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The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) launched a robotic mission yesterday to try to prevent one of its ageing telescopes from burning up in the atmosphere, a complicated operation expected to last several months. The unprecedented $30mn effort involves sending a robot to rescue the Swift space telescope that’s currently falling towards Earth. If successful, the mission could pave the way for giving other satellites a second life. Initially scheduled for Tuesday, the robot’s launch was postponed due to weather and then technical issues. It finally took place yesterday at 0836 GMT from an atoll in the Pacific Ocean. The Swift telescope cost $250mn and is used to study gamma-ray bursts, the most powerful explosions in the universe. The closely watched mission, organised on a short-notice production schedule of just nine months, would mark a key test of an orbital-grappling technology with major implications for both the commercial satellite industry and the US-China space race. Last year China demonstrated two satellites orbiting in close proximity, following a 2022 test in which one Chinese satellite grappled onto and yanked another into a different orbit – alarming US officials who said China could one day employ such tactics on American spacecraft. Source link
Japan’s Naomi Osaka arrives at Court 1 ahead of her third-round match against Australia’s Daria Kasatkina at Wimbledon…
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The Qatar men’s beach volleyball team has advanced to the semifinals of the Volleyball World Beach Pro Tour Ostrava Elite 16, taking place in Czechia.Qatari duo Cherif Younousse and Ahmed Tijan secured qualification after defeating the Argentine duo Nicolas and Tomas Capogrosso 2-1 in their quarterfinal match Saturday.The match was highly competitive and closely contested, as Qatar lost the first set 19-21, yet managed to bounce back strongly, showing championship character by winning the second and third sets 21-15 and 21-19 respectively, demonstrating the ability to turn tides in critical moments.Team Qatar will face David Ahman and Jonatan Hellvig of Sweden in the semifinals on Sunday. Source link
The ceasefire agreed in Lebanon last month has brought little respite for civilians, who are being driven from a steadily expanding swathe of the country by a relentless Israeli campaign of evacuations and air strikes. The US-brokered truce announced on April 16, after about six weeks of fighting, has failed to halt the violence between Israel and Hezbollah. Both are carrying out near-daily attacks while accusing the other of violating the pact. That’s left hundreds of thousands of civilians in southern Lebanon displaced from their homes. Shortly after the ceasefire declaration, Israel published a map marking out a buffer zone covering nearly 600sq km (230 sq miles) that it had occupied with ground forces, and listing 57 towns and villages where it had warned residents to evacuate. Since then, though, the Israel military has carried out hundreds of air strikes on a far wider area outside that occupied zone and issued evacuation orders covering more than 100 additional Lebanese towns and villages, according to a Reuters review of Israeli statements. Together with the occupied zone, these orders span about 2,000 sq km of Lebanon — about a fifth of the entire country — much of which has been rendered effectively off-limits to residents, according to the review and interviews with local officials, aid workers and displaced people. The reporting provides one of the most detailed pictures yet of the growing displacement crisis engulfing this small country on the eastern Mediterranean. The fighting is part of a wider conflagration across the Middle East. Israel aims to drive back its sworn enemies – Iran and its proxy forces, including Hezbollah and Hamas – with a stated strategy to create “buffer zones” along its borders with Gaza, Syria and now Lebanon to safeguard its citizens. The growing evacuation area, along with confusion about ongoing attacks and the eventual extent of the Israeli buffer zone, has made many residents fear they may never return to their homes. “There is no way we are coming back now,” said Iyad Watfi, a mukhtar — elected official — in Bazouriye, who said the town once home to 13,000 people had been hit by multiple air strikes and evacuation orders since the truce. “Last week, we had 20 buildings destroyed in the town in one night.” Only a tiny portion of the population remained, with most others sheltering in tents to the north, he said, adding that few felt safe to return in the foreseeable future. The latest Lebanese conflict erupted on March 2 when Hezbollah fired rockets at northern Israel in solidarity with Iran, which was under Israeli and US attack. Israel responded with a ground invasion of Lebanon, leading to fighting that has so far killed more than 3,000 people and displaced hundreds of thousands, according to the Lebanese government. