Thursday, December 21, 2023

EU hails a migration deal breakthrough after years of talks. Critics worry about rights abuses

The EU is expected to accommodate 30,000 people per year in its joint migration system at any given time - so each country will be assigned a share of that.

LORNE COOK
Updated Wed, December 20, 2023

 A Federal Police officer speaks into his radio as he and a colleague track down a group of migrants who have illegally crossed the border from Poland into Germany, while on patrol in a forest near Forst south east of Berlin, Germany, on Oct. 11, 2023. European Union leaders and top officials hailed on Wednesday Dec. 20, 2023 a major breakthrough in talks on new rules to control migration, but critics said the reforms will weaken the rights of asylum-seekers and encourage more morally dubious deals with countries that people leave to get to Europe. 
(AP Photo/Markus Schreiber, File)

BRUSSELS (AP) — European Union leaders and top officials hailed on Wednesday a major breakthrough in talks on new rules to control migration, but critics said the reforms will weaken the rights of asylum-seekers and encourage more morally dubious deals with countries that people leave to get to Europe.

After overnight talks, visibly exhausted EU lawmakers emerged expressing relief that agreement was found “on the core political elements” of the Pact on Asylum and Migration — a major overhaul of rules that many hope will address the challenges posed by migrant arrivals over the last decade.

“It’s truly a historic day,” said European Parliament President Roberta Metsola, flanked by lawmakers responsible for the key parts of the agreement. With migration likely to be a hot campaign issue ahead of EU elections next June, Metsola said, it was vital to make a breakthrough.

“Let’s not underestimate the risk if we had not reached such a deal,” she told reporters. “This means, hopefully, that member states will feel less inclined to reintroduce internal borders because the influx is being managed.”

The pact was touted as the answer to the EU’s migration woes when it was made public in September 2020. The bloc’s old rules collapsed in 2015 after well over 1 million people arrived in Europe without authorization. Most were fleeing war in Syria or Iraq.

But little progress was made on the pact as the member states bickered over which country should take charge of migrants when they arrive and whether other countries should be obligated to help.

In recent weeks, negotiators bridged differences on rules concerning the screening of migrants arriving without authorization -– facial images and fingerprints will be quickly taken, including from children from the age of 6 -– and the ways that this biometric data can be used.

Agreement was also found on which EU countries should handle asylum applications, the procedures for doing so, and what kinds of mandatory support other countries must provide to nations struggling to cope with migrant arrivals, notably in “crisis situations.”

In a post on X, formerly Twitter, the European Council on Refugees and Exiles – a migrant rights umbrella body – slammed the rules as “Byzantine in their complexity and Orban-esque in their cruelty,” a reference to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who erected razor-wire fences to keep migrants out.

But lawmakers were more sanguine.

Noting that he and fellow negotiators had “not slept a wink in the last couple of days,” Spanish Socialist EU lawmaker Juan Fernando Lopez Aguilar explained that merely agreeing a deal could be seen as a victory, and that “no one can come out of this negotiation entirely happy.”

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz described it as “a very important decision” that will “relieve the burden on countries that are particularly affected — including Germany.”

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez told his country’s parliament that the pact “will allow us to have an improved, more humane and better coordinated management of our frontiers and migration flows.”

Dutch caretaker Prime Minister Mark Rutte said the deal improves “control over migration” with “better asylum procedures at the external borders of the EU.” Far-right lawmaker Geert Wilders aims to replace Rutte after sweeping to victory in last month’s elections on an anti-migration platform.

The breakthrough was announced just after the French parliament approved a divisive immigration bill intended to strengthen France’s ability to deport foreigners considered undesirable. The vote prompted a heated debate after the far-right decided to back the measure.

Wednesday’s EU deal is not definitive though. For the entire reform pact to enter force, officials and lawmakers have said, a final agreement on all its 10 parts must be reached by February, and then transcribed into law before the June 6-9 elections.

In recent years, as hope for reforms languished, the EU focused on outsourcing the challenge by offering economic, political and travel incentives to countries that people leave or transit to get to Europe.

A deal with Tunisia, where authorities have been accused of dumping migrants in the desert, was a recent example. Italy has also concluded a bilateral agreement to send people to Albania, but that faces legal challenges. The EU is in talks with Egypt, Iraq, Morocco and Nigeria, among others.


Rights groups warned that Wednesday's agreement will only entrench that kind of thinking.

Eve Geddie, Director of Amnesty International’s European Institutions Office, said that it “will set back European asylum law for decades to come,” and “cause more people to be put into de-facto detention at EU borders, including families with children and people in vulnerable situations.”

“States will be able to simply pay to strengthen external borders, or fund countries outside the EU to prevent people from reaching Europe,” Geddie added.

Oxfam’s EU migration expert Stephanie Pope worried that the pact would encourage “more detention, including of children and families in prison-like centers. They have also slammed the door on those seeking asylum with substandard procedures, fast-tracked deportation and gambled with people’s lives.”

The secretary general of the Caritas Europa charity group, Maria Nyman, said the deal shows that EU countries “prefer to shift their asylum responsibility to non-EU countries, prevent arrivals and speed up return, exposing migrants to human rights violations.”


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Associated Press writers Kirsten Grieshaber in Berlin, Mike Corder in The Hague and Joseph Wilson in Barcelona contributed to this report.

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Follow AP’s coverage of migration issues at https://apnews.com/hub/migration


EU reaches ‘landmark’ agreement on asylum reform but deal still faces challenge of ratification


Alex Hardie and Luke McGee, CNN
Wed, December 20, 2023 

The European Union has reached a provisional agreement to “thoroughly overhaul” its laws on asylum and migration, a move being hailed as a landmark but which could face challenges when each member state comes to approve it.

The deal covers the political elements of five EU laws that “touch upon all stages of asylum and migration management,” the European Council said in a statement, adding that all five are components of the pact on migration and asylum proposed by the European Commission in 2020.

The five EU laws agreed upon address issues including the screening of irregular migrants, procedures for handling asylum applications, rules on determining which member state is responsible for handling an asylum application, and how to handle crisis situations, according to the European Council statement.

“The new rules, once adopted, will make the European asylum system more effective and will increase the solidarity between member states by enabling to lighten the load on those member states where most migrants arrive,” the statement added.

There have long been complaints that some EU members receive far more migrants than others. Under the proposals, countries not at the border will have to choose between accepting their share of 30,000 asylum applicants or paying at least 20,000 euros ($21,870) per person into an EU fund, Reuters reported.

The agreement was made between the current Spanish presidency of the European Council, which rotates between member states every six months, and the European Parliament.

While the agreement was hailed as historic by Roberta Metsola, president of the European Parliament, a formal deal will still need to be approved by all 27 members of the European Union and ratified by the Parliament, where multiple blocs of parliamentarians oppose the deal.

The European Council noted that the next step of the process will be submitting the provisional agreement to member states for confirmation.

Metsola said in a post on social media that “20th December 2023 will go down in history. The day the EU reached a landmark agreement on a new set of rules to manage migration and asylum.”

Refugee charities have criticized the deal, along with members of the European Parliament.


The Italian island of Lampedusa, close to Africa, has long been a flashpoint. - Zakaria Abdelkafi/AFP/Getty Images

The European Council on Refugees and Exiles, an alliance of 117 NGOs working to protect asylum seekers, said on social media that the deal marked a “dark day for Europe.”

Amnesty International reacted to the agreement on Wednesday, saying that it “will lead to a surge in suffering for asylum seekers, refugees and migrants on every step of their journeys.”

