Why are Gazans not getting sorely needed aid?

Gazans are in desperate need of essentials after more than 21 months of war, but efforts to get aid into the Palestinian territory — and to its hungry residents — face major obstacles.UN agencies and aid organisations cite Israeli restrictions, safety issues and the establishment of a US- and Israeli-backed mechanism that has sidelined the humanitarian system in place.Israel says international organisations have failed, and that the previous UN-led system had allowed Hamas militants to loot aid trucks.On the ground, meanwhile, more than 100 aid and human rights groups warned this week that “mass starvation” was spreading.- GHF: few sites, deadly incidents -Israel’s chosen aid distributor, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), began operations on May 26 after a more than two-month total aid blockade.Now the main channel for distributing food to Gaza’s more than two million people, GHF has faced chaos and deadly violence at its few distribution points.The United Nations and aid groups have refused to work with GHF, saying it was created to serve Israeli military interests.”They are not a humanitarian organisation… You don’t deliver humanitarian aid in areas that have been completely flattened and militarised,” said Arwa Damon, founder of INARA, a US-based NGO offering medical and mental health support to children.She noted the GHF’s site locations — along two military corridors in southern and central Gaza — rather than being spread out across the territory.With only four GHG sites and huge crowds trying to reach them, there have been repeated reports of deadly fire near them. According to UN figures, Israeli forces have killed some 800 Palestinian aid-seekers near GHF sites since late May.Israel has rejected calls to restore the UN-led system, citing concerns that Hamas looted trucks and resold aid meant to be distributed free of charge.- Aid organisations sidelined -International aid groups say vast quantities of aid are stockpiled outside Gaza but require Israeli military clearance to enter.Inside Gaza, coordination with the military is also essential, as fighting and air strikes rage on.Damon accused Israel of preventing aid delivery by refusing to coordinate with NGOs to grant safe passage through combat zones.”Getting that coordination approved is incredibly challenging,” she told AFP.”Not to mention Israel’s lack of willingness to provide humanitarian organisations with a safe route to be able to ensure a secure pickup.”The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, said on Wednesday it had “thousands of trucks in neighbouring countries waiting to enter Gaza –- banned by Israeli authorities from entering since March”.- ‘Encountered death’ for flour -Israel screens all goods entering Gaza, but COGAT, the Israeli defence ministry body overseeing civil affairs in the Palestinian territories, denies limiting the number of humanitarian trucks.On Thursday it said “around 70 food trucks were unloaded at aid crossings, and over 150 were collected by the UN and international organisations from the Gazan side”.But more than 800 trucks remained uncollected, and Israel’s military posted footage online of hundreds of trucks loaded with food aid “sitting idle inside Gaza”.UN agencies and international NGOs reject Israeli claims that they lack the capacity to distribute food.They note that aid was distributed effectively in the past, including during the last ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war that ended in March.In Khan Yunis, in Gaza’s south, resident Yousef Abu Shehla said this week he had “encountered death” to get his hands on a bag of flour for his family.”We shall feed our children even if we die,” he told AFP.

