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Council seeking to harmonize LGU rules on goods movement permits

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE National Price Coordinating Council (NPCC) said it will establish a technical working group (TWG) to review and harmonize local government unit (LGU) regulations on the movement of agricultural goods.

In a statement, NPCC Chair and Trade Secretary Alfredo E. Pascual said Justice Undersecretary Geronimo L. Sy will take the lead in establishing the TWG.

Mr. Sy said that the Department of Justine “has the enforcement capability to correct the policies and procedures being implemented by the LGUs, in accordance with existing laws.”

The TWG will include representatives of the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) and the Department of Agriculture (DA).

Producers such as the United Broilers Raisers Association, Inc. (UBRA) and the Philippine Chamber of Food Manufacturers, Inc. (PCFMI) have raised concerns about the movement of raw materials within agricultural zones.

According to UBRA and PCFMI, LGUs are imposing permit requirements on the movement of such goods, with local governments citing the need to contain African Swine Fever.

Mr. Pascual said that the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) will also work with the DILG on the proper implementation of Executive Order No. 41, which suspended the collection of pass-through fees by LGUs.

Chaired by Mr. Pascual, the NPCC convened on Wednesday to address the concerns of manufacturers, which could affect the availability of basic necessities and prime commodities (BNPCs).

The council proposed monitoring by the DA, DTI, and the Department of Information and Communications Technology.

The DTI said that the council agreed that integrating price monitoring data in a digital system is vital to the stabilization of BNPC prices.

“With accurate, real-time data, the agencies and consumers will be equipped to make smarter and more informed decisions,” it added.

The NPCC meeting was also attended by the Sugar Regulatory Administration, Department of Environment and Natural Resources, Department of Transportation, the National Food Authority, Philippine Competition Commission, and the National Economic and Development Authority. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

Congressman urges gov’t to build monorails, trams

FREEPIK

 

A CONGRESSMAN has urged the government to build monorails and trams to help ease traffic congestion and the commuter experience, amid the looming phaseout of jeepneys as part of the government’s Public Utility Vehicle Modernization Program (PUVMP).

“If we can provide our citizens with a proper monorail or light rail system, the need to bring a car will decrease,” Manila Representative Joel R. Chua said in a statement.

“Much of the EDSA congestion comes from vehicles from northern NCR (National Capital Region) and central Luzon provinces, and from commuters from the east and west of EDSA going to the Makati and Manila,” Mr. Chua, also the vice chairperson of the House Metro Manila Development committee, said.

He noted that monorails would suit the main roads connecting Manila City and Quezon City, while tramway lines could be built in the port areas between Manila City and the province of Cavite, central Luzon.

Mr. Chua also called for additional light rail lines from Manila  City to the province of Laguna, which is located in south of the capital, to ease traffic along southbound expressways.

“This would ease commuters to and from Cavite and Laguna daily and weekly,” Mr. Chua said in Filipino, citing the increase of people traveling to Metro Manila from the south.

“The new train systems that will be constructed can be placed either underground, on top of bridges, or at ground level, depending on the findings of experts after feasibility studies; hence, it is necessary to commence with the said feasibility studies,” the lawmaker said.

“[Travel time] will be faster if the government builds additional train lines,” he said in Filipino.

According to the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) website, more than 300 public utility jeepney (PUJ) routes and 76 UV Express routes in Metro Manila alone have not been consolidated under the government’s modernization program.

This would mean less public transport options at the unconsolidated routes. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

Strong Group Athletics sweeps Group B of Dubai tournament

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STRONG Group fended off Al Ahly Tripoli Sports Club from Libya, 91-89, in the battle of unbeaten teams to complete a group sweep entering the quarterfinals of the 33rd Dubai International Basketball Championship yesterday at the Al Nasr Club.

Jordan Heading came through with a timely eruption of 19 points, including the game-sealing freebies in the last 18 seconds as the Filipino squad wiped out Group B with a 5-0 record.

Kevin Quiambao was steady with 17 points, three rebounds and three assists while Dwight Howard poured 11 of his 17 points in the fourth quarter laced by eight rebounds and two blocks.

Andre Roberson and Andray Blatche contributed 13 and 10 points, respectively, for Strong Group in its biggest test yet in the 12-team Dubai joust heading into the knockout stage.

