Category: English

  • S. Korea’s defense ministry suspends duty of commanders involved in martial law declaration

    SEOUL — South Korea’s defense ministry said on Friday that it suspended the duty of three military commanders involved in the martial law declaration, made by President Yoon Suk-yeol earlier this week.

    Chiefs of the capital defense command, the army special warfare command, and the counterintelligence command were suspended and transferred to other units.

    It came amid the lingering worry about another martial law declaration in the opposition bloc.

    Yoon declared an emergency martial law Tuesday night before repealing it early Wednesday as the parliament voted against it. The revocation was approved at a cabinet meeting.

    XINHUA

  • 8 terrorists killed in separate operations in NW Pakistan

    ISLAMABAD — Eight terrorists were killed in two military operations in Pakistan’s northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, the military said.

    The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the media wing of the Pakistan Army, said on Thursday night in a statement that personnel of security forces engaged with the terrorists in two separate locations in the province.

    In the first engagement, the ISPR said that the security forces conducted an intelligence-based operation in the South Waziristan district on the reported presence of terrorists, resulting in the killing of two terrorists, including a ring leader.

    Two terrorists were also arrested during the operation in South Waziristan, the ISPR added.

    In another operation, six terrorists were killed in the Lakki Marwat district of the province.

    The ISPR said that the killed terrorists remained actively involved in terrorist activities against security forces as well as extortion and target killing of civilians in the area.

    Clearance of the surrounding areas is being conducted to eliminate any other terrorists found in the area, it added.

    XINHUA

  • 9 killed in Ecuador armed attacks

    QUITO — At least nine have been killed in two armed attacks in west Ecuador, local media reported Thursday.

    Early Thursday morning, police confirmed the discovery of six male bodies aged 17-25, all piled together.

    Local media reports indicated that some of the bodies were bound and showed gunshot wounds. Police have transported the bodies to a forensic center in the port city of Manta, Manabi.

    On Wednesday night, three members of the same family were murdered in the city of Bahia de Caraquez, Sucre canton, Manabi.

    Manabi, a key region for drug trafficking on Ecuador’s Pacific coast, has seen rising violence in 2024, with numerous crimes linked to organized crime, police said.

    In response, the government deployed police and military forces to target criminal groups in conflict zones. President Daniel Noboa declared an “internal armed conflict” in January against 22 criminal gangs labeled as “terrorist.”

    XINHUA

  • 4 dead in Brazilian highway accident

    SAO PAULO — Two trucks and a car on Thursday crashed on a main highway in Sao Paulo, Brazil, killing four people and leaving several others injured, the local fire department reported.

    The accident occurred on the Bandeirantes highway when two trucks collided and hit another vehicle stopped at the side of the road.

    According to the Sao Paulo Fire Department report, one of the trucks entered a restricted area of the highway, causing multiple crashes.

    The accident occurred early Thursday morning and caused a major traffic jam. A section of the highway was closed to attend to the victims and move the accident vehicles.

    XINHUA

  • Syria war monitor says tens of thousands flee Homs as rebels advance

    BEIRUT — Tens of thousands of members of President Bashar Assad’s Alawite minority community were fleeing Syria’s third city Homs Thursday, for fear that Islamist-led rebels would keep up their advance, a war monitor said.

    Homs lies just 40 kilometers (25 miles) south of Hama, which the rebels captured on Thursday.

    Analysts said they expected the fighters led by Islamist group Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS) to push on toward the city, a key link between Damascus and the Alawite heartland on the Mediterranean coast.

    Britain-based war monitor, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, reported “the mass exodus of Alawites from Homs neighborhoods, with tens of thousands heading toward the Syrian coast, fearing the rebel advance.”

    Khaled, who lives on the city’s outskirts told AFP that “the road leading to (coastal) Tartus province was glowing… due to the lights of hundreds of cars on their way out.”

    In April 2014, at least 100 people, mostly civilians, were killed in twin attacks in Homs that targeted a majority Alawite neighborhood.

    The attacks were claimed by the Al-Nusra Front, the Syrian branch of Al-Qaeda which now HTS leader Abu Mohammed Al-Jolani previously led.

    Jolani announced his group had cut ties with the jihadists in 2016, and Al-Nusra was dissolved the following year, to be replaced by the key component of HTS.

    Haidar, 37, who lives in an Alawite-majority neighborhood, told AFP by telephone that “fear is the umbrella that covers Homs now.”

