The New York Times 2024-09-21 00:10:39


Live Updates: Israel Targets Senior Hezbollah Leader in Beirut Airstrike

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Here are the latest developments.

The Israeli military on Friday carried out an airstrike in Beirut that it said killed a senior Hezbollah commander wanted by the United States for his role in bombings in the 1980s that killed hundreds.

Hezbollah did not immediately confirm that the commander, Ibrahim Aqeel, had been killed in the strike.

It was the second Israeli strike in two months that was intended to kill a top Hezbollah official in Lebanon’s capital, and came amid a flurry of attacks by both sides that raised fears of another full-scale war in the Middle East.

Mr. Aqeel, who is believed to be in his 60s, has been accused by the United States of being involved in two terrorist attacks in 1983 that killed more than 300 people at the U.S. Embassy in Beirut and the U.S. Marine Corps barracks.

Four officials who said Mr. Aqeel was the target of the strike spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

The Israeli strike flattened a residential high-rise building in the heart of Dahiya, a densely populated suburban neighborhood south of the city’s center, according to local residents. Lebanon’s health ministry said at least nine people were killed and dozens more were injured.

Last year, the State Department posted a $7 million reward for information leading to Mr. Aqeel’s identification, location, arrest or conviction. It said he had also directed the taking of American and German hostages in Lebanon in the 1980s, and served on Hezbollah’s highest military body, the Jihad Council. Mr. Aqeel had survived multiple assassination attempts.

Lebanese news networks broadcast images of what appeared to be the damage from the Israeli strike, showing a leveled building in Beirut’s southern suburbs, a sprawling neighborhood where Hezbollah, the powerful armed group, holds sway. Residents described a chaotic scene as ambulances raced through the streets.

In July, an Israeli strike killed another Hezbollah leader, Fuad Shukr, who had also been wanted by the U.S. government for his role in the 1983 attacks in Lebanon.

Israel and Lebanon have been on edge for days since pagers and walkie-talkies belonging to Hezbollah members blew up en masse this week, killing at least 37 people and injuring thousands in Lebanon in attacks widely attributed to Israel. Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah, had vowed retribution for the explosions.

Here is what else to know:

  • Heavy bombardment: The building in Beirut was one of more than 100 sites, mostly in southern Lebanon, that Israel struck since Thursday evening. Lebanese officials said the strikes overnight were some of the heaviest bombardment there in months of back-and-forth attacks. Earlier Friday, Israel said Hezbollah fired at least 140 rockets into northern Israel.

  • Hezbollah scrambles: Mr. Nasrallah sounded defiant in his speech on Thursday, saying Hezbollah would not cease the cross-border strikes against Israel that it began last October in solidarity with Hamas in Gaza. But the group was also scrambling to recover from the stunning security breach. Mr. Nasrallah said it had formed committees to investigate the lapses that led to the attack, which caused panic in Lebanon.

  • Gazans’ fears: As world attention focuses on heightening Israel-Hezbollah tensions, some Palestinians in Gaza worry that efforts to end the nearly yearlong war and humanitarian crisis there will be sidelined.

  • Lebanon on edge: After the explosions of Hezbollah-owned devices, people in Lebanon fear others could explode, avoiding cellphones and unplugging baby monitors, televisions and laptops. Lebanon’s aviation authority banned pagers and walkie-talkies from all flights leaving Beirut.

Children were among those who were injured in the Israeli strike, but there was no confirmation yet that they were among the dead, said Lebanon’s health minister, Dr. Firass Abiad.

Reached by phone, Abiad told The New York Times that Beirut hospitals were so far coping amid the sudden influx of wounded. Many are still full of casualties from the previous rounds of nationwide attacks this week that involved exploding wireless devices, and surgical rooms have been working around the clock.

Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, the Israeli military spokesman, told reporters that Aqeel was meeting other militants underneath the residential building in an attempt to “use civilians as human shields.” The New York Times could not independently verify that information.

In its statement, the Israeli military described Aqeel as the chief of Hezbollah’s military operations directorate and the de facto commander of its elite Radwan fighters. It said Aqeel was behind a long series of attacks against Israeli soldiers and civilians, as well as a never-implemented Hezbollah plan to invade northern Israel in a similar manner to Hamas’s surprise assault on Oct. 7.

The Israeli military just announced in a statement that Israeli fighter jets successfully targeted and killed Ibrahim Aqeel, the senior Hezbollah commander, in Beirut. There was no immediate confirmation by Hezbollah.

At least nine people have now been killed, according to Lebanon’s health ministry. Eight of those wounded are in a critical condition and others could still be trapped under the rubble, so the death toll is likely to rise further.

Who is Ibrahim Aqeel, the Hezbollah commander targeted by Israel?

Ibrahim Aqeel, the Hezbollah commander targeted by Israel on Friday in Beirut, is one of the Iran-backed Lebanese armed group’s most senior leaders.

Lebanon’s health ministry said at least eight people were killed and dozens injured in the strike, though it was not immediately clear if he was among them.

He had already survived multiple assassination attempts, and the United States had offered a multimillion-dollar bounty for his capture.

A member of Hezbollah more or less since its establishment in the 1980s, Mr. Aqeel served on the group’s highest military body, the Jihad Council. Over the past two decades, Israel has slowly killed many of the Jihad Council’s members, who are some of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah’s closest advisers.

U.S. officials wanted Mr. Aqeel, who is believed to be in his 60s, for his role in two bombing attacks in 1983 that killed more than 350 people at the U.S. Embassy in Beirut and the U.S. Marine Corps barracks, many of them American citizens, according to the State Department.

Last year, the State Department posted a reward of up to $7 million for information leading to his identification, location, arrest or conviction. It said Mr. Aqeel also directed the abduction of American and German hostages in Lebanon in the 1980s.

Israel assassinated another member of Hezbollah’s Jihad Council, Fuad Shukr, in late July, in another airstrike on a building in Dahiya, a southern suburb of Beirut. Former U.S. officials called Mr. Shukr, like Mr. Aqeel, one of Hezbollah’s most senior military leaders and a confidant of Mr. Nasrallah.

Assaf Orion, a retired Israeli brigadier general, said on Friday that Mr. Aqeel was effectively the top operations officer in Hezbollah’s military apparatus, one who was involved in “numerous” attacks against Israelis.

“He’s an extremely seasoned operations veteran,” said General Orion, a former Israeli military liaison to the international peacekeeping mission along the Lebanese-Israeli border.

Israel had tried to assassinate Mr. Aqeel numerous times in the past, but each time he managed to escape with his life, General Orion said.

In 2000, Israeli helicopters fired on Mr. Aqeel’s car in an attempt to avenge the killing of a Lebanese militia leader aligned with Israel, but he managed to survive with only slight injuries. Five civilians were also lightly wounded, including an infant.