At No. 1 in Group B, Strong Group will try to get over the hump against the still-to-be-determined fourth-ranked team in Group A for a seat in the Final Four — a feat it fell short of achieving after succumbing to eventual champion Al Riyadi in the quarterfinals last edition.

The wards of coach Charles Tiu started flat with an early 15-27 deficit only to find its groove, slowly but surely, with Messrs. Heading and Howard at the helm.

Strong Group finally snatched the driver’s seat at 74-73 after three quarters and managed to pull away at 89-82 off a Mr. Howard bucket before Heading doused cold water on Al Ahly’s fiery comeback.

Skipper Mohamed Sadi and Nicholas West strung six unanswered points to push the Libyan club to within 88-89 but Mr. Heading came to the rescue with steely freethrows to seal the deal.

Wajdi Omran Dawo split from the charity stripes after Mr. Heading’s late foul for the final tally.

Naseim Badrush (27), Sadi (22), Walter Muñoz (17) and West (10) led Al Ahly, which finished second in Group B with a 4-1 record. — John Bryan Ulanday

The Scores:

Strong Group 91 — Heading 19, Howard 17, Quiambao 17, Roberson 13, Blatche 10, Moore 7, Baltazar 3, Liwag 3, Escandor 2, Ynot 0, Cagulangan 0, Sanchez 0.

Al Ahly 89 – Badrush 27, Sadi 22, Munoz 17, West 10, Wesley 6, Dawo 5, Ramadan 2, Abdrahim 0, A Sedek 0, Alakrimi 0, Munam M Fellah 0, Sawie 0.

Quarterscores: 20-27, 51-50, 74-73, 91-89.

Ginebra and Phoenix eye breakthough win in pivotal Game 2 of semis 

PBA.PH

Games Friday
Mall of Asia (MOA) Arena
4 p.m. — San Miguel Beer vs Barangay Ginebra
8 p.m. — Magnolia vs Phoenix
* SMB, Magnolia leads series, 1-0

THE BURDEN of winning Game 2 is heavier on the shoulders of defending champion Ginebra and breakthrough-seeking Phoenix.

Failure to quickly strike back from their opening heartbreaker will put their respective rivals, San Miguel Beer (SMB) and Magnolia, a step closer to the clincher in the pretty short race-to-three PBA Commissioner’s Cup semifinal duel.

Worse, a second straight defeat will lead to the toughest possible situation for the Gin Kings and the Fuel Masters, who will then have to string up three wins in a row to salvage a stint in the finale.

Paramount for Ginebra and Phoenix going to today’s pivotal second matches at the MOA Arena is to find countermeasures to what worked for the opposition in the series kickoff last Wednesday.

The Gin Kings yielded a close 90-92 setback to the Beermen in Game 1, doomed by a couple of missed defensive rebounds and a critical offensive error in the dying seconds.

“We are going to try to find a way to beat this good team, tough team,” Ginebra coach Tim Cone said ahead of their 4 p.m. tiff with SMB and its current iteration of the “Death Squad.”

“They have a lot of different kinds of weapons. They got their own version of the ‘Death Five’ except that (import Bennie) Boatwright is playing Arwind Santos. It’s like Arwind and June Mar (Fajardo) together and the ‘Death Five’ except Mr. Boatwright is five inches taller, 30 pounds heavier, and shoots the ball as well as Arwind did. Just makes our job even harder.”

Youth-laden Phoenix fought the playoffs-savvy Hotshots toe-to-toe in a duel that went down to the wire before conceding, 79-82.

“Going to Game 1, most of their players have semifinal experience. That was their big advantage. Now, after Game 1, the Phoenix Fuel Masters roster, we all have semifinal experience. So that’s what we needed. We should be fine coming into Game 2,” said a defiant Phoenix mentor Jamike Jarin.

Magnolia and SMB recognize the extra work needed to repeat against their opponents.

“We just won the (first) game so obviously they’re going to do all they can to win the next one. It’s a big game so for us, we have to do better, learn from our mistakes (in Game 1),” said Magnolia import Tyler Bey. — Olmin Leyba

Gorayeb and Romeros set sights on transforming Capitol1 Solar Energy from PVL contender into champion

WHEN battle-scarred, championship-decorated coach Roger Gorayeb sat down and talked to the passionate sister tandem executives of Milka and Mandy Romero last Saturday to form Capitol1 Solar Energy, one of their goals was to gradually form a team that could evolve from a contender into a champion.

