Saturday, September 21, 2024

Haiti, its suffering growing, in ‘race against time’: UN expert

By AFP
September 20, 2024

Vendors hauling their goods travel on a rocky, cliff-lined road to avoid gangs in the Port-au-Prince area. The perilous journey takes nearly seven hours
 - Copyright AFP/File Clarens SIFFROY

The Haitian people are suffering gravely at the hands of powerful criminal gangs, while an international security force and local police are badly lacking resources to protect them, a top UN expert said Friday.

William O’Neill, briefing reporters in Port-au-Prince at the end of a 12-day visit to the impoverished Caribbean island, described dire conditions that have left the population in an extreme state of insecurity and spreading starvation.

He visited areas in southern Haiti that, untouched by gang violence a year ago, are now struggling with “galloping inflation, lack of basic goods and flows of internally displaced people,” particularly affecting women and children.

Only 28 percent of health services are functioning normally, O’Neill said, “and almost five million people are suffering from acute food insecurity.”

In one refugee camp he met an “anemic little girl” who had not eaten in two days and not been in school in over a year.

More than half the island’s 700,000 internally displaced people are children.

The gangs are increasingly using sexual violence as a weapon to control the population, O’Neill said.

They have “trafficked children, forcibly recruited them into gangs, and often used them to carry out attacks” on police and public facilities.

The criminal gangs control more than 80 percent of Port-au-Prince, as well as key roads around the country.

The police meantime “lack the logistical and technical capacity to counter the gangs,” O’Neill said.

He said the Multinational Security Support Mission authorized nearly a year ago by the UN Security Council has so far deployed less than a quarter of its planned contingent of 2,500. At its core are 400 Kenyan officers deployed this summer.

“The equipment it has received is inadequate, and its resources are insufficient,” the UN expert said.

Police are overwhelmed. “We have to learn to walk on water,” one policeman in Jeremie told O’Neill.

Prison conditions, the UN expert said, were deplorable.

A prison in Jeremie, designed for 50 inmates, holds 470. “They sleep on floors flooded with rainwater and littered with filth,” sometimes going days without food.

“This enduring agony must stop,” O’Neill said.

He called on the Haitian authorities, appointed this year after the resignation of the unpopular government of Ariel Henry, to greatly step up efforts to combat pervasive corruption, saying, “efforts must be redoubled immediately.”

At the same time, he said, “it is crucial to stifle the gangs” by giving the international force the resources to effectively support the national police.

And with the criminals still receiving imported weapons, an international arms embargo must be tightened.

“It is a race against time,” O’Neill said.

The population “lacks everything.”

POST-FORDISM
Automotive intelligence moves forwards with ‘Liquid AI’


By Dr. Tim Sandle
September 19, 2024
DIGITAL JOURNAL

An 'Apollo Go' autonomous taxi on a street in Beijing - Copyright AFP Jade GAO

Is a new era of automotive intelligence about to begin? This is the claim of Autobrains Technologies who are working on ‘Liquid AI’, a self-driving car technology. This approach is designed to solve some of the current autonomous driving challenges.

In addition, the technology seeks to enhance vehicle autonomy by dynamically adapting to complex driving environments. This adaptability is considered as essential to achieving smarter and safer automotive solutions.

Such challenges include:

Edge Cases

An edge case is a problem or situation that occurs only at an extreme (maximum or minimum) operating parameter.

The infinite variety of unexpected driving scenarios presents conventional AIs with practically unsolvable tasks. Attempts to address this by feeding the systems more labelled images result in a loss of trackability and controllability.

Cost

Addressing real-world driving problems by expanding existing systems with more data, labelling, layers, and computational resources leads to escalating costs and power consumption.

Achieving a substantial improvement in system accuracy by a factor of 10 requires 10,000 times more computational resources.

Perception-Decision Disconnect

The missing interplay between perception and decision functions hinders effective and precise decision-making. For the AI to make optimal driving choices, it requires specific information. However, when details are missing or overly complex, precision is compromised, leading to incorrect reactions.


Liquid AI – Human Brain-Inspired


The technology combines Autobrains’ signature-based self-learning approach with a modular and adaptive architecture of specialized, scenario-based end-to-end skills.


According to Autobrains’ Founder and CEO, Igal Raichelgauz: “While current technologies perform well in handling average conventional driving tasks, they fall short when faced with unexpected real-world driving scenarios that demand greater precision. By using or implementing our Liquid AI, automotive companies can close their AI gaps”.