The southern suburbs of Beirut — known as Dahiya — are unlike suburban areas you might find in American or European cities. The region is one of the most densely populated communities in Lebanon. The Israeli strike hit in the heart of the neighborhood and flattened a residential apartment building that was at least seven stories tall, according to local residents.

Videos from the aftermath of the strike verified by The Times show a high-rise building in Beirut’s Dahiya suburb completely flattened. Civilians and first responders dig through the remaining rubble.

Lebanon’s Civil Defense said in a statement that two residential buildings had collapsed in the Jamous area of the Dahiya district of Beirut as a result of the Israeli bombardment. First responders were combing through the area for survivors and those missing under the rubble, the agency said.

At least eight people have now been killed, with nearly 60 others wounded, according to Lebanon’s health ministry. This marks the deadliest single Israeli strike in Beirut since the conflict began last October.

John F. Kirby, the White House National Security Council spokesman, said the United States had “no involvement” in the Beirut strikes and is working to avoid an escalation. “We still believe that there is time and space for a diplomatic solution,” Kirby told reporters. “We think that that is the best way forward.”

The Israeli strike on Friday represented a major escalation in a week full of them. For 11 months, the Israel-Hezbollah conflict has been largely confined to sparsely populated towns in Lebanon’s south. Now it has unmistakably arrived on the streets of the capital — home to more than 2 million people.

Air-raid sirens blare in over 20 communities across northern Israel, warning of incoming rocket fire in the wake of the Israeli airstrike in Beirut.

Um Saleh, a witness who lives near the bombing, said by phone that she didn’t hear the sound of the missiles arriving. “It was more like an earthquake. Our building shook for a bit.”

Residents of Beirut’s southern suburbs reported chaos as ambulances raced through the streets to the scene of the strike. Mortada Smaoui, 30, who owns a nearby gift shop, said he had arrived to find a residential building flattened and a car flipped on its side. He tried to help a woman look for her missing child, but was ordered to leave by the security services. “The building was destroyed completely,” he said. “I am shaking.”

At least three people have been killed and another 17 injured in the strike in Beirut, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry.

Lebanon’s state-run news agency said the strike targeted a residential building and resulted in a number of casualties, including children. The New York Times could not independently verify that information.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel has postponed his flight to the United States to participate in the annual meeting of the U.N. General Assembly by a day, according to an official in the prime minister’s office, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to discuss the Israeli leader’s schedule publicly.

The decision to delay the flight came after the Israeli military carried out an airstrike in Beirut on Friday, the first time the military conducted an airstrike on the Lebanese capital since July. The flight had originally been planned for just after midnight on Tuesday, the official said.

Israel announces a ‘targeted strike’ in Beirut, as tensions with Hezbollah soar.

The Israeli military announced on Friday that it had conducted a “targeted strike” in Beirut, with local news networks broadcasting footage of a column of smoke rising above the southern suburbs of Lebanon’s capital — a sprawling civilian neighborhood where the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah holds sway.

It was the first time the Israeli military has struck in the area of Beirut since late July, when it killed one of Hezbollah’s most senior commanders in an airstrike.

The latest attack — striking just miles from the heart of downtown Beirut — came as tensions soared in the region amid concerns about a full-scale war between Israel and Hezbollah and following some of the heaviest Israeli bombardment in southern Lebanon since the war began.

Ambulances could be heard rushing to the scene of the strike, with footage circulating on local news networks of what appeared to be a flattened building.

Lebanese news networks broadcast images of what appeared to be a leveled building in Beirut’s southern suburbs, a sprawling neighborhood where Hezbollah holds sway. Ambulances could be heard rushing to the scene, as a column of smoke rose above the skyline of the Lebanese capital.

The Israeli military just said it conducted a “targeted strike” in Beirut, amid sky-high tensions between Israel and Hezbollah. It was the first time the Israeli military has publicly struck in the area of the Lebanese capital since late July, when it killed a senior Hezbollah commander there in an airstrike.

At the same time, the Israeli military said there was no immediate change to its emergency instructions to the Israeli public. The Israeli authorities often modify those civil defense orders when they expect an imminent attack.

Israel submits a challenge to the I.C.C. after a request for arrest warrants for Netanyahu and the defense minister.

Israel on Friday submitted an official legal challenge to the International Criminal Court, five months after its chief prosecutor requested arrest warrants for Israel’s prime minister and defense minister, along with a group of Hamas leaders, on charges of crimes against humanity.

The request by the prosecutor, Karim Khan, provoked a furor in Israel and drew denunciation from its allies, including the United States. In a statement in May, President Biden called Mr. Khan’s request “outrageous” and said: “Whatever this prosecutor might imply, there is no equivalence — none — between Israel and Hamas.”

The court has yet to respond to Mr. Khan’s request. He asked the court to issue the warrants with “utmost urgency” in new legal filings unsealed this month.

In its challenge, the Israeli government argued that the court does not have jurisdiction over the case. It also argued that the prosecutor’s request was unlawful because it did not “provide Israel with the opportunity to exercise its right to investigate by itself” the allegations he had made.

“No other democracy with an independent and respected legal system like that which exists in Israel has been treated in this prejudicial manner by the prosecutor,” Oren Marmorstein, a spokesman for the foreign ministry, said in a statement. “Nevertheless, Israel remains steadfast in its commitment to the rule of law and justice.”

Mr. Khan asked for arrest warrants for three Hamas leaders — Yahya Sinwar, Ismail Haniyeh and Muhammad Deif — on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in connection with the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attack. He also sought warrants for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel and his defense minister, Yoav Gallant, on the same charges, related to Israel’s conduct of the war in Gaza.

In the new filing made public earlier this month, Mr. Khan withdrew his request for a warrant for Mr. Haniyeh, who was assassinated in Tehran in late July. Mr. Khan said he was also working to determine whether Mr. Deif was dead or alive. The Israeli military said in August that he was killed in a strike on Gaza.

A day after heavy overnight Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon, Hezbollah launched a series of rocket salvos at northern Israel. The Israeli military said it had detected more than 140 launches from Lebanese territory. Hezbollah said it had conducted eight strikes aimed at Israeli military bases, most using Katyusha rockets. Those rockets generally have limited accuracy.

Daily life in Lebanon’s capital, Beirut, began stumbling back to normal on Friday following the deadly attacks this week. Commuters hurried to and from work. Children played in schoolyards. Young men and women sat outside coffee shops, flicking through novels and catching up with friends. But tension remains, with thousands of injured people still being treated in hospitals.

With world’s attention shifting, some in Gaza fear they will be forgotten.