Trump to tour Fed, ramping up war on central bank

Donald Trump is due to visit the US Federal Reserve Thursday as the president escalates pressure on its chairman Jerome Powell over the central bank’s management of the economy.Trump — who wants to oust Powell for refusing to lower interest rates but likely lacks the legal authority — has threatened to fire the Fed chief over cost overruns for a renovation of its Washington headquarters.The White House did not specify whether Trump would meet Powell, who has vowed to remain in place until the end of his term next May, but the president would likely welcome any encounter.The afternoon tour comes with Trump desperate to shift focus from the crisis engulfing his administration over its decision to close the file on multi-millionaire sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, who died in 2019 while awaiting trial on trafficking charges. Attorney General Pam Bondi informed the president in the spring that his name appeared in the Epstein files, according to the Wall Street Journal.Trump has picked all manner of targets, including his Democratic predecessors and former chiefs of the security and intelligence services, as he bids to move Epstein out of the headlines.He again berated Powell on Wednesday, moments after Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent had appeared on television to claim the banker’s job was safe.”Housing in our Country is lagging because Jerome ‘Too Late’ Powell refuses to lower Interest Rates,” Trump thundered on his social media platform, Truth Social.Presidential visits to the Federal Reserve are not unheard of — Franklin D. Roosevelt, Gerald Ford and George W. Bush all made the trip — but they are rare.Trump has criticized Powell for months over his insistence on keeping short-term interest rate at 4.3 percent this year, after cutting it three times last year, when Joe Biden was in office.Powell says he is monitoring the response of the economy to Trump’s dizzying array of import tariffs, which he has warned could lead to a hike in inflation.But Trump has angrily accused Powell of holding back the economy, calling the man he nominated in his first term “stupid” and a “loser.”- Threats and abuse -Soaring costs for the Fed’s facelift of its 88-year-old Washington headquarters and a neighboring building — from an initial $1.9 billion to $2.5 billion — have caught Trump’s eye.Ahead of his visit, staff gave reporters a tour of the renovations, on track to finish in 2027.A significant driver of the cost is security, including blast resistant windows and measures to prevent the building from collapsing in the event of an explosion. Plans for a rooftop seating area were abandoned, the staff said, as they were seen as an unnecessary “amenity.”Trump’s budget director Russell Vought wrote to Powell earlier this month to tell him the president was “extremely troubled by your mismanagement of the Federal Reserve System.””Instead of attempting to right the Fed’s fiscal ship, you have plowed ahead with an ostentatious overhaul of your Washington, D.C. headquarters,” Vought wrote. The Federal Reserve, the world’s most important central bank, makes independent monetary policy decisions and its board members typically serve under both Republican and Democratic presidents.Experts question whether Trump has the authority to fire Powell, especially since a Supreme Court opinion in May that allowed the president to remove other independent agency members but suggested that this did not apply to the Fed.Before the visit, Trump plans to sign executive orders at the White House on Thursday afternoon, as he continues to face pushback from his supporters over his handling of the Epstein case.Justice Department officials were to interview Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s imprisoned accomplice on Thursday in her cell in Tallahassee, Florida, US media reported.

