UK Labour Party risks losing Muslim voters over Gaza war stance

UK Labour Party risks losing Muslim voters over Gaza war stance
Pro-Palestinian activists and supporters wave flags and carry placards during a National March for Palestine in central London. (File/AFP)
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Updated 31 January 2024
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UK Labour Party risks losing Muslim voters over Gaza war stance

UK Labour Party risks losing Muslim voters over Gaza war stance
  • “We know we’ve lost the Muslim vote, and at the very least their trust," MP says

LONDON: The Labour Party in the UK has started surveying British Muslim voters amid growing concern among senior officials about the damage done to one of its strongest bases of support by the party’s stance on Gaza.

Labour sources told The Guardian newspaper that the party had been conducting polls and organizing focus groups across the UK, with the General Election thought to be only months away.

One senior Labour MP told the paper: “Muslims are not only predominantly Labour supporters but they are also geographically important. There are many of them in a range of key target seats in both the south and the northwest, and we need to pay attention to that.”

A frontbencher said: “We know we’ve lost the Muslim vote, and at the very least their trust.

“The Muslim community is no longer a safe voter base for us because of how we initially responded to the war. So we’re just focused on damage control; we all know it.”

MPs concerned about the issue have formed new groups to influence Labour leader Keir Starmer. His office, meanwhile, has begun to focus on how it communicates with party members who feel ignored.

The crisis within the party escalated following Starmer’s interview in October in which he said Israel had the right to withhold power and water from Gaza, a stance he later drew back from.

His refusal to support a ceasefire led to further unrest, with 56 Labour MPs breaking party ranks to vote for a Scottish National Party ceasefire motion, resulting in the resignation of eight shadow ministers.

Labour Friends of Palestine and the Middle East has become a central organizing hub. Another is a WhatsApp group of about 30 MPs who share not only policy thoughts but also security advice, given the threats made to some Labour MPs, especially in areas with many Muslim voters.

David Lammy, the shadow foreign secretary, and Sue Gray, Starmer’s chief of staff, are in regular dialogue with this group. Shabana Mahmood, the shadow justice secretary and a prominent Muslim figure in the party, has taken a leading role in these discussions.

Internal tensions persist, especially after Wayne David, the shadow Middle East and North Africa minister, said that Labour would recognize Palestine only after negotiations between the Israelis and Palestinians started. This stance has drawn criticism from some party members, who argue it undermines Palestinian self-determination.

Recent polls by research organization UK in a Changing Europe show that nearly half of Britain’s 2 million Muslim voters supported Labour in the last election, underscoring the significance of this voter base. Concerns are growing that a narrow margin in the polls could affect outcomes in key constituencies with high Muslim populations.

The formation of The Muslim Vote, a grassroots group aiming to increase Muslim electoral participation, further highlights Labour’s challenges. This group intends to influence voting in constituencies based on MPs’ positions on ceasefire motions.

Beyond the Muslim vote, Labour also faces the risk of losing support in affluent, predominantly white regions like Bournemouth, Bristol, and Brighton, where sympathy for the Palestinian cause is strong.

“We’re expecting to see middle-class Labour supporters sympathetic to the Gaza crisis back the Greens because of their immediate ceasefire calls,” one Labour MP told The Guardian.

Another cautioned that the amount of footage from Gaza on social media platforms such as Instagram and TikTok was radicalizing younger voters in particular.

A party source told The Guardian: “The discontent is much wider than the leadership realizes. If we don’t get on top of this soon we are going to have trouble later this year.”
 


World’s oldest person dies in Spain at 117: family

Updated 12 sec ago
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World’s oldest person dies in Spain at 117: family

World’s oldest person dies in Spain at 117: family
  • Guinness World Records had officially acknowledged Branyas’s status as the world’s oldest person in January 2023
Madrid: The world’s oldest living person, Spain’s Maria Branyas Morera, who was born in the United States and lived through two world wars, has died at the age of 117, her family said Tuesday.
“Maria Branyas has left us. She died as she wished: in her sleep, peacefully and without pain,” her family wrote on her account on social network X.
“We will always remember her for her advice and her kindness,” they said.
Branyas, who had lived for the last two decades in the Santa Maria del Tura nursing home in the town of Olot in northeastern Spain, had warned in a post on Tuesday that she felt “weak.”
“The time is near. Don’t cry, I don’t like tears. And above all, don’t suffer for me. Wherever I go, I will be happy,” she added in the account which is run by her family.
Guinness World Records had officially acknowledged Branyas’s status as the world’s oldest person in January 2023 following the death of French nun Lucile Randon aged 118,
In the wake of Branyas’s death, the oldest living person in the world is Japan’s Tomiko Itooka, who was born on May 23, 1908 and is 116 years old, according to the US Gerontology Research Group.

