Tag: InternationalNews

  • Jordan set for ‘historic’ vote

    {New electoral law aims to fix a political system with which many voters have grown disenchanted.}

    Amman – Throughout Jordan, street signs have been replaced by beaming campaign posters and car parks filled with rows of seats for rallies.

    Campaigning reached its peak on Sunday night before lapsing into an enforced silence in preparation for Tuesday’s polls, which will be different from other elections in the kingdom’s recent past.

    Jordan made significant changes to its electoral law this year, replacing a controversial one-person-one-vote system with a list-based system designed to encourage political parties. As a result, key opposition groups that previously boycotted the election, including the Muslim Brotherhood, are back.

    It is a major development at a time when regional wars, an ever-growing refugee crisis and a struggling economy have all converged to threaten Jordan’s stability. Government spokesman Mohammad Momani has said the 2016 vote would be “historic by all means”.

    On the streets, however, the response has been muted. For decades, Jordan’s elections have been greeted with apathy, as parliament’s failure to challenge government policies has fostered frustration among voters.

    Most recently, representatives passed a motion increasing the powers of the king, and in 2013 they failed to select a prime minister despite the king’s request that they do so. In past elections, voter turnout has hovered around 55 percent.

    “Most people don’t care about the elections,” Maha Oudat, an independent candidate running in the southern Maan governorate, told Al Jazeera. “I reached out to a lot of people, and most of them don’t care. They don’t trust in the performance of parliament.”

    A survey by the International Republican Institute (IRI) think-tank conducted this June found that 87 percent of Jordanians believed the most recent parliament had accomplished nothing worthy of commendation, while only 29 percent considered the legislative branch to be effective. More than half of the respondents said they were unlikely to vote.

    “Parliament is a form of theatre, and people know this,” political risk analyst Kirk Sowell told Al Jazeera. “It cannot choose the government, cannot originate legislation, and although it can amend it, this power is meaningless since the senate can amend its amendments, and the king can also veto.”

    Jordan is often described as a tribal society, where ties to large family groups are crucial in defining who holds power. Citizens are among the first to admit that family and personal loyalties are an important driver for political choices; that sense is echoed by polls and pundits, some of whom have urged citizens to pay attention to policies rather than personal loyalties.

    Campaigning often involves networking or securing votes through personal assurances, while party programmes or “visions for change” play a less important role.

    The one-person-one-vote law, scrapped earlier this year, entrenched that culture by encouraging voting for individuals. It was introduced by King Hussein in response to major Islamist gains after the 1989 election, with subsequent parliaments consisting of individuals rather than parties with a shared programme.

    Supporters say that they hope the new electoral law will help to revive the political system. It requires voters to pick from among pre-set lists of candidates – a system that could encourage stronger organising between candidates on ideological or party-based grounds.

    How this will work in practice, however, remains to be seen. Of 1,293 candidates competing for 130 seats in Jordan’s parliament, 82 percent are non-partisan. The Muslim Brotherhood and Islamist parties, while making a strong showing, have been fractured into smaller groups.

    But Khaled Kalaldeh, a former political affairs minister who has since become president of Jordan’s Independent Electoral Commission, said he was confident in the new system.

    “There is not a single party boycotting this election,” he told Al Jazeera. “Some didn’t present candidates, but all of them they agreed to participate in the election for parliament … Our mandate is to run this election with integrity, trust and in an impartial way. We have to regain the trust of the people through our electoral process. This is our goal and this is what we are going to do.”

    In Maan, Oudat said that reaching out to residents and giving people a reason to engage in politics was crucial to encouraging Jordanian democracy. The region she represents is relatively rural and conservative, outside of the wealthy bubble of West Amman. Economic issues are a top priority for voters in her area, she said, with average unemployment across Jordan reaching nearly 15 percent – and double that among young people.

    “We have to increase people’s trust,” Oudat said. “We need to talk to people, to reach people and to talk about programmes. And I think, hopefully, we can change things.”

    Still, it will be a tough road ahead. Studies by the IRI and the University of Jordan have suggested that the troubled economy is a key cause of voter apathy, while 58 percent of Jordanians were unaware of the new electoral law, the IRI found.

