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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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How Every Senator Voted on Passing the Bill to End the Shutdown

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How Every Senator Voted on Passing the Bill to End the Shutdown

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Measure passed with 60 “yes” votes to 40 “no” votes.
Vote Total Democrats Republicans Independents Bar chart of total votes
60 7 52 1
40 38 1 1

The Senate on Monday passed a bill to end the longest government shutdown in history after more than a month of stalemate. Seven Democrats and Senator Angus King, a Maine independent, joined almost every Republican in voting “yes.”

In voting for the bill, the Democrats broke with the rest of their party’s members, who have been insisting that any spending measure include the extension of expiring health insurance subsidies. The bill does not include any health care provisions, but Democrats did obtain some concessions, including the restoration of the jobs of federal workers who were laid off during the shutdown and guaranteed backpay for those who were furloughed.

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The bill still needs to pass the House. Representatives are beginning to return to Washington after an extended recess, and a vote is not expected until Wednesday at the earliest.

How Every Senator Voted

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Syria’s President Ahmed al-Sharaa visits White House for historic Trump meeting

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Syria’s President Ahmed al-Sharaa visits White House for historic Trump meeting

Ahmed al-Sharaa — who 20 years ago was thrown into a US detention centre in Iraq after he joined al-Qaeda militants fighting the Americans — on Monday became the first Syrian president to visit the White House since the country’s independence in 1946.

During his meeting with Donald Trump, Sharaa formally joined the 89-country coalition to defeat the militant group Isis, capping an extraordinary transformation for the erstwhile rebel leader who toppled dictator Bashar al-Assad nearly a year ago.

Trump said in the Oval Office on Monday: “He’s a very strong leader. He comes from a very tough place. And he’s a tough guy. I like him, I get along with him. We want to see Syria be successful along with the rest of the Middle East. So I have confidence that he’ll be able to do the job, absolutely.”

Since seizing power last December, Sharaa, 43, has worked hard to court friends and allies after decades of Assad family rule and 14 years of ruinous civil war left Syria internationally isolated.

His charm offensive has largely worked. Western and Arab states — spurred by Washington — have lifted most of the economic sanctions imposed in the Assad era and built closer ties with a state they had long shunned.

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Sharaa met privately with the US president for nearly an hour and a half on Monday, after which he was expected to hold meetings with lawmakers in an effort, backed by the White House, to permanently repeal US sanctions.

Sharaa’s government has appealed to western sensibilities by touting free markets and foreign investment, political inclusion and a pluralistic society.

Top US lawmakers in both parties have broadly welcomed his message and have thrown their support behind a vote to repeal Washington’s most stringent sanctions, known as the Caesar Act.

But Sharaa’s government is dominated by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, the Islamist insurgent group the Syrian leader once led, and critics say attempts at political inclusion have been superficial.

They also point to eruptions of sectarian violence in Syria over the past year, including clashes between government-backed forces and gunmen from the country’s Alawite and Druze religious minorities in which hundreds of civilians from both communities were killed. The government pledged to hold the perpetrators accountable, but many Syrians, particularly among minority groups, remain sceptical.

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Trump in May waived most of the Assad-era sanctions on the country to give the nascent Syrian government “a chance”, after being impressed by the “tough” and “handsome” Syrian leader during a meeting in Saudi Arabia.

After Monday’s meeting, the Trump administration suspended the bulk of the Caesar Act sanctions for a further 180 days, replacing the president’s earlier waiver. The measures will still apply to “certain transactions” relating to Russia and Iran, the Treasury said.

The World Bank estimates it will take more than $200bn to rebuild the war-ravaged nation. Syria’s economic recovery has stalled amid the lingering sanctions, with foreign companies wary of investing until they are fully repealed.

Syrian companies, in turn, have found it difficult to raise funds or import goods because of concerns about complying with sanctions.

The Israeli government and its allies in Washington have warned the White House against placing its trust in Sharaa and have urged Congress not to support a full repeal.

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Sharaa “has deep roots in the global jihad”, a pro-Israel advocacy group, the Jewish Institute for National Security of America, warned in a recent report, which called on Congress to slow its “rush to repeal the Caesar Act permanently”.

Sharaa on Sunday met Republican congressman Brian Mast, chair of the House foreign affairs committee and a key Republican holdout on lifting sanctions.

Mast, who lost both of his legs to an improvised bomb while serving as a soldier in Afghanistan, on Monday said he and Sharaa had “a long and serious conversation about how to build a future for the people of Syria free of war, Isis and extremism”.

“He and I are two former soldiers and two former enemies,” Mast said. He added Sharaa told him of his desire to “liberate from the past and have a noble pursuit for his people and his country and to be a great ally to the United States of America”.

