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Seven people injured after man drives car into pedestrians in northern Italy

Eight people were injured, two seriously, on Saturday after a car rammed into a group of pedestrians in the northern Italian city of Modena. Police said the driver, in his 30s, had been arrested. He is also alleged to have attempted to stab a passerby who had tried to stop him from fleeing the scene. According to reports in the Italian press, the car crashed into a shop window after hitting the pedestrians on a road in the central area of the city. The driver is alleged to have “aimed for the pavement, hitting a bike” before crashing “head-on” into a woman, the Modena mayor, Massimo Mezzetti, told the Ansa news agency. The mayor said the woman’s legs were crushed on the impact. The driver is an Italian national born in the Lombardy city of Bergamo and of north African origin, the mayor said, adding that he lives in the Modena area. The two seriously injured pedestrians were taken to Maggiore hospital in Bologna. Mezzetti said the circumstances of the incident were still unclear. Italian press reports said four or five people had helped to capture the driver after chasing him. One man told Ansa that he disappeared behind parked cars before reappearing, allegedly “with a knife in his hand”. Mezzetti said “he was seen with a knife in his hand, but he didn’t manage to stab anyone. It seems like he was trying to hit someone”. He added: “We need to understand what’s behind this act. But it was a dramatic event. I am deeply shaken. Whatever it was, it was extremely serious. If it turns out to be an attack, that would be even more serious.” The mayor said he wanted to thank the people who helped to capture the driver, saying “they showed courage and great civic sense”. One of the injured pedestrians told Rai news that he saw the car crash on to the pavement “at high speed” and heard the sound of “people being hit”. “It was coming in the same direction as me, and I managed to jump out of the way,” he said. The man added that the driver appeared to be under the influence of alcohol or drugs, although authorities haven’t confirmed this. In a message posted on social media, Italy’s prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, expressed her solidarity “with those who were injured and their families”.

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Israeli strikes kill six in southern Lebanon hours after extension of ceasefire

Israel carried out airstrikes in southern Lebanon, killing at least six people, including three paramedics working at a health centre, just hours after its envoys had agreed with the Lebanese government to extend a ceasefire. Israel also said it had killed the Hamas military chief, Izz al-Din al-Haddad, in a targeted strike in Gaza on Friday. In a further sign that the region could be on the brink of a possible return to full-scale war, reports in the US and Israeli press said Donald Trump had been briefed on his military options in Iran, should he decide to break a five-week-old truce and resume strikes in the hope of forcing concessions at the negotiating table. Lebanon’s state-run media reported that at least five villages in the south of the country had been hit by strikes, and the Israeli military confirmed on Saturday that it was targeting what it said was “Hezbollah infrastructure” in southern Lebanon. Lebanese authorities said that an airstrike on Friday had hit a clinic run by the Hezbollah-linked Islamic Health Committee, killing six people, three of them paramedics. An Israeli military statement said it had killed Hezbollah militants preparing to fire rockets at its troops in southern Lebanon. The new strikes, which triggered a fresh exodus of civilians from the south, came hours after envoys from Israel and Lebanon completed a round of talks in Washington, with an agreement to extend a month-long partly observed ceasefire for a further 45 days, and to establish a US-supervised security mechanism between their armies. Hezbollah, however, has denounced the talks, while Israel has only partly observed the ceasefire ordered by Trump on 17 April, restricting attacks on Beirut and northern Lebanon in general while focusing its military operations in the south, where its troops have clashed with Hezbollah fighters. Israel has also kept up operations in Gaza against Hamas, confirming on Saturday that it had killed Haddad, the latest acting Hamas military chief to die in Gaza, and the last surviving Hamas senior official suspected of planning the attack on southern Israel in October 2023, which killed 1,200 people and ignited the latest Gaza war. Israel has accused Hamas of violating the fragile eight-month-old ceasefire in Gaza by refusing to disarm. For its part, Hamas has blamed Israel for failing to abide by the first phase of the truce, continuing airstrikes and stealthily moving the agreed demarcation line between the two forces westwards into Hamas-controlled parts of Gaza. In recent days, the Israeli media has been predicting a return to full-scale war across the region, as truces fray amid scant diplomatic progress. As Trump returned to the US from a visit to China on Friday, the New York Times reported that he had been briefed on US options for returning to the offensive in Iran, but that he had yet to make a decision. Pakistani-led mediation has failed to bring diplomatic progress in more than a month since Islamabad brokered a ceasefire in the Iran war, with the negotiating positions of the US and Iran still far apart.

