Canada, Philippines sign defence pact to deter Beijing in South China Sea

Who killed Shireen?

New evidence and cover-ups by Israeli and US governments are revealed in an investigation into Shireen Abu Akleh’s murder.

The murder of Palestinian American Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, who was reporting in Jenin, West Bank, was the subject of this significant investigative documentary.

After months of exhaustive investigation, it finally discovers the identity of the Israeli sniper who killed her.

It examines efforts to bring justice to its own country through the US and Israeli governments’ opaque political systems.

Humanitarian disaster worsens across Sudan after RSF takes over el-Fasher

In spite of the ongoing violence and killings in North Darfur’s el-Fasher, millions of people in Sudan’s war-ravaged region, especially its western regions, still need humanitarian aid.

Despite the fact that a mediation roadmap by mediators has failed to produce a ceasefire, international aid organizations called on the Sudanese armed forces (SAF) and paramilitary rapid support forces (RSF) on Sunday to encourage more aid entry.

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After an 18-month siege and hunger campaign, the paramilitary force seized El-Fasher, the state capital of North Darfur, and the situation is still dire.

In the final major city in the western region of Darfur, tens of thousands of civilians are reportedly trapped, and thousands more are still unaccounted for after fleeing El-Fasher.

Only a small percentage of those who eluded El-Fasher’s footpath managed to reach Tawila, a town that is about 50 kilometers (30 miles) away.

Only a few hundred more people have shown up in the town over the past few days, according to a representative from Tawila for an official with a French-based aid organization.

Given how few people were trapped in El-Fasher, those are “very small.” According to Caroline Bouvard, Sudan’s country director for Solidarites International, “we keep hearing that people are stuck on the roads and in various villages that are unfortunately still inaccessible due to security reasons.”

After the RSF takeover, according to Bouvard, there is a “complete blackout” in terms of information coming out of El-Fasher, and aid organizations are gathering information from nearby neighborhoods where up to 15, 000 people are reportedly stuck.

There is a strong call for advocacy from the various parties to ensure that these people can receive humanitarian aid or that we can at least send them back to Tawila.

Many of the survivors of numerous RSF checkpoints and patrols to Tawila have reported seeing numerous sexually abused, tortured, and mass executions. Some were kidnapped by armed men and forced to pay a ransom for their pain.

In Sudan’s Northern State, many more people have been forced to relocate to the al-Dabbah refugee camp. Some have been in place for a while.

According to Hiba Morgan, a reporter for the camp, more displaced people have flooded in from El-Fasher, which has only justgotten worse.

Many people are sleeping outside in the open because they require food, clean water, medication, and shelter. As people flee the massacre by RSF fighters, thousands more could visit the camp and other nearby areas in the coming days.

As mediators, the United States, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Egypt have all voiced their opposition to the widespread massacres and forcibly increased humanitarian aid.

In response to the massacre of the Masalit people in West Darfur’s capital, the US Department of State said in a statement on Saturday that “the RSF must stop engaging in retribution and ethnic violence.”

“External military support only prolongs the conflict, and there isn’t a workable military solution.” In a post on X, the United States urged both parties to pursue a negotiated solution to the suffering of the Sudanese people.

In response to the RSF’s takeover of el-Fasher, US lawmakers have also demanded action from Washington.

How can the US government shutdown be brought to an end?

As the political impasse gets worse, the poor are the ones who are most affected.

The government shutdown in the United States is not about to end.

Some federally subsidized workers worry about getting their next meal, while at least 1.4 million of them are going without pay.

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What will happen if the Republicans and Democrats get into a fight, and how can it be resolved?

Presenter: 

Adrian Finighan

Guests: 

Marena Lin is the co-founder of Project Restore Us, a volunteer-led initiative that helps neighborhoods in Los Angeles who are experiencing food insecurity.

Niall Stanage, a Washington, DC, columnist for The Hill newspaper and a digital media company, is a writer for The Hill.

