Category: English

  • S. Korean police officers confront security service agents to raid President Yoon’s office

    SEOUL — South Korean police officers had confronted security service agents for over three hours to raid the office of President Yoon Suk-yeol, multiple media outlets said Wednesday citing the police.

    A group of police investigators attempted to raid the presidential office in central Seoul from 11:50 a.m. local time (0250 GMT), but security service agents blocked them from getting in for security reasons.

    Earlier in the day, the police launched a raid on the National Police Agency, the Seoul Metropolitan Police and the National Assembly Police Guards, as well as the presidential office.

    The police investigated insurrection and other charges over Yoon’s martial law declaration on the night of Dec. 3, rescinded by the National Assembly hours later.

    President Yoon reportedly was not staying at the presidential office building.

    XINHUA

  • 65 killed in alleged paramilitary attack in east-central Sudan

    KHARTOUM — At least 65 civilians were killed on Tuesday in an artillery attack by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) on Omdurman city, north of the Sudanese capital Khartoum, according to Khartoum State government.

    XINHUA

  • Israeli airstrike kills seven Palestinians, injures others in Gaza

    GAZA – An Israeli airstrike Tuesday evening killed seven Palestinians and injured others in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, according to local sources.

    They said that Israeli fighter jets targeted a house belonging to the Khalifa family in the refugee camp, claiming the lives of seven people and injuring others.

    They added that Israeli fighter jets bombed a six-storey building belonging to the Kasba family in Gaza city neighborhood of Sheikh Radwan.

    WAFA, Dec 10, 2024

  • Mohammed al-Bashir named to lead Syrian transitional government until March 2025

    Mohammed al-Bashir announced Tuesday that he has been tasked with heading a transitional government in Syria until early March 2025 following the collapse of the government of Bashar al-Assad.

    In a brief televised statement, al-Bashir said he would lead the transitional authority until March 1.

    Al-Bashir, born in 1983, was an electrical engineer and head of the “Syrian Salvation Government” (SSG) in Idlib formed in 2017 by the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham and other Syrian militant groups during the Syrian civil war. The SSG wielded administrative and service-related authority in areas under the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) control in northern Syria.

    XINHUA

  • Israeli navy launches attack to destroy Syrian fleet — Israeli military

    JERUSALEM — The Israeli military announced on Tuesday that its navy carried out a large-scale operation to destroy the former Bashar al-Assad regime’s fleet.

    The strikes destroyed “numerous” vessels armed with sea-to-sea missiles in Mina al-Bayda Bay and the port of Latakia on the Syrian coast in an overnight attack between Monday and Tuesday, it said.

    The operation aimed to prevent the fleet’s weaponry from falling into hostile hands, it added.

    Separately, the Israeli Air Force has conducted about 250 airstrikes in Syria since the collapse of Assad’s government, Israel’s state-owned Kan TV reported.

    Israeli officials said the strikes were intended to destroy advanced weapons that could threaten Israel.

    XINHUA

  • Mass evacuation of Philippine villages underway after a brief but major volcanic eruption

    MANILA — About 87,000 people were being evacuated in a central Philippine region Tuesday a day after a volcano briefly erupted with a towering ash plume and superhot streams of gas and debris hurtling down its western slopes.

    The latest eruption of Mount Kanlaon on central Negros island did not cause any immediate casualties, but the alert level was raised one level, indicating further and more explosive eruptions may occur.

    Volcanic ash fell on a wide area, including Antique province, more than 200 kilometers (124 miles) across seawaters west of the volcano, obscuring visibility and posing health risks, Philippine chief volcanologist Teresito Bacolcol and other officials said by telephone.

    At least six domestic flights and a flight bound for Singapore were canceled and two local flights were diverted in the region Monday and Tuesday due to Kanlaon’s eruption, according to the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines.

    The mass evacuations were being carried out urgently in towns and villages nearest the western and southern slopes of Kanlaon which were blanketed by its ash, including in La Castellana town in Negros Occidental where nearly 47,000 people have to be evacuated out of a 6-kilometer (3.7-mile) danger zone, the Office of Civil Defense said.

    More than 6,000 have moved to evacuation centers aside from those who have temporarily transferred to the homes of relatives in La Castellana by Tuesday morning, the town’s mayor, Rhumyla Mangilimutan, told The Associated Press by telephone.

