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  • Ukraine war: Russia hits Kyiv with ‘biggest drone attack of conflict so far’ | World News

    Ukraine war: Russia hits Kyiv with ‘biggest drone attack of conflict so far’ | World News

    Ukraine war: Russia hits Kyiv with ‘biggest drone attack of conflict so far’ | World News

    Ukraine war: Russia hits Kyiv with 'biggest drone attack of conflict so far' | World News

    Kyiv has been hit by what Ukraine’s air force described as the largest Russian drone attack of the war so far.

    At least five people were injured after Iranian-made kamikaze Shahed drones descended on the capital overnight.

    Explosions were heard as the aircraft were intercepted, with buildings damaged across multiple districts.

    Writing on Telegram, mayor Vitali Klitschko said apartment blocks and a nursery were hit.

    An 11-year-old girl was among the injured, he added.

    President Volodymyr Zelenskyy described the strikes, which came ahead of Ukraine’s annual memorial day for victims of the 1932 Holodomor famine, as an act of “wilful terror”.

    He said more than 70 drones were involved in the attack, most of which were shot down.

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    0:35

    How Ukraine shoots down Russia’s drones

    Russia’s winter bombardment

    It comes days after Russia launched consecutive nights of drone attacks on Kyiv for the first time in weeks.

    Those also used Shahed drones.

    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.

    Millions were left without energy and heating during the coldest months of the year.

    The latest attack has left almost 200 buildings without power, Ukraine’s energy ministry said.

    The Holodomor Famine

    Ukraine recognises the Holodomor famine as a genocide against its people by Soviet leader Joseph Stalin.

    Historians dispute whether the famine, which killed millions of Ukrainians, was a purposefully orchestrated bid to eradicate an independence movement, or a botched nationalisation policy.

    The man-made famine saw Stalin order police to seize grain, livestock, and seed from Ukrainian farms.

    Moscow denies the deaths were caused by a deliberate genocidal policy and says Russians and other ethnic groups also suffered.

    Ukraine’s Holodomor memorial day takes place on the fourth Saturday in each November.

    Since Russia launched its invasion last year, President Vladimir Putin has been accused of a similar attempt to starve Ukraine’s people.

    More on Ukraine war:
    Has Ukraine’s counteroffensive failed?
    The importance of David Cameron’s trip to Kyiv

    Mr Zelenskyy had warned civilians to expect another winter bombardment from Moscow this year.

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

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    Ukraine war: Russia hits Kyiv with ‘biggest drone attack of conflict so far’ | World News

  • WHO concerned about al-Shifa chief detained by Israel, remaining patients | Israel-Palestine conflict News

    WHO concerned about al-Shifa chief detained by Israel, remaining patients | Israel-Palestine conflict News

    WHO concerned about al-Shifa chief detained by Israel, remaining patients | Israel-Palestine conflict News

    Israel says the hospital director is being questioned as the WHO voices fears over the safety of dozens who are still in the facility.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has expressed concern about the fate of the head of Gaza City’s al-Shifa Hospital, Muhammad Abu Salmiya, who was detained by Israel this week.

    The WHO said in a statement on Friday that the director of the biggest hospital in the besieged Palestinian territory had been arrested on Wednesday along with five other health workers, while they were taking part in a United Nations mission to evacuate patients.

    “Three medical personnel from the Palestine Red Crescent Society and three from the Ministry of Health were detained,” the WHO said.

    Since then, two of the six have reportedly been released, but “we do not have information about the well-being of the four remaining health staff, including the director of Al-Shifa hospital,” the statement added.

    The UN agency called for “their legal and human rights to be fully observed during their detention”.

    A spokesperson for the Israeli army said on Saturday that Abu Salmiya was being questioned.

    “We are currently moving forward with … questioning him over the fact that he was the head of a hospital that was really sitting on top of an entire terror network,” Israeli military spokesperson Doron Spielman said.

    “How could he not know what’s happening? We have hostages that were on, you know, CCTV in his hospital.”