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Abortion providers brace for more disruptions after mail-order mifepristone whiplash

Abortion providers and advocates are making plans for future disruptions to reproductive care after the US supreme court temporarily continued nationwide access to mail-order mifepristone on Thursday while several legal challenges wind their way through the lower courts. Three lawsuits, including a suit brought by Louisiana against the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), seek to limit access to mifepristone, one of two abortion medications. Limitations on abortion medication could have significant ripple effects throughout the pharmaceutical industry, allowing a single state to regulate medications for the entire country. At the same time, the FDA is conducting a review of mifepristone; the agency just this week suffered major shake-ups with the ousters of commissioner Marty Makary and the acting director of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER), Dr Tracy Beth Hoeg, the fifth person to lead the center this year. Hoeg shared on X on Friday that she “was fired”. After the decision on Thursday, “we can take a momentary sigh of relief, but there’s always 10 other threats on the horizon”, said Emily Steinert McDowell, associate director of federal policy at Reproductive Freedom for All. “We have to be prepared for the worst-case scenario,” said Bonyen Lee-Gilmore, chief external affairs officer at Patient Forward, an advocacy organization focused on later abortion care. The Louisiana case is expected to come before the supreme court again in a future term. “The supreme court has already heard a very similar case and said that there was no standing for the plaintiffs,” said David Cohen, professor of law at the Drexel University Kline School of Law. Yet legal and regulatory challenges are likely to be “a constant battle,” Cohen said. “Nothing’s ever settled. Everything is always contested. The attacks are going to keep coming, and providers are going to keep adapting, and patients are going to keep getting abortions.” Telehealth for miscarriage management and abortion care has been a major step forward, said Melissa Bayne, an obstetrician-gynecologist and member of the reproductive freedom taskforce for the Committee to Protect Health Care. She works in rural Michigan, where people in the community remember a time before mifepristone, when miscarrying patients needed to go under anesthesia for midnight procedures to prevent complications like sepsis – and they’re worried about going back to that, Bayne said on a press call on Friday. People can and should still get abortion care, she said, adding: “Michiganders have the right to abortion in our state, but we need our federal leaders to defend it for us.” Patients who need reproductive care shouldn’t have to drive hundreds of miles, Jenna Beckham, an obstetrician-gynecologist in North Carolina, said on the Friday call. “People are struggling to get by, let alone get hundreds of miles away for basic health care.” In Montana, the right to abortion is protected in the state constitution, “but that doesn’t mean that abortion care is accessible”, said Helen Weems, a family nurse practitioner and owner and founder of All Families Healthcare in Whitefish, Montana. The Rocky Mountains bisect the state, and there are expanses in the eastern half with no providers at all. A patient might need to drive 400 miles for about seven hours, sometimes over harrowing wintertime mountain passes, to access in-person care. “Being able to mail abortion pills has revolutionized abortion access in Montana and throughout the country,” Weems said on a press call last week. “There are also people with disabilities or young people who can’t talk with an adult, or people trapped in violent and controlling relationships. We talk to people all the time who can’t leave their home for whatever reason, and getting pills mailed to them means they can have the essential care that they need.” Survivors of intimate partner violence and human trafficking are especially at risk of losing the care they need if abortion medications are restricted, which would have “monumental, tragic consequences”, Julie Dahlstrom, director of the immigrants’ rights and human-trafficking program at Boston University School of Law, said on the call last week. Research from the National Bureau of Economic Research shows that restrictive abortion policies, after the Dobbs decision reversed national abortion rights, led to a 7% to 10% increase in intimate partner violence incidents in states with bans – more than 9,000 cases. With state-level restrictions following the Dobbs decision, more people are being pushed into accessing care later in pregnancy, Lee-Gilmore said. Forty states ban abortion at some point in pregnancy, and 30 of those states ban abortion after the most common period of time during which people use pills to manage abortion, which is up to 12 weeks or so. Only four states – Maryland, New Mexico, Colorado, Illinois – and Washington DC have all-trimester clinics offering later abortion care; some providers in other states may offer the care on a case-by-case basis. “All-trimester clinics are few and far between in this country, and they’re already having a hard time managing the demand for later care, and this mifepristone court ruling could really have a devastating impact on that sustainability,” said Lee-Gilmore. “People will still need abortions. They’ll just become harder to access.” On Thursday, the confusion and chaos around mifepristone access was encapsulated in the roughly 30-minute period when Justice Samuel Alito was late on the deadline he’d given himself to deliver a decision – allowing the stay to expire and temporarily creating a nationwide ban on mail-order mifepristone. “The legal back-and-forth is already creating chaos and confusion,” Beckham said. It’s not just patients but also colleagues who are confused about the “whiplash” on what is and isn’t legal, she said. Bayne said: “All physicians are worried all the time. I can’t take great care of my patients if I’m not working or if I’m in jail.” “Not just physicians and not just [advanced practice clinicians], but also nurses are scared – everyone is afraid of touching and interacting with a patient,” Beckham echoed. “Because of the changing laws and requirements, there’s a constant fear of ‘Is this legal? Am I going to be prosecuted? Am I going to go to jail?’ It impacts our ability to provide care for our patients in that moment, and it adds to the ongoing stress.” Justice Clarence Thomas wrote in his dissent on Thursday that mailing mifepristone to patients is a “criminal enterprise”, claiming that it ran afoul of the 1873 Comstock Act, an anti-obscenity law. Such statements “foreshadow a lot of concerns that we’ve been having” about possible criminal investigations, McDowell said. Even so, providers are creating plans to counter future disruptions to mail-order medications – but they come with some complications. In rural Michigan, where three or four doctors see 40,000 people, staff shortages are one of the biggest barriers to providing care, and switching to more in-person care would be a challenge, Bayne said. If mifepristone is restricted in the future, providers are ready to switch immediately to alternate treatments that are still evidence-based, like misoprostol only. “Abortion care by mail will continue, and that care will be safe and effective,” said Weems. But it is “infuriating” to have politicians and judges attempt to dictate how evidence-based medicine is practiced, she added. Cohen emphasized that people “should know that you can still get care” and that patients in the US “can get abortions safely and effectively, cheaply and widely available, despite what the court might say”. “The irony here is that abortion could be cheaper and more available because misoprostol is cheaper than mifepristone. There are no restrictions on misoprostol like there are on mifepristone – any doctor can prescribe it and any pharmacy can dispense it,” he added. Yet the temporary disruptions and ensuing confusion are reverberating across the country among patients, providers, pharmacists and others, McDowell said. “It really is a tangible impact on people’s healthcare across the country. It creates so much uncertainty for people in the times that they need as much certainty and support as they can get.”

