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Pope kicks off Christmas celebrations in shadow of wars

By - Dec 25,2023 - Last updated at Dec 25,2023

ROME — Pope Francis on Sunday kicked off global Christmas celebrations with a call for peace, as Israel’s war on Hamas and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine cast a shadow over one of the world’s favourite holidays.

Children around the globe, meanwhile, tracked Santa, his reindeer and their present-laden sleigh with the help of www.noradsanta.org, a 3-D interactive website run annually by a joint US-Canadian military monitoring agency.

And revellers the world over donned Santa’s red caps for a shot of holiday cheer in all sorts of leisure activities — a city race in Spopje, a surfing session in Florida, a jog in the woods on the outskirts of Paris, a dip in the sea near the port of Dover, and a dip with a drink in hand in Lake Geneva.

At the Vatican, the Pope struck a somber tone.

“Tonight, our hearts are in Bethlehem, where the Prince of Peace is once more rejected by the futile logic of war, by the clash of arms that even today prevents him from finding room in the world,” the Pope said, adding that Jesus “does not eliminate injustice from above by a show of force, but from below, by a show of love”.

Earlier in the day, the pontiff had said: “We are close to our brothers and sisters who are suffering from war — we are thinking of Palestine, of Israel, of Ukraine”.

Bethlehem, the biblical city in the occupied West Bank where Christians believe Jesus Christ was born in a manger more than 2000 years ago, effectively cancelled the annual Christmas celebrations that normally draw thousands of tourists.

The town did away with its giant Christmas tree, marching bands and flamboyant nativity scene this year, settling for just a few festive lights.

In the centre of town, a huge Palestinian flag had been unfolded with a banner declaring that “The bells of Bethlehem ring for a ceasefire in Gaza”.

“A lot of people are dying for this land,” said Nicole Najjar, an 18-year-old student. “It’s really hard to celebrate while our people are dying.”

The Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, Pierbattista Pizzaballa, arrived on Sunday at the Church of the Nativity, clad in the traditional black and white keffiyeh.

“Our heart goes to Gaza, to all people in Gaza but a special attention to our Christian community in Gaza who is suffering,” he said.

 

WHO chief decries 'decimation' of Gaza health system

Of Gaza's original 36 hospitals, only 9 are now partially functional

By - Dec 25,2023 - Last updated at Dec 25,2023

A man, who was detained with other Palestinians by the Israeli military during their operation in the northern Gaza Strip and recently released through the Karem Abu Salem crossing, awaits treatment for his injuries at Al Najjar hospital in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Sunday (AFP photo)

GENEVA — The head of the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Sunday the health system in Gaza was being destroyed and reiterated his call for a ceasefire.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus also hailed Gaza's medical workers who continue their work under increasingly dire circumstances.

"The decimation of the Gaza health system is a tragedy," he posted on X, formerly Twitter. "We persist in calling for CeasefireNow."

"In the face of constant insecurity and inflows of wounded patients, we see doctors, nurses, ambulance drivers and more continue striving to save lives," Tedros said.

The UN health agency has long been sounding the alarm about the state of healthcare since the bloodiest ever war in Gaza erupted following Hamas’s unprecedented attack inside Israel on October 7.

Israel’s withering military campaign, including massive aerial bombardment, has killed 20,424 people, mostly women and children, according to the territory’s health ministry.

Vast areas of Gaza lie in ruins and its 2.4 million people have endured dire shortages of water, food, fuel and medicine due to an Israeli siege, alleviated only by the limited arrival of aid trucks.

Of Gaza’s original 36 hospitals, only nine are now partially functional, all of them in the south and all of them overwhelmed.

After missions last week to two badly damaged hospitals in the north, Al Shifa and Al Ahli, WHO staff described “unbearable” scenes of largely abandoned patients, including young children, begging for food and water.

WHO warned that even as healthcare needs soar, only 38 percent of pre-conflict hospital beds remained available in the Palestinian territory and only 30 per cent of original health staff were still working.

At the same time, hospitals, protected under international humanitarian law, have repeatedly been hit by Israeli strikes since the war erupted.

The Israeli military accuses Hamas of having tunnels under hospitals and using the medical facilities as command centres, a charge denied by the Islamist group.

