Author: AFP

  • Gazans struggling to survive as Israel plans for ‘conquest’

    Gazans struggling to survive as Israel plans for ‘conquest’

    Israel’s plan for the “conquest” of Gaza has sparked renewed fears, but for many of the territory’s residents, the most immediate threat to their lives remains the spectre of famine amid a months-long Israeli blockade.

    The plan to expand military operations, approved by Israel’s security cabinet overnight, includes holding territories in the besieged Gaza Strip and moving the population south “for their protection”, an Israeli official said.

    But Gaza residents told AFP that they did not expect the new offensive would make any significant changes to the already dire humanitarian situation in the small coastal territory.

    “Israel has not stopped the war, the killing, the bombing, the destruction, the siege, and the starvation — every day — so how can they talk about expanding military operations?” Awni Awad, 39, told AFP.

    Awad, who lives in a tent in the southern Gaza city of Khan Yunis after being displaced by Israeli evacuation orders, said that his situation was already “catastrophic and tragic”.

    “I call on the world to witness the famine that grows and spreads every day,” he said.

    The UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) in late April said it had depleted all its foods stocks in Gaza due to Israel’s blockade on all supplies since March 2.

    Aya al-Skafy, a resident of Gaza City, told AFP her baby died because of malnutrition and medicine shortages last week.

    “She was four months old and weighed 2.8 kilograms (6.2 pounds), which is very little. Medicine was not available,” she said.

    “Due to severe malnutrition, she suffered from blood acidity, liver and kidney failure, and many other complications. Her hair and nails also fell out due to malnutrition.”

    Umm Hashem al-Saqqa, another Gaza City resident, fears her five-year-old son might face a similar fate, but is powerless to do anything about it.

    “Hashem suffers from iron deficiency anaemia. He is constantly pale and lacks balance, and is unable to walk due to malnutrition,” she told AFP.

    “There is no food, no medicine, and no nutritional supplements. The markets are empty of food, and the government clinics and pharmacies have nothing.”

    ‘Distract the world’

    Gaza City resident Mohammed al-Shawa, 65, said that Israel’s new military roadmap changes little as it already controls most of Gaza.

    “The Israeli announcement about expanding military operations in Gaza is just talk for the media, because the entire Gaza Strip is occupied, and there is no safe area in Gaza,” he said.

    The UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) estimates that 69 percent of Gaza has now been either incorporated into one of Israel’s buffer zones, or is subject to evacuation orders.

    That number rises to 100 percent in the southern governorate of Rafah, where over 230,000 people lived before the genocide but which has now been entirely declared a no-go zone.

    “There is no food, no medicine, and the announcement of an aid distribution plan is just to distract the world and mislead global public opinion,” Shawa said, referring to reports of a new Israeli plan for humanitarian aid delivery that has yet to be implemented.

    “The reality is that Israel is killing Palestinians in Gaza by bombing, shooting, or through starvation and denial of medical treatment,” he said.

    Israel says that its renewed bombardments and the blockade of Gaza are aimed at forcing Hamas to release hostages held in the territory.

    Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich praised the new plan for Gaza on Monday and evoked a proposal previously floated by US President Donald Trump to displace the territory’s residents elsewhere.

    The far-right firebrand said he would push for the plan’s completion, until “Hamas is defeated, Gaza is fully occupied, and Trump’s historical plan is implemented, with Gaza refugees resettled in other countries”.

  • ‘Devastated’ Prince Harry says no UK return but seeks reconciliation

    ‘Devastated’ Prince Harry says no UK return but seeks reconciliation

    Prince Harry said Friday he wanted to reconcile with Britain’s royal family, but was “devastated” at losing a court battle over his security that meant he felt unable to return to the country with his family.

    Visibly upset, Harry revealed to the BBC that his father King Charles III no longer speaks to him over the security issue and after he published a memoir critical of the royals, and urged Prime Minister Keir Starmer to intervene.

    “Of course some members of my family will never forgive me for writing a book. Of course they will never forgive me for lots of things. But… I would love for reconciliation,” he said.

