Friday, May 2, 2025

Israel says it struck near Syria palace over violence in Druze areas

 Israel says its fighter jets bombed an area next to the presidential palace in Syria's capital, Damascus, as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to protect the Druze religious minority following days of deadly sectarian violence.

Netanyahu said the strike was a "clear message to the Syrian regime" that Israel would "not allow the deployment of forces south of Damascus or any threat to the Druze community".

The Syrian presidency said it strongly condemned the strike, calling it a "dangerous escalation" intended to destabilise Syria.

Israel also carried out strikes south of Damascus on Wednesday during clashes between Druze gunmen, security forces and allied Sunni Islamist fighters


UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres also criticised the latest air strike, calling it a "violation of Syria's sovereignty".

In a statement delivered by his spokesman, Guterres called for Israel to stop such attacks and to respect Syria's "unity, its territorial integrity and its independence".

A spiritual leader of Syria's Druze, Sheikh Hikmat al-Hijri, condemned the violence on Thursday as an "unjustifiable genocidal campaign" against his community and called for intervention by "international forces to maintain peace".

Other Druze religious leaders put out a statement early on Friday confirming what they said was the community's "commitment to a country that includes all Syrians, a nation that is free of strife", according to the Associated Press.

They also reportedly said the state should be activated in Suweida province, and that authorities should be in control of the Suweida-Damascus highway.

The Syrian government said it had deployed security forces to Druze areas to combat "outlaw groups" which it accused of instigating the clashes.

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a UK-based monitoring group, at least 109 people have been killed this week in Ashrafiyat Sahnaya, a town in the southern outskirts of Damascus, the mainly Druze suburb of Jaramana, and the southern province of Suweida, which has a Druze majority.

It says that includes 11 Druze civilians and 26 Druze fighters, as well as another 42 Druze men who were shot dead in an "ambush" by security forces while travelling from Suweida to Damascus on Wednesday. Thirty members of the General Security service and allied fighters have also been killed, it says.

Istanbul-based Syria TV reported that the Israeli air strike near the presidential palace appeared to have targeted an empty area, and that there were no reports of casualties or material damage.

Israel's Defence Minister issued a statement saying that when the Syrian president woke up and saw the results he would "understand well that Israel is determined to prevent harm to the Druze in Syria".

"It is [Sharaa's] duty to protect the Druze in the suburbs of Damascus from jihadist assailants and to allow the hundreds of thousands of Druze in Suweida and Jabal al-Druze to defend themselves on their own, rather than sending jihadist forces into their communities," he added.

In a statement released on Friday afternoon, the Syrian presidency said it "condemned in the strongest terms the bombing of the presidential palace yesterday by the Israeli occupation, which constitutes a dangerous escalation against state institutions and the sovereignty of the state".

"This reprehensible attack reflects the continuation of reckless movements that seek to destabilize the country and exacerbate security crises," it added.

The presidency also called on the international community to stand by Syria in confronting the attacks, which it said violated international law.

A Druze religious leader in Suweida, Sheikh Hamoud al-Hinawi, meanwhile told the BBC that the situation was "still tense" in the affected areas.

"What is happening right now is sectarian targeting by extremist elements [and] it is the duty of the state to protect civilians," he said.


"We support the rule of law and national sovereignty of Syria, as long as the national government is protecting its citizens and adhering to its commitment to rebuilding a modern Syria."

When asked whether he supported the Israeli intervention, Sheikh Hinawi said: "It's not a matter of whether I am for or against Israel - it is a matter of life and death for us and if we are being attacked we have every right defend ourselves."

On Thursday, a member of the security forces deployed in Ashrafiyat Sahnaya told the BBC that they were "not targeting any sect, but rather dealing with an armed group acting outside the law, regardless of its religious affiliation", adding: "Any such group will be held accountable."

The sectarian violence erupted in Jaramana on Monday night after an audio clip of a man insulting the Prophet Muhammad circulated on social media and angered Sunni Muslims. It was attributed to a Druze cleric, but he denied any responsibility. The interior ministry also said a preliminary inquiry had cleared him.

