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Iberia probes ‘Free Palestine’ message on kosher meals

Iberia probes ‘Free Palestine’ message on kosher meals
Spain's flagship carrier Iberia's planes are parked at the Madrid-Barajas Adolfo Suarez Airport in Madrid, on December 3, 2024. (File/AFP)
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Updated 05 August 2025

Iberia probes ‘Free Palestine’ message on kosher meals

Iberia probes ‘Free Palestine’ message on kosher meals
  • Several Jewish passengers on a flight from Buenos Aires to Madrid received meal trays marked with the initials “FP” for “Free Palestine”

MADRID: Spanish airline Iberia said Tuesday that it had opened an investigation after a passenger who requested a kosher meal received his food tray with the words “Free Palestine” written on the packaging.
Several other Jewish passengers on the flight from Buenos Aires to Madrid received meal trays marked with the initials “FP” for “Free Palestine,” according to DAIA, the umbrella organization of Argentina’s Jewish community, calling it a “serious act of antisemitism.”
“We strongly condemn this discriminatory act and have contacted the airline authorities to demand explanations and immediate action,” the group said in a message posted on X.
The post included a photo showing a meal tray with a handwritten white label marked “Free Palestine” in black letters.
Kosher refers to food prepared according to Jewish dietary laws.
In a statement, Iberia confirmed that some passengers on the flight that landed early Tuesday reported “handwritten pro-Palestinian messages” on their meal packaging.
“The Iberia crew documented the incident and took action to assist those affected. The captain personally approached them to apologize on behalf of the airline,” the statement said.
The airline said it was conducting an internal investigation and working with its catering providers to determine how the labels were added.
Iberia also said it “categorically rejects any form of discrimination, incitement to hatred, or behavior that undermines the dignity of individuals.”
Last month, dozens of Jewish teenagers from France were removed from a Vueling flight departing Valencia in Spain.
The airline said they had engaged in disruptive behavior including tampering with life jackets and oxygen masks.
Some parents, however, alleged the removal was antisemitic, saying the group was expelled after one teen sang a song in Hebrew.
Vueling is part of International Airlines Group (IAG), which also owns Iberia, British Airways and the Irish airline Aer Lingus.P


Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger announce exit from International Criminal Court

Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger announce exit from International Criminal Court
Updated 5 sec ago

Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger announce exit from International Criminal Court

Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger announce exit from International Criminal Court
DAKAR: The military-led West African countries Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger have announced their withdrawal from the International Criminal Court, denouncing it as “a tool of neocolonial repression.”
The announcement, in a joint statement published on Monday, is the latest example of diplomatic upheaval in West Africa’s Sahel region following eight coups between 2020 and 2023.
The three countries, which are ruled by military officers, have already split from the West African regional bloc ECOWAS and formed a body known as the Alliance of Sahel States. They have also curbed defense cooperation with Western powers and sought closer ties with Russia.
Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger have been members of the ICC, located in The Hague, for more than two decades. But their statement said they viewed the court as incapable of prosecuting war crimes, crimes against humanity, crimes of aggression and genocide. It did not specify examples of where the countries believed the ICC had fallen short.
The three countries are battling Islamist militant groups that control large swathes of territory and have staged frequent attacks on military installations this year.
Human Rights Watch and other groups have accused the militants as well as the militaries and partner forces of Burkina Faso and Mali of possible atrocity crimes.
In April, United Nations experts said the alleged summary execution of several dozen civilians by Malian forces may amount to war crimes.
The ICC has had an investigation open in Mali since 2013 over alleged war crimes committed primarily in the northern regions of Gao, Timbuktu and Kidal, which had fallen under militant control. Later that year, France intervened to push back the insurgents.
The Mali investigation was opened following a referral from the government at the time.

