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  • Hundreds of Thais trapped by clashes in northern Myanmar being evacuated | News

     

    Hundreds of Thais trapped by clashes in northern Myanmar being evacuated | News

    Hundreds of Thais trapped by clashes in northern Myanmar being evacuated | News

    A group of 266 Thais are being rescued and flown back home via China, according to the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

    Over 200 Thai nationals caught in the crossfire of clashes between soldiers and armed ethnic-minority groups in northern Myanmar are being rescued and flown back to Thailand, the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs has announced.

    Myanmar’s military, which took power in a 2021 coup, is battling armed resistance from an alliance of three ethnic-minority groups and pro-democracy fighters. The fighting is especially intense in the country’s north, with armed fighters taking over key towns near the Chinese border and blocking trade routes.

    Thailand’s Foreign Ministry says they are working with Myanmar authorities to evacuate a group of 266 Thais, along with an undisclosed number of Filipinos and Singaporeans, who are stuck in the town of Laukkaing in the northern Shan State.

    The group will receive clearance to enter China and will then fly from the Chinese city of Kunming on two chartered flights to Bangkok. There, they will be screened for human trafficking and criminal records, the foreign ministry said.

    The groups are expected to arrive in Thailand late Sunday night, the Bangkok Post reported.

    Authorities previously said some people trapped in Myanmar were victims of human trafficking, and others might be involved in telecom scams.

    Southeast Asia, including Myanmar, has become a hub for telecom and other online fraud, according to the United Nations, with hundreds of thousands of people trafficked by criminal gangs and forced to work in scam centres and other illegal operations.

    The latest push to evacuate Thai nationals from Mynamar comes a day after a separate group of 41 Thai nationals were repatriated by land back to Thailand.

    Operation 1027

    Myanmar plunged into crisis when generals seized power from the elected government of civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi in a coup in February 2021.

    Millions took to the streets to oppose the takeover and advocate for a return to democracy. When the military responded with force, some civilians took up arms, joining forces with ethnic armed groups who have long been fighting for self-determination. At least 4,185 civilians and anti-coup activists have been killed in the violence since, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, a Myanmar non-profit tracking the crackdown.

    The latest offensive against the military, code-named Operation 1027, began in Shan State near the border with China on October 27. It is led by the Three Brotherhood Alliance, a grouping of the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA), Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) and Arakan Army (AA).

    The operation’s aim is to eradicate “oppressive military dictatorship”, and fighting has since spread to other areas of the country, including western Rakhine and Chin states, bordering Bangladesh and India.

    More than 200,000 people have been displaced by the fighting, according to the United Nations.

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    Hundreds of Thais trapped by clashes in northern Myanmar being evacuated | News

  • Diseases spread in Gaza amid water and sewage crisis, cholera feared | Gaza News

    Diseases spread in Gaza amid water and sewage crisis, cholera feared | Gaza News

    Diseases spread in Gaza amid water and sewage crisis, cholera feared | Gaza News

    Khan Younis, Gaza – Sewage flows in the streets of Gaza as all key sanitation services have ceased operating, raising the alarming prospect of an enormous surge of gastrointestinal and infectious diseases among the local populations – including cholera.

    For Gaza’s 2.3 million residents, finding drinkable water has become close to impossible.

    At a school run by the United Nations relief agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) in Khan Younis, 33-year-old Osama Saqr attempted to fill some bottles with water for his thirsty children.

    He took a sip and grimaced in disgust at the saltiness of the fluid, before letting out a long sigh.

    “It’s polluted and unsuitable, but my children always drink it, there’s no alternative,” he told Al Jazeera.

    Saqr’s one-year-old son has diarrhoea but he cannot find medicines in hospitals or pharmacies to treat him. “Even if I find it, the problem remains, the water is polluted and salty water, not suitable for drinking,” he said.

    “I’m afraid that eventually, I’m going to lose one of my children to this poisoning.”