The Druze faith is an offshoot of Shia Islam with its own unique identity and beliefs. Half its roughly one million followers live in Syria, where they make up about 3% of the population, while there are smaller communities in Lebanon, Israel and the occupied Golan Heights.

Syria's transitional President, Ahmed al-Sharaa, has promised to protect the country's many religious and ethnic minorities since his Sunni Islamist group led the rebel offensive that overthrew Bashar al-Assad's regime in December after 13 years of devastating civil war.

However, the mass killings of hundreds of civilians from Assad's minority Alawite sect in the western coastal region in March, during clashes between the new security forces and Assad loyalists, hardened fears among minority communities.

In February, Israel's prime minister warned that he would not "tolerate any threat to the Druze community in southern Syria" from the country's new security forces.

Netanyahu also demanded the complete demilitarisation of Suweida and two other southern provinces, saying Israel saw Sharaa's Sunni Islamist group, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), as a threat. HTS is a former al-Qaeda affiliate that is still designated as a terrorist organisation by the UN, the US, the EU and the UK.

The Israeli military has already carried out hundreds of strikes across Syria to destroy the country's military assets over the past four months. It has also sent troops into the UN-monitored demilitarised buffer zone between the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights and Syria, as well as several adjoining areas and the summit of Mount Hermon.


South African woman guilty of kidnapping and trafficking daughter aged 6



The mother of a South African girl, who disappeared aged six more than a year ago, has been convicted of kidnapping and trafficking her daughter.

Kelly Smith, her boyfriend Jacquen Appollis and their friend Steveno van Rhyn were arrested after Smith's daughter, Joshlin, went missing from outside her home in Saldanha Bay, near Cape Town, in February last year.

Appollis and Van Rhyn were also found guilty on Friday of kidnapping and trafficking Joshlin. All three had previously pleaded not guilty to to these charges.

Joshlin's disappearance sent shockwaves across South Africa and despite a highly publicised search for her, she is yet to be found.

During the trial, held in March, prosecutors accused Smith of having "sold, delivered or exchanged" Joshlin and then lied about her disappearance.

Smith wiped tears from her eyes when the guilty verdict was read, while Van Rhyn inexplicably broke into a smile.

Applause rippled through the packed courtroom and some onlookers began to cry.

Smith's mother was in attendance and after the hearing finished, she said she was "angry" with her daughter and did not want to see her.

"She must tell me where my grandchild is," Amanda Daniels-Smith told reporters.

Smith, Van Rhyn and Appollis could face life in prison - a date for sentencing is yet to be set.

In a statement following the judgment, the police said they would continue in their search for Joshlin.

The trial was held in Saldanha's Multipurpose Centre to "ensure the community has access" to proceedings, Judge Nathan Erasmus, who presided over the case, said previously.

Ahead of the verdict, nearby roads had been closed, while police officers were deployed in and around the centre.

The trial captivated South Africa, with witnesses and prosecutors making a number of shocking allegations.

The most explosive came from Lourentia Lombaard, a friend and neighbour of Smith who turned state witness.

Ms Lombaard alleged that Smith told her she had done "something silly" and sold Joshlin to a traditional healer, known in South Africa as a "sangoma".

The "person who [allegedly took] Joshlin wanted her for her eyes and skin", Ms Lombaard told the court.

A local pastor testified that in 2023, he had heard Smith - a mother of three - talk of selling her children for 20,000 rand ($1,100; £850) each, though she had said she was willing to accept a lower figure of $275.

Joshlin's teacher then alleged in court that Smith had told her during the search that her daughter was already "on a ship, inside a container, and they were on the way to West Africa".

Smith's lawyer, Rinesh Sivnarain, cast doubt on these allegations. He cited inconsistencies - recognised by the prosecution - in Ms Lombaard's remarks and suggested she was an "opportunist".

Smith, Appollis and Van Rhyn chose not to call any witnesses in their defence and did not take the stand during the trial.

Sangomas are legally recognised in South Africa under the Traditional Health Practitioners Act of 2007, alongside herbalists, traditional birth attendants and traditional surgeons.