    President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said authorities were ready to provide support to large numbers of displaced villagers and that his social welfare secretary flew early Tuesday to the affected region.

    “We are ready to support the families who have been evacuated outside the 6-kilometer danger zone,” Marcos told reporters.

    Government scientists were monitoring the air quality due to the risk of contamination from toxic volcanic gases that may require more people to be evacuated from areas affected by Monday’s eruption.

    Disaster-response contingents were rapidly establishing evacuation centers and seeking supplies of face masks, food and hygiene packs ahead of the Christmas season, traditionally a peak time for holiday travel and family celebrations in the largely Roman Catholic nation.

    Authorities also shut schools and imposed a nighttime curfew in the most vulnerable areas.

    The Philippines’ Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said the nearly four-minute eruption of Kanlaon volcano on Monday afternoon had caused a pyroclastic density current — a superhot stream of gas, ash, debris and rocks that can incinerate anything in its path.

    “It’s a one-time but major eruption,” Bacolcol told the AP, adding that volcanologists were assessing if Monday’s eruption spewed old volcanic debris and rocks clogged in and near the summit crater or was caused by rising magma from underneath.

    Few volcanic earthquakes were detected ahead of Monday’s explosion, Bacolcol said.

    The alert level around Kanlaon was placed on Monday to the third-highest of a five-step warning system, indicating “magmatic eruption” may have begun and may progress to further explosive eruptions.

    The 2,435-meter (7,988-foot) volcano, one of the country’s 24 most-active volcanoes, last erupted in June sending hundreds of villagers to emergency shelters.

    In 1996, three hikers were killed near the peak and several others were later rescued when Kanlaon erupted without warning, officials said.

    Located in the so-called Pacific “Ring of Fire,” a region prone to earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, the Philippines is also lashed by about 20 typhoons and storms a year and is among the countries most prone to natural disasters.

    AN-AP

  • 104 journalists killed in 2024, over half in Gaza: press group

    BRUSSELS, Belgium — This year has been “particularly deadly” for journalists with 104 killed worldwide, over half of them being in Gaza, the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) said Tuesday.

    The toll for 2024 is down on the 129 deaths in 2023 but still makes it “one of the worst years” on record, IFJ general secretary Anthony Bellanger told AFP.

    According to the figures collated by the press group 55 Palestinian media workers were killed in 2024 in the face of Israel’s offensive in Gaza.

    “Since the start of the war on 7 October 2023, at least 138 Palestinian journalists have been killed,” the federation said.

    Bellanger condemned the “massacre that is happening before the eyes of the world.”

    He said that “many journalists were targeted” in Gaza deliberately, while others had found themselves “in the wrong place, at the wrong time” in the fighting.

    After the Middle East, the second most dangerous region for journalists was Asia with 20 killed, including six in Pakistan, five in Bangladesh and three in India.

    In Europe, the war in Ukraine continued to claim journalist victims with four killed in 2024.

    Meanwhile, the IFJ said that across the globe 520 journalists were in prison — a sharp uptick on the 427 being held behind bars last year.

    China topped the list as the worst jailer of reporters with 135 being detained, including in Hong Kong, where the authorities have been criticized by Western nations for imposing national security laws quashing dissent and other freedoms.

    The IFJ’s count for the number of journalists killed is typically far higher than that of Reporters Without Borders, due to different counting methods.

    In 2023 Reporters Without Borders said 54 journalists and two collaborators were killed in the course of their work. The NGO will publish its own figure for 2024 later this week.

    AN-AFP

  • Syria rebels say found dozens of tortured bodies in hospital near Damascus

    Sanitary servicemen arrange the bodies of dead persons at the morgue of a hospital in Damascus on December 10, 2024. (AFP)

    BEIRUT, Lebanon — Rebel fighters told AFP they found around 40 bodies bearing signs of torture inside a hospital morgue near Damascus on Monday, stuffed into body bags with numbers and sometimes names written on them.

    “I opened the door of the morgue with my own hands, it was a horrific sight: about 40 bodies were piled up showing signs of gruesome torture,” Mohammed Al-Hajj, a fighter with rebel factions from the country’s south told AFP by telephone from Damascus.