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Arrest of Iraqi terror suspect with alleged links to Iran’s Quds Force is astonishing but not surprising

The arrest by US authorities of an alleged Iraqi commander of an Iranian-backed militia group now accused of responsibility for 18 terrorist attacks in the UK, Europe and Canada since the beginning of the Iran war is an astonishing development – yet not the least bit surprising. According to a complaint unsealed on Friday in a federal court in Manhattan, Mohammad Baqer Saad Dawood al-Saadi is allegedly responsible for organising – among other operations – a string of recent firebombings of banks and other targets in France, Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands, an arson attack against a synagogue and a shooting at the US consulate in Toronto in March, as well as – most recently – a wave of attacks on mainly Jewish targets in the UK including places of worship and charities. Most notably perhaps, al-Saadi, 32, is accused of involvement in the stabbing of two Jewish men in north London in April. The detailed complaint provides no details of the London attack but cites recorded conversations between al-Saadi and an FBI informant and an undercover FBI agent, in which he appeared to have referred to operations in Europe while trying to set up new attacks on Jewish targets in the US. Al-Saadi also allegedly posted claims of responsibility for attacks on Snapchat and Telegram in the name of Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamia (HAYI), a supposed Islamist militant group, the complaint said. He was reportedly detained in Turkey, though the details are unclear. In a development few observers anticipated, the individual allegedly responsible for a wave of frightening if nonlethal violence across a dozen countries is now in solitary confinement in a federal jail in Brooklyn. That a senior official in an Islamist militia in Iraq – which was formed and supported by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) – is the prime suspect is also no huge revelation for investigators and analysts. It has long been suspected that the IRGC – more specifically its Quds Force, which specialises in clandestine operations overseas – was responsible for the attacks that have caused concern and fear in recent weeks. Iran has a long history of such unconventional operations, all designed to divert, distract and destabilise current or potential enemies. For decades, Tehran’s key tactic has been to work through loyal proxies overseas – or those the proxies themselves can recruit. This provides several layers of cover obscuring the original instigator of the violence. One clue indicating IRGC involvement was that HAYI was unknown before the war in Iran, appearing for the first time in early March on social media channels associated with Iran-backed Islamist militia in Iraq. Its posts claiming responsibility or showing imagery of attacks were made so soon after each operation that it was clear their author was very close to whoever had organised them – possibly even the same individual. Some posts appeared before attacks, suggesting targets that were then hit. Al-Saadi allegedly posted many under his own name, which would appear a flagrant breach of security “tradecraft”. Another potential clue was the nature of the attacks, which was familiar to European security services, who have reported for several years that Iran has relied on criminal networks to recruit low-level “disposable” operatives motivated by the opportunity to earn relatively small amounts of money. Many appear to have a limited understanding of the nature of their target and no knowledge of their ultimate paymaster. A former drug dealer detained in France in 2024 after conducting surveillance on a Jewish businessman’s home in Munich said he had been recruited via Snapchat by a former cellmate to help with a “fraud case” and paid €1,000 (£870). In Paris in March, a 17-year-old arrested on suspicion of an abortive effort to bomb a Bank of America branch told police he had been recruited via a Snapchat group where he usually got commissions to deliver drugs. A “Mr Big” had said he wanted to intimidate the unfaithful girlfriend of a friend and offered between €1,000 and €1,400 to the teenager and two other recruits if they ignited a firework in front of the woman’s home and filmed the scene, according to a police statement obtained by Le Monde. In conversations in April with a man he took to be a senior figure in a Mexican cartel but was working for the FBI, the complaint said, al-Saadi offered $10,000 for attacks on a synagogue and Jewish community centres, which he also wanted recorded. In an earlier conversation, he had described how things in Europe were “going well” and said he did not need help there. Al-Saadi smiled throughout his initial court appearance but did not speak. Through his lawyer, he called himself a political prisoner and a prisoner of war and said he was being persecuted by US authorities for his relationship with Qassem Suleimani, the former Revolutionary Guards leader who led the Quds Force and was killed in a US drone strike in Baghdad in 2020. Al-Saadi may now find himself in the same position as many of those who were hired to commit attacks over recent months claimed by HAYI. They were recruited specifically to be deniable as well as disposable. So far, there has been no reaction from Tehran to al-Saadi’s arrest or the allegations contained in the justice department’s complaint. Al-Saadi was not required to enter a plea. He will remain in jail but could request bail.

