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Indonesia’s deadly flooding was an “extinction-level disturbance” for the world’s rarest great ape, the tapanuli orangutan, causing catastrophic damage to its habitat and survival prospects, scientists warned on Friday.Only scientifically classified as a species in 2017, tapanulis are incredibly rare, with fewer than 800 left in the wild, confined to a small range in part of Indonesia’s Sumatra. One dead suspected tapanuli orangutan has already been found in the region, conservationists told AFP.”The loss of even a single orangutan is a devastating blow to the survival of the species,” said Panut Hadisiswoyo, founder and chairman of the Orangutan Information Centre in Indonesia. And analysis of satellite imagery combined with knowledge of the tapanuli’s range suggests that flooding last month which killed nearly 1,000 people may also have devastated wildlife in the Batang Toru region.The scientists focused on the so-called West Block, the most densely populated of three known tapanuli habitats, and home to an estimated 581 tapanulis before the disaster. There, “we think that between six and 11 percent of orangutans were likely killed,” said Erik Meijaard, a longtime orangutan conservationist.”Any kind of adult mortality that exceeds one percent, you’re driving the species to extinction, irrespective of how big the population is at the start,” he told AFP.But tapanulis have such a small population and range to begin with that they are especially vulnerable, he added.Satellite imagery shows massive gashes in the mountainous landscape, some of which extend for more than a kilometre and are nearly 100m wide, Meijaard said.The tide of mud, trees and water toppling down hillsides would have carried away everything in its path, including other wildlife like elephants.David Gaveau, a remote sensing expert and founder of conservation start-up The Tree Map, said he was flabbergasted by the before-and-after comparison of the region. “I have never seen anything like this before during my 20 years of monitoring deforestation in Indonesia with satellites,” he told AFP.The devastation means remaining tapanulis will be even more vulnerable, with sources of food and shelter now washed away. Over nine percent of the West Block habitat may have been destroyed, the group of scientists estimated.In a draft paper shared with AFP and set to be published as a pre-print in coming days, they warned the flooding represents an “extinction-level disturbance” for tapanulis. Environmentalists have long campaigned against industrial activity in Batang Toru, particularly a hydroelectric dam and gold mine.The highland homes currently inhabited by tapanulis are not their preferred habitat, but it is where remaining orangutans have been pushed by development elsewhere. Earlier this month, Indonesia’s government said industrial plantations, hydropower and gold mining in the region had “contributed significantly to the pressure on the environment”.They announced they would suspend operating permits for all projects in the region pending a review. The government, along with environmentalists, has said deforestation contributed to the scale of the flooding disaster. A study published Thursday also said climate change-linked heavier rains and warmer seas that can turbocharge storms played a role.The orangutan experts are urging an immediate halt to development that will damage remaining tapanuli habitat, and an immediate survey of the region.They also back the expansion of protected areas and work to restore lowland forests.Panut said the region had become eerily quiet after the landslides. “This fragile and sensitive habitat in West Block must be fully protected by halting all habitat-damaging development,” he told AFP. Source link
A severe storm and low-pressure system hitting the Gaza Strip within the past 24 hours have caused the deaths of at least 11 people and left several others injured.Local sources reported by Palestinian WAFA news agency said that five people were killed and others were injured after a house sheltering displaced families collapsed in the Beir al-Naaja area of the city of Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza.Two more people died after a large wall fell on tents housing displaced families in the Al-Rimal neighborhood west of Gaza City early today. Another Palestinian was killed yesterday when a wall collapsed in the Shati refugee camp.Meantime, two children were injured after their tent collapsed in the Al-Amadi area, while freezing temperatures led to the death of an infant inside a displaced people’s tent in the Al-Mawasi area of Khan Younis yesterday.Civil defense teams reported that at least ten houses have collapsed in the past hours, including two in the Al-Karama and Sheikh Radwan neighborhoods. Residents of the Darbieh family home in Sheikh Radwan were evacuated after its entrance collapsed, while the Al-Madhoun family was evacuated near Al-Karama roundabout in Gaza City.The low-pressure system also caused entire camps in the Al-Mawasi area of Khan Younis to flood and inflicted damage on large areas in Al-Basa and Al-Baraka in Deir al-Balah, the central market in Al-Nuseirat, and the Yarmouk and Al-Mina areas in Gaza City. Source link
Last year, the Late Sheikh Jassim Bin Mohammed Bin Thani Trophy was won by Al Sij Al Sakb. The Qatar Racing & Equestrian Club (QREC), chaired by Hamad bin Abdulrahman al-Attiyah, will stage a major race meeting today, featuring racing for the Qatar National Day Trophy and the Late Sheikh Jassim Bin Mohammed Bin Thani Trophy. The nine-race card will be run on the turf track at Al Rayyan Racecourse, with leading owners, trainers and jockeys all set to take part as they compete for total prize money of QR2mn. Prize money includes QAR 500,000 for each of these two feature races, Races 8 and 9 on the card. In addition to the two feature contests – the Qatar National Day Trophy a Gr2 international race for Purebred Arabians, and the Late Sheikh Jassim Bin Mohammed Bin Thani Trophy, a Class 1 for Local Purebred Arabians – the programme also includes a number of cup races. These include the Al Safliya Cup, a QA Gr3for Thoroughbreds, which serves as a qualifier for the Shalfa Race to be held during the HH The Amir Sword Festival next February; the Halul Island Cup, an open race for Local Thoroughbreds; the Al Busayyir Cup, a Thoroughbred Conditions; and the Falcon Cup, an open race for Thoroughbreds. Winners of the cup races will be crowned after each contest while the winners of the two feature trophies will be honoured at the conclusion of the meeting.QREC has made full preparations for the occasion, which ranks among the QREC’s major fixtures each season and is stagedannually in conjunction with the Qatar National Day celebrations. Al Sij Al Sakab and Jabalah: last year’s trophy winnersIn last year’s renewal, the ninth race, the Late Sheikh Jassim Bin Mohammed Bin Thani Trophy for three-year-old and older LocalPurebred Arabians over 1400m, was won by Al Sij Al Sakb, owned by Khalid Hamad al-Atteya. The then six-year-old delivered a powerful performance under the care of trainer Jassim Hamad al-Atteya, with Alberto Sanna producing a fine ride. Meanwhile, the eighth race, the Gr2 Qatar National Day Trophy for four-year-old and older Purebred Arabians over 2100m, was claimed by Jabalah, in the colours of Wathnan Racing. The then eight-year-old finally secured the title after finishing runner-up in the same race in both 2022 and 2023. The victory came under the supervision of trainer Alban de Mieulle, with James Doyle in the saddle. Source link
MES Indian School holds largest Qatar flag formation In a historic feat of unity and tribute to Qatar, about 7,700 students and staff of MES Indian School formed ‘the Largest Human Qatar Flag,’ a magnificent sight to behold.Ministry of Education and Higher Education’s private schools education consultant Mubarak Abdullah al-Mansoori and Indian Doctors Club president Dr Saibu George were the observers of the event.Wearing co-ordinated colours (white and maroon) representing the Qatari national flag, the students and staff formed with precision in 140 rows and 55 columns, maintaining a spacing of 0.50m. The entire display covered an area of 1,925sqm. “Through this collaborative initiative reflecting unwavering commitment to excellence, we pay a heartfelt tribute to Qatar and the visionary leadership that continues to inspire generations,” remarked principal Dr Hameeda Kadar.MES governing board directors and members, officials, teaching, non-teaching staff and students were present. The event was co-ordinated by the Department of Physical Education’s co-ordinator Salim J Nadaf and cultural committee convener Anver, along with a team of teachers. Source link
Britain’s King Charles III, who has broken royal taboos to talk openly about battling cancer, was set to appear in a “personal message” filmed for a TV campaign raising funds for research into the devastating disease.Charles, 77, announced in February 2024 that he had been diagnosed with an undisclosed type of cancer the previous month. In a candid written message during a reception in April at Buckingham Palace for cancer campaigners, the monarch acknowledged that every cancer diagnosis is “daunting and at times frightening”.He said there were more than 1,000 new cancer cases diagnosed every day in the UK, or some 390,000 a year. “But as one among those statistics myself, I can vouch for the fact that it can also be an experience that brings into sharp focus the very best of humanity,” he said.The king’s frankness about his illness is a marked departure from the reign of his mother, the late Queen Elizabeth II, whose health was for decades a closely-guarded secret.Buckingham Palace said Charles had pre-recorded a video message for the Stand Up To Cancer joint campaign between Cancer Research and Channel 4 that was to air at 8pm on Friday. The king “will stress the importance of cancer screening programmes in enabling early diagnosis and will reflect on his own recovery journey”, the palace said.Charles recorded the message during the last week of November at Clarence House, his London residence. Fundraisers and celebrity challenges have been taking place throughout the week leading up to Friday’s show.Stand Up To Cancer, which brings together UK celebrities in a national, televised fund-raising drive, says to date it has raised more than £113mn ($151mn). The funds aid research into more than 20 different types of cancer, including brain tumours, avoiding surgery for those with rectal cancer, and designing methods to lessen the often brutal side effects of chemotherapy.Charles’s cancer was detected in January 2024 during treatment for a benign prostate condition for which he had surgery. He has not revealed what kind of cancer he has been diagnosed with, although the palace said it was not related to his prostate issues.Just six weeks after Charles announced his diagnosis, his daughter-in-law Catherine, Princess of Wales, revealed she also had cancer and had begun chemotherapy. The mother of three young children has also never discussed what kind of cancer she was suffering from. She is now in remission and cancer-free, after what her husband, heir to the throne Prince William, admitted had been a “brutal” year and the “hardest” of his life.The king suspended his public duties for a few weeks before resuming them in April 2024, with his doctors saying they were “encouraged” by his recovery. He has been undergoing treatment ever since. He has stepped up his activities over the past year, making many royal visits around Britain as well as trips to Canada and the Vatican.He was briefly hospitalised in March after experiencing “side effects” from his ongoing cancer treatment. At the April event, he sought to comfort those receiving a new cancer diagnosis, repeating the words of a late well-known British campaigner, Deborah James, who died from bowel cancer. “Find a life worth enjoying; take risks; love deeply; have no regrets; and always, always have rebellious hope.” Source link
At least 30 people were killed, including patients, after an airstrike by the country’s ruling junta hit a hospital in Myanmar’s western Rakhine state, according to a rebel group, an aid worker and a witness. More than 70 people were injured, they said.UN human rights chief Volker Turk said such attacks may amount to a war crime and called for an investigation. A spokesperson for the US State Department called the reports “disturbing” and said the military government should cease violence against civilians.The hospital in Rakhine’s Mrauk U township was struck late on Wednesday by bombs dropped by a military aircraft, said Khine Thu Kha, a spokesman for the Arakan Army, which is battling the ruling junta along parts of the coastal state.”The Mrauk U General Hospital was completely destroyed,” Khine Thu Kha told Reuters. “The high number of casualties occurred because the hospital took a direct hit.”A junta spokesman did not respond to calls for comment. Myanmar has been gripped by conflict since the military suppressed protests against a 2021 coup that unseated the elected government led by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. The 300-bed hospital was overflowing with patients at the time of the strike, said aid worker Wai Hun Aung, as most healthcare services across swathes of Rakhine state have been suspended amid the ongoing fighting.”I am appalled and condemn in strongest possible terms the strikes on Rakhine hospital,” the UN’s Volker Turk said in a post on X, adding he is concerned about new waves of acute violence and fear in the country.On Thursday morning, the facility lay in complete ruins, with a collapsed roof, shattered columns and beams, and the bodies of victims laid out on the ground, according to images shared by Wai Hun Aung that he also posted on social media.Reuters could not immediately verify the images. “The remaining patients have been moved to a safe location,” he told Reuters.Soon after he heard the sound of explosions on Wednesday night, a 23-year-old resident of Mrauk U said he rushed to the scene. “When I arrived, the hospital was on fire,” he said, asking not to be named because of security concerns. “I saw many bodies lying around and many injured people.”The junta, which has the only air force in Myanmar, has been increasingly using airstrikes to hit targets inside rebel-held areas. From January to late November, the junta conducted 2,165 airstrikes, compared to 1,716 such incidents in all of 2024, according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project.The US State Department spokesperson said Washington was deeply concerned about the Myanmar crisis and called on the junta to allow unhindered access to humanitarian assistance, release those unjustly detained, and engage in dialogue with opposition groups. “This is essential for a secure and prosperous Indo-Pacific region,” the official said.Resistance groups formed since the coup have combined with major ethnic armies like the Arakan Army to take on the military, which is fighting the rebellion on multiple frontlines. Since the breakdown of a ceasefire in 2023, the Arakan Army has pushed the military out of 14 of Rakhine’s 17 townships, gaining control of an area larger than Belgium, according to an analysis published by the ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute.Mrauk U township, in the north of Rakhine state, has been under the control of the Arakan Army since last year and there has been no recent fighting in the area, Khine Thu Kha said. Source link
A flickering candle casts a dim light on the photo of 12-year-old Akash Patni, a pensive look on the face of the Indian boy who died in a plane crash that has left his family inconsolable. He is among dozens of people who died on June 12 when Air India flight 171 smashed into buildings in a neighbourhood of Ahmedabad, in the western state of Gujarat.Since the disaster six months ago, Akash’s parents and four siblings have gathered every day to pray in front of his picture, placed on a shelf in a corner of the small, dark space that serves as their living room. “My son was sitting near the tea stall when a part of the plane fell on him… there was smoke and fire everywhere and nobody could go near the site,” said the father, Suresh Patni, a 48-year-old tea vendor.”The boy was burnt to ashes… We could not even take him to the hospital.”The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner had just taken off for London when, for reasons that an investigation has not yet clarified, fuel was cut to both of its engines.Deprived of power, the aircraft crashed onto buildings at the end of the runway, engulfing in flames 241 of its 242 passengers and crew, and 19 residents of Ahmedabad.One passenger survived. “Everything happened before my own eyes,” said Akash’s mother Sita Patni, 45. From beneath the headscarf covering her grey hair and shoulders emerges a bare arm covered in large burn scars — the mark of her lost battle to pull her son from the flames. “I am in pain the whole day,” she said softly.”I tried to save him, but he did not survive.”Kiritsinh Chavda, 49, lost his brother and sister-in-law in the crash. He recalled the horror of receiving a call from his father, telling him that a plane had crashed in the neighbourhood where he lives. “He told me that my younger brother and his wife were unreachable,” said Chavda, a police officer. When he arrived at the scene, chaos awaited him. “The bodies were very badly damaged and burned,” he said.”It took nearly a week for my brother and his wife to be identified.”Relatives of the victims have been looking for answers, trying to understand what caused their loved ones’ deaths. They are also just beginning to deal with the ordeal of compensation. Air India quickly paid the equivalent of $28,000 to the families of each of the dead. The airline’s owner, Tata Group, pledged to add another $112,000. “We are yet to get the remaining amount,” muttered Chavda.Air India has acknowledged the delay but asked for patience.”The process for final compensation is underway,” a spokesperson said.”We are deeply conscious of our responsibility and are providing support and care to all families affected by the tragedy, which remains our absolute priority.”To Chavda, “they should give whatever compensation they promised. That is enough for me.”Badasab Saiyed, 60, said that for him, “compensation is secondary.” A retired academic, he lost his brother, sister-in-law, a nephew and a niece in the accident.They had initially planned to fly from New Delhi to London, but the flight was cancelled, and they took