December 22, 2023

March To Protest Excessive Arrests Of Baluch Men Ends Violently In Islamabad

Police in Islamabad used force to disperse a protest by Baluchis in the early hours of December 21 after the protesters marched hundreds of kilometers to draw attention to excessive arrests of Baluch men and their mistreatment by police. The woman who led the march, Mahrang Baloch, said on X, formerly Twitter, that she was taken into custody along with other protesters, while several protesters were reportedly injured by police as the protest was dispersed and people were rounded up and placed into transport vehicles. The march “is under attack by the Islamabad police,” Baloch said on X. “I have been arrested along with several women and men by Islamabad police, but remember fascist state, we will defeat you.” Participants in the march posted videos on X showing people, mainly women, marching and decrying alleged brutal police beatings of their sons. Before her own arrest, Baloch said many youths had been arrested and many had been injured by tear gas and violence. “Right now, we are being treated worse than animals. Will the world raise its voice for us against this barbarism?” she said on X. The protesters reached Islamabad nearly a month after setting off from the Turbat district in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan Province to demand a judicial inquiry into the killing of Balach Maula Bakhsh, who relatives say died in police custody in November. The killing is just one of the crimes that protesters want authorities to investigate. They also accuse Pakistani security agencies of a string of abductions and extrajudicial killings of Baluch men. The authorities reject the allegations. The march passed through the provincial capital, Quetta, before heading toward Islamabad. Source:https://www.rferl.org/a/pakistan-balochistan-march-protest-police-violence-/32740747.html

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Gunman kills 14 people and wounds 25 others at Prague university

  A shooter killed at least 14 people and wounded 25 others at a university in Prague on Thursday in the deadliest mass shooting the Czech Republic has seen in decades. Authorities believe the gunman, a 24-year-old man, died by suicide, Czech Police Chief Martin Vondrášek said Thursday evening, but added it had not yet been confirmed. The gunman, who police said was a student of the Faculty of Arts at Charles University, has not been formally identified because of the severity of his injuries, the chief said. Police have not named him. Authorities are still investigating a motive in the rampage, which took place at the Faculty of Arts building of Charles University, in the center of the capital city. The area is popular with tourists and close to major attractions, just across the Vltava River from Prague Castle. The shooter traveled to Prague from his hometown village of Hostouň, the police chief said. As the violence broke out, some students locked themselves in classrooms to avoid the gunfire, police said. A picture shared on social media showed several people hiding on an outside ledge high up in a building. The university was holding classes on Thursday and was due to go on Christmas break on December 23, according to a schedule on the university’s website. Students are seen hiding on a ledge at Charles University. From @elirozic/X Graduate student Jakob Weizman told CNN he was in a classroom with his professor when they heard what sounded like gunshots and screams. The 25-year-old locked the door and with his professor, began pushing furniture against it to create a barricade. “After I made the barricade and locked the door, I hid under the desk and I was preparing myself for anything that could happen,” Weizman said. “I did not know if (the shooter) was going to come through the door or from the window.” He took down the barricade only when police arrived, he said. Authorities escorted him down and out of the building, the student told CNN he saw blood on each floor. “It was very traumatizing,” he said. Weizman told CNN he and his professor barricaded a classroom door after they heard what sounded like gunshots and screams. Jakob Weizman In a later news conference Thursday night, Vondrášek revised the number of people killed to 14, after previously saying 15 people had died. Of the 25 people injured, 10 were in serious condition, the police chief said. The next update from authorities is expected Friday morning. Shooter may be linked to other killings The police chief said authorities had information about the shooter before the university killings, saying police received a tip he was traveling to Prague with the intention to take his own life. Enter your email to sign up for CNN’s “Meanwhile in China” Newsletter. close dialog Shortly afterward, they received information a deceased man was found in Hostouň, a town around 13 miles (21 km) west of Prague. The man is believed to be the shooter’s father. Vondrášek said the police were aware the shooter had a lecture at 2 p.m. CET and evacuated the building where the lecture was meant to take place. But authorities then received a call about a shooting in a different building, according to the police chief. Czech authorities are also working on a theory the gunman is connected to a double homicide in Klanovice, a Prague suburb, last week, Vondrášek said. Authorities are still conducting a thorough investigation in that case, the chief added. The shooter had a gun permit and owned several weapons, Vondrášek said. Country declares day of mourning The Czech Republic will observe a day of mourning Saturday for those killed, country officials announced at a joint news conference late Thursday. “I want to express my deep sadness and also helpless anger over the loss of so many young lives,” Czech President Petr Pavel said. The massacre is “the most tragic incident in the history of the Czech Republic,” he added. Flags will be flown at half-staff during the day of mourning and a minute of silence will be held nationwide at noon Saturday. Bells across the country will also toll for the victims of the attack, Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala said. Earlier, Fiala said authorities believe the shooting was a lone incident and there was no remaining danger. Interior Minister Vít Rakušan said the shooting was not an act of terrorism. Charles University said it tightened its security measures “with immediate effect” and canceled events at the university on Thursday and Friday. In a statement posted on X, it also “called for an adequate and sensitive approach to [Friday’s] possible exams or credit examinations.” “We now ask everyone to try to remain calm and composed, and we again extend our condolences to all those whose hearts have been broken by the loss of loved ones,” the university said. The Czech Republic has relatively liberal gun laws compared to the rest of the European Union, but gun attacks are rare. To obtain a gun legally, a person needs an official firearm license, which requires a medical examination, a weapon proficiency exam and no previous criminal record. According to official police statistics, more than 300,000 people have a legal permit to own a gun. As of 2022, almost 1 million legally owned weapons were officially registered in the Czech Republic. Students of Charles University are evacuated by police. Gabriel Kuchta/Getty Images In December 2019, a 42-year-old man killed six people at a hospital waiting room in Ostrava in the east of the country before shooting himself. And in 2015 a man killed eight people in a shooting at a restaurant in Uhersky Brod before killing himself. Source:https://edition.cnn.com/2023/12/21/europe/prague-university-shooting-intl/index.html