As of December 20, WHO had registered 246 attacks on health care in Gaza, including hospitals and ambulances, resulting in 582 deaths and 748 injuries.

 

US warship downs 4 incoming attack drones in Red Sea — US military

UK's Cameron brands Iran 'malign influence' after shipping attacks

By - Dec 25,2023 - Last updated at Dec 25,2023

This handout photograph released by AS J Ludwig Mowinckels Rederi on December 12, shows the Norwegian-flagged chemical tanker the MT Strinda (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON/LONDON — A US Navy destroyer patrolling in the Red Sea on Saturday knocked down four attack drones before they could strike the warship, the US Central Command said.

The USS Laboon "shot down four unmanned aerial drones originating from Huthi-controlled areas in Yemen that were inbound" towards the American vessel, Centcom said in a post on X, formerly Twitter, adding there were "no injuries or damage".

UK Foreign Secretary David Cameron has branded Iran "a thoroughly malign influence in the region and in the world" in an interview published on Sunday in which he also pledged stepped-up deterrence towards Tehran.

The former British prime minister's warning echoes accusations by the United States Friday that Iran is involved in attacks on commercial ships by Yemen's Huthi rebels, providing drones, missiles and tactical intelligence.

In the latest instance of a vessel being targeted in or near Middle Eastern waters, Washington said on Saturday that a tanker struck earlier off the coast of India was targeted "by a one-way attack drone fired from Iran".

Cameron accused Tehran of aiding various "proxies" there.

"Iran is a thoroughly malign influence in the region and in the world — there's no doubt about that," he told the Sunday Telegraph newspaper.

"You've got the Houthis, you've got Hizbollah, you've got the Iranian-backed militias in Iraq that have actually been attacking British and American bases, troops. And, of course, Hamas.

"So you've got all of these proxies, and I think it's incredibly important that, first of all, Iran receives an incredibly clear message that this escalation will not be tolerated."

Britain's top diplomat, who returned to frontline politics last month after stepping down as prime minister in the aftermath of losing the 2016 Brexit referendum, said London would increase cooperation with its allies over Tehran.

"We need to work with our allies to develop a really strong set of deterrent measures against Iran, and it's important that we do that," he added.

"The level of danger and insecurity in the world is at an extremely high level compared with previous years and decades, and the Iran threat is a part of that picture."

Britain will contribute warships to the new maritime security initiative in the Red Sea and surrounding waters, known as Operation Prosperity Guardian.

Earlier this month the UK also unveiled new sanctions targeting Iran’s “decision makers and those doing its bidding”, including the leader of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Force.

Asked if London was poised to impose other measures, Cameron said that was “not for public consumption”.

But he added it wanted to send “a very clear warning to the Houthis and to their Iranian backers that we’re not going to tolerate these continued attacks on shipping”.

 

Rising Indonesia presidential candidate pledges change from Widodo era

Dec 24,2023 - Last updated at Dec 24,2023

Presidential candidate Anies Baswedan’s supporters react at his campaign rally in Serang on Thursday (AFP photo)

SERANG, INDONESIA — As one of Indonesia’s leading presidential candidates is driven away from a campaign stop, locals surround his car, screaming his name and jostling to kiss his hand through the window.

Anies Baswedan, a former governor of the capital Jakarta, is in a three-way battle ahead of February’s vote to lead the world’s third largest democracy and fourth most populous nation, with polls showing him rising toward a spot in a potential second-round runoff.

In his first interview with foreign media since registering to run last month, the 54-year-old told AFP that he is the candidate for change.

He has sought to paint himself as an alternative to the other two candidates, frontrunner and current Defence Minister Prabowo Subianto and Ganjar Pranowo, who has the backing of incumbent President Joko Widodo’s party.

Both have promised to largely carry on the current administration’s policies.

“We offer a change. We offer the concept of equality in policymaking,” Baswedan said from his car in western Java.

“More and more people realise that we need change.”

That includes strengthening the country’s corruption eradication commission and distributing wealth more fairly, Baswedan has pledged.

His campaign slogan — “Fair, prosperous Indonesia for all” — promises economic development felt by everyone, not just the Indonesian elite, he said.

Achieving that goal would take a “commitment for good governance, starting from the top leader”, he said.