After nearly a year of war, fear marks everyday life for Palestinians in Gaza. There is fear of the Israeli warplanes that tear through the skies and carry out deadly airstrikes. There is fear of famine with only a trickle of aid coming in. There is fear of being displaced, yet again, by Israeli evacuation orders.

And now, there is increasing fear of being forgotten.

International attention has been diverted, first by deadly Israeli military raids into Palestinian cities in the occupied West Bank this month, and this week by coordinated attacks against the militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon. Israel’s leaders have increasingly signaled that they intend to shift their focus from the Gaza Strip to their northern border with Lebanon, in what the country’s defense minister, Yoav Gallant, described this week as a “new phase of the war.”

But the war it is already waging in Gaza has not gone away. Israel, which says it wants to eradicate the armed group Hamas that led the Oct. 7 attack, has not stopped its airstrikes or ground attacks.

And some Gazans worry that the already sputtering efforts to reach a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas will be sidelined as tensions rise in other areas of the Middle East.

“Unfortunately, people see the attention going to the West Bank or Lebanon,” said Muhammad al-Masri, a 31-year-old accountant who has been forced to flee numerous times. “We don’t know what is going to happen here. It’s not just depression or misery. It’s a catastrophe in a terrifying way, and the situation is getting worse all the time.”

He played a brief clip that showed him and his family fleeing recently in the back of a truck, his sunburned face covered in sweat. “The displacement,” he said, letting the camera take in a road packed with people fleeing by vehicle and donkey carts, is “the worst thing people can live through.”

With humanitarian access restricted, about 96 percent of the population in Gaza still faces high levels of acute food insecurity, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, a partnership of U.N. agencies and international humanitarian groups, reported this month.Nearly half a million people are facing catastrophic levels of acute food insecurity, meaning families are suffering from an extreme lack of food and face starvation, the group reported.

A separate coalition of aid groups working in Gaza analyzed recent data on aid entering the territory and said that Israel has “systematically blocked” entry of food, medicine, medical supplies, fuel and tents since the war began.

The organizations’ analysis found that as a result of the Israeli government’s restrictions on aid, 83 percent of the food Gazans need is not getting in. Gazans have gone from having an average of two meals a day earlier in the war to just one every other day, the group reported.

COGAT, an Israeli Defense Ministry body that implements government policy in the occupied West Bank and Gaza, did not respond to a request for comment on the aid groups’ report.

In August, an average of only 69 humanitarian trucks entered Gaza each day, well below the average of 500 trucks, including those carrying commercial goods, before the war, according to the United Nations.

Some 1.87 million people are in need of shelter, with at least 60 percent of homes damaged or destroyed, according to the United Nations.

“With the onset of the winter season, any gust of wind sends all the tents flying because they are all just blankets,” Mr. Al-Masri said. “If we human beings have collapsed, we are tired, we are falling apart, how is a tent going to stay together for an entire year?”

Just a few months ago, Gazans followed every new development in cease-fire negotiations. But now, people have given up hope.

“We wake up and go to sleep, and the airstrikes don’t stop,” aid Rawoand Altatar, who lives with her parents in Gaza City. “Additionally, there’s little food and little water and spread of diseases. People walk through the streets talking to themselves.”

But Ahmed Saleh, a 44-year-old civil servant in Gaza City, said it didn’t matter if the international community shifted its attention elsewhere, because for nearly a year “the world did nothing for Gaza.”

Abu Bakr Bashir contributed reporting.

The Israeli military ordered residents in Safed, a large town that is home to the military’s northern command near the border with Lebanon, to “avoid going outside unless absolutely necessary.” It advised them to stay close to “protected areas” like bomb shelters, safe rooms and interior stairwells.

At Funerals and in Hospitals, Talk of Revenge for Pager Attacks

At Funerals and in Hospitals, Talk of Revenge for Pager Attacks

After two days of exploding pagers and walkie-talkies, Beirut was a city on edge, with people worried there were bombs in their bags or pockets. Victims’ relatives vowed retribution.

Hwaida Saad and Ben Hubbard

Hwaida Saad attended three funerals, in Beirut and the Bekaa Valley of Lebanon, for people killed in the attacks and interviewed relatives of the dead and wounded there and in one hospital in Beirut. Ben Hubbard reported from Istanbul.

In the waiting rooms of a Beirut hospital, exhausted families slumped on couches, waited anxiously for doctors’ updates and wept. Nearby rooms held their loved ones, injured when pagers and walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah suddenly exploded across Lebanon this week, blinding and maiming many of their owners.

“I have no hope,” said a woman whose son-in-law had lost an eye and fingers on both hands. He had been lying down when his pager beeped and he picked it up — only for it to blow up in his face.

She gave only her first name, Joumana, and would not say what her son-in-law did that required a pager. But she made a vow: “The only revenge that will get us justice is to get rid of Israel.”

Across Lebanon on Thursday, hospitals were packed and people were on edge after hand-held communications devices imported by Hezbollah, the militant group and political party, blew up in waves across the country on two successive days. Dozens of people were killed and thousands of others injured in attacks that spread a terror that simple objects carried in people’s bags and pockets could readily become bombs.

Lebanese, American and other government officials have said that Israel launched the attacks by remotely detonating devices that had been outfitted with explosives before they were sent to Hezbollah. Israeli officials have not confirmed or denied their country’s involvement.

For 11 months, Hezbollah has been attacking sites in northern Israel in support of its ally Hamas in Gaza. Israel has responded by bombing and assassinating Hezbollah leaders in Lebanon, and civilians have fled areas on both sides of the border.

Lebanon’s health ministry on Thursday raised the death toll from the attacks on Tuesday and Wednesday to 37, adding that nearly 3,000 people had been wounded.

Hezbollah did not release figures on how many of its members were killed or injured, but the devices were distributed solely to its people, and multiple interviews with officials and relatives suggested that most of the victims were connected to the group, although some were civilians or had noncombat roles in the organization.

Hezbollah publicly mourned many of the dead as its fighters, including one teenager, born in 2008, who was 15 or 16. At least two other children, a 9-year-old girl and an 11-year-old boy, were among the dead, as was at least one woman.

The precise identities and affiliations of the wounded were less clear. Journalists were barred from entering some hospitals to interview victims, and the covert nature of Hezbollah’s military activities means that its members don’t readily share information with outsiders.

Hezbollah is a vast organization, which Israel, the United States, and other countries consider a terrorist group. It has a military force estimated to have tens of thousands of fighters, as well as offices that provide social services, administer schools and serve the group’s ministers and lawmakers in the Lebanese government.

The attacks appeared to cut through a broad swath of that apparatus, raising questions about whether such an assault violated the laws of war.

“It was an indiscriminate attack,” Firass Abiad, Lebanon’s health minister, told reporters on Thursday, after describing the burden the attacks had put on Lebanon’s health system. “It was a war crime.”