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Five labourers gunned down in attack on S Waziristan police station

At least five labourers were killed on Thursday night after unidentified assailants attacked an under-construction police station in a remote area of South Waziristan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. According to police, the firing took place late Thursday night at the police station which also injured one of the labourers working at the station. The bodies and the wounded worker have been moved to a district hospital in Wana, the police added. Meanwhile, District Police Officer (DPO) Farmanullah said that complete details will be provided after investigating the incident. He added that no details can be shared at the initial level about the firing incident. On October 31, four labourers and a cop in an attack on a police station in the Nasirabad area of Balochistan’s Turbat by unidentified assailants which was labelled as a terror incident by the authorities. The labourers, according to an official, hailed from Punjab and were identified as Mohammad Uzair, Baqar Ali, Shehbaz Ahmed and Shehzad Ahmed. In the same month, at least 6 labourers were killed in their sleep and two were wounded after gunmen targeted them in an overnight attack in Turbat city. According to the police, unidentified gunmen attacked the labourers who were sleeping in an under-construction house. ‘Terror attacks claim 470 lives in KP this year’ The outgoing year witnessed an alarming rise in terror-related incidents in the country in general and in KP in particular as at least 470 security personnel and civilians were killed in the province, so for. According to statistics available with Geo News, 470 people were killed in 1,050 terror-related incidents in one year alone. As per the record of the provincial home department and tribal affairs, 698 security personnel and citizens were killed in 1,823 terror-related incidents during the past three years. Seven areas along the Pak-Afghan border in KP remained “terrorism hotspots” during the outgoing year. The areas include Peshawar, Khyber, North Waziristan, South Waziristan, Dera Ismail Khan, Bajaur and Tank. Out of the 1,050 terror-related incidents, 419 were reported in Bandobasti, 631 in the erstwhile Fata, 201 in North Waziristan, 169 in Khyber, 121 in South Waziristan, 98 in DI Khan, 62 in Bajaur, 61 each in Tank and Peshawar. One hundred and six security personnel embraced martyrdom in Peshawar, four in Bajaur, 28 in Khyber, 36 in North Waziristan, and 29 in South Waziristan. Likewise, the terror-related incidents claimed 73 lives in Bajur, 28 in North Waziristan, five in DI Khan, seven in Tank, and two citizens each in Peshawar and Khyber. Source:https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/1140715-five-labourers-gunned-down-in-attack-on-s-waziristan-police-station

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Israel-Hamas war live: UN Security Council delays Gaza vote again

