The New York Times 2024-09-04 00:11:32


Middle East Crisis: Polio Vaccinations in Gaza Are Beating Goals, W.H.O. Says

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The vaccine drive has been more successful than expected, a W.H.O. official says.

The World Health Organization said on Tuesday that the campaign to vaccinate 640,000 children in Gaza against polio had so far been more successful than expected as families flocked to receive the treatment.

Teams of health workers delivered the two-drop oral vaccine to 161,030 children in the first two days of the roughly 10-day operation, surpassing the organization’s goal of 150,000 for the first phase of the campaign in central Gaza.

“It’s going well,” Rik Peeperkorn, the organization’s representative for the Palestinian territories, told reporters by video link from Gaza on Tuesday, describing an “almost festive” atmosphere as families went to designated sites to get their children vaccinated.

While Israeli airstrikes continued in other parts of Gaza, Israel agreed to pauses in the fighting in specific areas to allow the vaccination drive to proceed, and “until now they work,” Dr. Peeperkorn said.

Health teams will next take the effort to southern Gaza, where the W.H.O. estimates that it needs to reach 340,000 children before going to the north to inoculate some 150,000 more.

The W.H.O. and its partner agencies in Gaza say they need to reach 90 percent of children under 10 to avert the spread of polio. Gazans are experiencing an explosion of infectious diseases in the overcrowded and unsanitary conditions created by the war and the destruction of Gaza’s health care infrastructure.

Medical Aid for Palestinians, an aid group supporting the effort, said in a statement on Tuesday that the main challenges of the campaign included ensuring safe access for medical workers and keeping the vaccines refrigerated in the face of electricity outages and fuel shortages, as well as the consequences of damage to sanitation and health care infrastructure.

The success of the vaccination campaign relies heavily on the staggered pauses in fighting in different regions of the Gaza Strip, which both Hamas and Israel agreed to and which they appear to be respecting. The pauses are intended to allow families and aid workers to safely reach vaccination sites between the hours of 7:30 a.m. and 2 p.m.

Mohammed Abu Hajar, a 41-year-old driver who has been sheltering in central Gaza, where the campaign kicked off, said he took his two children to get vaccinated because “a child getting sick could lead to death,” given the collapsed health care system and a severe lack of medical supplies. “There is no other option,” he said.

But the vaccination campaign brought with it another blessing for Mr. Abu Hajar: the temporary pause in fighting, during which he said he had been able to “move around comfortably and feel some reassurance” that there would not be strikes.

Mazen Abdulwaha, a displaced father of seven, said he had been worried about his children ever since he first heard that the virus had been detected in Gaza’s wastewater, because they “live in camps where wastewater follows us everywhere.” He took his three youngest children to get vaccinated as soon as the campaign began.

Like others in central Gaza, Mr. Abdulwaha, 36, said his family was “trying to take advantage” of the pauses in fighting during the four days of the campaign in that area, but he remained cautious because he did not trust Israeli forces to adhere to them. “We had to bear this risk to vaccinate our children and protect them from diseases,” he said.

But for some, the humanitarian pauses offered little relief after more than 10 months of a brutal war.

“A calm of five to six hours means nothing,” said Mohammed al-Sapti, a 32-year-old who is sheltering in Nuseirat in central Gaza. “There is no such thing as temporary safety as long as we are living under siege, exhaustion and torture,” he added.

Iyad Abuheweila contributed reporting from Istanbul, and Ameera Harouda from Doha, Qatar.

Israeli forces return to Tulkarm as the West Bank offensive stretches to a 7th day.

Israeli forces were operating again on Tuesday in Tulkarm, a Palestinian city from which they had withdrawn last week, as one of the longest and most destructive recent Israeli raids in the occupied West Bank reached its seventh day.

The Israeli military said the operation in the northern West Bank aimed to crack down on increasingly powerful Palestinian militants in the area. Palestinian militants said they were firing back, and a series of unusual attempted bombings against Israeli targets further highlighted the growing strength and ambition of such groups in the West Bank.

At least 30 Palestinians have been killed, according to Palestinian health officials, since the Israeli raids began on Wednesday last week. Many were publicly mourned as fighters by Palestinian militant groups. Those killed also included two older people, including a man in his 60s who suffered from mental illness, according to his family.

Israeli soldiers withdrew from Tulkarm last week after two days of fighting, even as a raid continued in the city of Jenin to the north. But on Monday evening, Israeli forces began again deploying throughout Tulkarm in large numbers, said Ma’mun Abu al-Heija, a resident of Nur Shams, a neighborhood on the city’s outskirts.