Autobrains draws inspiration from the human brain. As the human brain adapts its architecture based on context – such as light/weather conditions, surroundings, and relevant road users – Liquid AI has been designed to follow the same approach.

The basis of the technology includes:

Network of Specialized Narrow AI

Liquid AI comprises hundreds of thousands of specialized narrow AIs, each designed for specific tasks, making reactions very precise and tailored to the relevant driving scenario.

This specialized AI approach enables scalability, ranging from a few tens to hundreds of AIs for ADAS systems, scaling up to thousands for higher levels of automated driving, all the way to hundreds of thousands of AIs for full self-driving.

Adaptive Architecture

Unlike fixed systems, Liquid AI’s architecture adapts dynamically to the driving context, activating only relevant modules as necessary. This significantly reduces power consumption and compute requirements, not only resulting in cost savings for the System on Chip (SoC) hardware.

Efficiency and Precision

By mimicking the brain’s flexibility, Liquid AI achieves superior performance, cost-effectiveness, and safety. This includes human-like cognitive processing, which mimics human decision-making, allowing for better handling of unpredictable real-world conditions.

Efficient Resource Utilization

Lower computational power requirements make it scalable across various vehicle models without compromising performance.

These factors lead to a potentialenhancement in situational awareness and decision-making, providing a safer and more reliable driving experience.

Read more: https://www.digitaljournal.com/tech-science/automotive-intelligence-moves-forwards-with-liquid-ai/article#ixzz8mVkwNvN4
Environmental protesters block French cruise liner port


By AFP
September 21, 2024

Activists from the NGO "Stop croisieres" and "Extinction Rebellion France" hold banners while they block a cruise ship
 — © POOL/AFP/File Yuichi Yamazaki

Environmental activists blocked the cruise ship port in the southern French city of Marseille on Saturday to protest against the sea, air and climate pollution generated by these huge vessels.

About 20 members of Extinction Rebellion and Marseille-based Stop Croisieres (Stop Cruises) made a chain of canoes in the water across the entry to France’s leading port for cruise liners, an AFP correspondent reported.

The demonstration forced one ship to turn back at 7:00 am and moor further down the coast. Others had to stay in stand-by outside the port until about 9:30 am.

The port has since reopened, the maritime authorities told AFP cruise ships have docked.

“Nothing justifies the maintenance of these absurd, energy-intensive and toxic floating cities,” Stop Croisieres said on its website.

“Our air, our seas and our health are not up for negotiation,” it said.

It criticised the noxious heavy fuel oil used by the vessels, the destruction of ocean and coastal wildlife, the ships’ impact on the climate and poor working conditions for employees on board.

The protest prevented the Germany-owned Aidastella, which can carry around 2,000 people, from docking at around 7:00 am.

The Costa Smeralda and the MSC World Europa also had to wait before entering the French port.

The MSC World Europa is the sixth largest cruise liner in the world. It can carry 6,000 passengers and has more than 2,600 cabins, as well as 13 restaurants and a shopping centre.

– Pollution –

Marseille is the centre of a burgeoning cruise ship industry in France.

Between 2022 and 2023, the number of cruise passengers entering the port jumped from 1.5 million to 2.5 million, according to the Marseille tourism observatory.

Advocates of cruise liners argue they provide revenue to stopover ports.

Detractors say the ships encourage passengers to spend their money onboard, not on land, and that the industry promotes competition between reception ports to force down prices.

There have been protests in several European port cities against the damage caused by cruise liners, including in Venice and Amsterdam, which have banished them from docking in the city centre.

Stop Croisieres was set up during the Covid pandemic.

“We saw videos of nature being restored all over France, little birds in towns and other bucolic scenes.

“Yet in some parts of Marseille, the air was even more polluted than before the pandemic because of all the cruise liners forced to stay in port with their engines running,” said Andrea, who declined to give her surname for fear of prosecution.

In March 2023, residents’ associations in Marseille lodged a legal complaint over ocean traffic pollution in the port area, which regularly exceeded European Union limits.

According to a study by NGO Transport and Environment, cruise ships sailing in European waters in 2022 emitted more than eight million tonnes of carbon dioxide — the equivalent of 50,000 Paris to New York flights.



Op-Ed: Underpaid, understaffed, wage theft, and prices out of control. Happy?



