Israeli strikes on Gaza kill 10 people, mostly women and childrenNew Foto - Israeli strikes on Gaza kill 10 people, mostly women and children

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israeli strikes overnight and into Sunday killed 10 people inthe Gaza Strip, mostly women and children, according to local health officials. Two of the strikes hit tents in the southern city of Khan Younis, each killing two children and their parents. Other strikes killed a child and a man riding a bicycle, according to Nasser Hospital, which received the bodies from all the strikes. The Israeli military says it only targets militants and tries to avoid harming civilians. It blames Hamas for civilian deaths in the 19-month-old war because the militants are embedded in densely populated areas. There was no immediate Israeli comment on the latest strikes. Israelhas sealed Gaza off from all imports, including food, medicine and emergency shelter, for over 10 weeks in what it says is a pressure tactic aimed at forcing Hamas to release hostages. Israel resumed its offensive in March,shattering a ceasefirethat had facilitated the release of more than 30 hostages. Aid groups say food supplies are running low and hunger is widespread. U.S. President Donald Trump, whose administration has voiced full support for Israel's actions,is set to visit Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates this week in a regional tour that will not include Israel. The war began when Hamas-led militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking 251 hostage. Fifty-nine hostages are still inside Gaza, around a third of them believed to be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefire agreements or other deals. Israel's offensive has killed over 52,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which does not say how many of the dead were combatants or civilians. The offensive has destroyed vast areas of the territory and displaced some 90% of its population of around 2 million. ___ Magdy reported from Cairo. ___ Follow AP's war coverage athttps://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war

Israeli strikes on Gaza kill 10 people, mostly women and children

Israeli strikes on Gaza kill 10 people, mostly women and children DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israeli strikes overnight and into Sunday...
Former Panama president Martinelli leaves Nicaraguan embassy for asylum in ColombiaNew Foto - Former Panama president Martinelli leaves Nicaraguan embassy for asylum in Colombia

Former Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli left the Nicaraguan embassy in Panama City, where he had sought refuge more than a year ago after the courts upheld a money laundering sentence against him, and headed to Colombia where he has received political asylum, the government said late Saturday. Panama's foreign ministry said in a statement that Colombian President Gustavo Petro sent Panamanian President José Raúl Mulino a formal note saying that he had granted Martinelli asylum and that Panama had granted the former president safe passage to Colombia. "The Republic of Colombia is a State that has historically recognized with the utmost respect, compliance, and promotion the institutions of International Law, including the asylum system within the Inter-American system," the statement said. Martinelli, 73, was sentenced to 10 years in prison for money laundering in July 2023 in connection with the purchase of a publishing group. Following the confirmation of that sentence, the former president sought refuge in the Nicaraguan diplomatic mission in Panama after President Daniel Ortega's government granted him asylum. He had remained inside the embassy for more than a year. Martinelli is a businessman and supermarket magnate who governed Panama from 2009 to 2014, a period of rapid economic growth driven by the construction of major projects such as the first metro in Central America and the expansion of the interoceanic canal. But his government was tainted by accusations of bribery and cost overruns. He was sanctioned by the United States for corruption in January 2023. Martinelli maintains that his prosecution was politically motivated as he sought to run for a second term of office. In 2023, he won his party's nomination to seek the presidency again. However, he was convicted of money laundering, and after the Supreme Court denied his appeal, he was ineligible to run. Ultimately, Martinelli supported his running mate, current President Mulino. Nicaragua granted Martinelli political asylum in February 2024. Panama had refused to grant Nicaragua permission to move Martinelli to Nicaragua. The Colombian government had not previously commented on the matter. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Former Panama president Martinelli leaves Nicaraguan embassy for asylum in Colombia

Former Panama president Martinelli leaves Nicaraguan embassy for asylum in Colombia Former Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli left the ...
Douglas Murray Defends Israel and Admonishes the WestNew Foto - Douglas Murray Defends Israel and Admonishes the West

