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Earthquake rocks Surigao del Sur

A MAGNITUDE 5.3 earthquake rocked Hinatuan, Surigao del Sur in the country’s south on Wednesday morning, the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) said.

The tectonic quake, initially estimated at 5.3 magnitude, had a depth of 25 kilometers and located 32 km southeast of Hinatuan town, which felt a 7.4-magnitude tremor last month that killed three people.

Wednesday’s earthquake was deemed an aftershock of the early December tremor, Phivolcs said.

Meanwhile, the agency said 116 volcanic earthquakes had been recorded near Mt. Bulusan in Sorsogon province as of 9 a.m. on Wednesday. It urged residents near the volcano to remain cautious of potential mudflows. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Firecracker and fireworks injuries climb to 557

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE PHILIPPINE health department on Wednesday said it had recorded 114 more injuries related to lighting up firecrackers and fireworks after the New Year celebration, bringing the total cases during the holiday season to 557.

The youngest victim so far was a 10-month-old baby from Metro Manila whose right eye was hit by a legal firecracker lit by someone else at home, the Department of Health (DoH) said in a statement.

The oldest case was a 77-year-old male from Ilocos Region who suffered burns from a legal firecracker lit by another person at home.

“Household use of fireworks is a risk not only to yourself but to your family. Our data further strengthens this observation,” the DoH said.

Almost 100% of the victims were injured at home and in the streets, the DoH said, adding that most of the cases were due to legal fireworks. It said around 9% of the new cases were hospitalized due to their injuries.

Metro Manila accounted for more than half or 306 of the 557 injury cases related to fireworks and firecrackers during the holiday season, followed by Ilocos Region with 55 cases, Central Luzon with 42, and Calabarzon with 39.

Kwitis, a rocket-like pyrotechnics product, was the top cause of injuries, followed by firecrackers “5-Star,” pla-pla, boga, and “whistle bomb,” and then sparklers like luces and the “fountain.”

“Illegal fireworks are to blame for just four out of every 10 cases (216, 39%), with legal fireworks causing more injuries,” the DoH said. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Dwight Howard beefs up PHL’s Strong Group in Dubai tourney

DWIGHT HOWARD — NBA.COM

NBA veteran Dwight Howard is Philippines-bound.

The decorated big man will reinforce country representative Strong Group in the Dubai International Basketball Championship slated on Jan. 19 to 28 in the United Arab Emirates.

No less than head coach Charles Tiu confirmed the news first reported by NBA insider Shams Charania of The Athletic.

“He should be here this weekend,” Tiu on Wednesday told The STAR, expecting Mr. Howard’s hulking presence to spell the difference for the Philippine team.

“I expect him to still be dominant, especially defensively. We got him because we intend to win and we think he would give us the best chance (to accomplish it).”

Mr. Howard, the No. 1 pick of the Orlando Magic in 2004, indeed boasts a stacked resume in the NBA that should be handy for Strong Group’s Dubai bid.

He’s an NBA champion, three-time Defensive Player of the Year, five-time All-NBA First Team and eight-time All-Star with stints in the Los Angeles Lakers, Houston Rockets, Atlanta Hawks, Charlotte Hornets, Washington Wizards and the Philadelphia 76ers.

Mr. Howard, 38, also served as a vital cog for Team USA’s Redeem Team in the 2008 Beijing Olympics as the powerhouse squad featuring legendary cagers Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Carmelo Anthony, reclaimed the gold medal. Recently, Mr. Howard played for Taoyuan Leopards in Taiwan’s T1 League, where he won Most Valuable Player (MVP) for Imports and All-Star Game MVP, before trooping to another Asian squad in Strong Group.

Aside from Mr. Howard, Strong Group also scooped up the services of Australia national team mentor and former Bay Area coach Brian Goorjian as part of Tiu’s coaching staff. Mr. Goorjian steered Bay Area to a runner-up finish in the PBA Commissioner’s Cup as a guest team.

UAAP MVP Kevin Quiambao of La Salle and ace point guard JD Cagulangan of the University of the Philippines are among the notable players to headline the squad alongside the NBA legend, according to Mr. Tiu.