On Tuesday, a 16-year-old Palestinian girl was killed by Israeli gunfire in Kafr Dan, just outside Jenin, the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Ramallah said in a statement. The circumstances were not immediately clear and the Israeli military did not respond to a request for comment.

Israeli troops typically use less force in operations in the West Bank than they do in Gaza, much of which has been destroyed in Israel’s nearly 11-month-long war against Hamas. But these raids have been unusually destructive, residents and Palestinian officials in the West Bank said.

Israeli bulldozers have torn up main roads — in what military officials say is an effort to unearth improvised explosives planted by militants — along with water pipes and electrical cables. Many Palestinians in Jenin have spent days without electricity or running water, according to the local governor, Kamal Abu al-Rub.

Some residents of Jenin have begun to flee, fearing for their lives. Omar Obeid, 62, said he had left the city over the weekend with his children and many of his neighbors, walking through streets torn up by Israeli forces. They had been trapped at home for days without running water or electricity, he said.

“We tried to take a path that would avoid the army, but we still were risking our lives,” he said in a phone interview.

Eventually, he said, they reached a relative’s home in nearby Yabad and took shelter. Intermittent gunfire and explosions are distant but still audible, he said.

Israeli officials have described the raids as necessary to combat rising Palestinian militancy, particularly a spate of attempted bombings, over the past few weeks. The return of the tactic has revived difficult memories for Israelis, whose national psyche was scarred by dozens of Palestinian suicide attacks in the early 2000s that left hundreds of civilians dead.

Over the weekend, two cars rigged with explosives burst into flames during attacks in the southern West Bank. Israeli forces killed the two assailants, who Hamas said were members of its armed wing. And on Monday, Israel’s police said sappers had disarmed a car bomb near the Israeli settlement of Ateret in the central West Bank.

In mid-August, Hamas and its ally Palestinian Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for a bombing in Tel Aviv that wounded one person and killed the assailant. The armed groups claimed it was a suicide bombing.

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Here’s what we know about those still being held hostage in Gaza.

Protests and labor strikes erupted across Israel after the military said on Sunday that it had recovered the bodies of six hostages from Gaza.

Dozens of other hostages abducted in the Oct. 7 Hamas-led attack on Israel remain in captivity, according to the Israeli authorities.

Here is what we know about them.

How many hostages are still in Gaza?

More than 60 living hostages, and the bodies of about 35 others taken captive on Oct. 7 but believed to be dead, are still in Gaza, according to the Israeli authorities.

In all, about 250 people were abducted on Oct. 7, according to Israeli officials, who include in that number 37 people who were murdered in the initial attack and whose bodies were taken back to Gaza. Those taken were mainly civilians but also included military and security personnel. They were men, women and children, Israeli citizens as well as people who were citizens of the United States, Britain, France, Russia, Germany, Mexico, Thailand and other countries.

How many hostages are Americans?

In all, 12 people with U.S. citizenship were abducted to Gaza on Oct. 7, according to the Israeli government. Two of them, Judith Raanan and her daughter, Natalie Raanan, were freed on Oct. 20 after pressure on Hamas by the United States and Qatar. Two others were released during a cease-fire in November.

One of the hostages, Hersh Goldberg-Polin, 23, a dual Israeli American citizen, was among the six who were found dead in Gaza over the weekend. He had been taken from a music festival in southern Israel on Oct. 7.

The American Jewish Committee, an advocacy organization for Jewish people around the world, on Saturday listed four American citizens who were still being held alive in Gaza. They are Edan Alexander, 20; Sagui Dekel-Chen, 35; Omer Neutra, 22; and Keith Siegel, 64. Three others are presumed dead: Itay Chen, 19; Gadi Haggai, 73; and Judi Weinstein Haggai, 70.

How many hostages have been freed?

Since Oct. 7, 117 people have been released, according to the Israeli authorities. More than 100 were freed during a one-week cease-fire at the end of November in exchange for 240 Palestinians held in Israeli detention.

In addition, eight people have been freed during Israeli military operations. Last week, a Bedouin Arab citizen of Israel was rescued after Israeli commandos found him alone in a tunnel in southern Gaza.

In the most high-profile hostage rescue, in June, soldiers and special operations police rescued four hostages from buildings in the town of Nuseirat, in central Gaza. Scores of Palestinians, including women and children, were killed during that operation, according to the health ministry in Gaza.

In December, Israeli forces mistakenly killed three hostages who had escaped from their captors and were attempting to approach them. The army said the shooting violated its rules of engagement.

What are the conditions like for those still in captivity?