The politics of migration


Migration, particularly the question of how to deal with the large influx of refugees that Europe has seen in recent years, has come to dominate European politics, particularly on the right.

Europe’s geographical location and comparatively friendly record on human rights and support for refugees has made it an attractive destination for those fleeing conflict.

The EU has a vast external border, ranging from the Mediterranean Sea – close to parts of North Africa and the Middle East – to land borders with Russia in the east. Conflicts in these parts of the world over the past couple of decades have naturally led to many people seeking entry to Europe.

The EU faces other unique challenges when it comes to irregular migration, not least because 22 of the 27 EU member states are part of the borderless Schengen area, which makes tracking movement across the bloc somewhat trickier.

The frictionless movement is something that most Europeans don’t want to give up for economic reasons, but a lack of control on migration is the other side of the coin.

Unsurprisingly, this creates ample opportunity for anti-EU politicians to whack Brussels, a tried and tested political strategy for politicians across the bloc. For opposition parties, it means you can hold your government’s feet to the fire on domestic migration policy.

The day before the EU reached its deal on migration, the French parliament passed a controversial immigration bill, which France’s leading far-right politician Marine Le Pen called an “unquestionable ideological victory” for her party.
What's in the new EU deal on migrants?

Reuters Videos
Updated Wed, December 20, 2023 

STORY: The European Union agreed on Wednesday (December 20) on new rules designed to share out the cost and work of hosting migrants more evenly and to limit the numbers of people coming in.

The deal is being hailed as a breakthrough after almost a decade of bitter feuds on the issue.

European Commission Vice President Margaritis Schinas.

"...We do have the agreement on this holistic European framework. This is a proud testament to the fact that Europe can deliver solutions on issues that matter to the many, and this is the case on migration."

The New Pact on Migration and Asylum should start taking effect next year.

The bloc aims to spread more evenly the task of caring for arriving refugees and migrants.

The EU is expected to accommodate 30,000 people per year in its joint migration system at any given time - so each country will be assigned a share of that.

It will be calculated on factors including a country’s GDP and population, and the number of irregular migrant border crossings - including sea rescue operations.

Countries unwilling to take in people would instead be able to help their peers through equipment, personnel or cash - at least 20,000 euros per person a year.

The agreement would introduce a new speedy border procedure for those deemed unlikely to win asylum, preventing them from lingering inside the bloc for years.

Their claims would be dealt with in a maximum of 12 weeks and, if rejected, they should be returned to their home countries within a further 12 weeks.

That mechanism would apply to all those deemed dangerous, uncooperative or coming from countries with low asylum recognition rates in the EU like India, Tunisia and Turkey.

EU countries could also apply the speedy procedure to people picked up in the sea trying to get in illegally or filing for asylum at a country's border, rather than in advance.

Before eventually agreeing, Italy and Greece voiced concerns about the workability of the new system, especially as some states refuse to host people.

The southern countries worry about being overwhelmed - especially as complex solidarity schemes take time to kick in.

States further from the bloc’s borders also tend to drag their feet on admitting arrivals.

Another challenge is keeping close tabs on the movement of people once they get inside Europe's free travel zone.

Rights groups said the scheme risked creating overcrowded migration camps on the edges of the EU and the extended detention of minors.

Adding that it focusing on keeping people away rather than helping those in need.

Separately, Poland has refused to take in any of the mainly-Muslim arrivals, though it has given shelter to millions of Ukrainians fleeing Russia's war.


EU agrees 'historic' reform of asylum laws

Marc Burleigh and Anne-Laure Mondesert
Wed, December 20, 2023 

The EU reforms mean more border detention centres being set up to screen asylum-seekers (Alessandro Serranò)


The EU on Wednesday agreed to an overhaul of its asylum system that includes more border detention centres and speedier deportations, prompting migrant charities to slam the changes as "dangerous".

But EU governments, officials and MEPs hailed the preliminary accord on the bloc's new pact on asylum and migration as "historic", saying it updated procedures to handle growing irregular arrivals while maintaining respect of human rights.

The legislative reform, reached after lengthy negotiations between EU member countries and bloc lawmakers, has yet to be formally adopted by the European Council and European Parliament.

That is expected to be done before June 2024, when EU elections will decide the next parliament.

Nationalist, anti-immigrant parties are forecast to win more seats in the parliament, reflecting a harder stance among EU voters struggling with a high cost of living.

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen welcomed the "historic" agreement on "a fair and pragmatic approach to managing migration".

Many EU countries, including France, Germany, Spain and the Netherlands also hailed the accord.

Italy's interior minister, Matteo Piantedosi, called the agreed reform a "great success", saying frontline countries like his own "no longer feel alone".

But Hungary -- which objects to having to take in irregular migrants or pay countries that do -- rejected the deal in the "strongest possible terms," its foreign minister Peter Szijjarto said.

- Faster screening -


The EU reform includes faster vetting of irregular arrivals, creating border detention centres, accelerated deportation for rejected asylum applicants and a solidarity mechanism to take pressure off southern countries experiencing big inflows.

The overhaul, based on a commission proposal put forward three years ago, keeps the existing principle under which the first EU country an asylum-seeker enters is responsible for their case.

But to help countries experiencing a high number of arrivals -- as is the case with Mediterranean countries Italy, Greece and Malta -- a compulsory solidarity mechanism would be set up.

That would mean a certain number of migrant relocations to other EU countries, or countries that refuse to take in migrants would provide a financial or material contribution to those that do -- something Budapest is fiercely against.

The reform also accelerates the vetting of asylum-seekers so those deemed ineligible can be quickly sent back to their home country or country of transit.

That procedure -- which requires border detention centres being set up -- would apply to irregular migrants coming from countries whose nationals' asylum requests are rejected in more than 80 percent of cases.

Families with young children would have adequate conditions, human rights monitoring would take place and free legal advice provided, MEPs said.

Another point is a proposed "surge response" under which protections for asylum-seekers could be curtailed in times of significant inflows, as happened in 2015-2016 when more than two million asylum-seekers arrived in the EU, many from war-torn Syria.

- Charities' criticism -

Dozens of charities that help migrants criticised the changes.

The deal "will cost more lives at sea," the Sea-Watch ship rescue charity said, arguing that it was "a bow to the right-wing parties of Europe".

Oxfam said the new package is "in many ways... far worse" than the existing system, with one of its migration experts, Stephanie Pope, calling it "a dangerous dismantling of the key principles of human rights and refugee law".

Amnesty International said the "likely outcome is a surge in suffering on every step of a person's journey to seek asylum in the EU", while the Danish Refugee Council complained that "the EU should protect refugees -- not make it harder for them".

Despite these concerns, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced his "satisfaction" with the effort "to implement a strict but fair immigration policy".

While UNHCR chief Filippo Grandi said the agreement was "a very positive step" and the UN refugee agency "stands ready to advise and support" as it is put into action.

The EU is seeing a rising number of irregular migrant arrivals and asylum requests.


In the first 11 months of this year, the EU border agency Frontex has registered more than 355,000 irregular border crossings into the bloc, an increase of 17 percent over the same period last year.

The number of asylum-seekers this year could top one million, according to the EU Agency for Asylum.

EU Clinches Long-Sought Pact on Contentious Migration Rules

Lyubov Pronina
Wed, December 20, 2023 



(Bloomberg) -- The European Union reached an agreement on an overhaul to its rules for tackling immigration crises as it seeks to streamline asylum procedures and boost returns of people who fail to obtain the right to stay in the bloc.

