COP28 climate talks go into overtime amid standoff over fossil fuels | Climate Crisis News

A flurry of shuttle diplomacy is under way at the UN-led negotiations in the UAE as countries fight over the wording of a potential deal.

The COP28 climate talks have gone into overtime as countries grapple over the wording of a potential agreement on the issue of fossil fuels.

There was a flurry of shuttle diplomacy as the UN-led conference extended past midday on Tuesday after nearly two weeks of speeches, demonstrations and negotiations with many countries criticising a draft text released on Monday for failing to call for the total phase-out of oil, gas and coal.

The COP28 director general for the United Arab Emirates, Majid Al Suwaidi, said the aim of the draft text was to “spark conversations”.

“The text we released was a starting point for discussions,” Al Suwaidi said at a news conference on Tuesday. “When we released it, we knew opinions were polarised, but what we didn’t know was where each country’s red lines were.”

Monday’s draft prompted negotiations that ran overnight into early Tuesday at the talks in Dubai.

German climate envoy Jennifer Morgan said the talks were in a “critical, critical phase”.

“There is a lot of shuttle diplomacy going on,” she said on X, formerly Twitter.

The draft text mentioned eight nonbinding options countries could take in cutting emissions, including reducing “both consumption and production of fossil fuels in a just, orderly and equitable manner so as to achieve net zero by, before, or around 2050″.

This is the first time a UN summit has mentioned reducing the use of all fossil fuels.

Too weak?

The draft text was criticised as too weak by countries that included Australia, Canada, Chile, Norway and the United States. They are among nearly 100 nations that want a complete phase-out of coal, oil and natural gas use.

Scientists say greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels are the main cause of climate change. However, such fuels still produce nearly 80 percent of the world’s energy.

A new draft was supposed to be completed on Tuesday, but ongoing negotiations have prevented that from happening.

Deals at UN climate summits must be passed by consensus, and countries are then responsible for implementing them through their own national policies.

Different timeframes?

Countries in the Global South charge that richer countries should quit fossil fuels first because they have been using and producing them far longer.

“The transition should be premised on differentiated pathways to net zero and fossil fuel phase-down,” said Collins Nzovu, green economy minister for Zambia, which chairs the African group of countries in UN climate talks.

“We should also recognise the full right of Africa to exploit its natural resources sustainably,” he added.

Brazil is on board with forgoing fossil fuels but wants a deal that makes clear that rich and poor nations should do so on different timeframes, Environment Minister Marina Silva said.

OPEC countries, meanwhile, are the strongest resistors of a fossil fuel phase-out.

Sources told the Reuters news agency that the UAE’s COP28 President Sultan al-Jaber faced pressure from Saudi Arabia, the de facto leader of OPEC, to drop any mention of fossil fuels in the final agreement.

‘Death sentence’

Meanwhile, participants from small island nations, which are among the countries hit hardest by rising sea levels, said they would not approve a deal akin to a “death warrant”.

“How do we go home and tell them the result? That the world has sold us out? ” Briana Fuean, a climate activist from Samoa, asked. “I can’t answer that. We are sitting in rooms being asked to negotiate our death sentence.”

Joseph Sikulu of Pacific Climate Warriors shed tears while talking about the draft text.

“We didn’t come here to sign our death sentence,” he said.

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Why White Lotus Season 3 Is Already Making Jaws Drop

Nathasha Rothwell is extending her stay. 

The White Lotus actress, who is set to reprise her season one role of hotel spa manager Belinda in the anthology series’ third installment, revealed her reaction to reading the scripts for the first time —and sent a whole lot of praise to creator Mike White

“I gasped out loud a minimum of five times, and this was just me reading them,” Natasha told Vanity Fair in an article published on Dec. 11. “The scripts are a testament to Mike’s skill and ability to tell the most smart and entertaining stories.”

In fact, the 43-year-old teased that fans are simply not prepared for what the writer has in store for their next stay at the White Lotus.  

“Everything that he does is like a lesson to me as an actor and a performer,” she continued. “And as a writer myself, he takes folks on a journey. Everyone needs to buckle up, because it’s going to get real!”