    The prince, also known as the Duke of Sussex, stepped down from royal family duties in 2020, and moved to the United States with his wife Meghan and son Archie, who is about to turn six.

    King Charles III’s youngest son has been embroiled in a years-long court battle after the UK government downgraded his security.

    But he told the BBC from California that he did not want any more legal struggles, suggesting he would not go to the Supreme Court.

    “Life is precious. I don’t know how much longer my father has… he won’t speak to me because of this security stuff,” Harry said.

    Charles was diagnosed with an unspecified cancer in February 2024 and has been receiving weekly treatment.

    Harry reportedly only found out from the media that his 76-year-old father had been briefly hospitalised with ill-effects from his treatment in April.

    The prince, 40, said he was “devastated” by Thursday’s court judgement, which threw out his bid to restore fully his police protection while visiting Britain.

    “It’s impossible for me to take my family back to the UK safely,” he said.


    – ‘Sense of grievance’ –

    In response to the court decision, a Buckingham Palace spokesperson said: “All of these issues have been examined repeatedly and meticulously by the courts, with the same conclusion reached on each occasion.”

    Harry was not present for the judgement when Judge Geoffrey Vos dismissed the appeal, saying the duke’s “sense of grievance” had failed to translate into a legal argument.

    Harry’s security was now a “more bespoke, and generally lesser, level of protection than when he was in the UK”, Vos said.

    This, however, did not “of itself give rise to a legal complaint”, he added.

    Since moving to California, Harry and Meghan have had a second child, Lilibet, born in 2021.

    The government committee that handles protection for royals and public figures in 2020 decided he would not receive the same level of publicly funded protection when in Britain as he did previously.

    After losing a High Court case challenging the decision, the prince was allowed to launch an appeal against the interior ministry.

    His lawyers argued Harry was singled out for “unjustified and inferior treatment” and that the committee did not fully assess the security threats when downgrading his protection.


    – ‘I miss the UK’ –

    Harry, whose older brother Prince William is heir to the throne, has long been haunted by the 1997 death of his mother Princess Diana in a high-speed car crash as she tried to escape paparazzi photographers in Paris.

    The prince has blamed the press for the tragedy and cited intense media scrutiny as one of the reasons he and Meghan stepped back five years ago.

    The prince admitted to the BBC: “I miss the UK,” adding: “It’s really quite sad that I won’t be able to show… my children my homeland.”

    In the two-day appeal hearing last month, Harry’s lawyers said the Sussexes had been threatened by Al-Qaeda and involved in a “dangerous car pursuit with paparazzi” in New York, as an example of the security dangers he faces.

    His lawyer Shaheed Fatima said the prince’s “safety… security and… life” were at stake.

    Harry called Thursday’s court decision a “good old-fashioned establishment stitch up” and accused the Royal household of influencing the ruling.

    “This all comes from the same institutions that preyed upon my mother,” he said in a statement Friday.

    While Harry has maintained a low profile since 2020, Meghan has boosted her public presence this year, launching a podcast and Netflix series and making a return to social media.

  • Barca edge Real Madrid in extra-time to win wild Copa final

    Barca edge Real Madrid in extra-time to win wild Copa final

    Barcelona defender Jules Kounde struck deep in extra-time to decide a gripping Copa del Rey Clasico final on Saturday in Seville, earning his side a 3-2 win over rivals Real Madrid.

    The Catalans, aiming for a quadruple this season, won the first major trophy of Hansi Flick’s reign as coach and a record-extending 32nd Spanish cup in dramatic fashion.

    Three Real Madrid players were sent off during and after a fiery conclusion to the game, including England international Jude Bellingham.

    Pedri sent Barcelona ahead at La Cartuja but two Real Madrid goals in seven second-half minutes, from Kylian Mbappe and Aurelien Tchouameni, pulled the Spanish and European champions level.

    However, Ferran Torres struck in the 84th minute to take the game to extra-time and Kounde drilled home to win it for the La Liga leaders.

    “Madrid pushed us to our limits but we showed great character and pride,” said Kounde.