The full roster, including the additional imports, will be released soon as Strong Group seeks redemption after a quarterfinal exit last year led by fellow ex-NBAers in Renaldo Balkman, Shabazz Muhammad, Nick Young Messrs. Quiambao and Cagulangan were also part of last year’s squad with MPBL MVP Justine Baltazar,Fil-American sensation Sedrick Barefield, Jerom Lastimosa, Will Gozum, Migz Oczon and Francis Lopez.

Strong Group is eyeing to bring the Dubai crown back to the Philippines after the feat of Mighty Sport, also mentored by Mr. Tiu, in 2020 as the first non-Middle Eastern champion team. — John Bryan Ulanday

Five teams vie for last three slots in playoff phase of PBA Commissioner’s Cup

MAGNOLIA LEADS THE PACK — PBA.PH

FIVE teams embark on a spirited race for the last three available slots in the PBA Commissioner’s Cup playoffs as hostilities resume tomorrow.

NorthPort (5-4), TNT (4-5), Rain or Shine (4-5), NLEX (3-6) and a still-alive Terrafirma (2-7) hope to get the job done in their two remaining eliminations assignments to catch the quarterfinals bus.

Five seats in the Last-8 are already accounted for with Magnolia (9-1) assured of Top 4 and twice-to-beat advantage no matter what happens in its eliminations closeout game.

Phoenix (7-2), Meralco (6-2), San Miguel Beer (6-3) and holder Ginebra (6-3) are disputing the three other win-once bonuses, making their post-holidays assignments equally high-value.

Carrying identical 1-8 cards, Blackwater and Converge are out of it all but will surely aim for a graceful exit in the import-flavored Season 48 opener.

With five wins, sixth-running NorthPort enjoys the upperhand among the five quarterfinal aspirants.

The Batang Pier can formally clinch a quarterfinal ticket with win No. 6 tomorrow against the also-ran Bossing; if not, versus the Gin Kings on Sunday.

Governors’ Cup kingpin Tropang Giga and the rejuvenated Elasto Painters can advance without complications if they sweep their last two, which include their faceoff tomorrow and succeeding duel with the Fuel Masters and the FiberXers, respectively

If they can hurdle both Converge and Barangay Ginebra, the Road Warriors can reach as many as five victories, which might get them an outright entry or at least a rubbermatch, depending on the final records of the other camps.

For their part, the Dyip can get to a maximum of four Ws if successful against SMB and Meralco, but they have to pray it would be enough to still send them to a KO for the quarters. — Olmin Leyba

US charges ex-fintech CEO who tried to buy Sheffield United fraudulently

NEW YORK — US prosecutors in Manhattan unveiled criminal charges against a Nigerian fintech businessman who recently bid unsuccessfully for an English Premier League soccer team, saying he lied to investors about his companies’ finances.

Odogwu Banye Mmobuosi, 45, the former co-chief executive officer of Tingo Group, was charged with securities fraud, making false US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filings, and conspiracy in an indictment made public on Tuesday.

Prosecutors said the defendant, known as Dozy Mmobuosi, falsely represented that his Tingo Mobile cellular business and Tingo Foods agriculture business were profitable, generating hundreds of millions of dollars of revenue.

Mr. Mmobuosi sold both businesses to Tingo Group and Agri-Fintech Holdings, caused them to falsely portray the businesses as “cash-rich, revenue-generating companies,” and looted millions of dollars by misappropriating cash and selling stock at inflated prices, the indictment said.

The alleged scheme occurred from 2019 to 2023, prosecutors said. Mr. Mmobuosi is at large. A lawyer for him could not immediately be identified.

Tingo Group, based in Montvale, New Jersey, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Mr. Mmobuosi temporarily stepped down as Tingo Group’s co-chief executive officer (CEO) on Dec. 20, two days after the SEC filed civil charges accusing him of orchestrating a “staggering” fraud.

