Britain’s Rishi Sunak apologizes for leaving D-Day event early to return to campaigning

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Britain’s Rishi Sunak apologizes for leaving D-Day event early to return to campaigning

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak suffered a fresh setback in his struggling election campaign on Friday when he apologized for leaving D-Day commemorations early in order to give an interview attacking the main opposition party.

Sunak’s decision to leave early was met with dismay within his Conservative Party, which is trailing far behind the Labour Party in opinion polls and facing the prospect of a huge defeat on July 4.

Labour Leader Keir Starmer also attended the D-Day 80th anniversary events in northern France on Thursday and was seen talking to world leaders including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

“After the conclusion of the British event in Normandy, I returned back to the U.K.,” Sunak said in a post on X. “On reflection, it was a mistake not to stay in France longer — and I apologize.”

An elderly man in a military uniform stands with a younger man in a suit and tie on his right, and a woman in formal wear - dress and hat - to his left.
British Conservative Leader Rishi Sunak stands beside British D-Day veteran Alec Penstone, 98, on Thursday in Ver-sur-Mer, France, with Sunak’s wife, Akshata Murty, shown on the right. Sunak has apologized for leaving the event before its end. (Gareth Fuller/AFP/Getty Images)

Sunak said the D-Day events “should be about those who made the ultimate sacrifice for our country. The last thing I want is for the commemorations to be overshadowed by politics.”

World leaders including U.S. President Joe Biden and King Charles gathered in Normandy, northern France, to mark the anniversary of the Allied landings, a turning point in the Second World War. Prince William attended an event honouring Canadian sacrifices and heroism on D-Day.

Sunak spoke at a British-led event but delegated other duties to ministers including Foreign Secretary David Cameron, who was pictured with Biden, French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz at a memorial ceremony.

Sunak then recorded an interview with broadcaster ITV on Thursday after returning from France.

WATCH l American WW II hero offers praise to Ukrainian leader:

Veteran calls Zelenskyy a ‘saviour of the people’ at D-Day event

20 hours ago

Duration 0:46

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy kneeled to share a moment with a veteran at an event marking the 80th anniversary of D-Day, with each man praising the other for their war efforts.

‘Total dereliction of duty’

Senior Labour spokesperson Jonathan Ashworth accused Sunak of “choosing to prioritize his own vanity TV appearances over our veterans,” and “it is yet more desperation, yet more chaos, and yet more dreadful judgment.”

Liberal Democrat Leader Ed Davey accused the prime minister of a “total dereliction of duty.”

WATCH l Sunak makes wet, impromptu election call last month:

U.K. PM Rishi Sunak calls snap election in political gamble

16 days ago

Duration 2:18

U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak called a snap election for July 4, months earlier than expected. His conservative party risks a heavy defeat, down 20 points in the opinion polls, but he appears to hope improved economic data will help his party come back from behind.

Sunak has tried to portray himself as the person best placed to look after Britain’s security and he recently pledged to introduce mandatory national service if he wins the election.

His campaign got off to a bad start last month when he announced the election date under a downpour of rain, competing to be heard against Labour supporters blaring a pop song associated with the party’s crushing 1997 election victory.

Sunak’s Conservative Party is lagging about 20 points behind the opposition Labour Party in opinion polls. The party, in power for over 14 years, could also be vulnerable on the right after Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage changed course after announcing he wouldn’t run in the election by taking over leadership of the right-wing Reform UK party.

Chris Hopkins, political research director at the polling company Savanta, said Sunak was already seen by voters as out of touch.

The latest “political misjudgment seems almost laser-guided in causing Rishi Sunak and the Conservative Party as much political pain as humanly possible,” he said.

LISTEN l BBC’s domestic political correspondent Rob Watson on election stakes:

Front Burner24:02Election season in the UK, again


In the interview with ITV on Thursday, Sunak doubled down on claims this week that if Labour win power they would raise taxes by 2,000 pounds ($3,500 Cdn) per household.

