a barrier for radiant heat but there was also below average heat accumulation [on days] where we didn’t have any haze,” he says.


Freshly harvested corn kernels being loaded for transport to storage silos. Photograph: Alamy

So far, America’s 2023 corn harvest is set to return high yields. And corn growers can avoid having to harvest later in the year by choosing to plant seed hybrids that ripen more quickly.

But those corn types result in lower yields, reducing the overall profits of growers such as Haerr, who has a team of eight people – including two of his sons – working on this year’s harvest. Corn containing high moisture levels can be harvested, but farmers then face a difficult choice of selling at far lower prices or paying huge fuel costs to dry the grain to prevent it from spoiling.

Haerr wouldn’t speculate whether climate crisis has played a role in delaying his harvest, or whether he expects more wildfires in the future, though researchers say the climate crisis has more than doubled the likelihood of “extreme fire weather conditions” in eastern Canada.

Right now, he said his harvest would not be finished for some time. “We’re figuring that this year it’s going to be into December. We’re just hoping the weather doesn’t turn bad.”
Invisible Generals review: vital story of Black US military heroes

Charles Kaiser
GUARDIAN
Sat, November 25, 2023 


This book tells the important story of Benjamin O Davis Sr and Jr, America’s first Black father and son generals. Triumphing over the harsh racism of the first half of the 20th century, their accomplishments were as important to the integration of the US armed forces as the achievements of men like Martin Luther King Jr and Bayard Rustin were in the civilian world. Their comparative anonymity is the reason the author Doug Melville called his book Invisible Generals.

Related: ‘The Lincoln shiver’: a visit to the Soldiers’ Home, a less-known Washington gem

After Davis Jr was named commander of the first all-Black air unit, the 99th Pursuit Squadron, and later of the 332nd Fighter Group, a larger all-Black unit, he led the celebrated Tuskegee Airmen, one of the most successful fighting units of the second world war.

Melville’s father was raised by Davis Jr, so the author was thrilled when he was invited to a gala screening of Red Tails, George Lucas’s movie about the Tuskegee Airmen in 2012. But he was horrified when he discovered the movie had changed his grandfather’s name from Davis to Bullard. That anger fueled Melville’s determination to bring new attention to his ancestors. A self-described “entrepreneurial thinker and marketer”, he is not an elegant writer, but his story is powerful enough to propel the reader all the way through.

After Davis Jr was admitted to West Point in 1932 – a privilege denied his father, who nevertheless became America’s first Black general – the younger Davis was completely ostracized by his white classmates, none of whom would speak to him, room with him or a share a table to eat. Nevertheless, Davis graduated 35th in a class of 276. Commissioned as a second lieutenant, he became only the second Black officer in the 20th century. His father was the first, commissioned in 1901.

The difficulty of achieving those commissions is suggested by a heinous internal report produced by the army in 1925, which said the American “Negro” had not developed leadership qualities because of “mental inferiority” and an “inherent weakness of character”.

Like every minority group that has fought to prove the truth of Declaration of Independence – that all men (and, much later, women) are created equal – Black people had to wildly outperform their white counterparts before their inherent talents would be recognized. The younger Gen Davis and the men under his command did that in the second world war.

In its obituary of the younger Davis, the New York Times noted the Tuskegee Airmen had an extraordinary record “against the Luftwaffe … they shot down 111 enemy planes and destroyed or damaged 273 on the ground at a cost of more than 70 pilots killed in action or missing. They never lost an American bomber to enemy fighters on their escort missions. As the leader of dozens of missions Gen Davis was highly decorated, receiving the Silver Star for a strafing run into Austria and the Distinguished Flying Cross for a bomber-escort mission to Munich.”

Almost every triumph of this father and son was tinged with disappointment because of virulent racism. When Davis Sr received a richly deserved promotion from Franklin D Roosevelt that made him the first Black US general, in 1940, the appointment was derided as an effort to appeal to the Black vote in New York and Illinois and “an appeasement” of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

Six years later, Davis Sr was appointed by Harry Truman to the president’s committee on civil rights, to plan the integration of the armed forces. But instead of standing by Truman’s side two years later when the president signed the executive order which was one of the first great triumphs of the modern civil rights movement, Davis was nowhere to be seen – because he had been forced to retire just six days earlier. Similarly, when his son was eligible for his fourth star as a general, Lyndon Johnson inexplicably refused to approve the promotion.

Related: ‘An end of American democracy’: Heather Cox Richardson on Trump’s historic threat

The second half of Melville’s book records some of the ways America has made amends. Years after the younger Davis retired, at the urging of Senator John McCain, Bill Clinton finally bestowed his richly deserved fourth star. But the ageing general barely understood what was happening, because of the onset of Alzheimer’s.