The laws of war prohibit booby traps in everyday items, said Lama Fakih, director for the Middle East and North Africa at Human Rights Watch, including “something like a pager that a kid could easily pick up when it starts beeping.”

Combatants must also differentiate between fighters and civilians, something an attacking power cannot do with so many explosives moving freely around such a large area, Ms. Fakih said.

And detonating such explosives in urban communities risked harming nearby civilians and possibly exposing those with no ties to Hezbollah to future attacks. Ms. Fakih mentioned the case of a man who had lost an eye because he had been passing someone on the street whose pager exploded.

Appearing to be affiliated with Hezbollah meant “you could be targeted at any time,” she said.

After two days of explosions, many in Lebanon were anxious on Thursday about what might blow up next. Public institutions banned pagers, the Lebanese army collected and detonated suspicious devices, and the civil aviation authority forbade airline passengers from traveling with pagers and walkie-talkies.

At the American University of Beirut hospital, two floors held people who had been injured in the attacks.

One man wiped away tears, saying that his 30-year-old nephew had “almost lost his whole face.”

Dr. Mohammed Ghobris, a surgeon from southern Lebanon, said he had received dozens of patients wounded by the exploding pagers after the first blasts on Tuesday. Now, he was in Beirut, where his brother-in-law, Sajid Ghobris, awoke to find that he was missing an eye and that one of his hands had been amputated at the wrist.

“This is international terrorism,” Dr. Ghobris said. Three other relatives of his had also been injured.

In a televised speech on Thursday, Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah, acknowledged that the attacks had been “a severe and cruel blow” to the organization. He vowed that Hezbollah would continue to prevent Israelis who have been displaced from the border region from returning home.

“No military escalation, no killings, no assassinations and no all-out war can return residents to the border,” he said.

As he spoke, Israeli jet screamed though the sky over Beirut, setting off sonic booms, further terrifying residents.

Earlier in the day, crowds had gathered in Beirut’s southern suburbs, where Hezbollah holds sway, for a second day of funerals for those killed in the attacks.

A woman named Hanan said that it was the second funeral she had attended in two days and that four of her relatives were in the hospital as a result of the attacks. They included her sister-in-law, who she said had been injured when her husband’s pager blew up.

“There are fighters and nonfighters,” she said. “There are people who were civilian staff in hospitals.”

Nearby, Ali Bazzi watched pallbearers carry the coffin of his nephew, Abbas Bazzi.

“This enemy has no mercy, no pity,” he said.

When asked how his nephew had died, he said, “From the pager.”

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What Lies Beneath Canada’s Former Indigenous School Sites Fuels a Debate

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Ian Austen

Reporting from Tk’emlups te Secwepemc, British Columbia.

The revelation convulsed all of Canada.

Ground-penetrating radar had found possible signs of 215 unmarked graves at a former residential school in British Columbia run by the Catholic Church that the government had once used to assimilate Indigenous children forcibly taken from their families.

It was the first of some 80 former schools where indications of possible unmarked graves were discovered, and it produced a wave of sorrow and shock in a country that has long struggled with the legacy of its treatment of Indigenous people. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau ordered flags to fly at half-staff, as many Canadians wore orange T-shirts with the slogan “Every Child Matters.”

Three years later, though, no remains have been exhumed and identified.

Many communities are struggling with a difficult choice: Should the sites be left undisturbed and transformed into memorial grounds, or should exhumations be done to identify any victims and return their remains to their communities?

While there is a broad consensus in Canada that children were taken from their families and died in these schools, as the discussions and searches have dragged on, a small universe of conservative Catholic and right-wing activists have become increasingly vocal in questioning the existence of unmarked graves. They are also skeptical of the entire national reconsideration of how Canada treated Indigenous people.

Three years after the announcement about the former Kamloops residential school site, they ask, why has no proof of any remains been uncovered anywhere in the country?

“There’s, so far, no evidence of any remains of children buried around residential schools,” Tom Flanagan, professor emeritus of political science at the University of Calgary and an author of “Grave Error: How the Media Misled Us (and the Truth About Residential Schools),” said in an interview.

“Nobody disputes,” he added, “that children died and that the conditions were sometimes chaotic. But that’s quite different from clandestine burials.”

The arguments by Mr. Flanagan and other skeptics have been roundly denounced by elected officials across the political spectrum who say evidence clearly suggests that there are many sites of unmarked burials.

Chief Rosanne Casimir of the Tk’emlups te Secwepemc Nation, who made the announcement about the Kamloops site, said, “The denialists, they’re hurtful. They are basically saying that didn’t happen.”

Security guards protecting the potential gravesites in her community have turned away people who have turned up late at night with shovels, she said.

Chief Casimir recalled holding the piece of paper in her hands about the potential gravesites that she read from to deliver the news and knew it would reverberate.

“I was thinking to myself, ‘This is horrible,’” she said.

Now her community is moving slowly and deliberately before deciding what to do next.

“We’ve had many conversations about whether to exhume or not to exhume,” Chief Casimir said. “It is very difficult and it is definitely very complex. We know that it’ll take time. And we also know that we have many steps yet to go.”

“We have to know for sure,” she added, “that we did everything that we can to determine: yes or no, anomaly or grave?”

The Canadian government and Pope Francis have apologized for the gruesome treatment of Indigenous people and the residential schools where children suffered so much abuse.

But the work to try to establish a precise number of potential graves will likely be difficult.

Murray Sinclair, a former judge who headed the National Truth and Reconciliaton Commission to investigate the residential schools system, estimates that at least 10,000 students never made it home from the schools, which were established by the government and operated from the 1880s to the 1990s.

During that period the Canadian government forcibly removed at least 150,000 Indigenous children from their communities and sent them to residential schools, most of which were run by the Roman Catholic Church. Indigenous languages and cultural practices were forbidden, sometimes using force.

And when the children died the government refused to pay to return their bodies to the communities where they came from.

In Ontario, a search of records by investigators working for the province’s chief coroner has so far identified 456 students who died while attending 12 residential schools. Some records show where remains may be buried, the coroner said, but there’s uncertainty about those findings.

At the Kamloops school site, where one of the largest number of potential gravesites was reported, Chief Casimir said her tribe was still analyzing the results of its ground and document searches before deciding whether to conduct exhumations.

Doing so, she added, would be “very intrusive.”

Kimberly Murray, a lawyer and a member of a Mohawk First Nation, was appointed by the federal government in 2021 to examine the issues surrounding potential Indigenous graves and make recommendations about protecting and commemorating the sites.

She says she reminds communities that the work they are doing is because “the government purposely disappeared” Indigenous children, “by not proper record keeping, by not telling the families, by refusing to send them home.”