Hostages who have returned from captivity in Gaza have shed some light on where they were held and what the conditions were like. Some were held in hospitals, others in apartments, a mosque and even a destroyed supermarket. Hamas has also been known to hold hostages underground in a network of tunnels. The Israeli military said on Sunday that the bodies of the six slain hostages were found in a tunnel.

Many hostages who have left Gaza have described being moved repeatedly during their captivity, under heavily armed guard. They reported being subjected to physical and psychological abuse.

Andrey Kozlov, 27, a Russian Israeli, provided a detailed account of his time in captivity after he was rescued by the Israeli military in June. He described being held in six locations in the first two months and being moved to an apartment in mid-December. In some places, he and the hostages he was held with had only a pail for a toilet, and food was scarce.

After the rescue of Mr. Kozlov and three other captives, Dr. Itai Pessach, the head of a medical team for returning hostages, said they were malnourished. “They were all abused, punished and tortured physically and psychologically in many ways,” he said.

Gabby Sobelman contributed reporting.

Here are the latest developments.

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Here are the latest developments.

A Russian missile strike killed more than 50 people and injured scores of others on Tuesday, Ukrainian officials said, the latest in a series of devastating bombardments of Ukraine and one of the deadliest attacks of the two-and-a-half-year war.

Two ballistic missiles hit a military academy and a neighboring hospital in the eastern Ukrainian city of Poltava, President Volodymyr Zelensky said. Ukraine’s prosecutor general’s office said 51 people were killed and rescue efforts were still ongoing.

The missiles struck with an unforgiving quickness: The Ukrainian Defense Ministry reported that the gap between the sounding of warning sirens and the strike was so short that many people were killed on their way to shelter.

Here is what else to know:

  • Heavy fighting: The attacks come at a particularly active moment in the war. Ukraine is pressing an offensive into Russian territory while Moscow’s forces are advancing with fierce assaults in Ukraine’s east and aiming to capture the transit hub of Pokrovsk.

  • Cadet gathering: Ukrainian news outlets reported that those who died were cadets of the Poltava Institute of Military Communications who had been lined up for an event. It would not be the first time that Russia attacked while Ukrainian troops congregated to observe military protocol or receive awards. Last fall, a Russian missile struck a medal ceremony for artillery troops in the Zaporizhzhia region, killing 19 soldiers in an episode that stirred criticism of the military and civilian leadership.

  • Mourning victims: Local authorities in Poltava announced three days of mourning. “My condolences to all the families and friends,” Mr. Zelensky said in a video address, adding that he had ordered an investigation into the strikes. A search and rescue operation was underway, and local government reports said many people were lining up to give blood.

  • Putin traveling: Amid Moscow’s latest deadly attack, President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia was in Mongolia, making his first state visit to a member nation of the International Criminal Court since it issued a warrant for his arrest last year. Mongolia, highly dependent on Russia for energy, gave Mr. Putin a red-carpet welcome. Ukrainian officials expressed outrage over the visit, warning they would work to “ensure that this has consequences” for Mongolia.

Nataliia Novosolova contributed reporting.

The death toll in Poltava has climbed to 51, according to Ukraine’s prosecutor general’s office. It said in a statement on Telegram that rescue efforts were still ongoing.

Recent attacks renew Ukraine’s pleas for more air defense systems.

President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine reiterated a longstanding plea for more air defense systems from Western allies after Tuesday’s ballistic missile strike killed dozens in eastern Ukraine, the latest in a string of deadly attacks.

“We continue to urge everyone in the world who has the power to stop this terror: Ukraine needs air defense systems and missiles now, not sitting in storage,” Mr. Zelensky said in a message on social media.

Ballistic missiles can travel faster than the speed of sound and reach a target anywhere in Ukraine in a matter of minutes, which gives little to no time for air raid warnings to sound and help people get to safety. Ukraine’s Defense Ministry said the gap between the sounding of warning sirens and the strike in Poltava was so short on Tuesday that many people were killed on their way to shelter.

Ukraine has begged since the outset of Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022 for more tools to close its sky to Russian missiles. But the first Patriot missile systems from the United States and Germany — the only proven defense against ballistic missiles — did not arrive until the spring of 2023.

The Patriot was originally designed to hit aircraft but was re-engineered after the Gulf War to be primarily used to strike tactical ballistic missiles, as those weapons grew in prevalence and importance on the battlefield. It is one of the scarcest weapons systems in the U.S. arsenal, in part because they are in demand around the globe and because they are expensive and take a long time to produce.

Mr. Zelensky of Ukraine has said he desperately needs at least seven Patriot batteries to fend off attacks across the country. Germany has sent three and, in July, President Biden announced the deployment of a second Patriot missile system from the United States. Other American allies also have Patriots: Romania has pledged one, and the Netherlands has given parts of the complex system. U.S. officials have said they hope European powers will send more.

