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Top US general cautions over risks in a long Gaza war

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Tokyo (Reuters) – A faster resolution to the fighting in Gaza could help limit civilian strife that might spur people to join the ranks of Palestinian militants, U.S. President Joe Biden’s top military adviser said.

General Charles Q. Brown, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Israel’s stated aim for its military campaign in Gaza — the complete destruction of the Hamas militant group that runs the territory — was “a pretty large order.”

But he also said Israel was focused on targeting the senior leadership of Hamas, which might be achieved more quickly.

“I think the longer this goes, the harder it can become,” Brown told reporters before arriving in Japan on Thursday, in his first detailed remarks on the month-old conflict.

Israel launched a ground and air offensive against Hamas in the Gaza Strip after gunmen crossed from the small enclave into southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,400 people and taking about 240 others hostage.

Palestinian officials said 10,569 Gaza residents had been killed as of Wednesday, about 40% of them children, and humanitarian problems are mounting.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on Wednesday the number of civilians killed in Gaza showed there was something “clearly wrong” with Israel’s military operations.

Brown, who took over as the U.S. military’s top officer just over a month ago, expressed confidence that Israel was abiding by the laws of war in Gaza.

He also said there was room for Israel’s military to improve in its public explanations about its conduct, and that he had raised this with his Israeli counterpart.

“There’s room for improvement based on what we’re seeing,” Brown said. “What I’ve talked to him about is how do we demonstrate — not only with the videos but also as they talk about the strikes — why they’re striking in some locations, provide more context to the strike.”

Asked whether he was concerned a high Palestinian civilian death toll could push people to join the ranks of the militants, Brown said: “Yes, very much so. And I think that’s something we have to pay attention to.”

“That’s why when we talk about time — the faster you can get to a point where you stop the hostilities, you have less strife for the civilian population that turns into someone who now wants to be the next member of Hamas,” he said.

Israel Braces For Long, Tough War

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned Israelis the country is in a “tough war” that will also be long.

Israel has blamed Hamas for civilian deaths in Gaza, saying it is using civilians as human shields and hiding arms and operations centres in residential areas.

Brown stopped short of advocating for a short campaign or offering his view of how long Israel’s Gaza operation should last.

Brown has overseen air campaigns in the Middle East in the past, including during the battle to retake cities in Iraq from Islamic State militants. He said military campaigns can drag on longer than expected.

“(Almost) every conflict that I’ve been involved with throughout my military career … (has) particularly gone a bit longer than most people would have imagined. So we’ve got to prepare ourselves for that,” he said.

Saudi Arabia to sign deals worth over $500 mln with African nations -minister

Riyadh (Reuters) – The Saudi Fund for Development will sign agreements worth 2 billion riyals ($533 million) with African countries, Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan said on Thursday during the Saudi-Arab-African Economic Conference in Riyadh.

“We are working with partners to support Ghana and other countries regarding their debt,” Jadaan added.

Saudi Investment Minister Khalid Al-Falih later said at the same conference the kingdom’s over $700 billion wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund, will make some “game changing” investments in Africa.

Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, also at the conference, signed preliminary agreements with African countries including Nigeria, Senegal, Chad and Ethiopia on energy-related cooperation.

Israeli army shows devastation in northern Gaza as invasion grinds on

Northern Gaza (Reuters) – Blackened windows, shattered bedrooms, pockmarked walls. Wherever you look in northern Gaza, you see destruction and desolation a month into Israel’s military campaign to oust Hamas from the enclave.

Israeli forces gave a small group of foreign reporters a rare view of their advance into the Palestinian territory on Wednesday, driving them along sandy routes, churned by tank tracks, to the fringes of Gaza City.

Stopping at a cluster of apartment blocks, every building within sight is scarred by battle. Walls have been blown away, bullet holes and shrapnel dot the facades, the palm trees are shredded and broken.

“It’s been a long two weeks of fighting. It is not an operation, it is a war,” said Lieutenant Colonel Ido, deputy commander of the 401st brigade. He did not give his last name. “It is going to last a long time, until Hamas no longer exists.”