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Peacock ‘invasion’ of Italian seaside town ruffles feathers

Federico Bruni was sitting on a bench, eating a piadina romagnola (flatbread sandwich) and minding his own business, when a peacock strutted up in the hope of a few crumbs. High-pitched squeals emanated from the direction of a disused military barracks across the road. “That would be the call to love,” Bruni said. “The male peacocks are courting the female ones – we’re in peak mating season.” As another couple of peacocks wandered by, their iridescent trains sweeping the pavement behind them, this could be mistaken for a wildlife park. But the scene is Punta Marina, a seaside town on the Adriatic coast of Italy’s Emilia-Romagna region that has been colonised by the birds, to the delight – or despair – of its approximately 1,000 residents. The birds have made their home in the gardens of abandoned properties and perch on rooftops and fences, or peek out from trees. They carefully navigate the traffic, sometimes tapping their beaks on the windows of parked cars after catching their reflection. The Guardian saw one shamelessly leaping over the gate of a block of flats and doing a poo on the entrance steps. They don’t bother Bruni, who frequently comes to his holiday home in Punta Marina. “It’s no different to seeing a cat, really, they’re part of the fabric of the town,” he said. Others are less welcoming. “There are too many of them,” said Francesco, who preferred not to give his surname. “They jump over the wall and on to my balcony, leaving excrement. But the main issue is the mating – the screams are keeping people awake.” His relative Marco said: “Each time I come to Francesco’s home, I tread on peacock poo outside. It’s unhygienic; the peacocks need to be contained.” Some say the peacock, a bird of Indian origin, was introduced to the European continent by Alexander the Great, or even before. Their populations are well established in parts of Europe, especially in England and Spain, and although some have been reported in Italy, their presence in Punta Marina is especially notable. Historically a symbol of immortality, peacocks feature in many of nearby Ravenna’s prized Byzantine mosaics, and over the centuries they became status symbols, once adding colour to the resplendent gardens of Emilia-Romagna’s wealthy residents. How they settled in Punta Marina is a mystery – although there are reports they were brought in as pets by a resident more than 20 years ago. “I heard that a male peacock, left to his own devices after the woman died, crossed paths with a female one in the old military barracks – they mated and it all began from there,” said Ilaria Sansavini, who owns a shop selling fresh pasta. She said she was strongly in favour of the birds. “This is their season of love and they should be left alone.” For a long time, the peacocks lived in the sprawling pine forest behind the town. But then came Covid in 2020, and for months the peacocks roamed free while people were in lockdown. The occasional human they came across gave them food, enticing them to return. There is no official data on their numbers in Punta Marina, but the population was estimated at 10 in 2018, 40 in 2023 and about 120 today. Rosario Balestrieri, an ornithologist at the Naples-based Anton Dohrn zoological station, said: “The pine forest serves as a preferred habitat and nesting refuge … but supplementary feeding actively provided by the local population has encouraged steady population growth.” While people were used to the birds’ more prominent presence at this time of year, the mating period, a recent social media post from a disgruntled female resident imitating the mating scream has gone viral, creating a media frenzy. A local police officer said some resulting reports – depicting an “invasion” of peacocks forcing people away from the town because of a possible threat to public health – were wildly exaggerated. Still, the high profile tensions have left Ravenna city council, which in recent years has been grappling with how to manage Punta Marina’s peacock population, with a dilemma. An attempt to move them in 2022 was opposed, and after that, Clama, a voluntary animal rights association, was enlisted to protect the peacocks and encourage harmony. Clama has produced leaflets and put up signs to teach residents and tourists about the birds, saying they absolutely must not be fed. “If they know it’s easier to come and snack on a sandwich in the town rather than having to forage for their own food in the pine forest, then of course they will keep coming back,” said Cristina Franzoni, a volunteer with Clama, adding that people who fed the peacocks could be fined. “They feed them because they love peacocks, but unfortunately in doing so they upset the neighbours who don’t.” “Peacock rangers”, who can be called on to clean up poo from the streets, homes or the wheels of cars have been recruited to defuse tensions, while the council is planning the first official peacock census. Other Italian regions have offered to “adopt” the birds, but Franzoni said removing them was not the solution and would cause “trauma”. She said: “We need to try to live with the animals instead of making them victims of our choices – they didn’t choose to come here, we brought them here and so must respect them.”