After all, Rome wasn’t built in a day.

“Great teams take time to build,” said Milka (Romero) during yesterday’s (Jan.25) team launch at the Milky Way in Makati. “We hope we can create a formidable team in the next two to three years. We want to create a culture and elevate our team.”

Mandy (Romero), for her part, said they would bring in their passion reminiscent of their father, avid sportsman and patron Mikee Romero.

“Our inherited passion for winning, we want to have a competitive spirit, something we learned from our dad,” she said.

Also in the presser were the Romeros’ mom and GlobalPort President Sheila Romero, Premiere Volleyball League (PVL) President Ricky Palou and Chair Tonyboy Liao and Capitol1 Solar Manager Ed Galvez. Mr. Gorayeb, for his part, vowed to use his vast experience that led to nine championships in the Shakey’s V-League — the precursor of the PVL — to help the Power Spikers compete.

Mr. Gorayeb recently held a two-day tryout recently that drew 75 players in the first and around 50 in the next with 23 making it to pool, including shoe-ins Jorelle Singh, Heather Guinoo, Aiko Urdas, Jannine Navarro, Vira May Guillema and May Macatuno.

“We’ll eventually trim it down to 20 soon,” said Mr. Gorayeb. — Joey Villar

No escape for Alcaraz as Zverev roars into Australian Open semis

Alexander Zverev — REUTERS

MELBOURNE — Alexander Zverev served up a huge shock at the Australian Open on Wednesday by stunning second seed Carlos Alcaraz to make the semifinals after third seed Daniil Medvedev fought hard to avoid an upset at the hands of Hubert Hurkacz.

Ukrainian qualifier Dayana Yastremska and Chinese 12th seed Zheng Qinwen earlier progressed to the last four of a Grand Slam for the first time after contrasting victories from a wide open section of the women’s draw.

Mr. Zverev was near-flawless on his delivery early in the clash on Rod Laver Arena and the sixth seed took advantage of mistakes from the racket of Mr. Alcaraz to lay the foundation for a 6-1 6-3 6-7(2) 6-4 victory.

Two years on from Rafa Nadal’s “Miracle of Melbourne” when the Spaniard battled from two sets down to beat Medvedev in the final, his 20-year-old compatriot came to life by edging the third set but there would be no escape for Mr. Alcaraz.

Battling fatigue and an issue with his toes, German Mr. Zverev held firm in the face of relentless pressure to secure the win and set up a Friday semifinal showdown with Mr. Medvedev, who has won 11 of their 18 previous meetings.

Third seed Mr. Medvedev, who lost back-to-back Melbourne Park finals in 2021 and 2022, pounced on the few chances offered up by Pole Mr. Hurkacz to get closer to returning to the title clash with a 7-6(4) 2-6 6-3 5-7 6-4 win.

The former US Open champion has sometimes found it hard to get the Melbourne Park crowd on his side but has received great backing this year and will hope to ride that support when he plays Mr. Zverev.

Ms. Yastremska kept things on track with a swift 6-3 6-4 win over giant-killing Czech teenager Linda Noskova to become the first women’s qualifier into the semis since the 1978 event.

The world number 93, who had already taken out Grand Slam champions Marketa Vondrousova and Victoria Azarenka during her stellar run, meets Ms. Zheng who came from behind to beat world number 75 Anna Kalinskaya.

Ms. Zheng overcame a slow start to outclass unseeded Russian Ms. Kalinskaya 6-7(4) 6-3 6-1 and join Yastremska in the semi-finals of a major for the first time and the Chinese player will also crack the top 10 when the rankings are updated on Monday.

The 21-year-old is looking to emulate her idol Li Na and win the Australian Open. — Reuters

Zheng aiming for Djokovic ‘chill’ in semi-final

ZHENG Qinwen reached the semi-finals of the Australian Open for the first time with her win over Anna Kalinskaya on Wednesday, and now the Chinese 12th seed wants to learn to be as chilled as men’s world number one Novak Djokovic.

Zheng defeated Russia’s Kalinskaya 6-7(4) 6-3 6-1 in the quarter-final and afterwards spoke of her brief chat with Djokovic the previous day when they crossed paths after her practice session, as the Serb was about to take on Taylor Fritz in his quarter-final.