    The Israeli army, which raided the hospital last week, has alleged that Hamas fighters used a tunnel complex beneath al-Shifa as a command centre – an assertion Hamas and hospital officials have repeatedly denied. Israel has not provided any evidence to back up its claim.

    Concern for remaining patients

    Abu Salmiya has frequently been quoted by international media about the conditions inside al-Shifa, a major focus of the Israeli air raids and ground offensive following attacks by Hamas fighters on October 7.

    A week ago, the Israeli army ordered an evacuation of al-Shifa, which had housed 7,000 people including patients and displaced Palestinians. But dozens of patients who could not be moved remained inside with a handful of medics.

    The WHO has carried out three evacuation missions to the hospital in the space of a week, the organisation said, on one occasion managing to transfer 31 babies from the hospital.

    During the third mission on Wednesday, which was carried out in cooperation with the Palestine Red Crescent, 151 people were evacuated, including patients, their relatives and healthcare workers, according to the WHO.

    A WHO spokesperson said on Friday that the UN agency was working on further evacuations from northern Gaza hospitals as soon as possible as a truce gets under way, voicing fears for the safety of those remaining in al-Shifa Hospital.

    “We’re extremely concerned about the safety of the estimated 100 patients and health workers remaining at al-Shifa,” said WHO spokesperson Christian Lindmeier.

    He declined to react to comments from the Gaza health ministry saying it was suspending cooperation with the global health agency amid reports that Israel is holding medical staff for questioning.

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    WHO concerned about al-Shifa chief detained by Israel, remaining patients | Israel-Palestine conflict News

  • Kyiv hit by mass Russian drone attack – biggest of war so far, Ukraine’s air force says | World News

    Kyiv hit by mass Russian drone attack – biggest of war so far, Ukraine’s air force says | World News

    Kyiv hit by mass Russian drone attack – biggest of war so far, Ukraine’s air force says | World News

    Kyiv hit by mass Russian drone attack - biggest of war so far, Ukraine's air force says | World News

    Kyiv has been hit by a mass drone attack overnight, the city’s mayor has said.

    Vitali Klitschko said multiple districts of the Ukrainian capital had been targeted.

    According to Ukraine‘s air force, it was the largest Russian attack using kamikaze Shahed drones of the war so far.

    The drones have been intercepted, but fragments from the downed aircraft have left at least two people injured and damaged several buildings.

    Writing on Telegram, Mr Klitschko said apartment blocks were hit – and a fire had broken out at a nursery.

    It comes days after Russia launched consecutive nights of drone attacks on Kyiv for the first time in weeks.

    Those also used Iranian-made Shahed drones.

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

    Millions were left without energy and heating during the coldest months of the year.

    President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has warned civilians to expect another winter bombardment from Moscow.

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

    This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly.

    Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

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    Kyiv hit by mass Russian drone attack – biggest of war so far, Ukraine’s air force says | World News

  • From Khalistan to tourism dollars: Pakistan’s love-hate ties with its Sikhs | Features

    From Khalistan to tourism dollars: Pakistan’s love-hate ties with its Sikhs | Features

    From Khalistan to tourism dollars: Pakistan’s love-hate ties with its Sikhs | Features

    In the complex of the Gurdwara Darbar Sahib Kartarpur, one of the most sacred Sikh places of worship in the world, an unexploded bomb is displayed in a glass case. Beside it, a sign states that the Indian air force dropped the bomb during the 1971 India-Pakistan war “with the aim to destroy” the gurdwara.

    Located in the town of Kartarpur, Pakistan, just 4km (2.5 miles) from the border with India, the gurdwara, where Guru Nanak, the founder of Sikhism, spent his last years, was unharmed in the attack. This, the sign explains, was because the bomb landed in a sacred well.

    Almost four decades later, in 2019, the two countries opened the Kartarpur corridor, a border crossing with visa-free access to Indian pilgrims wanting to visit the gurdwara, where Guru Nanak, died in 1539. Guru Nanak’s birth will be celebrated on the November full moon on Monday, November 27 this year.