    In Amman, many voters told Al Jazeera that they did not trust politicians to make decisions that represented their communities. Tim Naser, a business owner in the city’s downtown, said he was optimistic about the potential of parliament to bring positive change – but major hurdles remain.

    “I know they made many changes, but to be honest I don’t know what the changes are,” Naser said. “Two of my family members are running for seats, so I need to support them. This is Jordan – it’s just how these things work here.”

    More than half of the respondents to a recent survey said they were unlikely to vote
  • Thousands flee fire at refugee camp on Greece’s Lesbos

    {More than 3,000 people forced to flee as blaze rips through one of Greece’s main refugee camp on the island of Lesbos.}

    Thousands of people were forced to flee to safety on Monday after a fire, set on purpose according to police, tore through a refugee camp on the Greek island of Lesbos.

    No casualties were reported but tents at the Moria camp were “almost entirely destroyed” and containers that provide additional accommodation and health and registration services were damaged, a police source in Athens told AFP.

    Greek news agency ANA said the arson began because of fighting between different nationalities in the camp, while Athens-based newspaper Kathimerini said the fires were lit after rumours circulated that refugee deportations to Turkey were being planned.

    “Between 3,000 and 4,000 migrants fled the camp of Moria,” to the surrounding fields, with firefighters being hampered by strong winds that fanned the flames, the police source said.

    Police were sent out after the migrants and were in the process of returning them to the camp, the officer added.

    The officer said there was “no doubt” that the fire had been set on purpose by those inside.

    Some 150 minors housed at the camp were taken to a children’s village on the island, the officer said.

    Another two fires broke out in the olive groves near Moria but were brought under control before the third blaze erupted at the camp.

    There are now more than 60,000 refugees and migrants in Greece, most of them seeking to travel to Germany and other EU countries.

    But they are unable to do so after several eastern European and Balkan states shut their borders earlier this year.

    Human rights groups have repeatedly criticised the condition of Greek camps for migrants and refugees, pointing to overcrowding and unsanitary living conditions.

    The situation is particularly acute on Lesbos and other eastern Aegean islands facing Turkey, where most of the refugees and migrants land and are held for registration.

    Island residents have staged protests to demand the transportation of the migrants to the mainland.

    The procedure is part of an EU-Turkey deal designed to limit the flow of refugees and migrants to Greece’s shores.

    According to government data, there are more than 13,000 people on five islands in facilities built to house fewer than 8,000.

    Most of them are Syrian refugees fleeing civil war, in addition to Iraqis, Afghans, Pakistanis and others from the Indian subcontinent and north Africa considered to be economic migrants, and as such not automatically entitled to asylum in Europe.

    On Lesbos itself there are in excess of 5,600 people, more than 2,000 more than the nominal capacity of the camps.

    Brawls are common, with many desperate to avoid being returned to Turkey or their home countries after spending a small fortune and risking their lives trying to escape poverty and persecution.

    The fire comes as UN member states on Monday promised to try to improve the plight of millions of refugees around the world.

    Speaking at the first UN refugee summit in New York, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras warned that failure to confront the refugee crisis would unleash xenophobia.

    “If we fail to support this, the political repercussions will be felt not only in Greece but everywhere,” he said.

    “We will give space to nationalistic, xenophobic forces to show their face for the first time since World War II.”

    More than 850,000 migrants arrived on the Greek islands last year, many after risking their lives in unseaworthy boats and dinghies.

    Greek news agency ANA said the arson began because of fighting between different nationalities in the camp
  • Syria’s shaky ceasefire continues to crumble

    {Syria calls US-led air strikes on its troops a “dangerous and blatant aggression” as ceasefire looks close to collapse.}

    Syria’s fragile ceasefire continued to unravel on Sunday with the first aerial attacks on rebel-held neighbourhoods of Aleppo and a southern village in the deadliest day since the truce began.

    The violations came as tensions between American and Russian brokers of the deal worsened following a deadly US air raid on Syrian government forces.

