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UCLA to resume in-person classes after Gaza protest crackdown

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UCLA to resume in-person classes after Gaza protest crackdown

In-person classes will resume Monday at the University of California, Los Angeles, college officials said, after they were moved online following clashes on campus between pro-Palestinian protesters and police.

Demonstrations against Israel’s war on Hamas in Gaza have rocked US campuses across the country for weeks, prompting crackdowns, mass arrests, and a White House directive to restore order.

UCLA said Friday it had moved classes online after a large police contingent forcibly cleared a sprawling encampment. Clashes have also broken out between the protesters and pro-Israel counter-demonstrators.

“The campus will return to regular operations (on Monday)… and plans to remain this way through the rest of the week,” read a statement posted Sunday on the university’s website.

“A law enforcement presence continues to be stationed around campus to help promote safety,” the post added.

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UCLA Chancellor Gene Block said “urgent changes” were needed in the campus’ security operations, adding that a new office would lead the effort.

“It is clear that UCLA needs a unit and leader whose sole responsibility is campus safety to guide us through tense times,” he said in a statement on Sunday.

Rick Braziel, the former head of the Sacramento Police Department, was named to lead the office.

More than 2,000 arrests have been made in the past two weeks across the United States, some during violent confrontations with police, giving rise to accusations of use of excessive force.

President Joe Biden, who has faced pressure from all political sides over the conflict in Gaza, has said that “order must prevail” on US campuses.

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The Gaza war started when Hamas militants staged an unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7 that resulted in the deaths of more than 1,170 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.

Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 34,683 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.

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Chinese industrial profits return to growth

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Chinese industrial profits return to growth

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Profits at China’s industrial companies returned to growth in April, highlighting Beijing’s efforts to boost manufacturing as other areas of the world’s second-largest economy struggle to regain momentum.

Industrial profits at businesses with more than Rmb20mn ($2.8mn) in turnover increased 4 per cent year on year in April after a decline of 3.5 per cent in March, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. So far this year, their profits are up 4.3 per cent, unchanged compared with the rate in the first quarter after a large jump at the start of the year.

The improved April data follows a rise in Chinese exports in the same month after a push from Xi Jinping’s government to boost “high-quality development” in manufacturing, which prompted complaints from western leaders over perceived overcapacity.

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The EU is carrying out a probe into state support for Chinese electric vehicle production, while US President Joe Biden this month introduced 100 per cent tariffs on EV imports from China, where intense domestic competition has spurred a price war.

Recent economic data in China is being closely watched for further evidence of the government’s strategy as it grapples with a historic property sector slowdown and weak consumption. Exports in April grew 1.5 per cent year on year in dollar terms, while industrial production jumped 6.7 per cent.

Analysts at Goldman Sachs noted strong increases in profits across equipment manufacturing in the first four months, with profits in electronics and transportation equipment growing by 76 per cent and 41 per cent, respectively.

Yu Weining, statistician for the National Bureau of Statistics, also emphasised the contribution of equipment manufacturing and said market demand picked up in April, citing the impact of “macroeconomic policies”.

But Yu added that domestic demand remained “insufficient” and that the development of new productive forces — a widely used term in China for its recent focus on manufacturing — still needed to be “accelerated”.

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State-owned companies’ profits dropped 2.8 per cent year on year in the first four months of 2024, the data showed, while profits at private groups rose 6.4 per cent and those at foreign businesses grew 16.7 per cent.

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Bowling Green home damaged during severe storm

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Bowling Green home damaged during severe storm

BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (WBKO) – A line of tornado-warned storms moved through South Central Kentucky Sunday night, and one area of Bowling Green took the brunt of it.

Numerous downed trees and power outages were reported in the immediate aftermath, and one home on Allen Michael Lane suffered extensive damage.

When our crew arrived at the scene of the home that had damage, no one was there. There’s no known injuries at this time.

As of midnight, WRECC has 12,000 outages they’re working to restore, while BGMU has 8,000 powerless customers. Crews are working to get power back as soon as possible.

Stay with WBKO News on-air and on WBKO.com for the latest in the aftermath of Sunday’s severe storms.

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Dozens killed and wounded after explosions at Gaza ‘safe-zone’ camp

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Dozens killed and wounded after explosions at Gaza ‘safe-zone’ camp

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Explosions and fires ripped through a camp for displaced persons in Rafah late on Sunday after what authorities in Gaza said were Israeli air strikes.