“Well, that talk was really fast, honestly, I talk with him before his match,” Zheng said.

“You know, he came to say hi to me, so chill. Looks like he doesn’t have a match. Because me, before a match, I’m really focused and I don’t want to talk with anyone.

“I really want to learn that chill from the top players, because I think that is what I’m missing.”

The 21-year-old was far from chilled as she lost the opening set against Kalinskaya, despite breaking the Russian’s serve twice early on.

“I think at the beginning of the first set I’m just thinking too much,” Zheng said.

“That’s why I lost the first set, because I got those early breaks, then later on I’m not able to keep my serve.

“Of course, that’s one of my problems. So when I lost the first set I tried to tell myself to stay focused, don’t think too much.”

Zheng had no problem holding her serve in the next two sets, and she hit 10 aces over the match compared with Kalinskaya’s two.

“I think my serve just gets better and better as the match goes on,” Zheng said.

“Of course, I think there is lot of things I need to improve, especially in the percentage. I still think there is lot of margin I can still improve a lot in my serve.”

There isn’t much time to improve things now, as Zheng faces Ukrainian qualifier Dayana Yastremska on Thursday for a place in the final.

“Well, I don’t know if you can improve in less than 24 hours,” Zheng said with a smile.

“Yeah, basically I think just trying to recover, and I think about what I have to do for the next match and enjoy on court, focus on the present.

“I mean, there is nothing I can change too much in 24 hours, right? So, yeah, I just keep it simple and let’s go for it.” — Reuters

Lions, 49ers dig in for dogfight with Super Bowl on horizon

TOSS your history lessons and memories of a woebegone franchise, and Lions coach Dan Campbell knows what you can do with your opinions about underdog Detroit in the NFC Championship Game Sunday.

“This is going to be an outstanding test for us. It’s one we’re ready for,” Campbell said. “We’re built to handle this. … Our guys will be ready to roll.”

The 49ers are in the conference championship game for the third consecutive year. Kyle Shanahan is still seeking his first trip to the Super Bowl since he became San Francisco’s head coach.

“They’re a team that is really very aggressive in what they do,” said Shanahan, who has a 7-3 playoff record in seven seasons with the 49ers. “Their whole defense.

“See their numbers, 31st (against) the pass, but then when you watch the tape you realize they’re aggressive, mix everything up, which is going to make you susceptible to big plays but they’re fourth (in the NFL) in causing negative plays.”

Mainstream media began taking the Lions seriously with a Week 1 win at defending champion Kansas City, the first of six regular-season road wins.

Lions quarterback Jared Goff said he first realized this Detroit team was ready for spotlight games such as this week’s when they won at Green Bay to end the 2022 regular season.

Neither team is short on star power.

Goff, who grew up in the Bay Area, knows his way around Levi’s Stadium, too, from his time with the Rams. Goff is 3-6 in his career against the 49ers, but he hasn’t thrown an interception in four consecutive playoff starts and had multiple TD passes in each of his past four games in San Francisco.

“There’s four teams left. These are the times you dream of as a kid; we’re one win away from the Super Bowl,” said Goff, who is 4-3 in the playoffs as a starting quarterback and 2-0 with the Lions, who are in the conference championship game for the first time since 1991.

Shanahan said wide receiver Deebo Samuel didn’t practice Wednesday but his shoulder feels better. He’ll need no introduction to the Lions. Samuel caught nine passes for 189 yards and a touchdown in Campbell’s first game with the Lions, a 41-33 win for the 49ers at Detroit in 2021.

Lions center Frank Ragnow, fighting ankle and knee injuries, plans to play but was “definitely stiff” at the outset of practice this week. Ragnow said Goff and Detroit’s veterans are “hardened” by the low points with the franchise.

Ragnow repeated a framework shared by Campbell with context of the rise to within a game of the Super Bowl.

“I’ve been at the lowest, I’ve been at the highest. It helps,” Campbell said. “You learn a lot. I’m glad I’m not there anymore.”

Campbell doesn’t deny he’s a risk-taker. He said he’s willing to “give up something to get something” as a general approach that specifically applies to his “salty” defense. He reminded his defense if it will hit and disrupt, dividends are realized in the fourth quarter.

“You see our

Selective risk-taking applies to the quarterbacks in this game. But the more apt description of the overall offensive approach might be bully-ball.