Crimes against humanity charges against former Philippine President Duterte detailed by court

Crimes against humanity charges against former Philippine President Duterte detailed by court
Updated 36 min 18 sec ago

Crimes against humanity charges against former Philippine President Duterte detailed by court

Crimes against humanity charges against former Philippine President Duterte detailed by court
  • Supporters of Duterte criticized the administration of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., Duterte’s political rival, for arresting and surrendering the former leader to a court whose jurisdiction his supporters dispute

THE HAGUE: The crimes against humanity charges against former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte allege his involvement in the killings of at least 76 people while he was president and earlier a southern mayor, the International Criminal Court has revealed.
The first charge cites 19 victims killed while Duterte was mayor of Davao City between 2013 and around 2016. The second involves 14 who died in targeted killings between 2016 and 2017 when Duterte was president. The third cited the killings of 43 people during so-called “clearance operations” between 2016 and 2018.
The redacted charges were made public Monday after prosecutors submitted a 15-page charge sheet to the court on July 4. Among other things, they allege Duterte instructed and authorized “violent acts including murder to be committed against alleged criminals, including alleged drug dealers and users.”
Duterte, his lawyer and family did not immediately react to the detailed charges. Even when he was president, he denied authorizing extrajudicial killings although he openly threatened drug suspects with death and encouraged police to open fire if suspects violently resisted arrest and threaten law enforcers.
Duterte was arrested in March by Philippine authorities on a warrant issued by the ICC. He is now being held at an ICC facility in the Netherlands.
Supporters of Duterte criticized the administration of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., Duterte’s political rival, for arresting and surrendering the former leader to a court whose jurisdiction his supporters dispute.
A court hearing had been scheduled to begin Tuesday but was postponed to give judges time to evaluate arguments from Duterte’s attorneys that he is not fit to stand trial.


Sri Lanka jails immigration chief for two years

Sri Lanka jails immigration chief for two years
Updated 53 min 17 sec ago

Sri Lanka jails immigration chief for two years

Sri Lanka jails immigration chief for two years
  • Harsha Ilukpitiya pleaded guilty to ignoring court orders to end a multi-million dollar contract that outsourced visa services to a foreign consortium
  • A three-judge bench of the Supreme Court handed down the two-year sentence to Ilukpitiya – who has already spent a year in custody – for contempt

COOMBO: Sri Lanka’s immigration chief was sentenced to two years in prison Tuesday, the latest top official jailed under the government’s anti-corruption drive.
President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has revived corruption cases against members of the former administrations of the two Rajapaksa brothers – Mahinda and Gotabaya, and purged several top officials.
In the latest case, Harsha Ilukpitiya pleaded guilty to ignoring court orders to end a multi-million dollar contract that outsourced visa services to a foreign consortium.
A three-judge bench of the Supreme Court handed down the two-year sentence to Ilukpitiya – who has already spent a year in custody – for contempt.
The case centered on a visa handling contract awarded by the previous government, which replaced a local provider charging one dollar per visa with a foreign consortium that raised the fee to $25.
The consortium – comprising India’s GBS Technology Services and IVS Global FZCO, with VFS Global as a technology partner – even applied the fee to citizens of countries that did not need visas.
Opposition parties and then-tourism minister Harin Fernando had argued the fee would discourage tourists.
Petitioners alleged that the contract was not awarded transparently and estimated that the consortium stood to earn up to $2.75 billion over a 16-year period.
The Supreme Court last year ordered the temporary reinstatement of the previous provider, which Ilukpitiya ignored.
The court has yet to rule on the legality of the outsourcing deal.


Australia probes how Bali body returned home without heart

Australia probes how Bali body returned home without heart
Updated 58 min 14 sec ago

Australia probes how Bali body returned home without heart

Australia probes how Bali body returned home without heart

SYDNEY: Australian officials have demanded answers from Indonesian counterparts after the body of a young man who died on the resort island of Bali was repatriated without his heart.
Queensland man Byron Haddow, 23, was found dead in the plunge pool of his Bali villa this year while on holiday.
His body was returned to Australia four weeks later, where a second autopsy found he was missing his heart.
A spokesperson for Australia’s foreign ministry said Tuesday they were providing consular assistance to Haddow’s family but could not comment further owing to privacy obligations.
“They just rung us to ask if we were aware that his heart had been retained over in Bali,” mother Chantal Haddow told Australia’s Channel Nine.
“Just when I thought I couldn’t feel any more heartbroken, it was another kick in the guts,” she said
“I feel like there was foul play. I think that something’s happened to him prior to being in the pool.”
Senior Australian officials in Bali and Jakarta have made representations to the Indonesian Government regarding the matter.
The Australian Consulate-General in Bali has also conveyed the family’s concerns to hospital officials.
But the forensic doctor who performed the original autopsy rejected claims of wrongdoing.
“For forensic purposes, his heart was tested and was kept behind when the family repatriated the body home,” doctor Nola Margaret Gunawan told The Sydney Morning Herald newspaper on Monday.
“I have given the autopsy result and explanation to the family. They have accepted my explanation.”
Indonesia remains a popular tourist destination, with official data showing it was the top destination for short-term trips overseas by Australians in 2023.