Some charlatans are involved in unscrupulous traditional so-called cures, and have been known to sell good luck charms that involve body parts.

The allegation that Smith had discussed selling her daughter and had issues with drugs has prompted conversations about the vulnerability of children, particularly in South Africa's poor communities.

In Joshlin's community of Middelpos, parents have been telling local media that more than a year after the young girl's disappearance, they are still concerned for their own children's safety.

Activists say ship aiming to sail to Gaza was attacked by drones

 


Activists who were planning to sail a ship to Gaza say it was struck by drones in international waters off the coast of Malta - appearing to accuse Israel of being behind the attack.

The Freedom Flotilla Coalition said its ship The Conscience was targeted at 00:23 local time on Friday and issued an SOS signal right after the attack.

The BBC was sent a recording of the distress call from the flotilla ship, recorded by a crew member on a nearby oil tanker. The captain of the flotilla ship can clearly be heard reporting drone strikes and a fire onboard.

The Maltese government said everyone aboard the ship was "confirmed safe" and that a fire onboard the ship was "brought under control overnight".

The Freedom Flotilla Coalition said it had planned to sail to Gaza with people including climate activist Greta Thunberg on board and "challenge Israel's illegal siege and blockade".

The NGO called for Israeli ambassadors to be summoned to answer for "violation of international law, including the ongoing blockade and the bombing of our civilian vessel".

The Israeli military said it was looking into reports of the attack.

Organisers told the BBC that the group had been "operating in total secrecy with a complete media blackout" to prevent "sabotage" as they prepared to sail towards Gaza - where about two million Palestinians have been under a complete blockade by the Israeli military for two months.

Volunteer Surya McEwen said he and others had lost contact with the ship after the incident, which he said caused a fire on board and damaged the hull. They had since been told there were no major injuries.

"It's a full-on situation for them but they're recovering," he told the BBC, adding that the incident had been an "unprovoked attack on a civilian vessel in international waters, trying to do a humanitarian mission".

Climate activist Greta Thunberg was among those who had planned to board the ship once it departed for Gaza on Friday.

Speaking to journalists in Valetta, she said: "I was part of the group who was supposed to board that boat today to continue the voyage towards Gaza, which is one of many attempts to open up a humanitarian corridor and to do our part to keep trying to break Israel's illegal siege on Gaza."

Thunberg added that as far as she's aware, the ship is still at the location of the attack because moving it would let too much water in.

"What is certain is that we human rights activists will continue to do everything in our power to do our part, to demand a free Palestine and demand the opening of a humanitarian corridor," she said.

The Maltese government said that 12 crew and four activists were on board the boat, while the NGO said 30 activists had been on board.

The Freedom Flotilla Coalition uploaded a video showing a fire on the ship. It said the attack appeared to have targeted the generator, which left the ship without power and at risk of sinking.

The Maltese government said a tugboat was sent to the scene to extinguish the fire, which they say was under control by 01:28 local time.

"By 2:13, all crew were confirmed safe but refused to board the tug," the statement said, adding the ship remains outside territorial waters.

Cyprus responded to the SOS signal by dispatching a vessel, the activists said, but that it did not "provide the critical electrical support needed".

Marine tracking software shows that the Conscience left Tunisia on Tuesday evening and is currently around 12-14 nautical miles off Malta.

The coalition is campaigning to end Israel's blockade of Gaza, which is also facing mounting international condemnation. Last month the UK, French and German foreign ministers described the Israeli decision to block aid as "intolerable".

Two months ago, Israel shut all crossings to Gaza – preventing all goods, including food, fuel and medicines from entering - and later resumed its military offensive, ending a two-month ceasefire with Hamas.

Some humanitarian organisations such as the World Food Programme say they have already run out of food while community kitchens say their stocks are dwindling fast. On Friday the Red Cross said the humanitarian response in Gaza was on the verge of "total collapse".

The Israeli military launched a campaign to destroy Hamas in response to an unprecedented cross-border attack on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

At least 52,418 people have been killed in Gaza during the ensuing war, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.

