Palestinians ‘squeezed’ as Israel moves beyond ‘yellow line’ in Gaza City

Dozens of Palestinian families are “besieged” in northern Gaza, local authorities say, as the Israeli military has repositioned its forces deeper into the enclave in violation of a United States-brokered ceasefire agreement.

Gaza’s Government Media Office said on Thursday that Israeli forces and tanks had advanced about 300 metres (984 feet) beyond the so-called “yellow line” in eastern Gaza City.

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“The fate of many of these families remains unknown amidst the shelling that targeted the area”, the office said, adding that the expansion of the yellow line shows a “blatant disregard” for the ceasefire deal.

Set out in the agreement between Israel and Hamas, the yellow line refers to an unmarked boundary where the Israeli military repositioned itself when the deal came into effect last month.

It has allowed Israel, which routinely fires at Palestinians who approach the line, to retain control over more than half of the coastal territory.

Reporting from Gaza City on Thursday, Al Jazeera’s Hind Khoudary said Israeli soldiers were seen placing yellow blocks and signs to identify the new deployment line, deeper into the city’s eastern neighbourhood of Shujayea.

“But the entire boundary has not been marked, so many Palestinians do not know exactly where it is”, Khoudary said.

“With this latest advancement in Gaza City’s Shujayea, more Palestinians are unable to reach their homes. People say this is a cage, as they’re being pushed and squeezed into the western parts of Gaza”.

The Israeli military has not publicly commented on the reports that it has gone beyond the yellow line in violation of the ceasefire.

‘ When will this nightmare end? ‘

The move comes amid a surge in Israeli attacks across the Gaza Strip that have sown fear across the war-ravaged enclave.

The Palestinian Health Ministry in Gaza said on Thursday morning that at least 32 Palestinians were killed in Israeli attacks over the past 24 hours and another 88 were wounded.

Medics said an Israeli air strike on a house in Bani Suheila, a town east of Khan Younis, killed three people, including a baby girl, and wounded 15 others.

Israel has violated the truce nearly 400 times since it came into force on October 10, according to an Al Jazeera analysis.

A displaced Palestinian man, 36-year-old Mohammed Hamdouna, told the AFP news agency that people are being killed daily in continued shelling.

“We are still living in tents. He claimed that all the basic necessities of life are still missing because the cities are rubble, crossings are still closed, and there are still no crossings.

Lina Kuraz, a 33-year-old resident of Tuffah east of Gaza City, also told AFP that she was concerned about the resumption of the war.

Funeral held for former US vice president, Iraq War architect Dick Cheney

In honor of the passing of vice president Dick Cheney, who passed away on November 3, a bipartisan group of former US presidents and officials gathered at the National Cathedral in Washington, DC.

Cheney, a powerful figure in Republican politics, served from 2001 to 2009 under George W. Bush. He passed away at the age of 84.

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He is best remembered for leading the invasion of Iraq and developing important laws during the so-called “war on terror,” some of which resulted in human rights violations.

A number of senior officials sat down in the pews on Thursday to pay their respects.

Former Vice President Mike Pence, former Vice President Kamala Harris, former President Joe Biden, former secretary of state Hillary Clinton, and former Vice President Kamala Harris among them.

Trump himself and the current vice president, JD Vance, reportedly weren’t invited.

Bush, Cheney’s former boss, addressed a tribute to the vice president for his legacy.

When a man of this caliber has been your colleague and friend, it should be valued, Bush said in his remarks.

We are appreciative of his good deed, we honor his sacrifice, and we appoint someone to meet him once more.

After speaking at his funeral on November 20th, former representative Liz Cheney passes by his casket.

Cheney’s pivotal role in the advancement of the war in Iraq was poorly made in the depressing memorial’s few words, which made no mention of it.

When Cheney became president of the United States at the age of 34, he was born in Nebraska and raised in Wyoming. He would later serve as George H. W. Bush’s defense secretary and spend ten years in the House of Representatives.

However, his legacy would be decided during the Bush presidency, which was earlier.

Cheney used the vice presidency to advance a broad perspective of executive power following the September 11, 2001 attacks in the US.

He also refuted the myth that Iraq was using “weapons of mass destruction” to justify US invasion of that nation.

In the name of national security, he frequently defended measures like torture, detention without due process, and domestic surveillance.

Criticism of Bush and Cheney’s administration cite the Middle East’s instability as the cause of the US invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, which resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people.

The Afghan conflict lasted for two decades before coming to an end in 2021 after the Iraq War ended in 2011.

432, 000 civilians were killed in the fighting, out of 940, 000 direct deaths in the Middle East as a result. In addition to the conflict, millions more died from untreated diseases and a lack of healthcare facilities.

Despite allegations by human rights experts that he oversaw a torture campaign against US prisoners, Cheney has largely refuted his role as vice president.

When questioned about his support for “enhanced interrogation techniques” like waterboarding in 2014, he said they were not at all torture.

Cheney continued, “do it again,” and referred to those who conducted the interrogations as “heroes.”