The SEC said Mr. Mmobuosi siphoned at least $16 million from Tingo Group. It said he used the money to buy luxury cars and travel on private jets, and to try to buy the Sheffield United soccer team when it was in the lower Championship league.

According to the SEC complaint, Tingo Mobile purports to supply mobile handsets and related services to farmers in Nigeria, while Tingo Foods is a purported food processor.

Tingo Group is a defendant in the SEC case, and has said it intended to vigorously defend itself.

The indictment was made public nearly seven months after the short-seller Hindenburg Research accused Tingo Group of having “fabricated” its financials, and challenged Mr. Mmobuosi’s claim to have developed Nigeria’s first mobile payment app.

The case is US v. Mmobuosi, US District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 23-cr-00601. — Reuters

Steelers fighting for playoff spot, face top-seeded Ravens

THE BALTIMORE Ravens have locked up the No. 1 seed in the American Football Conference (AFC) playoff bracket, so why play their starters in Week 18?

Coach John Harbaugh and company are pondering that question ahead of Saturday’s season finale against the visiting Pittsburgh Steelers, whose own playoff dreams will be on the line.

The Ravens (13-3) thrashed the Miami Dolphins 56-19 last Sunday for their sixth straight victory, clinching the AFC North and a first-round playoff bye in the process. Lamar Jackson threw more touchdown passes (five) than incompletions (three) as public support grew for the quarterback to win his second NFL Most Valuable Player award.

Mr. Harbaugh said Monday that the Ravens had yet to decide how much — if at all — to play Mr. Jackson and other starters in the regular-season finale. The coach said they’d know by Wednesday and would not “keep it a secret.”

One possible factor at play is the age-old “rest vs rust” debate. When the Ravens secured a first-round bye in 2019, they held out starters against Pittsburgh in the regular-season finale, but after a long gulf between games, they came out flat in a divisional-round loss to Tennessee.

In Mr. Harbaugh’s view, there’s no comparison worth drawing. “I remember the experience and the choices we made (in 2019), but the decisions we made, we made for certain reasons,” Mr. Harbaugh said. “We thought they were the right decisions. What impacted how in terms of us not playing our best football that day, it’s really hard to say what the cause and effect was.”

The Steelers (9-7) surely would love to face Baltimore’s backups in Week 18. After staying in the AFC wild-card hunt with Sunday’s 30-23 win at Seattle, they have five paths to earn a playoff berth.

Three of the scenarios require Pittsburgh to win while getting help elsewhere in the conference. Pittsburgh could also get in with a tie, a Jacksonville loss and the Houston-Indianapolis game not ending in a tie. If the Steelers lose, but Jacksonville loses, Denver beats Las Vegas and Houston and Indianapolis don’t tie, Pittsburgh would sneak in, too.

The Steelers will continue to place their hopes on the shoulders of Mason Rudolph, their third starting quarterback this season. In two starts, both Pittsburgh wins, Rudolph has completed 68.6 percent of his passes for 564 yards, two touchdowns and zero interceptions.

Kenny Pickett was inactive against Seattle while recovering from an ankle injury, but he is now healthy and will be Mr. Rudolph’s backup Sunday. Mr. Pickett refuted a rumor that he refused to dress against Seattle if the starting job wasn’t returned to him.

“One man’s misfortune is another man’s opportunity,” Mr. Pickett said Tuesday. “Mason played well when he got in there. I have a ton of respect for Mason and everything that he’s done and what our team has been doing. My job now that I’m back healthy is to be the backup.”

“There’s never been an awkward air. Those guys are dear friends and always professional,” Mr. Rudolph said of his fellow quarterbacks.

Pittsburgh star T.J. Watt is tied for the league lead with 17 sacks. He recorded two sacks and recovered a fumble when the host Steelers defeated the Ravens 17-10 in October.

Pittsburgh has won six of its past seven games against Baltimore dating back to the 2020 season — all seven decided by seven points or fewer.