By Paul Wallis
September 19, 2024
DIGITAL JOURNAL


UK nurses will stage a second unprecedented strike amid an increasingly acrimonious fight with the government for better wages
- Copyright AFP/File ISABEL INFANTES

If you search the words “underpaid, understaffed, and wage theft” you’ve given yourself a lifetime job researching them. The words mean a totally dysfunctional environment where organizational failure is unavoidable. This is global. It’s also happening with a backdrop of out-of-control prices for just about everything.

The word is “systemic”. It can’t be any sort of coincidence that these things are so common. That’s particularly the case in the ultra-cheapskate US, where “employment at will” apparently means a license to gouge workers.

It goes well with the mantras of “hate the public, hate the staff and hate the customers”, though. There’s that adorably delicate subtle ambience of sleaze and greed.

Meanwhile, in the unreal world, CEO wages have risen 1085% since 1978, where workers’ wages have risen 24%, according to one source. That’s probably a massive underestimate. Many people have asked why so few people who do so little make so much.

There’s no rational answer to that question. There’s no particular reason why a herd of deformed meeting-dwellers should get paid anything. They don’t actually do their own jobs. They delegate to lesser cretins, and that’s all they need to do.

In the days of Rent A Meaningless Degree, it’s inevitable that the talentless take over. (A degree is meaningless when given to an idiot.) As long as no competent people are involved, everything’s sweet until it all inevitably falls over. This is underperformance on a truly colossal scale.

It’s also hyper-obstructionist by intent. Cheaper tech, better time management, better productivity, better business models, you name it; they just don’t happen. For example – There’s no good cost-effective business reason for “back to the office”. Those places cost millions, and all that’s likely to happen is that diseases spread a lot faster. The upkeep of the buildings is obscene, the liabilities endless, and you’re paying for it.

If there was ever a species of serial underachievers on Earth, this is them. They have political ideologies to back them up. They’re in luck, too. In a deregulated environment, you can’t pull the plug on insane prices and unearned wages. This isn’t socialism; it’s common sense and business best practice, and you can guess how popular that is right now.

Why the cheapskate stuff, you may wonder in your palatial hollowed-out grain of rice? To create entirely fictional numbers, and maybe rip off some poor people. The appearance of success isn’t success, but it looks like it. Most of these guys can’t even make sense of their own balance sheets.

Most of the stockholders in this cartoon can’t read them either. So, everyone’s happy. They get paid for this fictional fantasy. World Com, Enron, Lehmann Bros, you live or die by the numbers. It’s more likely you create the numbers and vanish before the crash and burn kicks in.

Many businesses are going broke and being exposed to serious legal actions thanks to this culture. A lot of businesses are basically doing business for their inner parasites, not for themselves. Eventually, long afterward, it shows on the balance sheets, but you can see the problem.

Never mind the rhetoric. More outraged verbiage is hardly enough. The fact is that there are plenty of simple solutions to this mess:

All of these things are breaches of applicable laws in some form. Therefore, as a business, you have a perfect in-house excuse to sue and sack the parasites.

Fines don’t scare anyone. Therefore, you shut down the business until compliance. That’ll scare the guys who own the businesses out of these bad habits fast enough.

You create a nice bonny bouncing stack of case law and penalties to cover underpayment, understaffing, and wage theft, This is “strategic” case law for pests. At the moment you could get any number of cases for all these issues, preferably class actions.

It’s all easily fixable. Now let’s see what happens.

ANOTHER BILLIONAIRE SERIAL RAPIST

Lawyers of women alleging Al-Fayed sex abuse receive over 150 new enquiries

#METOO

London (AFP) – A legal team representing women alleging rape and sexual assault by the late Egyptian billionaire Mohamed Al-Fayed said on Saturday it received over 150 new enquiries, including from women accusing the former Harrods owner.



Issued on: 21/09/2024 -
Fayed is accused by multiple women who worked at London luxury department store Harrods of sexual assault 
© Ben STANSALL / AFP/File

The BBC released a documentary and podcast on Thursday in which Fayed is accused by multiple women who worked at the London luxury department store of sexual assault, including five accusing him of rape.

The new enquiries included a "mix of survivors and individuals with evidence" about Fayed, the legal team confirmed to AFP, after announcing it was representing 37 women accusing Fayed of sex abuse.

Comparing the scale and nature of the case to claims made against fallen figures like Jeffrey Epstein and Harvey Weinstein, lawyers said the allegations included some girls who were just 15 and 16 at the time of the alleged assault.