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Disney Insists Bethesda’s Indiana Jones Game Going PC and Xbox Exclusive Isn’t ‘Overly Exclusionary’

Microsoft’s high-profile legal battle with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) over the fate of its $69 billion buyout of Activision Blizzard unearthed a number of explosive revelations, among them the fact Microsoft renegotiated ZeniMax’s deal with Disney to make Bethesda’s upcoming Indiana Jones game exclusive to Xbox and PC, thus ditching the PlayStation 5 version.

During the trial, Bethesda’s Pete Hines revealed that Disney had an agreement with Bethesda owner ZeniMax for a multiplatform AAA Indiana Jones game, but after Microsoft bought the company, the agreement with Disney was amended to transition the Indiana Jones game to an Xbox and PC exclusive. At the time, Hines said the game was set to hit Game Pass on day one.

Several emails and conversations shown during the trial added colour to the decision to make Indiana Jones a platform exclusive. “While it is not in our messaging, I think it is important to highlight that Lucasfilm brought up the issue of platforms because we have a signed agreement with them to develop the game for multiple consoles,” read an email between Hines, Xbox CEO Phil Spencer, Xbox Studios head Matt Booty, and several other executives.

“The upside here is a game coming from Bethesda that everyone will be excited about. This is the most important thing. The downside for Xbox… is that a large percentage of output from Bethesda won’t directly benefit the Xbox community in any way,” Spencer wrote in January 2021.

IGN’s Twenty Questions – Guess the game!

Hines said he was told by Spencer in a subsequent call that Bethesda should continue to look at title exclusivity on a case-by-case basis. Asked why Indiana Jones was ultimately amended, Hines attributed it to “reducing risk and trying to get a degree of clarity.”

“You’re dealing with a licensor who is giving a ton of feedback on what you’re making, is going to add a ton of time to your scheduling, these agreements, you don’t get to take as long as you want, you have a window of time in which you’re going to release a game, you immediately have a clock that’s ticking on you,” Hines said.

In short, while Bethesda had a degree of control over what happened with Starfield, it has much less control over Indiana Jones, which is owned by Lucasfilm. “Truthfully, we also kind of liked the idea of embracing, bringing it to Game Pass and how many players we could get there,” Hine said.

A subsequent court document revealed how Microsoft believed it could use Game Pass and console sales to help offset the losses it would incur from making Indiana Jones and the recently released Starfield Xbox console exclusives.

The FTC cited Microsoft Gaming Chief Financial Officer Tim Stuart’s testimony, stating that Microsoft had forecasted “more than 10 million” sales on PlayStation “for both Starfield and Indiana Jones,” before it decided to make both games exclusive to Xbox.

We felt like it’s still going to reach a broad set of folks, and we felt, financially and strategically for the game, that made sense at the time.

Now, Speaking to Axios, Disney’s head of gaming, Sean Shoptaw, explained why the company was happy to renegotiate on Indiana Jones. With “Xbox still being one of the bigger marketplaces for games, we didn’t feel like we were going to be overly exclusionary”, Shoptaw insisted. “We felt like it’s still going to reach a broad set of folks, and we felt, financially and strategically for the game, that made sense at the time.”

Essentially, Microsoft made it worth Disney’s while to ensure Indiana Jones on Xbox as a console exclusive, thus adding further value to Game Pass and encouraging sales of the Xbox console.

Microsoft and the issue of console exclusivity has come up multiple times in recent years. Microsoft announced its plans to acquire Bethesda owner ZeniMax back in 2020, and outside of honoring the timed-exclusivity deals PlayStation previously inked with Bethesda for timed console exclusivity for Arkane’s Deathloop and Tango Gameworks’ Ghostwire: Tokyo, projects coming from developers under the ZeniMax umbrella were announced as a console exclusive for Xbox consoles, including the previously mentioned Starfield and Indiana Jones.

Indeed, Arkane Studios was working on a PS5 version of Redfall before Microsoft acquired ZeniMax. Arkane Studios’ Harvey Smith noted in the interview that the developer was then instructed to focus on “Game Pass, Xbox, and PC.”

The exclusivity of Activision’s Call of Duty was at the heart of the FTC’s case against Microsoft, a case it ultimately lost. While Bethesda games, including the upcoming Elder Scrolls 6, are PC and Xbox exclusive, Microsoft signed a 10-year deal with Sony to ensure Call of Duty remains on PlayStation.