Steelers safety Minkah Fitzpatrick (knee) and linebacker Elandon Roberts (pectoral) did not participate in Pittsburgh’s walkthrough Tuesday. Running back Najee Harris (knee) — who had season highs of 27 carries, 122 yards and two touchdowns against Seattle — was limited along with guard Isaac Seumalo (shoulder), defensive tackle Cameron Heyward (groin) and safety Trenton Thompson (neck). Pickett was a full participant.

Baltimore’s estimated injury report listed leading receiver Zay Flowers (calf), linebacker Malik Harrison (groin), cornerback Marlon Humphrey (calf) and cornerback Daryl Worley (shoulder/ankle) as non-participants. Star safety Kyle Hamilton (knee) and linebacker Patrick Queen (shoulder) were among seven Ravens listed as limited. — Reuters

Charlotte Hornets overtake Kings, end 11-game slide

TERRY ROZIER scored 34 points and the Charlotte Hornets ended an 11-game losing streak by rallying for a 111-104 victory over the host Sacramento Kings on Tuesday night.

Miles Bridges added 27 points for Charlotte, which concluded the game with 10 consecutive points to win for the first time since Dec. 8. P.J. Washington added 17 points off the bench for the Hornets, who shot 75 percent from the field (12 of 16) during a 36-point final quarter.

De’Aaron Fox recorded 30 points, six assists and five rebounds for the Kings, who have lost three of their past five games. Domantas Sabonis had 23 points and 19 rebounds but also committed a career-worst 11 turnovers.

Chris Duarte added 12 points and Keegan Murray scored 10 for the Kings, who committed 21 turnovers.

Cody Martin had 10 points for Charlotte, which played without rookie Brandon Miller (hip), the No. 2 overall pick in the 2023 draft. Charlotte took a 105-104 lead on Washington’s dunk with 51.5 seconds to play. Fox turned it over on the Kings’ next possession and Mr. Martin’s layup gave the Hornets a three-point advantage with 42.1 seconds to play.

Mr. Bridges added four free throws over the final 32.9 seconds as the Hornets closed out the victory and improved to 4-13 on the road.

The Hornets made 51.2 percent of their field-goal attempts and were 12 of 34 (35.3 percent) from behind the arc.

Sacramento shot 43.5 percent from the field, including 14 of 36 (38.9 percent) from 3-point range. The Kings held a 48-35 rebounding advantage. A 3-pointer by Washington knotted the score at 81 with 10:03 left in the game.

The Kings scored 13 of the next 20 points to hold a 94-88 lead after Davion Mitchell’s 3-pointer with 6:28 remaining.

Charlotte scored the last five points of the third quarter, including a dunk by Washington with 1:03 left, to trail 78-75 entering the final stanza. — Reuters

Pliskova rallies to oust Naomi Osaka in Brisbane

BRISBANE — Karolina Pliskova gave Naomi Osaka a reality check on her return to tournament tennis by rallying for a 3-6 7-6(4) 6-4 victory in a high quality second-round clash at the Brisbane International on Wednesday.

Ms. Osaka had eased through her first tour match in 15 months on Monday after taking time out of the game to have a child but former world number one Ms. Pliskova proved an altogether tougher prospect.

The contest started well for four-times Grand Slam champion Ms. Osaka after she banged down five aces to lock up the opening set in 37 minutes against her rusty-looking opponent, who had received a bye through the first round.

Ms. Pliskova found her rhythm in the second set, however, and although Ms. Osaka’s rock solid serve repeatedly got her out of trouble until the tiebreak, she was unable to prevent the Czech from leveling up the contest.

An early break allowed Ms. Pliskova to get her nose in front in the deciding set and she saved three break points in the next game to retain her advantage over her 26-year-old rival.

That was as close as Ms. Osaka got and Ms. Pliskova showed the quality of her own serve to ease into the third round and a clash with Camila Giorgi or third seed Jelena Ostapenko. “I’m happy to start with a win, the start of the season is always important, I thought I played quite well,” Ms. Pliskova, who won the Brisbane title in 2017, 2019 and 2020, said in an on-court interview. “I thought my focus (was the difference), you can practice for as long as you like but a match is always a bit different.”