Urged on by Washington, the UN Security Council has lifted terror-related sanctions on Sharaa and his interior minister and former al-Qaeda member Anas Khattab. The UK and US followed suit.

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Talks between Sharaa and Trump on Monday were expected to focus on security, including Israel, Isis and Kurdish-led forces.

Syria’s formal entry into the global anti-Isis coalition helps to seal Sharaa’s partnership with Washington and strengthens his anti-jihadi credentials with sceptics. While HTS was briefly allied with Isis in the fight to oust Assad, it has fought the group since they parted ways.

Despite no longer having territorial control, Isis cells continue to carry out attacks in Syria. Sharaa’s security forces have conducted raids on the group in recent weeks.

For years, Washington’s main ally in fighting Isis has been the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, which control the country’s north-east. Talks to merge the SDF and Damascus’s security forces have stalled, despite pressure from Washington to come to a resolution.

The US military has increased its co-operation with Damascus on Isis in recent months and is said to be considering an expansion of its military presence in Syria by sending troops to an air base in the Syrian capital. This would be a boost to Sharaa’s fledgling presidency, analysts said.

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Syrian analyst Malik al-Abdeh said: “It’s great for Sharaa, in that he will be backed up by a major power, and great for the US in terms of its footprint in the region and having decisive influence over Damascus. It’s a win-win.”

Moscow, a financial and military backer for Assad, has sought to smooth things over with Sharaa’s government over the past year in order to keep its strategically important air base and naval port in the country. Last month, Sharaa met Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Moscow in what was billed as a “reset” in relations.

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Families accuse Camp Mystic of ignoring risks in Texas lawsuit over flood deaths

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Families accuse Camp Mystic of ignoring risks in Texas lawsuit over flood deaths

An officer prays with a family as they pick up items at Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, on July 9.

Ashley Landis/AP


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Ashley Landis/AP

The operators of Camp Mystic in Texas, where 25 girls and two teenage counselors died in catastrophic flooding on July 4, failed to take necessary steps to protect the campers as life-threatening floodwaters approached, families of the victims allege in a lawsuit.

The lawsuit, filed Monday in state court in Austin, seeks more than $1 million in damages but does not specify an exact amount. It was filed as Camp Mystic has drawn renewed outrage from several victims’ families over plans to reopen the 100-year-old camp next summer.

Among the claims in the lawsuit is that a groundskeeper was directed to spend more than an hour evacuating equipment while girls and counselors in cabins closest to the Guadalupe River were ordered to remain there, even as floodwaters overwhelmed the property.

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The lawsuit was filed by the families of five campers and the two counselors who died.

“These young girls died because a for-profit camp put profit over safety,” the lawsuit said. “The camp chose to house young girls in cabins sitting in flood-prone areas, despite the risk, to avoid the cost of relocating the cabins.”

The suit also alleges the operators of the camp chose not to make plans to safely evacuate campers, despite state rules requiring such plans, and instead ordered campers and counselors to remain in their cabins as a matter of policy.

A broken heart sign is displayed near Camp Mystic on July 8 after a flash flood swept through the area in Hunt, Texas.

A broken heart sign is displayed near Camp Mystic on July 8 after a flash flood swept through the area in Hunt, Texas.

Eli Hartman/AP


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Defendants named in the lawsuit include Camp Mystic, affiliated entities and its owners, including the estate of camp owner Richard Eastland, who also died in the flooding, and his family members.

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A separate lawsuit with similar allegations was filed Monday by the family of Eloise Peck, another Camp Mystic camper who died in the flood. Both lawsuits were filed in Travis County.

Telephone and email messages left Monday with an attorney for Camp Mystic seeking comment on the lawsuit were not immediately returned.

The campers and counselors were killed when the fast-rising floodwaters roared through a low-lying area of the summer camp before dawn on the Fourth of July. All told, the destructive flooding killed at least 136 people, raising questions about how things went so terribly wrong.

County leaders were asleep or out of town. The head of Camp Mystic had been tracking the weather beforehand, but it’s now unclear whether he saw an urgent warning from the National Weather Service that had triggered an emergency alert to phones in the area, a spokesperson for the camp’s operators said in the immediate aftermath.

The camp, established in 1926, did not evacuate and was hit hard when the river rose from 14 feet (4.2 meters) to 29.5 feet (9 meters) within 60 minutes.

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Ryan DeWitt, whose daughter Molly DeWitt was one of the campers killed in the flooding, said in a statement that the lawsuit is a step toward helping the family find peace.

“We trust that through this process, light will be shed on what happened, and our hope is that justice will pave the way for prevention and much-needed safety reform,” DeWitt said.

The deaths of the campers and counselors, and the gut-wrenching testimony from their parents to Texas lawmakers, led to a series of new laws designed to prevent similar tragedies in the future.

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