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Chido death toll rises to 94 in Mozambique

A drone view of destroyed houses and buildings following cyclone Chido in Pemba, Mozambique, December 18, 2024. (REUTERS)
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A drone view of destroyed houses and buildings following cyclone Chido in Pemba, Mozambique, December 18, 2024. (REUTERS)
Chido death toll rises to 94 in Mozambique
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This handout picture taken and distributed by UNICEF on December 15, 2024 shows a damaged telecommunications tower after Cyclone Chido made its landfall in Mecufi district, Cabo Delgado proving, in Mozambique. (AFP)
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Updated 22 December 2024

Chido death toll rises to 94 in Mozambique

A drone view of destroyed houses and buildings following cyclone Chido in Pemba, Mozambique, December 18, 2024. (REUTERS)

MAPUTO: Cyclone Chido killed at least 94 people in Mozambique in its deadly rampage through the Indian Ocean last week, the country’s disaster management agency said Sunday, raising a previous death toll of 76.
The cyclone, which devastated the French island territory of Mayotte before hitting the African mainland, also destroyed 110,000 homes in Mozambique, officials said.
It comes as the southern African nation reels from a deadly post-election crisis pitting the party in power since Mozambique’s independence from Portugal against an opposition crying foul over alleged electoral fraud.
After making landfall the storm ravaged the northern province of Cabo Delgado with gusts of around 260 kilometers per hour, pelting it with 250 millimeters of rain in a day.
That part of northern Mozambique is both regularly ravaged by tropical storms and wrestling with unrest from a long-running insurgency.
More than 500,000 of the 620,000 Mozambicans affected by the storm — which experts say was made more intense by human-driven climate change — are concentrated in Cabo Delgado.
In the hard-hit Mecufi district a mosque had its roof stripped by the gale, as seen in images taken by UNICEF.
The ruling Frelimo party’s presidential candidate Daniel Chapo — whose win at the ballot box in October has been denounced by the opposition as fraudulent — visited the affected areas on Sunday.
At least 130 people have been killed in protests against Chapo’s victory in an election that international observers say was marred by irregularities, according to Plataforma Decide.
That local civil society group’s figures have been cited by Amnesty International.
Chapo — who is due to be sworn in as president on Jan. 15 if the Constitutional Council approves the election results by Monday — appealed on public television for citizens across the country to donate food and clothes. “Even if we are using them, our brothers need them,” he urged.
The protests against Frelimo’s declared win have brought city centers to a standstill, with several of Mozambique’s power plants shuttered as a result.
Police have been accused of using live rounds against demonstrators to suppress the protests.
Opposition leader Venancio Mondlane has threatened “chaos” if the Constitutional Council validates the initial results that found he came second in the Oct. 9 polls.
For the time being, Mozambique remains the country with the heaviest death toll from Chido.
Seven days after the cyclone hit Mayotte, 35 people were reported dead and some 2,500 injured on that archipelago by the French Interior Ministry.
But it is feared the toll may rise sharply given the scores of undocumented migrants from the nearby Comoros islands, who tend to inhabit Mayotte’s many shantytowns flattened by the storm.

The Comoros — which also claims sovereignty over Mayotte — declared a day of national mourning over Cyclone Chido’s passage, despite having not recorded any deaths on its territory.

After sweeping over Mozambique, the cyclone moved into Malawi.


Dutch Supreme Court orders government to review Israel weapons export policy

Dutch Supreme Court orders government to review Israel weapons export policy
Updated 6 sec ago

Dutch Supreme Court orders government to review Israel weapons export policy

Dutch Supreme Court orders government to review Israel weapons export policy
  • The Supreme Court of the Netherlands on Friday ordered the government to review its policies for weapons exports to Israel
THE HAGUE: The Supreme Court of the Netherlands on Friday ordered the government to review its policies for weapons exports to Israel.
The court did not uphold a ban on the export of parts for F35 fighter jets ordered by a lower court last year, but said the government needed to assess by itself whether there was a risk that the jet parts would be used in violation of international law.
It gave the government six weeks to make this review, during which the export of fighter jet parts would still be banned.

India to resume direct flights with China in late October

India to resume direct flights with China in late October
Updated 53 min 15 sec ago

India to resume direct flights with China in late October

India to resume direct flights with China in late October
  • India’s largest carrier IndiGo plans to start Kolkata-Guangzhou flights on Oct. 26
  • Direct connections suspended since Indian-Chinese border clashes in 2020

NEW DELHI: India is set to resume direct flights with China in late October, its foreign ministry said, with no commercial airlines having operated between the world’s two most populous countries for the past five years.

The nuclear-armed neighbors were locked in a standoff triggered by deadly clashes along their Himalayan border, known as the Line of Actual Control, in 2020.

Tens of thousands of troops, tanks, and artillery have been deployed on both sides of the LAC, with both countries also building roads, bunkers, and airstrips in the high-altitude region.

Despite multiple rounds of talks, tensions persisted, with India curbing Chinese investments, banning dozens of apps, and tightening trade scrutiny while deepening ties with the US, Japan, and Australia.

Border talks only resumed in August this year, during Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s visit to New Delhi, which was widely interpreted as a signal of an easing of tensions. At the same meeting, the two sides agreed to restore air links and finalize a deal between their civil aviation authorities on direct air services.

“This agreement of the civil aviation authorities will further facilitate people-to-people contact between India and China, contributing towards the gradual normalisation of bilateral exchanges,” India’s Ministry of External Affairs said on Thursday.

“It has now been agreed that direct air services connecting designated points in India and China can resume by late October 2025, in keeping with the winter season schedule, subject to commercial decision of the designated carriers from the two countries and fulfilment of all operational criteria.”