Texas jury finds school shooter’s parents not liable for violence

Texas jury finds school shooter’s parents not liable for violence
Updated 10 min 43 sec ago
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Texas jury finds school shooter’s parents not liable for violence

Texas jury finds school shooter’s parents not liable for violence
  • Lawsuit was filed after the May 18, 2018, Santa Fe High School rampage in which 10 students killed
  • Among those killed was a 17-year-old Pakistani girl who was an exchange student at the school

COLORADO: A Galveston, Texas, jury on Monday found the parents of a teenager who shot and killed 10 classmates at Santa Fe High School in 2018 not liable for the violence, ending an unusual civil trial.
Family members of the shooting victims and survivors accused Antonios Pagourtzis and Rose Kosmetatos of being negligent in allowing their son, Dimitrios, to obtain weapons from their home and for not warning school officials or police about his deteriorating mental state.
The jury did decide that Dimitrios Pagourtzis and Lucky Gunner, the company that sold him the ammunition used in the shooting even though he was too young to buy it, were liable for the deaths and injuries, and awarded $330 million in damages.
Lucky Gunner last year reached a settlement with families that sought to exclude it from having to make any more payments.
Jake Felde, Lucky Gunner’s CEO, said in a written statement that his company “isn’t responsible for paying any monetary damages awarded by the jury” as it already reached a separate settlement for the shooting and was not a party to the Texas trial.
Nicholas Poehl, the criminal attorney representing Dimitrios Pagourtzis, said in a phone call that his client had no money “and never will.”
Dimitrios Pagourtzis, who was 17 at the time of the shooting, has been charged with capital murder. He has been deemed mentally incompetent to stand trial and will remain in a treatment facility until a judge declares he is competent.
Judge Jack Ewing told the jurors they had sent a clear message with their verdict.
“That message will carry even outside of the walls and doors of this courtroom, and hopefully it will fall into the ears of our legislators, who can help in taking some action,” Ewing said from the bench.
The lawsuit was filed shortly after the May 18, 2018, Santa Fe High School rampage that also injured 13 people. Among those killed was a 17-year-old Pakistani girl who was an exchange student at the school.
The jury’s decision came four months after the sentencing of two Michigan parents found guilty of manslaughter after a jury found they ignored warning signs before their son shot and killed four classmates at Oxford High School in 2021. Jennifer and James Crumbley are the first parents known to have been charged with manslaughter in a school shooting carried out by one of their children.
Lori Laird, an attorney representing Antonios Pagourtzis and Rose Kosmetatos, said before the verdict that holding her clients responsible for their son’s shooting rampage was not justified.
“Regardless of the outcome of this lawsuit, nobody has won,” Laird added.
Laird said in an interview that the parents did not know their son was mentally ill and saw no warning signs. Since the shooting, she said, Dimitrios Pagourtzis had been diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder.
Laird also said the parents’ guns were stored in a gun safe and a locked cabinet.
Experts and gun safety advocates have said holding parents accountable for shootings carried out by children is an important step in reducing school violence. Studies by the US Department of Homeland Security have shown that around 75 percent of all school shooters obtained their weapons at home.
James Miller, senior counsel of Everytown Law and counsel to plaintiffs Abdul Aziz and Farah Naz, said they were disappointed the jury didn’t hold the shooter’s parents responsible “for their role in this heinous act.”
“Guns are the number one killer of American children and teens, and secure storage is absolutely essential in the fight to end this nation’s gun violence epidemic,” Miller added.


12-minute search shifts resume for 6 from sunken yacht off Sicily, including tech giant Mike Lynch

12-minute search shifts resume for 6 from sunken yacht off Sicily, including tech giant Mike Lynch
Updated 22 min 30 sec ago
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12-minute search shifts resume for 6 from sunken yacht off Sicily, including tech giant Mike Lynch

12-minute search shifts resume for 6 from sunken yacht off Sicily, including tech giant Mike Lynch
  • Among those missing was Lynch, who was once hailed as Britain’s king of technology
  • Also missing was Jonathan Bloomer, a chairman at Morgan Stanley International