The Lions average 135.9 rushing yards per game, and San Francisco held opponents to an average of 89.7 rushing yards before allowing an individual 100-yard rusher last week (Packers RB Aaron Jones, 108). The 49ers rushed for 140 yards per game in the regular season.

Disrupting quarterback Brock Purdy is one of Detroit’s top priorities this week. The Lions are allowing 338 passing yards per game in the playoffs but kept the Rams and Buccaneers to 33 percent third-down conversions.

“Every week it’s been sort of been a little bit different based on who they’re playing — how they play guys and certain receivers — it’s always a little bit different with them,” Purdy said. “As a quarterback you’ve got to know that they’re going to be aggressive and they can make a play. It’s a fine line.”

One of Purdy’s four career losses in 21 starts was in the 2023 NFC Championship Game to the Eagles. He left the field with a torn ulnar collateral ligament in his right arm, which led to offseason surgery. Purdy said he’s “hungry to get to the next game,” casting his focus forward rather than rewinding to last year.

Shanahan, 2-0 in his career against the Lions, expects balance from the Lions. He also stressed the offense is willing to give opponents “opportunities” by trying to steal possessions in going for it on fourth down.

“You understand it, you prepare for it,” Shanahan said. “Those guys are trying to steal possessions as much as they can. I’ll tell you after the game whether that’s a good or a bad thing for us.

“Any time you try to steal possessions, you’re offering an opportunity to lose possessions. … Those are big opportunities for us, too.”

When it comes to potential Super Bowl LVIII matchups, the Baltimore Ravens battered the Lions, 38-6, and won at San Francisco, 33-19, in the regular season.

The Lions beat the Chiefs, 21-20, in Week 1. Kansas City did not play the 49ers in 2023. — Reuters

Bucks redemption

If there was anything the firing of Adrian Griffin proved, it’s that the presence of stars makes winning an immediate objective. And, in this light, there can be no mistake: “winning” means nothing less than claiming the ultimate prize. The erstwhile head coach was in possession of a seemingly heady 30-13 slate halfway through his first season, good enough for second in the competitive East. And yet he got the axe because of unmistakable signs that he did not have the tools needed to steer the Bucks to a championship run.

In the end, it didn’t matter that Griffin got the appointment because of an endorsement from Giannis Antetokounmpo. The two-time Most Valuable Player awardee withdrew his support as soon as it became clear that his initial bet would not be able to grow into the job fast enough to his liking. That the Bucks went all in for Damian Lillard, even at the expense of highly regarded Jrue Holiday, served to underscore the win-now mode that permeated the locker room, and the ensuing realization that someone else — less behind the ears, more championship-savvy — was needed at the helm.

It’s easy to look back and say the Bucks didn’t exactly change gears midstream. After all, they already had Mike Budenholzer, who netted them the Larry O’Brien Trophy in 2021 — manning the fort. Their very impatience led them to give him the pink slip after an unanticipated first-round exit in the immediate past Playoffs. Never mind that he poured himself into his work despite losing his brother to an accident, and that Antetokounmpo suffered from an injury and missed two games in the series. They were looking to improve their standing pronto, and so swung the pendulum the other way to settle in on Griffin.

Now, the Bucks have apparently gone the other extreme. As if to highlight their  faux pas, they’ve decided to tap Doc Rivers for the hot seat. Just like Budenholzer, he has gone all the way. He just did it with a far more talented roster, and at a time when the National Basketball Association was vastly different. Sixteen years removed from reaching the pinnacle of success, he needs to show that he’s equally adept with his Xs and Os in a pace-and-space environment. And to argue that this is a big ask would be an understatement.

Rivers’ accomplishments notwithstanding, he has developed a reputation as a poor tactician. Not for nothing has he already lost 10 Game Sevens, including his last five. And not for nothing has he wasted the last nine opportunities to steer his charges to the conference finals. Will he be the Bucks’ steadying force en route to redemption? Or will he slowly wear out his welcome, similar to his stints with the Clippers and Sixers? These questions are best answered by outcomes. In the meantime, he brings hope.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

US Navy intercepts missiles in Red Sea while escorting Maersk ships

THE USS DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER conducted flight operations on Jan. 12 in response to increased Iranian-backed Houthi malign behavior in the Red Sea. — US DEFENSE DEPT./NAVY PETTY OFFICER 2ND CLASS ZACHARY ELMORE

COPENHAGEN — Maersk said explosions nearby forced two ships operated by its US subsidiary and carrying US military supplies to turn around when they were transiting the Bab al-Mandab Strait off Yemen, accompanied by the US Navy.