In the United States and Europe, university students and professors, journalists and diplomats, activists and NGOs, international court judges in The Hague, and international organization bureaucrats in Turtle Bay, Brussels, and Geneva take a peculiarly intense interest in condemning Israel. It would be bad enough if Western condemnations only demonstrated bias against the Jewish state. But they also display an antipathy to principles such as the dignity of the person and virtues such as the courage to defend ones family and nation with deep roots in Western civilization. Since Israel embodies these principles and virtues, which are essential to the preservation and flourishing of freedom and democracy in the 21stcentury, learning from and standing by the Jewish state fortify the West. The critics work overtime to vilify Israel, but their favorite accusations conflict with the facts and rely on gross double standards. First, the critics allege that inspired by Zionism, Israel illegitimately embraces nationalism, conceiving of itself as the nation-state of the Jewish people. This allegation neglects that Israel remains the Middle Easts lone rights-protecting democracy. It ignores that like all minorities in Israel, Arab citizens, some 21% of the population, enjoy full civil and political rights. (They are not required to serve in the army but may enlist.) And it overlooks that like Israel - but often with less success in integrating Muslim minorities - nation-states across Europe combine the protection of rights, democratic self-government, and devotion to nationhood. Second, according to legions of detractors in the West, Israel occupies the West Bank (territory Israelis often refer to by the biblical names Judea and Samaria) and Gaza. Yet military imperatives compel Israel to maintain overall security responsibility for the West Bank where, within Palestinian Authority administered areas, Iran-backed Hamas plots against both the PA and Israel. Meanwhile, many in the West justify Hamas Oct. 7, 2023, massacre in southern Israel - Gaza jihadists killed around 1,200 persons, mostly civilians, and took around 250 persons hostages, mostly civilians - as laudable resistance to occupation, notwithstanding Israels 2005 withdrawal from Gaza. Yet the West seems generally unconcerned about clear-cut occupations and volatile territorial disputes elsewhere. Turkey invaded northeastern Cyprus in 1974, declaring the establishment of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, though hardly anyone in the West notices Ankaras more than 50 years of occupation of the Mediterranean island. Few in the West (until recently) have given much attention to the bloody strife between Pakistan and India over Kashmir. And the Chinese Communist Partys unlawful seizure of, and snuffing out of freedom in, Hong Kong in 2020 excite little sympathy or engagement in the West. Third, asserts the fashionable indictment, Israels war-mongering visits death and destruction on the region. Yet fighting between Jews and Arabs over the last 100 years has stemmed primarily from Arab and Muslim determination initially to prevent the establishment of a Jewish state, and then to wipe out Israel. A comparative perspective is revealing. From the 1917 Balfour Declaration, in which the British government announced support for the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine, to Oct. 6, 2023, approximately91,000Arabs died in fighting against Jews living in their ancestral homeland. Since the terrorists Oct. 7 assault on Israel, around 50,000 Arabs have been killed, according to Hamas, whose numbers dont distinguish combatants from noncombatants and dont consider the jihadists use of Palestinian noncombatants as human shields. In addition, according to its own estimates, the Israel Defense Forces have killed 3,800 Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon after the Iran-backed militia opened on Oct. 8, 2023, a northern front against the Jewish state. Despite the terrible death toll in Gaza over the last 19 months, Arab fatalities in the Middle East at the hands of other Arabs in just the last 14 years exceed by more than sevenfold the total number of Arab deaths in all the wars that Arabs have waged against the Jews for more than 100 years. Since 2014, nearly 400,000 Arabs have perished in the Yemen civil war fomented by the Iran-backed Houthis. And since 2011, approximately 650,000 Arabs have been killed in Syria in deposed Iran-backed Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assads war against his people. Few and far between, however, are the best and the brightest in the West who act as if the massive loss of Arab life in the Middle East in which Israel played no role should trouble the humanitarian conscience. Amazon In "On Democracy and Death Cults: Israel and the Future of Civilization," Douglas Murray excoriates the Western hypocrisy, mendacity, and malignancy that fuel enthusiasm for Hamas butchery of Jewish civilians and antipathy toward Israels exercise