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  • Gaza’s hospitals on the brink of collapse | In Pictures News

    Gaza’s hospitals on the brink of collapse | In Pictures News

    Gaza’s hospitals on the brink of collapse | In Pictures News

    Hospitals in Gaza City and northern Gaza are in their final, “critical hours”, and are expected to completely go out of service due to a lack of fuel and as a result of “direct and intentional targeting”, the government’s media office said.

    The number of hospitals that have gone out of service since the beginning of Israel’s offensive has reached 21.

    As attacks around the Al-Shifa Hospital intensified, the head of Gaza’s largest medical facility, Muhammad Abu Salmiya, told Al Jazeera, “This day was a day of war on hospitals.”

    The government called for the “urgent, immediate, and permanent” opening of the Rafah border crossing, though which aid and medical supplies can flow to hospitals and various relief centres. It also called for much-needed fuel so that hospitals can continue operating and providing healthcare services to the thousands in need.

    “We hold the Israeli occupation and the international community, especially the US, fully responsible” for the crimes being committed against “defenceless” Palestinians in Gaza, the media office added.

    Gaza’s Ministry of Health says the number of Palestinians killed since October 7 has risen to 11,078, including at least 4,506 children.

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    Gaza’s hospitals on the brink of collapse | In Pictures News

  • Body of British man who got lost on hike in Jamaica is found after huge search | World News

    Body of British man who got lost on hike in Jamaica is found after huge search | World News

    Body of British man who got lost on hike in Jamaica is found after huge search | World News

    Body of British man who got lost on hike in Jamaica is found after huge search | World News

    A British man who went missing while visiting Jamaica has been found dead. 

    Robert Dyer, from Lewisham in southeast London, got lost while on a hike in woods near St Elizabeth in the south-west of the Caribbean island on Sunday.

    His family last heard from the 60-year-old at around 1pm on Monday, when he told them he was lost, according to reports by local media.

    His son, Lewis Dyer, posted an appeal online on Tuesday to say his father was lost somewhere in Ballards Valley and had been without water for days.

    Mr Dyer’s body was found at 9.15am local time, the Jamaica Constabulary Force said in a statement.

    Hundreds of police officers were involved in the search, and the force also thanked locals who were out “night and day” and played a “critical role” in the operation.

    The Jamaica Defence Force and the fire brigade were also involved in the search.

    The force said “no foul play” was suspected in his death.

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    “Throughout the search, we have been determined to find Mr Robert Dyer,” a police officer said in a video posted to social media.

    “We were hopeful we would find him alive.

    “It is very unfortunate that we did not manage to find him earlier, but we did everything available based on the information that we had.”

    Mr Dyer was a personal trainer and co-founded Mace Masters, an exercise training company.

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    Body of British man who got lost on hike in Jamaica is found after huge search | World News

  • Grammy nominations: Taylor Swift breaks more records while SZA leads the pack | Ents & Arts News

    Grammy nominations: Taylor Swift breaks more records while SZA leads the pack | Ents & Arts News

    Grammy nominations: Taylor Swift breaks more records while SZA leads the pack | Ents & Arts News

    Grammy nominations: Taylor Swift breaks more records while SZA leads the pack | Ents & Arts News

    Pop powerhouse Taylor Swift has broken yet another record as the Grammy award nominations are revealed.

    Swift, who is currently on the road with her epic Eras Tour, has become the first artist to have seven tracks nominated in the prestigious Song Of The Year category, with her track Anti-Hero picking up a nod.

    She has previously been in the category with You Belong With Me, Shake It Off, Blank Space, Lover, Cardigan and All Too Well.

    Swift’s latest studio album Midnights is up for Album Of The Year, while her remix of the track Karma with Ice Spice was recognised in the duos category.

    If she wins the album category, it would make her the first artist to bag the accolade four times.

    But it’s SZA who picks up the most nominations this year with nine, who is also up for song, album and duo performance, as well as best R&B performance and Record Of The Year.

    She’s followed by indie artist Phoebe Bridgers and her group Boygenius, as well as Olivia Rodrigo and Victoria Monet.

    Billie Eilish and Miley Cyrus also picked up a handful of nominations, with the former getting recognition for her song What Was I Made For, which she wrote for the Barbie movie, while Cyrus’ hit Flowers grabs several nods.

    Barbie dominates the soundtrack category, with five of the six nominated tracks coming from the summer smash – including Ryan Gosling’s I’m Just Ken and Dua Lipa’s Dance The Night.

    Jon Batiste has the most nominations among male artists, going up in the jazz category, as well as Record, Song and Album of the year.

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    1:10

    Taylor Swift’s film premieres

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    Shania Twain’s tour crew taken to hospital after bus crash

    Beyonce remains the most decorated artist in Grammy history, with 32 trophies, followed by Hungarian conductor Georg Solti with 31, and legendary producer Quincy Jones who has 28.

    Next year’s ceremony will be held at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles on 4 February, and be televised in the US on CBS and Paramount+.

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    Grammy nominations: Taylor Swift breaks more records while SZA leads the pack | Ents & Arts News

  • Analysis: Why Biden is pressuring Israel on Gaza ‘humanitarian pauses’ | Israel-Palestine conflict News

    Analysis: Why Biden is pressuring Israel on Gaza ‘humanitarian pauses’ | Israel-Palestine conflict News

    Analysis: Why Biden is pressuring Israel on Gaza ‘humanitarian pauses’ | Israel-Palestine conflict News

    Over the past weeks, dozens of countries and leaders have asked Israel, directly, indirectly and through the United Nations, to temporarily cease assaults on Gaza. Pleas were ignored or turned down; the UN talks drowned in technicalities and semantics.

