Australian PM says Israel’s explanation for aid worker deaths unsatisfactory

Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 09 April 2024
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Australian PM says Israel’s explanation for aid worker deaths unsatisfactory

  • Anthony Albanese declined to say what actions Australia would consider adequate or whether he would consider diplomatic sanctions should Israel fail to provide more information
  • Israel said on Friday its soldiers mistakenly believed they were attacking Hamas gunmen when airstrikes killed the mostly international group of World Central Kitchen staff

SYDNEY: Israel is yet to provide a satisfactory explanation for the death of seven aid workers last week, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Monday as Australia appointed a senior former military official to study Israel’s inquiry into the incident.
Israel said on Friday its soldiers mistakenly believed they were attacking Hamas gunmen when airstrikes killed the mostly international group of World Central Kitchen staff, including Australian “Zomi” Frankcom. Two officers have been dismissed and others reprimanded.
Albanese said the explanation for the deaths was not adequate. Given that almost 200 aid workers had been killed in the conflict, Israel also needed to provide more information about what it would do to prevent similar events in the future, he added.
“We don’t find the explanations satisfactory to this point,” he said in an interview on state broadcaster ABC. “We need proper accountability, full transparency about the circumstances and I think that is what the Australian public would expect.”
Albanese declined to say what actions Australia would consider adequate or whether he would consider diplomatic sanctions should Israel fail to provide more information.
On Monday, Australia appointed a retired Air Force general to study Israel’s investigation and advise Canberra whether the inquiry was sufficient and whether further action was needed to hold those responsible accountable.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong said last month Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was undermining his country’s international standing with his approach to the war.
Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong has appointed retired defense force chief Mark Binskin as a special adviser working with Israel’s military on continuing investigations.
She said Australia “has made clear to the Israeli government our expectation and trust that this engagement will be facilitated.”
She said the Australian government “has been clear that we expect full accountability for these deaths.”
Wong said Binskin, a highly respected senior officer who also led Australia’s air force, would examine “measures taken to hold those responsible for accounting.”
She added that he would also advise the Australian government on whether further investigations or consequences were warranted.
US-based World Central Kitchen — founded by Spanish-American celebrity chef Jose Andres — said a “targeted attack” by Israeli forces had killed the seven aid workers.
The group included 43-year-old Australian national Frankcom and British, Palestinian, Polish and US-Canadian employees.

 


Nowhere to pray as logs choke flood-hit Indonesian mosque

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Nowhere to pray as logs choke flood-hit Indonesian mosque

  • Before the disaster, the mosque bustled with worshippers — locals and students alike — attending daily and Friday prayers
  • Indonesia consistently ranks among the countries with the highest annual deforestation rates

ACEH TAMIANG, Indonesia: Almost two weeks on from devastating floods, Muslim worshippers in Indonesia’s Sumatra who gathered at their local mosque on Friday for prayers were blocked from entering by a huge pile of thousands of uprooted trees.
The deadly torrential rains had inundated vast tracts of rainforest nearby, leaving residents of the Darul Mukhlisin mosque and Islamic boarding school to search elsewhere for places of worship that had been less damaged.
“We have no idea where all this wood came from,” said Angga, 37, from the nearby village of Tanjung Karang.
Before the disaster, the mosque bustled with worshippers — locals and students alike — attending daily and Friday prayers.
“Now it’s impossible to use. The mosque used to stand near a river,” said Angga. “But the river is gone — it’s turned into dead land.”
Village residents told AFP the structure likely absorbed much of the impact of trees and logs carried by the torrents, preventing even greater destruction downstream.
When AFP visited the site, the mosque was still encircled by a massive heap of timber — a mix of uprooted trees and felled logs, likely from nearby forests.
By Friday, the death toll from one of northern Sumatra’s worst recent disasters — including in Aceh, where a tsunami wreaked havoc in 2004 — had reached 995 people, with 226 still missing and almost 890,000 displaced, according to the National Disaster Mitigation Agency.

- Uncontrolled logging -

Authorities have blamed the scale of devastation partly on uncontrolled logging.
Environmentalists say widespread forest loss has worsened floods and landslides, stripping the land of tree cover that normally stabilizes soil and absorbs rainfall.
Indonesia consistently ranks among the countries with the highest annual deforestation rates.
President Prabowo Subianto, visiting Aceh Tamiang district on Friday, assured victims the government was working to restore normalcy.
“We know conditions are difficult, but we will overcome them together,” he said, urging residents to “stay alert and be careful.”
“I apologize for any shortcomings (but) we are working hard,” he said.
Addressing environmental concerns, Prabowo called for better forest protection.
“Trees must not be cut down indiscriminately,” he said.
“I ask local governments to stay vigilant, to monitor and safeguard our nature as best as possible.”
But frustrations were growing, with flood victims complaining about the pace of relief efforts.
Costs to rebuild after the disaster could run up to 51.82 trillion rupiah ($3.1 billion) and the Indonesian government has so far shrugged off suggestions that it call for international assistance.
Back in nearby Babo Village, Khairi Ramadhan, 37, said he planned to seek out another mosque for prayers.
“I’ll find one that wasn’t hit by the flood,” he said. “Maybe some have already been cleaned. I don’t want to dwell on sorrow anymore.”