Ms. Osaka will take plenty of positives out of the contest, not least the 14 aces she pounded down, as she looks ahead to her return to the Grand Slam arena at the Australian Open, a tournament she won in 2019 and 2021. — Reuters

Police probe possible negligence in Tokyo airport runway collision

An aerial view shows burnt Japan Airlines’ (JAL) Airbus A350 plane after a collision with a Japan Coast Guard aircraft at Haneda International Airport in Tokyo, Japan January 3, 2024, in this photo taken by Kyodo. — MANDATORY CREDIT KYODO/VIA REUTERS

TOKYO — Police are investigating whether a crash between an airliner and a smaller plane at a Tokyo airport may involve professional negligence, media reported on Wednesday, as transport authorities began inspecting the charred wreckage for clues.

All 379 people miraculously escaped the Japan Airlines (JAL) Airbus A350 which erupted into flames after colliding with a De Havilland Dash-8 Coast Guard turboprop shortly after landing at Haneda on Tuesday evening.

Five of the six Coast Guard crew, responding to a major earthquake that struck the country’s west coast, died.

Once a recurring safety problem, aviation experts say the number of such runway collisions or incursions have become far less frequent with modern ground tracking technology and procedures.

Japanese authorities say the cause of the crash remains unclear.

Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department are investigating whether possible professional negligence led to deaths and injuries, several news outlets including Kyodo news agency and Nikkei Asia reported.

A police spokesperson said a special unit had set up at the airport and was investigating the runway and planning to interview people involved, but declined to comment on whether they were looking into possible professional negligence.

“There’s a strong possibility there was a human error,” said Hiroyuki Kobayashi, a former JAL pilot and aviation analyst.

“Only one plane is generally allowed to enter the runway but even though landing clearance had been given, the Japan Coast Guard aircraft was on the runway.”

The JAL plane was told to continue its approach to runway 34R at 1743 local time (0843GMT), and was given clearance to land at 1745, two minutes before authorities say the collision occurred on the same runway at 1747, according to air traffic control recordings available at liveATC.net.

“Clear to land 34R Japan Airlines 516,” a controller can be heard saying in a recording.

Haneda airport did not immediately have comment on the recordings.

JAL said in a statement on Tuesday the aircraft recognized and repeated the landing permission from air traffic control before approaching and touching down.

The Coast Guard has declined to comment on the circumstances surrounding the crash, including why the plane was on the runway and whether it was stationary or moving when disaster struck.

The plane, one of six Coast Guard aircraft based at the airport, had been due to deliver aid to regions hit by a deadly earthquake on Monday.

TWO INVESTIGATIONS
As well as the police probe, the Japan Safety Transport Board (JTSB) is also investigating the crash, with participation from agencies in France, where the Airbus airplane was built, and Britain where its two Rolls-Royce engines were manufactured, people familiar with the matter said.

Airbus said it was also sending technical advisers to assist in the investigation.

JTSB has recovered flight and voice recorders from the coast guard aircraft, Kyodo news agency reported, citing the agency.

While all passengers and crew were evacuated around 20 minutes after the crash, the aircraft was completely engulfed in flames and burned for more than six hours, the airline said.

Authorities were set to begin work to remove the charred remains of the JAL aircraft in the afternoon, Kyodo reported, while TV footage showed police and fire department personnel inspecting the site of the accident on Wednesday. — Reuters

‘Hawkish’ China military pressure on Taiwan likely after presidential election

A globe is seen in front of Chinese and Taiwanese flags in this illustration, Aug. 6, 2022. — REUTERS/DADO RUVIC/ILLUSTRATION

BEIJING/HONG KONG — The arms race across the Taiwan Strait and Chinese military pressure against the island Beijing claims as its “sacred” territory is unlikely to end no matter who wins Taiwan’s closely watched elections.

China has cast the Jan. 13 presidential and parliamentary elections as a choice between war and peace, warning an attempt to push for Taiwan’s formal independence means conflict.

China has focused its anger on the run-up to the vote on Lai Ching-te, the ruling Democratic Progressive Party’s (DPP) presidential candidate, rebuffing his calls for talks as it views him as a separatist.

