Terrified Bangladeshis flee Israeli strikes in Lebanon

Terrified Bangladeshis flee Israeli strikes in Lebanon
Late on October 21, the first 54 of some 1,800 Bangladeshis wanting to escape the troubled Mediterranean nation flew back to Dhaka on a government-backed flight. (AFP)
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Terrified Bangladeshis flee Israeli strikes in Lebanon

Terrified Bangladeshis flee Israeli strikes in Lebanon
  • The first 54 of some 1,800 Bangladeshis wanting to escape the troubled Mediterranean nation flew back to Dhaka
  • Some gave up long-established lives in Lebanon for a deeply uncertain economic future back home

DHAKA: The first Bangladeshis airlifted home after fleeing Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon described the constant fear of living in a city rocked by explosions.
Late Monday the first 54 of some 1,800 Bangladeshis wanting to escape the troubled Mediterranean nation flew back to Dhaka on a government-backed flight.
Some gave up long-established lives in Lebanon for a deeply uncertain economic future back home.
Bangladesh’s foreign ministry estimates between 70,000 to 100,000 of its nationals are working in Lebanon, many as laborers or as domestic workers.
For 68-year-old Abul Kashem — who lived in Lebanon’s seaside capital Beirut for nearly four decades, including during past heavy fighting in the civil war — the barrage of strikes that began last month was unlike anything he had seen before.
“I have never seen any war like this,” said Kashem, who worked at a gas station, before it was reduced to rubble.
“Everything around the fuel pump where I worked has been destroyed,” he said, after arriving exhausted on a plane chartered by the UN’s International Organization for Migration.
Israel drastically escalated its air campaign against Lebanon’s Hezbollah group last month.
It has since launched a ground offensive intended to push the group back from its northern border.
Hezbollah has been firing thousands of projectiles into Israel over the last year, displacing tens of thousands of Israelis.
Escaping war
The Bangladeshi workers, striving to earn money to send back home to family in South Asia, were trapped in a conflict that erupted around them.
“Five buildings near my residence were brought to the ground,” said Mohammad Hossain, 28, who returned from Beirut with his wife and year-old infant.
“The attacks were so intense,” he added. “The cars are almost melting.”
Nearly a month of all-out war has killed at least 1,489 people in Lebanon, according to an AFP tally of Lebanese health ministry figures.
Bangladesh’s Business Standard newspaper has reported at least five Bangladeshi citizens were among those wounded, while thousands have fled border zones with Israel northwards into Lebanon.
“I feel very good after returning to my home country,” Hossain said, speaking as returnees were embraced by relatives welcoming back, some in tears.
“When the plane left the airport in Lebanon, I immediately felt peace in my mind.”
Those returning must now find work at home, with Bangladesh undergoing a political transition after a student-led revolution toppled the autocratic ex-leader Shiekh Hasina from power on August 5.
Their income loss will be sorely missed by their families in a nation where more than five percent of GDP comes from personal remittances, according to the World Bank.
Bangladesh’s foreign ministry, who said Dhaka is bearing the cost of the flights, added 65 more citizens would return on Tuesday.
Ruma Khatun, 30, said she had first fled to Beirut seeking refuge, but said she did not feel safe there either, so was among the first to sign up to leave.
“The situation is very bad,” she said. “When we were taking off from Lebanon.. we heard the sound of bombing.”


EU observers say ‘irregularities’ in Mozambique vote results

EU observers say ‘irregularities’ in Mozambique vote results
Updated 54 sec ago
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EU observers say ‘irregularities’ in Mozambique vote results

EU observers say ‘irregularities’ in Mozambique vote results
  • The results of Mozambique’s general election have been contested by the opposition
  • Observers noted irregularities during counting and unjustified alteration of election results

MAPUTO: European Union poll observers on Tuesday noted irregularities in the results of Mozambique’s general election, which has been contested by the opposition.
On Monday, riot police in the capital Maputo fired tear gas to disperse a crowd protesting against alleged fraud in the October 9 presidential and parliamentary election, days after two associates of opposition presidential candidate Venancio Mondlane were shot dead.
“The European Union Election Observation Mission (EU EOM)... has noted irregularities during counting and unjustified alteration of election results at polling station and district level,” they said.
The EU observers urged election authorities in the southern African country to conduct the ballot count “in a transparent and credible manner, ensuring the traceability of polling station results.”
“In view of the social tensions and electoral related violence witnessed in recent days, the EU EOM reiterates its condemnation of the killings of Elvino Dias and Paulo Guambe, and wishes to call for utmost restraint by all,” they added.


