Displaced Gazans sew winter clothes from blankets

Displaced Gazans sew winter clothes from blankets
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Palestinian Nidaa Attia (R) and another woman work to turn blankets into winter clothes for displaced people, amid clothing shortages, at a tent in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip.(REUTERS)
Displaced Gazans sew winter clothes from blankets
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Palestinian Nidaa Attia (R) and another woman display winter clothes they sewed for displaced people from from blankets, amid clothing shortages, at a tent in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip. (REUTERS)
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Updated 28 October 2024
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Displaced Gazans sew winter clothes from blankets

Displaced Gazans sew winter clothes from blankets
  • The amount of international aid entering Gaza has plummeted to its lowest level all year
  • The overall death toll in Gaza is approaching 43,000, according to the enclave’s health ministry.

KHAN YOUNIS: As Gaza braces for a cold, wet winter, displaced Palestinians living in tents and makeshift shelters by the sea are sewing clothes from blankets in a desperate effort to stay warm.
Nidaa Attia, 31, and others measure, cut and sew the clothing in a tent near the beach at Al-Mawasi in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip.
The work is entirely manual and labor intensive. Lacking electricity, they generate power by using the pedals of a bicycle connected by a belt to their sewing machine.
“Winter is coming for the second time (since the start of the war) and people are without any (warm) clothes,” Attia said.
Nearby a young child stood on a table while another woman measured him for a jumper to protect him from the cold winter.
“There are no clothes coming into the Gaza Strip, so we thought a lot about how we could find a solution to the lack of fabrics, and we came up with the idea of recycling thermal blankets into winter clothes,” Attia said.
Her “Needle and Thread” initiative, launched in September, relies mostly on volunteers, though some receive a small payment. The clothes are sold for between 70 and 120 shekels ($18-$30) but prices are lower for those who bring blankets.
A Gazan winter can be harsh, marked by cold temperatures and strong winds. Last year heavy rains flooded some shelters.
After more than a year of war, many in Gaza have no income. Some have tried to sell their possessions, including second-hand clothes, but few can afford the prices of even basic goods.
The amount of international aid entering Gaza has plummeted to its lowest level all year, according to UN data, while a global hunger monitor has also warned of a looming famine.
Displaced
Most of the roughly two million people in Gaza have been displaced by Israel’s relentless assault on the coastal strip.
“We have been displaced for more than a year now. We lived through one winter and now winter is coming again,” said Samira Tamous, who is originally from Gaza City in the north of the Strip but now lives in a makeshift shelter in Al-Mawasi.
“There are no winter clothes at all, not in the market and not to dress my daughter,” said Tamous, whose 13-year-old child with Down syndrome was putting on clothing made under the “Needle and Thread” project.
The Israeli offensive in Gaza was triggered by an attack led by Hamas militants on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, in which 1,200 people were killed and around 250 taken as hostages back into the Palestinian enclave, according to Israeli officials.
The overall death toll in Gaza is approaching 43,000, according to the enclave’s health ministry.


Sudanese need protection, but conditions not right for UN force, says Guterres

Sudanese need protection, but conditions not right for UN force, says Guterres
Updated 4 sec ago
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Sudanese need protection, but conditions not right for UN force, says Guterres