The team is bringing claims against Harrods for enabling the "systematic abuse" of its employees, many hired as Fayed's personal assistants and secretaries, over a period of 25 years.

The accusers say assaults took place at Fayed's apartments in London, residences in Paris, and on trips abroad from Saint-Tropez to Abu Dhabi.

The upmarket department store, which Fayed sold in 2010, said it was "utterly appalled" by the allegations and had received new enquiries as well since the BBC investigation.

The Harrods website now has a form that victims can complete, adding that it had an "established process" for those affected to claim compensation.

The legal team also said it was representing women who were employed by the Ritz hotel -- which was also owned by the mogul.

A former manager of the women's team at Fulham FC, also owned by Fayed until 2013, said the players were "protected" from Fayed.

"We were aware he liked young, blonde girls. So we just made sure that situations couldn't occur," Gaute Haugenes, who managed the team from 2001 to 2003, told the BBC on Saturday.

A Fulham FC spokesperson said the club was "deeply troubled and concerned".

"We are in the process of establishing whether anyone at the club is or has been affected," the spokesperson added.

© 2024 AFP
AI is ‘accelerating the climate crisis,’ expert warns


ByAFP
September 15, 2024

People visit a booth during the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai on July 4, 2024 -
 Copyright AFP STR Mathiew LEISER

If you care about the environment, think twice about using AI.

Generative artificial intelligence uses 30 times more energy than a traditional search engine, warns researcher Sasha Luccioni, on a mission to raise awareness about the environmental impact of the hot new technology.

Recognized as one of the 100 most influential people in the world of AI by the American magazine Time in 2024, the Canadian computer scientist of Russian origin has sought for several years to quantify the emissions of programs like ChatGPT or Midjourney.

“I find it particularly disappointing that generative AI is used to search the Internet,” laments the researcher, who spoke with AFP on the sidelines of the ALL IN artificial intelligence conference, in Montreal.

The language models on which the programs are based require enormous computing capacities to train on billions of data points, necessitating powerful servers.

Then there’s the energy used to respond to each individual user’s requests.

Instead of simply extracting information, “like a search engine would do to find the capital of a country, for example,” AI programs “generate new information,” making the whole thing “much more energy-intensive,” she explains.

According to the International Energy Agency, the combined AI and the cryptocurrency sectors consumed nearly 460 terawatt hours of electricity in 2022 — two percent of total global production.

– Energy efficiency –


A leading researcher on the impact of AI on climate, Luccioni participated in 2020 in the creation of a tool for developers to quantify the carbon footprint of running a piece of code. “CodeCarbon” has since been downloaded more than a million times.

Head of the climate strategy of startup Hugging Face, a platform for sharing open-access AI models, she is now working on creating a certification system for algorithms.

Similar to the program from the US Environmental Protection Agency that awards scores based on the energy consumption of electronic devices and appliances, it would make it possible to know an AI product’s energy consumption in order to encourage users and developers to “make better decisions.”

“We don’t take into account water or rare materials,” she acknowledges, “but at least we know that for a specific task, we can measure energy efficiency and say that this model has an A+, and that model has a D,” she says.

– Transparency –


In order to develop her tool, Luccioni is experimenting with it on generative AI models that are accessible to everyone, or open source, but she would also like to do it on commercial models from Google or ChatGPT-creator OpenAI, which have been reluctant to agree.

Although Microsoft and Google have committed to achieving carbon neutrality by the end of the decade, the US tech giants saw their greenhouse gas emissions soar in 2023 because of AI: up 48 percent for Google compared to 2019 and 29 percent for Microsoft compared to 2020.

“We are accelerating the climate crisis,” says Luccioni, calling for more transparency from tech companies.

The solution, she says, could come from governments that, for the moment, are “flying blindly,” without knowing what is “in the data sets or how the algorithms are trained.”

“Once we have transparency, we can start legislating.”

– ‘Energy sobriety’ –


It is also necessary to “explain to people what generative AI can and cannot do, and at what cost,” according to Luccioni.

In her latest study, the researcher demonstrated that producing a high-definition image using artificial intelligence consumes as much energy as fully recharging the battery of your cell phone.

At a time when more and more companies want to integrate the technology further into our lives — with conversational bots and connected devices, or in online searches — Luccioni advocates “energy sobriety.”