Russia targets Ukraine’s lifeline railways with ‘systematic’ attacks, CEO says

Russia targets Ukraine’s lifeline railways with ‘systematic’ attacks, CEO says
Updated 23 September 2025

Russia targets Ukraine’s lifeline railways with ‘systematic’ attacks, CEO says

Russia targets Ukraine’s lifeline railways with ‘systematic’ attacks, CEO says
  • Ukrzaliznytsia, the vast state owned railway company, employs 170,000 people and has been the target of Russian attacks since the start of Russia’s invasion, but attacks have intensified, causing regular delays
  • The railway network has been a lifeline for people moving around Ukraine and out of the country, as all civilian flights have been grounded

KYIV: Russia has unleashed a massive wave of attacks on Ukraine’s railways since the summer, using new tactics to hit key nodes with long-range drones, but the network is holding up for now, the CEO of the state railway company told Reuters.
“Their first aim is to sow panic among passengers, their second aim is to hit the overall economy,” Oleksandr Pertsovskyi said in an interview held in a rail carriage at Kyiv’s central station.
There did not appear to be a particular focus on targeting military cargo. “These are all, in essence, strikes on civilian infrastructure,” he said.

RAILWAY ATTACKS HAVE INTENSIFIED
Ukrzaliznytsia, the vast state-owned railway company, employs 170,000 people and has been the target of Russian attacks since the start of Russia’s invasion three-and-a-half years ago, but attacks have intensified, causing regular delays.
Since the start of the war in February 2022, the railway network has been a lifeline for people moving around Ukraine and out of the country, as all civilian flights have been grounded.
World leaders, from French President Emmanuel Macron to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and former US President Joe Biden, have arrived in wartime Ukraine by train.
The rail company’s popular sleeper carriages are seen as a reliable way to travel overnight and arrive early in the morning in cities many hundreds of miles away, until the latest Russian onslaught began to delay passengers by several hours.
The railway is also crucial for transporting military equipment and commercial cargo, although volumes of the latter have dropped significantly in wartime, denting the company’s finances.
Pertsovskyi said the attacks, which have hit dozens of substations, were linked to the dramatic increase in long-range drones that Russia’s military-industrial complex is producing.
“Previously, they simply did not have sufficient resources for a single combat drone, such as a Shahed, to hunt down a locomotive. Now they can afford to use Shaheds to hit individual locomotives rather than strategic targets.”

QUICK RECOVERY BUT AT A COST
For now, the railway is recovering from each blow, he said.
The immediate disruption to trains after an attack usually lasts six to 12 hours and electric locomotives are switched out for diesel while power is restored.
Pertsovskyi said disruption had been minimized and the transit of military cargoes had not been impacted.
“It’s a marathon ... They strike us, we recover,” he said. “They strike us, we recover.”
Since the middle of summer, Russia has attacked railway electricity substations and other infrastructure nodes with an average of six to seven long-range Shahed kamikaze drones most nights, according to Pertsovskyi.
“They are ... acting systematically, knocking out one substation after another or key rail hubs in order to stop passenger trains and sow panic and distrust among the people.”
Five or six key rail hubs have been bombarded since the summer, he said.
Reuters could not independently verify the reports. Russia denies targeting Ukrainian civilians.
The railway also faces sabotage from agents recruited by Russia in Ukraine. Ukraine’s security services regularly announce the detention of people they accuse of plotting to blow up vulnerable points on the network.
This is less of a threat than Russian airstrikes, but sabotage is on the rise with dozens of cases recorded this year, Pertsovskyi said.
And diesel locomotives are about five times more expensive to run per kilometer than their electric equivalents — an additional headache for a company with deep financial issues.
The World Bank estimates that roughly 30 percent of Ukraine’s railway is in a “damage-repair” cycle.
Some bridges had been hit many times over by Russian forces throughout the war and repaired each time, but Pertsovskyi declined to specify which ones, citing security reasons. The company would keep up the pace of repairs, he said.
“If we slow down a little and let the enemy strike and destroy, then they will be even more drawn to the smell of blood.”