    The Sikh faith was founded in the Punjab region of the Indian subcontinent towards the end of the 15th century. Its followers found themselves divided between India and Pakistan during the 1947 Partition of India. The vast majority of Sikhs ended up in India, but many of Sikhism’s religious sites and a small Sikh minority remained in Pakistan, where during Sikh religious festivals attended by thousands of Indian pilgrims and Sikhs from other parts of the world, India-Pakistan antagonism continues to play out.

    Pakistani Sikh Surjeet Singh wears a T-shirt commemorating the deadly 1984 Indian army raid on the Golden Temple during a visit to the Gurdwara Panja Sahib and its sacred pond in Hasan Abdal, Punjab, Pakistan [Rida Arif/Al Jazeera]

    In many cases, this takes the form of support for a political movement that demands a separate Sikh homeland.

    The Khalistan movement, which took hold in the 1970s, was potent in the 1980s and ’90s. While it has lost much of its momentum since, it has recently come under the spotlight again since the killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a Canadian Sikh leader and proponent of the movement, in Canada in June. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said three months later that Canadian security agencies had “credible allegations of a potential link” between Indian government agents and Nijjar’s shooting death.

    During Sikh festivals in Pakistan, shirts with the message, “Never Forget 1984,” or images of Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, a leading figure in the Khalistan movement, are often sold.

    Bhindranwale became the face of Sikh revolutionary politics in the early 1980s. He was assassinated in June 1984 during Operation Blue Star, in which the Indian army entered the Golden Temple in Amritsar, Punjab, during a major religious event.

    The operation damaged one of the holiest Sikh shrines and resulted in the deaths of hundreds of innocent civilians, who were at the gurdwara to commemorate the martyrdom of Sikhism’s fifth guru. It caused widespread anger in the Sikh community.

    Sikhs gather at the Golden Temple complex in Amritsar, Punjab, India, on August 11, 1984 [File: Sondeep Shankar/Getty Images]

    Later that year, Indira Gandhi, the prime minister of India, who had overseen the operation, was assassinated by her two Sikh bodyguards in retaliation. Immediately, anti-Sikh riots began in Delhi. Thousands of Sikhs were killed in just a few days.

    Operation Blue Star and the anti-Sikh violence ushered in a new and much more violent phase of Sikh separatism and the demand for the establishment of Khalistan, a separate Sikh state.

    Seeking revenge for India’s role in the 1971 war that led to the creation of Bangladesh, the Pakistani state came out in support of the Khalistan movement and was accused by India of providing a haven to its fighters – training them, providing them with weapons and supporting them financially. A byproduct of this support was a softening of Pakistan’s attitude towards its own Sikh community and its heritage.

    From ‘long live Khalistan’ to preserving the gurdwaras

    “In those days [the mid- and late 1980s], you would see banners [saying] ‘Khalistan Zindabad’ (‘Long Live Khalistan’) and pictures of Bhindranwale all over the gurdwara,” said Madan Singh*, a resident of Nankana Sahib, a city in Punjab, Pakistan.

    Madan witnessed how the movement transformed the gurdwaras in Pakistan. Many expat proponents of it – Sikhs living in the United Kingdom, United States and Canada who couldn’t travel to India because of their political views – would come to Pakistan instead and speak to Indian pilgrims during religious gatherings.

    Pilgrims at Gurdwara Janam Asthan in Nankana Sahib, Pakistan [Faisal Saeed/Al Jazeera]

    He recalled a festival that took place in 1985 when the wounds of Operation Blue Star and the anti-Sikh riots of the year before were still fresh. Many powerful speeches were made in favour of Khalistan that year, including one by Sardar Ganga Singh Dhillon, a US-based supporter of a separate Sikh state who spoke vehemently against the Indian government, rousing the passion of many young Sikh men at the gathering and perhaps also aware that representatives of the Indian High Commission in Pakistan were in attendance.