Crawley and Duckett run riot before India hit back in fourth Test

Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett got England off to a flying start in their first innings of the fourth Test on Thursday, before India ensured both openers fell agonisingly short of centuries.England were 225-2 at stumps on the second day at Old Trafford, a deficit of 133 runs, after they dismissed India for 358, with captain Ben Stokes taking five wickets and an injured Rishabh Pant making a gutsy fifty for the tourists.The hosts are 2-1 up in this five-match series, and a win in Manchester would see England take an unassailable lead ahead of next week’s finale at the Oval.Crawley (84) and Duckett (94) shared an opening stand of 166  — just the duo’s fifth century partnership in 53 Test innings together.”We were happy to get India 358 all out,” Crawley told Sky Sports. “We are happy with the state of the game right now. Batting last could be tricky.”Crawley, reflecting on his partnership with Duckett, added: “I just try to stay with him and hit a few nice drives! He’s the leader of that partnership and a phenomenal player.”The inconsistent Crawley, who 2005 Ashes-winning captain Michael Vaughan has said is “lucky” to have won so many England caps, played some trademark stylish shots but also survived a confident lbw appeal on 26 after offering no stroke to Mohammed Siraj.Crawley, however, fell frustratingly short of what would have been just his sixth century in 58 Tests — and second in Manchester following a majestic 189 against Australia two years ago — when he nicked left-arm spinner Ravindra Jadeja low to KL Rahul at slip.  It was the end of a sparkling 113-ball stint featuring 13 fours and a superb straight six off Jadeja, with Crawley’s innings a reminder of why England think he will do well on the firm pitches they are likely to encounter in Australia when they bid to regain the Ashes in a 2025/26 tour.”There is a bit more pace and carry here (Old Trafford) which suits my game,” said Crawley.Duckett was no slouch either, taking three fours off debutant Anshul Kamboj’s first over in Test cricket.Kamboj was only included after fellow paceman Nitish Kumar Reddy was ruled out due to a knee injury suffered during England’s dramatic 22-run win at Lord’s last week.But Duckett also flicked Jasprit Bumrah, the world’s top-ranked Test bowler, off his pads for two fours in three balls.The left-hander was eyeing his second hundred of the series, following a brilliant 149 in England’s win in the first Test at Headingley, when he edged an intended cut off Kamboj to reserve wicketkeeper Dhruv Jurel, deputising for the injured Pant.As Kamboj celebrated his maiden Test wicket, a crestfallen Duckett trudged off having faced exactly 100 balls, including 13 fours, with England 197-2.- Battling Pant -Pant returned to action earlier Thursday after a severe foot injury.The vice-captain had to retire hurt on 37 during Wednesday’s opening day when struck a painful blow attempting an audacious reverse-sweep off a Chris Woakes yorker.After Shardul Thakur fell to Stokes for 41, Pant slowly made his way out into the middle.The left-hander’s movements were restricted but runners are no longer allowed in international cricket.However, there was nothing Pant could do as Stokes cleaned up the tail at the other end. When Kamboj was caught behind off the England skipper for a duck it meant Stokes had his first five-wicket haul in a Test since a career-best 6-22 against the West Indies at Lord’s in 2017.The all-rounder finished with 5-72 in 24 overs, a fine return after his future as a lively medium-pacer was threatened by repeated hamstring trouble.Pant reached his half-century in 69 balls, including a pulled six off Jofra Archer despite his lack of mobility, before he was bowled by the express quick for 54.Stokes went against history by sending India into bat on Wednesday. No team winning the toss and bowling first has ever won a Test at Old Trafford.But India need to make history of their own if they are to maintain hopes of a series victory as they have never won a Test at Old Trafford.

ICC convicts pair over Central Africa war crimesThu, 24 Jul 2025 18:05:28 GMT

The International Criminal Court Thursday convicted a former top Central African Republic football official and a militiaman nicknamed Rambo for war crimes committed during the country’s civil war in 2013 and 2014.Ex-sports minister Patrice-Edouard Ngaissona was a senior leader of mainly Christian militias as the country slid into civil war, while Alfred Yekatom, a former …

ICC convicts pair over Central Africa war crimesThu, 24 Jul 2025 18:05:28 GMT Read More »

France: plus de décès que de naissances en 2025 ? Un scénario possible, selon l’Insee