Sudanese need protection, but conditions not right for UN force, says Guterres
UNITED NATIONS: United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres appealed to the Security Council on Monday for its support to help protect civilians in war-torn Sudan, but said conditions are not right for deployment of a UN force.
“The people of Sudan are living through a nightmare of violence — with thousands of civilians killed, and countless others facing unspeakable atrocities, including widespread rape and sexual assaults,” Guterres told the 15-member council.
War erupted in mid-April 2023 from a power struggle between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces ahead of a planned transition to civilian rule, and triggered the world’s largest displacement crisis.
“Sudan is, once again, rapidly becoming a nightmare of mass ethnic violence,” Guterres said, referring to a conflict in Sudan’s Darfur region about 20 years ago that led to the International Criminal Court charging former Sudanese leaders with genocide and crimes against humanity.
The current war has produced waves of ethnically driven violence blamed largely on the RSF. The RSF killed at least 124 people in a village in El Gezira State on Friday, activists said, in one of the conflict’s deadliest incidents.
The RSF has previously denied harming civilians in Sudan and attributed the activity to rogue actors.
Guterres acknowledged calls by Sudanese and human-rights groups for stepped-up measures to protect civilians, including the possible deployment of some form of impartial force, saying they reflected “the gravity and urgency of the situation.”
“At present, the conditions do not exist for the successful deployment of a United Nations force to protect civilians in Sudan,” he told the council, but added he was ready to discuss other ways to reduce violence and protect civilians.
“This may require new approaches that are adapted to the challenging circumstances of the conflict,” Guterres said.
Aid access
The UN says nearly 25 million people — half of Sudan’s population — need aid as famine has taken hold in displacement camps and 11 million people have fled their homes. Nearly three million of those people have left for other countries.
“This is not just a matter of insufficient funding. Millions are going hungry because of access,” US Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield told the council.
Thomas-Greenfield said Washington was alarmed that instead of facilitating aid, the Sudanese authorities “continue to undermine, intimidate, and target humanitarian officials.” She said they need to expand and streamline humanitarian movements.
“They also need to extend the authorization for the Adre border crossing, open additional cross-border and crossline access routes, and facilitate airport access for humanitarian purposes,” Thomas-Greenfield added.
The Sudanese army-backed government is committed to facilitate aid deliveries across the country, including in areas controlled by the RSF, said Sudan’s UN Ambassador Al-Harith Idriss Al-Harith Mohamed. He said 10 border crossings and seven airports had been opened for aid deliveries.
A three-month approval given by Sudanese authorities for the UN and aid groups to use the Adre border crossing with Chad to reach Darfur is due to expire in mid-November.
“There are 30 trucks that went through the Adre border crossing loaded with advanced weaponry and ammunition and this led to serious escalation in Al-Fashir and in other places,” Mohamed said. “We noticed that thousands of mercenaries from Africa and Sahel entered the country ... through Adre. The border crossing Adre is really a threat to national security.”
Russia’s UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia told the council it was up to the Sudanese government to decide on whether the Adre crossing would remain open beyond mid-November and that it would be “inappropriate to put pressure on” the government.
“We’re categorically opposed to the politicization of humanitarian assistance,” he said. “We believe that any humanitarian assistance should be conducted and delivered solely with the central authorities in the loop.”

Iran at disadvantage after Israel’s airstrikes, Israeli defense minister says

Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant speaks during a memorial ceremony of the Hamas attack on October 7 last year.
Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant speaks during a memorial ceremony of the Hamas attack on October 7 last year.
Updated 6 min 55 sec ago
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Iran at disadvantage after Israel’s airstrikes, Israeli defense minister says

Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant speaks during a memorial ceremony of the Hamas attack on October 7 last year.
  • Israel has “damaged their production capabilities, which changes the balance of power. Their supplies are now set, and this affects their calculus,” statement said

JERUSALEM: Iran is at a disadvantage that can be exploited in the future after Israeli airstrikes over the weekend, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said on Monday.
“You have conducted accurate strikes on their radars and air defense systems, which creates a huge disadvantage for the enemy when we will want to strike later,” a statement released by Gallant’s office quoted the defense minister as saying during a meeting with air force chiefs.
“You have also damaged their production capabilities, which changes the balance of power. Their supplies are now set, and this affects their calculus. Both their attack and defensive capabilities have been weakened.”
Iran has said Saturday’s airstrikes caused limited damage. A spokesperson for Iran’s foreign ministry said on Monday that Tehran would “use all available tools” to respond.
Israel’s air strikes responded to an Iranian missile attack on Israel on Oct. 1.


Israel to vote on severely restricting UN agency that is a lifeline for Gaza

Israel to vote on severely restricting UN agency that is a lifeline for Gaza
Updated 8 min 35 sec ago
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Israel to vote on severely restricting UN agency that is a lifeline for Gaza

Israel to vote on severely restricting UN agency that is a lifeline for Gaza
  • Israel has alleged that some of UNRWA’s thousands of staff members participated in the Oct. 7 attacks
  • UNRWA provides education, health care and other basic services to millions of Palestinian refugees across the region