Many communities, Ms. Murray said, have expanded their physical searches and have employed additional methods to find remains.

One involves placing probes into the ground to detect specific soil acidity that is created by buried human remains.

Another process involves using short pulses of laser light to scan the surfaces of areas where government and church records, as well as the memories of former students, suggest there were burials. The process, using a technology known as lidar, can reveal patterns consistent with burial sites.

Some Indigenous communities have also brought in dogs trained to find remains.

In some cases, Ms. Murray said there was evidence that schools resorted to burying students in mass graves because of disease sweeping through the institutions or to store bodies until the spring thaw made digging graves possible.

Still, Indigenous communities have faced obstacles finding graves, Ms. Murray said, as they struggle getting access to records about the children who died at the schools from the Canadian government and the Catholic Church, despite pledges of cooperation.

Even if exhumations uncover remains, identifying individual bodies or determining a cause of death will likely be impossible, said Dr. Rebekah Jacques, a forensic pathologist who has been working with Indigenous communities that have potential gravesites.

Dr. Jacques has met members of Indigenous communities while serving as a member of a national committee on potential graves at school sites, and she said the question of exhumations hangs heavy over many groups.

“I don’t always have consensus myself about what to do,” she said. “So for me to expect for our communities to have consensus — well, I can really relate to that.”

She also believes that nothing Indigenous communities do, including exhumations, will satisfy skeptics.

For Mr. Flanagan and others who share his viewpoint, their disbelief that there are many gravesites is part of a broader argument against the key conclusion of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission: that the residential schools were a system of brutality that led to “cultural genocide.’’

“The narrative that’s been constructed pulls out all the bad stories and retails those and minimizes the benefit of residential schools,” Mr. Flanagan said, adding that converting Indigenous people in nations colonized by Europeans to Christianity and eradicating their cultures was once common worldwide.

“The churches believed that it was their religious duty, and the politicians thought that it helped to civilize the Indians,” He said. “Would we do that today? No. But our understanding wasn’t available to these people of 150 years ago.”

Government officials and experts say such views are driven by bias and a lack of understanding and sensitivity over what Indigenous children endured for over a century, until 1996.

“There is simply no question about the horrific impact that the residential schools policy had on Indigenous peoples,” said David Lametti, who was Canada’s justice minister and attorney general when Chief Casimir announced the findings at the Kamloops school site.

Government officials, he added, have little doubt that many of the radar anomalies found on school grounds will prove to be gravesites.

“Will every one of those anomalies turn out to be an unmarked grave? Obviously not,” Mr. Lametti, a former law professor now practicing law in Montreal, said. “But there’s enough preponderant evidence already that is compelling.”

Many Indigenous people who favor exhumations want their communities to move more quickly to find remains.

On his ranch in the Tk’emlups te Secwepemc Nation, Garry Gottfriedson, a poet, retired academic and rodeo rider, said that as a former residential school student he wants more openness and progress from leaders.

“It can drag on and on and on and in the meantime, it dies out,” Mr. Gottfriedson said of the discussion about what to do about the gravesites.

“I’m saying: something needs to happen, let it happen,” he added. “But right now, it seems like nothing’s happening.”

Vjosa Isai contributed research.

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Europe’s New Defense Chief: ‘A King Without a Kingdom’?

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Facing an aggressive Russia, a long war in Ukraine and an uncertain American commitment to Europe, Ursula von der Leyen, as president of the European Commission, has created a new post of defense commissioner.

The task before any new commissioner is formidable. The war in Ukraine has pointed up huge shortcomings in Europe’s capacity to defend itself. Its armies are small and sometimes poorly equipped. It has been slow to increase military spending and prioritize the production of artillery shells, ammunition and air defense. It remains deeply dependent on the United States for key military equipment and funds.

But even before the commissioner, a former prime minister of Lithuania, Andrius Kubilius, can begin, analysts and others have raised alarms that the portfolio is ill-defined and vastly underfunded. The appointment, they say, appears more of a semaphore than a substantive position, calling into question whether Europe is fundamentally serious about taking responsibility for its own defense.

Europe has no army. Defense is legally in the competence of the 27 member states, 23 of which are also members of the NATO alliance. In reality, Mr. Kubilius will be a commissioner for the European arms industry, not defense itself.

His difficult job will be trying to push the arms industries of various European nations toward more standardized production and cooperative purchasing power and coordination.

Before he resigned suddenly on Monday, Thierry Breton, who was responsible for industry as commissioner for internal markets and security, estimated that 100 billion euros a year — about $111 billion — would be needed for European defense.

But even €20 billion or €30 billion, the size of the military budgets of larger European countries, “could make the European Union a sizable investor on the continent and start shaping business decisions,” said Camille Grand, a former NATO assistant secretary general for defense investment now at the European Council on Foreign Relations.

For now, the European Union is not even close. It can spend just €1.5 billion for 2025 to 2027 under its budgeted strategy, far less than required, said Christian Mölling, a defense expert and director for Europe for the Bertelsmann Foundation.

“So to change the E.U. structure you’re really looking more for a wizard than a commissioner,” Mr. Mölling said. “It’s a king without a kingdom.”

A senior European diplomat also expressed skepticism, saying that the commission had no extra money for the job, so Mr. Kubilius wouldn’t be able to get much done. In any case, the diplomat said, individual countries would do better at coordinating military capabilities than Brussels could.

A defense commissioner “could prove the catalyst for further reform and better coordination, but good intentions in this area have all too often failed to deliver the desired outcomes,” argued Ester Sabatino of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a centrist research institute that focuses on defense and security.

Then there is the question of overlapping responsibilities within the commission, the European Union’s 27-member executive arm. Ms. von der Leyen will have to “carve out something from already existing portfolios, so how is that going to work?” asked Mr. Grand.

The European Union already has a vice president in charge of European foreign affairs and security policy, soon to be Kaja Kallas of Estonia.

Ms. von der Leyen, who is starting her second term, has named a former French foreign minister, Stéphane Séjourné, to succeed Mr. Breton and he will keep much the same responsibilities for industrial strategy, but with a higher rank, as a vice president. There is also another vice president, Henna Virkkunen of Finland, responsible for tech sovereignty, security and democracy.

So what is the job of defense commissioner and is it really needed? asked Mr. Mölling.

In a recent comprehensive report on how to revive European growth and competitiveness, Mario Draghi, the former Italian prime minister and governor of the European Central Bank, supported the new commissioner’s job.

Europe buys more than 60 percent of its equipment from the United States, plus another 15 percent from other non-E.U. countries. So making European weapons more competitive would be good for European companies and taxpayers, Mr. Draghi argued, echoing many others.