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has recorded more than 44,000 cases of diarrhoea and 70,000 acute respiratory infections, but real numbers may be significantly higher. On Friday, the UN agency said it was extremely concerned that rains and floods during the approaching winter season will make an already dire situation even worse.

    “We are hearing about several hundred people per toilet at the UNRWA centres and those have been overflowing, so people are doing open defecation,” Richard Brennan, regional emergency director for the Eastern Mediterranean region at WHO, told Al Jazeera. “They have to find a place to go to the bathroom in the grounds where they are staying. That’s a huge public health risk and also very humiliating.”

    Brennan said overcrowding, lack of solid waste management, poor sanitation and open-air defecation were all contributing to the spread of diseases including diarrhoea, respiratory infections and skin infections, including scabies.

    UN agencies have warned that the collapse of water and sanitation services could even spark bouts of cholera if urgent humanitarian aid is not delivered. If nothing changes, “there will be more and more people falling sick and the risk of major outbreaks will increase dramatically,” Brennan said.

    Out of fuel

    Gaza’s essential water and sanitation infrastructure has either been destroyed by Israeli bombardment or has run out of fuel. In the southern governorates of Deir el-Balah, Khan Younis and Rafah, all 76 water wells have stopped functioning, as well as two main drinking water plants and 15 sewage pumping stations, according to the UNRWA.

    WHO estimates that the average person in Gaza is currently consuming just 3 litres of water per day for drinking and sanitation. This compares with the minimum of 7.5 litres recommended by the agency in emergency situations.

    The halt of key services including water desalination plants, sewage treatment and hospitals has led to a 40 percent increase in diarrhoea for people taking shelter in UNRWA schools, the agency said. It estimated that about 70 percent of Gaza’s 2.3 million people – more than half of whom are children – no longer have access to clean water.

    On Wednesday, Israeli authorities allowed just over 23,000 litres (6,000 gallons) of fuel to be brought into the Strip via Egypt. But they restricted the use of this fuel to trucks transporting the little aid coming in. The UNRWA said it needed 160,000 litres (42,000 gallons) of fuel a day for basic humanitarian operations.

    “This fuel cannot be used for the overall humanitarian response, including for medical and water facilities or the work of UNRWA,” the agency’s Commissioner General Philippe Lazzarini told a press conference. “It is appalling that fuel continues to be used as a weapon of war. This seriously paralyses our work and the delivery of assistance to the Palestinian communities in Gaza.”

    The Ministry of Health in Gaza has warned that the lack of clean water caused by fuel shortages has put the lives of 1,100 patients with kidney failure, including 38 children, particularly at risk.

    Among them is Samer Abdeen’s 22-year-old brother, Muhammad, who has been suffering from acute renal colic due to the poor water quality. “When he is in great pain, he screams,” Abdeen, 40, told Al Jazeera as he searched the streets of Khan Younis for bottled water to buy.

    While bottled water is now expensive and very hard to find, he refused to give up the search.

    “I don’t want to lose him in this unjust war,” he said.

    Dying of thirst

    Sixty-year-old Samir Asaad, from Deir el-Balah camp, suffers from high blood pressure, which is exacerbated by drinking salty water. “I heat up the water over a fire to drink it so I don’t feel its saltiness,” he said.

    “They are killing us from thirst or forcing us to drink any water so that we die anyway,” he said, referring to the Israeli siege on Gaza.

    Humanitarian officials are calling for more aid to enter Gaza. The World Food Programme warned on Thursday that supplies of food and water were almost non-existent in Gaza and that civilians were facing the immediate possibility of dehydration and starvation.

    Some residents resorted to digging wells to extract water, despite it being contaminated by the sewage and solid waste piling up untreated on the streets. Asaad said his family prefers to line up for hours to fill bottles at filling stations, but they are under no illusion that the water there will be any safer to drink.

    Umi al-Abadla, deputy director general of primary care at Gaza’s health ministry, said water reaching the filling station used to be treated before being pumped, but this is no longer possible due to the lack of fuel.