UN Security Council again delays vote on resolution urging scaled-up humanitarian aid access to Gaza after another day of intense negotiations. More than 576,000 Palestinians in Gaza – about a quarter of the population – face “catastrophic hunger and starvation”, a UN-backed report finds. Israel continues its bombardment of Gaza, with more casualties reported in Rafah, Khan Younis and Nuseirat refugee camp. At least 20,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli attacks since October 7, according to Gaza’s Government Media Office. The death toll from Hamas’s attack on Israel stands at nearly 1,140. ‘Battle of narratives’ ongoing between Israel and the UN Luciano Zaccara, associate professor of Gulf politics at Qatar University says “there is a battle of narratives” regarding the positions of Israel and the UN on aid entering Gaza’s southern border. “Israel keeps repeating that they are concerned about the killing of civilians, and they’re concerned about allowing aid to enter into Gaza. International agencies and other governments are blaming Israel for controlling the gate,” Zaccara told Al Jazeera. He added that he does not believe that the delayed vote on a UN Security Council on a resolution urging scaled-up humanitarian aid access to Gaza will change this. “I think there should be more diplomatic efforts conducted by both the UN and Israel to guarantee that the aid entering Gaza is not harming Israel in a way that Israel would withdraw from the support for this resolution,” Zaccara said. “Otherwise, we will come back to zero again.” Click Poll suggests Israelis prefer Biden to Trump as next US president: Report According to a new survey, 40 percent of the people in Israel want US President Joe Biden to be re-elected in 2024, compared to about 26 percent who prefer rival Donald Trump, the Times of Israel reported. The poll showed a big swing among Israelis compared to 2020. Back then, more than 60 percent of them preferred Trump as US president, compared to 17 who backed Biden. The steep decline in support for Trump may be linked to his criticism, among others, of the Israeli military and political leadership for its alleged failures in preventing the October 7. This is the first time in at least two decades where the Israeli public appears to favor a Democratic presidential candidate over a Republican, the Times reported. Click Israeli forces detain eight medical staff members: Red Crescent The Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) says Israeli forces have released a number of their paramedics, volunteers and women who were arrested yesterday evening in the Jabalia Ambulance Center. Some of them were “beaten and tortured”, it said on X, adding that Israeli forces continue to detain eight medical staff. “The occupation soldiers destroyed the central radio communication device and destroyed all ambulances present in the branch,” PRCS said. Click here to share on social media Ministry of Health director-general critically injured in Israeli attack Hani Mahmoud The northern part of Rafah was subjected to heavy, relentless bombardment where more residential homes have been targeted and destroyed. At least six people in these two residential homes were killed. There is fear people are still under the rubble, that’s why we are expecting the number to go higher within the coming hours. Both eastern and central Khan Younis are becoming the site of major bombardment of artillery shelling. There was constant bombardment last night of all the refugee camps in central Gaza Strip – Bureij, Maghazi as well as Nuseirat. The northern part of Gaza – Jabalia town and Jabalia refugee camp, along with the northern district of Gaza City – were targeted and destroyed. Ministry of Health Director-General Munir al-Bursh was sheltering in his sister’s house, which was targeted. He was critically injured, family members were also injured, but his daughter was killed in the attack on the residential home. Click Beyond Gaza: How Yemen’s Houthis gain from attacking Red Sea ships Justin Salhani Reporting from Beirut A 10-country coalition led by the United States is unlikely to be able to stop Yemen’s Houthi rebels from attacking ships in the Red Sea, but both sides have an interest in avoiding an escalation that could spiral out of control, analysts have told Al Jazeera. Their attacks on commercial and military ships potentially connected to Israel are, according to Houthi officials, aimed at pressuring Israel to end its war on Gaza. The Houthi attacks have been popular domestically in Yemen, allowing the group to recruit new fighters. Read the full story here. Houthi forces boarding the cargo ship Galaxy Leader on Sunday, November 19, 2023, in the Red Sea [Houthi Media Center via AP] Click Israel used ‘one of its biggest and most destructive bombs’ in southern Gaza: Report A visual investigation by The New York Times shows that during the first six weeks of the war in Gaza, Israel used its “one of its biggest and most destructive bombs” in areas in the south of the Strip which the military had indicated as safe for civilians. “The findings reveal that 2,000-pound bombs posed a pervasive threat to civilians seeking safety across south Gaza,” read the report. It added that bombs of that size are “almost never dropped by US forces in densely populated areas anymore,” according to ammunition experts. Asked about the bombs’ use in southern Gaza, the Israeli army told The Times that Israel’s priority was to destroy Hamas and that “questions of this kind will be looked into at a later stage,” the newspaper reported a spokesperson as saying. Click here to share on social media Palestinians to be ‘prevented’ from entering Al-Aqsa Mosque again Friday prayer will start in just a few hours and, as for every weekend since the start of the war, thousands of Palestinians will be prevented from entering the Al-Aqsa Mosque, Al Jazeera’s Sara Khairat says. “Every week there is tear gas, and the reason why is that they are preventing the majority of worshippers from attending the holy prayer – they [Israeli forces] say to reduce clashes as it’s under

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