“Europe is wasting its common resources,” he wrote. “We have large collective spending power, but we dilute it across multiple different national and E.U. instruments.” He added: “We are still not joining forces in the defense industry to help our countries to integrate and reach scale.”

He proposed creating E.U. bonds for military-related projects and other key investments. But that idea was quickly shot down by key member states, like Germany and the Netherlands, that have rejected collective European debt except for dealing with the “one-time” crisis of the coronavirus.

But without added money behind the E.U. ambition, the new commissioner is unlikely to be able to achieve what is needed. That includes helping the bloc make its support for Ukraine more timely, efficient and coordinated, while also replenishing the stocks of military equipment and ammunition depleted in European countries that have sent them to Ukraine.

Europe also needs to provide seed money, Mr. Grand emphasized. That is the only way to advance research and development of next-generation weapons and so-called strategic enablers, like integrated air and missile defense, sophisticated drones and intelligence satellites, among other things, that are now almost exclusively provided and sold by the United States.

Making the European Union itself a player in procurement could slim down extensive overlap. To satisfy competing domestic industries, Europe produces 12 battle tanks and 17 infantry fighting vehicles, and it provided Ukraine 10 kinds of howitzers, not all of which use the same shells.

To improve consolidation and make spending efficient, European rules on competition would have to be softened for defense, Mr. Grand said.

Still, he said, “I’m not sure having a single product line is a good idea,” and Brussels should not get into the business of trying to define military requirements for each country. “NATO knows much better, and the commission should not try to do that.”

But given the war in Ukraine and a U.S. concentration on the threat of a rising China, the question of European military dependency on Washington is no longer just a theoretical question, said Ian Lesser, director of the Brussels office of the German Marshall Fund.

It’s a natural inclination for Europeans to buy off-the-shelf from larger American arms producers, he said. “But Europe is in the process of shifting from seeing its own defense companies as national champions to thinking of them also as essential building blocks for stronger European defense,” Mr. Lesser said.

He, too, emphasized the issue of money, with major European economies like Germany, France and Italy already scouring their budgets for cuts.

As some E.U. countries are becoming skeptical of further large support for Ukraine, the motivation to come up with the money may only wane, said Ed Arnold, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, a British think tank centered on security.

He said he was skeptical that the defense commissioner would have the scope to make an impact on Europe’s military strategy. As ever, he said, a lot will depend on political will, and not just the funding.

“There’s a disconnect between the stated ambition you get initially and the hard reality of when you actually have to get member states’ approval,” he said.

The U.K.’s Anti-Immigration Party Has Big Plans. Can It See Them Through?

A week ago, he was the keynote speaker at a glitzy Chicago dinner for the Heartland Institute, a conservative think tank with a history of denying climate science, where the top tables went for $50,000.

On Friday, it was back to the day job for Nigel Farage, the veteran political disrupter, ally of Donald J. Trump and hard right, anti-immigrant activist whose ascent has alarmed both of Britain’s main political parties.

In a cavernous exhibition center in Birmingham, in England’s West Midlands, Mr. Farage is set to address supporters of his upstart party, Reform U.K., at its first annual conference since its success in Britain’s July general election. He is expected to lay out a plan to professionalize the party and build support ahead of local elections next year.

His ambitions are clear. But the jet-setting lifestyle of Mr. Farage, 60, whose visit to Chicago was his third recent trip to the United States, underscores the question hanging over Reform U.K.: Does its leader have the ability and appetite to build the fledgling party into a credible political force?

Mr. Farage, a polarizing, pugnacious figure, is one of Britain’s most effective communicators and had an outsized impact on its politics for two decades before finally being elected to Britain’s Parliament in July. A ferocious critic of the European Union, he championed Brexit and helped pressure Prime Minister David Cameron to hold the 2016 referendum.

“A fairly strong case can be made that Nigel Farage has been the most important political figure in all the elections of the last decade,” said Robert Ford, a professor of political science at the University of Manchester.

Having divided the Conservatives in the 2010s with his campaigning on Brexit, Mr. Farage dealt a huge blow to the party in July by splitting the vote on the right, allowing Labour to win. “Nigel Farage is the reason that the Conservatives had their worst-ever election result in July. Not even a reason. The reason,” Professor Ford said.

But taking the party a step further could be a challenge, he added, because it “presumes a level of strategic thinking that generally isn’t Farage’s strong point: He likes big, bold plans, lots of excitement, lots of razzmatazz.”

In an interview with The New York Times in June, Mr. Farage said his party could challenge both mainstream parties in the next general election, which must take place by mid-2029. “Five years will give us a lot of time to build us a mass movement,” he said, adding, “Very quickly into a Labour government, the desire for real change will get bigger.”

When it was put to him that Reform had few of the organizational structures of a modern political party, he replied: “Absolutely.”

Reform was founded in 2018 as a private company — initially called The Brexit Party — with Mr. Farage owning a majority stake. In a video released on Thursday, he pledged to give up his shares, saying: “I am giving up control, I am giving it to the members.” One of the tasks on the conference agenda in Birmingham is to adopt a formal constitution.

Having largely relied on volunteers until now, rewarding loyalty over expertise, Reform has begun recruiting for a number of jobs, including a regional director for England, a management accountant, a membership manager, a graphic designer and a video editor.

The party has five lawmakers in Parliament, including Mr. Farage and the blunt-spoken Lee Anderson, a former coal miner whose inflammatory, Islamophobic language saw him suspended by the Conservative Party early this year. He then defected to Reform.

Much of the work in professionalizing Reform will likely fall to its chairman, Zia Yusuf, 37. Born in Scotland to parents who emigrated from Sri Lanka, he studied at the London School of Economics and worked for Goldman Sachs before making a fortune by founding and selling a luxury concierge service.

One obvious strategy for Reform to copy is that of the centrist Liberal Democrats, who won a smaller share of the vote than Mr. Farage’s party in July but secured 72 seats in Parliament. That was achieved by ruthlessly targeting areas where they had a realistic chance of winning.

Reform came second in 98 constituencies in July. Of those, 89 were won by Labour, often in the deindustrialized north and middle of England. The party will try to campaign aggressively in those areas, hoping to win over disenchanted voters amid rising disillusionment with the mainstream political parties.

Mr. Farage also sees an opportunity in elections to the Welsh Parliament, the Senedd, and the Scottish Parliament, both scheduled for 2026. Those contests take place under a different voting system, which awards seats in proportion to the number of votes cast.

But the party’s many challenges include vetting candidates to exclude extremists and cranks. Mr. Cameron, the former prime minister, once described members of one of Mr. Farage’s earlier parties, the U.K. Independence Party, as “fruitcakes and loonies and closet racists, mostly.”