of its right to self-defense. A New York Times bestselling author of eight books, senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, intrepid war correspondent on three continents, prolific commentator in magazines and newspapers on politics and culture, and eloquent and unflappable debater and talk-show guest, Murray has warned the West for years about the perils of indulging Islamic extremism. Murrays new book deepens that warning. He describes Hamas atrocities and chronicles Israelis heroism. He analyzes the moral pathology that impels educated Western men and women to hate Jews and side with their murderers. And he sketches lessons that citizens of the West must learn in order to overcome the internal disarray and the self-loathing that spur them to make common cause with jihadists who loathe individual freedom and equality under law. On Oct. 8, 2023, Murray attended a hastily arranged demonstration in New York Citys Times Square. "But it was not a protest against the horrors of the previous day," writes Murray. "It was not a protest against the terrorists of Hamas. It was instead a protest of the State of Israel and the citizens of the worlds only Jewish state." He encountered banners and signs adorned with slogans - subsequently made familiar by student encampments at Americas elite campuses - affirming Hamas genocidal intentions and extending the war against Israel to the West: "From the River to the Sea," "Resistance Is Justified," "Resistance Is Not Terrorism," "Fight White Supremacy," "Long Live the Intifada," and "By Any Means Necessary." New York, where the British-born Murray makes his home, was not an exception. In numerous European cities huge crowds celebrated the mass slaughter of Jews. Yet, he ruefully notes, "there was not a single major protest against Hamas in any Western city." Murray, who first visited Israel in 2006 to report on the war with Hezbollah and has returned many times since, resolved to show solidarity with Israel, cover Hamas war of extermination against the Jewish state, and clarify its larger implications. Arriving in Israel shortly after the Oct. 7 attack and staying for many months, he traveled to the kibbutzim and towns where Hamas perpetrated the massacre. He visited survivors of the slaughter and victims and hostages families. He went to the morgues to confront Hamas sadism embodied in charred and mutilated corpses. He entered Gaza to observe the treacherous urban warfare. He consulted with Israeli political officials, military commanders, and soldiers. He conversed with a multitude of ordinary Israelis. He not only provided courageous on-the-scene reporting and astute political and military analysis but also bore witness to Israeli suffering and resilience, establishing himself as a tireless champion of the Jewish state. In Hamas, Murray observes, Israel faces a distinctively evil enemy. The jihadists atrocities were "something uncommon even in the long history of violence," he argues. Whereas the Nazis hid their extermination of the Jews, "the terrorists of October 7 did what they did with such relish," writes Murray. "Not just the endless shouting of their war cries. Or the visible glee you could see in their faces and hear in their voices. It was the fact that all of this gave them such intense joy. And that they were proud of their actions." In antisemitism, Murray maintains, Israel and the Jewish people confront a particularly virulent form of hatred. In lines from novelist Vasily Grossmans masterpiece, "Life and Fate," Murray finds antisemitisms essence. "Anti-Semitism is always a means rather than an end; it is a measure of the contradictions yet to be resolved," writes Grossman. "It is a mirror for the failings of individuals, social structures and State systems. Tell me what you accuse the Jews of - Ill tell you what youre guilty of." Antisemitism endures because Jews provide a convenient scapegoat exploited by the enduring human tendency to attribute ones faults to others and exact revenge on them for ones failings. How did Israel turn the tide against jihadists who proudly declare their love of death? What must the West do to overcome the contagion of antisemitism, recognize the evils of Islamic extremism, and grasp the best within the West? Murray finds an answer in Gods exhortation to "all Israel" in Deuteronomy, Chapter 30: "[C]hoose life." Biblically understood this means not only surviving but also embracing the good, which includes cherishing the dignity of the person while summoning the courage to defend ones family and nation. Israel, Murray shows, provides an inspiring example of choosing life. For the West at this juncture, choosing life must include learning from and standing by the Jewish state. Peter Berkowitz is the Tad and Dianne Taube senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. From 2019 to 2021, he served as director of the Policy Planning Staff at the U.S. State Department. His writings are posted atPeterBerkowitz.comand he can be followed on X @BerkowitzPeter.