Additional reporting by Tom Bateman, Alice Cuddy and BBC Verify

JD Vance praises ‘tough negotiator’ PM Modi, shares update on India-US trade deal

 

JD Vance predicted that India could be among the first countries to strike a trade deal to avert ‘reciprocal tariffs’ set by US President Donald Trump


US Vice-President JD Vance on Thursday termed Prime Minister Narendra Modi a “tough negotiator” and said that ‘good negotiations’ were going on with India on the tariff issue.

In an interview with Fox News, Vance also predicted that India could be among the first countries to strike a trade deal to avert reciprocal tariffs set by US President Donald Trump last month.

"Modi, the Prime Minister, is a tough negotiator, but we're going to rebalance that relationship, and that's why the president's doing what he's doing," Vance said during the interview.

Vance was asked if a deal with India would be the first to come through as negotiations go on to avoid the high import taxes. Most of the tariffs imposed by Trump in his ‘Liberation Day' declaration are on pause right now.

"I don't know if it'll be your first deal, but I think it would be among the first deals for sure. We've got negotiations with Japan, with Korea, we've got negotiations going on with some folks in Europe, and obviously, we've got a good negotiation going on in India," Vance replied.


Wednesday, April 30, 2025

The Clockmaker's Garden


 Chapter One: The Town That Forgot to Hurry

There was a quiet town nestled between the shoulders of two forested hills and hugged by a lazy river that shimmered gold at dawn. The townsfolk called it Eldhollow, a place where the clocks ticked just a little slower, where people still nodded at strangers and where time, it seemed, politely asked permission before passing.

At the very center of Eldhollow stood a tiny shop with stained glass windows and a swinging wooden sign that read: “Ellis Thorne: Clockmaker”. Inside, the ticking of clocks played like a symphony, echoing through the scent of cedarwood and lavender oil. The man who owned the shop, Ellis, was known for his calm smile, messy curls, and the way his fingers moved like music when fixing old timepieces.

But no one knew that Ellis could hear more than ticking.

He could hear time whisper.


Chapter Two: The Girl With the Wounded Voice

On a rainy spring afternoon, just as Ellis was polishing the brass rim of a grandfather clock, the bell above the door tinkled. A girl stepped in, soaked from the rain, holding a locket in her palm. Her cheeks were flushed from the cold, and her eyes—moss green and guarded—carried stories her lips didn’t.

“Can I help you?” Ellis asked gently, wiping his hands.

She opened her hand. Inside was a tiny, broken pocket watch. “It doesn’t tick anymore.”

Ellis took it from her and smiled faintly. “Most things still want to tick. They just need to be listened to.”

The girl hesitated. “Can I stay while you fix it?”

He nodded. And so she sat, dripping on his floor, watching him work. He didn’t ask her name. She didn’t offer it.

But when he wound the watch and it gave a shy tick-tick, she smiled—a real one. And that was enough for the first day.


Chapter Three: Every Day at Four

The girl—her name was Lyra, he’d learn later—began visiting the shop every day at four. She brought things that didn’t work: a rusted alarm clock, a music box with a stuck ballerina, a wall clock that sang the wrong song. She always watched him work, always left without lingering.

Ellis never asked why.

But he noticed how she flinched at loud sounds. How she held her locket like a tether. And how she would glance at the door, as though someone might follow her in.

One afternoon, she stayed after the repair. Her voice, when it came, was like a wind-chime in fog.

“Do you believe some things are meant to break?”

Ellis looked up from a delicate gear in his palm. “No,” he said. “I believe some things are waiting for the right hands to help them remember.”

Lyra lowered her gaze. “What if it’s not a thing? What if it’s a person?”

Ellis set down the gear and said nothing for a long moment.

Then he whispered, “Especially then.”


Chapter Four: The Garden That Stopped Blooming

After a month of clock repairs and quiet glances, Lyra invited Ellis to her home. She lived in an old manor outside town, covered in ivy, with a gate that hadn’t opened in years. The garden had grown wild and strange, with roses that never bloomed and trees that bent inward as if listening.