On foreign policy, he chided Widodo for never attending the United Nations General Assembly in person, promising that he would represent Indonesia at the annual gathering of world leaders.

“How come we don’t want to join the village’s meeting when our land is the fourth largest in the village?” he asked, referring to Indonesia’s 270 million people.

“Indonesia must be present and Indonesia must play its part. We’ll be active.”

That message appears to be catching on with voters, with Baswedan — an independent candidate backed by three political parties — rising in recent polls as Pranowo’s numbers have fallen.

The former university rector is now closing in on Pranowo, 55, for the second run-off spot to challenge Subianto, 72.

An independent poll published on December 10 showed 22.3 per cent of Indonesian respondents would choose Baswedan, up from 19.6 per cent in October.

Pranowo’s support slid from 26.1 per cent to 23.8 per cent in the same interval.

Baswedan — popular with conservative Muslims in the Muslim-majority country — was accused of stoking religious divisions in the race for governor of Jakarta in 2017, when he defeated a Christian rival backed by Widodo.

“You can see our record. We didn’t campaign with that. We campaigned with programmes,” he said.

Despite being a former education minister and campaign spokesperson for Widodo, Baswedan has put himself at odds with his former boss to try to succeed him.

Widodo’s legacy policy is a move of the capital from Jakarta to Nusantara on the island of Borneo due to take place next year.

But Baswedan says fixing the problems of major Indonesian cities such as Jakarta — where large areas are slated to be underwater by 2050 — should come first.

“With limited resources, I think it’s wiser that we fulfil those basic needs rather than build a place that will be unequal with other regions,” he said.

Asked if he would run the government from the new capital set to open in August, he said he would instead govern from Jakarta.

“Is it ready? The readiest infrastructure is here,” he said.

Baswedan was largely viewed as the winner of the first presidential debate, where he attacked Subianto’s campaign for an ethics violation that allowed his running mate — Widodo’s eldest son, Gibran Rakabuming Raka — to stand in the election.

Subianto hit back in a viral video in which he mocked Baswedan’s attack on his ethics.

“Ethics start from the head,” Baswedan said in response to his opponent’s mockery.

“From the head, down to the subordinates.”

Police seek motive in Prague mass shooting

By - Dec 24,2023 - Last updated at Dec 24,2023

PRAGUE — Czech authorities sought a motive on Friday in a student’s gun attack at a Prague university, where tearful mourners have left a sea of candles to grieve for the 14 victims.

The gunfire on Thursday at the Charles University’s Faculty of Arts sparked frantic scenes of students running from the attack that was the Czech Republic’s worst shooting in decades.

A makeshift memorial of hundreds of candles lit by tearful students flickered outside the university on Friday as the school, families and friends started to publish the names of the victims.

“This is extremely cruel news for us all,” the Institute of Musicology said on Facebook after learning its 49-year-old director Lenka Hlavkova, a mother of two, was among the victims.

Other victims included translator and Finnish literature expert Jan Dlask and student Lucie Spindlerova.

The gunman, a 24-year-old student, killed himself after shooting dead 13 people and wounding 25 others. One of the wounded later died in hospital.

Police said he also wounded three people in the street and damaged two cars as he was shooting from a balcony.

Interior Minister Vit Rakusan said a Dutch national and two citizens of the United Arab Emirates were wounded in the attack.

Police officer Josef Jerabek said the gunman killed himself when he “felt the loop tightening” as the police approached him after the carnage.

Rakusan had said earlier that there was no link between the shooting and “international terrorism” and that the perpetrator acted on his own.

But police have since detained four people either for threatening to copy the attack or for approving of it.

Police guards at selected sites, including schools, will be in place at least until January 1, said Rakusan.

The government has declared a national day of mourning on Saturday, with flags on official buildings to be flown at half-mast and people asked to observe a minute’s silence at noon.

‘Huge arsenal’

The gunman, previously unknown to the police, had a “huge arsenal of weapons and ammunition”, Police Chief Martin Vondrasek said after the killings on Thursday.

He added an inspection of the crime scene was “the most shattering experience” in his 31 years of police service.

Police started a search for the student even before the mass shooting as they had found his murdered father and the student’s note saying he is planning to kill himself in Prague.