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Maldives diver dies in operation to recover bodies of Italians from cave

A Maldivian military diver has died during a high-risk operation to recover the bodies of four of the Italian scuba divers who drowned while exploring a deep underwater cave in the Maldives. The diver suffered underwater decompression sickness after searching for the bodies of the Italians who, according to Italy’s foreign ministry, had “apparently died while attempting to explore caves at a depth of 50 metres (164ft)”. Mohamed Hussain Shareef, the Maldives presidential spokesperson, said that Mohamed Mahudhee, a member of the Maldivian national defence force, died of the sickness after being transferred to a hospital in the capital, Male. “The death goes to show the difficulty of the mission,” he said. Authorities had temporarily suspended attempts to recovery the bodies on Friday, owing to bad weather, but resumed the search on Saturday. Mahudhee was part of the group of divers who had briefed the Maldives president, Mohamed Muizzu, on the rescue plan when he visited the search site on Friday. In total, five Italians died in the scuba diving accident in Vaavu Atoll in the Indian Ocean archipelago on Thursday, Italy’s foreign ministry said. The body of the fifth diver was found near the mouth of a cave shortly afterwards, and rescuers believe the remaining four divers are inside the same cave, which is divided into three large chambers connected by narrow passages. Working in pairs, a recovery team of eight divers had already explored two of the three chambers on Friday, but were hampered in their efforts to explore the third chamber. The search resumed on Saturday, with two Italians – a deep-sea rescue expert and a cave diving expert – expected to join the recovery effort. Italy’s foreign minister, Antonio Tajani, said the Italian government “will do everything possible to recover the bodies of our compatriots”. The deceased have been identified as Monica Montefalcone, an associate ecology professor at the University of Genoa, her daughter Giorgia Sommacal, marine biologist Federico Gualtieri, researcher Muriel Oddenino and diving instructor Gianluca Benedetti, whose body has been recovered. The causes of their deaths is unknown and is being investigated. Officials said the incident was the worst single diving accident in the Maldives, which has 1,192 tiny coral islands scattered across hundreds of miles of the Indian Ocean. The University of Genoa said Montefalcone and Oddenino were on an official scientific mission to monitor marine environments and study the effects of the climate crisis on tropical biodiversity. Montefalcone’s husband, Carlo Sommacal, said he believed an incident must have occurred and ruled out recklessness on his wife’s part. “Something must have happened,” he told Italian TV channel Rete 4. He added that his wife, an experienced diver who had survived the Boxing Day tsunami in 2004 while diving off Kenya, “had two lives – one on land and one in her environment, the water”. He described her as a disciplined diver who carefully weighed risks before each descent and recalled her telling him at times: “This one I can do, you can’t.” Diving at 50 metres exceeds the maximum depth recommended for recreational divers by most scuba certifying agencies. Depths beyond 40 metres are considered technical diving, which requires specialised training and equipment. The recreational diving limit in the Maldives is 30 metres (98ft), and experts have warned that cave divers could easily become disoriented or lost, particularly when sediment clouds reduce visibility. The Italians were passengers onboard a 36-metre luxury yacht the Duke of York, whose operating licence was suspended “indefinitely” on Saturday by the Maldivian ministry of tourism and civil aviation, pending the outcome of an investigation. A website link related to the ship was not working on Saturday and the owner of the yacht did not immediately respond to a request for comment by the Guardian. Shareef said investigators were looking into why the group went below the officially permitted depth of 30 metres. Greenpeace Italia, the environmental organisation, paid tribute to Montefalcone as a passionate advocate for marine protection, and said it would miss “her professionalism and her advice immensely”. It recalled the “special light she had in her eyes” when speaking about the wonders of the sea and the importance of protecting them.