    In a surprise announcement on Thursday, the White House claimed that Israel would allow “limited pauses” in its military operations “for humanitarian reasons”. None has happened so far, but a promise is a promise.

    At the same time, United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that Gaza should not be re-occupied by Israel and that Palestinians who fled Gaza City should be allowed to return.

    All of this, even as the US has bolstered its military presence in the region, with two aircraft carrier battle groups deployed in the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean, and additional air and land forces reinforcing friendly bases throughout the region. Some of the 3,400 US troops in Iraq and Syria have nevertheless come under isolated and unprecise missile and drone attacks, apparently from various sub-state armed groups. The US has also rushed massive air and sea deliveries of weapons and ammunition to Israel.

    So what is really happening?

    Israel is the traditional, strongest and guaranteed American strategic partner in the Middle East, and it is unlikely that, whatever the differences between their administrations may be, that position will ever change. But the US needs its Arab strategic partners, too.

    In deciding on its Middle Eastern policies and strategies, Washington has many factors to consider. They include, among other things, regional and global security, its relations with Iran, security and cost of oil and gas supplies, freedom and security of international shipping lanes, and containing the influence of Russia and China. It is a complicated mix, even at the best of times.

    When policies are formulated and implemented by amateurs guided by the partiality of private inclinations, it often spoils years of hard work. Such was the case during the four disastrous years of the Trump administration’s off-the-hip approach to the Middle East. The president’s main “expert” was his then 37-year-old son-in-law. His proposed “peace plan” was fodder for Israeli hawks, but stunned and angered Palestinians.

    Stepping back from current Gaza-related issues, it is obvious that most American problems in the Middle East originate from two fundamental reasons: the end of the bipolar world and Washington’s relations with Iran.

    For 50 years after World War II, the division between the American-dominated West and Eastern Communism led by the Soviet Union directed political allegiances.

    In the Middle East, Israel was in the American camp, as were Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the Gulf states; Syria, Egypt, Iraq and Libya were on the Soviet side. Convincing Egypt to change its allegiance from East to West and sign the peace accord with Israel in 1978 was one of Washington’s major strategic victories in the Middle East during the Cold War.

    Under the rule of the shah, Iran probably had the most pro-American regime from the Mediterranean to the Pacific, but that equation flipped on its head after the Islamic Revolution of 1979. Overnight, the US became Iran’s biggest enemy.

    In the best tradition of pragmatic foreign policy, the US encouraged and helped Saddam Hussein’s Iraq to invade its bigger neighbour, Iran. The war that dragged on for almost 10 years was practically, if not directly, a US proxy war against Iran. The US fought another proxy war through the mujahideen against Soviet-controlled Afghanistan.

    While the Cold War was often hard and unfair on the interests of individual small countries involved, the bipolar strategic paradigm had its advantages: Both big protectors took care not to allow local troubles to explode into major wars, usually with success.

    When communism caved in, the West allowed itself to proclaim “the end of history,” believing that it had won its big strategic struggle once and forever, and that future confrontations would be small and easily controllable. What a mistake.

    In less than a decade, the US allowed its regional oversight and insight into potential trouble spots to wilt.

    With much weakened analytical capabilities, the United States ignorantly, arrogantly and overconfidently let itself be led into three successive wars that ended in embarrassing setbacks for Washington.

    After years of being bogged down in Iraq, the US hastily pulled out when it realised that continuing there cost too much in soldiers’ lives, money and especially its reputation in the Middle East and Islamic countries. In a similar fashion, it pulled out of Afghanistan a decade later.

    Washington repeated the mistake it made in Iraq by getting involved in the Syrian war, although this time it did not invade openly. Its support for anti-government factions ended up helping, of all factions, the pro-Iranian armed groups gain influence and strength. Syria also cemented its ties with Moscow. The end result: Iran spread its regional influence, and the US failed to check it.

    Other regional conflicts, too, have shown the limits of US power and influence — whether in its failure to stop the war between Saudi Arabia and the Houthis in Yemen, or to end the impasse in Libya.

    It is then understandable, that in the year prior to the 2024 elections, Biden wants to appear active in the region with a more balanced approach, aimed at demonstrating that the US still does have the ability to mediate peace.

    If that means mentioning some things that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his hardline cabinet don’t want to hear — let alone heed — so be it.

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    Analysis: Why Biden is pressuring Israel on Gaza ‘humanitarian pauses’ | Israel-Palestine conflict News

  • Pro-Palestinian demonstrators blockade military suppliers in UK, US | In Pictures News

    Pro-Palestinian demonstrators blockade military suppliers in UK, US | In Pictures News

    Pro-Palestinian demonstrators blockade military suppliers in UK, US | In Pictures News

    Dozens of pro-Palestinian protesters blocked the entrances to the facilities of military suppliers in the United Kingdom and the United States, demanding an end to arms sales to Israel.

    They were joined in their rallies by trade unionists, holding banners and Palestinian flags outside a BAE Systems factory in southeastern England on Friday, targeting the United Kingdom’s biggest military supplier.

    “Stop arming Israel”, read one sign at the protest at BAE’s Rochester, Kent, site, where the firm tests and assembles electronic equipment used on military aircraft and in surveillance systems.

    Other placards read “no business as usual” and “taxpayers have blood on their hands”. Organisers said they were aiming to shut down the factory “which provides components for military aircraft currently being used by Israeli forces in the bombardment of Gaza”.

    They said it was part of an “international day of action for Palestine” organised in response to a call by Palestinian trade unionists.

    In the United States, demonstrators had gathered in front of the Northrop Grumman office complex in San Diego, California, on Thursday to protest the sale of their weapons to Israel, raising placards that read, “End the genocide of Gaza now”.

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    Pro-Palestinian demonstrators blockade military suppliers in UK, US | In Pictures News