“While en route, both ships reported seeing explosions close by and the US Navy accompaniment also intercepted multiple projectiles,” Maersk said in a statement, adding it was suspending Red Sea transits by vessels of the US subsidiary.

A spokesperson for Yemen’s Houthi military forces said they fired ballistic missiles at several US warships that were protecting two US commercial vessels.

Both commercial vessels are operated by Maersk Line, Limited (MLL), its US subsidiary that carries cargo for the Department of Defense, Department of State, USAID, and other US government agencies.

Both are enrolled in the Maritime Security Program (MSP) and Voluntary Intermodal Sealift Agreement (VISA) with the US government, which is why they were escorted through the strait by US Navy vessels, Maersk said.

MSP and VISA are programs run by the US Defense Department to transport forces, supplies and equipment during times of war or national emergency.

The vessels and crew were unharmed and were being escorted back to the Gulf of Aden by the US Navy, Maersk said. Bab al-Mandab is the outlet of the Red Sea, between Yemen on the Arabian Peninsula, and Djibouti and Eritrea on the African coast.

The Houthi military spokesperson, Yahya Sarea, said in a statement that Houthi forces targeted several US warships with ballistic missiles on Wednesday in a “clash” that lasted more than two hours and led to a US warship being directly hit and the two commercial vessels having “to withdraw and return.”

“Several of our ballistic missiles struck their targets despite warships’ attempts to intercept them,” the statement said.

A US official said no ships were hit. “No US warships or commercial vessels were struck by Houthi missiles today,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Houthi forces fired three anti-ship ballistic missiles toward the US-flagged container ship Maersk Detroit on Wednesday as it was transiting the Gulf of Aden, the US Central Command said separately.

There were no reports of injuries or damage to the ship, it added in a statement.

‘ESCALATION OF RISK’
On Jan. 5, Maersk said it would divert its container vessels away from the Red Sea for the foreseeable future. Until Wednesday, MLL ships were the exception, but that would no longer be the case, Maersk said.

“Following the escalation of risk, MLL is suspending transits in the region until further notice,” it said on Wednesday.

Seafarers remain in the firing line and have signed agreements to receive double pay when entering the high-risk zones.

“There’s a feeling of vulnerability,” Stephen Cotton, General Secretary of the International Transport Workers’ Federation, the leading union for seafarers, told Reuters.

“The feedback from the (ship) captains is certainly on the container trades, they are much happier to go around the Cape.”

US maritime labor organizations have been separately concerned about the impact on US flagged ships, which in recent weeks have been subjected to what nine unions called “the most significant attacks on the United States Merchant Marine in more than half a century.”

“It is critically important that US-flag vessels carrying commercial, military and foreign aid cargoes are provided the necessary protection from the United States military as they transit the increasingly treacherous waters of the Red Sea,” the unions wrote in a Jan. 19 letter to the US Transport Command. — Reuters

Israel denies attacking UN compound in Gaza

A view shows houses and buildings destroyed by Israeli strikes in Gaza City, Oct. 10, 2023. — REUTERS

GAZA/JERUSALEM — The United Nations (UN) said on Wednesday that Israeli tanks struck a huge UN compound in Gazasheltering displaced Palestinians, causing “mass casualties,” but Israel denied its forces were responsible and suggested Hamas may have launched the shelling.

The attack, which the UN said hit a vocational training center housing 30,000 displaced people in Khan Younis, southern Gaza’s main city, prompted rare outright condemnation from the United States.

“Mass casualties have taken place, some buildings are ablaze and there are reports of deaths. Many people are trying to flee the scene, but unable to do so,” UN Humanitarian Coordinator for the Palestinian Territory James McGoldrick said.

Thomas White, director of Gaza affairs for the UN agency UNRWA, said two tank rounds hit one of the center’s buildings where some 800 displaced people were sheltering. At least nine people were killed and 75 wounded. The agency’s head Philippe Lazzarini said the death toll was probably higher.

