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UK, Japan, South Korea endure hottest summer on record

The UK, Japan and South Korea sweltered this year through the hottest summers since each country began keeping records, their weather agencies said Monday.Temperatures the world over have soared in recent years as human-induced climate change creates ever more erratic weather patterns.The UK’s provisional mean June-August temperature was 16.1C, which was 1.51C above the long-term …

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Yemen’s Huthis hold funeral for PM killed in Israeli strike

Yemen’s Huthi rebels held a funeral on Monday for their prime minister and 11 other senior officials killed in an Israeli air strike that decimated its political cabinet.Twelve coffins draped in flags were displayed at Sanaa’s Al-Shaab mosque, as masked gunmen patrolled the area and thousands of mourners flooded in.Huthi prime minister Ahmed Ghaleb Nasser al-Rahawi, nine ministers and two cabinet officials were killed as they attended a government meeting in the Sanaa area on Thursday.It was the highest profile assassination to be announced in Yemen in months of attacks by Israel during the Gaza war. The United States also waged an intense bombing campaign against Huthi targets from March to May this year.The Huthis have repeatedly launched missiles and drones towards Israel throughout the Gaza war.On Monday, the Israeli military said it had intercepted a drone launched from Yemen before it entered Israeli territory.On Sunday, the Huthis detained at least 11 United Nations workers as part of a round-up, prompting a protest from UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.A Yemeni security source told AFP on Saturday that Huthi authorities had arrested dozens of people in Sanaa and other areas “on suspicion of collaborating with Israel”.The Huthis also fired a missile at an Israeli tanker in the Red Sea on Sunday, reprising a campaign they have waged throughout the Gaza war.The missile landed close to the Liberian-flagged Scarlet Ray with a “loud bang”, the UK Maritime Trade Operations monitoring agency said.- ‘Bad day’ for Huthis -The Huthis, part of Iran’s “axis of resistance” of anti-Israeli groups, vowed to step up their attacks on Israel following Thursday’s killings.Their campaign of missile and drone strikes at Israel and on shipping in the Red Sea, a major cargo route, has persisted throughout the Gaza war, claiming solidarity with the Palestinians.Last week’s Israeli strike wiped out about half of the 22-strong Huthi cabinet, which plays a mainly administrative role.Rahawi, the late prime minister, was from the southern province of Abyan, which is not part of the large swathes of Yemen under Huthi control.The Huthis, who hail from divided Yemen’s rugged north, have traditionally reserved the premiership for southerners in an attempt to win hearts and minds.US-based Yemen analyst Mohammed Al Basha said Thursday’s strike may signal an Israeli shift towards targeted killings, an approach that gutted the leadership of Gaza rulers Hamas and Hezbollah in Lebanon.The attack could mark “the beginning of a campaign of targeted assassinations against both civilian and military Huthi leadership, even at informal gatherings”, he posted on X, calling it a “bad day” for the group.

Tunisian brutalist landmark faces wrecking ball, sparking outcry

Tunisia’s brutalist landmark the Hotel du Lac — a 1970s postcard icon said to have inspired a desert-roving vehicle in “Star Wars” — is being demolished, sparking calls from architects, historians and activists to save it.Built by Italian architect Raffaele Contigiani in central Tunis, the concrete-and-steel inverted pyramid opened in 1973 during a push to boost post-independence Tunisia’s tourism industry.Its daring silhouette has since enraptured brutalism and modernist architecture admirers from across the globe. But after getting caught up in inheritance disputes and mismanagement, the hotel shut down in 2000, and its 10 floors and 416 rooms have grown decrepit since.Tunisian historian Adnen El Ghali sees the Hotel du Lac as one of the world’s “top 10 brutalism jewels”.Its demolition would mean “a great loss for world heritage”, he said.LAFICO, a Libyan state investment fund that has owned the hotel since 2010, has not made any public announcements about its future.But earlier this month, its head, Hadi Alfitory, told AFP the fund had “obtained all the necessary permits for demolition”.- ‘Must be demolished’ -When construction fences went up around the building in recent weeks, outrage spread.A petition on Change.org calling to “save the urban landscape” of Tunis and preserve the “brutalist icon” collected more than 6,000 signatures within days, with a protest set to take place in Tunis in September.Alfitory said the decision to tear down the structure came after “various expert assessments” determined that “the building is a ruin and must be demolished”.Its replacement, a 20-storey luxury hotel and mall, will keep to its “concept and shape”, Alfitory said, with the Libyan fund pledging $150 million in investment and 3,000 jobs.Critics say the plan ignores both the building’s engineering achievements and its cultural resonance.”Investing and modernising does not mean demolishing and erasing collective memory and architectural heritage,” said Amel Meddeb, a member of parliament and architect who first raised alarms about the demolition permit this year.Like many, she said the proposed plan was “totally vague”, and therefore difficult to officially challenge.Safa Cherif, head of Tunisian conservation group Edifices et Memoires, said there was “no official sign explaining the nature of the work underway, nor any indication about the new project”.The Hotel du Lac has survived other close calls.Between 2010 and 2020, demolition plans were shelved, and in 2022, a wave of media campaigns led by civil society convinced the Culture Ministry to grant it temporary protection. That safeguard expired in April 2023, and the ministry declined to renew it despite an expert rebuttal maintaining that the building was indeed restorable.- ‘The main symbol’ -Parliament member Meddeb said the refusal was “a 180-degree turn”, insisting the hotel was a cultural monument worthy of saving.To Gabriele Neri, a professor of architectural history at the Polytechnic University of Turin, its loss would be profound.”These buildings are 50 years old and will soon be 60 or 100,” he said. “They are witnesses of important eras.”The Hotel du Lac is “the main symbol in Tunisia” of the independence wave that swept across African nations, when leaders like the country’s first president Habib Bourguiba “sought to project a new, modern and international image”, he added.It is an “engineering feat” with its narrow base supporting a wider top using Austrian-imported steel, said Neri, who urged authorities to preserve “as much as possible”.Across the world, he pointed out, nations are learning to embrace late 20th-century architecture rather than discard it.”In Uzbekistan, where I just returned from, the authorities have undertaken efforts to seek UNESCO recognition for Soviet monuments of the 1970s and 80s,” he said.Brutalism — a style characterised by its use of exposed concrete — had “a very powerful era in many places”, Gabriele added. It’s now “attracting a growing amount of attention, almost becoming fetishistic”, he added, citing books, magazines and movies like 2024’s “The Brutalist”.Amid this wave, Hotel du Lac as it stands could “become an attraction for high-level cultural tourism”.