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Andalucíans to vote in election seen as gauge of Spain’s wider political change

Voters in the southern Spanish region of Andalucía will cast their ballots in an election this weekend that is likely to deliver an absolute majority to the conservative People’s party (PP) and inflict another debilitating defeat on Pedro Sánchez’s embattled socialists in what was previously one of their proudest strongholds. Sunday’s election in Spain’s most populous region – the last big poll before next year’s general election – will serve as a barometer of wider electoral opinion and could also reveal whether the popularity of the far-right Vox party is beginning to peak. The PP, which has governed the former socialist bastion for the past seven years, is seeking to frame the election as a referendum on Sánchez, the country’s prime minister, whose inner circle, party and administration are facing an array of corruption allegations. According to the polls, the incumbent PP regional president, Juan Manuel Moreno Bonilla, is on course to almost replicate his result at the last election in 2022, when the conservatives won 58 of the seats in the 109-seat regional parliament. Meanwhile, the Spanish Socialist Workers’ party (PSOE), which ruled Andalucía from 1982 to 2019, looks set for its worst-ever results, dropping from 30 seats to 28. Vox, which entered mainstream Spanish politics in the 2018 Andalucían regional election, is forecast to pick up another seat or two to add to the 14 it won four years ago. Moreno is hoping another absolute majority will mean he does not need to depend on Vox, which has been seeking to drag the PP further to the right in regional coalitions by insisting Spaniards receive priority over foreign-born people for housing and public services. The regional president appears so confident of his majority that he has rubbished Vox’s so-called “national priority” policy as “an empty slogan”. Both Moreno and the PP’s national leader, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, are keen to use Sunday’s vote to advance the party across the country by making the most of the scandals engulfing the national government. Moreno has referred to his PSOE opponent, the former national minister and deputy prime minister María Jesús Montero, as “the lady from the past” and has spoken of the need to “bury bad politics and leave the past in the past to build the future”. Feijóo has been blunter still, saying Andalucían voters need to “choose between the conspiracy that Sánchez led and Montero watched over, and [Moreno’s] crack team”. Recent events have put the socialists under even greater pressure. Montero was fiercely criticised earlier this week for referring to the deaths of two Guardia Civil officers who lost their lives while pursuing drug-traffickers off the Andalucían coast as a “workplace accident”. She later corrected herself and said the deaths had occurred “in the line of duty”. Moreno has also found himself under fire. With 42.2% of Andalucían voters identifying healthcare as their region’s biggest problem, his handling of a cancer-screening scandal has returned to the fore during the campaign. Towards the end of last year, the regional government admitted that more than 2,300 women had not been informed of their inconclusive mammogram results, meaning follow-up tests and treatments were missed. The delay in diagnosis triggered huge anger and prompted protests that culminated in the resignation of the regional health minister. Moreno insisted this week that no one had died as a result of the administrative failure – a claim that has been challenged by campaigners. Ángela Claverol, the president of the breast cancer support association Amama Sevilla, said at least six women had died because of the failure to communicate screening results. She said the cancer scandal was indicative of a wider crisis in Andalucían health services that she and many others blame on Moreno’s privatisation of the public health system. Under Spain’s decentralised system, Spain’s self-governing regions are responsible for healthcare. “It’s awful; there are delays of up to three months for cancer surgery,” she said. “There are delays for CT scans, MRIs, appointments with oncologists, radiotherapy, etc. The delays are horrendous for oncology, but at the normal level for ordinary people, if I request an appointment with the GP at my health centre, they won’t give me one for 21 days.” Claverol said the public healthcare system had collapsed because of the regional government’s growing use of private providers. “Instead of reinvesting that money in the public sector, in hiring people, in hiring doctors, in hiring specialists, in hiring administrative staff, what they’ve done is siphon it off to the private sector,” she said. Moreno, however, says his government has modernised and upgraded hospitals and equipment and increased capacity “so that more patients can be seen and waiting times can be reduced so that we can move towards a closer, more agile and decisive health system”. Housing is another significant concern for voters in Andalucía, as elsewhere in Spain. As cities such as Seville, Málaga and Córdoba suffer the effects of overtourism – including soaring rents and a shortage of places to live – local groups are urging the regional government to focus on residents rather than tourists. Juan Carlos Benítez, a member of Albayzín Habitable, a residents’ association formed two years ago in response to dramatic changes in the picturesque Albaicín neighbourhood of Granada, said the Moreno government appeared to have opted for “a strategy of quantitative tourism over qualitative tourism”. Benítez said Granada was the latest Andalucían city to fall victim to short-term thinking that favoured rapid economic growth through tourism over sustainable development. He said recent months had been “catastrophic” for the neighbourhood, with a local health centre closing and many important local buildings being sold off for redevelopment. “It’ll become a Disneyland-type centre where no real people live and which only generates money for restaurant and shop owners, but doesn’t really benefit society as a whole,” Benítez added. Pablo Simón, a political scientist at Madrid’s Carlos III University, said the results of Sunday’s election would be felt far beyond Andalucía as Spain gears up for the general election. Polls suggest that the PP will once again finish first next year, but will need Vox’s support to govern. “If Moreno Bonilla maintains his absolute majority and Vox fails to gain influence in forming a government, that will confirm the notion that Vox is now somewhat stagnant and the PP is gaining more ground,” said Simón. He said that despite performing relatively well in recent regional elections in Aragón, Extremadura and Castilla y León, there was a feeling that Vox was stalling amid internal bickering and that its chances of taking a coveted 20% of the vote might be fading. “It’s a party that’s well anchored around 13-14%,” added Simón. “That means that nationally it’s around 17%. That’s a very good result. But since they already had the idea of being at 20%, that’s backfired on them.” However, he added that any scandals involving PP-led regions – such as the conservatives’ botched handling of the deadly floods in Valencia in 2024 – could yet reverse Vox’s fortunes. Simón also said the socialists would be bracing for a “terrible” result on Sunday. “The latest poll I’ve been given shows 27 seats, so three fewer,” he said. “We’re talking about a gap of more than 20 points between the first and second party – it’s just awful.”