Douglas Murray Defends Israel and Admonishes the West

Douglas Murray Defends Israel and Admonishes the West In the United States and Europe, university students and professors, journalists and d...
NHL playoffs: Golden Knights stun Oilers with 0.4 seconds left, with some help from Leon Draisaitl's stickNew Foto - NHL playoffs: Golden Knights stun Oilers with 0.4 seconds left, with some help from Leon Draisaitl's stick

The Las Vegas Golden Knights are on the board against the Edmonton Oilers. It took one of the most dramatic games of the NHL playoffs to get there. With time ticking toward overtime in a must-win Game 3, with the Oilers leading 2-0, the Golden Knights got the puck where they needed, in the hands of the player they needed, with the bounce they needed to steal their first win of the series. It was Reilly Smith with the game-winning goal with 0.4 seconds left, with assists from William Karlsson, Brayden McNabb and, unfortunately, Oilers star Leon Draisaitl, whose stick was in the worst possible place in the worst possible time. WHAT A BOUNCE 😏pic.twitter.com/yzxrf8BaVX — y-Vegas Golden Knights (@GoldenKnights)May 11, 2025 The goal was initially waved off with the ref thinking it didn't cross the plane, but replay show it clearly hit the camera inside the goal. The result was a 4-3 Golden Knights win and a stunned Rogers Place crowd. Per Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman, the goal was the third-latest regulation game-winner in playoff history, behind only Nazem Kadri's in 2020 (0.1 seconds left) and Jussi Jokinen's in 2009 (0.2 seconds). Even Smith wasn't sure what happened,as he told the "NHL on TNT" panel after the game: "From my angle, it seemed like it hit the middle bar, but it came out so fast and I wasn't really sure if the time expired," Smith told the "NHL on TNT" panel postgame. "And then I take a peek at the ref, and he's telling me, 'It didn't go in,' so just fortunate we were able to get something with time running down there." It took plenty of effort for the Golden Knights just to get to a point where a miracle goal could win the game for them. The Oilers were up 2-0 in both the game and series after 12 minutes on Saturday, but Vegas responded with goals from Smith and Nicolas Roy within a minute of each other at the end of the first period. The Knights took a lead on a Karlsson goal late in the second period, only to lose the lead on a would-be gut punch from Connor McDavid with three minutes left. And then, Smith. Smith made his return to Vegas at the trade deadline this season, coming over from the New York Rangers in exchange for Brendan Brisson and a third-round pick. He previously played six seasons with the Knights, reaching the 2018 Stanley Cup finals in the team's inaugural season and winning his first championship in 2023. Game 4 is scheduled for 9:30 p.m. ET on Monday in Edmonton.

NHL playoffs: Golden Knights stun Oilers with 0.4 seconds left, with some help from Leon Draisaitl's stick

NHL playoffs: Golden Knights stun Oilers with 0.4 seconds left, with some help from Leon Draisaitl's stick The Las Vegas Golden Knights ...
How the Timberwolves dug deep to take a 2-1 series lead over the WarriorsNew Foto - How the Timberwolves dug deep to take a 2-1 series lead over the Warriors