UN ‘deeply concerned’ by Kenya’s return of Turkish refugees

UN ‘deeply concerned’ by Kenya’s return of Turkish refugees
Updated 49 min 24 sec ago
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UN ‘deeply concerned’ by Kenya’s return of Turkish refugees

UN ‘deeply concerned’ by Kenya’s return of Turkish refugees
  • Kenya’s foreign ministry said it had received assurances from Turkiye that the refugees will be “treated with dignity”

NAIROBI: The United Nations expressed concern Tuesday over the repatriation of four Turkish refugees from Kenya who rights groups say were abducted and forcibly returned in violation of international law.
The four — Mustafa Genc, Huseyin Yesilsu, Ozturk Uzun and Alparslan Tasci — were sent back to Turkiye on Friday, according to the Kenyan foreign ministry.
It followed media reports that they had been kidnapped on the street in the Kenyan capital Nairobi along with three others who were later released.
UNHCR, the UN refugee agency, said in a statement to AFP that it was “deeply concerned by the refoulement of four refugees from Kenya.”
It called on Kenya’s government “to abide by their international legal obligations and in particular, to respect the principle of non-refoulement, which protects asylum-seekers and refugees from any measure that could lead to their removal to a place where their life or freedom would be threatened.”
Kenya’s foreign ministry said it had received assurances from Turkiye that the four will be “treated with dignity.”
“This incident constitutes a breach of both Kenya and international refugee law,” Amnesty International said on Saturday before the repatriation had been confirmed.
“Their abductions underscore the growing concerns about the safety of all refugees and asylum seekers in Kenya.”
An alliance of Kenyan rights groups, the Police Reforms Working Group, said it was “shocked” by the government’s action, saying it had “placed four human beings at grave risk as well as Kenya’s standing as a sanctuary nation.”
It said the action “undermines Kenya’s credibility” as a new member of the UN Human Rights Council.
Kenya is hosting more than 780,000 refugees, the foreign ministry said.


Sixteen farmers arrested for burning crop waste as pollution rises in north India

Sixteen farmers arrested for burning crop waste as pollution rises in north India
Updated 22 October 2024
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Sixteen farmers arrested for burning crop waste as pollution rises in north India

Sixteen farmers arrested for burning crop waste as pollution rises in north India
  • Police in Haryana registered 22 stubble burning complaints this year before making the arrests
  • Investigations have been launched against nearly 100 farmers, and fines imposed on over 300

NEW DELHI: At least 16 farmers have been arrested in India’s northern state of Haryana for illegally burning paddy stubble to clear fields, a practice that stokes air pollution in the region around New Delhi at the onset of winter, authorities said on Tuesday.
India’s national capital region battles pollution at this time each year as temperatures fall and cold, heavy air traps construction dust, vehicle emissions and smoke, much of which authorities say travels from the neighboring breadbasket states of Punjab and Haryana.
Delhi, ranked the world’s most polluted capital for four years in a row by Swiss group IQAir, has closed its schools and halted construction projects for brief periods in the past as it looks to tackle the problem.
Police in Haryana’s Kaithal region told Reuters that 22 complaints of stubble burning have been registered this year, and 16 people have been arrested.
“Those arrested have been released on bail since this is a bailable offense,” said Birbhan, a deputy superintendent of police, who uses only one name.
Investigations have been launched against almost 100 farmers across Haryana, while fines have been imposed on more than 300, local media reported.
Delhi recorded “very poor” air on Tuesday morning, according to the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), with an air quality index (AQI) of 320. An AQI of 0-50 is considered good while anything between 400-500 poses health dangers.
It was the second-most polluted city in the world on Tuesday, a live ranking on IQAir’s website indicated, after only Lahore in neighboring Pakistan.
The environment ministry said Delhi’s daily average AQI was likely to stay in the ‘Very Poor’ category (300-400) in coming days due to unfavorable meteorological and climatic conditions.
To curb Delhi’s pollution authorities have ordered water sprinkling on roads to tackle dust, increasing public bus and metro services and higher parking fees to discourage car use.
Environmentalists say the measures are inadequate.
“These are only emergency measures...This air pollution mitigation needs a long-term comprehensive solution rather than these ad hoc measures,” said environmentalist Vimlendu Jha.