It was unclear if Ukraine used any of those Patriot batteries to try to fend off Tuesday’s attack in Poltava, the scale of which added fresh urgency to Ukrainian pleas for more defenses against ballistic missiles. Ukraine’s air force said the missiles had arrived “a matter of minutes” after they were launched.

“Ballistics are extremely dangerous, especially for the frontline areas,” the air force said in a statement to Ukrainian media.

At the same time, Ukrainian officials have urged allies to allow the use of long-range weapons provided by the West, such as rockets and cruise missiles, to strike back at targets inside Russia — a call Mr. Zelensky took up again on Tuesday.

“Long-range strikes that can protect us from Russian terror are needed now, not later,” he said on social media. “Every day of delay, unfortunately, means more lost lives.”

Marc Santora, Maria Varenikova and Lara Jakes contributed reporting.


A map highlighting Sumy, Ukraine , showing it’s proximity to Kharkiv and the border with Russia.

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President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia spent the day in Mongolia, some 3,000 miles from the front line in the war against Ukraine. He said nothing in public about Ukraine, according to Kremlin transcripts of his remarks. It was the first time that a member nation of the International Criminal Court had hosted Putin since the court issued a warrant for the Russian president last year.

Russia’s attack on Poltava comes after a week of airstrikes and losses in Ukraine.

The Russian missile strike that killed more than 40 people in the eastern city of Poltava on Tuesday comes after a difficult few days for Ukraine, in which Moscow appears to have stepped up the tempo of its attacks, resulting in a wave of death and destruction.

At dawn on Aug. 26, residents of Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, and many other cities woke to the sound of a Russian aerial assault. Moscow had launched more than 200 missiles and drones that hit targets in 15 regions of Ukraine. At least seven people were killed.

President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine said that it was one of the largest attacks since Russia’s full-scale invasion began 30 months ago. The strikes knocked out power in some cities, including the capital, continuing a pattern of attacks on the country’s energy infrastructure.

Early the next morning, Russia launched another barrage, and one missile hit a hotel in the central Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih, killing four people. There was also a smaller round of strikes on Wednesday.

Moscow, which has been conducting aerial assaults on Ukraine every few weeks, gave no reason for the timing of the strikes, but it came weeks after Ukraine launched a surprise incursion into the southern Russian region of Kursk. President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia had vowed a decisive response.

Russia continued to pound urban areas close to the front lines throughout the week. On Wednesday, a Russian attack killed four members of a family in the tiny community of Izmailivka in the Donetsk region, the state prosecutor said. The settlement is a few miles west of Russian lines and close to the city of Pokrovsk, which Moscow is trying to capture.

Most of the missiles and drones were shot down by Ukraine’s air defense systems, the Air Force said. F-16 fighter jets, recently delivered by the country’s allies in NATO, were deployed in that effort, intercepting and shooting down three cruise missiles and a drone.

But on Thursday, the head of Ukraine’s air force, Lt. Gen. Mykola Oleshchuk, announced that one of the jets had crashed in combat during the operation on Monday and its pilot had been killed. He said that the crash, which came as a shock to many Ukrainians so soon after the deployment of the coveted fighter jets, was being investigated.

The following day, Mr. Zelensky announced that Lt. Gen. Oleshchuk had been fired.

Russian fire was also directed at Ukraine’s second largest city, Kharkiv, which is situated within range of Russian artillery and has been repeatedly assaulted since the start of the full scale war.

On Friday, a Russian glide bomb hit a children’s park and a mid-rise apartment block in the city, killing seven people and wounding nearly 60 others, according to the head of the regional military administration, Oleh Syniehubov.

Two days later, Russian forces bombarded residential areas of the city, wounding more than 40 civilians, Ukrainian officials said. At least 10 explosions had rocked the city.

Ukraine’s Parliament has held a moment of silence for those killed in the Poltava attack. Local authorities in Poltava have announced three days of mourning.

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In a note offering condolences to the families of those killed and wounded, Ukraine’s first lady, Olena Zelenska, noted a higher toll than her husband had cited earlier on Tuesday. Zelenska said the missiles had killed 47 people and wounded 206. “Russia is taking away our most valuable asset, our lives,” she wrote.

The Ukrainian Air Force said that the short time between the warning siren and the strikes in Poltava was a result of the speed of the missiles used in the attack, which arrived “literally a matter of minutes” after they were launched. That suggests they were ballistic missiles, which can travel faster than the speed of sound and reach any target in Ukraine in a matter of minutes. Poltava is a little more than 100 miles from the Russian border.