“It’s been a long road to get here. But we made it,” Margaritis Schinas, an EU vice president in charge of migration issues, said Wednesday in a post on X. “Europe is finally delivering on migration.”

The tentative deal between EU member states and the European Parliament, which was clinched after two days and two nights of intense negotiations, still needs to be approved formally by both groups. A number of technical details also need to be worked out in the coming weeks.

Countries facing surges in third-country citizens crossing their borders would be allowed more flexibility on how to handle the arrivals in crisis situations and count on solidarity contributions from other member states such as relocation of asylum seekers and financial help.

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock hailed the agreement, noting that the EU member states for the first time will be required to show solidarity with each other in dealing with migration flows, but said there were some tough compromises.

“Germany couldn’t push through its ambitions concerning the general exception of children and families from border procedures,” she said in a statement. “All the more, we’ll now pay attention that the implementation of the new asylum system will be fair, orderly and in solidarity.”

With over 1 million irregular arrivals registered in the EU since 2015 — including more than 250,000 this year alone — migration is reshaping the bloc’s politics and providing fuel to right-wing parties. Some countries, including Germany, have taken unilateral measures this year to tighten controls at their borders as more people, particularly from the Middle East and Africa, flee violence and poverty.

Read more: Meloni Touts Plan Inspired by Her Vacation to Fix Migrant Crisis

In June, interior ministers agreed on asylum and migration regulations that included a rule that would allow border officials to quickly assess whether applications for entry are unfounded. The new procedure would let governments keep asylum applicants, including families, in locations at the border.

But human rights advocates have been very critical of the proposals being discussed by the EU.

“The deal is nothing but a house of cards incapable of fixing the EU’s broken asylum system,” Stephanie Pope, an EU migration expert at Oxfam, said Monday. “After years of negotiation, we are left with a pact that ushers in increased detention, more pushbacks, and dubious deals with non-EU countries.”

The new border procedure would effectively bar people from applying for asylum, fast-track deportation and put families and children in detention at risk of being returned to home countries where they could face persecution, Oxfam said. The proposal also fails to guarantee that European countries welcome immigrants equally and allows member states pay their way out of solidarity.

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.




EU agrees on major migration deal amid West's anti-immigrant shift

Jenna Moon
Wed, December 20, 2023 


Semafor Signals

NEWS

The European Union agreed on a major deal of immigration reform, reducing some of the pressures of migration on its southern members.

The Pact on Migration and Asylum will limit entries into the EU and make it easier for states to process deportations, while spreading some of the burden of receiving new migrants across the bloc.
SIGNALSSemafor Signals: Global insights on today's biggest stories.
Voters and governments shift right on immigrationSources: Semafor, Foreign Policy

Anti-immigration policies have been flourishing in recent months, and even left-wing and center-left parties have sought to reduce migration. The U.S., Australia, and France are all looking to come down hard on immigration, and politicians who have promised to reduce migrant numbers have swept recent elections. The shift partly comes from voters who think established parties ignore their concerns about immigration, driving them to the far-right for whom immigration has always been a talking point, one expert told Foreign Policy. “Mainstream [parties] acted like the issue didn’t exist—they didn’t want to tackle it. That irritated people,” said Jakub Wondreys, a political scientist at the Hannah Arendt Institute for Totalitarianism Studies in Dresden.
But the rich world’s anti-immigrant turn may seem like “an aberration” soonSources: The Economist

There is an “immigration boom” underway in wealthy nations where foreign-born populations are reportedly rising faster than ever before, The Economist noted earlier this year. While part of this is a post-lockdown surge of people with visas who had delayed their moving plans during COVID-19, the primary reason could be the “post-pandemic economy” in rich countries where unemployment is low and demand for labor is high. Some rich governments are trying to attract more students to counter their ageing populations, the Economist wrote, and in countries like the U.S., immigrants bring new enterprises, ideas, and innovation, ultimately generating more tax revenue. “Before long the rich world’s anti-immigrant turn of the late 2010s will seem like an aberration,” The Economist argued.
Journeys for migrants are expensive, and deadlySources: The Wall Street Journal

Across the Atlantic, more than 500,000 people have attempted to traverse Panama’s treacherous Darien Gap crossing this year, which connects South and Central America — doubling the number of people who made the attempt in 2022. Many of the migrants setting out across the region’s dense jungle originate from Venezuela and hope to reach the U.S., which closed two border crossings with Mexico this year in response to 2.5 million encounters with migrants at its southern border. Those with means are taking a different route, paying up to $5,000 to travel by sea from Colombia to Nicaragua, The Wall Street Journal reported. That journey is deadly, and 100 people have gone missing over the last two years.




India's Waaree to invest $1 billion in Texas solar panel factory

Thu, December 21, 2023

(Reuters) - India's top solar panel maker Waaree Energies on Thursday said it would invest up to $1 billion to build a factory in Texas to take advantage of soaring U.S. demand for clean energy.

The announcement is the latest major corporate commitment to solar manufacturing since passage of U.S. President Joe Biden's landmark climate change law last year which offers subsidies and tax breaks for clean energy projects.

India's solar manufacturing industry is growing rapidly and just beginning to use its know-how in the United States, with both countries looking to build a clean energy sector to compete with China.

Waaree said that by 2027 its planned Brookshire, Texas facility will be one of the largest solar factories in the U.S., with an annual capacity of 3 gigawatts (GW) of panels when it opens in late 2024, then expanding to 5 GW.

The Houston-area factory will create more than 1,500 jobs, it said. The company aims to add a solar cell facility by 2025.

Waaree's plans are supported by a long-term supply agreement with SB Energy, a clean energy developer backed by Japan's Softbank Group.

"By setting up the new facility in the Houston area, Waaree brings critical technologies that will boost American solar production, reducing reliance on overseas sources while supporting strong U.S. jobs," Sunil Rathi, interim CEO of Waaree Solar Americas said in a statement. "We are committed to the U.S. and its growing demand for clean energy."

Under Biden's Inflation Reduction Act, solar project developers receive additional subsidies for using American-made equipment, and producers also receive new incentives.

Most major components in Waaree's solar modules will be made in the U.S., the company said.

Waaree's move to manufacture in the U.S. comes after a venture backed by India's Vikram Solar earlier this year said it would invest $1.5 billion in the U.S. solar supply chain.

Waaree has made inroads into the U.S. market already this year by supplying 4 GW of solar modules from its factory in India.

(Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing by Sonali Paul)

Family of Sikh activist call for new UK investigation into his death


Stephanie Kirchgaessner and Kiran Stacey
Tue, 19 December 2023 a

Photograph: handout

The family of the late Sikh activist Avtar Singh Khanda have called on the Home Office to appoint a police force to conduct a full and independent investigation into his sudden death last June, which coincided with a murder and an attempted murder of Sikh separatists in Canada and the US.

Khanda’s family lawyer, Michael Polak, said that a decision by the Home Office to launch an investigation would alleviate concerns among the Sikh community that they could be targeted by India and that their safety and rights were being sacrificed for “political expediency”.

The Home Office declined to comment.

At the cente of the controversy lies the case of the 35-year-old asylum seeker who was based in Birmingham and was a vocal advocate of the Khalistan movement, which supports the creation of a separate Sikh state.

Khanda died on 15 June in a Birmingham hospital, after what was later deemed to be a case of acute myeloid leukemia.

In the years and months before his death, Khanda was – friends and family say – the subject of an intense harassment campaign that played out in the Indian press, where he was falsely accused of taking part in a protest at the Indian high commission in London last March. Khanda was never charged or convicted of any crimes in connection to the protest in the UK. In the months before he died Khanda was repeatedly called by Indian police, who also questioned and detained his mother and sister.