Cheney had largely lost favor with the Republican Party in spite of his status as one of the most significant vice presidents to have taken office in US history over the previous 15 years.

He became even more distant from political figures when he launched a sharp criticism of Trump, calling him a “threat to our republic” at the moment.

For instance, Cheney criticised Trump’s attempts to stifle Biden’s 2020 presidential election success.

Cheney backed Trump’s re-election campaign in 2024 with Democrat Vice President Harris.

His daughter Liz Cheney was one of two Republicans on a congressional committee investigating the Trump-led assault on the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, which was led by Trump’s supporters in protest of his 2020 defeat.

In a primary challenge to a candidate who supported Trump, she was ultimately removed from her seat in the House of Representatives. In the 2020 presidential election, she later ran alongside Harris.

In her remarks at his funeral on Thursday, Liz said, “To be in my dad’s company was to know safety, love, laughter, and kindness.

US tariffs cast shadow over Nuevo Leon’s steel industry in Mexico

Monterrey, Mexico – For nearly the whole year, only one of the five machines at a metal products workshop in Apodaca, Nuevo Leon, in northern Mexico, has been operational. The small business was forced to drastically reduce its production capacity after United States President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on steel and aluminium.

“It affected us greatly,” Jose David Garcia Torres, chief of operations at Maquinados Bera, told Al Jazeera. “Many companies decided to halt production, and our services were no longer needed. We were stopped for months, literally doing nothing.”

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The US initially implemented 25 percent tariffs on steel imports in March and doubled that to 50 percent in June. In the first seven months of the year, the latest data available, Mexican steel and aluminium exports to the US fell 29 percent and 21 percent, in value, respectively, according to data from the US Department of Commerce.

Tariff negotiations are continuing after Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and Trump spoke by phone on October 25. A 90-day extension of tariff pause on most items other than steel, copper and aluminium, expected to expire on October 31, was extended for “a few more weeks”, Sheinbaum said.

Belem Iliana Vasquez Galan, an economics professor at Colegio de la Frontera, a research institute in Monterrey, told Al Jazeera that these recent tariffs have a broad reach, encompassing all products containing steel and aluminium.

“It’s not just the steel industry but also the automotive industry, the production of electronic goods, machinery, everything that includes some steel, aluminium or copper,” she said.

Nuevo Leon’s governor, Samuel Garcia, declared at a September trade show that the state’s steel and aluminium industry has been affected by tariffs applied under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, which allows the US president to impose tariffs for national security interests. At the event, Garcia pledged support for major companies like Nemak and Ternium, which Al Jazeera couldn’t reach for comment.

In recent years, Nuevo Leon, known as Mexico’s industrial powerhouse, has grandly announced significant foreign investments, rebranding itself as a leading city in nearshoring. This was largely driven by the announcement of the construction of a Tesla Gigafactory in March 2023. This project, which brought immense pride to the region and the country, is now widely considered cancelled after Tesla CEO Elon Musk put it on hold in July 2024 due to uncertainty over trade policies between Mexico and the US and in the lead-up to the US elections that year. The Mexican government insists it is merely on hold.

This uncertainty has significantly impacted small companies that once believed the influx of foreign investment would benefit them directly.

“If they’re receiving all those investments, I think it’s more for larger companies. We, the workshops, are more abandoned,” Garcia Torres said.

Previously, high production demand in Nuevo Leon had benefitted small workshops like Maquinados Bera, even those not directly connected to large corporations. “Before, it was like, ‘I have so much work, I’m at capacity.’ People would call you to offer work, not to ask for it,” Garcia Torres added.

Jorge Rodriguez, who runs a metalworks workshop in Cadereyta, a predominantly agricultural and livestock municipality 40km (25 miles) southeast of Monterrey, agreed there was a slowdown in orders in the months leading up to the presidential elections in both countries. However, work came to a standstill at the beginning of this year after Trump’s tariff announcements and the resulting climate of uncertainty.

“Purchase orders have decreased significantly,” he said. “The companies I work for export their products. Their [exports] almost completely stopped, and I no longer manufacture anything for them.”

Emmanuel Loo, Nuevo Leon’s deputy economy secretary, insisted the impact on the state’s industry has been minimal. Loo told Al Jazeera he views this new climate as an opportunity to strengthen local supply chains and increase global competitiveness.

“What we’ve seen is a reorganisation of the steel production chain, in which Nuevo Leon industries have purchased from local industries,” Loo added.

Made in Nuevo Leon

For some small businesses, tariffs meant halting production for large companies, such as machining bushings, pins for hoppers or creating all the fixtures and tooling needed to bend and assemble products. These businesses had to shift their focus to local individual demand and, in some cases, lay off workers.

Rodriguez told Al Jazeera that local demand has always existed, but industrial demand was so high that small businesses like his never prioritised it. This year, these smaller orders became their lifeline.

“The money is in the industry, and it was good. But then the industry stopped, and we needed those people with smaller requests. They are smaller jobs, but ultimately they add up – 10, 15 orders – and then you can start paying salaries again,” he said.