The pace of the war in Ukraine has been picking up in recent weeks.

The missile strike that killed dozens of people in the eastern Ukrainian city of Poltava on Tuesday served as a deadly reminder that the tempo of the war has been picking up, both on the ground and in the air.

The fortunes of the warring sides have ebbed and flowed since President Vladimir V. Putin ordered the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. After a Ukrainian counteroffensive last summer aimed at reclaiming territory captured by Russia failed to meet key objectives, Moscow took the initiative and pushed to seize more ground.

The attack on Tuesday extended a wave of assaults on cities across Ukraine that Russia began a week ago, even as it pushes forward with fierce attacks along the front line in Ukraine’s east. Early on Monday, Russia carried out its third large-scale bombardment of Ukraine in a week, with explosions ringing out in Kyiv and several other cities after a volley of missiles was fired on the first day of the school year.

The nationwide barrages of missiles and drones have been among the largest since the start of Russia’s invasion.

In an effort to undermine Russia’s ability to supply its forces with fuel and cut into the energy revenues that fund the Kremlin’s war effort, the Ukrainian military has for months been targeting Russian oil and gas facilities with attacks. But the campaign has not yet had a demonstrable effect on the fighting inside Ukraine, where Russian forces made steady gains throughout the summer in the eastern Donbas region.

Ukraine had hoped that the long-awaited arrival of Western-supplied F-16 fighter jets would assist in repelling Russian attacks and forces. That effort suffered a blow last week when one of the warplanes crashed while defending against an intense Russian aerial attack, in what may have been a friendly-fire incident.

In an attempt to force Russia to divert forces away from eastern Ukraine, officials in Kyiv ordered an incursion into the Kursk region of Russia in early August. While Russia did send reinforcements to the region, the troops were not sent from eastern Ukraine.

Instead, Russia has pressed on in Ukraine’s east, advancing on the city of Pokrovsk, where the local authorities have urged civilians to evacuate. President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine — who on Tuesday said the Ukrainian offensive in Kursk was going “according to plan” — has sent reinforcements to Pokrovsk, a vital transport and logistics hub for Ukrainian forces in the Donbas region.

The capture of Pokrovsk by Russian forces would be their biggest gain in the region since they seized the cities of Marinka and Avdiivka in January and February after intense ground fighting and bombardment.

It also would bring Russian forces one step closer to achieving a key goal for Mr. Putin: full control of the Donbas region.

Marc Santora contributed reporting.

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The Russian claim that the high death toll came after military cadets gathered together at their institute could not be independently confirmed. But strikes as troops congregated to observe military protocol or receive awards have happened before in Ukraine. Last fall, a Russian missile struck a medal ceremony for artillery troops in the Zaporizhzhia region, killing 19 soldiers who had distinguished themselves as skilled artillerymen. That incident stirred criticism of the military and civilian leadership from fellow soldiers.

Ukraine’s public broadcaster, Suspilne, has aired an interview with a resident in Poltava. Olena Serdiuk, who lives near the military academy, told the broadcaster that she was in the bathroom with her child when the missiles hit nearby, and said there was almost no time between the air-raid alarm and the strike. “As soon as the alarm sounded, literally a minute later, there were two explosions, one after the other,” she said. “We thought that our building had been hit. All the windows are shattered, both in our apartment and in the neighbors’.”

The first numbers of dead and wounded reported after missile strikes are often undercounts that rise as rescuers clear rubble. Still, the initial count of 41 people killed in Poltava is among the largest from a single strike in Ukraine since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022. The deadliest attack was in May 2022, when officials said 87 soldiers were killed at a military training center in the Chernihiv region of northern Ukraine.

The strike in Poltava came after yet another night of Russian bombardments across Ukraine. A missile strike at around 11 p.m. Monday in the southern city of Zaporizhzhia killed two people, including an 8-year-old boy, Ivan Fedorov, the head of the Ukrainian military’s regional administration, said in a statement.

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Vladimir Rogov, a Kremlin-appointed occupation official in southern Ukraine, claimed in a post on the Telegram messaging app that the missile strike had hit a military school that offers training in radar and electronic warfare when hundreds of cadets were gathering in formation. His claim, which might explain the high death toll, could not be independently verified.

The strike hit the Institute of Communications, a military academy in Poltava in eastern Ukraine, President Zelensky said in a video posted to his Telegram channel. He said one of the buildings of the institute was “partially destroyed” and that people were “under the rubble.”