While West Midlands police initially insisted that the matter had been thoroughly investigated, it appeared to backtrack after questions by the Guardian about the nature of the investigation, including allegations that the police never inspected Khanda’s residence or interviewed his friends and colleagues after his death.

Citing a recent move to place West Midlands police under special measures for, among other allegations, failing to properly investigate crimes, Khanda’s family have requested the Home Office appoint another police force to investigate his death. They are seeking a response from the Home Office by 29 December.

Related: ‘Police said I’m in danger’: Sikh activists on edge worldwide after Vancouver killing

New questions are being raised about the handling of the matter as details have emerged in Canada and the US about the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, another Sikh separatist, and an alleged plot to murder Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, a New York-based lawyer who is organising a symbolic Khalistan referendum to be held in California next month.

“Avtar died within the same period that Mr Nijjar was assassinated by an Indian agent in Canada, and when an attempt was made to kill Mr Pannun in the USA on behalf of the Indian regime,” said Polak. “The family’s request for a diligent and objective review by a different police force in this matter is reasonable and one that we hope the home secretary will grant.”

West Midland police have declined to provide further comment on the matter.

The Biden administration has emphasised the need to maintain a strong relationship with India as an ally to counter China. But the courting of the government of the prime minister, Narendra Modi, did not stop the Department of Justice from unsealing a criminal indictment recently that accused an unnamed Indian government official of orchestrating an attempted murder of a US attorney – Pannun – on US soil.

It followed remarks by the Canadian prime minister, Justin Trudeau, who claimed in October that India had a hand in the murder of Nijjar outside his place of worship in British Columbia.

The Indian government has said it would investigate the claims.

The UK government has not publicly weighed in on questions about Khanda’s death, apart from some Foreign Office ministers saying the matter had been thoroughly reviewed by police.

Like the US, the UK has sought to ensure India can provide a bulwark to China’s geopolitical power and ambitions. But more pressingly, London is trying to secure a multibillion-pound free trade agreement with New Delhi in time for elections in both countries next year. Downing Street officials recently travelled to the Indian capital, with sources saying that negotiations are reaching their final stages.

“The months of silence by the UK government in relation to the shocking revelations of the Indian government’s transnational repression have been very disturbing to British Sikhs,” said Jas Singh, an adviser to the Sikh Federation (UK). “The UK government cannot continue to ignore the illegal activities of the Indian government against Sikhs. There are many cases and examples of foreign interference and undue influence on UK policy.”
ISRAEL USES SNIPERS
How a sniper’s bullets utterly shattered the last vestiges of sanctuary in Gaza’s only Catholic church


Bel Trew
Wed, 20 December 2023 

Nahida Anton (left) and her daughter Samar were shot in the courtyard of the Holy Family Church in Gaza City (Supplied/Getty)

For years, Gaza’s only Catholic church had been a sanctuary of prayer for its congregation, so little wonder it was where hundreds would flee after the destruction of homes in the territory’s largest city, the focal point of Israel’s ferocious aerial bombardment.

The parishioners turned nursery playrooms and even pews in the nave of the sprawling complex of the Holy Family Church into makeshift homes. They held Mass by torchlight, praying for survival as Israel’s bombing campaign levelled buildings in the area around them.

Israeli tanks closed in and snipers positioned themselves on the apartment blocks overlooking the compound, making moving between the buildings of the limestone complex dangerous.


Samar Anton, 49 a Gaza City church worker, knew there was a risk in helping her mother Nahida, a grandmother in her seventies who was weak from two months of war and little food, to the bathroom.

It required crossing a palm-tree-lined courtyard that in any other year a week before Christmas would have been crowned with a towering tree and packed with children singing Christmas songs.

Now it was exposed.

A sniper bullet cracked through the air and into Samar’s head. Another hit Nahida, a grandmother of 15, in the stomach.


Some of the damage around the Holy Family (Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem)

“Their family saw them drop to the floor,” says George, 31, who is related to the women but has asked for his identity to be protected, as he fears for the safety of his family and for himself. Blood stained the floor.

Speaking to The Independent from the occupied West Bank, he says his parents and his 20-year-old brother, like most of Gaza’s dwindling Christian population, have been sheltering in this church in northern Gaza, and the Orthodox Church about two miles east.

His family told him the story of the killings – which have sparked global uproar, described by Pope Francis as “terrorism” – during rare phone calls as the signal faded in and out. The Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem – the Catholic authority in the region – said that Nahida and Samar were killed “in cold blood”.

“Some of our relatives rushed out to help. One of them was a surgeon called Dr Elias, the others were my family members including a cousin, who is just 16 years old. But they were then hit by a kind of bomb.

“Seven in total were injured from shrapnel – including my teenage cousins. There is no way to properly treat them there are no working hospitals in north Gaza.”

George, who had already lost 20 members of his family in Gaza, has now lost contact with his parents and the others in the church. He doesn’t know if they have been able to bury the bodies, or if the injured are still alive. All he knows is there is “no hope”.

“All our homes have been bombed. Gaza is uninhabitable, dead bodies are everywhere, epidemics are taking over, the craters from the bombing are 20 metres deep. There is nothing left.

“We are very worried if we cannot get them out.”

Those trapped had already been forced into rationing out the last scraps of oatmeal and dwindling, dirty water, unable to move.

The Holy Family Church before the latest conflict (AFP/Getty)

The bombardment of Gaza began in the wake of the 7 October attack inside Israel by Hamas, during which 1,200 people were killed and 240 people taken hostage. In the near-constant aerial assault that has followed, health officials in Gaza say Israel’s offensive has killed more than 19,000 people, nearly three-quarters of them women and children. Vast swathes of the 26-mile-long strip, which is home to more than two million people, have been levelled in Israel’s bid to eradicate Hamas.

One of the chief focuses of Israel’s campaign has been Gaza City, where forces have encircled hospitals schools and now, apparently, churches.

An Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesperson said the incidents at the church which took place on Saturday were still under review.

The Israeli military appeared to deny the report, saying that “it targets terrorists and terror infrastructure and does not target civilians, no matter their religion”.

But the killing of the two women in the church, as well as the bombing and the siege on the compound, has cast a searing spotlight on the Israeli military’s use of force. George says there are real fears Gaza’s Christian community will be on the verge of “extinction” if such attacks continue.

Layla Moran, a Liberal Democrat MP, has family trapped in the Catholic church, including a grandmother, a cousin, his wife and their 11-year-old twins. She says the congregation are “innocent civilians who had nothing to do with Hamas and [are] absolutely terrified”.

In recent days she said, anyone who approached the church had been shot.

“I have been told white phosphorus was thrown into the compound, that the bin collector was shot dead as he tried to come into the compound, and that a janitor trying to fix a carpet was also shot,” she tells The Independent. White phosphorus is an incendiary, used to create light and smokescreens during combat. Using it isn’t illegal but deploying it deliberately against civilians or in a civilian setting violates the rules of war. Israel says it complies with international law over its use.

‘My family is not justifiable collateral damage’: Liberal Democrat MP Layla Moran (PA)

Ms Moran said the congregation were “innocent civilians who had nothing to do with Hamas and [are] absolutely terrified”.

She urged the Israeli military surrounding the church in tanks to “back off” immediately.

“We need to exert maximum pressure on Israel and Hamas for that bilateral ceasefire. There is no military solution to this. My family is not justifiable collateral damage.”

Ms Moran says that the remaining generators have been destroyed in the bombardment, meaning there is no power.