Schools shut, tourists asked to leave as eastern India braces for cyclone

Schools shut, tourists asked to leave as eastern India braces for cyclone
Updated 22 October 2024
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Schools shut, tourists asked to leave as eastern India braces for cyclone

Schools shut, tourists asked to leave as eastern India braces for cyclone

BHUBANESHWAR: Schools in some parts of India's eastern state of Odisha were ordered to shut and tourists asked to vacate the popular beach city of Puri, as authorities braced for a severe cyclonic storm that is expected to hit later this week.
Cyclone Dana, currently over the Bay of Bengal, is expected to strengthen into a severe cyclonic storm with wind speeds gusting up to 120 kph (74 mph), and is likely to make landfall late on Thursday, the weather office said.
Schools in 14 districts will be closed from Wednesday to Friday, and fishermen have been asked not to venture into the sea, a senior official from the Special Relief Commissioner's office, which oversees disaster management, told Reuters.
Tourists and pilgrims who frequent the coastal city of Puri, home to the famous Jagannath temple, have been asked to leave, officials said, while rescue teams were on standby.
Heavy to extremely heavy rainfall in Odisha was likely in the next three days, the weather office said, and the ensuing storm could damage houses, roads, crops, and power lines, causing flooding and landslides.
Odisha is prone to cyclones, but has improved disaster preparedness over time, reducing damage and casualties.


Kenya court to hear challenge to deputy leader’s impeachment

Kenya court to hear challenge to deputy leader’s impeachment
Updated 22 October 2024
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Kenya court to hear challenge to deputy leader’s impeachment

Kenya court to hear challenge to deputy leader’s impeachment
  • Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua was impeached by the Senate on Thursday on five out of 11 charges leveled against him
  • The impeachment was the culmination of a public falling out between Gachagua and President William Ruto

NAIROBI: A Kenyan High Court is due Tuesday to hear an appeal by impeached Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua over his ouster in an unprecedented Senate vote last week.
In fast-moving political drama, the court on Friday ordered the impeachment to be put on hold, only minutes after parliament had approved his replacement, Interior Minister Kithure Kindiki.
Gachagua was impeached by the Senate on Thursday on five out of 11 charges leveled against him, including stirring ethnic divisions and undermining the judiciary.
The embattled 59-year-old had been admitted to hospital with chest pains ahead of the Senate session, but the upper house rejected an appeal by his lawyers for the process to be delayed.
The impeachment was the culmination of a public falling out between Gachagua and President William Ruto.
And after being released from hospital Gachagua on Sunday lashed out at his boss as “vicious” and claimed there had been attempts on his life in the past.
Gachagua said his security had been withdrawn and his entire staff sent on compulsory leave.
A three-judge bench at the High Court in Nairobi is due to start hearing Gachagua’s impeachment appeal on Tuesday.
“The petition and application raise monumental constitutional issues,” the High Court said in its ruling on Friday.
The order effectively blocks Kindiki, a 52-year-old lawyer turned heavyweight politician, from taking office.
Ruto — who had chosen Gachagua as his running mate for the August 2022 election — has not yet given any public comment on the impeachment.