At Least 12 Die Trying to Cross English Channel, French Authorities Say

At least 12 people died after a boat carrying migrants capsized off the coast of northern France on Tuesday during an attempt to cross the English Channel, the French authorities said. It was the deadliest episode in the waterway this year as French and British governments struggle to prevent attempts at the perilous crossing.

Gérald Darmanin, France’s interior minister, said on the social media platform X that the vessel sank off the coast of Wimereux, in an area of the Pas-de-Calais region where several similar tragedies have occurred this year. Two people were still missing and several others were injured, Mr. Darmanin said.

“All government services are mobilized to find the missing and care for the victims,” he said.

The French maritime authorities said in a statement that dozens of people fell into the sea after their vessel encountered unspecified difficulties on Tuesday morning off the coast of Cap Gris-Nez, which at some points is less than 30 miles from the British coastline.

Rescue workers picked up 65 people out of the water, some of them in critical condition, and rescue operations involving helicopters and several ships are still continuing, the maritime authorities said in a statement.

One of the worst migrant-related accidents in the Channel happened in 2021, when 27 people died after their boat capsized, but similar tragedies have repeatedly occurred on a smaller scale. Five people died at sea in January near Wimereux as well; five people died in similar circumstances around the same area in April.

Last week, Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain and President Emmanuel Macron of France pledged to increase cooperation in the English Channel and to dismantle human smuggling networks, which the authorities on both sides of the waterway have blamed for the repeated deaths.

“The leaders agreed to do more together to dismantle smuggling routes further upstream and increase intelligence sharing,” Mr. Starmer’s office said in a statement after the two leaders met in Paris.

The Channel is one of the busiest shipping routes in the world. Its waters are especially icy in the winter, winds can be treacherous, and migrants trying to cross often crowd onto flimsy inflatable boats.

“It’s a particularly dangerous sector even when the sea looks calm,” the maritime authorities said in their statement on Tuesday.

Most of those who try to cross the Channel leave from the Pas-de-Calais. Many are from Afghanistan, Albania, Eritrea, Iraq, Iran, Sudan and Syria, according to the French authorities, and they cluster in makeshift camps on the coast of northern France before trying to cross.

Many prefer risking the trip over staying in France because they see Britain as an attractive destination with a strong job market where English is spoken, or because they already have family there or people they know from their home country.

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South Korean Teenagers Detained Over Deepfake Sexual Images

The authorities in South Korea are investigating a surge of sexually explicit images and video clips that have spread online and shocked the nation, leading the police to detain seven male suspects — six of them teenagers — the police said on Tuesday.

The South Korean authorities began investigating the images and videos late last month after local media reported the spread of the content, which was created using deepfake apps. Young men were said to be stealing social media images from female classmates, teachers and neighbors, and then using them to create the sexually explicit material before circulating them in chat rooms on the messaging app Telegram.

The crimes triggered a panic among many women in South Korea, and President Yoon Suk Yeol last week called on his government to root out digital sex abuse.

“Many of the victims are minors and most of the perpetrators are teenagers,” Mr. Yoon said last Tuesday during a cabinet meeting. “They may say that they created this as a ‘mere prank,’ but this is a clear criminal act that exploited technology behind the wall of anonymity.”

The investigation in South Korea followed the arrest of Pavel Durov, Telegram’s Russian-born founder, by the French authorities last month. The authorities in France were investigating child sexual abuse material, drug trafficking and fraud on the encrypted messaging app. Mr. Durov was later charged with a range of crimes, including complicity in crimes such as enabling the distribution of child sexual abuse material.

The steep rise in deepfakes in South Korea made headlines in the country after reporters found Telegram channels on which female university, high and middle school students were among the victims.

“Telegram has been actively removing content reported from Korea that breached its terms of service and will continue to do so,” the company said in a statement.

Last week, 118 cases of suspected deepfake sexual crimes were reported, resulting in the detention of the seven male suspects, the police said Tuesday. The police have not yet charged any of those who have been detained.

Under South Korean law, people convicted of making sexually explicit deepfakes with the intention to distribute them face punishments of ​up to five years in prison or a fine of up to 50 million won, or $37,000. Women’s rights groups have called for new legislation ​to punish those who possess and watch such materials.

Most of the people involved in the production and spread of the imagery — as well as many of the victims — are in their teens, according to data compiled by the Korean National Police Agency. Of the 178 people identified by the agency as criminal suspects in the first seven months of the year, 131 were teenagers, the police said.

The number of suspects was expected to increase as more people reported cases of deepfake sexual violence.

South Korea has struggled with digital sex crimes in recent years. In 2020, Cho Joo-bin, the mastermind of a digital sex crime ring, was sentenced to 40 years in prison on charges of luring young women, including teenagers, into making videos that he sold online through encrypted chat rooms on Telegram.