Labour denies it has any such plan, and accused Sunak of lying for claiming the estimate came from the civil service, which has said it did not endorse it. The head of Britain’s statistical watchdog said on Thursday the Conservatives should be clearer about the source of Sunak’s claims.

Published at Fri, 07 Jun 2024 11:00:19 +0000

‘Everyone is in pieces’: Witnesses to Israeli strike on Gaza shelter say there’s nowhere safe to go

WARNING: This story contains details about people being killed or hurt in an airstrike in Gaza and graphic images showing blood and injuries.

Mahmoud Nijim was jolted awake by the sounds of bombs falling nearby early Thursday, as the Israeli military attacked the site of a UN-run school in central Gaza that was serving as a shelter for displaced Palestinians. 

“We came running to the school and we found children martyred,” Nijim, who lives nearby, told CBC News freelance journalist Mohamed El Saife. “All of the martyrs were women and children.” 

“Everyone is in pieces,” he said. “Blood is everywhere on the rubble.” 

He said this was yet another place where people sought safety after fleeing the Israeli strikes that have levelled much of Gaza, only to face more destruction.

“People don’t know where to go,” he said. “There isn’t a single safe place in Gaza.”

The UN Palestinian refugee agency (UNRWA) ran the school in the Nuseirat refugee camp, which was sheltering 6,000 displaced people at the time of the strikes, UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini said.

A man stands inside a building that is heavily damaged from an explosion.
Mahmoud Nijim said he was asleep when he woke up to the sound of three or four explosions after 1 a.m. local time Thursday and ran to the nearby shelter, at a UN-run school, to find people ‘thrown around’ after the Israeli military bombed the site in central Gaza that served as a shelter for some 6,000 displaced Palestinians, killing at least 35 people. (Mohamed El Saife/CBC)

Israel carried out what it described as a targeted airstrike on Hamas fighters who had sheltered inside the site, with a top official saying at least 35 people had been killed. Health officials in Gaza said Israel’s strike killed at least 40 people.

Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) spokesperson Lt.-Col. Peter Lerner said the military is “very confident in the intelligence” that the site was being used as an operational base for militants. 

He said 20 to 30 fighters were located in the compound, and many of them had been killed, but had no precise details as intelligence assessments were being carried out.

“I’m not aware of any civilian casualties and I’d be very, very cautious of accepting anything that Hamas puts out,” he said, referring to the Palestinian militant group that runs Gaza and led the deadly militant attacks on Oct. 7 that precipitated the devastating conflict. 

UNRWA’s Lazzarini said the accusation that armed groups may have been based at the site “are shocking” and against International Humanitarian Law. In a post on social media platform X, he said that the agency is “unable to verify” the Israeli claims and condemned the attack on a facility sheltering so many people.

Hospital struggles to treat injured

The early morning explosion ripped through parts of the school building, tearing holes through the walls and ceilings and showering concrete chunks on the rooms where people slept.

Footage captured by El Saife showed foam mattresses that appear still wet with blood piled up among the rubble and scattered belongings. 

Sitting outside the complex Thursday, Umm Alaa Abu Daher said she woke up to the explosion and thought her son had been killed.

“I picked him up and thought he was martyred,” she said. He was alive but injured. 

“I started running outside and found everyone [was] injured and martyred,” she said.

Two foam mattresses stacked on top of one another, the bottom one covered in blood, laying atop concrete debris near a wall blown out in a bombing.
Bloodied mattresses lay inside a school that was being used as a shelter in the Nuseirat refugee camp, in central Gaza, after an Israeli airstrike early Thursday. (Mohamed El Saife/CBC)

Many of the dead and injured were taken to the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in the city of Deir al-Balah, about five kilometres away, where patients — including children — were treated on the floor of the overcrowded facility. 

A hospital spokesperson told Reuters that 14 children and nine women were among 40 dead brought to the hospital overnight, with a further 74 wounded, including 23 children and 18 women.