The church’s solar panels had also been destroyed, water tanks had holes from shrapnel and gunfire, and the only source of electricity, one last generator, was also blown up in an explosion that saw the precious fuel resources disappear in a fireball.

The MP says she was stunned that Israel had rejected negotiations to even discuss a ceasefire recently – although talks now appear to be on – and that the US and other countries have vetoed efforts for a humanitarian pause.

“Our only hope is that we can get my family to south Gaza in the next truce, but they are too scared to leave the church complex now because everyone is shot,” she says.

“There is no way to evacuate, men are frightened to go south because Israeli soldiers are arresting and taking away men from the so-called safe corridor,” Moran says. “Snipers don’t distinguish between civilians and [combatants].”


‘There is no way of getting aid there’: Shireen Awwad in Bethlehem (Bel Trew/The Independent)

Shireen Awwad, head of the Bethlehem Bible College and a peace activist who met Pope Francis last month to relay her concerns over conditions in Gaza’s churches, says her family is split between the Catholic church and the Orthodox Church of Saint Porphyrius, said to be one of the oldest active churches in the world.

“The family split between the two churches so if one gets bombed, some of the family will survive,” she says, revealing a choice no family would ever want to make.

Describing the situation as “horrific”, she says her aunt Najwa, in her seventies, was badly injured when an Israeli airstrike hit the Orthodox church in October. Najwa underwent surgery without anaesthesia in the city’s al-Ahli Hospital, which had also just been hit. The hospital has since been raided by Israeli forces and is now shut.

Having faced a harrowing two-mile journey, Najwa is sheltering in the Catholic church, where she “exists in diapers, with no one to help her walk or move.”

“She is in deep pain, all she wants to do is die,” says Awwad. She mentions another uncle in his eighties who died 10 days ago at the Holy Family Church when his appendix burst and there was no hospital to take him to.

The Latin Patriarchate said that earlier Israeli tank fire that day had also destroyed other parts of the church compound sheltering 54 disabled people, and they now lack access to respirators they need to survive. Three more were wounded during intense bombing nearby.

Beyond the terror of sniper fire, shelling and bombing, there is also the threat of disease. Given the number of elderly, disabled and wounded, there is a real fear of more deaths. The water tanks have holes from shrapnel and gunfire and those inside are “now drinking dirty salty water ... There is no way of getting aid there,” Awwad adds.

Palestinians search the destroyed annexe of the Greek Orthodox Saint Porphyrius Church after the strike in October (AFP/Getty)

Israel is under increasing pressure to agree to a ceasefire. Its military’s use of force is already in the spotlight after the army admitted to “mistakenly” shooting dead three of its citizens – three male hostages – even as they were wielding a white flag and calling for help in Hebrew while trying to escape in northeast Gaza.

Prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has doubled down on his Gaza offensive, saying the “military pressure is necessary both for the return of the hostages and for victory”.

The military has not been clear about what happened at the Holy Family Parish Church. It said church representatives had contacted it early on Saturday regarding explosions in the area but did not report any casualties in the church complex. However, in the same statement shared with The Independent, it was discussing the wrong part of Gaza City. In the statement, the army said that “it takes claims regarding harm to sensitive sites with the utmost seriousness — especially churches — considering that Christian communities are a minority group in the Middle East”.

There were believed to be a few more than 1,000 Christians left in Gaza before Israel launched its heaviest ever bombing campaign on the strip. Over the years, Christians – who until comparatively recently numbered 3,000 – have sought to flee the area which has been subject to a 15-year Israeli and Egyptian siege.

Before the war, most were only able to get out of Gaza via special permissions granted to just a handful of Christians at Christmas and Easter to worship in Bethlehem or Jerusalem, to see family in other parts of the occupied Palestinian Territories, or to briefly travel abroad.

Now “life is absolute hell,” say members of the community who did not want to be named, fearing for their safety.

In the south of Gaza, where Israel is pushing the latest part of its offensive against Hamas, Christian and Muslim families have spoken of the terrible conditions for those that have managed to move from the north, including massive overcrowding in tents, no water, and no food. Medics tell The Independent they have no medical supplies to save lives. All the Christian families The Independent spoke to said they were desperately seeking visas to get their loved ones out of Gaza.

But while the border remains closed, the Bethlehem Bible College’s Awwad says all this leaves is petitions to a higher power: “We have lost all hope in all countries – England, the US – who won’t vote for a ceasefire, we have lost hope in humanity.

“The only resource we can count on is prayer.”
Opinion

Israel is losing the war against Hamas – but Netanyahu and his government will never admit it


Paul Rogers
THE GUARDIAN
Thu, 21 December 2023 

Photograph: Oren Ziv/AFP/Getty Images

Until recently the war narrative on Gaza has been very largely controlled by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and the country’s ministry of defence. Israel’s international reputation may have plummeted with the killing of more than 20,000 Palestinians, the wounding of more than 50,000 and the destruction of much of Gaza, but the IDF could still sell a plausible narrative of a severely weakened Hamas, even claiming that the war in northern Gaza was largely complete, and success in southern Gaza would follow before too long.

The narrative was helped by severe difficulties for the few journalists still operating in Gaza, including the risk to their personal safety, while the international press corps was stuck in Jerusalem and dependent on IDF sources for much of their information.

That changed as a different picture began to emerge. First there was a lack of evidence to support the IDF’s claim of a Hamas headquarters under al-Shifa hospital, then the IDF could not identify the location of the Israeli hostages, despite having some of the world’s most advanced intelligence.


Very recently there have been two further incidents. On 12 December, there was a skilful triple ambush staged by Hamas paramilitaries in a part of Gaza supposedly controlled by Israeli forces. An IDF unit was ambushed and took casualties. Further troops were sent to aid that unit, and they were then ambushed, as were reinforcements.

Ten IDF soldiers were reported killed and other seriously wounded, but it was their seniority that counted, including as it did a colonel and three majors from the elite Golani Brigade. That Hamas, supposedly decimated and with thousands of troops already killed, could mount such an operation anywhere in Gaza, let alone a district reportedly already under IDF control, should raise doubts about the idea that Israel is making substantial progress in the war.

A further indication came a few days later, when three Israeli hostages succeeded in getting away from their captors, only to be killed by IDF soldiers, even though shirtless and carrying a white flag. What has since made that worse, and is causing considerable anger in Israel, is that calls from the hostages were picked up by an audio-equipped IDF search-dog five days before they were killed.

There are other, wider indications of the IDF’s problems. Official casualty figures have shown more than 460 military personnel killed in Gaza, Israel and the occupied West Bank and about 1,900 wounded. But other sources suggest far greater numbers of wounded. Ten days ago, Israel’s leading daily, Yedioth Ahronoth, published information obtained from the ministry of defence’s rehabilitation department. This put casualty numbers at more than 5,000, with 58% of them classed as serious and more than 2,000 officially recognised as disabled. There have also been a number of friendly fire casualties, with the Times of Israel reporting 20 out of 105 deaths due to such fire or accidents during fighting.

Overall, the IDF is still following the well-rehearsed Dahiya doctrine of massive force in responding to irregular war, causing extensive social and economic damage, undermining the will of the insurgents to fight while deterring future threats to Israel’s security. But it is going badly wrong. Criticism is coming from unexpected quarters, including from the former UK defence minister, Ben Wallace, who has warned of an impact lasting 50 years. Even the Biden administration is becoming thoroughly uneasy at what is unfolding, yet Benjamin Netanyahu and the war cabinet are determined to continue for as long as they can.