This year, South Korea has reported a surge in online deepfake sex crimes. Between January and July, 297 cases were reported, almost three times the number reported in the same period last year, according to the police.

At Least 129 People Die in Jailbreak at Congo’s Largest Prison

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At least 129 people died during an attempted jailbreak at the largest prison in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the country’s authorities said on Tuesday. It was the latest crisis to hit an overcrowded detention facility notorious for conditions that human rights groups have long decried as inhumane.

A stampede was to blame for most of the deaths, but at least 24 inmates were killed by gunfire as they tried to escape from the Makala Central Prison early on Monday, according to Congo’s interior minister, Jacquemain Shabani.

He said on the platform X that 59 people had been injured and that there had been “some cases of women raped,” without providing further details. As of Tuesday afternoon, it was unclear if any inmates had escaped.

Makala is the only prison in Kinshasa, Congo’s capital and one of Africa’s most populous cities. Its intended capacity is 1,500 people but it has held at least 12,000 inmates, according to an October 2023 report from Amnesty International, the human rights organization.

The violence occurred as President Felix Tshisekedi of Congo is in Beijing for a forum on China-Africa cooperation, and adds to the challenges facing the Central African country. Home to more than 100 million people, Congo is battling multiple crises, including a deadly mpox outbreak and a conflict in its eastern region that has killed more than six million people and displaced millions of others over the past three decades.

Gunfire erupted Monday night in the prison, according to local news reports and videos posted on social media. Stanis Bujakera Tshiamala, a well-known Congolese journalist who served time at Makala last year but has since been released, shared a video showing a chaotic scene, with inmates running outside as shots rang out around them. In another video he shared that was filmed at night, several inmates are standing around what appears to be a corpse within the prison grounds.

Several videos verified by The New York Times as being filmed inside the prison complex showed the aftermath of the attempted jailbreak.

In one very graphic video, a large crowd stands around at least 25 lifeless bodies lined up in a central alleyway between prison blocks. Bodies were loaded onto a truck and driven from the grounds in another video filmed by the eastern perimeter of the prison complex, while a third video showed thick black smoke billowing from a building near the prison’s entrance.


Mr. Shabani, the interior minister, said that the inmates who died from bullet wounds had been shot “after warning.” The spokesman for Congo’s government, Patrick Muyaya, was traveling with Mr. Tshisekedi in Beijing and did not immediately reply to a request for comment on Tuesday.

Human rights groups have long denounced horrifying detention conditions at the Makala prison, a facility built in 1957, before Congo became independent from Belgium, and which has had few renovations since.

Last year, more than 500 inmates died from suffocation and various diseases, according to Emmanuel Adu Cole, a human rights advocate based in Kinshasa.

Undated videos shared earlier this summer by Mr. Bujakera, the Congolese journalist, show haggard inmates crammed in detention rooms and restrooms, unable to sit or properly lie down.

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Pope Visits Indonesia, Where Muslim-Christian Harmony Is Under Strain

The hallelujahs rang out on Sunday from a small hall on the outskirts of Jakarta, the capital of Indonesia. The sounds from the Christian service could be heard within the green and orange mosque across the way, as a group of young girls in hijabs walked by.

On the surface, the scene was a reflection of the interfaith harmony that Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim-majority country, is proud of. But the Christians were not in their own church. Earlier this year, their congregation’s building was stormed by dozens of angry Muslims, and now they were temporarily gathering in a government-owned building in a different area.

This is the complex reality awaiting Pope Francis as he begins a four-day trip to Indonesia on Tuesday, which will include an interfaith dialogue at the national mosque. There are many vibrant examples of how Christianity and Islam coexist in Indonesia — a dynamic that Francis wants to encourage — but at the same time, religious minorities face discrimination.

By and large, Indonesian Muslims practice a moderate brand of Sunni Islam that is tolerant of other faiths. But other branches of Islam, notably the Shias and Ahmadiyyas, have long felt marginalized. And conservative strains of Islam have spread here in recent years, with one province, Aceh, having enforced Shariah law for nearly a decade.

In dozens of cities, young girls are pressured, bullied, and harassed to wear hijabs at schools and public spaces, Human Rights Watch has documented.

With the rise of conservative Islam, some believers in minority faiths say, the space for religious freedom in Indonesia has shrunk.

The Christians who met on Sunday in Tangerang, the city on the outskirts of Jakarta, had been attacked in their building in March as children prepared costumes for an Easter show. They were told that they could not have a church in a Muslim area, members of the community said.