“My mother was a botanist,” she said, leading him through the tangled paths. “She died two years ago. Since then, nothing grows. It’s like the house is mourning.”

Ellis ran his fingers over a branch. “Maybe it’s waiting.”

“For what?”

“For joy to come back.”

Lyra laughed, but it cracked like thin glass. “I don’t know if I can give it that.”

“You’ve already given it your presence. That’s a start.”

She turned to him. “Why are you kind to me?”

Ellis met her gaze, steady and unafraid. “Because even broken things deserve kindness. Especially them.”


Chapter Five: The Whispering Clock

One evening, Lyra brought a curious item: a clock shaped like a heart, with intricate gears and a faint hum—though it didn’t move.

“I found it in my attic,” she said. “It belonged to my mother.”

Ellis examined it. The heart-clock was unlike anything he’d ever seen. Inside it, faintly, he heard something—not ticking, but... whispering. It wasn’t words. It was memory.

“May I keep it for a few days?” he asked.

Lyra nodded. And for the first time, she touched his hand. Brief. But it warmed him through.

That night, the heart-clock glowed faintly on his desk. Ellis worked until dawn. Not fixing it. Listening.

He heard laughter. Lyra’s laughter, but as a child. He heard lullabies. Arguments. A voice saying, “I love you more than life, Lyra.”

It was her mother. The clock had been built not just with gears—but with memory, grief, and love.


Chapter Six: A Place Time Forgot

The next day, Ellis brought Lyra the heart-clock, now ticking gently, glowing in rhythm.

When she held it, she cried. Not the kind of crying that wounds—but the kind that heals. The kind that says thank you for remembering me.

“I used to think I’d forget her voice,” she whispered.

Ellis placed his hand over hers. “Now you never will.”

They stood in the garden, and Ellis noticed: a single rose had bloomed. Small, red, and defiant.


Chapter Seven: The Day the River Stopped

A strange thing happened in Eldhollow.

The river, which never hurried, stopped.

It simply froze mid-flow, like a paused breath. People panicked. Birds flew in spirals. The sun stayed in one place.

Ellis and Lyra stood on the hill and watched.

“This isn’t right,” Lyra said.

Ellis closed his eyes. He could hear the clocks in town. All of them had stopped.

Except one.

The heart-clock.

Back at the shop, they found it glowing brighter than ever. Ellis placed his ear to it and heard something new:

“She must choose.”

“What does that mean?” Lyra asked.

Ellis didn’t know. But he had a feeling.

Time, he realized, wasn’t just something he repaired. It was something he was part of. And Lyra... she had brought a piece of time trapped in grief. Now time was listening.


Chapter Eight: The Choice

That night, Lyra stood beneath the rose bush in bloom, holding the heart-clock.

“I was going to leave Eldhollow,” she said. “I was supposed to marry someone in the city. Someone my mother approved of before she died. But I ran. Because I didn’t love him.”

Ellis stepped closer. “And now?”

“I don’t know what I feel.” Her voice trembled. “But I know I feel it with you.”

Ellis reached out. Not to hold her, but to be there if she needed holding.

“I hear time,” he whispered. “But with you, it sings.”

The clock pulsed once, gently.

And the river began to move again.


Chapter Nine: A New Bloom

Spring truly arrived the next morning. Not just on the calendar—but in the soul of Eldhollow. Flowers burst from places long dormant. The townsfolk smiled more.

Lyra didn’t leave.

She stayed, not because she had to—but because something deep and ancient had rooted in her heart. Something warm. Something patient.

Love didn’t arrive like thunder in Eldhollow.

It arrived in tick-tick-ticks, in quiet cups of tea, in gardens replanted, in hands brushed accidentally, in a clock that whispered a mother’s lullaby.

Ellis and Lyra walked the garden one evening as fireflies blinked awake. She looked up at him and asked, “Do you believe in forever?”

Ellis smiled. “I believe in now. And if we have enough ‘nows,’ we’ll make a forever.”

And Lyra kissed him.

Not out of passion—but out of peace. Out of a longing that finally found home.