the doomed flight from Ahmedabad instead.Saiyed did not hesitate long before joining a complaint filed by a British law firm seeking answers. “The main thing is, who is the culprit responsible?” he said.”Was there lax maintenance, or was there a problem with the Boeing plane itself? Or was it a small (pilot) fault? This should not have happened.”The crash site has been cleared of all the aircraft debris. Only the charred ruins of the building that supported its tail remain, along with a few rusted shells of burned-out cars.Curled up in his grief, Suresh Patni cares little about getting answers. “I’m not interested in the investigation,” he said. “I don’t understand any of it.”Nor does he care about compensation. “What do we do with money?” he said. “We lost our son.” The family had had high hopes for Akash. “He was our youngest and the most adored,” his father said. “We wanted him to study and do something.””He was the brightest in our family,” added his mother, who has not had the strength to return to, much less reopen, her tea stall. “I can’t bear it, I keep on thinking about him,” she said. “I can’t bear the sound of a plane now. I keep looking down, can’t look up in the sky.” Source link
Israeli warplanes launched heavy airstrikes Friday on several areas in southern and eastern Lebanon, including Wadi Zalaya in the Bekaa and towns in Jezzine and Nabatieh.Strikes also hit areas between Zrariyeh and Ansar, and near Sajad, Al Rihan, and Jbaa.Despite a ceasefire deal from November 2024 requiring Israeli withdrawal, forces remain in five southern positions and continue violations Source link
Q Life is thrilled to announce that tickets for the eagerly anticipated third edition of the Match for Hope charity football match are now on sale at www.match4hope.com. Scheduled to take place on Friday, 30 January 2026, at the iconic Ahmad bin Ali Stadium in Doha, Match for Hope 2026 is being organised by Q Life, the cultural initiative under the State of Qatar’s International Media Office (IMO), in collaboration with the Education Above All Foundation (EAA) and the Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy to once again raise vital funds for EAA projects across the globe. Get ready for an unforgettable match! The 2026 edition marks the highly anticipated final showdown between Team Chunkz and Team AboFlah, with both captains returning to lead their teams to glory, joined by a powerful lineup of global football icons and content creators. This year’s match will feature superstar talents including:• KSI • Sharky • Billy Wingrove • Danny Aarons • Angry Ginge • Harry Pinero • Amr Nassouhy • Luva de Pedreiro• Marlon • Fanum• Eden Hazard• Thierry Henry • Marcelo Vieira da Silva Júnior• Diego Costa Stay tuned for the full team lineups and an electrifying half-time show headlined by a world-class international performer. All the thrilling details will be revealed soon on Match for Hope’s social media channels @match4hope.Building on the great successes of Match for Hope 2024 and 2025 – events which combined to raise more than QR 71 million )$19.5 million (and provided support to out-of-school children in Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sudan, Pakistan, Mali, Tanzania/Zanzibar, and Qatar – Match for Hope 2026 promises to be the most impactful yet, further harnessing the global power of sport and entertainment to change lives. Don’t miss your chance to be part of this incredible night. Buy tickets through the official Match for Hope website now. About Match for Hope Match for Hope combines the power of sport with the influence of the world’s biggest creators and football legends to raise funds to give disadvantaged people and communities hope for a better future. For the past two years, world-famous creators and legendary ex-professional footballers have competed in an 11-a-side showdown at one of Qatar’s state-of-the-art World Cup venues. All the proceeds from the event have gone to Education Above All (EAA) Foundation to raise awareness and support for the quality education of out-of-school children. Source link
DPS Modern Indian School (DPS-MIS) Grade X student Amir Nawaz (right) won a bronze at the 22nd International Junior Science Olympiad (IJSO 2025) in Sirius, Russia, held from November 23 to December 2, representing Team Qatar. The Qatari team, comprising six exceptional students from both public and private schools, bagged two bronze in this global competition. The students were supported by academic supervisors from the Ministry of Education and Higher Education, who guided them through scientific discussions, test translations, assessments, and co-ordination throughout the event. Source link