Microsoft exclusivity hit the headlines again last week following the reveal of Arkane’s Blade game during The Game Awards 2023. Microsoft is yet to announce launch platforms, leaving a potential PS5 version up in the air. But with Disney seemingly happy for Indiana Jones to leave PlayStation behind, perhaps it has agreed a similar deal for Blade.

In September, Todd Howard indicated Bethesda will talk more about the Indiana Jones game, developed by Wolfenstein maker MachineGames, in 2024.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

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Ukraine’s Zelenskyy arrives in the US. What’s on the agenda? | Russia-Ukraine war News

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has arrived in the US as part of his efforts to convince US politicians to not block military aid to the war-torn country.

Who will Zelenskyy meet on his visit to the US?

Zelenskyy is expected to meet US President Joe Biden, a staunch supporter of Ukraine in its war with Russia.

“[Russian president Vladimir Putin] thought he could break you … he was wrong. He continues to be wrong. Ukraine is unbroken, unbowed and unconquered, proving that nothing can dim the flame of liberty that burns in the heart of free people,” Biden said in late last September when Zelenskyy had again visited the White House.

Zelenskyy’s key meeting in Washington was likely to be scheduled with Republican and Democratic senators. The Republican Party has so far refused to even schedule a vote on President Biden’s request for $50bn in military aid for Ukraine next year and to replace US weapons drawn down for Ukraine this year.

Senate Republicans last week blocked Biden’s $111bn bill, which includes military aid to Israel and humanitarian aid to Ukraine, from advancing to debate and a vote. They said the bill did not contain provisions to tighten border security with Mexico and restrict asylum and parole rights for refugees.

JD Vance, the Ohio Republican senator, said he was “offended” by Zelenskyy’s visit to Washington this week, and it was “not the role of the United States here to hand out money to every beggar who comes into our country”.

Asked whether he had any indications for a breakthrough in September, Biden had said, “I’m counting on the good judgment of the US Congress. There’s no alternative.”

Biden has urged Congress to vote for Ukraine because it is both in the US interest and consistent with US values.

“The entire world has a stake in making sure that no nation, no aggressor, has the power to take a neighbour’s territory by force,” he said in his meeting with Zelenskyy. “The American people will never waver in our commitment to those values.”

Is Ukraine losing support?

Ukraine has witnessed an erosion in support on both sides of the Atlantic after a carefully prepared counteroffensive this year failed to achieve its strategic objective of driving a wedge into the middle of the Russian front. Some politicians have called for Ukraine to negotiate with Russia, something Zelenskyy presently refuses to do.

On Monday, Zelenskyy spoke with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban in Buenos Aires, during the inauguration of Argentina’s President Javier Milei.

Hungary has emerged as the European Union member most opposed to inviting Ukraine to start membership talks with the EU in this week’s summit or promising Ukraine $21.4bn (20 billion euros) in military aid next year. Zelenskyy has been coordinating strategies with the European Commission to break that impasse.

“We are working to get an unconditional decision to start negotiations,” said Zelenskyy in a November 13 video address. “It is fundamental for Ukraine to implement all the recommendations of the European Commission.”

But the US military aid is key, because the US has donated more than three times what Europe has donated in military aid ($111bn so far, versus Europe’s $29bn), and it also has the largest stockpiles of deliverable weapons in the West’s arsenal.

That, says a former Republican congressional candidate, is precisely why the US needs to step back.

“Republicans are reflecting the sentiment of many Americans who believe Ukraine’s fight is just, but believe that an additional $61.2bn in aid is excessive given that the US has contributed more to the effort than all other nations combined, while domestic concerns have been ignored,” Demetries Andrew Grimes, who stood for Florida’s 15th House district in 2022, told Al Jazeera.

Grimes, who has also supported ending birthright citizenship, whereby people born in the US have the right to US citizenship even if their parents were not legal migrants, says the situation is critical.

“6.5 million unvetted and undocumented migrants have entered the US since Biden took office,” he said, adding that a record number of immigrant arrivals on the southern border will lead to “another 5 million illegal” migrants entering the US within the next year.

Biden said Ukraine was to receive its first M1-Abrams tanks next week, along with Hawkeye missiles, launchers and interceptors to protect its airspace.