Last year, there were 329 acts of violence against religious minorities, nearly one per day, according to the Setara Institute for Democracy and Peace, a human rights watchdog. There has been deadly violence in the past, including bombings at churches.

The Indonesian government officially recognizes six faiths: Islam, Catholicism, Protestantism, Buddhism, Hinduism and Confucianism. It has adopted some measures to protect religious freedom, like forbidding schools to make hijabs compulsory. But some minorities say those protections aren’t honored in practice and that parts of Indonesian law effectively discriminate against them.

The biggest issue has been the building of houses of worship. To do so, religious groups have to get the signatures of 60 people from other faiths in the community, as well as approval from the local interfaith council, which is made up of religious leaders but almost always dominated by Muslims. This, critics say, effectively gives Muslims veto power.

Cardinal Ignatius Suharyo Hardjoatmodjo, the archbishop of Jakarta, downplayed the issue of church construction being blocked, saying that such incidents largely came down to vote baiting by Muslim politicians. The bigger challenges facing the Catholic Church in Indonesia, he said, are ones that face the nation as a whole: corruption, threats to democracy and income inequality.

Still, the Christian community in Tangerang has not been able to get even half of the 60 signatures for their church, members said.

“We have been independent for 79 years, but for me it is a half-independence,” said Oktaviyanto M.I. Pardede, 59, a leader of the congregation. “Why am I still being colonized by my own people, why can’t I practice my religion freely?”

The Vatican was one of the first states to recognize Indonesia’s independence after it became free of Dutch rule in 1947, and the two have maintained close ties ever since.

Yet when Pope John Paul II visited in 1989, he was met with protests because of his faith. Two decades later, when President Barack Obama visited the Istiqlal Mosque in Jakarta, the national mosque, many Muslims asked why a practicing Christian was being allowed into their house of worship.

But the reaction to Francis’s trip — part of his outreach to what he calls “the peripheries” of Catholicism — has been different.

“I think it’s a very important visit,” said Nurlaila, a Muslim woman who, like many Indonesians, goes by one name, and who had just finished praying at the Istiqlal Mosque.

Much of the credit for changing attitudes has gone to the Nahdlatul Ulama, the largest Muslim social organization in the world, with some 150 million members. Its leader, Yahya Cholil Staquf, said the group had protected churches from extremist groups and lobbied local officials to let them be built.

Three percent of Indonesia’s 280 million people are Catholics, but they have a substantial presence in some parts of the country, like the eastern island of Flores, where theirs is the dominant faith. Nationwide, Protestants account for 10 percent of the population.

Nasaruddin Umar, the grand imam of the Istiqlal Mosque, said Catholics had offered to donate animals to the mosque to be sacrificed during the Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha.

The grand imam pushed for the construction of a “tunnel of friendship” to connect the Istiqlal Mosque and the nearby Jakarta Cathedral. On Thursday, Francis will visit the Istiqlal for an interfaith dialogue, and mosque officials hope he will see the tunnel.

Such blending of religions is not unusual in Indonesia.

On a recent Friday night, Diah Purwanti, 47, laid out her prayer mat in the presence of a picture of Jesus. Raised a Catholic, she had converted to Islam after marrying a Muslim man. Her parents were Muslims who had converted to Catholicism, and one of her brothers is studying to be a Jesuit priest. As children, they celebrated both Eid and Christmas.

But some worshipers see a contradiction between their own experience and Indonesia’s image as a multicultural, tolerant place.

“Unity is the foundation of the country,” said Manav Hardinata, 23, whose Lutheran community has not been allowed to build a house of worship. “But here it is a competition, they treat us as if we want to take their people.”

Though they were Lutherans, not Catholics, many of the worshipers in Tangerang were hopeful and excited about the pope’s visit.

“We are hoping that it will bring changes to this issue,” said Robert Sinaga, 62. “His message is a message of community.”

On Sunday evening in Bekasi, another suburb of Jakarta, the Muslim call to prayer could be heard from the Catholic church Santa Clara, as a priest prepared for communion.

After a 17-year wait, Santa Clara received a permit to begin building in 2015, said Rasnius Pasaribu, the coordinator of the church’s construction committee. But thousands of Muslims protested the project at the local city hall. So Mr. Pasaribu’s committee agreed to make changes to the church’s design.

From the highway, Santa Clara, a sprawling white complex with a congregation of 10,000, does not look like a church. It cannot display a cross or a bell there. Instead, its facade, and its statue of the Madonna, enclosed in a cave of rose petals, lie toward the back of the compound.

Still, Mr. Pasaribu said: “We are happy. It’s amazing that we can pray in a church.”

Muktita Suhartono, Rin Hindryati and Hasya Nindita contributed reporting.

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