Melville played a significant role in the lobbying effort that led to his grandfather’s greatest vindication. In a competition with William Westmoreland and Norman Schwarzkopf Jr, Benjamin Davis Jr finally won the respect from West Point he was denied in four years as a cadet. In 2017, less than one week after one of America’s worst racist events in Charlottesville, Virginia, Melville traveled to West Point for the dedication of the Gen Benjamin O Davis Jr Barracks, a brand new dormitory at the center of the campus.

Melville insisted that the construction men and women who worked on the dormitory be invited to the ceremony. One led him to at stone on which he had secretly etched a version of Psalm 118:22, 200ft from the entrance to the imposing new building. It read: “The stone which the builders rejected has become the cornerstone.”

How do the Croc Docs, a team of Florida scientists who wrangle crocodiles and alligators, stay safe? 'Very carefully.'

Kelsey Vlamis
Thu, November 23, 2023 

How do the Croc Docs, a team of Florida scientists who wrangle crocodiles and alligators, stay safe? 'Very carefully.'


University of Florida's Croc Docs are a team of biologists who study crocodilians and other reptiles.


Frank Mazzotti, the original Croc Doc, said safety is key and that they virtually never get injured.


Still, he said it's like operating a nuclear power plant: "There's no room for error."

In his more than 40 years of monitoring crocodiles in Florida, Frank Mazzotti has one early memory that especially stands out.

It was a hot and humid July on the coast of Florida in the 1970s, and the air was heavy with mosquitoes. Scientists still hadn't figured out how to use radio transmitters in saltwater, so Mazzotti got a canoe, a good headlamp, and a tent, and camped out with the crocodiles. Instead of relying on a transmitter, he would simply observe the reptiles, watching them come, go, and swim around.

He remembers one early morning, writing in his field book and smearing blood onto the page as a swarm of mosquitos feasted on his hand. He wrote, "The sun is coming up. The mosquitoes are going away. Thank God."


Mazzotti has spent the decades since studying crocodiles, alligators, and many other reptile species in Everglades National Park and beyond. He's a professor at the University of Florida and a member of the Croc Docs — a team of biologists and outreach specialists studying crocodilians, invasive reptiles, and threatened and endangered species in Florida and the Caribbean.

The lab's catchy nickname can actually be traced to a profile of Mazzotti published by Sports Illustrated in the 90s in which the writer dubbed him "The Croc Doc" and "the best friend Florida crocodiles have."

The Croc Docs' work includes monitoring alligators and crocodiles to see how they are responding to Everglades restoration. They also monitor several invasive animal species, a major problem in Florida, like Burmese pythons, Argentine black and white tegus, and Nile monitors.

"What we do is very much like what TV portrays, except it's the real thing," Mazzotti told Business Insider. "We drive in boats, we fly in helicopters, we catch alligators and crocodiles and Burmese pythons. We do all of those things and we do it all safely and scientifically, and collect quality data by which people can make management decisions."


Wildlife technician Elizabeth Sutton on a Crocodile catch.
University of Florida's Croc Docs

One of the Croc Docs' latest successes has been nearly eradicating invasive caimans from south Florida. Mazzotti said they accomplished this by defining an area and doing repeated and persistent surveys to remove and euthanize the caimans. The key, he said, was doing it consistently for as long as they did — about 10 years.

"You don't ride in, shoot 'em up, get rid of 'em, and then leave and it's done," he said, adding that every effort where they've had a lasting impact has been the result of persistence.

So how does a team of scientists regularly wrangle, measure, and tag these reptiles while staying safe?

"Of course, the joke is, we do it very carefully," Mazzotti said.
When catching crocodiles and alligators, there's no room for error

Mazzotti says he has about 15 people working for him across the lab's projects, and that there are very rarely — virtually never — any injuries.

When there is, he says it's more likely for a plant like poisonwood or a sharp rock formation to get you than a crocodile. The last injury that sent someone to the hospital was an allergic reaction to fire ant bites.

"That's the kind of thing that gets us in the field, not the charismatic, dangerous critters that you're really worried about," Mazzotti said.

And that's not because the animals they're handling aren't dangerous — they are. "I hate calling them dangerous because we're assaulting them and they're defending themselves, but I think that captures the point," he said. "They can hurt you."