Both the DPP and Taiwan’s largest opposition party, the Kuomintang (KMT), say only they can preserve the peace, and both have also committed to bolstering Taiwan’s defenses and say only the island’s people can decide their future.

The KMT traditionally favors close ties with China although it denies being pro-Beijing.

Wang Zaixi, a deputy head of China’s Taiwan Affairs Office between 2000 and 2006 and a retired Chinese army major general, was quoted last month in China’s Global Times newspaper as saying the DPP’s Mr. Lai was an “extremist” independence supporter.

“If he is elected, you cannot rule out the possibility of a military clash across the Taiwan Strait. We need to be fully aware of this,” Mr. Wang said.

Such an outcome could have grave geopolitical and economic outcomes, pitting China against the United States — the world’s two leading military powers — while blocking key shipping lanes and disrupting semiconductor and commodity supply chains.

“I believe they will take more hawkish actions to try to warn the new president over his future policies towards China,” Admiral Lee Hsi-ming, a former Taiwan military chief, told Reuters, referring to Beijing.

Western security officials are trying to gauge how serious China could be about a military response to the election outcome.

One official, speaking on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak to the media, said Beijing may wait and see, with any strong reaction coming after May 20 when the next president takes office and gives an inauguration speech.

If the DPP wins the presidency but loses its majority in parliament, that could also temper China’s response given it would weaken the DPP’s ability to pass legislation, the Western official added.

China’s defense ministry, which has decried Taiwan’s government for deliberately “hyping up” a military threat from China for electoral gain, did not respond to a request for comment.

Taiwan defense ministry spokesperson Sun Li-fang told reporters its assessment of China’s moves would not be based on whether there is an election or not.

“We’ll look at the signs and what the enemy is up to as a basis for our judgement,” he said.

NEW STATUS QUO
After Chinese and US leaders met in San Francisco in November, President Xi Jinping reportedly stressed to President Joseph R. Biden that while Taiwan is the most “dangerous” bilateral issue, he indicated China is not preparing for an invasion of Taiwan.

However, since the last Taiwan presidential poll in 2020, China has engaged in an unprecedented level of military activity in the Taiwan Strait, including holding two rounds of major war games near the island in the past year-and-a-half.

Chinese jets now regularly cross an unofficial median line in the strait, seeking to wear down Taiwan’s far smaller air force by making them repeatedly scramble.

Some analysts see Taiwan’s contiguous zone that is 24 nautical miles (44 km) off its coast, being increasingly challenged by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) in the coming years.

Taiwan is strengthening its armor.

A second Western security official said China was well aware that every year they wait to “resolve the Taiwan problem,” it gives Taipei a further opportunity to beef up its defenses.

“That is not good for the PLA,” the official said.

Defense has featured prominently on the campaign trail.-

The DPP has repeatedly brought up Taiwan’s indigenous submarine, while other arms programs including drones are being developed.

The KMT champions the “3Ds” — deterrence, dialogue and de-escalation.

Jaw Shaw-kong, the KMT’s vice president candidate, said last month Taiwan should ramp up missile production to show it can strike into China in the event of war, although he also said China should allow in Taiwanese military observers as a sign of goodwill and to lessen tensions.

Whoever wins, Taiwan has a big weapons order backlog from the United States.

In the next few years, Taiwan is due to get advanced US weapons including F-16V fighter jets, M-1A tanks, Harpoon anti-ship missiles and the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System, or HIMARS.

OTHER OPTIONS
While clearly a superior military power, recent purges in the PLA that have felled generals in the Rocket Force, navy and air force and a former defense minister could lower the risk of conflict.

“The more problems they have, the more corruption they have, the better it is for us,” said Lee, the former Taiwan military head. “I don’t think there will be a full-scale invasion in the next few years because they have their own difficulties.”

Over the past week or so, Mr. Xi has given two speeches where he reiterated the need for “reunification” with Taiwan. On both occasions he made no mention of using force, though Beijing has never renounced that possibility.