Epilogue: The Garden of Hours

Years later, people still visit Eldhollow.

They say if you enter the garden behind the clockmaker’s shop, time feels strange—slower, softer. Roses bloom all year. There’s a heart-clock in the center, still ticking.

No one knows how Ellis Thorne and Lyra Everen met. Only that love, in that garden, never hurries.

It simply stays.

Ticking.

Waiting.

Blooming

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Trump congratulates Canada's Carney as they agree to meet in 'near future


 US President Donald Trump has called Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney to congratulate him on his victory in the country's general election and the two have agreed meet in the near future.

The two countries were expected to enter talks about a new economic and security relationship after Monday's vote.

Trump's trade tariffs and repeated comments undermining Canada's sovereignty overshadowed the race, which ended with Carney's Liberals projected to win a minority government, according to public broadcaster CBC.

That result will make Carney's pressing tasks of negotiating with his US counterpart and tackling a range of domestic issues more of a challenge, as he'll need to wrangle support from other political parties.

In their first call since the election, Trump congratulated Carney on his victory, according to the prime minister's office on Tuesday.

The office also said the two leaders had "agreed on the importance of Canada and the United States working together – as independent, sovereign nations – for their mutual betterment".

The Liberals will need to rely on their support to pass legislation through the House of Commons.

They also face possible defeat in any vote of confidence in the chamber.


The Liberals are most likely to find willing partners with the diminished left-wing New Democrats, who have in the past supported the Liberals, and the Bloc Québécois.

The Liberals are projected to have won 169 seats, three short of the 172 needed for a majority in Canada's House of Commons.

It still marks a historic turnaround for a party that had seemed on course for collapse just months ago.

Carney, a former central banker for Canada and the UK, will continue as prime minister, having stepped into the role last month following his unpopular predecessor Justin Trudeau's resignation.

One issue where it may be easy for the Liberals to find support in the House is in passing legislation to help workers and industries affected by US tariffs - something all parties swung behind on the campaign trail.

  • RESULTS: How Canada voted - in charts
  • ANALYSIS: Trump made Carney's turnaround victory possible
  • PROFILE: Five things Carney has pledged to do as Canadian PM
  • WATCH: Relief, disappointment or surprise? Canadians reactOn Tuesday morning, Bloc Québécois leader Yves-Francois Blanchet suggested Carney could benefit from at least a period of stability in the House.
  • Blanchet urged a "truce" among parties while Canada negotiated trade with the US, saying it was clear Canadians wanted political stability in unstable times.

    He said it wasn't time for other parties to "threaten to overthrow the government anytime soon" and didn't see any scenario "other than collaboration for a period of slightly over a year".

    The leader of the sovereigntist party, which only runs candidates in Quebec, did urge Carney to avoid pressing the province on certain issues, noting that collaboration goes both ways.

    On Tuesday, the White House commented on Carney's win, with deputy press secretary Anna Kelly saying: "The election does not affect President Trump's plan to make Canada America's cherished 51st state."

    In an interview with the BBC, Carney said that Canada deserves "respect" from the US and he will only allow a Canada-US trade and security partnership "on our terms".

    Carney has told the BBC that a 51st state scenario was "never, ever going to happen".

    Meanwhile, new US ambassador to Canada, Pete Hoekstra, said in a video statement that he is "committed to making progress in this great relationship".

    Carney has also promised action on a range of domestic issues, including tackling the country's housing crisis and tax cuts for lower- and middle-income Canadians.

    The prime minister also needs to prepare for the G7 summit in June, which Canada is hosting in the province of Alberta.

    In Monday's election, both the Liberals and the Conservatives saw a significant rise in their share of the national vote compared with four years ago.

    The Conservative Party came in second, on track to win 144 seats, and will form Official Opposition.

    Increased support for Canada's two largest parties has come at the expense of smaller parties, particularly the NDP, whose share of the popular vote is down by around 12 percentage points.

    Voter turnout for the election was 67%.

    Both Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre and NDP leader Jagmeet Singh lost their seats, with Singh announcing he will step down as leader of the left-wing party.