Israeli forces entered Gaza on Oct. 27 after days of heavy bombardment in response to a surprise Hamas attack through the border fence on Oct. 7, which Israel says killed 1,400 people.

Over the past 12 days, thousands of Israeli troops have encircled Gaza City, effectively cutting the densely populated coastal enclave into two, as they look to hunt down and eliminate Hamas fighters.

Very few details have emerged about the invasion. Reuters footage shot during the 1-1/2-hour tour on Wednesday was reviewed by the Israeli army as a condition for having a journalist embedded. No material was removed.

The military has repeatedly told civilians to leave the north and head to the southern end of the enclave. Ido said that by the time they had reached this cluster of buildings, all the families had packed and left.

“So we know that everyone here is our enemy. We have not seen any civilians here. Only Hamas,” he said, standing in a badly damaged children’s bedroom that was painted pink.

The mirror behind him was smashed and bags, toys and a doll lay discarded on the floor.

The soldiers said that beneath the family apartment there were two floors of workshops that had been used to make weapons, including drones that were discovered in five wooden boxes.

The workrooms contained metal lathes, hand tools and grey casings, but it was not possible to verify what had been made there.

The reporters were driven to the site in a heavily armoured, hi-tech vehicle known as a Tiger, which has no windows. Instead screens connected to cameras on the outside show the occupants where they are going.

Piles of earth have been banked up to give protection to army vehicles parked outside the wrecked buildings. Idling tanks have sturdy metal grills on top to protect them from possible drone attack from the air.

A lone chicken ran around under the tanks.

According to latest figures released on Wednesday, 31 Israeli soldiers have been killed during the Gaza ground offensive, and more than 260 injured. Palestinian officials say 10,569 people have been killed by Israeli forces since Oct. 7, 40% of them children.

Booms and explosions could be heard in the distance as Israel pressed further into the Gaza Strip. Soldiers suggested they were moving cautiously.

“We are getting to know the enemy a little bit more and more. Every house we get into we try and be careful,” said one soldier, who did not give his name.

Democrats urge Biden to grant protected status to Palestinians in US amid war

Washington (Reuters) – A group of Democratic lawmakers on Wednesday urged U.S. President Joe Biden to allow Palestinian tourists, students and workers in the United States to remain in light of the conflict in the Gaza Strip and unrest and violence in the West Bank.

In a letter to Biden, more than 100 Democrats led by U.S. Senator Dick Durbin called on Biden to grant residents of Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories deportation relief and access to work permits through U.S. programs for people whose homelands are affected by conflicts, natural disasters or other extraordinary circumstances.

“In light of ongoing armed conflict, Palestinians already in the United States should not be forced to return to the Palestinian territories, consistent with President Biden’s stated commitment to protecting Palestinian civilians,” the lawmakers wrote.

The humanitarian protections would only be available to Palestinians already in the U.S., not those in the war zone or refugees in other countries. It was not clear how many Palestinians in the U.S. would be covered.

Around two-thirds of Gaza’s 2.3 million population are internally displaced due to the fighting, according to U.N. figures.

The lawmakers called on Biden to use the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) or Deferred Enforced Departure (DED) programs to provide the relief. Biden has granted TPS to hundreds of thousands of people since taking office in 2021, including Venezuelans and Haitians.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Democratic pressure on Biden comes as some Republican presidential candidates, including former President Donald Trump, have backed immigration restrictions against people coming from Gaza.

Last week, Republican Representative Ryan Zinke and 10 other Republicans introduced a bill to expel Palestinians from the U.S. on security grounds and bar entry of people holding passports issued by the Palestinian Authority, a governing body set up under the Oslo interim peace accords 30 years ago.

Some Democrats, civil rights and immigrant advocates criticized the bill, with Democratic Representative Bill Pascrell calling it “absolutely despicable.”