    AFP saw dozens of photographs and video footage that Hajj said he took himself and showed corpses with evident signs of torture: eyes and teeth gouged out, blood splattered and bruising.

    The footage taken in Harasta hospital also showed a piece of cloth containing bones, while a decomposing body’s rib cage peaked through the skin.

    The bodies were placed in white plastic bags or wrapped in white cloth, some stained with blood.

    Corpses had pieces of cloth or adhesive tape bearing scribbled numbers and sometimes names.

    Some seemed to have been killed recently.

    While some of the dead were wearing clothes, others were naked.

    Islamist-led rebels seized power on Sunday ousting former President Bashar Assad, whose family ruled Syria with an iron fist for more than five decades.

    At the core of the system of rule that Assad inherited from his father Hafez was a brutal complex of prisons and detention centers used to eliminate dissent by jailing those suspected of stepping out of the ruling Baath party’s line.

    Thousands of people hoping to reunite with loved ones who disappeared in Assad’s jails had gathered Monday evening at the notorious Saydnaya prison outside Damascus, AFP correspondents said.

    Hajj said the fighters received a tip from a hospital worker about the bodies that were being dumped there.

    “We informed the military command of what we found and coordinated with the Syrian Red Crescent, which transported the bodies to a Damascus hospital, so that families can come and identify them,” he added.

    Diab Serriya, who cofounded the Association of Detainees and the Missing in Sednaya Prison (ADMSP) watchdog, told AFP the bodies were likely detainees from Saydnaya prison.

    “Harasta Hospital served as the main center for collecting the bodies of detainees,” he said.

    “Bodies would be sent there from Saydnaya prison or Tishrin Hospital, and from Harasta, they would be transferred to mass graves,” he added.
    “It is very important to document what we are seeing in the video.”

    According to the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor, at least 60,000 people have been killed under torture or because of terrible conditions in Assad’s detention centers.

    Since the start of the conflict, President Bashar Assad’s government has been accused of human rights abuses and of cases of torture, rape and summary executions.

    Hajj said he hoped that efforts will focus on “exposing the crimes committed by Assad in prisons and detention centers” during the transitional period.

    “We hope Assad will be held to account as a war criminal,” he said.

    AN-AFP

  • US searching for journalist Austin Tice in Syria prisons, White House says

    WASHINGTON — U.S. officials are communicating with people on the ground in Syria to seek information about Austin Tice, an American journalist captured more than 12 years ago in Syria, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said on Monday.

    “This is a top priority for us – to find Austin Tice, to locate the prison where he may be held, get him out, get him home safely to his family,” Sullivan said in an interview with ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

    “”We are talking through the Turks and others to people on the ground in Syria to say, ‘Help us with this. Help us get Austin Tice home.’”

    Tice, a former U.S. Marine and a freelance journalist, was 31 when he was abducted in August 2012 while reporting in Damascus on the uprising against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who was ousted by Syrian rebels who seized the capital Damascus on Sunday. Syria had denied he was being held.

    Assad fled to Russia after a 13-year civil war and six decades of his family’s autocratic rule.

    President Joe Biden said on Sunday that the U.S. government believes Tice is alive.

    “We believe he’s alive. We think we can get him back but we have no direct evidence to that yet.

    And Assad should be held accountable,” Biden said. “We have to identify where he is.”

    Sullivan met Tice’s mother, Debra Tice, on Friday at the White House after she told journalists at the National Press Club that she believed her son was alive.

    REUTERS

  • Turkish military helicopters collide in midair, killing 6 military personnel

    ANKARA — Two Turkish military helicopters collided in midair on Monday, causing one of them to crash and killing six military personnel on board, officials said. The second helicopter landed safely.

    Five of the victims died at the site of the accident while a sixth died of his injuries at a hospital, the defense ministry said.

    The crash occurred in the southwestern province of Isparta during regular training flights, according to the region’s governor, Abdullah Erin.

    A brigadier general who was in charge of the military aviation school was among the victims, he said.

    It was not immediately clear what caused the two helicopters to come into contact. Erin said an investigation has been launched.

    The private DHA news agency said the UH-1 utility helicopter crashed into a field and split in two. The second helicopter landed some 400 meters (yards) away.

    AN-AP