How labour unions in Europe can help end Israel’s genocide in Gaza

Since October 10, there has been a ceasefire in Gaza, but Israel has continued to use brutal force. More than 220 Palestinians have been killed in three weeks. More than 100 people were massacred on Tuesday in a 24-hour period. Israel continues to block the amount of aid that was agreed during the ceasefire. For reconstruction and extensive medical evacuations, it is stifling resources and equipment.

Israeli soldiers and settlers continue to carry out unchecked attacks on Palestinians and their property in the occupied West Bank. Since October 7, 2023, they have killed more than 1, 000 Palestinians, including 213 children. A nine-year-old boy was playing football with friends when Israeli soldiers shot him dead just on October 16.

As long as Israel continues to be occupied and colonized Palestine, a ceasefire is undoubtedly not going to stop the killing, as long as the West offers it political, military, and logistical support. Governments have attempted to change their positions on Israel after two years of street protests all over the world, but they have failed to do so.

The solution might be to mobilize large numbers of workers. Labor unions are uniquely positioned to undermine the support for Israel by their governments, particularly in Europe. Workers in many sectors could influence the situation by organizing for Palestine, given the active trade between Israel and the European countries and the logistical significance of European ports.

Millions of people have marched across Europe over the past two years, but most governments have ignored calls to end all support for Israel. Despite its unwavering support for Palestinian rights, the Irish government still trades heavily with Israel. In 2024, Israel was the third-largest importer.

Public demonstrations frequently act as a “pressure valve,” guiding dissention and lowering government pressure to alter policies. However, industrial behavior is unique. The economy is driven by workers. The consequences of their inability to carry out their duties can be both politically and economically devastating.

Strikes and industrial actions can paralyze supply chains, cause higher production costs, and force concessions, in contrast to protest marches and protest marches. Employers have the organizational acumen to strategically escalate actions, from localized slowdowns to national-scale strikes, thereby putting economic downturns under political pressure.

Unions continue to be the most powerful means of influencing governments in liberal democracies. And recent history provides a lot of proof for that.

For instance, the South African apartheid regime was actively challenged by labor unions in Western nations. In response to the Irish anti-apartheid strike at Dunnes Stores in July 1984, workers at the store refused to handle South African goods in a protest against apartheid. In the same vein, San Francisco dockworkers vowed to not unload any cargo from South Africa in November 1984.

The anti-apartheid movement in the West grew more quickly thanks to these and other examples of workers’ solidarity actions, which eventually led to the government’s official sanctions against the apartheid regime.

stumbling block to the trade between the EU and Israel

Israel’s largest trading partner is the European Union, which accounts for 32% of its total goods trade in 2024. Israel’s imports are made up of 34.2% of the EU’s, and its exports are made up of 28.8%. Israel’s military equipment and supplies are primarily imported from EU nations. Israel’s war machine could be directly undermined by disrupting this supply chain.

Because they regulate the flow of goods, ports are crucial chokepoints in this chain. Significant consequences would result from selective industrial action at ports that would halt shipments to or from Israel. Since Israel’s trade accounts for only 0.8% of the total of the EU, such actions would have a significant impact on the EU’s economies.

Additionally, a ban on EU ports would have an impact abroad. Major European ports are used to transport a large portion of Israel’s trade with the United States, which is its main trading partner in 2024. The cost of Israeli logistics could go up dramatically if transshipments are blocked or cargo costs are increased by making ships avoid EU hubs.

Trade unions can also protest the status of goods produced in occupied Palestinian territory by blocking their movement. Or they can go further and refuse to deal with any goods coming from or going to Israel. Small and medium-sized European businesses and corporations would find it expensive to trade with Israel as a result.

Trade unions would be upholding international law and acting in accordance with established human rights standards in doing so.

Solidarity movements should work with labor unions throughout Europe in order to address the scope of industrial protest action. The work of solidarity organizations can primarily enlist the public’s support, encourage boycotts of stores, and educate people about the history of Palestine and Israel’s actions. These actions maintain legitimacy, increase support, and raise awareness of the Palestinian conflict.

Unions can direct action in Israel’s production sites and ports, preventing the flow of goods there.