Aid groups call at Paris conference for immediate ceasefire in Gaza

Paris (Reuters) – International organisations and aid agencies called on Thursday for an immediate ceasefire to end a “haemorrhage of human lives” in Gaza, warning that the situation could quickly spiral out of control.

They made their appeals at a conference in Paris intended to coordinate aid and assess how to help people wounded in Gaza since Israeli launched its ground and air offensive in response to an attack by Hamas militants on southern Israel on Oct. 7.

Representatives of Arab nations, Western powers and members of the Group of 20 major economies were among those attending the conference, but Israel was not invited and few heads of state, government or foreign ministers were there. Expectations for concrete results are low if there is no pause in fighting.

Participants were set to discuss a proposal to create a maritime corridor to ship humanitarian aid into Gaza or evacuate the wounded, the establishment of field hospitals and financial assistance to ease the growing humanitarian crisis.

“We cannot wait a minute more for a humanitarian ceasefire or lifting of siege which is collective punishment,” said Jan Egeland, the Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council.

“Without a ceasefire, lifting of siege and indiscriminate bombarding and warfare, the haemorrhage of human lives will continue,” he said in comments echoed by the United Nations and the International Red Cross.

Israel has ruled out an immediate ceasefire that might help strengthen Hamas. The United States has echoed the Israeli view, warning that a ceasefire could help Hamas regroup, but has called for humanitarian pauses.

Doctors Without Borders chief Isabelle Defourny, whose staff operate in Gaza, said safe zones for Palestinians in southern Gaza were unrealistic and that sustained halts in fighting were needed, “not an hour (pause) here or there.”

Palestinian officials said 10,569 Gaza residents had been killed as of Wednesday, about 40% of them children. Israel said Hamas gunmen killed 1,400 people and took about 240 others hostage in the Oct. 7 assault.

Macron Seeks A Pause

Opening the conference, French President Emmanuel Macron called for a swift humanitarian pause.

“The situation is serious and getting worse each day. We need a humanitarian pause very quickly and (a) push for a ceasefire,” he said.

Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh was present at the conference. French officials said Israel was being kept informed of developments.

“How many Palestinians must be killed for the war to stop,” Shtayyeh asked. “Is killing 10,000 people in 30 days enough?”

Philippe Lazzarini, Commissioner General of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), said all crossings into Gaza should be opened.

Without buy-in from Israel or Hamas for a pause in fighting, there is little prospect of things moving quickly. But French officials hope the conference will lay the groundwork for a swift international response when there is a pause.

Efforts will be made at the conference to mobilise financial resources, with several sectors identified for emergency support based on U.N. assessments of the $1.1 billion of immediate needs.

Re-establishing supplies of water, fuel and electricity will also be discussed, while ensuring accountability processes to ensure aid is not diverted to Hamas.

Macron said France would raise financial aid to Palestinians this year from 20 million euros to 100 million euros ($106.87 million).

Cyprus outlined the proposal to set up a maritime corridor to use sea lanes to ship humanitarian aid into Gaza and see how ships could be used to help evacuate the wounded.

Although the conference was expected to assess the prospect for establishing field hospitals, diplomats have said Egypt is reluctant to host a multitude of hospitals on its territory, while setting them up in Gaza could be difficult without a humanitarian pause or ceasefire.

India weighs changes to improve uptake of production incentive scheme – sources

New Delhi (Reuters) – India is planning to ease and expand some norms for five sectors to help them better utlise its $24 billion industrial incentives aimed at boosting local manufacturing, two government officials said on Thursday.

The 1.97-trillion rupees production-linked incentive scheme (PLI), launched in 2020, covers 14 sectors ranging from electronic products to drones but has been successful only in a handful of them, triggering reviews.

The changes are being planned in the textiles, pharmaceuticals, drones, solar and food processing industries, which together form nearly a third of the PLI scheme.

The government plans to include more products in the textile sector such as man-made fibre and give firms an additional year to meet the manufacturing targets required to claim incentives for the scheme, the officials said.