They started the search at a Faculty of Arts building where he was expected to attend a lecture, but he went instead to the faculty’s main building nearby.

Police learned about the shooting at around 14:00 GMT and sent a rapid response unit to the scene. Twenty minutes later, the gunman was dead.

Vondrasek said the gunman’s social media account showed he was inspired by a “similar case that happened in Russia”, without providing further details.

Following a search at the gunman’s home, police drew a link between him and the murder of a young man and his two-month-old daughter during a walk in a Prague forest on December 15, whose investigation stalled on a lack of evidence.

“A ballistic analysis proved the gun used in the... forest was IDENTICAL with a gun found at the university gunman’s home,” police said on X.

‘It could have been me’

The shooting at Charles University, which sits near major tourist sites like the 14th-century Charles Bridge, was the deadliest since the Czech Republic emerged as an independent state in 1993.

Prime Minister Petr Fiala said there was “no justification for this horrendous act”.

Support poured in from across the world as Pope Francis, US President Joe Biden, French President Emmanuel Macron, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky, Britain’s King Charles and many others have sent condolences.

At the makeshift memorial, technical university student Antonin Volavka lit a candle to pay tribute to the dead.

“This could have happened to anyone. Really, it could have been me,” he told AFP.

Though mass gun violence is unusual in the Czech Republic, the nation has been rocked by some instances in recent years.

Influx of migrants at US-Mexico border poses conundrum for Biden

By - Dec 24,2023 - Last updated at Dec 24,2023

This aerial view shows immigrants waiting to be processed at a US Border Patrol transit center after they crossed the border from Mexico in Eagle Pass, Texas, on Friday (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON/EAGLE PASS — US border patrol and several states have found themselves overwhelmed lately, lacking resources to manage the thousands of migrants arriving from Mexico every day — a crisis that has exposed President Joe Biden to intense attacks from his Republican opponents.

Border officials have in recent weeks counted some 10,000 daily crossings, an uptick from preceding months, which had already seen migrants arrive at an accelerating clip.

There were more than 2.4 million migrant interceptions via land in the year from October 2022 to September 2023.

On Tuesday, authorities closed railroads at Eagle Pass and El Paso, Texas due to a "resurgence" of undocumented migrants entering the United States via freight trains.

Border crossings by car have been suspended at Eagle Pass since early December, as have entry points in California and Arizona, with border police saying they had to move personnel away from those checkpoints to focus on processing irregular entries.

Accusing Biden of "deliberate inaction" on the border issue, Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott this week approved a controversial law criminalising illegal entry into his state.

Abbott, a staunch supporter of Donald Trump, hosted a signing ceremony in front of a section of border wall in the city of Brownsville, a nod to the former president's flagship project and intense 2024 anti-immigration platform.

The law, set to go into effect in March, makes it a crime to illegally enter Texas from a foreign country, punishable by six months in prison, or up to 20 years, in the case of repeat offenders.

It gives Texas state law enforcement the ability to arrest migrants and deport them to Mexico, a power normally reserved for federal authorities.

In response, several human rights organisations, including the influential ACLU, immediately filed lawsuits challenging the Texas law’s constitutionality.

Even political allies in border states have taken Biden to task over migration, with Arizona’s Democratic Governor Katie Hobbs saying “the federal government is refusing to do its job to secure our border and keep our communities safe.”

Earlier this month, Hobbs announced she would send Arizona national guard troops to the border to help pick up some of the slack.

A ‘broken’ system

The reasons for this recent uptick in migration are not totally clear. Customs and Border Protection have blamed “smugglers peddling disinformation to prey on vulnerable individuals”.

Several migrants in Texas told AFP there has been gossip swirling that a total closure of the US border was imminent, which could have fueled some recent crossings.

“There were rumors that from the 20th [of December], they wouldn’t let anyone else in,” said 32-year-old Yurianlis Alexmar Camacho, who had come from Venezuela with her husband and four children.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas will travel to Mexico in the coming days to meet with President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador in an effort to stem this incessant flow, the White House announced on Thursday.

“The president understands that we have to fix this immigration system. It has been broken for decades now,” White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre said the same day.

Biden said earlier this month he was prepared to compromise with congressional Republicans on a border plan, they have demanded a concrete tightening of immigration policy in exchange for agreeing on a new aid package for Ukraine.