    “I’ve never seen this scene in my life. We are extremely afraid, we don’t know what is happening from one hour to the next,” he said.

    He has managed to send his parents to Tartus, but has not found a car to take him and his wife “due to the high demand.”

    “When we find a car, we’ll leave as fast as possible for Tartus.”

    The province, which hosts a naval base operated by Assad ally Russia, has remained safe though 13 years of war.

    AN-AFP

  • Palestinian security forces exchange gunfire with militants in West Bank

    JENIN — Gunfights erupted in Jenin in the north of the occupied West Bank on Thursday between militants and Palestinian security forces following the theft of vehicles belonging to the Palestinian Authority, according to AFP journalists in the city.

    The intense exchanges of fire began around 9:30 PM (1930 GMT) and followed the deployment of members of the security forces around the Jenin refugee camp, which is adjacent to the city and a stronghold for armed groups in the territory, according to the journalist.

    Witnesses reported that the Palestinian security forces set up roadblocks on routes leaving the camp.

    Tensions were running high in Jenin earlier in the day after a group of armed men seized two vehicles belonging to the PA and paraded through the streets waving Islamic Jihad flags.

    In a statement, General Anwar Rajab, spokesman for the security forces, said “a group of outlaws opened fire on the headquarters of the security services” and stole two vehicles.

    He said the security forces would “recover the vehicles and hold accountable anyone who committed this act.”

    Tensions between the PA and armed groups appear to have been exacerbated by recent arrests by the security forces.

    At a press conference inside Jenin camp, Mahmud Abu Talal, spokesman for a collective of local armed groups, said the PA had “abandoned its people in the most difficult circumstances.”

    He rejected the label of outlaws and accused the PA of “carrying out a continuous operation to undermine those who protect their people.”

    Jenin has long been a bastion of Palestinian armed groups and was the focus of a major Israeli raid launched at the end of August.

    Violence in the West Bank, already increasing, surged after the start of the war in Gaza in October 2023.

    Israel has occupied the territory since 1967.

    AN-AFP

  • 7.0 earthquake off Northern California prompts brief tsunami warning

    SAN FRANCISCO — A 7.0 magnitude earthquake shook a large area of Northern California on Thursday, knocking items off grocery store shelves, sending children scrambling under desks and prompting a brief tsunami warning for 5.3 million people along the US West Coast.

    The quake struck at 10:44 a.m. west of Ferndale, a small city in coastal Humboldt County, about 130 miles (209 km) from the Oregon border, the US Geological Survey said.

    It was felt as far south as San Francisco, some 270 miles (435 km) away, where residents felt a rolling motion for several seconds.

    It was followed by multiple smaller aftershocks.

    There were no immediate reports of major damage or injury.

    The tsunami warning was in effect for roughly an hour. It was issued shortly after the temblor struck and covered nearly 500 miles (805 km) of coastline, from the edge of California’s Monterey Bay north into Oregon.

    “It was a strong quake, our building shook, we’re fine but I have a mess to clean up right now,” said Julie Kreitzer, owner of Golden Gait Mercantile, a store packed with food, wares and souvenirs that is a main attraction in Ferndale.

    “We lost a lot of stuff. It’s probably worse than two years ago. I have to go, I have to try and salvage something for the holidays because it’s going to be a tough year,” Kreitzer said before hanging up.

    The region — known for its redwood forests, scenic mountains and the three-county Emerald Triangle’s legendary marijuana crop — was struck by a 6.4 magnitude quake in 2022 that left thousands of people without power and water. The northwest corner of California is the most seismically active part of the state since it’s where three tectonic plates meet, seismologist Lucy Jones said on the social media platform BlueSky.

    Shortly after the quake, phones in Northern California buzzed with the tsunami warning from the National Weather Service that said: “A series of powerful waves and strong currents may impact coasts near you. You are in danger.
    Get away from coastal waters. Move to high ground or inland now. Keep away from the coast until local officials say it is safe to return.”

    Numerous cities urged people to evacuate to higher ground as a precaution, including Eureka.

    AN-AP, Dec 5, 2024

  • An Israeli strike on a Gaza hospital kills a teen in a wheelchair

    GAZA — An Israeli drone strike on a hospital compound in northern Gaza on Thursday killed a 16-year-old boy in a wheelchair and wounded at least 12 other people, including medical staff, the Gaza Health Ministry and the hospital director said.