Apart from President Biden and the full Senate, Zelenskyy was due to meet with US House Speaker Mike Johnson.

What challenges is Ukraine currently facing in terms of funding and the war?

The Pentagon has started rationing its aid to Ukraine and has warned it could be stopped altogether by the end of the year.

On December 4, the White House Office of Budget and Management wrote to Congress, warning that “without congressional action, by the end of the year we will run out of resources to procure more weapons and equipment for Ukraine and to provide equipment from U.S. military stocks”.

The result would be to “kneecap” Ukraine’s armed forces just as Russia is pushing to regain the initiative on the battlefield, wrote Shalanda D Young, who heads the Office.

“If Ukraine’s economy collapses, they will not be able to keep fighting, full stop,” she said. “Putin understands this well, which is why Russia has made destroying Ukraine’s economy central to its strategy – which you can see in its attacks against Ukraine’s grain exports and energy infrastructure.”

Some US commentators believe the Republican stance represents Putin’s best hope of hobbling Ukraine’s war effort – especially once the US presidential election gets under way next year.

“What’s going to happen to the American election?… Trump and what the Republicans represent does not help Ukraine, and could potentially make things easier for Russia,” retired Colonel Seth Krummrich, now vice-president of Global Guardian, a security consultant, told Al Jazeera.

The White House has told congressional Republicans that domestic politics should not come in the way of US support for Ukraine in its fight against Russia.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has already put his own military budget in place. On November 27, he signed a 70 percent increase of defence and security spending next year, to a post-Cold War record $157.5bn – some 39 percent of the entire Russian budget.

“Zelensky is likely to depart Washington empty-handed, but with a commitment of assistance through authorized US weapons transfers from allies, backed by a US pledge to replenish allies for their contributions,” said Grimes.

On Monday afternoon, Zelenskyy received a boost from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which said it would disburse another $900m under its Ukraine programme. The fund has granted $4.5bn under the $15.6bn programme so far this year.

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Manchester United vs Bayern Munich: five things to watch out for – Man United News And Transfer News

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It all comes down to this. After a solitary win in five matches, Manchester United’s Champions League destiny is out of their hands but they still have to do their part.

A win against Bayern Munich is not just wanted, it’s needed. Nothing less will do. Even still, they would need to rely on a draw in the other game between Galatasaray and Copenhagen to go through.

Here are five things to watch out for as United’s final stand in the Champions League kicks off tonight:

Wounded lion vs Weak prey?

It is a sign of how these two teams are matched mentally that when Bayern inexplicably lost 5-1 to Frankfurt on the weekend, the first reaction was that United are in trouble.

On the other hand, when Bournemouth scored the first against United, the full-time whistle might as well have blown in the fourth minute because heads always drop at the club at the first sign of distress.

Therefore, Bayern’s loss comes at the worst possible time for United because the Bundesliga champions are now itching for a reaction. It is no longer a dead rubber for them.

They say a wounded lion is a dangerous beast. Bayern is exactly that right now. Brittle United need to find some semblance of consistency to avoid looking like a weak prey. Speaking of consistency…

Which Onana will turn up?

Andre Onana’s United career can be perfectly divided into two extremes. He has either been irresistible and world-class, or a walking calamity.

United’s inconsistencies can be summed up by their goalkeeper’s form. Ironically, their only win in the tournament came due to an Onana penalty save, but the reason that that is their only win of the season is because of the Cameroonian too.

He single-handedly cost United a win in Turkey which would have left their destiny in their own hands and it was not the first time that has happened.

Erik ten Hag will hope the “other” version of Onana appears for this game because the margin for errors is now non-existent.

The Dane’s European playground

Rasmus Hojlund’s case is pretty similar to Andre Onana’s, but the Dane hasn’t been atrocious in any game so far. His duality is limited to the competition he plays in.

It is a barely believable fact that UCL’s top scorer is yet to score in the Premier League. The chaos and end-to-end football in Europe suit the energetic striker to a tee as he has made the world aware of his immense potential in the Champions League.

As long as he is doing things right, the goals will naturally follow in all competitions. Till then, Europe is his playground and if he wants to extend his playtime, United need him to stand up and deliver in this fixture.