The situation is fraught for Biden as he begins his 2024 White House reelection campaign in earnest: in addition to criticism from the right, which says he is too soft on immigration, the president’s progressive supporters expect him to stay far away from his predecessor’s policies on migrants, who are mostly fleeing poverty and violence in Latin America.

But he will have to face the issue head-on one way or another, and soon, as there is no sign the steady flow of arrivals will let up.

Panama said earlier this month that since the start of 2023, half-a-million people, or double the number from last year, had crossed into its territory through the jungle at the perilous Darien Gap the separates the country from Colombia. The vast majority were headed for the United States.

Residents return to Iceland town as volcano eruption peters out

By - Dec 22,2023 - Last updated at Dec 22,2023

Molten lava is coming out from a fissure on the Reykjanes peninsula 3km north of the evacuated town of Grindavik, western Iceland on (AFP photo)

REYKJAVIK — Evacuated residents of the Icelandic town of Grindavik returned on Thursday for daytime visits as a nearby volcanic eruption appeared to be petering out, though their hopes of spending Christmas at home were dashed.

The eruption, which began on Monday evening, opened a fissure in the ground about 4 kilometres long, spewing glowing fountains of orange lava into the sky only 3 kilometres from Grindavik.

By Thursday, the Icelandic Meteorological Office (IMO) said that during a surveillance flight “no volcanic activity was observed and it seems as though there is no activity in the craters”.

“The volcanic activity seems to have come to an end late last night or early [Thursday] morning,” it said.

“Despite that, it is possible that lava is flowing underneath the lava coat in lava tubes and therefore it is not possible to say that the eruption is over.”

Late Wednesday, the IMO had said the likelihood of a new eruption forming without warning near Grindavik had decreased.

Authorities therefore allowed the town’s 4,000 residents access to the small fishing port between 7:00am and 4:00pm.

They were evacuated on November 11 after a series of earthquakes, considered a possible precursor to an eruption.

First responders were present in the town on Thursday in case an emergency evacuation was required.

Some returning residents were quick to get back to work, including the staff at fishing company Thorfish who rushed to save the catch caught just before the eruption.

“Now they are trying to pack it and prepare it so it won’t get damaged, and then clean up the whole place for Christmas,” Jon Emil, purchasing manager for Thorfish, told AFP outside the packing plant.

 

‘Very different’ Christmas 

 

Authorities still say it is unsafe to stay in the town overnight, and have informed residents they will not be able to return to stay in their homes before Christmas.

Bergsteinn Olafsson, a 59-year-old municipal worker from Grindavik, told AFP that Christmas this year would therefore be “different, very different”.

“But if you have your family, everything is ok.”

Some said they had no plans to return to their homes ever again.

Sigurdur Oli Porleifsson, a father of four who works in the fishing industry, said his house and those nearby were all set for demolition, due to cracks in their structure caused by the earthquake swarm in early November.

“All these houses are all tilting and they are cracked. They will all be demolished... they’re not repairable.”

But others said they had no choice but to return once authorities give the green light.

“We can’t pay a loan on the house and rent, it’s not possible. So we have to come back,” said 50-year-old former fisherman David Arnason.

“Nobody wants to buy our house, we can’t sell it,” he added.

But his family is not keen on living in Grindavik again due to the eruption risk.

“We never know what’s going to happen... It’s pretty frightening,” he said.

“My kids don’t want to come back. And my daughter has already found another place to live, she has a little boy.”

Volcanic eruptions are common in Iceland, which is home to 33 active volcano systems, the highest number in Europe.

But until 2021, the Reykjanes Peninsula had not experienced an eruption for eight centuries.

Since then, eruptions have struck in 2021, 2022 and earlier this year — all in remote, uninhabited areas. Volcanologists say this could be the start of a new era of activity in the region.

 

China in 'race against time' to house quake victims for winter

By - Dec 22,2023 - Last updated at Dec 22,2023

People are seen at a temporary shelter in the main square in Dahejia in Jishishan County in northwest China's Gansu province on Wednesday (AFP photo)

JISHISHAN, China — Chinese authorities are facing a "race against time" to ensure victims of the deadliest earthquake in years can be sheltered from freezing winter temperatures, a local official told AFP on Thursday.