    Dr. Hossam Abu Safiya said an Israeli drone deliberately targeted patients and staff at the entrance to the reception and emergency area of Kamal Adwan Hospital, killing Mahmoud Abu Al-Aish, a patient being taken in a wheelchair to the radiology department.

    Abu Safiya spoke in a video he posted on social media, standing inside the hospital as doctors operated on a wounded man behind him, calling it, “The injured treating the injured.”

    Abu Safiya was wounded in his thigh and back by an Israeli drone strike on the hospital last month.

    Israel says it goes to great lengths to avoid harming civilians as it battles Hamas.

    Kamal Adwan Hospital has been struck multiple times over the past two months since Israel launched a fierce military operation in northern Gaza against Hamas militants. In October, Israeli forces raided the hospital, saying that militants were sheltering inside and arrested a number of people, including some staff. Hospital officials denied the claim.

    The United Nations humanitarian office estimates up to 75,000 people remain in the northern towns of Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahiya and the Jabaliya refugee camp.

    The area has been almost completely sealed off from humanitarian aid for two months and experts have warned that a famine may have set in.

    A medical relief team from the UN World Health Organization was able to reach Kamal Adwan Hospital on Monday, delivering 10,000 liters of fuel (2,640 gallons), blood supplies, essential medical items and food.

    AN-AP, Dec 5, 2024

  • Israeli airstrike kills 15 Palestinians in N. Gaza: sources

    GAZA — At least 15 Palestinians were killed Thursday afternoon in an Israeli airstrike on the northern Gaza Strip, Palestinian sources said.

    Israeli warplanes targeted a residential house in the town of Beit Lahia, according to local sources and eyewitnesses. Mahmoud Basal, spokesman for Civil Defense in Gaza, told Xinhua that the raid killed 15 people, including children and women.

    The Israeli army has not commented on this incident.

    Also on Thursday, the General Directorate of Civil Defense in Gaza warned of a possible suspension of services and humanitarian interventions it provides to displaced citizens residing in what was designated by the Israeli army as a “humanitarian area” in southern Gaza.

    Muhammad Al-Mughair, director of supply for Civil Defense in Gaza, said in a press statement that the Civil Defense is suffering from a crisis due to fuel shortage in the “humanitarian area,” warning that the continued prevention of fuel supply threatens the lives of thousands of displaced people.

    Israel has been launching a large-scale offensive against Hamas in Gaza to retaliate against a Hamas rampage through the southern Israeli border on Oct. 7, 2023, during which about 1,200 people were killed and around 250 others taken hostage.

    The Palestinian death toll from ongoing Israeli attacks in the Gaza Strip has risen to 44,580, Gaza-based health authorities said in a statement on Thursday.

    XINHUA

  • Hezbollah to pay total of $77 million and rent to families affected by war

    BEIRUT — Hezbollah has paid out more than $50 million in cash gifts to families affected by war with Israel, its leader Naim Qassem said on Thursday, as the Iran-backed group seeks to shore up its support base after a devastating conflict with Israel.

    The payments of between $300 and $400 per person will total more than $77 million when paid out to all 233,500 families who registered, Qassem said in a recorded speech, thanking Iran for its financing of the effort alongside Hezbollah.

    Hezbollah will also provide a lump sum of $8,000 to those whose primary homes were destroyed in the war, and $6,000 for a year of rent for those living in Beirut or its suburbs and $4,000 for those living outside the capital until they can move back home, he said. The payments would be financed mainly by Iran, he said.

    Israeli strikes have flattened swathes of Shi’ite majority areas Hezbollah’s support base call home in Beirut’s southern suburbs and southern and eastern Lebanon.

    A ceasefire to the 14-month conflict took effect late last month, though Israel has been accused by U.N., French and Lebanese officials of violating it dozens of times.

    Israel says it is enforcing the terms of the deal and also accuses Hezbollah of breaching it.

    With the guns mostly silent, Qassem said Hezbollah was turning its focus to reconstruction.

    The World Bank says nearly 100,000 homes in Lebanon were partially or fully damaged during the conflict, amounting to $3.2 billion in damages and losses.

    The conflict began on Oct. 8, 2023, when Hezbollah began firing on Israel in solidarity with its ally Hamas, and then steeply escalated in September this year.

    Qassem called on “Arab brothers” and the international community to participate in reconstruction and said Hezbollah would work hand in hand with the Lebanese government.

    REUTERS