SAN FRANCISCO — TheTimberwolves claimed a scrappy 102-97 win over the Warriors in Game 3at Chase Center on Saturday, seizing a 2-1 advantage in the Western Conference semifinals. With Game 4 looming Monday in San Francisco, and Stephen Curry reportedlyunavailable until at least Game 6, the Warriors now find themselves in a must-win situation. Here are the biggest takeaways from Saturday night's clash: Julius Randle is locked in all facets of the game right now as he continues dispelling the narrative of him being unreliable in the playoffs. Randle paced the Wolves with 13 points in the first half, but he was the catalyst of a second-half surge that helped unlock the offense and, more importantly, Anthony Edwards. Randle was masterful, posting his first career postseason triple-double, finishing with 24 points, 10 rebounds and 12 assists. He's thefirst Timberwolves player since Kevin Garnettto notch a triple-double in the playoffs, and it couldn't have come at a better time. "I feel like I just got a lot of different tools, you know what I mean?" Randle said. "It's really about using my mind and taking what the defense gives me." His ability to bully down low and find Minnesota's shooters proved vital, as Randle repeatedly forced Golden State into rotations that led to open looks. His playmaking was critical for the Wolves in the second half, as he generated nine of his 12 assists across the final two frames. Six of those second-half assists went to Edwards. "He was incredible, man," Edwards said. "Finding everybody on cuts. Finding the open guy, time after time. Just pushing the pace. That's what we asked of him, and he's been doing that at a high level." While Randle's triple-double underpinned Minnesota's turnaround, Edwards stole the show. After scoring a modest eight points in the first half on 3-of-12 shooting, Edwards cranked his game into hyperdrive, finishing with 36 points (13-of-28 FG, 5-of-14 3PT, 5-of-8 FT) with 4 rebounds, 4 assists and 1 block in 44 minutes. When Draymond Green picked up his fourth foul in the third quarter, Edwards capitalized, making a concerted effort to get downhill. He scored 15 points in the third, with five of his six FGs coming in the paint, including this banger over Kevon Looney. When asked about what got him fired up, Edwards said, "I felt like when Jonathan Kuminga dunked on me, it got me going more so, if anything." The Warriors did a good job getting Edwards out of rhythm in the first half, but it all came together once he focused on higher-percentage looks, dropping 28 in the second half with 13 in the fourth quarter. On a night when the Wolves' bench added a mere 11 points, Edwards and Randle put the team on their backs. Mike Conley joined Randle and Edwards at the post-game news conference, and though his numbers don't jump off the page, his late-game defense and poise in the fourth was the veteran leadership the Wolves needed in this rock fight. Golden State didn't go down without a fight, leading by four heading into the final period. But then, the wheels came off. The Warriors struggled to generate offense late, scoring just 24 points in the fourth with four turnovers and five assists. That's when not having Curry is pretty glaring. A few factors were at play in the fourth: Jimmy Butler, a dog all night, went ice cold, shooting 1 of 7 from the field. Draymond Green fouled out at the 4:38 mark. The Warriors managed to win the third quarter by two points without the foul-addled Green; they didn't have the same fate in the fourth. Offensively, without Green's screens and decision-making in the half-court, the Warriors struggled to create quality looks against Minnesota's compact defense. No one showed up except for Kuminga. Kuminga was terrific off the bench, scoring 30 points (11-of-18 FG, 3-of-4 3PT, 5-of-6 FT) with 6 rebounds, 3 assists and 2 blocks. He looked like a guy who wants a fat contract in the offseason and played his way back into relevancy Saturday night. Kerr has to stick with JK, which is pretty interesting considering he's been in Kerr's doghouse all year. Kuminga and Butler accounted for 65% of the Warriors' points and 54% of their shot attempts. Sounds like a recipe for success if you're the Timberwolves. For Golden State, the sense of urgency is now undeniable. Down 2-1 in the series and with Curry unavailable, the pressure is on the Warriors to reclaim momentum Monday night in Game 4. Green has to stay out of foul trouble. Brandin Podziemski has to wake up after shooting 6 of 26 through three games. The Warriors need to limit turnovers, keep the ball moving and continue putting pressure on Minnesota's frontcourt. The Warriors' focus on getting Rudy Gobert and Naz Reid into foul trouble while punishing the post worked through three quarters. That type of physicality and intent is key, especially when the Wolves are taking away their ability to shoot 3s; the Warriors attempted just five in the first half. For Minnesota, this win was a statement. The Wolves cut off the water for everyone but Butler and Kuminga and forced the Warriors to play without their defensive anchor in the most pressurized moments. The Wolves need more offense from their bench, but involving Jaden McDaniels more (4 of 7 from the floor) would be in their best interest. His seven shot attempts were his second fewest of the postseason, and his growth continues to be one of their biggest X-factors of the postseason. Lastly, if Edwards can stop settling for 3s and start attacking like he did in the second half, the Warriors will be on the ropes. Game 4 awaits. The Wolves smell blood. Golden State needs a response. Buckle up.

How the Timberwolves dug deep to take a 2-1 series lead over the Warriors

How the Timberwolves dug deep to take a 2-1 series lead over the Warriors SAN FRANCISCO — TheTimberwolves claimed a scrappy 102-97 win over ...

 

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