WHO chief calls for end to hospital attacks in Gaza after deadly Israeli strike

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WHO chief calls for end to hospital attacks in Gaza after deadly Israeli strike

The head of the World Health Organization (WHO) on Monday called for an end to attacks on hospitals in Gaza after Israel struck one and raided another in the past few days.

“Hospitals in Gaza have once again become battlegrounds and the health system is under severe threat,” said WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus in a post on X.

“We repeat: stop attacks on hospitals. People in Gaza need access to health care. Humanitarians need access to provide health aid. Ceasefire!”

The Israeli military said Hamas militants were the targets of a strike on Gaza City’s Al Wafa hospital on Sunday, which the Palestinian Civil Defence said killed seven people.

WATCH | Medical staff detained after Israeli raid on north Gaza hospital: 

Israeli raid forces major Gaza hospital to shut down, WHO says

2 days ago

Duration 3:02

An Israeli raid shut down a major Gaza hospital on Friday, the World Health Organization (WHO) said. The Kamal Adwan Hospital was the last functioning hospital in northern Gaza, and WHO spokesperson Margaret Harris says this ‘essential’ lifeline for local Palestinians is gone.

Israeli forces also detained more than 240 Palestinians, including dozens of medical staff from Kamal Adwan hospital, on Friday. Among those detained was its director Hussam Abu Safiya, according to health authorities in the enclave and Israel’s military.

The Israeli military said the hospital was being used as a command centre for Hamas military operations and those arrested were suspected militants. It said Abu Safiya was taken for questioning as he was suspected of being a Hamas operative.

Tedros, who last week was caught up in an Israeli strike against Yemen’s main airport that he said might have cost him his life, called for Abu Safiya’s immediate release and said the Al-Ahli hospital had also faced attacks.

A man looks at papers on the ground at the site of an airstrike.
A Palestinian Civil Defence volunteer inspects the site of an Israeli strike on Al Wafa hospital Sunday. (Dawoud Abu Alkas/Reuters)

Tedros said the WHO and partners had delivered basic medical supplies, food and water to Gaza’s Indonesian hospital and transferred 10 critical patients to Al Shifa hospital. Four patients were detained during the transfer, he said.

“We urge Israel to ensure their health care needs and rights are upheld,” Tedros said.

At least 45,541 Palestinians have been killed and 108,338 wounded in Israel’s military offensive in Gaza, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry.

The war was triggered by an attack led by Hamas on southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken to Gaza as hostages, according to Israeli tallies.

Published at Mon, 30 Dec 2024 12:28:57 +0000

South Korea orders air safety probe after worst crash in country kills 179

South Korea’s acting President Choi Sang-mok on Monday ordered an emergency safety inspection of the country’s entire airline operation system as investigators worked to identify victims and find out what caused the deadliest air disaster in the country.

All 175 passengers and four of the six crew were killed when a Jeju Air Boeing 737-800 belly-landed and skidded off the end of the runway at Muan International Airport on Sunday, erupting in a fireball as it slammed into a wall. Two crew members were pulled out alive.

The top priority for now is identifying the victims, supporting their families and treating the two survivors, Choi told a disaster management meeting in Seoul.

“Even before the final results are out, we ask that officials transparently disclose the accident investigation process and promptly inform the bereaved families,” he said.

“As soon as the accident recovery is conducted, the transport ministry is requested to conduct an emergency safety inspection of the entire aircraft operation system to prevent recurrence of aircraft accidents.”

As a first step, the transport ministry announced plans to conduct a special inspection of all 101 Boeing 737-800 aircraft operated by South Korean airliners beginning on Monday, focusing on the maintenance record of key components.

Two women sitting in chairs cry and hug eachother.
Relatives of passengers of the aircraft that crashed after it went off the runway react at Muan International Airport on Monday. (Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters)

Jeju Air flight 7C2216, arriving from the Thai capital Bangkok with 175 passengers and six crew on board, was trying to land shortly after 9 a.m. local time at the airport in the south of the country.

Investigators are examining bird strikes and weather conditions as possible factors in the crash, fire officials have said. Experts say many questions remain, including why the plane, powered by two CFM 56-7B26 engines, appeared to be travelling so fast, and why its landing gear did not appear to be down when it skidded down the runway and into a wall.

CFM International is a joint venture between GE Aerospace and France’s Safran.

On Monday, transport ministry officials said as the pilots made a scheduled approach they told air traffic control the aircraft had suffered a bird strike, shortly after the control tower gave them a warning birds were spotted in the vicinity.

WATCH | Plane’s landing gear did not properly deploy: 

Investigation begins into Jeju Air crash in South Korea

9 hours ago

Duration 2:31

Authorities are investigating the cause of a plane crash at Muan airport in South Korea, after it skidded along the runway and burst into flames, killing at least 179 people on board.

The pilots then issued a mayday warning and signalled their intention to abandon the landing and to go around and try again. Shortly afterward, the aircraft came down on the runway in a belly landing, touching down about 1,200 metres along the 2,800-metre runway and sliding into the embankment at the end of the runway.

Officials are investigating what role the localizer antenna, located at the end of the runway to help in landing, played in the crash, including the concrete embankment on which it was standing, transport ministry officials told a media briefing.

“Normally, on an airport with a runway at the end, you don’t have a wall,” said Christian Beckert, a flight safety expert and Lufthansa pilot based in Munich.

“You more have maybe an engineered material arresting system, which lets the airplane sink into the ground a little bit and brakes [it].”

The crash killed mostly local residents who were returning from holidays in Thailand, while two Thai nationals also died.

Military personnel walk beside a chain-link fence. In the foreground, debris from an airplane crash is strewn on a runway.
Military personnel at the site where the aircraft went off the runway and crashed. (Kim Soo-hyeon/Reuters)

On Monday morning, investigators were trying to identify some of the last remaining victims, as anguished families waited inside the Muan airport terminal.

Park Han-shin, who lost his brother in the crash, said he was told by authorities that his brother had been identified but has not been able to see his body.

Park called on other victims’ families to unite in responding to the disaster and recovery efforts, citing a 2014 ferry sinking that killed more than 300 people. Prolonged efforts to identify the victims and cause of the sinking followed that disaster.

Flight data recorder recovered

Emergency workers were sifting through wreckage that was nearly completely destroyed when the aircraft was engulfed in an explosion of flames and debris at the regional airport near the country’s winding western coastline.

Transportation ministry officials said the jet’s flight data recorder was recovered but appeared to have sustained some damage on the outside and it was not yet clear whether the data was sufficiently intact to be analyzed.

Nuns hold white flowers and pray at a memorial for plane crash victims in South Korea.
South Korean nuns pay tribute at a memorial altar for victims of the fatal air crash at Muan Sports Park in Muan, South Korea, on Monday. (Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images)

Shares of Jeju Air hit their lowest level on record on Monday, trading as much as 15.7 per cent lower.

Under global aviation rules, South Korea will lead a civil investigation into the crash and automatically involve the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) in the United States where the plane was designed and built.

The NTSB said it was leading a team of U.S. investigators to help South Korea’s aviation authority. Boeing and the Federal Aviation Administration were also taking part.

Choi, who was overseeing recovery efforts and the investigation, became acting leader just three days ago after the country’s president and prime minister were impeached over the imposition of a short-lived martial law.

Published at Sun, 29 Dec 2024 18:26:16 +0000

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