PORTICELLO: Police divers resumed searching Tuesday for six people, including British tech magnate Mike Lynch, believed trapped some 50 meters (164 feet) underwater in the hull of a superyacht that sank in a storm off Sicily.
Divers in wetsuits and oxygen tanks returned to the site off Porticello, near Palermo, to tag-team in 12-minute underwater search shifts where the luxury sailboat went down. Fire rescue crews reported that divers only made it to the bridge during a first search, and were unable to access the below-deck cabins because they were blocked by furniture that had shifted during the violent storm that toppled the vessel early Monday.
Fifteen people survived, including a mother who reported holding her 1-year-old baby over the waves to save her. One body has been recovered, identified as the on-board chef, officials said.
The Bayesian, a 56-meter British-flagged luxury yacht, had been moored about a half-mile off Ponticello when a storm rolled in around 4 a.m. Monday. Civil protection officials said they believed the ship was struck by a tornado over the water, known as a waterspout, which had passed through the area.
The search for the six missing passengers has been slow because the Bayesian is resting at a depth of 50 meters, where divers can stay for only 12-minute shifts, the fire rescue team said in a statement Tuesday.
The rotating search teams, each made up of two specialized cave divers, were working Tuesday to open up other access points to get inside of the wreckage. Rescue crews said they assume the six passengers will be found in the below-deck cabins, given the time of the shipwreck, but that they have not managed to verify their presence there through portholes.
The statement referred to the six as “missing.” Fire rescue officials have said the six will be considered missing until they are located in the wreckage.
Fifteen of the Bayesian’s 22 passengers and crew managed to escape on a lifeboat before being rescued by a nearby sailboat that was also moored offshore to ride out the storm, Karsten Borner, the sailboat’s captain, told reporters at the scene.
Among those missing was Lynch, who was once hailed as Britain’s king of technology. He was cleared in June of fraud and conspiracy charges in a US federal trial related to Hewlett Packard’s $11 billion takeover of his company, Autonomy Corp. His wife, Angela Bacares, survived.
The sailing vacation appeared to be something of a celebration after Lynch’s acquittal, since fellow passengers included some of the people who had stood by Lynch throughout the ordeal. Among those unaccounted for, according to the civil protection agency, were one of Lynch’s US lawyers, Christopher Morvillo of Clifford Chance, and Morvillo’s wife.
Also missing was Jonathan Bloomer, a chairman at Morgan Stanley International and the former head of the Autonomy audit committee who testified at Lynch’s trial for the defense, and his wife. Lynch appointed Bloomer to Autonomy’s board of directors in 2010, where he served as chairman of the audit committee at the time of the HP deal.
International insurance company Hiscox Group, where Bloomer was chairman, was “deeply shocked and saddened by this tragic event,” Hiscox Group CEO Aki Hussain said in a statement. “Our thoughts are with all those affected, in particular our Chair, Jonathan Bloomer, and his wife Judy, who are among the missing, and with their family as they await further news from this terrible situation.”
Among the survivors was Charlotte Golunski, who said she momentarily lost hold of her 1-year-old daughter Sofia in the water, but then managed to hold her up over the waves until a lifeboat inflated and they were both pulled to safety, Italian news agency ANSA reported. The father, identified by ANSA as James Emslie, also survived.
The yacht, built in 2008 by the Italian firm Perini Navi, was carrying 12 passengers and 10 crew. According to online charter companies, it has been available for charter for 195,000 euros (about $215,000) a week and is notable for its massive 75-meter tall aluminum mast, one of the tallest in the world.


Kenya ‘psychopath’ serial killer suspect escapes from custody

Kenya ‘psychopath’ serial killer suspect escapes from custody
Updated 18 min 51 sec ago
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Kenya ‘psychopath’ serial killer suspect escapes from custody

Kenya ‘psychopath’ serial killer suspect escapes from custody
  • Collins Jumaisi, 33, described by police as a “vampire, a psychopath,” was arrested last month after the horrific discovery of mutilated bodies in a garbage dump in a slum in the Kenyan capital