During this year’s election campaign, embarrassing revelations emerged about one Reform candidate who said that Britain should have “taken Hitler up on his offer of neutrality” in the Second World War, and another who used antisemitic tropes.

But perhaps the biggest question surrounds Mr. Farage himself. He wavered before deciding to run for Parliament this year, confessing doubts as to whether he wanted to spend time in Clacton, the seaside area he now represents. He appears regularly as a presenter on GB News, a right-leaning TV channel, and recently declared earnings of almost £98,000 a month (about $131,000) from those appearances.

Gawain Towler, a spokesman for Reform U.K., said Mr. Farage’s recent trips to the United States were arranged months ago, when the general election was expected to be held later in the year. He said Mr. Farage was now committed to building up his party and campaigning against immigration and against government plans to cut greenhouse gas emissions to zero by 2050.

Yet while he is the party’s undisputed star, Mr. Farage is a divisive politician. In one pre-election interview, he said the expansion of the European Union and NATO had provoked the war in Ukraine, prompting widespread criticism. During riots in August that were fueled by far-right conspiracies about the murder of three young girls, he was accused of stoking the violence by questioning whether “the truth” had been withheld by the authorities.

“Having him as your frontman ensures that you get media attention whenever you want it,” Professor Ford said. But, he added: “There are an awful lot of people — including quite a lot of Tory voters — who just don’t like the guy at all.”

With $39 Billion Loan for Ukraine, Europe Moves Ahead Without U.S.

The European Union’s top official said on a trip to Kyiv on Friday that Europe would offer Ukraine a loan of 35 billion euros, about $39 billion, backed by frozen Russian assets. European leaders said the loan would move forward initially without contributions from the United States, after talks between American and European officials stalled in recent days.

The official, Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, met with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine to reiterate Europe’s continued support for his country. Her trip came days before Mr. Zelensky was expected to travel to New York for the United Nations General Assembly.

There, he will present President Biden with a proposal, which has not yet been made public, to bring about the end of Russia’s war in Ukraine. He will also meet with the two candidates seeking to replace Mr. Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald J. Trump.

The loan announced on Friday, which would provide Ukraine with a needed infusion of funds without increasing direct aid from the budgets of European countries, is smaller than the $50 billion that the United States and other large Group of 7 economies agreed to provide in June. Washington had intended to contribute $20 billion to $25 billion to the loan, but only under conditions that would have barred an E.U. review of sanctions against Russia for three years.

Still, the loan announcement will be a relief to Kyiv, which is running out of money for acquiring weapons and for rebuilding damaged energy infrastructure as it heads into another winter at war.

At a news conference with Mr. Zelensky, Ms. von der Leyen said, “We should make Russia pay for the destruction it has caused.” The trip to Kyiv was her eighth visit to the Ukrainian capital since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022.

The plan is to repay the $39 billion loan using interest from $300 billion of Russian central bank assets that were frozen in 2022, though there is a risk that falling rates could decrease the value of the returns on those assets.

E.U. member states and the European Parliament will need to vote on the loan announced on Friday; should the proposal gain the required votes, Brussels intends to release the funds before the end of the year.

Jacob Kirkegaard, a Brussels-based senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said the announcement that the European Union would move forward with the loan signaled that it was rising to the task of possibly becoming the dominant supporter of Ukraine. But by doing so, the bloc was also taking on the risks associated with the loan.

“Those assets aren’t 100 percent certain, so this is a common risk taken by the E.U. without unanimity,” he said. “That’s a huge deal.”

The proposal for a $39 billion loan leaves open the question of to what extent individual European countries might reduce their contributions to Ukraine from their budgets, potentially decreasing the financial impact of the loan.

European and American officials struggled to secure an agreement because of legal questions. One sticking point has been the requirement by the European Union, where two-thirds of Russia’s central bank assets are held, to review the sanctions that have frozen the assets every six months. Because any change in the sanctions could unlock the frozen Russian money serving as the basis of the loan, the United States has said that it will only move forward with its contribution if Brussels agrees to extend the sanctions review period to 36 months.

Any change to the review period requires the approval of all 27 E.U. member states, however, and Hungary, which has cultivated close ties with Russia, objected.

To resolve the impasse, E.U. officials decided to move forward with the smaller loan, which does not include participation from Washington, though Ms. von der Leyen said that she was “absolutely confident” that the United States and others would eventually contribute.

Ukraine faces enormous energy challenges as it heads into the third winter of the war. Russian attacks on power plants have intensified in recent months, and in late August, after Ukraine invaded the Kursk region of Russia, Moscow fired more than 200 missiles and drones on Ukraine that targeted its energy infrastructure.

Even before those attacks, Ukraine’s power generation was about a third of its prewar capacity. “This winter will be, by far, its sternest test yet,” Fatih Birol, the head of the International Energy Agency, said on Thursday.

In a report published on Thursday, the energy agency urged Ukraine and the international community to focus on increasing the security of critical infrastructure and on Ukraine’s capacity to import electricity and gas from the European Union. The agency also called on Ukraine to decentralize its power supply, since large energy assets were more vulnerable to attack.

Ms. von der Leyen’s visit to Kyiv comes as Ukrainian troops on the ground are in a precarious position. On the eastern front, they have been gradually retreating for months in the face of persistent Russian advances, and they are now grappling with Russian counterattacks in the small portion of the Kursk region that they captured last month.

Also on Friday, Ukraine announced that it would ban the use of the messaging app Telegram on the official devices of members of its government, military and security apparatus. The app was founded by Pavel Durov, a Russian citizen who was arrested in France last month as part of an investigation into criminal activities on the platform.

Citing threats to national security, the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine warned on Friday that Russia may have access to messages and personal data on Telegram. The app has become a major platform of communication for people in both Ukraine and Russia during the war.

The ban was not expected to significantly affect communications within Ukraine’s military, which uses other platforms, such as Signal.

Alan Rappeport contributed reporting from Washington.

China Says It Will ‘Gradually’ Resume Imports of Japanese Seafood

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China said on Friday that it would gradually resume imports of seafood from Japan, a year after banning them in response to Japan’s release of treated radioactive water from the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant into the ocean.

The announcement came after the countries reached an agreement to expand monitoring of the treated water, which Japan began discharging in August of last year. The Japanese government and Tokyo Electric Power Company, which operated the Fukushima plant and is overseeing its cleanup, have assured the public that the water is safe for human consumption.

China was the most outspoken of several Asia-Pacific countries that objected to the release of the water, citing fears that it could contaminate seafood, though most scientists have dismissed such concerns. The water had been used to cool the nuclear fuel rods destroyed in 2011 when the Fukushima plant, on Japan’s east coast, melted down after a devastating earthquake and tsunami.