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Palestinians forced to demolish own homes to make way for Israeli theme park

At the bottom of a steep and densely populated valley just below Jerusalem’s old city walls, the earth has been shaken in recent weeks by jackhammers and bulldozers. These have been the sounds of Jerusalem for decades as the Israeli state has relentlessly sought to stamp a uniformly Jewish identity on to the occupied east of the city, while erasing its Palestinian character. Typically it is workers for the state and municipality at the wheel of the bulldozers, but in the al-Bustan neighbourhood, in the shadow of the 11th-century al-Aqsa mosque, the clamour is from a more recent development. It is the sound of Palestinians demolishing their own family homes. “This is something really hard. This is something bitter,” Jalal al-Tawil said as he watched a tractor he had hired, with a front loader at the front and jackhammer at the back, rip apart the last remnants of the house his father had built, which in turn had been on the site of his grandparents’ home. By Wednesday morning, most of the walls had been brought down to their foundations and the rubble pushed into a single pile. Al-Tawil left the thick knotty root of a 35-year-old grapevine until last. “It used to provide grapes for all of al-Bustan,” he said. The spring vine leaves had already sprouted along the trellis above him, but he was resigned to the fact they would never again bear fruit. The experience of demolishing his own family’s home and history had drained al-Tawil, but it came down to brutal economics. The Jerusalem municipality had told him it would cost him 280,000 shekels (£72,000) if its workers demolished the house. Hiring his own equipment and labour would cost al-Tawil less than a tenth of that. “Also, if they do it, they will uproot the land and make a complete mess,” he said. For him it was like being given the choice between suicide or being murdered, he said. More than 57 homes in al-Bustan, part of the larger Silwan district of East Jerusalem, have been demolished in the past two years with at least eight designated for demolition in the next few weeks. On the site a biblical theme park called the Kings Garden is to be built, supposedly where King Solomon took his leisure three millennia ago. The park is designed to be part of a spreading, largely settler-driven, archaeological project focusing exclusively on Jerusalem’s Jewish past and centred on what has been called the City of David – despite the view of many Israeli archaeologists that the visible remains date to other eras, before and after King David’s iron-age reign. Aviv Tatarsky, a senior researcher at Ir Amim, a group advocating for an equitably shared Jerusalem, says al-Bustan encapsulates the erasure of Palestinians from both geography and history. “Israel is not willing to recognise the bi-national, multi-ethnic, multicultural reality of Jerusalem and it is wiping out first and foremost Palestinians – but really anything that is not Jewish, and then glossing it over with this Disneyfied nonsense,” he said. “If this happens to the end, Israelis will go there and they will see the story of the park and they will be completely ignorant of the fact that lives were destroyed, a whole community was destroyed to make space for it.” The shadow of the Kings Garden theme park has hung over al-Bustan for nearly two decades, but the bulldozers have been held back until now by Palestinian resistance, combined with international opposition and some ambivalence within Israeli politics. All three barriers have fallen since the 7 October 2023 Hamas attacks, the ensuing Gaza war and the restoration of Donald Trump as US president. Ambassadors from other countries still visit and pledge support, but with Washington’s support, their combined intervention has proved ineffectual. “There are stray dogs who go around the neighbourhood at night who feel more safe and secure than we do,” said Mohammad Qwaider, 60, a father of six. He recently demolished the part of the house which has been a family home for more than half a century, in the hope of appeasing the planners. This week, however, a man from the municipality came to warn him that the bulldozers would be back to