It is worth recognising why. The 7 October attacks and the brutality involved struck Israel’s assumption of security to the core, which means that the great majority of Israeli Jews have so far continued to support Netanyahu’s response. Even that, though, is fraying and is made worse by the killing of the three hostages by IDF troops.

An effect of all this is that the IDF commanders are coming under huge pressure to succeed, and will go as far as the war cabinet will allow. Many of those commanders are highly intelligent if inevitably single-minded people, and will now know that for all Netanyahu’s rhetoric, Hamas, or at least Hamas’s ideas, cannot be defeated by military force. They also know that while talks are stalling, pressure from the families of hostages may soon result in another humanitarian pause. Therefore, their aim will be to damage Hamas as much as they can, as quickly as they can, while they can, whatever the cost to Palestinians. For evidence of this approach, witness this week’s intense air raids.

What makes that possible is Netanyahu’s dependence on an extremist minority of religious fundamentalists and trenchant Zionists in his government. They would not have anything like the wider support in Israel were it not for the tragedy of 7 October, yet they are doing more and more harm to Israel’s long-term security. Not only does Israel risk becoming a pariah state, even among its allies, but it will also fuel a generation of radical opposition from a reconstituted Hamas or its inevitable successor.

It needs saving from itself, but that will depend, more than anything, on Joe Biden and the people around him. Perhaps pushed on by the rapidly changing public mood in western Europe, they must recognise their role in bringing an immediate end to this conflict.

Paul Rogers is emeritus professor of peace studies at Bradford University and an honorary fellow at the Joint Service Command and Staff College
He’s raising millions in aid for Gaza. But still he couldn’t save his family

Rhana Natour, in Washington
  THE GUARDIAN
Thu, 21 December 2023 

Photograph: Eman Mohammed/The Guardian

Hani Almadhoun braces himself whenever he hears his iPhone ping, the sound now a harbinger of bad news from his family in Gaza.

Related: ‘If I must die, let it bring hope’: the power of poetry in the Palestinian struggle

On Thanksgiving, it was a Facebook notification with a message that his 17-year old nephew had been shot in the head by a sniper.


A Telegram alert was how Almadhoun learned that his brother Mahmoud was taken by the IDF. He spotted him in a photo, blindfolded and stripped down to his underwear.

As the war continued, the bad news seemed to get closer. “At first it was the death of a good friend, someone who was in the US on a Fulbright, then it was cousins, then more cousins, then it was my sister-in-law’s entire family.”

It’s a situation that is common these days for diaspora Palestinians with family members and friends back in the Gaza Strip. Almadhoun, who hails from Gaza but has been in the US since 2000, works as the director of philanthropy for UNRWA USA, a charity that fundraises for the UN agency for Palestinian refugees. The limitations of his work add another layer of helplessness.

Today nearly 1 million people in Gaza, half the territory’s population, are estimated to be sheltering in a UN facility. A single UNRWA warehouse building is now a temporary home to over 30,000 people.

UNRWA USA is among the agency’s largest non-governmental source of funding. When the war started, Almadhoun and his team raised $10m in donations in just four weeks. The funds purchased deliveries of food, water and blankets. But it did not get to the people he wished it for the most, Almadhoun said. “My family has seen none of that. They’re starved. They’re cold. They’re out of food.”

***

The United Nations established UNRWA in 1949 for the purpose of providing direct relief to the 700,000 Palestinians displaced by the Arab-Israeli war of 1948.

But with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict never really ending, what was meant to be a temporary refugee designation has lasted for the last 75 years, as has UNRWA’s mandate to provide for them.

Today the agency provides schooling, healthcare, jobs and social services to these refugees and their descendants in Gaza, the West Bank, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon – an eligible population of 5.9 million today. But in Gaza, where more than two-thirds of the population are formally registered as refugees, UNRWA maintains its largest operation and has become a fixture of life.

After Hamas took power in Gaza and Israel imposed a blockade, UNRWA became the territory’s second-largest employer after the Hamas-run government, pumping $600m annually into Gaza’s economy through salaries, vendor payments, food aid, construction and other activities, according to a 2023 International Crisis Group report.

During war the agency becomes a distributor of emergency aid and services. But in this conflict, the United Nations seal has not kept these facilities or UNRWA staff from harm. UNRWA says that over 115 of its buildings have been damaged and that over 100 UNRWA staff have been killed, the largest number of UN fatalities ever in a single conflict.

***

In the US, Almadhoun is an ambassador of sorts for the agency, fostering a community of American donors and advocating for the agency before US policy makers.

Given the White House’s full-throated support for Israel’s military campaign, Almadhoun says he has had to communicate a lot of hard truths.

Related: These Palestinian boys received life-saving surgery in the US. An Israeli airstrike killed them in their home

When the White House announced additional funding to UNRWA for its Gaza emergency response, Almadhoun said he had to balance gratitude with reality. “OK, yes you are giving a mom a can of tuna, but you also killed her son and bombed her house,” he says he told Biden administration officials.

Then there are congressional politics.

In the US, Republican lawmakers have proposed requiring UNRWA prove it has no Hamas or extremist links before receiving funding. The Republican senator Marsha Blackburn called for an investigation into reports that an Israeli hostage was held in the home of an UNRWA teacher. (UNRWA says it has received no further information or evidence to substantiate these claims after repeated requests.)

Almadhoun says that this is largely just rhetoric, pointing out that UNRWA is the only organization Israel has authorized to access and distribute fuel in Gaza.

And while his ability to fundraise for UNRWA USA is at an all-time high, UNRWA is facing the biggest challenge in its history in delivering this much needed relief.

Rafah, in southern Gaza, is the only place that UNRWA and most organizations are able to consistently deliver aid, but it’s not nearly enough to feed the roughly 1 million Palestinians displaced there. Almadhoun’s sister who fled to the city was physically assaulted by a man over a can of corned beef. “He got a can of fava beans and he wanted the meat,” Almadhoun said.

UNRWA can’t get any aid to the north of Gaza, where the situation is increasingly dire. According to the World Food Programme, 48% of households in the north have experienced “severe levels of hunger”. In late November, the enclave’s ministry of health announced that every hospital in the north is completely out of service. Almadhoun’s cousin died after he couldn’t get basic medical care for an infected gunshot wound in his leg.

The temporary ceasefire in November should have been a respite but it didn’t come soon enough for Alhamdoun’s family.

Just one hour before the ceasefire was set to start, an airstrike hit the family’s house in Beit Lahia in northern Gaza, killing his brother Majed, his wife and their four children.

It could not have been a more devastating blow. The two were only a year apart, and best friends. In our conversation, he matter-of-factly rattled off the details. How the power of the blast propelled his nephew Ali’s body. How his mom guarded the rubble to keep stray dogs away. And his brother’s final resting place, the dug-up grave plot of another brother who died of Covid a few years ago.

Almadhoun’s colleagues tell me he hasn’t missed a single day of work since the war began. His brother and his family were killed on Black Friday. Alhmadhoun was at work that Monday, in back-to-back meetings, conference calls and media appearances.

“My wife tells me I suppress my emotions,” he sighed.

***

There was one instance in which Almadhoun was able to help his family from the US, a move he believes ultimately saved their lives.

Earlier this month, Almadhoun spotted his brother, a shopkeeper, in photos showing dozens of Palestinian men bound and blindfolded by Israeli soldiers. “It was my brother Mahmoud,” Almadhoun said. “He’s always lounging in his boxers so it wasn’t hard for me to identify him. I recognized his haircut, his body.”

He then learned from his sister that his father and two young nephews were also in IDF custody.