The conflict between the systems that support Israel’s war and solidarity movements and unions would become materialized. When they launched a national strike on Gaza in September, Italian activists and workers demonstrated how effective combined action can be.

convergent human rights and labor interests

Israel’s ties to multinational corporations, particularly in Europe and North America, are a determining factor in the war and colonization of Palestine. Many of these businesses profit from occupation and war while also being major employers in these locations by exploiting workers, driving down wages, and lobbying for labor deregulation. They lobby governments to support Israel and purchase Palestinian-tested weapons and technologies to use for Israeli surveillance and repression against their own citizens.

This provides a platform for solidarity movements and labor unions to unite against common oppressors. Unions can undermine Israel’s war effort by disrupting its supply chain, as well as hold multinational corporations accountable for putting profits before people’s lives, whether they are from the Palestinian or the European Union.

Particularly now that Israel has switched to low-level killing and starvation under the guise of a ceasefire to placate international outcry, a convergence of efforts between the solidarity movement and labor unions is crucial.

This pattern of continued genocidal violence can be seen in previously agreed agreements, which demonstrates why symbolic gestures and diplomatic promises won’t put an end to the Gaza genocide. Israel’s war machine can only be broken by logical, tangible action.

By preventing Israel’s economic lifeline through strategic industrial action, labor unions in Europe have the authority to do just that. Unions can compel complicit corporations to stop using their own words and force governments to abandon their empty rhetoric by attacking supply chains that fuel the war. Israel’s continued killing of Palestinian children won’t be stopped by symbolic protests and chants against the war. Workers must unite, speak out, and put an end to Palestinian colonial violence.

Hamas rejects US accusation it looted aid trucks in Gaza

Hamas has refuted claims made by US Central Command (CENTCOM) that it looted aid trucks in the Gaza Strip.

An aid truck allegedly targeted the enclave in a drone footage that CENTCOM had released. The drone reported that on October 31 suspected Hamas operatives allegedly looted the truck as it traveled with a humanitarian convoy in northern Khan Younis, according to a statement.

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Hamas claimed on Sunday that the accusations made by the United States were “unfounded” and were “part of an attempt to justify the further reduction of already-limited humanitarian aid, while concealing the failure of the international community to put an end to the blockade and hunger imposed on civilians in Gaza.”

“All instances of chaos and looting ended with the [Israeli] occupying forces’ withdrawal, demonstrating that the occupation was the only organization that supported these gangs and organized the chaos,” it continued.

Hamas claimed that in an effort to protect humanitarian aid convoys and ensure that aid is delivered to those in need, more than 1, 000 Palestinian police and security personnel lost their lives and injured hundreds.

No one working with the aid convoys, nor any of the international or local organizations, was cited in the report or complaint about Hamas’ looting.

This clearly demonstrates that the scene that the US Central Command has cited serves only to justify blockade measures and the reduction of humanitarian aid, according to the statement. The US is also accused of failing to adequately account for the ongoing Israeli attacks that resulted from the ceasefire agreement, which resulted in the deaths of 254 Palestinians and 595 wounded.

The MQ-9 aerial drone was flying over the Israeli-Hamas border to check the implementation of the ceasefire, according to CENTCOM.

“Over 600 trucks full of commercial goods and aid have been delivered to Gaza daily by international partners over the past week,” said the statement. These efforts are undermined by this incident, the statement read.

Despite our repeated requests to increase the number of humanitarian aid trucks and reduce commercial shipments, Hamas claimed that the average number of aid trucks entering Gaza daily is not more than 135. The rest are commercial trucks carrying goods that the population of Gaza cannot afford.

The US’s use of the Israeli narrative only serves to reinforce Washington’s moral bias, according to the statement.

Under US President Donald Trump’s 20-point plan, the ceasefire became effective on October 10.

In exchange for nearly 2, 000 Palestinian prisoners, the captives are released in phase one of the agreement. Additionally, the plan envisages the establishment of a new Hamas-unfriendly governing structure and the reconstruction of Gaza.