“The compound is a clearly marked UN facility and its coordinates were shared with Israeli Authorities as we do for all our facilities. Once again, a blatant disregard of basic rules of war,” Mr. Lazzarini said.

In Washington, US State Department spokesperson Vedant Patel said: “We deplore today’s attack on the UN’s Khan Younis training center.”

“Civilians must be protected, and the protected nature of UN facilities must be respected, and humanitarian workers must be protected so that they can continue providing civilians with the life-saving humanitarian assistance that they need,” Mr. Patel said.

Israel’s military initially released a statement describing the wider Khan Younis area as a base of Hamas fighters and acknowledged that fighting was taking place near large numbers of civilians.

In a second statement sent following Washington’s criticism, the military said an examination of its operational systems ruled out that its forces had struck the center. It added that a thorough review was still under way to examine the possibility that the strike was a result of Hamas fire.

Since Israel’s ground offensive began in late October, Washington has raised concerns and asked Israel for information about incidents but has rarely been openly critical of a specific Israeli action.

Hours after the attack, as night fell, UN staff were still unable to reach the area and all communications were shut down.

Israeli forces have launched their biggest ground offensive in at least a month, encircling Khan Younis where hundreds of thousands of people who fled fighting elsewhere in Gaza are staying.

Residents said that Israeli announcements warning them to leave the area came only after the operation was under way and the main road out already shut.

The bulk of the 2.3 million-strong population of Gaza is now penned into Khan Younis and the towns just north and south of it. Palestinian officials say the Israelis have cut off and besieged the city’s main hospitals, making it impossible for rescuers to reach many of the wounded and the dead.

Israel said that Hamas has “command and control centers, Hamas outposts and Hamas security headquarters” in the area.

“Dismantling Hamas’ military framework in western Khan Younis is the heart of the logic behind the operation,” the Israeli military said.

“It is a dense area and an area that consists of civilians, it is a place that requires very specific methods of action and precise operations. There is an area with shelters, there are several hospitals, several sensitive sites. We have seen terrorists use these sites.”

‘WHERE DO WE GO?’
Palestinian health officials said at least 25,700 people had been killed in Gaza in the war, including 210 in the previous 24 hours. Israel launched its assault to wipe out Hamas after fighters stormed Israeli towns on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people and capturing more than 240 hostages.

In Rafah, a small town just south of Khan Younis on the Egyptian border, an air strike hit a mosque, and residents were gathering scattered pages of holy books from among the pulverized ruins.

Several men hoisted up a concrete block and pulled away rubble, revealing the legs of a dead man in jeans. When the body was finally pulled out, they carried it on a blanket under a stretcher, chanting religious slogans.

Several bodies were later laid in plastic body bags at a morgue, where relatives wailed in sorrow, clutching the corpses.

Um Khaled Baker, whose son was among the dead, told Reuters they had fled to Rafah because it was supposed to be safe.

“I don’t even have a tent to stay in. They bombed us and my son is a young martyr. Where do we go? The old and helpless people? What can they do? Where do we go?”

The Palestinian Red Crescent Society, which runs the Al-Amal hospital in Khan Younis, said troops had blockaded its staff inside and imposed a curfew in the area, including its local headquarters, where three displaced individuals had been killed.

Israel says Hamas fighters operate in and around hospitals, which hospital staff and Hamas deny. — Reuters

Japanese man sentenced to die for killing 36 in animé studio arson

TOKYO — A Japanese man was convicted and sentenced to death on Thursday for the arson and killing of 36 people at famed animé studio Kyoto Animation in 2019, public broadcaster NHK said.

The deadly attack on the Kyoto-based studio, better known as KyoAni, had sent shockwaves not only through Japan where violent crime is rare, but also overseas given the studio’s far-reaching fan base and the audacity of the crime.

Shinji Aoba, now 45, had set the studio ablaze by dousing the entrance area of the building with petrol, also injuring 32. Mr. Aoba himself suffered heavy burns and underwent intensive treatment for nearly a year.

Media have reported that Mr. Aoba held a grudge against the studio, known for the series Violet Evergarden and other popular works, believing that it had plagiarized his novel, an allegation that KyoAni has denied.

A pillar of Japanese pop culture, animé has become a major cultural export, winning fans around the world.

The incident prompted condolences from world leaders and business executives such as Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook.

Japan and the United States are the only Group of Seven (G7) nations that carry out capital punishment. — Reuters