Some Israeli media outlets were reporting that these were surrendered Hamas fighters. Almadhoun says this is not true of his brother, nor of any of his detained family members and many other men he later recognized in the photos.

Related: ‘The bombs are still falling. My heart breaks every day’: novelists Sally Rooney and Isabella Hammad on the Israel-Palestine conflict

Almadhoun quickly turned to social media to make the case publicly. “Many people who go on these little trips don’t ever come back,” he told me.

Almadhoun’s post went viral and he spent the next few days doing a rash of TV appearances and media interviews.

The next day all four of Almadhoun’s relatives were released unharmed.

He is convinced that these efforts made a difference. “I swear to you, if I couldn’t clearly recognize my brother, or if I didn’t go public with this, my brother would be in a ditch somewhere.”

***

One reason Almadhoun says he can’t fully process Majed and his family’s death is because he doesn’t yet know all he has to grieve. “The bombs are still falling. When it’s done we will catch our breath and look to see what we lost.” Almadhoun said.

Almadhoun cycles through photos from the last time he visited Gaza with his wife and two young daughters this summer. He looks at the business profile he created of Majed’s kitchenware shop. Almadhoun knew it had absolutely no practical purpose – all the shop’s customers lived in the neighborhood and didn’t need help finding it – but he did it anyway, knowing it made Majed happy to see his digital mark on a world beyond Gaza.

Last he heard from his brother Mahmoud over the weekend, he had been stripped and detained again, this time in a hospital courtyard where he was sheltering. He was ultimately released.

But it’s getting harder and harder for Almadhoun’s family to communicate with him. All he can do is wait for his phone to ping.
ECOCIDE
Rivers of sewage, dirty water and toxic air: The environmental disaster unfolding in Gaza

Mohammed Soulaiman
Wed, 20 December 2023 



15 years ago, a 23-day war in Gaza left 17% of farmland “ruined with little to no feasibility of rejuvenation,” according to a UNDP fact-finding report.

Now, 70 days into the current war, experts warn that irreversible damage is being done to the environment of the narrow strip that is one of the world’s most populated regions.

Air pollution has spiked, water-borne illnesses are on the rise and wildlife is suffering.


In October this year, Human Rights Watch confirmed that Israel had dropped white phosphorus on Gaza and Lebanon. This chemical is known to have a severe and fatal impact on humans, animals, and the environment.

The highly toxic substance burns through human flesh and reignites. It damages soil, contaminates water sources, and poisons aquatic ecosystems, says Khaled El-Sayed, managing director of the Cairo-based Synerjies Center for International and Strategic Studies and advisor on sustainable development.

“Research indicates that the intense heat generated during the combustion [of bombs],” says El-Sayed, “could alter both the physical structure and chemical properties of the soil, thereby reducing fertility and elevating the likelihood of soil-borne diseases.”

UN vote on Israel Hamas war resolution postponed again, southern Gaza bombarded


‘Now we can breathe a little’: How Gaza is bringing its wetlands back to life
Deep puddles of sewage surround homes

The area where Gazans can go to escape these horrors is becoming smaller and smaller by the day.

Khan Younis in southern Gaza was home to about 400,000 residents before the war. Now more than a million are crammed into just over 21 square miles.

58-year-old local Ahmed Al-Astal is grateful his family is still alive, after months of bombing that has killed more than 20,000 people to date. But deep puddles of sewage water surrounding his home have triggered a new set of fears.

“The lives of my grandchildren are at stake,” Al-Astal says.

Ahmed, 4, and Fatima, 2, face the short-term threat of drowning in this sea of contaminated water and the long-term threat of chronic illness.

“Ahmed has a respiratory infection and his sister has a rash all over her body, which doctors say is a symptom of skin disease acquired from this polluted environment,” Al-Astal says.

Since Hamas’ 7 October deadly attack on Israel which killed 1,200 people, Israel has limited fuel supplies entering the Strip, paralysing most utilities and services. The Khan Younis municipality has been unable to pump sewage out to the treatment stations outside the city. Sewage treatment stations do not work consistently because there’s no fuel to power their generators.

“Khan Younis is almost completely inundated with sewage water,” says Al-Astal, who, like thousands of others, was forced to move to Al-Mawasi, an 8.5 square kilometre sliver of land on Gaza’s coast, described as “smaller than London’s Heathrow airport.”

Tackling air pollution means 'changing our systems', says expert


Reducing pollution accelerates global warming. How do we solve this catch-22?
Bombs dropped on Gaza pollute soil and water supplies

The Geneva-based Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor says Israel has dropped 25,000 tonnes of bombs on Gaza, the equivalent of two nuclear bombs. This, experts say, severely pollutes the soil and air quality. They also contaminate Gaza’s scarce water resources, which a UN report described as largely unsuitable for human consumption back in 2020.

According to the head of the Palestinian Environmental Quality Authority (PEQA) Nasreen Tamimi, the environmental impact of the war on Gaza is “catastrophic”, adding that a comprehensive environmental field assessment would show that the “damage exceeds all predictions”.

“The martyrs' bodies under the rubble, hazardous medical waste, the shutdown of treatment and desalination plants have all contributed to the current crisis,” Tamimi says, echoing UN warnings of a looming public health disaster. The World Health Organization has reported a sharp rise in acute respiratory infections, diarrhea, lice, scabies and other fast-spreading diseases.

People with lung conditions face ‘greatest risk’ from climate change, experts say


Infertility, heart failure and kidney disease: How does climate change impact the human body?
Makeshift landfills are overflowing

Omar Matar, director of the Health and Environment Department in Khan Younis Municipality, says the influx of people to the city has created a rubbish crisis.

“Over one million now live in the same space. Solid garbage produced per day increased from 150 tons to over 450 tons. With limited resources, the municipality could not handle this increased volume, especially because trucks, excavators and fuel supplies are scarce,” says Matar.

The municipality can only move garbage three times a week, not daily as was the case before the war, he adds.

Even after collection, Matar says that the garbage was dumped in a temporary landfill set up near a residential area west of Khan Younis after Israel bombed the main landfill in the Fakhari area east of Khan Younis earlier this month.

A temporary landfill set up in Khan Younis after the main facility was bombed. - Mohammed Soulaiman

This, he says, causes environmental and health risks due to the foul odours, insects, rodents, and pollutants.

Furthermore, agricultural lands housing perennial trees like olives and citrus fruits, or field crops like vegetables, have been subjected to extensive and unprecedented destruction.

In a report issued last month, Lawfare, a non-profit multimedia publication dedicated to providing non-partisan analysis on legal and policy issues, said “the legally proportionate collateral damage by lethal weapons used in civilian populated areas would be thoroughly immoral,” adding that the IDF’s airstrikes “can be considered as war crimes.”

Ahmed Al-Astal's 23-year-old son, Mohammed, suffers from kidney failure, requiring dialysis treatment three times a week.

“Because of the unhealthy environment, little access to clean water and gunpowder contaminating the air, his health has sharply declined,” he says.

This story was produced in collaboration with Egab.
Israel troops kill motorist in West Bank: Palestinian media

Israeli security forces cordoned off the area preventing Muhtasib from being taken to hospital, the report said.


AFP
Wed, 20 December 2023 

Israeli troops cordon off a road junction north of the West Bank city of Hebron after shooting dead a Palestinian motorist they suspected of preparing to attack them (MOSAB SHAWER)

Israeli troops killed a Palestinian motorist in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday, the official Palestinian news agency Wafa reported, while the army said it had "neutralised a terrorist".