    “As a result of the power outage, water is distributed from random wells whose water is contaminated,” he said. “This has caused diarrhoea among children, more than the annual average.”

    He added that the lack of personal hygiene as a result of the mass displacement was causing a spread of skin diseases as well as viral diseases including chickenpox, and raising the threat of epidemics of diseases including cholera.

    Drinking dirty seawater

    Desperate to quench their thirst, some in Gaza have resorted to drinking seawater.

    But, with sewage systems and wastewater treatment plants out of operation due to the lack of fuel, more than 130,000 cubic metres of wastewater are being discharged into the Mediterranean Sea each day.

    Salwa Islim, 45, said she and her family go to the sea to bathe and sometimes drink from it. “I am forced to drink seawater and people here also do that,” she told Al Jazeera.

    “Where is our right to water? What is this war that prevents all citizens from eating, drinking and all the other necessities of life?” she said.

    “Is this a punishment for the children, who ask every day when the war will end? They stand in the streets and ask for bottles of water to drink. But there is no drinking water in Gaza”.

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    Diseases spread in Gaza amid water and sewage crisis, cholera feared | Gaza News

  • Pakistan military says four fighters killed near Afghanistan border | Pakistan Taliban News

    Pakistan military says four fighters killed near Afghanistan border | Pakistan Taliban News

    Pakistan military says four fighters killed near Afghanistan border | Pakistan Taliban News

    Troops are continuing to search the Khaisoor area of North Wazirstan district for fighters in hiding.

    Pakistani security forces have killed four armed fighters, including a highly sought individual, near the northwestern border with Afghanistan, the military announced Sunday.

    Pakistani forces traded gunfire with the fighters during an “intelligence-based operation” in the Khaisoor area of North Waziristan district, said a military press release. The troops killed four fighters, including one “high-value target” identified by the single name of “Ibrahim”.

    Troops found a cache of weapons, ammunition and explosives during the raid, the military statement said, and are continuing to search surrounding areas for fighters in hiding.

    “The Security Forces of Pakistan are determined to wipe out the menace of terrorism from the country,” said the military statement.

    North Waziristan long functioned as a safe haven for fighters until the military rooted them out following an attack on an army-run school in Peshawar in 2014 that killed more than 150 people, mostly schoolchildren.

    The army announced after the years-long operation that it had cleared the region of fighters, but attacks persist sporadically, raising concerns that the local Taliban, known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), has found refuge in Afghanistan and is rebuilding there.

    The Pakistani Taliban are a separate group but allies of the Afghan Taliban, which seized power in Afghanistan in 2021 as the US and NATO troops were in the final stages of their pullout after 20 years of war.

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    Pakistan military says four fighters killed near Afghanistan border | Pakistan Taliban News

  • Ukraine war: Kyiv fears winter bombardment after second straight night of Russian drone attacks | World News

    Ukraine war: Kyiv fears winter bombardment after second straight night of Russian drone attacks | World News

    Ukraine war: Kyiv fears winter bombardment after second straight night of Russian drone attacks | World News

    Ukraine war: Kyiv fears winter bombardment after second straight night of Russian drone attacks | World News

    Russia has launched drone attacks over the Ukrainian capital for the second night in a row after several weeks of reprieve, city officials have said.

    Writing on the Telegram app, Serhiy Popko, the head of Kyiv’s military administration, said: “The enemy’s UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles) were launched in many groups and attacked Kyiv in waves, from different directions, at the same time constantly changing the vectors of movement along the route.

    “That is why the air raid alerts were announced several times in the capital.”

    Mr Popko added early information suggested air defence systems hit around 15-20 Iranian-made Shahed drones across Kyiv and the surrounding area.

    There were no initial reports of “critical damage” or casualties, but some infrastructure had been hit

    Sky News has not been able to verify the claims, and Russia has not commented on the allegations.

    It comes days after Foreign Secretary David Cameron visited Kyiv to meet President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, where he pledged to continue supporting Ukraine.