The quake, which struck just before midnight on Monday on the border between north-western Gansu and Qinghai provinces, killed at least 135 people.

The crippling December weather has made the aid operation even more challenging.

"Right now, it's a race against time to meet the needs of the population as quickly as possible, so that people can spend a warm winter in complete safety," Zhou Yongfeng, an official from Gansu's Jishishan county, told AFP.

Swathes of China are experiencing record-breaking cold temperatures, with authorities putting much of the country on alert.

AFP reporters saw survivors huddling around fires to keep warm, and the government has issued thousands of blue tents to replace improvised shelters built by residents immediately after the quake.

A huge logistics operation has unfolded over the past three days, AFP saw, with thousands of relief workers setting up shelter, food and other facilities for the displaced.

Zhou, who works in Liugou, a township of about 2,500 households near the epicentre of the quake, told AFP that resettlement was a problem.

“Makeshift tents are not a long-term approach... But as winters are too cold in northern China, it’s not possible to rebuild directly after the disaster,” she said.

“Work can only start in the spring of next year.”

Almost 1,000 were injured across the two provinces after the shallow tremor, measured at 5.9 by the US Geological Survey, struck.

The death toll rose on Thursday, state news agency Xinhua said, as rescuers continued to search for victims buried alive on Tuesday in Zhongchuan township in Qinghai.

Twelve people there remain missing after a “sand boil”, a phenomenon that can occur during an earthquake when soil liquefies and forces sand and water out of the ground, according to Xinhua.

The quake was China’s deadliest since 2014, when more than 600 people were killed in south-western Yunnan province.

At the Jishishan County People’s Hospital in Gansu, doctors attended to survivors with mild injuries on Thursday, administering intravenous drips and examining X-rays.

The hospital buildings themselves had been visibly damaged by the quake.

“I really want to go home,” one patient, a middle-aged woman waiting to receive surgery on her injured leg, told AFP.

“But my place has been destroyed, so I wonder where I can go,” she said.

“People are still worried about the aftershocks,” another Jishishan county official told AFP.

“They can’t sleep well because there is no safe place.”

Prague university shooting kills over 15

By - Dec 22,2023 - Last updated at Dec 22,2023

Armed police are seen on the balcony of the Charles University in central Prague, on Thursday (AFP photo)

PRAGUE — A 24-year-old gunman killed more than 15 people and wounded dozens more at a Prague university on Thursday in the Czech Republic's worst shooting in decades, before authorities said the attacker was "eliminated".

The deadly violence in the city's historic centre sparked evacuations, a massive response by heavily armed police and warnings for people to stay indoors.

The shooting erupted at the Charles University's Faculty of Arts, which sits near major tourist sites like the 14th-century Charles Bridge.

"More than 15 people have lost their lives and at least 24 have been wounded," police chief Martin Vondrasek told reporters following the shooting.

Emergency services preliminarily reported nine serious injuries, at least five mid-serious and up to 10 light injuries.

Vondrasek said police started a search for the man before the actual shooting as his father had been found dead in the village of Hostoun west of Prague.

The gunman "left for Prague saying he wanted to kill himself", Vondrasek said. Police suggested earlier the gunman had killed his father.

Police searched the main Faculty of Arts building where the gunman was expected to show up for a lecture, but he went to the faculty's other building nearby and they did not find him.

"At 1359 GMT, we received the first information about shooting," Vondrasek told reporters, adding the rapid response unit was on the scene within 12 minutes.

"At 14:20 GMT, the officers in action told us about the gunman's motionless body," Vondrasek said, adding unconfirmed information showed he had killed himself.

Citing a probe into social media, Vondrasek said the gunman was inspired by a "similar case that happened in Russia this autumn", without going into details.

"At the moment, there is nothing to suggest any further imminent danger," he added.

Vondrasek said no police officer was wounded in Thursday's action and that police had not yet started to identify the dead by 17:00 GMT as pyrotechnicians were at work in the building.

 

'Shocked' 

 

Police evacuated the building, using a concert hall across the street as a temporary refuge for the evacuees.

The worst shooting since the Czech Republic emerged as an independent state in 1993 prompted support from across the world.

Czech President Petr Pavel said he was "shocked" by the violence and expressed "deep regret and sincere condolences to the families and relatives of the victims".