    Barca host Inter Milan in the Champions League semi-finals on Wednesday.

    “They can make a party — for today, it’s OK,” a delighted Flick, who has won all seven finals he has coached in his career, told Movistar.

    Substituted Madrid defender Antonio Rudiger was sent off in the final seconds for “throwing an object” onto the pitch towards referee Ricardo de Burgos Bengoetxea, according to the official’s report, and Lucas Vazquez, also replaced, was dismissed for further protest as Madrid unravelled.

    Bellingham was sent off after the final whistle for showing an “aggressive attitude” towards the referee, who wrote that the midfielder “had to be restrained by his team-mates”.

    “I don’t want to talk about the referee,” said stone-faced Madrid coach Ancelotti.

    “I don’t know what happened at the end.”

    Madrid had issued furious statements about the refereeing team on Friday after they criticised the club’s television channel for attacking Spanish officials this season, casting a shadow over the game.

    Controversy aside, the football was enthralling.

    Madrid started with top scorer Mbappe on the bench after an ankle injury and lost Ferland Mendy early on with a thigh issue.

    Barcelona dazzling winger Lamine Yamal, 17, dyed his hair blond for the game and led the assault on Thibaut Courtois’ goal.

    The Catalans, who also won the first two Clasicos this season in La Liga and the Spanish Super Cup, scoring nine goals in the process, controlled the ball.

    They took the lead after 28 minutes, Pedri placing the ball into the top corner with precision and power from the edge of the box, a sensational goal set up by Yamal.

    Barcelona’s opener brought Madrid out of their shell — and also Mbappe off the bench to warm up.

    Bellingham netted but was offside. Vinicius Junior would have won a penalty when hacked down but had also strayed off in the build-up.

    Barcelona could have doubled their lead, with Dani Olmo’s corner hitting the post and Cubarsi unable to turn home as Dani Ceballos held him back.

    The referee was lenient with some heated Madrid tackles, perhaps cowed by Friday’s drama as the Spanish champions seethed at his pre-match comments.

    Madrid sent Mbappe on for Rodrygo Goes at half-time and soon he and Vinicius began to work Barcelona goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny.

    End to end 


    Mbappe pulled Madrid level almost on his own in the 70th minute, brought down after surging forward and firing home the free-kick off the post.

    Seven minutes later Madrid took the lead, Tchouameni heading in Arda Guler’s corner.

    Barcelona responded when Yamal played a delicious pass over the top for Torres, which drew both Rudiger and Courtois, but the Spaniard beat both and rolled home.

    Controversy unsurprisingly reared its head before the match headed to extra-time.

    Barcelona clamoured for a penalty when Rudiger tripped Torres, and then were awarded one deep in stoppage time as Raphinha tumbled under pressure — but the decision was overturned after a VAR review.

    In extra-time Barcelona were ascendent.

    They found their winner when Kounde intercepted an uncharacteristically loose Luka Modric pass and beat Courtois from range, sparking wild celebrations.

    The trio of dismissals and Madrid’s pre-match histrionics regarding the officials will ensure the repercussions run on.

    The teams meet again in La Liga in May in a potential title decider.

  • Real Madrid win at Getafe to keep La Liga title hopes alive

    Real Madrid win at Getafe to keep La Liga title hopes alive

    Arda Guler struck the only goal as Real Madrid won 1-0 at Getafe on Wednesday to claw back to within four points of La Liga leaders Barcelona.

    The young Turkey international fired in from outside the area midway through the first half as Carlo Ancelotti’s side stayed in title contention after Barcelona won by the same scoreline at Mallorca on Tuesday.

    Arch-rivals Madrid and Barcelona will meet in the Copa del Rey final in Seville on Saturday, with Kylian Mbappe poised to return from injury for the weekend Clasico — one of two remaining this season. The clubs are also due to meet in the league on May 11.

    However, the win over Getafe may have come at a cost to Madrid with David Alaba and Eduardo Camavinga both forced off.