Fierce winds force Gaza aid flotilla back to Barcelona

Fierce Mediterranean winds forced a Gaza-bound flotilla carrying humanitarian aid and hundreds of pro-Palestinian activists, including environmental campaigner Greta Thunberg, to return to Barcelona, organisers said on Monday.Around 20 vessels left the Spanish city on Sunday aiming to “open a humanitarian corridor and end the ongoing genocide of the Palestinian people” amid the Israel-Hamas war, said the Global Sumud Flotilla — sumud being the Arabic term for “resilience”.But “due to unsafe weather conditions, we conducted a sea trial and then returned to port to allow the storm to pass,” the organisation said in a statement, without specifying when exactly the boats returned to Barcelona.”This meant delaying our departure to avoid risking complications with the smaller boats,” it added, citing gusts that exceeded 55 kilometres (34 miles) per hour.”We made this decision to prioritize the safety and well-being of all participants and to safeguard the success of our mission.”Spanish media reported that the organisers would meet to decide whether to resume the expedition later on Monday.Among the activists from dozens of countries were Thunberg, actors Liam Cunningham of Ireland and Eduard Fernandez of Spain, as well as European lawmakers and public figures, including former Barcelona mayor Ada Colau.The flotilla is expected to arrive in Gaza in mid-September and comes after Israel blocked two activist attempts to deliver aid to the devastated Palestinian territory by ship in June and July.The United Nations has declared a famine in Gaza, warning that 500,000 people face “catastrophic” conditions.The war was triggered by an unprecedented cross-border attack on Israel by Palestinian militant group Hamas on October 7, 2023, which resulted in the death of 1,219 people, mainly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official data.Palestinian militants also seized 251 hostages, with 47 still held in Gaza, including 25 the Israeli army says are dead.Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 63,459 Palestinians, mostly civilians, according to figures from Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry which the UN considers reliable.

International media protest over journalist deaths in Gaza

More than 250 media outlets in over 70 countries staged a front page protest Monday highlighting the deaths of scores of journalists in Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza, the Reporters Without Borders media freedom group said.”At the rate journalists are being killed in Gaza by the Israeli army, there will soon be no-one left to keep you informed,” the group’s general director Thibaut Bruttin said in a statement.The protest was taken up on the website front pages of publications including Qatari broadcaster Al Jazeera, British news site The Independent, French newspapers La Croix and L’Humanite and Germany’s TAZ and Frankfurter Rundschau, according to Reporters Without Borders.Some 220 journalists have been killed during Israel’s Gaza campaign mounted in retaliation to Hamas’ October 7, 2023 attack, according to RWB data.The protest was staged one week after five journalists — some working for Al Jazeera, Associated Press and Reuters — were killed in Israeli strikes on the Nasser Hospital in Gaza’s Khan Yunis city. Earlier in August, six journalists were killed in another Israeli air strike outside the Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City.Israel said the strike on the Nasser hospital killings had targeted a Hamas camera. But the attack drew international condemnation. Even US President Donald Trump, a key Israeli ally, said he was “not happy”.Media participating in Monday’s action “demand an end to impunity for Israeli crimes against Gaza’s reporters, the emergency evacuation of reporters seeking to leave the Strip and that foreign press be granted independent access,” the RWB statement statement.RWB says it has filed four complaints at the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes it says the Israeli army committed against journalists in Gaza over the past 22 months.International media have been denied free access to the Gaza Strip since the war broke out.A few selected outlets have embedded reporters with Israeli army units operating in the Palestinian territory, under condition of strict military censorship.The Hamas 2023 attack killed 1,219 people in Israel, according to an AFP tally based on official data. Some 47 people remain hostage in Gaza out of 251 originally abducted, though only around 20 are believed to be alive.Israeli’s retaliatory campaign has killed at least 63,459 people in Gaza, according to figures from the Hamas-run goverment’s health ministry considered reliable by the United Nations.