    The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said evening air strikes on Aleppo killed one woman and wounded others, though it could not identify who carried them out.

    Ten people, including a child, were killed on Sunday when a pair of barrel bombs hit an opposition-held town in the southern province of Deraa, it said.

    “Today was the highest death toll since the truce began,” said Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman.

    The air raid by the US-led coalition allegedly killed dozens of Syrian soldiers and led to a harsh verbal attack on Washington by Damascus and Moscow. The US military says it may have unintentionally struck Syrian troops while carrying out a raid against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in eastern Syria on Saturday.

    The seven-day ceasefire is supposed to end at midnight Sunday, according to a Syrian army statement issued last week. The US and Russia have said if it holds for seven days, it should be followed by the establishment of a centre for both countries to coordinate the identification of targets against ISIL and Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, formerly known as al-Nusra Front.

    The ceasefire has been repeatedly violated by both sides, and aid convoys have not reached besieged rebel-held neighbourhoods of Aleppo, Syria’s largest city and one-time commercial centre.

    Moscow laid the blame for Sunday’s violence squarely on the opposition.

    Russian Defence Ministry spokesman Major-General Igor Konashenkov said in an emailed statement to the AP news agency that both “terrorists and the opposition” are using the truce to “boost their forces and prepare for renewed hostilities”.

    {{‘Dangerous and blatant aggression’}}

    Konashenkov said Moscow still has not been able to contact the US-backed opposition to coordinate ceasefire efforts, despite Washington’s assurances. He said the US has not even tried to get the opposition to hold its fire.

    Syria called Saturday’s US-led strikes on the outskirts of the eastern city of Deir Az Zor a “dangerous and blatant aggression against the Syrian Arab Republic and its army”.

    The foreign ministry’s statement, sent to the UN Security Council, said American warplanes repeatedly attacked Syrian army positions. It said the air strikes were “on purpose and planned in advance”, and killed dozens of Syrian soldiers.

    Russia’s military said it was told by the Syrian army that at least 62 Syrian soldiers were killed in the air raid and more than 100 wounded.

    The Russian air force has been carrying out strikes across Syria to bolster President Bashar al-Assad’s forces for nearly a year, and the two militaries work in close coordination.

    Russia said the United States was being obstructive and deceptive regarding the air strike. A foreign ministry statement on Sunday said in an emergency UN Security Council session the US took “an unconstructive and indistinct position”.

    The Americans “not only turned out to be unable to give an adequate explanation of what happened, but also tried, as is their custom, to turn everything upside down”, the statement said.

    Millions have fled Syria since the war began five years ago
  • Five devices found near New Jersey train station: mayor

    {Reports of an explosion near the Elizabeth train station near scene of investigation into suspicious package.}

    A New Jersey mayor said one of five devices found in a backpack near a train station has exploded while a bomb squad robot was attempting to disarm it.

    Elizabeth Mayor Christian Bollwage said that the device exploded shortly after 12:30 am local time on Monday. The FBI was leading the investigation and working to disarm the other four devices.

    There were no reports of injuries. Bollwage said to expect more detonations.

    Two men called police and reported seeing wires and a pipe coming out of a package after finding it around 8:30 pm on Sunday, the mayor said.

    Al Jazeera’s Tom Ackerman, reporting from one of the stalled trains in nearby Metuchen, New Jersey said authorities had “suspended all services on trains south and west of New York City because of reports of a possible live bomb had been found in a trash can at the Elizabeth station”.

    Elizabeth Mayor Christian Bollwage said two men called police and reported seeing wires and a pipe coming out of a package after finding it at about 9:30 pm on Sunday.

    Bollwage said the Union County bomb squad’s robotic device indicated the package the men left near the train trestle could be a live bomb, adding that the FBI and state police would decide how to remove the device.

    New Jersey Transit told the Associated Press news agency that service had been suspended between Newark Liberty Airport and Elizabeth, and New York’s emergency management department said that New Jersey-bound Amtrak trains were being held at New York Penn Station.

    The discovery of the suspicious package comes a day after an explosion in Manhattan injured 29 people, and an unexploded pressure-cooker device was found four blocks away.