    “We’ll see what they have tomorrow, but I think they’re both suffering from muscle soreness. It will certainly be difficult for them to be available on Saturday (to play Barcelona),” said Ancelotti.

    In Mbappe’s absence on the outskirts of Madrid, 18-year-old Brazilian striker Endrick made his first league start as England international Jude Bellingham dropped to the bench.

    Left-back Fran Garcia twice went close for Madrid, his initial effort palmed away by David Soria before he blasted the rebound high and wide.

    It wasn’t long before Guler broke the deadlock after Brahim Diaz looked to have wasted the chance.

    Madrid worked the ball back out to Guler, whose powerful 20-yard drive flashed past Soria despite the Getafe goalkeeper getting a hand to it.

    Endrick thought he had scored only his second La Liga goal after being put through by Vinicius Junior, but Soria took the sting out of his shot and Djene cleared off the line.

    Courtois preserves win 

    Getafe created opportunities of their own, the best of which fell in the second half to an unmarked Mauro Arambarri who dragged wide with only Thibaut Courtois to beat.

    Courtois came to Madrid’s rescue in stoppage time as he smothered inside his six-yard box after Peter and Juanmi tried to force the ball home from close range.

    Getafe substitute Alvaro Rodriguez, who is on loan from Madrid, nearly snatched an equaliser at the death but saw his low shot beaten away by Courtois.

    Inaki Williams fired Athletic Bilbao to a 1-0 home win over Las Palmas earlier on Wednesday to strengthen their chances of direct qualification for next season’s Champions League.

    The Basque side sit fourth with five games to go, eight points clear of fifth-placed Villarreal who suffered a 3-0 defeat at Celta Vigo.

    Bilbao also have a Europa League semi-final against Manchester United to come, and should they win that they will play the final in their home stadium.

    Five La Liga sides qualify for the Champions League this season. Sixth-placed Betis are a point behind Villarreal ahead of their encounter with rock-bottom Valladolid on Thursday.

    A fifth-minute goal from the elder Williams brother after he turned a defender in the box and side-footed home with the outside of his boot was enough for all three points.

    Bilbao needed two sharp saves from Spain goalkeeper Unai Simon before half-time as relegation-threatened Las Palmas went down fighting.

    Alaves climbed out of the bottom three at the expense of Las Palmas with a 1-0 victory over Real Sociedad.

  • Powerful 6.2-magnitude quake hits off Istanbul coast

    Powerful 6.2-magnitude quake hits off Istanbul coast

    An earthquake with a magnitude of 6.2 hit the Marmara Sea near the western outskirts of Istanbul on Wednesday, officials said, with the impact felt across Turkey’s largest city where people rushed onto the streets.

    “An earthquake of 6.2 magnitude occurred in Silivri, Marmara Sea, Istanbul,” Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said on X, adding that it was felt in the surrounding provinces.

    The initial quake at 12:49 pm (0949 GMT) was followed by three others of with magnitudes of 4.4 to 4.9, Turkey’s AFAD disaster management agency posted on X.

    As buildings shook, people rushed onto the streets where crowds of worried-looking people stared at their mobile phones for information or made calls, an AFP correspondent said.

    “I just felt earthquake, I’ve got to get out,” said a shaken-looking decorator rushing out of a fourth floor apartment where he was working near the city’s Galata Tower, who did not want to give his name.

    There were no immediate reports of anyone being hurt or killed nor of buildings collapsing in the sprawling city of 16 million people, city authorities and the regional governor’s office said.

    “Until now, we have no information about any buildings collapsing,” the governor’s office said, urging people to avoid any structures that might have been damaged in the tremors.

    “No serious cases have been reported so far following the earthquake in Istanbul,” the Istanbul municipality said on X.

    The tremors could be felt as far away as Bulgaria, according to AFP journalists in the capital Sofia.

  • Pope Francis has died: Vatican

    Pope Francis has died: Vatican

    Pope Francis died on Monday aged 88, a day after making a much hoped-for appearance at Saint Peter’s Square on Easter Sunday, the Vatican said in a statement.