India’s largest carrier, IndiGo, announced on social media that it would start operating daily non-stop flights between Kolkata and Guangzhou on Oct. 26.

A thaw between India and China began in late October last year, when Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping held their first bilateral meeting in five years at a summit of BRICS nations in Russia’s Kazan.

They met again last month as Modi visited China for a summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization last month. It was the Indian prime minister’s first official trip to China since the SCO summit in Wuhan in 2018.

The agreement to restart direct air connections was important as a first step in rebuilding the bilateral relationship, Manoj Kewalramani, chairperson of the Indo-Pacific Research Program and a China studies fellow at the Takshashila Institution, told Arab News.

“It is in the inherent interest of both India and China to have a stable and predictable relationship. This process of trying to gradually find some sort of a new arrangement began in October last year,” he said.

“It’s telling that it has taken nearly one year since the prime minister first met President Xi Jinping to put together this air services agreement and to resume direct flights, but it is significant as a first step in the gradual process of arriving at some sort of new balance in the relationship.”

 


Deadly Manchester synagogue attack prompts UK police call to cancel pro-Palestinian protests

Deadly Manchester synagogue attack prompts UK police call to cancel pro-Palestinian protests
Updated 03 October 2025

Deadly Manchester synagogue attack prompts UK police call to cancel pro-Palestinian protests

Deadly Manchester synagogue attack prompts UK police call to cancel pro-Palestinian protests
  • UK police urge cancelation of pro-Palestinian protest after Manchester synagogue attack

LONDON: British police on Friday urged organizers of a planned pro-Palestinian protest in London this weekend to cancel or postpone the event, following the deadly attack on a Manchester synagogue.
“The horrific terrorist attack that took place in Manchester yesterday will have caused significant fear and concern in communities across the UK, including here in London,” the Metropolitan Police said on X.
Police said they wanted to deploy every available officer to protect communities but were instead having to prepare for a gathering of more than 1,000 people in London’s Trafalgar Square on Saturday in support of Palestine Action, an organization which was banned under anti-terrorism laws in July.
“By choosing to encourage mass law breaking on this scale, Defend Our Juries (protest organizers) are drawing resources away from the communities of London at a time when they are needed most,” the police said.


Strike in Italy over Gaza flotilla strands commuters

Strike in Italy over Gaza flotilla strands commuters
Updated 03 October 2025

Strike in Italy over Gaza flotilla strands commuters

Strike in Italy over Gaza flotilla strands commuters
  • A general strike in Italy in support of the Gaza aid flotilla disrupted trains and threatened more commuter chaos Friday in a second day of demonstrations in Rome

ROME: A general strike in Italy in support of the Gaza aid flotilla disrupted trains and threatened more commuter chaos Friday in a second day of demonstrations in Rome.
The strike, called by the USB and CFIL unions, follows demonstrations Thursday in several cities across the world, including in Milan and Rome, where some 10,000 people marched from the Colosseum.
Protesters began to amass again Friday morning in Rome to march to the vast plaza outside the central train station of Termini, where services were canceled or delayed up to 80 minutes.
“The squares will be packed,” the head of the CGIL union, Maurizio Landini, told Radio Anch’io Friday.
“It shows the humanity and determination of decent people who want to stop genocide and are doing what governments and states have pretended not to see or are even complicit in,” Landini said.
In Milan and other cities, travelers experienced similar delays and cancelations, with national railway Trenitalia warning that the national strike would extend through 20:59 p.m. Friday.
“Today, one million Italians will be left stranded on trains alone,” Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini told the Mattino Cinque television show.
Commercial traffic was blocked at the port of Livorno, local media reported.
The strike began as Italy’s foreign ministry announced that four Italian parliamentarians had been released by Israel after being arrested in the Global Sumud Flotilla, which aims to break Israel’s siege of Gaza.
The two Italian members of parliament and two Italian members of the European Parliament were due to arrive back in Rome Friday, the ministry said.
The flotilla said Friday the Israeli navy had intercepted 42 vessels this week while officials said more than 400 activists were detained. The last ship set sail on Friday.
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni condemned the national strike while at an EU meeting in Copenhagen Thursday.
“I would have expected that at least on an issue they considered so important, the unions would not have called a general strike on Friday, because long weekends and revolution do not go together,” said Meloni.
The head of the right-wing government had previously called the flotilla a “dangerous, irresponsible” initiative, even while Italy sent a navy frigate to provide assistance.
Meloni’s reluctance to overtly criticize Israel and her unwillingness to break ranks with US President Donald Trump has encountered increasing resistance in Italy, spurring a wave of protests in recent weeks.
Italy’s strike watchdog has already called Friday’s action illegal, due to unions not having given the necessary 10-day notice.


UK police name victims of Manchester synagogue attack

UK police name victims of Manchester synagogue attack
Updated 16 min 53 sec ago

UK police name victims of Manchester synagogue attack

UK police name victims of Manchester synagogue attack

LONDON: British police on Friday named the two men killed in an attack on a Manchester synagogue as Adrian Daulby, 53, and Melvin Cravitz, 66, who were both local residents.
The men were killed on Thursday when a man drove a car into pedestrians and then began stabbing them outside the Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation Synagogue in the city in northern England.
The attacker, since named as Jihad Al-Shamie, a 35-year-old British citizen of Syrian descent, was shot dead at the scene by armed officers.
“My deepest sympathies are with Mr.Daulby and Mr.Cravitz’s loved ones at this extremely hard time,” said Detective Chief Superintendent Lewis Hughes in a statement.