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Israel kills 22 people including nine children in ‘horrific massacre’ in Gaza, Palestinian officials say

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Israel killed 22 people – including nine children – in strikes on Gaza City today, Palestinian officials have said.

Gaza civil defence spokesman Mahmoud Bassal described the killings as a “horrific massacre”.

Video purportedly from the scene of the attack on the Souq Firas area of the city showed the bodies of children being pulled from rubble.

“We were sleeping in God’s care, there was nothing – they did not inform us, or not even give us a sign – it was a surprise,” said Sami Hajjaj.

“There are children and women, around 200 people maybe, six to seven families – this square is full of families.”

Men carry the bodies of Palestinian children killed in a strike on a building where people were sheltering in Gaza City. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Men carry the bodies of Palestinian children killed in a strike on a building where people were sheltering in Gaza City. Pic: Reuters

The Israeli military claimed the strike targeted Hamas militants and that its forces tried to reduce harm to civilians in the area.

A total of 51 people have been killed across Gaza today, according to hospital medics in the Hamas-run territory.

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Israeli forces pushed towards the heart of Gaza City on Wednesday, placing at risk the lives of Palestinians who had stayed put in hopes that growing pressure on Israel for a ceasefire would mean they would not lose their homes.

“We moved to the western area near the beach, but many families didn’t have the time, tanks took them by surprise,” said Thaer, a 35-year-old father of one from Tel Al-Hawa.

Meanwhile, the Palestinian Red Crescent Society said the oxygen station at Al-Quds Hospital in Gaza had stopped operating “due to Israeli occupation forces firing at it”.

“Operations are currently being conducted using pre-filled oxygen cylinders, which are sufficient for only three days,” the group said.

“Occupation forces are currently stationed at the southern gate of the society’s Al-Quds Hospital in the Tal al-Hawa neighbourhood of Gaza City, preventing anyone from entering or leaving the hospital.”

The world’s leading authority on hunger crises said last month that Israel’s blockade and ongoing offensive had pushed Gaza City into famine.

Palestinians inspect the site of deadly overnight Israeli strikes on a building where displaced people were taking shelter. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Palestinians inspect the site of deadly overnight Israeli strikes on a building where displaced people were taking shelter. Pic: Reuters

More than 300,000 people have fled the city in recent weeks as Israel has ordered the population to move south, but UN agencies and aid groups say an estimated 700,000 remain.

More than 65,000 Palestinians have been killed since October 2023, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, more than half of them women and children.

Its figure does not differentiate between civilians and fighters.

The current wave of violence began on 7 October, 2023, when Hamas-led militants carried out an attack inside Israel that killed 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and saw around 250 people taken hostage.

Hundreds of thousands of people have been fleeing northern Gaza. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Hundreds of thousands of people have been fleeing northern Gaza. Pic: Reuters

Pic: Reuters
Image:
Pic: Reuters

Israel claims its operation in Gaza is aimed at pressuring Hamas to surrender and return the remaining 48 hostages. Israel believes around 20 of the captives are still alive.

Critics say Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is not interested in peace negotiations and wants to continue the war with a view to displacing Gaza’s population and expand Israeli settlements.

He has repeatedly rejected the possibility of a Palestinian state.

Addressing the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday, UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres said: “In Gaza, the horrors are approaching a third monstrous year.

“They are the result of decisions that defy basic humanity,” he continued, citing “a scale of death and destruction beyond any other conflict” in his years as secretary-general.

“Nothing can justify the collective punishment of the Palestinian people and the systematic destruction of Gaza,” he added.

The world’s leading association of genocide scholars, the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS), declared in August that Israel was committing genocide in Gaza.

Several other leading rights organisations, including two Israeli groups, have also said Israel is committing genocide.

Israel has repeatedly denied its actions in Gaza amount to genocide and claims they are justified as a means of self-defence.

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Police used journalists’ phone data to detect leaks by staff, report says

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51 minutes ago

Julian O’NeillBBC News NI crime and justice correspondent

imagePA Media

Concerns have been raised over how the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) used journalists’ phone numbers to check for any leaks of information by its officers or staff.

A 200-page report also revealed there were 21 unlawful uses of covert powers to attempt to uncover reporters’ sources – double the figure previously disclosed.

Its author, lawyer Angus McCullough KC, said he found that the PSNI’s surveillance of journalists and lawyers is not “widespread or systemic”.

PSNI Chief Constable Jon Boutcher said the report “rightfully highlights that we have to improve our processes, and we will”.