    “Dearest brothers and sisters, it is with deep sorrow that I must announce the death of our Holy Father Francis,” said Cardinal Kevin Farrell in the statement published by the Vatican on its Telegram channel.

    “This morning at 7:35 am (0535 GMT) the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the home of the Father.

    “His entire life was dedicated to the service of the Lord and His church.”

    Francis’s death came just a day after he delighted the crowds of worshippers at the Vatican on Easter Sunday with an appearance on the balcony at Saint Peter’s Basilica despite still convalescing after a severe illness.

    Francis had come close to dying twice earlier this year while suffering from pneumonia.

    He spent 38 days in hospital before he was released on March 23.

    On Sunday he wished the crowds on Saint Peter’s Square a “Happy Easter” as he waved and in his traditional “Urbi et Orbi” (“To the City and the World”) benediction he called for freedom of thought and tolerance.

    Francis: radical leader who broke the papal mould

    Pope Francis, who died Monday aged 88, will go down in history as a radical pontiff, a champion of underdogs who forged a more compassionate Catholic Church while stopping short of overhauling centuries-old dogma.

    Dubbed “the people’s Pope”, the Argentine pontiff loved being among his flock and was popular with the faithful, though he faced bitter opposition from traditionalists within the Church.

    The first pope from the Americas and the southern hemisphere, he staunchly defended the most disadvantaged, from migrants to communities battered by climate change, which he warned was a crisis caused by humankind.

    But while he confronted head-on the global scandal of sex abuse by priests, survivors’ groups said concrete measures were slow in coming.

    From his election in March 2013, Jorge Mario Bergoglio was eager to make his mark as the leader of the Catholic Church.

    He became the first pope to take the name Francis after Saint Francis of Assisi, a 13th-century mystic who renounced his wealth and devoted his life to the poor.

    “How I would like a poor church for the poor,” he said three days after his election as the 266th pope.

    He was a humble figurehead who wore plain robes, eschewed the sumptuous papal palaces and made his own phone calls, some of them to widows, rape victims or prisoners.

    The football-loving former archbishop of Buenos Aires was also more accessible than his predecessors, chatting with young people about issues ranging from social media to pornography — and talking openly about his health.

    Francis always left the door open to retiring like his predecessor Benedict XVI, who in 2013 became the first pontiff since the Middle Ages to step down.

    After Benedict died in December 2022, Francis became the first sitting pope in modern history to lead a papal funeral.

    He suffered increasingly poor health, from colon surgery in 2021 and a hernia in June 2023 to bouts of bronchitis and knee pain that forced him to use a wheelchair.

    His fourth hospitalisation, of more than a month for bronchitis in both lungs, was his longest, raising speculation he might step down.

    But he brushed off talk of quitting, saying in February 2023 that papal resignations should not become “a normal thing”.

    In a 2024 memoir, he wrote that resignation was a “distant possibility” justified only in the event of “a serious physical impediment”.

    Kissed prisoners’ feet

    Before his first Easter at the Vatican, he washed and kissed the feet of prisoners at a Rome prison.

    It was the first in a series of powerful symbolic gestures that helped him achieve enthusiastic global admiration that eluded his predecessor.

    For his first trip abroad, Francis chose the Italian island of Lampedusa, the point of entry for tens of thousands of migrants hoping to reach Europe, and slammed the “globalisation of indifference”.

    He also condemned plans by US President Donald Trump during his first term to build a border wall against Mexico as un-Christian.

    After Trump’s re-election, Francis denounced his planned migrant deportations as a “major crisis” that “will end badly”.

    In 2016, with Europe’s migration crisis at a peak, Francis flew to the Greek island of Lesbos and returned to Rome with three families of asylum-seeking Syrian Muslims.

    He was also committed to inter-faith reconciliation, kissing the Orthodox Patriarch Kirill of Moscow in a historic February 2016 encounter, and making a joint call for freedom of belief with leading Sunni cleric Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb in 2019.

    Francis re-energised Vatican diplomacy in other ways, helping facilitate a historic rapprochement between the United States and Cuba, and encouraging the peace process in Colombia.