Le nombre de décès pourrait dépasser celui des naissances en France en 2025, a indiqué jeudi l’Insee à l’AFP, ce qui serait une première depuis 1944.En 2025, un solde naturel de population négatif “est de l’ordre du possible”, a estimé l’Institut national de la statistique auprès de l’AFP, tout en précisant qu’elle ne faisait pas de “prévisions précises”.Sur 12 mois glissants, le solde naturel est déjà devenu négatif à fin mai, une première depuis la fin de la Seconde guerre mondiale, comme l’a révélé l’économiste de l’OFCE François Geerolf, repris par la presse. La France a enregistré quelque 651.000 décès contre quelque 650.000 naissances.”C’est une première”, a commenté auprès de l’AFP Chloé Tavan, cheffe de la division Enquêtes et études démographiques de l’Insee. Ce phénomène était attendu des démographes mais “il se produit plus tôt que prévu”, a-t-elle ajouté.La bascule devait se produire en 2035, avait estimé l’Insee fin 2021 dans une étude.Principale variante par rapport au scénario anticipé: le nombre de naissances est plus faible.Entre janvier et mai, elles ont reculé de 3,7% par rapport à la même période l’an dernier. Une tendance qui s’observe déjà depuis plusieurs années.Elle s’explique principalement par la baisse de la fécondité, soit celle du nombre d’enfants par femme, liée à différents facteurs (difficultés à accéder à un emploi stable, changement d’aspirations, inquiétude au sujet de l’avenir de la planète etc.).En parallèle, le nombre de décès a augmenté de 3,5% sur les cinq premiers mois de l’année. Ce phénomène, attendu des démographes, se produit en raison de l’arrivée à des âges de forte mortalité des générations nombreuses du baby-boom.Le déclin de la natalité soulève des inquiétudes au sujet du financement du système français de protection sociale, basé principalement sur les contributions des actifs.”Ce bouleversement démographique est majeur et il est de notre devoir de préserver notre modèle social”, a commenté jeudi sur X la ministre des Solidarités Catherine Vautrin. Le gouvernement dit vouloir soutenir la natalité, notamment en luttant contre l’infertilité et en modernisant les congés parentaux. Le gouvernement planche notamment sur un nouveau “congé de naissance”, qui pourrait être pris par la mère puis le père du bébé, avec un soutien financier plus important que l’actuel congé parental, indemnisé 456 euros par mois.

French holiday camp accuses Vueling of discrimination against Jewish teens

Holiday camp organisers vowed to file a legal complaint against Spanish airline Vueling over the expulsion of French Jewish teenagers from a Paris-bound flight, a lawyer said Thursday.The airline said it had asked the children to leave the plane in the Spanish city of Valencia due to their “disruptive behaviour”, but parents condemned what some of them described as an “antisemitic act”.”We are going to file a complaint for physical and psychological violence, as well as discrimination on the basis of religion,” camp organiser Club Kineret’s lawyer Julie Jacob said, adding that those involved were mostly under 15 years old.In a statement, Vueling said some passengers “engaged in highly disruptive behaviour and adopted a very confrontational attitude, putting at risk the safe conduct” of the flight to Paris-Orly airport.”We categorically deny any suggestion that our crew’s decision related to the religion of the passengers involved. This decision was taken solely to ensure the safety of all passengers,” it said.”This group mishandled emergency equipment and actively disrupted the mandatory safety demonstration, repeatedly ignoring instructions from cabin crew,” Vueling added.The holiday camp association Kineret, however, said it “formally and categorically” denied Vueling’s version of events.The crew requested the intervention of the Civil Guard police force, which “decided to disembark the group to prioritise the safety of the rest of the passengers”, Vueling said.”Once at the terminal, the group’s behaviour continued to be aggressive. Some individuals displayed a violent attitude,” leading to the arrest of one person, Vueling said.- Passenger arrested -One of the minors on the flight, 17-year-old Samson, told AFP by telephone that the group had taken their seats on the plane calmly.”One of my friends shouted a word in Hebrew because he was still a bit in holiday-camp mood,” he said, adding: “Perhaps he said it too loudly.”Flight staff then warned that they would alert police if it happened again, he said. “We immediately stopped making noise,” Samson said.The Civil Guard said it had removed 44 minors and eight adults from the plane, saying the arrested person “refused to get off the plane and obey the officers” but was later released.”The officers were not aware of the religion of the disembarked people at any point during the operation,” the Civil Guard said in a statement.Parents said the teenagers were forced off the plane after one of them had sung a song in Hebrew.A mother whose 17-year-old son was on the flight told AFP on condition of anonymity that the group was returning home from a two-week summer camp.She said she “could not see what could have justified” the incident, which affected children as young as 12 and 13. “They were disembarked like dogs,” she said.Karine Lamy, the mother of one of the children, told Israeli television channel i24NEWS that it was “an antisemitic act against young children who did nothing”.Kineret said the police action was brutal and unjustified “and clearly marked by bias”.burs-ah-imm-jh/rlp