Maquinados Bera also sustained itself through small orders. Garcia Torres explained that, like some other businesses, it had to diversify its production and make machine parts it wasn’t accustomed to. “There was a person who asked us to make grills, and so we made them,” he said.

The Nuevo Leon government promotes local products, job creation and entrepreneur connections through its Made in Nuevo Leon initiative. Loo emphasised that the state is promoting tax incentives for companies that use local supply chains as well as loans for small and medium-sized businesses to invest in equipment and integrate into global value chains of key sectors like the automotive and high-tech industries.

However, Vasquez said, integrating local small and medium-sized companies into global supply chains has always been challenging. Foreign companies’ high requirements in terms of both quantity and delivery time remain difficult for small businesses to meet.

“Integration generally occurs solely for employment. In other words, the only benefit foreign companies bring is job creation,” she said.

Made in Nuevo Leon has a lot in common with Plan Mexico, an initiative launched in January by Sheinbaum to boost Mexico’s global economic competitiveness and strengthen the domestic market. Analysts see a key challenge in ensuring domestic production finds a domestic market.

“So how are you going to tell a company that currently allocates, let’s say, half of its exports to other markets to now sell in Mexico when there’s no market or when prices aren’t competitive?” Vasquez asked.

The challenges of creating conditions for domestic market growth in Mexico are intensifying as the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) comes up for review next year. Loo told Al Jazeera in early October that the Nuevo Leon government is working with the US government to ensure Mexican aluminium and steel are treated equally under USMCA rules of origin, allowing them to be exported to the United States “virtually tariff-free”.

“This is what we’re trying to do, not because the industry is being affected but because it’s a great area of ​​opportunity and competitiveness for Mexico as a country and region and for the steel and aluminium companies in our state,” he added.

Mexico’s integral role in US supply chains highlights the interwoven need for stronger supply chains.

“We are at a crucial point in US-Mexico relations because the Mexican economy has always depended on the US economy and, through it, on international trade and foreign investment,” Vasquez said.

To protect its domestic industry, Mexico has applied temporary tariffs of up to 25 percent on steel imports from countries without a free trade agreement, such as China, Mexico’s second biggest trading partner after the US, a move many view as an attempt to placate Trump, as the US has been involved in a deep trade war with China.

Vasquez asks, “But how can Mexico benefit if it is also closing its doors to trade with the United States? In other words, it is neither allowing an agreement with China nor increasing its trade relationship with the United States.”

Meanwhile, Garcia Torres and Rodriguez are beginning, albeit cautiously, to see glimmers of hope after months of uncertainty. All machines are now operating at Maquinados Bera. Although the orders are still minimal, they are starting to hear more about large companies returning to their previous production rhythms.

At least 41 dead as heavy rain, flooding and landslides hit central Vietnam

Authorities in Vietnam say at least 41 people have been killed in a barrage of torrential rain, flooding and landslides, as rescue crews worked to save stranded people from the rooftops of submerged homes.

Rainfall exceeded 150cm (60 inches) over the past three days in several parts of central Vietnam, a region home to a key coffee production belt and the country’s most popular beaches.

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At least 41 people have been killed across six provinces since Sunday, while the search was continuing for nine others, the environment ministry said on Thursday.

More than 52,000 houses were flooded, and nearly 62,000 people were evacuated from their homes, while several major roads remained blocked due to landslides, and one million customers were left without electricity.

A suspension bridge on the Da Nhim River in Lam Dong province was swept away on Thursday morning, the VietnamNet newspaper reported.

Photos taken by the AFP news agency also showed hundreds of cars underwater as flooding inundated entire city blocks in Nha Trang, a popular tourist spot on the coast.

Local business owner Bui Quoc Vinh said his ground-floor restaurants and shops were under about a metre (3.2 feet) of water in the city.

“I am worried about our furniture in my restaurants and shops, but of course I cannot do anything now,” he told AFP.

“I don’t think the water is going to recede soon, as the rain has not stopped.”

The national weather forecast agency has warned of more flooding and landslides on Friday, with heavy rain set to continue in the region.

Deputy Prime Minister Ho Quoc Dung told the leaders of three flood-affected provinces – Khanh Hoa, Dak Lak and Gia Lai – to mobilise the army, police and other security forces to “promptly relocate and evacuate people” to safe areas, according to a government statement.

Meanwhile, state media reported that rescuers using boats in Gia Lai and Dak Lak pried open windows and broke through roofs to assist residents stranded by high water on Wednesday.

People wade through floodwaters near inundated vehicles in Nha Trang on November 20, 2025 [AFP]

Photographs shared in state media reports showed residents, including children, sitting on the roofs of flooded houses and calling for help via social media platforms.

“Any group out there please help! We’ve been sitting on the roof since 10pm last night, including kids and adults,” a resident of Khanh Hoa province posted on a local Facebook page.

Natural disasters have left 279 people dead or missing in Vietnam and caused more than $2bn in damage between January and October, according to the national statistics office.