China could also wield economic pressure post-election, targeting a trade deal signed in 2010 which Beijing says Taipei has breached with unfair trade barriers. Beijing could also ramp up operations to influence people in Taiwan through its “United Front” department.

“China needs to be able to lead and control the situation in Taiwan, and we do that via a variety of means, not just by one means,” said Wu Xinbo, a professor at Shanghai’s Fudan University. — Reuters

Killing of Hamas deputy leader raises risk of Gaza war spreading

REUTERS

BEIRUT/CAIRO/GAZA — Israel killed Hamas deputy leader Saleh al-Arouri in a drone strike in Lebanon’s capital Beirut on Tuesday, Lebanese and Palestinian security sources said, raising the potential risk of the war in Gaza spreading well beyond the Palestinian enclave.

Mr. Arouri, 57, was the first senior Hamas political leader to be assassinated since Israel launched a shattering air and ground offensive against the group almost three months ago after its shock assault and rampage into Israeli towns.

Lebanon’s heavily armed Hezbollah group, a Hamas ally, has been exchanging near-daily fire with Israel across Lebanon’s southern border since the war in Gaza began in October.

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah has warned Israel against carrying out any assassinations on Lebanese soil, vowing a “severe reaction.”

Hezbollah said on Tuesday it had targeted a group of Israeli soldiers in the vicinity of Marj with missiles, following Mr. Arouri’s killing.

Israel has long accused Mr. Arouri of lethal attacks on its citizens, but a Hamas official said he was also “at the heart of negotiations” conducted by Qatar and Egypt over the outcome of the Gaza war and the release of Hamas-held Israeli hostages.

Israel neither confirmed nor denied carrying out the killing, but its military spokesperson Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said Israeli forces were in a high state of readiness and prepared for any scenario.

“The most important thing to say tonight is that we are focused and remain focused on fighting Hamas,” he said when asked by a reporter about the reports of Mr. Arouri’s killing.

‘WAITING FOR MARTYRDOM’
Israel had accused Mr. Arouri, a co-founder of the Hamas’ military wing, the Izz-el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades, of ordering and supervising Hamas attacks in the Israeli-occupied West Bank for years.

“I am waiting for martyrdom (death) and I think I have lived too long,” Mr. Arouri said in August 2023, alluding to Israeli threats to eliminate Hamas leaders whether in Gaza or abroad.

Nasser Kanaani, spokesperson for the foreign ministry of Iran, a major supporter of Hamas and Hezbollah, said Mr. Arouri’s killing would “undoubtedly ignite another surge in the veins of resistance and the motivation to fight against the Zionist occupiers, not only in Palestine but also in the region and among all freedom-seekers worldwide.”

Hundreds of Palestinians took to the streets of Ramallah and other towns in the West Bank to condemn Arouri’s killing, chanting, “Revenge, revenge, Qassam!”

Iranian-backed Houthis rebels in Yeman have vowed to continue their attacks on shipping in the Rea Sea until Israel halts the conflict in Gaza, and warned that it would attack US warships if the militia group itself was targeted.

Houthi militants fired two anti-ship ballistic missiles into the southern Red Sea, though no damage was reported, the US Central Command (CENTCOM) said late on Tuesday.

Britain’s United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations Authority reported up to three explosions near a merchant vessel in the Bab al-Mandab Strait, east of Eritrea’s Assab, with no reports of damage.

The US has announced an international maritime task force to protect shipping through the Red Sea, which leads to the Suez Canal, a shipping route which carries roughly one third of global container cargo.

AL SHIFA HOSPITAL
The Gaza war was triggered by a shock cross-border Hamas assault on Israeli towns on Oct. 7 in which Israel says 1,200 people were killed and some 240 hostages spirited back to Gaza.

The Gaza health ministry said 207 people had been killed in the past 24 hours, bringing the total recorded Palestinian death toll to 22,185 in nearly three months of war in Gaza.

Israel says it tries to avoid harm to civilians and blames Hamas for embedding fighters among them, an accusation Hamas denies.

