Israel's defence minister has ordered a "complete siege" of Gaza after Saturday's deadly attack by the terrorist group Hamas. More than 700 Israelis are confirmed dead, and dozens more have been taken hostage, after what the country's military leaders described as "Israel's 9/11". Retaliatory airstrikes on Gaza have killed more than 500 Palestinians. Afghanistan is reeling from its deadliest earthquake in two decades. The 6.3-magnitude quake, which struck the western province of Herat on Saturday, has killed almost 2,500 people and left more than 9,000 injured. France is "in the throes of national psychosis" over an outbreak of bedbugs, says The Daily Telegraph. Images of the blood-sucking insects crawling around on train seats have gone viral, and the government last week held an emergency meeting to discuss the rise of the dreaded punaises de lit. 🪳😱 |
Hamas terrorists storming the Israeli border at Erez. Majdi Fathi/Getty |
The "deadly curse" of Hamas |
"This is not your usual Hamas-Israel dust-up," says Thomas Friedman in The New York Times. It is, first and foremost, "a disaster for Israel". That a tiny terrorist force was able to overwhelm the country's supposedly "impenetrable" 37-mile border with Gaza is a shocking intelligence failure. And while Benjamin Netanyahu has promised a "crushing blow" in retaliation, the Israeli PM's politics of division have "fractured Israeli society and its military". Just last week a former director general of Israel's defence ministry told a pro-democracy rally in Tel Aviv he had "never seen our national security in a worse state". |
Yet as bad as Netanyahu has been for Israel, Hamas has been a "deadly curse" for the Palestinian people. The "billion-plus dollars" it has received in aid from Qatar alone could have turned Gaza into a productive society with decent schools, universities and infrastructure. Instead, Hamas spent the cash digging tunnels into Israel and building shonky rockets. Saturday's attack will have wider geopolitical consequences, too. The real goal of the incursion, which was sanctioned by Hamas's paymasters in Iran, is to blow up the "budding normalisation of relations" between Israel and Saudi Arabia. This deal, now in the "deep freeze", would have forged an alliance between the Jewish state and the Sunni-led states of the Persian Gulf against Iran – likely boosting Hamas's more moderate rival, the Palestinian Authority. Ultimately, Hamas can never be a genuine partner for peace. The best hope now is that this "Islamist mafia" will be ousted for good. Because otherwise, sooner or later, "we'll be right back in the same situation – only worse". |
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Land artist Nikola Faller celebrates the arrival of autumn by raking fallen leaves into "charming, fleeting sculptures", says Moss and Fog magazine. During the rest of the year, the Croatian craftsman – who also creates flammable sculptures out of hay – makes his macro masterpieces in grassy fields and sandy beaches. Check out his Instagram here. |
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Americans without college degrees have "staggeringly shorter life spans" than those who do, says The New York Times. In 2021, a 25-year-old who didn't go to university could expect to live to around 75 – a decade less than someone with a degree. That gap was more than triple what it was in 1992, a scale of divergence only previously seen in the former Communist states of Eastern Europe after the collapse of the Soviet Union. | | |
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| Kenya's police officers have developed an innovative communications strategy, says The Economist: posting "breathless accounts" of their heroics on social media. "One [assailant] fired at the detective, missing his ear by a whisker," reads one description. "But in a quick rejoinder, the detective… chambered a round and gave the thug a taste of his own medicine." Another post, complete with comic-book illustrations (pictured), describes officers unleashing "an avalanche of fire" on armed cattle thieves. The cops need all the reputational help they can get: nearly 70% of Kenyans say that "most" or "all" the police are corrupt. |
Political obsessives at last week's Tory conference. Oli Scarff/Getty |
Who really cares about pronouns and HS2? |
The media coverage of last week's Tory party conference was almost entirely focused on one story, says Janet Daley in The Sunday Telegraph: the cancelled extension of HS2. But is that really the "most important matter facing the country"? The cost-of-living crisis, the economy, the housing shortage, the dire state of the NHS – all these issues affect the lives of far more people, and to a much greater extent. Yet they barely got a look in. The leak of the HS2 decision was a perfect example of the "intra-party soap opera" that gets Westminster politicos hot under the collar, but leaves the rest of us "absolutely cold".
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Another is the media's "endless debates about pronouns". How often do you find yourself arguing with friends and family over whether trans women should be referred to as "she/her"? Almost never, would be my guess, "unless you're a university student or a Human Resources officer". But again, to read the newspapers you'd think that's all anyone ever talks about. It was the same with Rishi Sunak's tweaks to Britain's net zero regulation – a decision most voters agree with, but which sent the BBC and others into "a paroxysm of hysterical condemnation". This disconnect – between what the public really thinks and cares about, and what the media thinks they should – has become "positively surreal". And it all adds to the growing distrust of the mainstream media and the "privileged elite" running the country. Our newspapers and broadcasters need to "widen their gaze". |
Dezeen has compiled a list of wacky, vibrant school campuses around the world, including the bright yellow extension at Portugal's Artave Music School; the blue, yellow and copper-clad cubes adorning the old church buildings of the Elementary School Vřesovice in Czechia; the cantilevered classrooms, rooftop gardens and deep, nautical window nooks of the Fuqiang Elementary School in Shenzhen, China; the sharp, asymmetrical angles of the Thaden School in Arkansas, US; and the cheerful, boldly coloured steel sheds of a pre-school in India. See more here. |
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If you think Londoners have it hard with Ulez, spare a thought for drivers in Singapore. Back in 1990, says Sky News, the city-state capped the number of vehicles allowed on the road at about 950,000. To become one of those lucky few, drivers have to buy a 10-year "certificate of entitlement" – prices for which have quadrupled since 2020, to £88,000. Once you've also factored in registration fees and taxes, buying a Toyota Camry Hybrid will set you back £151,000 – twice the median annual household salary, and five times more than the vehicle would cost in the UK. | It's the world's heaviest cucumber, weighing a whopping 30lbs – about the same as a mountain bike. Vincent Sjodin, known to family and friends as Vince the Veg, grew his 4ft-long record-breaker in a polytunnel, and had to erect a hammock to stop it collapsing under its own weight. Vince, from the Vale of Glamorgan, also holds the record for the heaviest marrow (256lbs). He turned up at September's UK National Giant Vegetables Championships with a 5lb potato, a tomato the size of a football, and a pumpkin that had to be driven there on a flatbed truck. |
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