Nairobi: Kenyan police launched a major manhunt on Tuesday after a man they claim has confessed to murdering and dismembering 42 women escaped from a Nairobi police cell, along with a dozen other detainees.
Collins Jumaisi, 33, described by police as a “vampire, a psychopath,” was arrested last month after the horrific discovery of mutilated bodies in a garbage dump in a slum in the Kenyan capital.
“Investigations have been launched and a major security operation is under way to get the 13 suspects,” Kenya police spokeswoman Resila Onyango told AFP.
Police said in a separate statement that they discovered the breakout when officers made a routine visit to the police station cells at around 5 am to serve the prisoners breakfast.
“On opening the cell door, they discovered that 13 prisoners had escaped by cutting the wire mesh in the basking bay,” it said, referring to an area in the station where detainees could get access to fresh air.
Those who fled were Jumaisi and 12 other people that police said were of Eritrean origin and were in custody for being “illegally present immigrants.”
The police station is located in the upmarket Nairobi district of Gigiri, home to the regional headquarters of the United Nations and numerous embassies.
It is the second time in barely six months that a suspect in a high-profile case has escaped from custody.
Kenyan national Kevin Kangethe, who is accused of murdering his girlfriend in the United States last year and leaving her body in an airport car park, fled a police station in February before being caught about a week later.

Jumaisi had appeared in a court in the Kenyan capital on Friday, when the magistrate ordered him to be held for a further 30 days to enable police to complete their investigations.
Ten butchered female bodies trussed up in plastic bags were found in the dumpsite in an abandoned quarry in the Nairobi slum of Mukuru, the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR) said last month.
The grisly find shocked Kenyans, already reeling from the so-called Shakahola forest massacre after the discovery of more than 400 bodies in mass graves near the Indian Ocean coast.
A Kenyan cult leader is accused of inciting his followers to starve themselves to death in order to prepare for the end of the world and “meet Jesus.” He faces numerous charges including terrorism, murder and child cruelty along with dozens of co-defendants.
Jumaisi was detained in the early hours of July 15 near a Nairobi bar where he had been watching the Euro 2024 football final.
The head of the Directorate of Criminal Investigations, Mohamed Amin, said after his arrest that Jumaisi had confessed to murdering 42 women over a two-year period from 2022, and that his wife had been his first victim.
“We are dealing with a vampire, a psychopath,” Amin said at the time.
The dumped bodies threw a fresh spotlight on Kenya’s police force as they were found just 100 meters (yards) from a police station.
The state-funded KNCHR said in July it was carrying out its own investigations into the Mukuru case because “there is a need to rule out any possibility of extrajudicial killings.”
Kenya’s police watchdog, the Independent Police Oversight Authority, had also said it was looking into whether there was any police involvement or a “failure to act to prevent” the killings.
Kenyan police are often accused by rights groups of carrying out unlawful killings or running hit squads, but few have faced justice.


China says US has ‘no right to intervene’ in South China Sea disputes

China says US has ‘no right to intervene’ in South China Sea disputes
Updated 22 min 39 sec ago
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China says US has ‘no right to intervene’ in South China Sea disputes

China says US has ‘no right to intervene’ in South China Sea disputes
  • The US condemned the ‘dangerous actions’ against ‘lawful Philippine maritime operations’ on Monday after the latest clash
  • ‘The US is not a party in the South China Sea and has no right to intervene in maritime disputes between China and the Philippines’

BEIJING: China warned the United States on Tuesday that it has “no right to intervene” in its maritime disputes with the Philippines after another clash near a disputed reef in the South China Sea.
China and the Philippines have had repeated confrontations in the waters over the past year, including around a warship, grounded in 1999 by Manila on the contested Second Thomas Shoal, which hosts a garrison.
Both countries said on Monday that their coast guard ships had collided near the disputed Sabina Shoal, located 140 kilometers west of the Philippine island of Palawan and about 1,200 kilometers from Hainan island, the closest Chinese landmass.
China claims almost the entire South China Sea despite an international tribunal ruling that its assertion has no legal basis.
The United States condemned the “dangerous actions” against “lawful Philippine maritime operations” on Monday after the latest clash.
“These actions are the latest examples of (China) using dangerous and escalatory measures to enforce its expansive and unlawful South China Sea maritime claims,” State Department spokesman Vedant Patel said.
Asked about Patel’s remarks on Tuesday, his Chinese counterpart Mao Ning defended Beijing’s “legal measures to safeguard its territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests.”
“The US is not a party in the South China Sea and has no right to intervene in maritime disputes between China and the Philippines,” Mao told a regular briefing.
“The US should stop provoking confrontation in the South China Sea, not disrupt regional stability and not escalate tensions,” Mao said.
Analysts have said Beijing’s aim is to push eastwards from the Second Thomas Shoal toward the neighboring Sabina Shoal in the Spratly Islands, encroaching on Manila’s exclusive economic zone and normalizing Chinese control of the area.
The confrontations have echoes of 2012 when Beijing took control of Scarborough Shoal, another strategic feature in the South China Sea closest to the Philippines.