    “The thought, of course, is that they are all related,” said Ackerman.

    Ackerman said that a “widespread search” was underway across the New York Metropolitan area to “see who is behind this spat of bombings, and of course, the suspicion would appear, that there are more to come in locations that we have yet to find”.

    The investigation in New Jersey comes just a little more than a day after a large explosion in Manhattan
  • Syria, nuclear arms and refugees top UN Assembly agenda

    {Annual meeting of world leaders in New York more likely to highly world’s tribulations than solve them.}

    New York, US – World leaders are arriving at the United Nations headquarters for an annual confab with hopes of addressing everything from superbugs to climate change and a global anti-poverty drive that is already faltering in its first year.

    Presidents, diplomats and their delegations must also broach impromptu items, such as North Korea’s recent nuclear test. A US air raid that allegedly killed at least 62 Syrian government soldiers on Saturday threatens a fragile truce in that country and sparked fresh rows at the UN.

    On top of that, the US, Russia, China and other UN heavyweights must see beyond their differences and agree on who will run the world body once the incumbent, Ban Ki-moon, steps down at the end of the year.

    On Monday, the UN will host a summit for refugees and migrants that may have already failed – countries refused to commit themselves to a UN target of resettling 10 percent of refugees each year.

    The outcome is a “watered-down version of what we had hoped for”, Erol Kekic, from the refugee aid group Church World Service, told Al Jazeera, adding that denying hope to the world’s 21 million refugees was “irresponsible and frankly dangerous”.

    A separate meeting on refugees, to be hosted by US President Barack Obama on Tuesday, will likely gain more traction, not least because any leader showing up must come bearing gifts. Guests will be giving cash, letting more refugees into their countries or helping them find jobs.

    Obama’s presence raises a question all of its own. His internationalism has buoyed UN meetings over the past eight years, but he leaves office in January and US voters have yet to decide who will replace him.

    {{Diplomatic marathon }}

    On Wednesday, leaders will be asked to ratify a climate change deal agreed in Paris in December – pushing it closer to the 55 ratifying states, covering at least 55 percent of global emissions, needed before it comes into force.

    UN officials say that deal could be sealed by early 2017.

    Also on Wednesday, the UN will launch a scheme to combat antibiotics-resistant bugs. Convincing the world’s farmers to stop using the drugs to fatten livestock is top of a list of challenges, health expert Laurie Garrett told Al Jazeera.

    In all, the UN expects some 140 world leaders to show up for a gruelling, diplomatic marathon that plays out over two weeks. Diplomats have booked out rooms for 11,000 private, bilateral sit-downs and 545 larger meetings.

    Expected in Manhattan are Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi and Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, who will present his historic peace deal with FARC rebels.

    The Democratic presidential candidate in the US election, Hillary Clinton will also be in town, burnishing her foreign policy credentials by meeting the presidents of Egypt, Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi, and Ukraine, Petro Poroshenko.

    Human rights lawyer Amal Clooney lent some stardust to proceedings on Friday, railing against human trafficking. Other celebrities will visit New York to advance pet projects. Actor Ben Affleck is expected to discuss Congo’s war and Coldplay frontman Chris Martin will sing against poverty in Central Park.

    But, for the UN, the big 2016 General Assembly theme is the set of environmental and anti-poverty targets that were agreed last year by all 193 members, with the headline ambitions of ending poverty and hunger everywhere by 2030.

    The so-called Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are a blueprint for global development, with 17 goals broken down into 169 smaller targets on everything from gender equality to clean energy and making governments play by their own rules.

    They are the focus of the General Debate, which begins on Tuesday.

    {{800 million people in extreme hunger }}

    David Nabarro, the UN’s point man on the SDGs, described “enormous strides” this year. At least 50 governments have started work on the goals, often by gathering data to make plans. Businesspeople, scientists, charity bosses and city mayors are also getting on board, he added.

    Samar Samir Mezghanni, a Tunisian campaigner for development who travelled to New York to call for rapid action, told Al Jazeera that it was vital the goals got worldwide support.