The idea here is not to oppose AI, she emphasizes, but rather to choose the right tools — and use them judiciously.


CLIMATE CRISIS: CENTRAL EUROPE
Hungary Danube waters reach decade high after Storm Boris

Budapest (AFP) – The Danube peaked at a 10-year high in a heavily fortified Budapest on Saturday with the water reaching the steps of parliament, after deadly Storm Boris lashed Europe.

Issued on: 21/09/2024 - 
Danube waters have reached the steps of the parliament building in Budapest
 © Attila KISBENEDEK / AFP
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Torrential rains and strong winds have led to widespread flooding in central and eastern Europe since last week, killing 24 people and devastating towns and villages.

As the swollen Danube waters have moved south, Hungarian emergency workers have lugged sandbags to fortify settlements, including Budapest, where the river has flooded the embankment up to the steps of parliament.

The water came close to 2013 record levels before it began to recede on Saturday.

Just north of Budapest, water has flooded the lower levels of some houses in Szentendre town © FERENC ISZA / AFP

"The last time it was this high I was only 10 or 11," Beata Hargitai, a 22-year-old student, told AFP in downtown Budapest near the flooded area.

"To move around in the capital is a bit more tricky but manageable. I am happy to see that things seem to go pretty well, in an orderly manner," she added.

Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who has cancelled all his international travels this week and went to inspect Budapest's flood protection work on Saturday, said the focus was "on controlling the flood" with some "hard days" ahead to make sure dykes hold.

Just north of Budapest, water has flooded the lower levels of houses near the Danube with people moving around on canoes in Szentendre town.

"The lower parts of our village are under water," Vilmos Nemet, a 50-year-old cook who lives uphill in nearby Tahitotfalu village, some 25 kilometres (16 miles) north of Budapest, told AFP.

The Danube has also breached its banks in Esztergom, north-west of Budapest © - / AFP

So far, 24 people have died in Austria, the Czech Republic, Poland and Romania as the flood waters have demolished houses and fields, and heavily damaged road and rail infrastructure.

The flooding damaged or destroyed more than 18,000 buildings and facilities in Poland, according to the first estimates announced by the government on Saturday.

Swollen rivers continued to threaten several settlements in western Poland, with Prime Minister Donald Tusk promising "massive aid" to the affected regions.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Thursday announced 10 billion euros ($11 billion) in funds for EU member nations reeling from the devastation.

Experts say climate change caused by greenhouse gas emissions generated by human activities is increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events such as torrential rains and floods.

© 2024 AFP

CLIMATE CRISIS & CIVIL WAR

Myanmar flood death toll jumps to 384

Yangon (AFP) – The death toll in Myanmar in the wake of Typhoon Yagi has climbed to 384, with 89 people missing, the junta said on Saturday.

INTERNATIONAL PARIAH
(EXCEPT FOR CHINA, RUSSIA AND THAILAND)

Issued on: 21/09/2024 -

NARROW GAUGE RAILROAD
The United Nations has warned that as many as 887,000 people have been affected in Myanmar in the wake of Typhoon Yagi 

Yagi swept across northern Vietnam, Laos, Thailand and Myanmar more than a week ago, triggering floods and landslides that have killed hundreds of people across the region.

In Myanmar, 384 people were dead and 89 were missing as of Saturday, the junta's information team said.

The floods have heaped more misery on a country where millions were already displaced by more than three years of conflict unleashed by the military's 2021 coup.

Last weekend, the junta issued a rare appeal for foreign aid to help cope with the disaster.

The United Nations has warned that as many as 887,000 people have been affected in Myanmar in the wake of Typhoon Yagi.

"The most severely affected areas remain in devastation, with widespread destruction to homes, household assets, water sources, and electricity infrastructure," the UN's humanitarian agency (OCHA) said Saturday.

"Roads, bridges, communication networks, schools, public service facilities, religious sites, and crops and farmlands have been severely damaged or completely collapsed," it added.

© 2024 AFP
RIP

Lebanese novelist Elias Khoury dies aged 76

Beirut (Lebanon) (AFP) – Novelist Elias Khoury, one of Lebanon's most renowned writers and a fervent advocate of the Palestinian cause, died on Sunday from illness aged 76, sources close to his family told AFP.



Issued on: 15/09/2024 - 16:37
1 min
Lebanese writer Elias Khoury, in 2007 
© MARWAN NAAMANI / AFP/File

Khoury, who was born in 1948 to a Christian family in Beirut, died in the Lebanese capital where he had been hospitalised for months, the sources said.