level the rest of it. Qwaider has chronic back problems, a son with special needs, and an infirm elderly mother who is unable to move, and he argues they have no other options. “If they demolish our house, we will put up a tent. We will not leave,” he said. “Maybe they misunderstand our mentality as Palestinians. We are not an easy target. You cannot take our land.” His mother, Yusra, is confined to a bed in a small ground-floor room. Her life story embodies modern Palestinian history. She was born 97 years ago in Jaffa but her family was forced to flee in 1948 in what Palestinians call the Nakba (the Catastrophe), the mass displacement which is the other side of the historical coin of Israel’s independence in that year. Nakba commemoration day fell on Friday, the day after Israeli Jews asserted their control with a nationalist march through the old city to mark Jerusalem Day, chanting “death to Arabs”. From Jaffa, Yusra Qwaider’s family sought shelter in a village called Yalo in Jordanian-controlled territory west of Jerusalem. In 1967 they were driven out again in the six-day Arab-Israeli war, and Israeli forces demolished their house and the rest of the village. From there they went to the Jewish quarter of Jerusalem’s old city in 1970, but were only able to stay three years before large parts of the district were demolished by the city’s new masters. “After the Jewish quarter, we came here to Silwan. From here, we are not leaving. Not me, and not my children,” she said. Two doors down, Fakhri Abu Diab, the al-Bustan community leader, took the same decision when his family house was demolished in 2024. Now he and his wife, Amina, live in a portable cabin amid the rubble of what was once their family home of four generations. Only part of the kitchen of the old house has been left standing among the ruins. “This is where we used to eat with my children, my grandchildren,” Abu Diab said. “They demolished our past. They demolished our memories. They demolished our dreams. They demolished my childhood, our childhood, and they demolished our future.” He compared the torture of living in the wreckage of his family’s history to a physiological illness. “My heart is burning,” he said. “Maybe you see me sitting with you, talking to you, but from inside, I am burning.” Abu Diab is still paying off the 43,000 shekel (£11,000) fine the municipality imposed to cover the cost of demolishing his home, at the rate of 4,000 shekels (£1,020) a month. He said he also had to pay 9,000 shekels (£2,300) for the sandwiches the police ate while enforcing the days-long operation. The Jerusalem municipality did not respond to a request for comment on its actions in al-Bustan, but told the +972 news site that the planned theme park was “being constructed for the benefit of all city residents” and al-Bustan’s houses were built illegally. “This area was never zoned for residential use, and the Jerusalem municipality is now working to build a park in an area that suffers from a severe shortage of open public spaces,” it said. The municipality also said it had tried “for years to find a solution for the residents that would also include a residential alternative, but they did not express any serious interest in reaching a resolution”. To that, Abu Diab pointed out that the community had long ago presented a master plan for the district with plenty of green space, which he said had been overruled at the political level. On the issue of permits, he said, some homes like his dated back to long before the Israeli occupation. The municipality has routinely denied building permits to Palestinians in East Jerusalem while routinely approving them for Israeli Jews. Furthermore, Abu Diab argued, the same rules were never applied to unauthorised settler outposts which constantly spring up in East Jerusalem and the West Bank. Amina Abu Diab, a schoolteacher and social worker, said her main concern now was for the children she cares for, who were facing a future of homelessness and uncertainty. “A house is a child’s dream of the future, and if somebody comes to demolish them, they destroy the dreams and a child’s sense of security,” she said. “And then what do the children think of us? That we cannot protect ourselves and we cannot protect our children.”