    “Everyone on the planet should support the SDGs as everyone feels the malaise or pain that global society is going through with its environmental, political and social challenges,” the 28-year-old told Al Jazeera.

    In the Middle East, the SDGs’ targets for institution-building and justice could answer the calls for reform made during the Arab Spring uprisings, she said.

    “We can’t wait till 2030 to re-establish trust between people and their leaders,” Mezghanni added.

    The first SDGs progress report in July pointed to 800 million people in extreme hunger and poverty globally, 59 million out-of-school children and 2.4 billion people without access to clean water or a decent bathroom.

    UN officials now warn that the target of having primary and secondary school places for all boys and girls globally will not be achieved until 2084, far behind deadline. Only a six-fold funding boost can get progress back on track.

    On Sunday, Gordon Brown, a UN education envoy and former British prime minister, unveiled plans to meet the cash shortfalls. He warned of a “ticking time bomb” of unschooled youths turning to extremism and “future Arab Springs, future Occupy movements”.

    “With no school places, young people will fall prey to extremist factions determined to exploit their discontents and assert that coexistence between the religions of the world is impossible,” he wrote in an article for Al Jazeera.

    Healthcare is tricky too. This month, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta blogged about African countries not being able to make more progress against such killers as Aids, malaria and tuberculosis without more cash.

    The cost of delivering a sustainable planet is estimated at $3 trillion – yet nobody has straight answer on how government revenues, aid, private finance, lending bodies and remittances from migrants will reach that sum.

    Supporters of the one-year-old SDGs say they can radically improve the world. Critics say there are too many goals, the targets are difficult to measure, and rich countries are still not serious enough about letting poor countries advance.

    According to Kenneth Conca, an adviser to the UN Environment Programme, the SDGs are a “broad and complicated agenda that almost looks like everyone tossed their favourite concern into the pie”.

    “There’s a very long way to go,” Conca told Al Jazeera.

    For Derrick Cogburn, an expert on disabilities at the American University, the vast range of targets has left development workers bamboozled, cherry-picking the goals they can muster “sustained engaged activity around”, he told Al Jazeera.

    There are optimists too. John McArthur, a former UN official and now a Brookings Institution analyst, said he grabbed his forehead when he was first confronted with an SDG agenda that lumped all global challenges together.

    “Ultimately, in a world of seven billion people, there’s a lot to unpack,” McArthur told Al Jazeera. “These common collective processes are hard and come with no guarantees. But, the question is: ‘What’s the alternative?’’And, very often, there isn’t a better one.”

    Celebrities are also expected to advocate for pet causes at the meeting
  • 17 Indian soldiers killed in attack on Kashmir base

    {India blames Pakistan for deadly attack that comes after region gripped by over two months of often violent protests.}

    Seventeen Indian soldiers and four suspected rebel fighters have been killed in an attack on an army headquarters in Indian-administered Kashmir, according to a statement by the army’s northern command.

    “Four terrorists killed in counterterrorist operation at Uri. 17 soldiers make the supreme sacrifice,” the command said on Twitter on Sunday, referring to the Uri area, about 100km west of the troubled northern region’s main city of Srinagar.

    The fighters first attacked a frontline base close to the border known as the Line of Control before moving on to the headquarters, army spokesman Colonel SD Goswami said.

    Most of the fatalities happened in a tent that caught fire, Lieutenant General Ranbir Singh, the Indian army’s director general of military operations, told the briefing in New Delhi.

    Reuters television footage showed helicopters flying in to evacuate the injured as an operation continued to secure the area. Smoke rose from the compound, set in mountainous terrain. The Defence Ministry earlier put the number of wounded at 35.

    {{India accuses Pakistan}}

    India has accused Pakistan of being behind one of the most deadly attacks in Kashmir in a quarter-century-old armed rebellion.

    Lieutenant General Singh said that Sunday’s attack bore the hallmarks of Pakistan-based armed group Jaish-e-Mohammed. Evidence gathered at the scene indicated the attackers were foreign and their equipment bore Pakistani markings, he told Reuters news agency.