Dr. Ashraf Al-Attar, an emergency room doctor, told El Saife the hospital is already struggling with overcrowding and is lacking resources and equipment resulting in surgeries having to be put on hold.

“[It] made it difficult to deal with the injuries we received last night, injuries I’ve never seen before,” he said.

A boy with a bandaged head and blood caked to his face lays on a hospital floor crying as doctors treat his injuries.
Officials at the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah say doctors treated 23 injured children following the attack on the shelter in the Nuseirat refugee camp, about five kilometres away. At least 14 children were among the dead brought to the hospital, a spokesperson said. (Mohamed El Saife/CBC)

Displaced then displaced again

In the light of day on Thursday, Abu Daher was among those still at the site as people were clearing the debris of the building they’ll continue to shelter in. 

More than 1.7 million of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million people have been displaced in the eight-month-long war. 

At least 370,000 housing units in Gaza have been damaged, including 79,000 that were destroyed completely, according to a recent report by the UN Development Program (UNDP) and the Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia

A woman, wearing a red, white, black and grey patterned headscarf, sits outside in front of a damaged building.
Umm Alaa Abu Daher says she thought her son died in the explosion overnight. He was injured but alive. (Mohamed El Saife/CBC)

In recent weeks, hundreds of thousands of people were forced to flee Rafah, previously one of the only refuges for evacuees, as Israeli forces began an assault in the southern Gaza city — despite an emergency order from the International Court of Justice to halt the invasion. 

But this is the third time in the past two weeks sites where dozens of civilians have been killed where they are taking shelter. 

Israel faced international condemnation after a May 27 strike that set off a deadly fire in a tent encampment in the southern city of Rafah, killing 45 people.

The Israeli government vowed to investigate.

But Israel denied it attacked a second tent encampment the following day, near Rafah, where a further 21 people were killed.

LISTEN | Doctors Without Borders nurse describes harrowing scene at Gaza hospital: 

As It Happens6:37Utter chaos’ at one of Gaza’s last standing hospitals, says nurse

An Israeli airstrike at a UN-run school in central Gaza has killed more than a dozen people. Israel says it was targeting Hamas fighters, but locals say it was just one of several strikes in the area this week. Karin Huster, a Doctors Without Borders nurse at Al Aqsa hospital, told As It Happens host Nil Köksal that badly injured patients are lying on the floor, people are screaming for help, and bodies arriving by ambulance are being lined up in the courtyard as loved ones say their final prayers.

Calls for transparency, independent investigation

The European Union’s head of foreign policy has called for an independent investigation of Thursday’s attack. 

U.S. State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said the Biden administration has been in contact with the Israeli government and expects it to be fully transparent making information about the strike public.

At the UN, Stéphane Djurric, the spokesperson for Secretary General António Gutteres, said the attack was another horrific example of the price that civilians are paying.”

When asked if the IDF had committed a war crime, Djurric said “there will need to be accountability for everything that has happened in Gaza” since the war began immediately following the Oct. 7 attacks.

Hamas-led militants killed around 1,200 people during the attacks, according to Israel, with more than 5,000 others injured. Militants took some 250 hostages back to Gaza. There are about 130 hostages remaining in Gaza. About 85 are believed to still be alive, alongside the remains of 43 others.

Israel’s subsequent bombardments and assault on Gaza has killed more than 36,500 Palestinians in nearly eight months, according to Gaza health officials, with a further 83,000 injured.  

WATCH | Many of the injured were children: 

Israeli airstrike on UN school kills dozens

11 hours ago

Duration 2:03

An Israeli strike on a United Nations school in Gaza has killed dozens, many of them children. Israel says Hamas fighters were sheltering inside, but so were thousands of Palestinian civilians. Canada joined other countries in urging an immediate ceasefire.

Published at Fri, 26 Jan 2024 09:01:20 +0000

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