The scheme will also be extended by a year for the pharmaceuticals sector, while the financial allocation will be raised for incentive payouts to the production of drones to 3.3 billion rupees from the current 1.2 billion rupees, the officials added.

For the food processing sector, India plans to extend the scheme to millet-based products and include the production of ingots and wafers in the scheme for the solar module sector, the officials said.

India’s trade ministry, which oversees the scheme’s implementation, is discussing the changes with other federal departments, they said.

The officials did not wish to be named as details of the discussions have not been made public.

The trade ministry did not respond to an emailed request for comment.

“None of the changes currently being discussed require fresh financial allocation, but will draw from the scheme’s savings,” one of the officials said.

Consumer-goods companies like Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HLL.NS), ITC Ltd (ITC.NS), Nestle India Ltd (NEST.NS), and Britannia Industries Ltd (BRIT.NS) are part of the food processing incentive schemes, while companies such as Reliance Industries (RELI.NS), JSW Energy (JSWE.NS) and Tata Power (TTPW.NS) are part of the solar module manufacturing incentive scheme.

A fraction of the PLI incentives has been claimed so far, prompting the government to consider ways to allocate unused funds, including a plan to bring new sectors into the scheme’s fold.

Injustice Amplified: Pakistan’s Treatment of Afghan Refugees Under Scrutiny

There have been distressing accounts of refugee camps being vandalized by Pakistani authorities

The recent government orders in Pakistan regarding the arrest and deportation of individuals residing without appropriate documents have raised concerns about the treatment of Afghan refugees.

While Pakistan is a signatory to a tripartite agreement with Afghanistan and the UNHCR to ensure the safety and return of Afghan refugees, its actions may be seen as contravening the principle of non-refoulement.

There are active discussions about Pakistan’s policies on Afghan refugees, highlighting the challenges and human rights issues faced by this vulnerable population.

Harassments Faced by Refugees

The treatment of Afghan refugees in Pakistan has been marred by numerous challenges and significant human rights concerns.

What raises further doubts about the intentions of the government is the timing of their decision, which coincides with the onset of winter. This raises questions about the adequacy of measures taken to ensure the well-being and safety of the refugees during this vulnerable period.

Disturbing reports have emerged indicating that even those Afghan refugees possessing valid residence proofs have been subjected to arbitrary detention. Shockingly, the police have been reported to demand bribes in exchange for the release of these individuals, further exacerbating their plight.

In some cities, like Karachi, young boys have been unjustly detained for extended periods, depriving them of their freedom and basic rights.

Furthermore, there have been distressing accounts of refugee camps being vandalized by Pakistani authorities. These acts of vandalism not only inflict physical damage but also undermine the sense of security and stability that refugees seek in such camps.

Additionally, deliberate delays in visa issuance, coupled with difficulties in obtaining essential services like bank accounts and rented accommodations, have left Afghan refugees vulnerable to exploitation and harassment by state authorities.

Such mistreatment and violations of human rights not only contravene international legal standards but also fail to uphold the spirit of compassion and empathy towards those fleeing conflict and persecution.

Contradictions to Non-Refoulement Principle

Pakistan’s decision to arrest and deport individuals residing without proper documents raises questions about its adherence to the principle of non-refoulement.

Although Pakistan is not a signatory to the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees, the principle of non-refoulement applies universally.

This principle prohibits states from expelling refugees, regardless of their status as signatories to the conventions. Pakistan’s actions may be seen as contradictory to this fundamental principle.

Humanitarian Obligations and International Agreements

The humanitarian obligation of Pakistan towards Afghan refugees cannot be overstated, particularly in light of the tripartite agreement it signed with Afghanistan and the UNHCR.

This agreement signifies a commitment to guarantee the safety and well-being of Afghan refugees, ensuring their protection and facilitating their safe return when conditions allow.

However, Pakistan’s recent actions, such as the arrest and deportation of individuals without proper documents, raise serious concerns about the fulfillment of its obligations under international agreements and human rights standards.