Tepco, as the power company is known, has said that it runs the water through a treatment plant to remove most of the radioactive material from it, and that what remains does not exceed international safety standards.

But Beijing has continued to refer to it as “nuclear-contaminated water,” doing so again in its statement on Friday. It has spread disinformation about the safety of the discharge, stoking fear, anger and anti-Japanese sentiment.

On Friday, the two countries announced that they had agreed to expanded monitoring of the treated wastewater under guidelines set by the International Atomic Energy Agency, with the participation of experts from countries including China.

Beijing said it planned to “gradually” restart imports of Japanese seafood that met its safety standards. But it continued to criticize what it called Japan’s “irresponsible practice.”

Mao Ning, a spokeswoman for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said that Beijing was still opposed to Japan’s “unauthorized discharge into the sea,” but that the agreement would ensure that Japan would “earnestly fulfill its obligation under international law.”

In a statement, Fumio Kishida, Japan’s prime minister, said that Japan welcomed the additional monitoring.

China was the biggest importer of Japanese seafood in 2022, accounting for about 23 percent of all exports, worth roughly $600 million, according to Japan’s Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries.

China’s announcement that it would lift the ban comes at a time of heightened tension between the two countries, further strained this week when a 10-year-old Japanese boy was fatally stabbed on his way to school in Shenzhen, a city in southern China.

Chinese officials have called the killing, which happened outside a school for Japanese children, an isolated incident perpetrated by a 44-year-old “thug,” according to a Chinese Communist Party newspaper. But it came two months after a man stabbed a Japanese woman and her son in eastern China, then killed a Chinese woman who tried to stop him.

On Thursday, Mr. Kishida called the attack on the boy in Shenzhen “an extremely despicable crime” and urged China to do more to protect Japanese people in the country.

Ms. Mao, the Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman, said the timing of the announcement about the seafood ban was unrelated to the boy’s killing. China said it had engaged in more than 10 rounds of negotiations with Japan and various organizations to reach the agreement.

Tepco says it has released more than 60,000 tons of treated wastewater from the Fukushima plant, in a series of eight discharges. That is less than 5 percent of the 1.3 million tons of treated water sitting in tanks at the decommissioned facility. It may take 30 to 40 years to release all the wastewater, Japanese news outlets have estimated.

Before the discharges started last year, the I.A.E.A. sent a team to Fukushima with experts from 11 countries, including China and the United States. They published a report in July last year that said Japan’s plan met international safety standards.

Since then, the agency has set up an office at the site to independently analyze the treated water before release and to test seawater near the plant. Two months ago, the I.A.E.A. said the wastewater discharge continued to comply with safety standards.

Mohamed al-Fayed ‘Was a Monster Enabled by a System,’ Lawyers Say

Lawyers representing dozens of women who have detailed harrowing allegations of sexual assault by Mohamed al-Fayed, the former owner of Harrods, said on Friday that they would launch a civil case against the luxury British department store for allegedly enabling his abuse.

At a news conference on Friday, a day after a bombshell BBC documentary and podcast laid out a pattern of sexual violence and rape of female employees during the time that Mr. al-Fayed owned the store, lawyers for at least 37 women said Harrods had “acquiesced to” an unsafe environment that had failed the alleged victims. About 20 of those women looked on from the audience.

Mr. al-Fayed, who died last year at 94, was a billionaire tycoon who owned the iconic store from 1985 to 2010.

“We will say it plainly, Mohamed al-Fayed was a monster,” said Dean Armstrong, one of the lawyers, adding, “But he was a monster enabled by a system, a system that pervaded Harrods.”

Mr. al-Fayed was “enabled by unsafe systems of work which Harrods established, maintained, certainly acquiesced to, and, we say, facilitated during his chairmanship,” Mr. Armstrong said.

Harrods, which is now owned by the state of Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund, issued a statement shortly after the documentary was released on Thursday, saying it was “utterly appalled by the allegations of abuse perpetrated by Mohamed al-Fayed.”

The company acknowledged that during his ownership, “we failed our employees who were his victims and for this we sincerely apologize.” It said its priority had been to “settle claims in the quickest way possible, avoiding lengthy legal proceedings for the women involved.”

New accusations have emerged since the documentary, called “Al Fayed: Predator at Harrods,” aired on Thursday, lawyers said. The investigation featured the accounts of more than 20 female ex-employees whose allegations span years and continents, with accusations of assault in London, Paris, St. Tropez and Abu Dhabi. Five of the women say they were raped by Mr. al-Fayed.

On Friday, three British lawyers sat alongside one victim who shared a detailed account of abuse. They were accompanied by Gloria Allred, the American attorney known for representing women in high-profile abuse cases.

Mr. Armstrong said the allegations against Mr. al-Fayed combined “some of the most horrific elements of the cases involving Jimmy Savile, Jeffrey Epstein and Harvey Weinstein.”

The lawyers said they would deal with each claim individually rather than through a class-action lawsuit, though civil claims had not yet been filed as they continued to investigate each case.

“Every survivor suffered different harm here and different long-term effects,” Mr. Armstrong said.

While the lawyers are focusing their initial efforts on holding Harrods accountable for what they describe as systemic failures and a culture that enabled the abuse, they said it was likely that civil suits could extend to other businesses Mr. al-Fayed owned, potentially in other countries.

“We are aware of allegations that have been made at other places of work,” said Maria Mulla, one of the lawyers representing the women. “But our investigations are obviously ongoing into all these entities that he had an involvement in.”

The lawyers said they were representing at least one employee of the Ritz Paris, which Mr. al-Fayed bought in 1979 and owned until his death. That hotel, in an emailed statement from a spokesperson, said it “strongly condemns any form of behavior that does not align with the values of the establishment,” adding that “the safety and well-being of our employees and guests are our absolute priority.”

Any case against the department store, and others who the lawyers say enabled Mr. al-Fayed’s behavior, could have international reach as the alleged sexual assaults took place in locations around the world. At least six of the accusers are from the United States, while others from Malaysia, Australia, Italy and Romania have also come forward.

Former employees said Mr. al-Fayed would scour the department-store floor and handpick women to work in his office. Many of those women were given intrusive gynecological medical checks and tested for sexually transmitted diseases, the results of which were sent directly to Mr. al-Fayed.

Around 20 women who said Mr. al-Fayed abused them filed into the room quietly at the start of the news conference on Friday. Many requested anonymity to protect their privacy.

Natacha, who spoke to reporters on the condition that only her first name be used, described how her one-time boss had manipulated and harassed her before ultimately sexually assaulting her. The abuse impacted her for years, and she said when she saw his obituary last year, it had overwhelmed her emotionally.

“I couldn’t believe that this monster had gotten away with his crimes. Thankfully today, this is a different story, and I’m really grateful for that,” she said.