    Russia returns to familiar tactics

    The attacks bear similarities to 12 months ago, when Russia began targeting Ukraine’s energy, military and transport infrastructure, six months after withdrawing its troops from around the capital.

    In the winter months, Ukraine was hit with hundreds of missiles and drones, leaving millions without energy and heating during the coldest part of the year.

    After a pause of 52 days, Russia resumed its aerial bombardment on Kyiv earlier this month.

    On Saturday, officials said all drones aimed at the capital had been destroyed, adding some had hit buildings in other parts of Ukraine.

    There had also been power outages, knocking out lines in more than 400 Ukrainian towns and villages.

    Read more:
    Ukrainians in Gaza await evacuation
    Ukrainian major killed by birthday present

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    0:45

    CCTV of Russian strike on Odesa museum

    Ukraine ‘preparing’ for winter attacks

    Mr Zelenskyy has warned Russia could restart a campaign of attacks aimed at civilian infrastructure in the winter months.

    In a nightly address on Saturday, he said: “The closer we are to winter, the more Russians will try to make the strikes more powerful.”

    Volodymyr Kudrytskiy, the head of energy firm Ukrenergo, told local media: “All of us energy workers and defence forces are preparing to repel possible Russian attacks on the energy infrastructure this winter.”

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    Ukraine war: Kyiv fears winter bombardment after second straight night of Russian drone attacks | World News

  • Israel has questions to answer after WHO’s profoundly worrying Gaza hospital report | World News

    Israel has questions to answer after WHO’s profoundly worrying Gaza hospital report | World News

    Israel has questions to answer after WHO’s profoundly worrying Gaza hospital report | World News

    Israel has questions to answer after WHO's profoundly worrying Gaza hospital report | World News

    Gaza has lost its largest hospital.

    Al Shifa has been the beating heart of the strip’s medical infrastructure for almost eight decades, but now is “basically not functioning”, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).

    Thirty-two babies still in hospital ‘death zone’ – live updates

    The WHO’s findings pose some very difficult questions for Israel and its military campaign in Gaza.

    Under the rules of war, hospitals are protected from military activity unless it can be proven the enemy is using them to pose a threat.

    Israel claims it has found a Hamas command and control centre in the hospital and that beneath it is a complex of Hamas built tunnels.

    But it has not produced the evidence to back that up – just footage claiming to show a tunnel entrance nearby, some assault rifles, some grenades, and laptops described as “technological assets”.

    Hospital turned into ‘death zone’

    As the normally pro-Israeli government Jerusalem Post has put it, Israel has presented a much weaker case to the world about Hamas’s presence at the hospital than expected.

    The WHO’s report is profoundly worrying. It says Gaza’s biggest hospital is now a “death zone”.

    Most of the patients have left. Footage over the weekend has shown patients emerging under white flags while Israeli tanks prowl the area.

    Left behind are the severely ill who cannot be moved and 32 babies in an extremely critical condition.

    Read more:
    Israel poised for ‘second phase’ of war – but sympathy waning
    Hamas claims ‘at least 50 killed’ in Israeli attack on Gaza school

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    4:07

    Two Gaza schools hit by missiles

    Israel holds itself to higher standards than Hamas

    Under international humanitarian law, parties to an armed conflict have a duty to meet the basic needs of a population under its control.

    Hamas has comprehensively failed to meet that standard, firing rockets from within residential areas and from schools and other civilian buildings.

    But Israel as a modern democracy holds itself to higher standards. It does not appear to be following up its military operation in northern Gaza with a large-scale humanitarian mission.

    Israeli officials have disputed its responsibilities under the rules of war. They have told Sky News that D-Day was not followed immediately by a Marshall Plan.

    But as allied troops moved through northern France in 1945, measures were put in place to feed and shelter civilians.

    Israel is arguably not doing the same on the scale required, and now its operation has effectively shut down the biggest hospital in Gaza just as the humanitarian disaster is deepening.

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    Israel has questions to answer after WHO’s profoundly worrying Gaza hospital report | World News