Basel Wajeeh al-Muhtasib, 28, "died as a result of being shot by occupation (Israeli army) bullets" as he drove through Bayt Inun junction, north of the city of Hebron, Wafa reported.

Israeli security forces cordoned off the area preventing Muhtasib from being taken to hospital, the report said.

The army said troops had opened fire on the vehicle after the driver attempted to carry out a "car ramming attack". It did not give further details.

Even before the war between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas broke out on October 7, violence was on the increase across the West Bank.

Since the war in Gaza started, the death toll has risen sharply, with more than 300 Palestinians killed by Israeli troops or settlers in the West Bank, according to the Ramallah-based Palestinian health ministry.

The United States announced earlier this month that it would refuse visas for extremist settlers implicated in recent violence against Palestinians in the territory.

Israel has occupied the West Bank since the Six-Day War of 1967 and, excluding annexed east Jerusalem, is now home to around 490,000 Israelis who live in settlements considered illegal under international law.

crb-jd/lcm/kir

Putin ratchets up military pressure on Ukraine as he expects Western support for Kyiv to dwindle

After blunting Ukraine’s counteroffensive from the summer, Russia is building up its resources for a new stage of the war over the winter, which could involve trying to extend its gains in the east and deal significant blows to the country's vital infrastructure.

Russian President Vladimir Putin seems to be hoping that relentless military pressure, combined with changing Western political dynamics and a global focus on the Israeli-Hamas war, will drain support for Ukraine in the nearly 2-year-old war and force Kyiv to yield to Moscow’s demands.

“As far as the Russian leadership is concerned, the confrontation with the West has reached a turning point: The Ukrainian counteroffensive has failed, Russia is more confident than ever, and the cracks in Western solidarity are spreading,” said Tatiana Stanovaya, senior fellow with Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, in a recent analysis.

An aid package for Ukraine has stalled in the U.S. Congress as Republicans insist on linking any more money to U.S.-Mexico border security changes opposed by Democrats. The European Union last week failed to agree on a $54 billion package in financial help that Ukraine desperately needs.

Amid these signs of fraying Western support, Russia has ramped up its pressure on Ukrainian forces on several parts of the more than 1,000-kilometer (620-mile) front line.

“The Russian military since October has been trying to seize initiative across the front in a couple of areas,” said Michael Kofman, a military expert with the Carnegie Endowment.

Ukraine's military needs to reconstitute and regenerate its combat effectiveness after a grueling five-month counteroffensive, he said.

“Ukrainian forces, while motivated, are exhausted,” Kofman said in a recent podcast. “They’ve lost a lot of units of action. They’ve lost a lot of assault capable troops.”

One area where Russia has maintained steady pressure is the northeastern city of Kupiansk, a strategically important rail hub that Moscow captured early in the war and then lost in a Ukrainian counteroffensive in September 2022. While Russian forces have failed to make any significant gains in the area, Ukraine has had to maintain a significant force to protect the city.

Starting in early October, Russian troops also have launched an offensive around Avdiivka, a town near Donetsk, the center of the region that was seized by Moscow-backed rebels in 2014 and illegally annexed by Russia in 2022 with three other Ukrainian regions.

Ukraine has built multiple defenses in Avdiivka, complete with concrete fortifications and a web of underground tunnels, allowing them to repel fierce Russian attacks. Despite massive losses, Russian troops have inched forward steadily, seeking to envelop Avdiivka and cut Ukrainian supply lines.

That battle has evolved into a gruesome grind for both parties and has been compared to the fighting for Bakhmut, the war’s longest and bloodiest battle that ended with Russia capturing it in May.

The Kremlin and the Russian Defense Ministry are silent about specific plans, but some Russian war bloggers say Moscow could launch a massive offensive of its own to forge deep into Ukrainian territory.

Others warn, however, that the Russian military lacks resources for any such big push, saying that would require many more troops and weapons, exposing it to the same risks that doomed initial Russian attempts to capture Kyiv and other cities in the northeast at the start of the war.

In that botched attack, Russian armored convoys stretched along highways leading to the capital, becoming easy prey for Ukrainian drones and artillery. Such setbacks forced the Kremlin to switch to a defensive strategy along the front line.

Putin is eager to show battlefield gains as he faces reelection in March. He said last week that Russia has 617,000 fighters in Ukraine, a number that many war bloggers see as far short of the kind of massive force needed to strike deep into Ukraine. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says his ground forces number about 600,000.

Western observers are emphasizing the need for Ukraine to build fortified defenses like Russia has done to counter any potential big offensive by Moscow.

“Ukrainians have painfully few reserves,” warned Mark Galeotti, head of Mayak Intelligence consultancy and a senior associate fellow at Royal United Services Institute in London.

If Moscow manages to break through Ukraine's defensive lines, “Russian forces could then really wreak havoc on lines of communication, lines of supply, rear supply bases,” he said.

“In that context, it does make sense to allow fortification to make up for the lack of reserves,” Galeotti said in a recent podcast.

In recent months, the Russian military has reduced the use of its long-range air- and sea-launched cruise missiles in what has been widely interpreted as a sign of Moscow’s effort to build up stockpiles of such weapons to strike Ukraine's power grid and other key infrastructure in winter, when it is most vulnerable due to high consumption.

At the same time, Russia has stepped up attacks on Kyiv and other regions with waves of Iranian-made Shahed exploding drones, in an apparent effort to deplete Ukrainian air defenses.

Last winter, Russian relentlessly pounded Ukraine’s energy grid, causing long blackouts but failing to knock out the electricity network that showed a high degree of resilience. Ukrainian officials have warned, however, that this winter could be even harder due to Russian strikes.

While the West has provided air defense systems to protect Kyiv and other key areas, it could be challenging for Ukraine to cope with massive missile attacks from different directions. Ukraine’s allies also promised it a few dozen U.S.-made F-16 fighter jets, and Ukrainian pilots are training in Romania, but it’s unclear when the warplanes will arrive.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg has said the F-16s will strengthen Ukraine’s air defenses but noted, “There is not a silver bullet, not a single system that by itself will change fundamentally the situation on the battlefield.”

“We must not underestimate Russia,” he said. “Russia’s economy is on a war footing.”

While the West faced problems in maintaining the tempo of weapons supplies, with military aid hitting snags in Washington and Brussels, Russia has been increasingly boosting production of missiles, tanks and other weapons. The U.S. has said that Moscow also has started getting munitions under a deal struck with North Korea in September.

The Russian military has fixed many of its weaknesses and deficiencies that plagued it early in the war, and it has developed new weapons and tactics that helped derail Ukraine's counteroffensive. A key factor that effectively paralyzed attempts by Kyiv to attack with a big mechanized force during the campaign was the sprawling minefields and other fortifications that Russia had built in the south.

One deadly novelty that significantly strengthened Russia's military was converting Soviet-made dumb bombs into smart, gliding weapons equipped with winglets and a GPS system that allowed them to strike targets with precision far from the front.

While Ukraine held a strong edge in drones at the start of the war, Russian forces since then have matched and even overwhelmed Ukrainian troops in using short-range small drones, which are now so prolific that Moscow is even them against individual troops.

Kofman said that while Ukraine pioneered the use of drones, “Russia now has more of them and has an advantage in them.”

“Russia will be materially advantaged in 2024 in artillery ammunition, in production of drones and likely long-range drones and cruise missiles, too,” Kofman said. “If the West just assumes that it’s a stalemate and can reduce its commitment to Ukraine, Russian advantages will compound because Russia doesn’t accept the stalemate.”

___

Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine