Arrests at Amsterdam pro-Palestinian protest near Oct. 7 event

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Pro-Palestinian demonstrators chant slogans during a sit-in at Central Station after a pro-Israeli commemoration marking the anniversary of the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack, in Amsterdam, Netherlands, Monday, Oct. 7, 2024. (AP)
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A pro-Palestinian demonstrator holds a placard reading "Every Day is Oct. 7" while a banner reads "From the Sea to the River" during a demonstration simultaneous with a pro-Israeli commemoration marking the anniversary of the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack, in Amsterdam, Netherlands, Monday, Oct. 7, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 08 October 2024
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Arrests at Amsterdam pro-Palestinian protest near Oct. 7 event

  • Away from Amsterdam, pro-Palestinian protesters staged sit-ins at several stations around the country

AMSTERDAM: Police arrested several pro-Palestinian protesters in Amsterdam Monday, as tensions erupted around events in the city to mark the one-year anniversary of Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel.
Riot officers carrying shields and batons deployed in force in the Dutch capital as people gathered in the Dam central square to mourn those killed one year ago.
While the pro-Israeli group was listening to speeches and concerts, counter-demonstrators began to shout slogans.
Police grabbed one middle-aged woman and hauled her into an armored van, an AFP journalist on the ground witnessed.
Nearby, police surrounded several dozen pro-Palestinian demonstrators with faces covered and waving flags, to keep them separated from the Israeli gathering.
Police warned them to disperse but later announced they had arrested the group “for breaking the law on public gatherings.”
French tourists Myriam Acef, 23, and Ines Khraroubu, 21, told AFP: “We were there right at the beginning but we only stayed a bit because we quickly saw the police were surrounding everyone.”
“We were pushed around a bit with shields and we were stuck for around 20-30 minutes,” Acef said.
Prime Minister Dick Schoof and other top Dutch political leaders were attending commemorations in an Amsterdam synagogue to mark the October 7 attack.
Away from Amsterdam, pro-Palestinian protesters staged sit-ins at several stations around the country.
The October 7 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,206 people, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
The attackers took 251 people hostage into Gaza, where 97 are still being held, including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.
Hours later, Israel launched a military offensive that has razed swathes of Gaza and displaced nearly all of its 2.4 million residents at least once amid an unrelenting humanitarian crisis.
According to data provided by the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza, 41,909 Palestinians, the majority civilians, have been killed there since the start of the war. Those figures have been deemed reliable by the United Nations.
 

 


Contaminated water kills 9 and hospitalizes 200 in India’s Indore city

Updated 58 min 10 sec ago
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Contaminated water kills 9 and hospitalizes 200 in India’s Indore city

  • The drinking water in the Bhagirathpur area of the city was contaminated due to a leak, and a water test had confirmed the presence of bacteria in the pipeline

NEW DELHI: At least nine people have died and more than 200 have been hospitalized ​in the central Indian city of Indore after a diarrhea outbreak that officials said was linked to contaminated drinking water, according to a lawmaker and local health authorities.
Kailash Vijayvargiya, a lawmaker, said nine people had died in ‌Indore.
Indore’s chief ‌medical officer, Madhav ‌Prasad ⁠Hasani, ​told Reuters ‌by phone that drinking water in the Bhagirathpur area of the city was contaminated due to a leak, and a water test had confirmed the presence of bacteria in the pipeline.
“I ⁠cannot say anything on the death toll but ‌yes over 200 people from ‍the same ‍locality are undergoing treatment at different hospitals ‍of the city. The final report of the water sample collected from the affected area is awaited,” Hasani said.
Shravan Verma, the ​district administrative officer, said authorities had deployed teams of doctors for door-to-door screening ⁠and were distributing chlorine tablets to help purify water.
“We have found one leakage point that could have contaminated the water and that point has been fixed,” Verma said, adding that officials had screened 8,571 people and identified 338 with mild symptoms.
Indore, in Madhya Pradesh state, has been named India’s cleanest city ‌and has topped the national cleanliness rankings for the past eight years.