By subjecting refugees to harassment, detention, and exploitation, Pakistan not only violates the principles of humanity and compassion but also risks contravening its commitments to providing a safe haven for those fleeing conflict and persecution.

International law, including customary international law, recognizes the fundamental principle of non-refoulement, which prohibits states from returning or expelling refugees to a place where their lives or freedom would be at risk. 

Pakistan Should Reconsider

It is crucial for Pakistan to reconsider its approach to Afghan refugees, taking into account their vulnerability and the principles of non-refoulement.

The government should focus on providing support and assistance to refugees, ensuring their access to basic services, education, and healthcare.

Collaboration with the UNHCR and international partners can help address the challenges faced by Afghan refugees, while also ensuring their safe return and reintegration into their home country.

It is imperative for Pakistan to uphold its humanitarian obligations, collaborate with relevant international organizations, and adopt a more compassionate approach to ensure the safety and well-being of Afghan refugees. By doing so, Pakistan can contribute to regional stability and foster stronger relationships with neighboring countries.

India bars protests that support the Palestinians

Srinagar (AP) — From Western capitals to Muslim states, protest rallies over the Israel-Hamas war have made headlines. But one place known for its vocal pro-Palestinian stance has been conspicuously quiet: Indian-controlled Kashmir.

Indian authorities have barred any solidarity protest in Muslim-majority Kashmir and asked Muslim preachers not to mention the conflict in their sermons, residents and religious leaders told The Associated Press.

The restrictions are part of India’s efforts to curb any form of protest that could turn into demands for ending New Delhi’s rule in the disputed region. They also reflect a shift in India’s foreign policy under populist Prime Minister Narendra Modi away from its long-held support for the Palestinians, analysts say.

India has long walked a tightrope between the warring sides, with historically close ties to both. While India strongly condemned the Oct. 7 attack by the militant group Hamas and expressed solidarity with Israel, it urged that international humanitarian law be upheld in Gaza amid rising civilian deaths.

But in Kashmir, being quiet is painful for many.

“From the Muslim perspective, Palestine is very dear to us, and we essentially have to raise our voice against the oppression there. But we are forced to be silent,” said Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, a key resistance leader and a Muslim cleric. He said he has been put under house arrest each Friday since the start of the war and that Friday prayers have been disallowed at the region’s biggest mosque in Srinagar, the main city in Kashmir.

Anti-India sentiment runs deep in the Himalayan region which is divided between India and Pakistan and claimed by both in its entirety. In 2019, New Delhi removed the region’s semiautonomy, drastically curbing any form of dissent, civil liberties and media freedoms.

Kashmiris have long shown strong solidarity with the Palestinians and often staged large anti-Israel protests during previous fighting in Gaza. Those protests often turned into street clashes, with demands for an end of India’s rule and dozens of casualties.

Modi, a staunch Hindu nationalist, was one of the first global leaders to swiftly express solidarity with Israel and call the Hamas attack “terrorism.” However, on Oct. 12, India’s foreign ministry issued a statement reiterating New Delhi’s position in support of establishing a “sovereign, independent and viable state of Palestine, living within secure and recognized borders, side by side at peace with Israel.”

Two weeks later, India abstained during the United Nations General Assembly vote that called for a humanitarian cease-fire in Gaza, a departure from its usual voting record. New Delhi said the vote did not condemn the Oct. 7 assault by Hamas.

“This is unusual,” said Michael Kugelman, director of the Wilson Center’s South Asia Institute.

India “views Israel’s assault on Gaza as a counterterrorism operation meant to eliminate Hamas and not directly target Palestinian civilians, exactly the way Israel views the conflict,” Kugelman said. He added that from New Delhi’s perspective, “such operations don’t pause for humanitarian truces.”

India’s foreign minister, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, sought to justify India’s abstention.

“It is not just a government view. If you ask any average Indian, terrorism is an issue which is very close to people’s heart, because very few countries and societies have suffered terrorism as much as we have,” he told a media event in New Delhi on Saturday.

Even though Modi’s government has sent humanitarian assistance for Gaza’s besieged residents, many observers viewed its ideological alignment with Israel as potentially rewarding at a time when the ruling party in New Delhi is preparing for multiple state elections this month and crucial national polls next year.

The government’s shift aligns with widespread support for Israel among India’s Hindu nationalists who form a core vote bank for Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party. It also resonates with the coverage by Indian TV channels of the war from Israel. The reportage has been seen as largely in line with commentary used by Hindu nationalists on social media to stoke anti-Muslim sentiment that in the past helped the ascendance of Modi’s party.

Praveen Donthi, senior analyst with the International Crisis Group, said the war could have a domestic impact in India, unlike other global conflicts, due to its large Muslim population. India is home to some 200 million Muslims who make up the predominantly Hindu country’s largest minority group.

“India’s foreign policy and domestic politics come together in this issue,” Donthi said. “New Delhi’s pro-Israel shift gives a new reason to the country’s right-wing ecosystem that routinely targets Muslims.”

India’s foreign policy has historically supported the Palestinian cause.

In 1947, India voted against the United Nations resolution to create the state of Israel. It was the first non-Arab country to recognize the Palestinian Liberation Organization as the representative of the Palestinians in the 1970s, and it gave the group full diplomatic status in the 1980s.

After the PLO began a dialogue with Israel, India finally established full diplomatic ties with Israel in 1992.

Those ties widened into a security relationship after 1999, when India fought a limited war with Pakistan over Kashmir and Israel helped New Delhi with arms and ammunition. The relationship has grown steadily over the years, with Israel becoming India’s second largest arms supplier after Russia.

After Modi won his first term in 2014, he became the first Indian prime minister to visit Israel in 2017. Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, travelled to New Delhi the following year and called the relationship between New Delhi and Tel Aviv a “marriage made in heaven.”

Weeks after Netanyahu’s visit, Modi visited the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah, a first by an Indian prime minister, and held talks with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. “India hopes that Palestine soon becomes a sovereign and independent country in a peaceful atmosphere,” Modi said.

Modi’s critics, however, now draw comparisons between his government and Israel’s, saying it has adopted certain measures, like demolishing homes and properties, as a form of “collective punishment” against minority Muslims.

Even beyond Kashmir, Indian authorities have largely stopped protests expressing solidarity with Palestinians since the war began, claiming the need to maintain communal harmony and law and order.

Some people have been briefly detained by police for taking part in pro-Palestinian protests even in states ruled by opposition parties. The only state where massive pro-Palestinian protests have taken place is southern Kerala, which is ruled by a leftist government.

But in Kashmir, enforced silence is seen not only as violating freedom of expression but also as impinging on religious duty.

Aga Syed Mohammad Hadi, a Kashmiri religious leader, was not able to lead the past three Friday prayers because he was under house arrest on those days. He said he had wanted to stage a protest rally against “the naked aggression of Israel.” Authorities did not comment on such house arrests.

“Police initially allowed us to condemn Israel’s atrocities inside the mosques. But last Friday they said even speaking (about Palestinians) inside the mosques is not allowed,” Hadi said. “They said we can only pray for Palestine — that too in Arabic, not in local Kashmiri language.”

Yemen’s Houthis launch a new batch of drones against Israel -statement

Cairo (Reuters) – Yemen’s Houthis launched a new batch of drones against sensitive targets inside Israel on Monday, according to a statement from their armed forces broadcast by TV channel Al Masirah.

The statement said the targets of the drones were “varied and sensitive” and led to halting the movement in the targeted bases and airports for hours.

UAE says it will establish a field hospital in Gaza- state news agency

Cairo (Reuters) – The United Arab Emirates will establish a fully equipped field hospital in the Gaza Strip, the state news agency said on Monday without elaborating whether there is an agreement on this initiative with Israel.

The agency said five aircraft carrying the equipment and requirements necessary for the establishment and operation of the field hospital departed from Abu Dhabi on Monday heading to Al-Arish airport in Egypt.