    And he sought to improve ties with China through a historic — but criticised — 2018 accord on the naming of bishops.

    Climate appeal

    Experts credited Francis with having influenced the landmark 2015 Paris climate accords with his “Laudato Si” encyclical, an appeal for action on climate change that was grounded in science.

    He argued that developed economies were to blame for an impending environmental catastrophe, and in a fresh appeal in 2023 warned that some of the damage was “already irreversible”.

    An advocate of peace, the pontiff repeatedly denounced arms manufacturers and argued that in the myriad of conflicts seen around the globe, a Third World War was underway.

    But his interventions were not always well received, and he sparked outrage from Kyiv after praising those in war-torn Ukraine who had the “courage to raise the white flag and negotiate”.

    In his modest rooms in the Vatican’s Casa Santa Marta guesthouse, Francis dealt with stress by writing down his problems in letters to Saint Joseph.

    “From the moment I was elected I had a very particular feeling of profound peace. And that has never left me,” he said in 2017.

    He also loved classical music and tango, stopping off once at a shop in Rome to buy records.

    ‘Who am I to judge?’

    Francis’s admirers credit him with transforming perceptions of an institution beset by scandals when he took over, helping to bring lapsed believers back into the fold.

    He will be remembered as the pope who, on the subject of gay Catholics, said: “Who am I to judge?”

    He allowed divorced and remarried believers to receive communion, and approved the baptism of transgender believers as well as blessings for same-sex couples.

    But he dropped the idea of letting priests marry after an outcry, and despite nominating several women to leading positions inside the Vatican, he disappointed those who wanted women allowed to be ordained.

    Critics accused him of tampering dangerously with tenets of Catholic teaching, and he faced strong opposition to many of his reforms.

    In 2017, four conservatives cardinals made an almost unheard of public challenge to his authority, saying his changes had sown doctrinal confusion among believers.

    But his Church showed no inclination to relax its ban on artificial contraception or opposition to gay marriage — and he insisted that abortion was “murder”.

    Francis also pushed reforms within the Vatican, from allowing cardinals to be tried by civilian courts to overhauling the Holy See’s banking system.

    He also sought to address the enormously damaging issue of sex abuse by priests by meeting victims and vowing to hold those responsible accountable.

    He opened up Vatican archives to civil courts and made it compulsory to report suspicions of abuse or its cover-up to Church authorities.

    But critics say his legacy will be a Church that remains reluctant to hand paedophile priests over to the police.

    ‘Raised on pasta’

    Jorge Mario Bergoglio was born into an Italian emigrant family in Flores, a middle-class district of Buenos Aires, on December 17, 1936.

    The eldest of five children, he was “born an Argentine but raised on pasta”, wrote biographer Paul Vallely.

    From 13, he worked afternoons in a hosiery factory while studying to become a chemical technician in the mornings. Later he had a brief stint as a nightclub bouncer.

    He was said to have liked dancing and girls, even coming close to proposing to one before, at age 17, he found a religious vocation.

    Francis later recounted a period of turmoil during his Jesuit training, when he became besotted with a woman he met at a family wedding.

    By then he had survived a near-fatal infection that resulted in the removal of part of a lung. His impaired breathing scuppered his hopes of becoming a missionary in Japan.

    He was ordained a priest in 1969 and appointed the provincial, or leader, of the Jesuits in Argentina just four years later.

    His time at the helm of the order, which spanned the country’s years of military dictatorship, was difficult.

    Critics accused him of betraying two radical priests who were imprisoned and tortured by the regime.

    No convincing evidence of the claim ever emerged but his leadership of the order was divisive and, in 1990, he was demoted and exiled to Argentina’s second-largest city, Cordoba.

    Then, in his 50s, Bergoglio is seen by most biographers as having undergone a midlife crisis.

    He emerged to embark on a new career in the mainstream of the Catholic hierarchy, reinventing himself first as the “Bishop of the Slums” in Buenos Aires and later as the pope who would break the mould.