Mr Boutcher added that he was “pleased” that the review did not identify systemic surveillance, but did find “individual authorisations where we as a police service could have done better”.

In the report, Mr McCullough was critical of “particular instances” and “some areas of practice”.

The report covered PSNI surveillance practices between 2011 and 2024.

Last year, Mr McCullough was asked to carry out an independent review by Mr Boutcher.

It followed legal action by journalists Barry McCaffrey and Trevor Birney and allegations that other journalists, and lawyers, might have had their phones monitored.

The PSNI previously admitted 10 attempts to use the communications data of journalists to try to identify their sources.

But the report found 21 instances, all pre-2015, which are “considered unlawful” and which relate to eight journalists, including Mr McCaffrey.

imagePA Media Barry McCaffrey and Trevor Birney outside the Royal Courts of Justice, London, in October. They are holding black signs with yellow and white writing that say 'Journalism is not a crime'. There are black iron gates behind them.PA Media

In 2017, Mr Birney and Mr McCaffrey produced a documentary about the loyalist murders of six Catholic men as they watched a football match in a pub in Loughinisland in County Down in 1994.

No Stone Unturned was made by Belfast-based production company, Fine Point Films and directed by Oscar winner, Alex Gibney.

It examined how the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) handled the case and made use of confidential documents from the Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland (PONI) – a watchdog which investigates police conduct.

The PSNI treated the leak of PONI documents as theft.

A year later the two journalists were arrested.

They said their arrests were “an attack on the press” and challenged the way they were treated in court, winning substantial damages amounting to £875,000.

However, through legal disclosure material surfaced which revealed details of surveillance against them and other journalists.

Speaking on BBC Radio Ulster’s Talkback programme, Mr McCaffrey called for a public inquiry.

He said this would allow Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn to “put the public confidence back in policing”.

Mr Birney welcomed the report but said his and Mr McCaffrey’s lawyers had not had a chance to “cross-examine the PSNI” and “review those documents… and test them against the law”.

Freedom of expression

Speaking at the report’s launch, Mr McCullough said there had been concerns of the effect the arrests could have on investigative journalism in Northern Ireland.

“Two journalists who had been investigating mass murder and allegations of state collusion had been arrested and subject to covert measures and surveillance of a suspected source”, the barrister said.

“The right of freedom of expression – including the freedom for journalists and civil society to examine the actions of the state – is fundamental to democracy.”

‘Lack of awareness’

The report also raised issues around the use of journalists’ phone numbers, which had been provided to the PSNI’s press office.

Between 2011 and 2023, the numbers were “washed through” police systems to detect any unauthorised contact between PSNI officers or staff and journalists.

This was referred to as pro-active “defensive operations” against leaks.

At one point, in 2011, it involved checking 65,000 calls against 383 journalists’ numbers.

The report states: “No legal advice appears to have been sought in relation to the legality or propriety of the practice.

“There seems to have been a lack of awareness until very recently that it might give rise to issues in relation to data protection and the rights of those whose data was being used unknowingly.

“This practice does not appear to have been necessary or proportionate.

“The scale and duration of defensive operations is a significant concern.”

imagePA Media Jon Boutcher speaks to reporters while wearing his PSNI uniform. He has short white hair and dark eyebrows.PA Media

Mr McCullough said the PSNI should consider self-reporting the matter to the UK’s data protection watchdog, the information commissioner.

He noted the practice was only formally discontinued in May of last year.

Investigative journalist Donal MacIntyre is named in the report as having been the subject of directed surveillance following posts he made on social media.

He is working on a documentary about the disappearance and death of schoolboy Noah Donohoe.

There was an unease that the X posts “created a serious risk of prejudice” to upcoming inquest proceedings.

Mr McCullough said he is concerned about the process that led to the surveillance being authorised, but added he found “no indication” that Mr MacIntyre’s private communications with Noah’s mother had been accessed.

Mr McIntyre said he was “shocked at the lackadaisical and lamentable processes that led the PSNI to authorise covert surveillance of [his] social media accounts”.

He said he was “relieved” that the review found his communications with Noah’s mother were not accessed.

However, he added that the findings exposed “profound institutional failings in the PSNI’s approach to covert surveillance” and raised “grave concerns” about the intrusion into his work and “the wider and potentially unchecked use of these powers in Northern Ireland”.

The report also found two instances of directed surveillance against an unnamed lawyer, including in a court building, without proper authorisation.