    Madan described how the crowd turned towards these two diplomats, who barely managed to escape the gurdwara. “The Pakistan state intervened,” he told me when I interviewed him for my book on Pakistan’s religious minorities, A White Trail, in 2011. “I was arrested along with 25 other people and was kept in jail for 10 days.”

    While the Khalistan movement was transforming these gurdwaras into political spaces, it was also having another impact.

    With almost the entire Sikh population of West Punjab (the area of Punjab that became part of Pakistan) having migrated to India at the time of partition in 1947, hundreds of Sikh gurdwaras had been abandoned.

    These were some of the holiest shrines associated with the religion, but without the presence of the community – and with the indifference of the Pakistani state towards its non-Muslim heritage – most of these gurdwaras fell into disrepair. Some were converted into residences, schools or government buildings while others were completely lost. A few prominent ones, such as Gurdwara Janam Asthan at Nankana Sahib and Gurdwara Panja Sahib at Hassan Abdal, were looked after by one or two Sikh families who had either remained in what became Pakistan or come over from India just to look after these places of worship.

    Gurdwara Panja Sahib in Hassan Abdal, Pakistan, was one of the gurdwaras that a few Sikh families who had remained in Pakistan looked after following the partition of Pakistan and India [Rida Arif/Al Jazeera]

    Places of worship – once again

    During the heyday of the Khalistan movement, as prominent expat leaders from around the world came to Pakistan, leaders like Ganga Singh also took up the cause of renovation of these sacred spaces with the Pakistani state. During religious festivals, they would exhort the Sikh community living in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Sindh provinces to come to Punjab and look after these shrines.

    Many responded to their calls, including the family of Rajbir Singh* who moved to Nankana Sahib from Parachinar in 1978 after listening to a fiery speech there by Jagjit Singh Chauhan, another expat supporter of Khalistan.

    Gradually during the late 1970s and ’80s, Sikh families from northwestern Pakistan began moving to Nankana Sahib and, over the years, a community began to develop in the city. This migration grew exponentially in the first decade of the 2000s as the Pakistani Taliban began to take over parts of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas and began demanding jizya, a tax for non-Muslims living in Muslim-controlled areas. Thousands moved to Nankana Sahib and other cities like Peshawar, where there were already Sikh communities.

    Young Sikhs gather in Nankana Sahib, where a thriving Sikh community has grown exponentially [Faisal Saeed/Al Jazeera]

    Today, there is a thriving Sikh community of about 1,500 at Nankana Sahib, according to the latest census, ensuring that not just Gurdwara Janam Asthan but all the other gurdwaras of the city are being looked after and have become places of worship once again.

    With Nankana Sahib being an important base for the community in Punjab, many Sikhs have also now moved to other cities in the province, ensuring that more gurdwaras are being reconverted into sacred spaces.

    This process, through which the Sikh community is ensuring its presence around different gurdwaras in Pakistan, began with the Khalistan movement.

    What was also pivotal in the redevelopment of these abandoned Sikh gurdwaras was the changing attitude of the Pakistani state towards Sikh heritage in the aftermath of the movement. While previously sceptical of “foreign money” coming into the country for the renovation of the gurdwaras, the state now facilitated transfers by the expat Sikh community to fund the renovation of these gurdwaras.

    Local government officials were appointed to look after the security of these buildings while Sikh pilgrimages were arranged to these newly renovated gurdwaras, making it easier for the expat Sikhs to get visas to visit Pakistan. Through this process, several gurdwaras that had until then been abandoned and were lying in ruins were renovated, and the local Sikh community was encouraged to come and stay at these places.

    Gurdwara Sacha Sauda at Farooqabad, Gurdwara Bhai Biba Singh in Peshawar, Gurdwara Bairi Sahib in Sialkot, Gurdwara Shaheed Gunj in Lahore and Gurdwara Dera Sahib at Kartarpur are just a few examples of the gurdwaras that have been renovated and opened for Sikh pilgrims over the past four decades.