Local health officials said at least 35 people had been killed and dozens more injured.

The Israeli military said it had struck a “Hamas compound” in Rafah at approximately the same time, but that it was looking into the specific incident at a UN-run “safe zone” in the city’s north-western Tal as-Sultan neighbourhood.

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It said two senior Hamas figures had been killed in its strike on Tal as-Sultan — naming them as Yassin Rabia and Khaled Nagar, two commanders responsible for the group’s militant operations in the West Bank. 

Palestinian eyewitnesses and videos on social media showed fires raging through makeshift tents while survivors tried in vain to extricate those caught in the flames.

Earlier in the day the Palestinian militant group fired long-range rockets at central Israel for the first time in months, including past Tel Aviv, in a demonstration of the capability it retains.

Eight rockets were fired from Rafah, less than a kilometre from advancing Israeli troops, in a move that Daniel Hagari, chief spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces, attributed to Hamas’s fears for their weapons stocks.

Israeli officials have described Rafah, Gaza’s southernmost city, as the last stronghold for the group in the territory and earlier this month launched a major air and ground assault on the area.

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About 1.2mn people took shelter in Rafah from Israeli attacks elsewhere in the Gaza Strip after Hamas’s October 7 assault on Israel triggered the ongoing war.

At least 800,000 of those had already fled to areas north of Rafah as the Israeli offensive deepened in recent weeks, according to the UN.

They have travelled to places that are designated “safe zones” but which lack basic services such as clean water and medical care, according to international aid groups.

Egypt and Israel were in talks on Sunday to resume aid deliveries to Gaza via the strip’s southern Rafah crossing as Israel pressed on with its military operations in the area despite an order to halt from the International Court of Justice.

The ICJ on Friday described conditions for those Palestinians still sheltering in Rafah as “disastrous”.

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Israel has rejected the UN court’s call for it to cease military operations in Rafah. The bench also ordered Israel to reopen the Rafah crossing to Egypt for direly needed aid, as Gazans struggle with acute shortages of food and other necessities.

The humanitarian situation for Gazans has become a point of contention between Israel and its allies, including the US, as well as playing a role in the court’s decision to order Israel to take fresh interim measures.

On Sunday, the supply of aid from Egypt to Gaza resumed, but only via the separate Kerem Shalom crossing from Israel. Aid from Egypt had been halted for several weeks following Israel’s seizure of the Gaza side of the Rafah crossing earlier this month, and Cairo’s angry reaction to the offensive.

More than 120 Egyptian aid trucks crossed via Kerem Shalom into Gaza on Sunday, said Israeli military officials, after US President Joe Biden spoke on Friday with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in an attempt to ease tensions.

The White House said talks were ongoing to “reopen the Rafah crossing with arrangements acceptable to both Egypt and Israel”, a move that would require the tactical redeployment of IDF personnel in the area, said an Israeli official.

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Josep Borrell, the EU’s chief diplomat, on Sunday said the situation in Gaza was “beyond words” as he spoke in Brussels alongside Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa.

The Israeli military claimed on Sunday that aid entering Gaza had doubled from the previous week, and that supplies had included 300,000 litres of fuel to run essential services at shelters and hospitals.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected calls for a halt to Israel’s offensive. He has also rebutted accusations of war crimes from the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, who last week requested arrest warrants against him and his defence minister.

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Netanyahu maintains that his country’s forces will pursue “total victory” against Hamas.

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Israeli forces have in recent days taken control of more than 70 per cent of Gaza’s frontier with Egypt, known as the Philadelphi corridor, and have pushed deeper into Rafah including the al-Shaboura refugee camp, according to Israeli military analysts.

Israeli officials insist military action in Rafah is needed to eliminate the last four standing Hamas battalions and sever the group’s access to smuggling routes from Egypt.

Israeli special forces have in recent weeks also retrieved the bodies of six hostages held by Hamas since October 7. According to Israeli officials, 125 Israeli and foreign nationals are still being held in Gaza, with 39 confirmed dead.

Negotiations for their release as part of a ceasefire deal tentatively resumed at the weekend in Paris as the head of Israel’s Mossad, David Barnea, met CIA chief Bill Burns and Qatar’s prime minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani.

Additional reporting by Henry Foy

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