    “Our men are ready to give a befitting response,” Singh said in response to a reporter’s question. He did not elaborate.

    Earlier, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi strongly condemned what he called the “cowardly terror attack”.

    “I assure the nation that those behind this despicable attack will not go unpunished,” Modi said in a series of Twitter posts.

    In an even stronger response, Indian Home Minister Rajnath Singh tweeted: “Pakistan is a terrorist state and should be identified and isolated as such.”

    Singh chaired a crisis meeting in New Delhi and cancelled planned trips to Russia and the United States.

    Pakistan rejected allegations that it was involved. “India immediately puts blame on Pakistan without doing any investigation. We reject this,” foreign ministry spokesman Nafees Zakaria told Reuters.

    {{Tens of thousands killed}}

    Army Chief Dalbir Singh Suhag and Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar are to visit Kashmir after the attack, the Indian media said.

    The Himalayan region has been in the grip of deadly unrest for more than two months, with protesting residents clashing almost daily with security forces, in the worst violence to hit the region since 2010.

    At least 87 civilians have been killed and thousands injured in the protests against Indian rule, sparked by the killing of a popular rebel leader in a gun battle with soldiers on July 8.

    Kashmir is divided into two parts, one administered by India and the other by Pakistan.

    India claims Pakistan has been supporting a violent secessionist movement in Kashmir. Islamabad has consistently denied this charge. It calls Kashmiri rebels freedom fighters.

    Tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians, have died in the fighting.

    Smoke billows out from inside an Indian Army base which was attacked by suspected rebels in Uri
  • Donald Trump finally admits Obama was born in US

    {After years of casting doubt on President Barack Obama’s place of birth, Trump changes his mind – though no apology yet.}

    The Republican Party’s presidential candidate Donald Trump has finally acknowledged that US President Barack Obama was born in the United States, and his admission quickly drew criticism for perpetuating a racist conspiracy.

    “President Barack Obama was born in the United States. Period,” said Trump on Friday, reversing his long-held position casting doubt on the veracity of Obama’s birthplace, which was known as the “birther” controversy.

    Trump had for years promoted the birther movement against Obama, who was born in Hawaii to an American mother and a Kenyan father, questioning his birthplace and, by association, the legality of his presidency.

    In 2012, the New York businessman turned presidential candidate wrote on Twitter that Obama’s birth certificate was “a fraud”.

    Without offering evidence, Trump on Friday also accused his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton of starting the birther allegations during her 2008 presidential primary campaign.

    “She is the one that started it, and she was unable or incapable of finishing it. That’s the way it worked out,” Trump said.

    Clinton was quick to respond, saying that Trump’s news conference about Obama’s birthplace was a “disgrace”, and her Republican rival had expressed “zero regret” for years of “pushing a racist conspiracy theory”.

    Clinton said in a series of tweets that when Trump tries to “deflect blame” for denying that Obama was born in the US, her Republican opponent was “lying”.

    “He had the audacity to spout a new lie about the birther movement that he helped to build,” the Democratic National Committee said.

    Bernie Sanders, who was Hillary Clinton’s rival in the Democratic presidential nomination race, said in a tweet: “The birther movement was about delegitimising the first African-American president in our history.”

    The head of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), Democratic Representative G.K. Butterfield of North Carolina, called Trump a “disgusting fraud”. Other members of the CBC told reporters that Trump has tried to delegitimise Obama, the first African-American president.

    Civil rights activist Jesse James pointed out that Trump now owes Obama an apology.

    Members of the CBC also held a news conference later on Friday to urge African-American voters to “resist any temptation to support Trump”.

    Celebrities also voiced their criticism of Trump’s latest stunt. Actress Mia Farrow said: “Listen now to the Members of Congressional Black Caucus and understand the pain Trump is inflicting on our fellow Americans.”

    Obama declined to comment on Trump, telling reporters he had better things to do.

    “I’m shocked that a question like that would come up at a time when we’ve got so many other things to do – well, I’m not that shocked actually,” Obama said.

    In 2011, Obama, released a long-form version of his birth certificate showing he was born in Hawaii.