  • Maldives ban Israelis to protest genocide in Gaza

    Maldives ban Israelis to protest genocide in Gaza

    The Maldives announced Tuesday it was banning the entry of Israelis from the luxury tourist archipelago in “resolute solidarity” with the Palestinian people.

    President Mohamed Muizzu ratified the legislation shortly after it was approved by parliament on Tuesday.

    “The ratification reflects the government’s firm stance in response to the continuing atrocities and ongoing acts of genocide committed by Israel against the Palestinian people,” his office said in a statement.

    “The Maldives reaffirms its resolute solidarity with the Palestinian cause.”

    The ban will be implemented with immediate effect, a spokesman for Muizzu’s office told AFP.

    The Maldives, a small Islamic republic of 1,192 strategically located coral islets, is known for its secluded white sandy beaches, shallow turquoise lagoons and Robinson Crusoe-style getaways.

    Official data showed that only 59 Israeli tourists visited the archipelago in February, among 214,000 other foreign arrivals.

    The Maldives had lifted a previous ban on Israeli tourists in the early 1990s and briefly moved to restore relations in 2010.

    Opposition parties and government allies in the Maldives have been pressuring Muizzu to ban Israelis as a statement of opposition to the genocide being committed in Gaza by Israel against Palestinians.

    Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs urged its citizens last year to avoid travelling to the Maldives.

    The genocide against Palestinians worsened after Palestinian militant group Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

    Gaza’s health ministry said on Sunday that at least 1,613 Palestinians had been killed since March 18, when a ceasefire collapsed, taking the overall death toll since the war began to 50,983.

  • Katy Perry roars into space on all-woman flight

    Katy Perry roars into space on all-woman flight

     Pop star Katy Perry completed a brief foray into space on Monday, roaring to the edge of the cosmos with an all-women crew on one of billionaire Jeff Bezos’s rockets.

    The “Firework” and “California Gurls” singer was lofted more than 60 miles (100 kilometers) above the Earth’s surface in a vessel from Blue Origin, the space company owned by the Amazon founder.

    Five other women — including Bezos’s fiancee Lauren Sanchez — were on the flight, which took off from western Texas shortly after 8:30am before safely landing again some 10 minutes later. The flight brought the passengers beyond the Karman line — the internationally recognised boundary of space.

    One of the other passengers, TV presenter Gayle King, said Perry sang “What a wonderful world” in space. “It’s a 10 out of 10. That’s my review. Definitely go for it,” the singer said after she was safely back on Earth.

    Their fully automated craft rose vertically before the crew capsule detached mid-flight, later falling back to the ground slowed by parachutes and a retro rocket. The jubilant women then emerged, with Perry kissing the ground after exiting the capsule.

  • Bangladesh reintroduces ‘except Israel’ phrase on passports

    Bangladesh reintroduces ‘except Israel’ phrase on passports

    Bangladesh has restored an “except Israel” inscription on passports, local media reported Sunday, effectively barring its citizens from travelling to that country.

    Israel is a flashpoint issue in Muslim-majority Bangladesh, which does not recognise it.

    The phrase “valid for all countries except Israel,” which was printed on Bangladeshi passports for decades, was removed during the later years of ousted prime minister Sheikh Hasina’s tenure.

    Nilima Afroze, a deputy secretary at the home ministry, told Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha (BSS) news agency on Sunday that authorities had “issued a directive last week” to restore the inscription.

    “The director general of the department of immigration and passport was asked to take necessary measures to implement this change,” local newspaper The Daily Star quoted Afroze as saying Sunday.

    In 2021, the words “except Israel” were removed from passports, although the then government under Hasina clarified that the country’s stance on Israel had not changed.

    The country’s support for an independent Palestinian state was visible on Saturday when around 100,000 people gathered in Dhaka in solidarity with Gaza.

    Israel has been committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza after Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures.

    A fragile ceasefire between the warring parties fell apart last month and Gaza’s health ministry said Sunday that at least 1,574 Palestinians had been killed since then, taking the overall death toll since the war began to 50,944.