JERUSALEM: Israel’s parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on a pair of bills that would effectively sever ties with the UN agency responsible for distributing aid in Gaza, strip it of legal immunities and restrict its ability to support Palestinians in east Jerusalem and the West Bank.
If passed into law, these bills would signal a new low in relations between Israel and the agency known as UNRWA, which Israel accuses of maintaining close ties with Hamas militants. The changes would also be a serious blow to the agency and to Palestinians in Gaza who have become reliant upon it for aid throughout more than a year of devastating war.
The bills risk crippling the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza at a time when the United States is pressing Israel to allow in more critical supplies. More than 1.9 million Palestinians are displaced from their homes and Gaza faces widespread shortages of food, water and medicine.
Israel has alleged that some of UNRWA’s thousands of staff members participated in the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas’ attacks that sparked the war in Gaza. It also has said hundreds of its staff have militant ties and that it has found Hamas military assets near or under UNRWA facilities. The agency denies it knowingly aids armed groups and says it acts quickly to purge any suspected militants from its ranks.
The bills, which do not include provisions for alternative organizations to oversee its work, have been strongly criticized by international aid groups and a handful of Israel’s Western allies.
One bill would effectively strip UNRWA from operating in Israel and the Palestinian territories; the other would bar it from operating in east Jerusalem. UNRWA provides education, health care and other basic services to millions of Palestinian refugees across the region, including in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
If approved, the bills would go into effect 60 to 90 days after Israel’s Foreign Ministry notifies the UN, according to the spokesperson of lawmaker Dan Illouz, one of the co-sponsors of one of the bills.
“If it passes and if it’s implemented, it’s a disaster” said Juliette Touma, communications director for the agency. “UNRWA is the largest humanitarian organization in Gaza ... Who can do its job?”
Death toll in Gaza surpasses 43,000 as Israeli raids continue
With no end in sight to the war, officials in Gaza reported Monday that the death toll from the yearlong fighting surpassed 43,000. The Palestinian Health Ministry’s count does not distinguish between civilians and combatants but it says more than half of the dead are women and children.
The rising death toll comes as Israel refocuses its offensive on Gaza’s hard-hit north, including on a hospital where the military says militants were operating from.
Israeli forces raided the Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza on Friday. An Israeli military official, speaking Monday on condition of anonymity in keeping with regulations, said there was heavy fighting around the hospital, though not inside it, and that weapons were found inside the facility. The military said Monday the raid had ended.
Israel has raided several hospitals in Gaza over the course of the yearlong war, saying Hamas and other militants use them for military purposes. Palestinian medical officials deny those allegations and accuse the military of recklessly endangering civilians.
The Israeli military said it detained 100 suspected Hamas militants in the latest raid. The Israeli official said medical staff were detained and searched because some of the militants had disguised themselves as medics.
The World Health Organization accused Israel of detaining 44 male hospital staff. It was not immediately clear why there was a discrepancy in the figures. Palestinian medical officials said the hospital, which was treating some 200 patients, was heavily damaged in the raid.
The Israeli military has called on Palestinians to evacuate northern Gaza, where it has been waging a large offensive for more than three weeks. The official said the operation in the northern Gaza city of Jabaliya would last “several more weeks.”
The UN said earlier this month at least 400,000 people are in northern Gaza, an area that was an early target of Israel’s retaliatory war. Hunger there is rampant as the amount of humanitarian aid reaching the north has plummeted over the past month.
Israeli airstrikes pummel Lebanese city and oil prices fall after Israel’s strike on Iran
The Israel-Hamas war began after militants from Hamas and other groups stormed into Israel, killing some 1,200 people — mostly civilians — and abducting 250 others. The war has roiled the Middle East, setting off fighting between Israel and Hezbollah as well as between Israel and Iran, archenemies who had long kept their conflict a shadow war but are now engaging in open fighting.
In Lebanon, successive Israeli airstrikes have pummeled the southern port city of Tyre following an evacuation order from the Israeli military for parts of the city, the state-run National News Agency reported. No casualties were immediately reported.
Reverberations from Israel’s strike on Iran over the weekend were felt Monday in global financial markets. Oil prices fell in a sign of relief for world supplies after Israel’s retaliatory strike targeted Iranian military sites rather than its energy infrastructure, as had been feared.
Oil prices had spiked after Iran fired nearly 200 missiles into Israel on Oct 1, part of a series of rapidly escalating attacks between Israel and Iran — and militant groups it supports — that threatened to push the Middle East closer to a regionwide war.
Iran is the world’s 7th largest oil producer, but if the conflict in the Middle East were to spread, it could drag in some of the world’s largest energy producers.
It is unclear how Iran could respond to Israel’s weekend strike, which damaged at least two secretive Iranian military bases. A carefully worded statement from Iran’s military Saturday night appeared to offer some wiggle room for the Islamic Republic to back away from further escalation. It suggested that a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip and Lebanon was more important than any retaliation against Israel.
International mediators renew efforts for a Gaza ceasefire
After collapsing in late summer, international mediators were trying to jump-start ceasefire efforts between Israel and Hamas. Israel said it would continue discussions on a halt in fighting after the head of the Mossad agency, David Barnea, returned from a meeting in Qatar with the head of the CIA, David Burns, and the Qatari prime minister.
Mediators are trying varying proposals to try to bring Israel and Hamas toward a deal. Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi has suggested a two-day ceasefire in exchange for the release of four hostages.
Israel appeared responsive to the idea. One Israeli official said Israel was discussing the proposal both internally and with Egyptian officials. A second official said that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed enthusiasm for the proposal in a meeting with his Likud party on Monday.
Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss internal deliberations about the proposal with the media.
Hamas has yet to formally respond to the plan and Hamas officials were not reachable for comment on Monday.