  • Syria’s civil war: Ceasefire strained by fresh fighting

    {As aid remains held up on the border and ceasefire violations mount, the UN warns “the world is watching”.}

    Air raids and fighting tested a fragile ceasefire in Syria into Saturday as civilians waited for aid and tensions mounted between Russia and the United States, who brokered the truce.

    In New York, the UN Security Council cancelled an urgent meeting on Friday that had been called to discuss whether to endorse the deal, billed as the “last chance” to end a five-year war that has killed hundreds of thousands of people and forced millions from the country.

    The closed-door consultations were scrapped after Moscow and Washington failed to agree on how disclose details of the ceasefire to the council.

    US Secretary of State John Kerry had earlier called his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov and condemned “repeated and unacceptable delays of humanitarian aid,” State Department spokesman John Kirby said.

    Kerry told Lavrov that Washington expected Russia to use its influence on the government of President Bashar al-Assad to press it to allow UN aid convoys to reach Aleppo and other areas, according to Kirby.

    “The secretary made clear that the United States will not establish the Joint Implementation Centre with Russia unless and until the agreed terms for humanitarian access are met,” Kirby said, referrring to a deal to set up a joint committee to enable the US and Russia to coordinate attacks on the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and Jabhat Fateh al-Sham armed groups.

    US President Barack Obama also voiced “deep concern” that the government continued to block humanitarian aid.

    The ceasefire has been marred by a lack of aid deliveries and sporadic violence, in which three civilians were killed on Friday.

    If the truce, which began on Monday , lasts seven days and aid access is granted, Russia and the US say they will work together to target ISIL, also known as ISIS, and Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, the group formerly known as al-Nusra Front.

    Under the deal, Moscow must put pressure on Assad and Washington must work with the Syrian rebels it supports to silence their guns.

    {{Civilians killed}}

    Earlier on Friday, Russia said that only Moscow and the Syrian government were fulfilling the deal.

    “Although the ceasefire agreement is bilateral, only one side is truly implementing it,” defence ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said.

    Russia said, though, that it was ready to extend the truce, which is due to expire late on Friday, by 72 hours.

    Russia accused the US “of not doing their part to get rebel forces to pull back from Castello Road, that vital link that aid trucks will eventually travel along into besieged Aleppo,” Al Jazeera’s Charles Stratford, reporting from Gaziantep along the Turkey-Syria border, said.

    “Also, the Russian defence ministry describing an incident last night saying that Syrian forces close to that road came under attack by the rebels using small arms fire, and… were forced to redeploy to initial positions to protect any kind of demilitarised zone that was beginning to happen there.”

    Members of the UN Security Council have said they need more details about the deal before deciding whether to endorse it.

    The Pentagon also said on Friday that dozens of US Special Operations Forces have been deployed to Syria’s border with Turkey to fight ISIL, at Ankara’s request, in support of Turkey’s army and “vetted” Syrian rebels.

    Three civilians, including two children, were killed in air raids on Friday on the rebel-held town of Khan Sheikhun in Idlib province, according to the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).

    Under the truce deal, fighting is to stop across the country except where ISIL and Jabhat Fatah al-Sham are present.

    Experts say the deal will be particularly difficult to implement in areas where Jabhat Fateh al-Sham has formed strong alliances with other rebel groups.

    {{‘The world is watching’
    }}

    Hours-long fighting and shelling erupted in neighborhoods on the edges of Damascus on Friday, with activists and residents calling the clashes the heaviest in the Syrian capital in weeks.

    Fighting between government troops and rebels was concentrated in the neighbourhood of Jobar, next to Qaboun, where rebels, including Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, have had a presence for years, according to the SOHR.

    Syrian state media said rebels violated the ceasefire by shelling government-held areas in the eastern Damascus neighborhood of Qaboun, wounding three people.

    The Observatory said three rebel fighters and four members of the government forces were killed.

    The UN has called the truce a “critical window of opportunity” to deliver aid to rebel-held eastern districts of Aleppo city, where around 300,000 civilians are under siege.