Mr McCullough did not examine any cases currently at the Investigatory Powers Tribunal, including MI5-conducted phone surveillance of journalist Vincent Kearney while he worked at the BBC.

‘Appropriate use of powers’

Mr Boutcher said that “properly exercised covert powers” had “an important role to play” in detecting, investigating, prosecuting and preventing crime.

“Mr McCullough makes reference to being struck by the utility of these powers in keeping the public better protected from a range of threats including organised crime, terrorism, paedophile rings and large scale drug supply,” he said.

Mr Boutcher said that “appropriate, lawful and proportionate use of these powers” keeps people safe and “builds confidence in policing”.

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‘Decisive’ statements can be heard in Soldier F Bloody Sunday trial, judge rules

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Key statements made by a number of soldiers on the ground during the Bloody Sunday shootings can be used as evidence in the trial of a former paratrooper, a judge has ruled.

Soldier F, who cannot be identified, is accused of murdering James Wray and William McKinney on 30 January 1972.

Judge Patrick Lynch, who is presiding over the non-jury trial at Belfast Crown Court, granted an application by the prosecution to admit a number of statements made by other soldiers who were at the time in Londonderry, which is also known as Derry.

These statements include claims the accused veteran fired shots in the courtyard where the two men he is accused of killing were shot.

In making the application at the court last week, the prosecution had characterised the evidence as “decisive” to the case.

Members of the Parachute Regiment shot dead 13 civilians in Derry/Londonderry on Bloody Sunday after a civil rights march.

Soldier F is also charged with five attempted murders during the incident in the city’s Bogside area, namely of Joseph Friel, Michael Quinn, Joe Mahon, Patrick O’Donnell and a person unknown.

He has pleaded not guilty to the seven counts.

Last week, prosecution barrister Louis Mably KC argued that statements given by soldiers G and H to the Royal Military Police (RMP) on the night of the shootings, and to the Widgery Tribunal in 1972, are the only evidence “capable of proving” Soldier F fired his rifle at civilians in Glenfada Park North.

“This is decisive evidence,” he told the court.

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Defence barrister Mark Mulholland KC, acting for Soldier F, argued against the application to admit the hearsay evidence, describing the contents of the statements as “contradictory, unreliable and inadmissible”.

Delivering his ruling on Wednesday, the judge said the prosecution has acknowledged it is “totally dependant” upon the hearsay statements by soldiers G and H.

But that the defence challenged it, arguing they do not meet the requirements of admissibility.

The judge said it would be “inappropriate at this stage to give reasons for my decision”.

The trial is set to sit again on Friday when a timetable will be agreed for hearing the remaining evidence.

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Manhunt under way for prisoner who escaped from Garda station on Monday

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Gardaí are searching for a man suspected of involvement in the drugs trade after he escaped from a Garda station.

He had been arrested for questioning during an operation last Thursday and was in custody. He escaped on Monday.

The suspect, who is in his 40s and has been a target for gardaí in Kilkenny, appears to have taken advantage of an unsecured area of the station campus.

Gardaí are concerned he has had help and will have the resources to flee abroad. Efforts are being made to ensure he cannot leave the country through the main ports or airports.

The man is considered a significant figure in the regional drugs trade and is suspected of directing others in the commission of crime. He was detained last Thursday in a planned operation following an investigation into the activities of a gang based in southeast Leinster with reach into parts of Munster.

While investigations to determine precisely how the suspect escaped from custody continue, gardaí believe there was a lapse in a usually secure area at Kilkenny station.

Though he fled of his own volition, he has a significant number of criminal contacts in the area who are believed to have aided him afterwards.

He was being interrogated during a prolonged maximum period of detention for questioning granted to gardaí due to the seriousness of the allegations against him.

In reply to queries, Garda Headquarters on Wednesday confirmed a prisoner escape was under investigation but did not provide details.

“Gardaí are investigating the escape from Garda custody of a male, aged in his 40s, on Monday, September 22nd, from a Garda station in the eastern region,” the Garda said.

Though escapes from Garda custody – or from prison custody, usually on medical visits or other escorts – are not unprecedented in the State, they are rare and treated very seriously. Many of those who have escaped have been located and arrested within days.

However, more senior criminals with access to significant funds pose a greater challenge as they have the resources to evade gardaí for long enough to flee the country.

The escape of the suspect in Kilkenny is an embarrassment for the Garda and a significant manhunt has been under way since Monday night.

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