    “There was a fundamental shift in 1999,” said Kalyan Singh, assistant professor at Government College University in Lahore. Originally from the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, Kalyan’s family moved to Nankana Sahib in the 1970s. He was the first Pakistani Sikh to be awarded a doctorate.

    “The Pakistani state realised that millions of rupees were being presented to these gurdwaras in the form of donations from pilgrims. All of this money was being taken back to India by the Sikh Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee [SGPC].”

    The SGPC is an Amritsar-based organisation responsible for the administration of Sikh gurdwaras in the Indian states of Punjab and Himachal Pradesh and the union territory of Chandigarh. “The Pakistan Sikh Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee was formed in 1999 to ensure that the offerings presented to the gurdwaras were kept within Pakistan,” Kalyan said.

    Gurdwara Bairi Sahib in Sialkot is one of a number of gurdwaras in Pakistan that have been renovated and opened to Sikh pilgrims [Iqbal Qaiser/Al Jazeera]

    Gurdwaras – ‘low-hanging fruit’

    The initial renovation of these gurdwaras – facilitated by the Pakistani state, sometimes through direct support and at other times by making it easier for the expat Sikh community and organisations to send money into the country – may have taken place to appease the expat Sikh community, which supported the Khalistan movement over the years.

    But it also became increasingly clear to the state that there was a real tourist opportunity associated with these gurdwaras. This became particularly apparent after the opening of the Kartarpur corridor in 2019, from which a new local economy has emerged around Sikh religious tourism in Pakistan with several tourist companies specialising in this form of travel.

    “The policymakers in Pakistan see Sikh tourism as a low-hanging fruit,” said Jahandad Khan, founder of the Indus Heritage Club, a tour-operating company that specialises in Sikh tours in Pakistan. “There exists a global Sikh diaspora that doesn’t require a lot of marketing relative to other communities to visit Pakistan. The government of Pakistan recognises the tourism opportunity in that.”

    With the Khalistan movement in many ways irrelevant today, it is this economic imperative that now shapes the government’s relationship with these gurdwaras, especially as its economic struggles worsen.

    While the Kartarpur corridor has still not achieved its anticipated economic potential due to COVID-19 and the strained India-Pakistan relationship, Pakistan estimated it generates $36.5m per year just from tourism to this one gurdwara. “The volume of Sikh tourism in Pakistan is too tiny [at this point] to make any meaningful transformation in this country,” Jahandad said. However, given the focus of the state, Pakistan hopes to expand Sikh tourism exponentially in the coming years, bringing in much-needed dollars to a struggling economy.

    More than three decades since the heyday of the Khalistan movement, its ripple effects are still being felt in the country. The movement helped to shed light on the Sikh community and gurdwaras of Pakistan and forced the country to re-examine its relationship with this heritage. Finally, it also made Pakistan realise that there is so much more the country can gain economically from renovating and opening up these gurdwaras than it previously imagined.

    *Some names have been changed to protect identities.

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    From Khalistan to tourism dollars: Pakistan’s love-hate ties with its Sikhs | Features

  • Can Israel’s economy withstand a prolonged war on Gaza? | Israel-Palestine conflict

    Can Israel’s economy withstand a prolonged war on Gaza? | Israel-Palestine conflict

    Can Israel’s economy withstand a prolonged war on Gaza? | Israel-Palestine conflict

    Israel’s war on Gaza has depleted the Israeli workforce and forced businesses to close.

    Israel started its war on Gaza with deep pockets: $200bn dollars in reserves and billions in military aid from the United States.

    But spending is skyrocketing, revenues are falling and borrowing costs are increasing.

    Israel’s central bank says the war has proven to be more costly than initially estimated.

    Many analysts expect the economic impact will be unlike anything Israel has experienced in decades.

    Meanwhile, Gaza is repeatedly being plunged into darkness despite a wealth of natural gas off its coastline.

    Elsewhere, we look whether Argentina’s new president can fix the nation’s economic crisis.

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    Can Israel’s economy withstand a prolonged war on Gaza? | Israel-Palestine conflict