    The UN had hoped that 40 trucks of food – enough to feed 80,000 people for one month – could be delivered there as soon as possible.

    But on Friday, the trucks were still waiting at the border with Turkey, said David Swanson, a spokesman for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

    Under the truce deal, the main route into divided Aleppo, the Castello Road, would be demilitarised and aid convoys would enter from Turkey.

    A military source said Syria’s army “has carried out its pledge and handed over a number of points to the Russian monitoring teams”, but that rebel groups had not withdrawn from their positions.

    “As humanitarians this is immensely frustrating. We’re here, we’re on the ground and we’re ready to move… The world is watching,” Swanson said.

    Air raids on Idlib on Friday killed three civilians, including two children.
  • Over 3,000 Saudi strikes on Yemen ‘hit civilian areas’

    {Saudi Arabia says new report “vastly exaggerated” and that rebels used schools, hospitals and mosques as bases.}

    More than a third of Saudi-led air strikes on Yemen hit civilian sites including schools, hospitals and mosques, according to a new study.

    The findings came from the Yemen Data Project, a group of security and human rights researchers, who looked into more than 8,600 air raids in the campaign between March 2015 and the end of August this year.

    The results of the study were published by British newspaper The Guardian on Friday.

    Out of the air raids examined, the study found that 3,577 were listed as hitting military sites and 3,158 non-military, while 1,882 strikes were classified as unknown, according to The Guardian.

    Over the course of the campaign led by Saudi Arabia, the survey listed 942 air raids on residential areas, 114 on markets, 34 on mosques, 147 on school buildings, 26 on universities and 378 on transport.

    The study, which the report said was based on open-source data including research on the ground, said that one particular school building was hit nine times, and one market was hit 24 times.

    The project said the coalition hit more non-military sites than military in five of the past 18 months.

    {{Riyadh dismisses report}}

    Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir was quoted by The Guardian dismissing the report as “vastly exaggerated” and challenging its methodology.

    He said rebel fighters had “turned schools and hospitals and mosques into command and control centres.”

    “They have turned them into weapons depots in a way that they are no longer civilian targets … They are military targets. They might have been a school a year ago. But they were not a school when they were bombed,” he said.

    Saudi Arabia, along with a coalition of other Arab states, intervened in Yemen in March 2015 in support of the government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi after Houthi rebels took over the capital Sanaa.

    Since then the conflict has killed more than 6,600 people, most of them civilians, and displaced at least three million others, according to the UN.

    A United Nations report in June found the coalition responsible for 60 percent of the 785 deaths of children in Yemen last year.

    Fighting has intensified since the collapse of UN-backed peace talks in Kuwait on August 6.

    The research says that the coalition hit more non-military sites than military in five of the past 18 months
  • Palestinian man shot dead after alleged stabbing attack

    {Israeli forces shoot dead another Palestinian man, bringing death toll from the last 24 hours to five.}

    Israeli soldiers shot dead a Palestinian man after he allegedly stabbed a soldier in the occupied West Bank, the Israeli military said, in the latest killing in a 24-hour spike in violence.

    A spokeswoman said on Saturday that the “assailant armed with a knife stabbed an [Israeli] soldier” during a “routine security check” before being shot dead in the West Bank city of Hebron.

    “In response to the immediate threat, forces at the scene shot the assailant, resulting in his death,” the spokeswoman was quoted by the Reuters news agency as saying.

    It brings the death toll from the past 24 hours to five. On Friday, three Palestinians and one Jordanian were shot and killed by Israeli forces in separate areas across the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

    Since October 2015, Israeli forces and settlers have killed at least 215 Palestinians, including unarmed demonstrators, bystanders and attackers.

    During the same period, Palestinian attackers have killed at least 33 Israelis in stabbing, shooting and car-ramming attacks.

    Human rights groups have accused Israeli forces of unlawful killings and using lethal force in situations where non-lethal measures would have been appropriate.

    Palestinian leaders say the assailants have acted out of desperation over the collapse of peace talks in 2014 and Israeli settlement expansion in occupied territory.

    The Israeli military said the Palestinian man was shot dead after attacking a soldier with a knife