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen denounced "the senseless violence of the shooting that claimed several lives today".

French President Emmanuel Macron also expressed his "solidarity" with the Czech people, just like many other European leaders including Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Czech Interior Minister Vit Rakusan said that there was no link between the shooting and “international terrorism”.

He added that “no other gunman has been confirmed” and called on people to follow police instructions.

Police cordoned off the area and asked people living nearby to stay at home.

Prague’s emergency service said on X that “a large number of ambulance units” were deployed at the faculty.

Though mass gun violence is unusual in the Czech Republic, the nation has been rocked by some instances in recent years.

A 63-year-old man shot seven men and a woman dead in 2015 before killing himself in a restaurant in the south-eastern town of Uhersky Brod.

In 2019, a man killed six people in the waiting room of a hospital in the eastern city of Ostrava, with another woman dying days later. The man shot himself dead about three hours after the attack.

Survivors brave freezing cold after China quake kills 134

By - Dec 21,2023 - Last updated at Dec 21,2023

Earthquake survivors are seen at a makeshift shelter made of tarpaulin in Jishishan County in northwest China's Gansu provinc en Wednesday (AFP photo)

JISHISHAN, China — Survivors of China's deadliest earthquake in years huddled in makeshift aid tents despite freezing temperatures on Wednesday, too scared to return to homes made dangerous by the disaster.

State broadcaster CCTV said at least 134 people were killed in northwestern Gansu province and neighbouring Qinghai after a shallow tremor on Monday night damaged thousands of buildings.

Almost 1,000 were injured across the two provinces, according to state news agency Xinhua, while CCTV said 13 were still missing in Qinghai as of 4:00 pm (08:00 GMT) Wednesday.

The quake was China's deadliest since 2014, when more than 600 people were killed in south-western Yunnan province.

AFP reporters saw families sheltering in makeshift tents built from wooden poles and tarpaulins outside the Majiahe mosque near the epicentre in Gansu's Jishishan county, with outdoor stoves and blankets salvaged from homes their only sources of warmth.

A woman taking refuge in one of the tents outside the mosque told AFP her family was afraid to return home.

“We can’t get inside anymore, it’s too dangerous,” she said, declining to give her name. “All the bricks and tiles inside could fall down at any time.”

Residents crowded around stoves in large tents set up on a basketball court by the local government in a nearby township.

One resident told AFP some tents had as many as 35 people huddled inside them.

“We have eight people in our family but [emergency response staff] only gave us three servings of instant noodles last night,” local student Ma told AFP.

“There is nothing we can do. We can’t go back to our house now,” she said.

Children lay under blankets, playing on their phones, while adults attempted to prepare meals from the limited food rations.

AFP saw rescue teams unloading large bundles of supplies, including more tents.

In another nearby town, people were seen queuing up for food and supplies beneath a large mosque, its roof panels almost entirely knocked down by the tremor.

Next to the damaged mosque were more than 150 blue emergency tents, each allocated to one family, an official at the scene told AFP.

 

Dozens of aftershocks 

 

Nearly a thousand people who were injured have been sent to hospitals, with 87,000 people moved to “temporary shelters” in Gansu alone, CCTV said.

China’s western hinterland carries the scars of frequent seismic activity. A huge quake in Sichuan province in 2008 left more than 87,000 people dead or missing, including 5,335 schoolchildren.

“Search and rescue work basically ended by 3:00pm yesterday and the main work now is to treat the injured and resettle the affected population,” an unidentified official from Gansu’s Emergency Management Department told a news conference on Wednesday.

The US Geological Survey said Monday night’s magnitude-5.9 quake struck at a shallow depth at 11:59pm local time (1559 GMT) with its epicentre around 100 kilometres from Gansu’s provincial capital, Lanzhou.

Dozens of smaller aftershocks followed and officials warned that tremors with a magnitude of more than 5.0 were possible in the next few days.

Fears are growing that survivors could succumb to the bitter cold, with temperatures in Jishishan expected to dip as low as -17oC on Wednesday.

Thousands of firefighters and rescue personnel have been sent to the disaster zone and state media said 2,500 tents, 20,000 coats and 5,000 rollaway beds had been sent to Gansu.

 

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