South Africa files ‘evidence’ of ‘genocide’ by Israel in ICJ case

Palestinians gather to buy bread from a bakery in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, October 28, 2024. (Reuters)
Palestinians gather to buy bread from a bakery in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, October 28, 2024. (Reuters)
Updated 27 min 38 sec ago
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South Africa files ‘evidence’ of ‘genocide’ by Israel in ICJ case

Palestinians gather to buy bread from a bakery in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, October 28, 2024. (Reuters)
  • Several nations have added their weight to South Africa’s proceedings against Israel, including Spain, Bolivia, Colombia, Mexico, Turkiye, Chile and Libya

JOHANNESBURG: South Africa has filed “evidence” of a “genocide” committed by Israel in the Gaza Strip with the International Court of Justice, the office of President Cyril Ramaphosa said on Monday.
The document “contains evidence which shows how the government of Israel has violated the genocide convention by promoting the destruction of Palestinians living in Gaza,” the presidency said in a statement, amid claims vehemently denied by Israel.
An official for the Hague-based court on Monday confirmed it had received the document, but declined to give further detail.
“The evidence will show that undergirding Israel’s genocidal acts is the special intent to commit genocide, a failure by Israel to prevent incitement to genocide, to prevent genocide itself and its failure to punish those inciting and committing acts of genocide,” said the presidency.
The “memorial” — the name of the document detailing South Africa’s case against Israel before the ICJ — cannot be made public but laid out evidence in “over 750 pages of text, supported by exhibits and annexes of over 4,000 pages,” it added.
South Africa in December brought a case before the ICJ, arguing the war in Gaza breached the 1948 United Nations Genocide Convention, an accusation Israel has strongly denied.
Several nations have added their weight to South Africa’s proceedings against Israel, including Spain, Bolivia, Colombia, Mexico, Turkiye, Chile and Libya.
While ICJ rulings are legally binding, the court has no concrete means to enforce them.
Israel’s Gaza campaign has killed at least 43,020 Palestinians, the majority of them civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-ruled territory’s health ministry, which the UN considers reliable.
The offensive was prompted by Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack which resulted in the deaths of 1,206 people in Israel, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures that include hostages killed in captivity.
Out of 251 hostages seized by during the attack, 97 are still held in Gaza, including 34 whom the Israeli military says are dead.


Blasts reported near ship in Red Sea off Yemen

UKMTO said a captain reported “an explosion in close proximity” to his merchant ship on Monday. (@UK_MTO)
UKMTO said a captain reported “an explosion in close proximity” to his merchant ship on Monday. (@UK_MTO)
Updated 42 min 44 sec ago
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Blasts reported near ship in Red Sea off Yemen

UKMTO said a captain reported “an explosion in close proximity” to his merchant ship on Monday. (@UK_MTO)
  • It was the first attack on shipping reported by the UKMTO since US B-2 heavy bombers hit multiple Houthi targets on October 17

DUBAI: Maritime security agencies reported two explosions on Monday near a ship in the Red Sea off Yemen, where Iran-backed Houthis have attacked shipping in what they call support for Gaza’s Palestinians.
The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO), run by the British navy, said a captain reported “an explosion in close proximity” to his merchant ship.
A second explosion followed, and the captain reported no damage and that “all crew are reported to be safe.”
It was the first attack on shipping reported by the UKMTO since US B-2 heavy bombers hit multiple Houthi targets including weapons storage facilities on October 17.
At the time, the Houthis said the attack would “not pass without a response.”
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, which took place 25 nautical miles south of the Yemeni city of Mokha.
Maritime security firm Ambrey also reported two blasts near a merchant ship, adding that the vessel had “a private armed security team” on board.
The Houthis, part of the “axis of resistance” of Iran-aligned groups, have targeted ships linked to Israel in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden since last November in what they describe as support for Palestinians during the Israel-Hamas war.
The attacks have seriously disrupted the Red Sea route which carries 12 percent of global trade, triggering reprisal strikes by the United States and Britain against Houthi targets in Yemen.
In more than 100 Houthi attacks over nearly a year, four sailors have been killed and two ships have sunk, while one vessel and its crew remain detained since being hijacked last November.