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) told Reuters its air campaign in Lebanon since the ceasefire was not aimed at displacing civilians but rather designed to eliminate threats from Hezbollah, which it accused of embedding forces and weaponry in civilian areas. It characterised the evacuation notices as “recommendations” issued before air strikes, allowing citizens to leave if they choose. Hezbollah’s media office didn’t respond to a request for comment. The group, a political and military movement, has itself carried out regular attacks including kamikaze drone strikes since the ceasefire. It has said that, despite the truce, it has the right to resist continued Israeli aggression and denies placing military assets in civilian areas. Reuters reached mukhtars from 20 of the towns and villages subject to Israeli evacuation orders since the ceasefire, communities with pre-conflict populations ranging from hundreds to thousands of people. Most estimated the percentage of residents remaining in single digits, saying most had fled northwards or to the coastal cities of Tyre and Sidon. “People’s nerves are shattered. They can’t take it anymore so they left,” said Ali Nazzal, a mukhtar in Srifa who said the village was virtually deserted. “The ceasefire is a lie.” The situation looks increasingly bleak for civilians in Lebanon. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledged that Israel would escalate its strikes, prompting residents to flee southern suburbs of Beirut, further to the north. Israel has since issued a new slew of evacuation orders, encompassing more than a dozen new towns and villages and declaring a large section of the south a “combat zone”. The ongoing conflict could have implications for the broader US-Israeli war on Iran, with Tehran demanding a halt to Israeli attacks in Lebanon as a condition in peace talks. ISRAEL STRIKES OVER 1,000 TARGETS SINCE TRUCEOn March 31, Netanyahu said his country’s area of occupation in Lebanon would stretch to the Litani River, about 30km north of the border with Israel. He described it as “a vast buffer zone” to thwart anti-tank fire and the threat of invasion. By the April 16 ceasefire, Israeli forces had only occupied about half of that area. However, the subsequent barrage of air strikes and evacuation orders has driven people from areas even well beyond the river. Only about half the towns and villages subject to evacuation orders since the ceasefire are south of the Litani, with the rest to the north of the river, some more than 20km from the waterway, the review of Israeli statements found. On May 12, the Israeli military said it had struck more than 1,100 targets since the ceasefire, including weapons warehouses, launchers and sites where Hezbollah was operating. Reuters identified the location of more than 300 of those strikes during the first month of the ceasefire by reviewing reports published by Lebanon’s state news agency. An analysis of nighttime lights data captured by the satellite-based VIIRS sensor, which was carried out for Reuters by Professor Hadi Jaafar at the American University of Beirut, showed a significant reduction in light emissions across south Lebanon since the conflict began. The light levels have remained depressed in some areas during the ceasefire, strongly suggesting that many displaced residents have not returned, Jaafar said. ‘WE WANT TO RETURN, EVEN TO SLEEP ON GROUND’Israeli forces have used explosives and bulldozers in demolitions that effectively erase many villages in the 600sq km zone its ground forces occupied before the ceasefire after the defence minister vowed on March 31 to destroy “all homes” near the border. In areas outside Israeli occupation, many residents tried to return during the ceasefire but were driven out again, often within days, by renewed evacuation orders and air strikes, according to local officials, displaced people and aid workers. Hawraa Yousef Ghadbouni, 39, said she fled from the southern town of Qlaileh to the coastal city of Sidon after the latest conflict began on March 2, sleeping in a car with her husband and three children. After the ceasefire, they returned and found their home partially standing, with two rooms still intact, amid ruined houses and shops. Within a day, shelling and air strikes forced them to flee again, this time to the coastal city of Tyre, about 10km to the north. When Tyre, too, was bombed, they returned to Sidon, taking refuge in a school turned shelter. “We want to return, even if we have to sleep on the ground,” Ghadbouni said. “What matters is going back. Life here is not sustainable.” In the town of Bedias, about a half-hour drive north of Qlaileh, Wael al-Amin, a 48-year-old medic, was sitting outside his brother’s home on May 10, drinking coffee and watching his children play despite the steady buzz of a drone overhead. “I thought, ‘Let them play’,” he said from a hospital in Tyre. “These are children. Who would target them?” Moments later, a blast tore through his brother’s house, sending a cloud of debris into the air. Amin stumbled through the smoke until he found his eight-year-old son, wounded amid the rubble. “He told me, ‘I’m here’,” he said. Amin pulled the boy to safety before discovering that his brother had been killed in the strike. Source link