  • Prada to buy Versace for $1.38bn to create new force in Italian fashion

    Prada to buy Versace for $1.38bn to create new force in Italian fashion

    Prada said Thursday that it had reached a deal to buy Versace for 1.25 billion euros ($1.38 billion), building a new Italian fashion powerhouse and hoping to insert much-needed “spark” into its smaller, flashier rival.

    The much anticipated acquisition, from US group Capri Holdings, will create a group with revenues of over six billion euros that could better compete with giants such as the French conglomerates LVMH and Gucci owner Kering.

    “We are delighted to welcome Versace to the Prada Group and to build a new chapter for a brand with which we share a strong commitment to creativity, craftmanship and heritage,” Prada Group chairman Patrizio Bertelli said.

    In 2018, Capri paid 1.83 billion euros (then $2.1 billion) to acquire Versace, which was previously owned 80 per cent by the Versace family and 20pc by the US investment fund BlackRock.

    But amid declining sales it sought a buyer, opening exclusive negotiations with Prada at the end of February.

    Capri, which also owns Jimmy Choo and Michael Kors, had to accept a reduced price from Prada amid the market turmoil caused by US President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

    The Financial Times had reported that the price was initially expected to be about $1.6 billion but had been negotiated downwards in recent days.

    Donatella’s departure

    Last month, Donatella Versace stepped down as creative director after more than 30 years, a move widely seen as a prelude to the accord.

    She took over in 1997 following the murder of her older brother Gianni, who founded the label in 1978.

    But on April 1, she was replaced as creative director by Dario Vitale, who has overseen soaring sales at Miu Miu, Prada’s sister brand targeting a younger clientele.

    Donatella will now serve as Versace’s chief brand ambassador.

    While still a label associated with the jet set, some of Versace’s lustre has faded in recent years.

    Capri had expected turnover to fall to $810 million during its 2025 fiscal year, according to Prada, down from $1.03 billion a year earlier.

    By contrast, Prada, under the creative helm of Miuccia Prada, the 76-year-old granddaughter of group founder Mario, is in robust health.

    Despite a global slowdown in luxury good sales in recent years, Prada’s net profit jumped 25pc to 839 million euros in 2024, on revenues that grew 15pc to 5.4 billion euros.

    Andrea Guerra, Prada’s group chief executive, said Thursday that Versace had “huge potential” but warned there was work to do.

    “The journey will be long and will require disciplined execution and patience,” he said.

    The deal, funded through 1.5 billion euros of new debt, is expected to close in the second half of 2025.

    For its part, Capri said the sale would allow it to step up investments in Michael Kors and strengthen its balance sheet.

    No revolution

    The two fashion labels have starkly different styles, with Versace’s exuberance contrasting with Prada’s sophisticated minimalism.

    Prada said its new acquisition “constitutes a strongly complementary addition” to its portfolio and promised to “maintain its creative DNA and cultural authenticity”.

    “I don’t think we need to change the brand, to revolutionise it,” Prada’s marketing director, Lorenzo Bertelli, told analysts during a conference call.

    “We need to just evolve it… all together, they’re going to make, hopefully, a huge spark and bring back Versace to be a huge success.”

    Bertelli, the eldest son of Miuccia Prada and Patrizio Bertelli and who is expected one day to take over, said his mother would not have creative involvement in Versace.

    Core business

    The deal bucks the trend of recent years, which has seen major names in Italian fashion such as Gucci, Fendi, and Bottega Veneta fall under the control of their French competitors.

    However, a previous attempt to expand the Prada portfolio — which also includes luxury footwear brands Car Shoe and Church’s — offers a cautionary tale.

    In 1999, the family group acquired the German brand Jil Sander and the Austrian label Helmut Lang before selling them in 2006 as they were weighing down its financial results.

    In 2000, Prada jointly acquired a 51pc stake in the Roman label Fendi with LVMH, but sold its 25.5pc stake to the French luxury giant a year later.

    With the Versace acquisition, “I see a risk for Prada to become distracted from its core business,” Luca Solca, an analyst at Bernstein, told AFP.