Argentinian black and white tegu caught by a trap.University of Florida's Croc Docs

Wildlife biologist William Whelpley and wildlife technician Analise Fussell on an alligator catch.University of Florida's Croc Docs

But the lab makes safety a top priority. Before anyone can captain their own boat and go out and capture crocodiles or alligators, they undergo training and have to get signed off on every step of the process, from noosing the animal to securing its mouth.

A key thing Mazzotti emphasized is that the Croc Docs would never pull an animal onto a boat without first securing its mouth, contrary to some of the stunts you may see pulled by TV adventurers.

"Then when the animal comes on board, he can thrash, he can certainly hit you with the tail," he said. "He can't bite you."

Mazzotti said they've nailed down the safety measures so well that he's more afraid while driving to a fieldwork site in his car than when he's out catching the animals. Still, he never forgets that the stakes are high.

"It's like operating a nuclear power plant," he said. "There's just no room for a mistake. You can't say, 'Sorry, let's do it again.'"

Crocodile hatchling.University of Florida's Croc Docs
Finding a way to do the work can be harder than actually doing it

While the idea of capturing a reptile sounds intimidating, it's actually finding them that poses more of a challenge. Many of the species the Croc Docs deal with, like Burmese pythons, are rare and incredibly cryptic, with a very low probability of actually being spotted.

"So how do you find them?" he said. "How do you detect enough of them so that you can remove enough of them so that you can have an impact?"

Of all the work he's done, Mazzotti said one of the most exciting discoveries he's had was when he figured out how crocodiles were surviving in saltwater — by relying on freshwater that accumulated on the surface during the rainy season — because, he said, "by all accounts, they shouldn't."

These days, Mazzotti's time in the field is much more limited. Now what he enjoys most is giving the people who work for him the opportunity to make a living being a biologist. For most people who dream about being a biologist, he said, this work is exactly the kind of thing they dream about.

"All of the work now is done by the people working for me," he said, praising the young, excited biologists on his team who are out doing the work like radio tracking scout snake pythons and trapping tegus.

"They're the ones going out and catching the alligators and crocodiles," he said. "And getting bit by mosquitoes."


World’s 1st electric flying passenger ship could 'revolutionize how we travel on water'

Keumars Afifi-Sabet
Thu, November 23, 2023

A small, compact white boat in the centre of a channel looks as though it is hovering over the water.

The world's first electric flying passenger ship has completed test flights in Sweden and will now enter production ahead of its introduction into Stockholm's public transport network in 2024.

The Candela P-12, designed by Swedish tech company Candela Technology AB, is 39 feet (12 meters) long,runs on a 252 kilowatt-hour battery and can carry up to 30 passengers. By contrast, the battery in a 2024 Tesla Model 3 is up to 75 kWh.

It will fly at up to 25 knots (29 mph, or 46 km/h) — although it can reach maximum speeds of 30 knots (35 mph, or 56 km/h ) — with a range of up to 50 nautical miles (92.6 kilometers).

"It will revolutionize how we travel on water," Gustav Hasselskog, CEO of Candela, said in a statement.

Related link: How do electric batteries work, and what affects their properties?

The vessel "flies" using hydrofoils, which are lifting surfaces that operate in water to elevate a boat's hull above the water's surface — similar to airfoils that help planes lift off from the ground. Hydrofoils reduce drag from the water, which enables vessels to achieve greater speeds while using less power than conventional boats.

The P-12 uses computer-guided hydrofoils to elevate its hull, and it consumes 80% less energy while moving at speeds of more than 18 knots (21 mph, or 33 km/h) versus traditional vessels, the company said in the statement.

Candela's flying ship runs with two custom-made engines with 340  kilowatts of total peak power. When in flight, the P-12's digital flight control system can adapt to waves, wind and water currents by adjusting the hydrofoils' angle up to 100 times per second. This system may help to reduce the chances of passengers experiencing seasickness, the company said in the statement.

The P-12 also aims to be more sustainable than conventional vessels because it runs on electric power. Most electric ships built to date have a limited range and slow speeds due to the excessive energy consumption of their hull, keeping adoption rates low. But the P-12's reduced water friction, thanks to its hydrofoils, lets it run using less power than conventional boats and therefore travel farther using battery power.

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From next year, the electric vehicle will fly on a TK mile route between the Ekerö suburb and Stockholm's city center — slashing a 55-minute commute to just 25 minutes thanks in part to the fact it's exempt from speed limits due to producing less wake while traversing water.

"Today, in many cities, congested roads are common while waterways — humanity's oldest transport infrastructure — remain underutilized for rapid commuting," Hasselskog said in the statement. "The P-12 will let you use these waterways as green highways, enabling fast intra-city connections. Often, the quickest route is by water."