The Israeli targeting of Gaza City’s Al Shifa hospital last November stoked global alarm over the fate of civilians and patients who were inside.

Israel said Hamas used tunnels beneath the hospital as a headquarters and was using its patients as shields.

A US official said on Tuesday, citing declassified US intelligence, that US spy agencies assessed that Hamas and Islamic Jihad had used Al Shifa to command forces and hold some hostages but largely evacuated it before Israeli troops entered.

Israeli bombardments have engulfed Gaza’s 2.3 million residents in a humanitarian disaster in which thousands have been left destitute and threatened by famine due to a lack of food supplies.

HAMAS RESPONDS TO CEASEFIRE PROPOSAL
Shortly before Mr. Arouri’s killing, Hamas’ paramount leader Ismail Haniyeh, who is also based outside Gaza, said the movement had delivered its response to an Egyptian-Qatari ceasefire proposal.

He reiterated that Hamas’ conditions entailed “a complete cessation” of Israel’s offensive in exchange for further releases of hostages.

Israel believes 129 hostages remain in Gaza after some were released during a brief truce in late November and others were killed during air strikes and rescue or escape attempts.

Israel has vowed to keep fighting until it has wiped out Hamas but it is unclear what it plans to do with the enclave should it succeed, and where that leaves the prospect of an independent Palestinian state.

In Washington, the State Department denounced as “inflammatory and irresponsible” statements by Israeli cabinet ministers Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben-Gvir advocating for the resettlement of Palestinians outside of Gaza.

Such statements underscore fears among some in the Arab world that Israel wants to drive Palestinians out of land where they envision a future state, repeating the mass dispossession of Palestinians when Israel was created in 1948. — Reuters

US public debt tops $34 trln as Congress heads into funding fight

United States one-dollar bills are seen in this Nov. 14, 2014 file photo — REUTERS

 – The US federal government’s total public debt has reached $34 trillion for the first time, the US Treasury Department reported on Tuesday, as members of Congress gear up for another series of federal funding battles in the coming weeks.

The Daily Treasury Statement for Friday showed that the total public debt outstanding rose to $34.001 trillion from $33.911 on Thursday.

The debt that counts toward the federal debt ceiling rose to $33.89 trillion on Friday from $33.794 trillion on Thursday. This “debt subject to limit” category excludes the unamortized discount on Treasury bills and zero coupon bonds, debt issued by the Federal Financing Bank and guaranteed debt of certain other agencies.

The milestone comes shortly after the federal debt topped $33 trillion in September amid rising federal deficits fueled by falling tax revenues and rising federal expenditures.

Congress returns to Washington next week to tackle Jan. 19 and Feb. 2 deadlines for settling government spending through September, amid Republican demands to reduce fiscal 2024 discretionary spending below caps agreed in June. Lawmakers also hope to pass emergency aid for Ukraine and Israel, possibly with unrelated US border security provisions attached.

Failure to approve the one-dozen fiscal 2024 spending bills would plunge Washington agencies into shutdown mode. But reaching a compromise could become more difficult with November presidential and congressional elections coming quickly into focus.

Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a fiscal watchdog group, called the $34 trillion federal debt figure “a truly depressing achievement,” attributing it to political leaders’ unwillingness to make difficult fiscal choices.

“We remain hopeful that policymakers will take further measures to reduce our borrowing either by raising taxes, reducing spending, or creating a fiscal commission – or ideally by doing all of the above,” Ms. MacGuineas said in a statement.

White House spokesperson Michael Kikukawa said the debt increases were “trickle-down debt” driven by Republican-passed tax cuts in 2017 that benefited corporations and wealthy Americans.

“Congressional Republicans want to double down on MAGAnomics with more than $3 trillion in giveaways skewed to the wealthy while forcing hardworking Americans to pay the price by cutting Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid,” Kikukawa said in a statement.

He added that Mr. Biden plans to reduce US deficits by $2.5 trillion over 10 years by increasing taxes on large corporations and wealthy Americans and cutting spending on pharmaceuticals and tax breaks for oil companies. – Reuters

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