Over several decades Khoury produced a large body of work in Arabic that touched on the themes of collective memory, war and exile, alongside writing for newspapers, teaching literature and editing a publication linked to the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO).

Many of his books were translated into foreign languages including French, English, German, Hebrew and Spanish.

One of his best-known novels, "Gate of the Sun", tells the story of Palestinian refugees expelled from their homes in 1948 during the war that coincided with Israel's foundation.

Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were driven out or expelled from their homes during that war, in what Palestinians call the Nakba, or catastrophe in Arabic.

The novel was made into a film by Egyptian director Yousry Nasrallah.

Khoury also wrote about Lebanon's 1975-1990 civil war in novels like "Little Mountain" and "Yalo".

A champion of the Palestinian cause since his youth, Khoury was co-managing editor of the PLO-linked Palestinian Affairs magazine from 1975 to 1979, together with poet Mahmoud Darwish.

Khoury also headed the cultural section of the now-defunct Lebanese newspaper As-Safir and the cultural supplement of the daily Annahar.

He taught literature at several US institutions including New York's prestigious Columbia University.

Khoury's ailing health in recent years did not stop him from writing, publishing articles reposted on his Facebook page from his hospital bed.

On July 16, he published an article titled "A Year of Pain", recounting his time bedridden in hospital and enduring "a life filled with pain, which stops only to herald in more pain".

He ended his piece by alluding to the Israel-Hamas war in the besieged Gaza Strip, which by then had raged on for more than nine months, triggered by the Palestinian group's October 7 attack.

"Gaza and Palestine have been brutally bombarded for almost a year now, but they stand steadfast and unshakable. A model from which I have learnt to love life every day," Khoury wrote.

© 2024 AFP
Israelis rally to pressure government on hostage release

Tel Aviv (AFP) – Thousands of Israelis again took to the streets of Israel's commercial hub Tel Aviv on Saturday to press for a Gaza truce deal that could free dozens of hostages.

Issued on: 21/09/2024 -
Demonstrators hold placards and set off smoke bombs during an anti-government rally in Israel's Tel Aviv © Jack GUEZ / AFP

Weekly rallies in Tel Aviv throughout the war, which was triggered by Hamas's October 7 attack, have become more critical of the Israeli government since the military announced earlier this month that six dead captives had been recovered from a tunnel in the southern Gaza Strip.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, accused by critics of stalling in truce negotiations and prolonging the war to appease far-right coalition partners, has said Hamas militants "executed" the six hostages by shooting them in the back of the head.

Netanyahu has also blamed Hamas leaders for rejecting terms of a possible truce and hostage release deal, while himself facing calls from Israeli critics to make concessions to secure the return of 97 people still held in Gaza, including 33 the military says are dead.

Actor Lior Ashkenazi told the crowd in Tel Aviv on Saturday that "there will be no redemption" if the government allows the Israeli captives to be "abandoned to murderers and rapists for coalition considerations".

"No one will agree to live under a broken leadership. Cry out, beloved land, for your leaders abandon you."

As in past weeks, relatives of captives addressed the crowd.

Eli Elbag, father of hostage Liri Elbag, said addressing his daughter: "It's been a year since I last kissed you, a year since I last laughed with you."

"We will continue to fight to bring everyone home," said the father.

Saturday's protest unfolded in the shadow of increasing cross-border attacks between Israel and Lebanese group Hezbollah, a Hamas ally.

Shahar Mor, nephew of slain hostage Avraham Munder, said he feared the fight against Hezbollah would again distract leaders from the plight of the hostages.

"Their goal is to focus on the illusion of 'absolute victory' that is always just around the corner," said Mor.

But like during successive phases of intense fighting in Gaza over nearly a year of war, the "corner... always shifts according to specific interests," he said.

"Yesterday it was Rafah (in southern Gaza), tomorrow it will be Beirut."

The October 7 attack that triggered the war resulted in the deaths of 1,205 people, mostly civilians, on the Israeli side, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures that include hostages killed in captivity.

Palestinians militants seized 251 hostages that day, scores of whom were released during a one-week truce in November.

Israel's retaliatory military offensive has killed at least 41,391 people in Gaza, most of them civilians, according to figures provided by the Hamas-run territory's health ministry. The UN has acknowledged the figures as reliable.

© 2024 AFP