Looking for Kobbie

Kobbie Mainoo’s remarkable debut start for the club seems like a fever dream at this point. The youngster hasn’t seen consistent first-team minutes after that memorable debut performance and with questions asked of Ten Hag’s absent midfield, it’s a curious decision, to say the least.

Of course, Ten Hag might be protecting the teenager from too much exposure, too soon, but it is in the need of the hour that world-class players made. Mainoo undoubtedly has that potential and there is no bigger stage than Old Trafford under the lights in a Champions League fixture against European royalty.

Amrabat has started showing spurts of form, while McTominay’s goalscoring is clearly valued by Ten Hag above the imbalance it causes in midfield. Therefore, it is unlikely that Mainoo will start, but some minutes on the pitch are warranted.

A week from hell begins

Bayern Munich are a formidable force, but United matched up fairly well at Allianz Arena before individual mistakes cost them again.

However, such is fate’s cruel game with United that after losing to Bournemouth, Bayern is the “more convenient” opponent. A trip to Anfield follows after that game in a week that is straight from hell.

Of course, big games and marquee oppositions are sometimes exactly what’s needed to galvanise a struggling group. However, nothing this group of players have shown so far proves that they relish a big game or adversity.

Anfield has been the burial ground for many United manager post-Sir Alex. Ten Hag’s job security doesn’t seem like a concern now but after potentially three embarrassments in a week, nobody knows.

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Inflation Holds Roughly Steady Ahead of Fed Meeting

Inflation data released on Tuesday showed that price increases remained moderate in November, the latest sign that inflation has cooled substantially from its June 2022 peak. That’s likely to keep the Federal Reserve on track to leave interest rates unchanged at its final meeting of the year, which takes place this week.

The Consumer Price Index came out just as the Fed began its two-day gathering, which will conclude with the release of an interest rate decision and a fresh set of quarterly economic projections at 2 p.m. on Wednesday. Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, is then scheduled to hold a news conference.

Central bankers have embraced a recent slowdown in price increases, and Tuesday’s data largely suggested that inflation remains lower than earlier this year. Overall inflation climbed 0.1 percent on a monthly basis, making for a 3.1 percent increase compared to a year earlier.

That was cooler than 3.2 percent in October, and it is down notably from a peak above 9 percent in the summer of 2022.

But some of the report’s underlying details could keep Fed officials wary as they contemplate what to do next with interest rates. Investors expect central bankers to begin lowering borrowing costs within the first half of 2024, though officials have been trying to keep their options open.

After stripping out volatile food and fuel to give a clearer sense of underlying inflation trends, so-called core inflation climbed more quickly on a monthly basis. And a closely watched measure that tracks housing expenses also climbed more quickly; that measure is called “owners’ equivalent rent” because it estimates how much it would cost someone to rent a home that they own, and economists have been expecting it to decline.

“It reinforces this idea that it’s going to be a bumpy road to disinflation,” said Blerina Uruci, chief U.S. economist at T. Rowe Price. “The Fed cannot cut interest rates too soon in the face of resilient services inflation.”

Core inflation was up by 4 percent compared to a year earlier, holding steady from October. That pace remains well above the roughly 2 percent pace that was normal before the onset of the pandemic.

Many economists expect inflation to continue coming down in 2024.

That’s partly a function of monetary policy. Fed officials raised rates sharply between March 2022 and this summer in a bid to slow the economy, hoping to cool demand enough to wrestle inflation lower. As it has become pricier to borrow to make big purchases, the housing market has cooled somewhat and the car market has calmed.

Policymakers have also gotten help from the supply side of the economy. Shipping routes clogged during the pandemic but have since cleared, and factories have caught up to demand, easing shortages for some key products. The return to normal has helped to push goods prices lower in recent months.

And as workers return to the labor market, filling open jobs, wage gains have been cooling — which could suggest that labor-heavy services industries will stop raising prices as quickly.

Fed officials have now held borrowing costs steady for several months as they try to assess whether they have adjusted policy enough to return price increases to a normal pace over time.

“They should be very encouraged,” Neil Dutta, head of economic research at Renaissance Macro, said following the report. “Inflation is falling much more quickly than they’d expected, and the new number doesn’t really change that.”

Still, central bankers have been hesitant to declare victory at a time when inflation is improving but remains elevated. Economists expect them to maintain that cautious approach this week, even though many think that the Fed’s next move will be an interest-rate cut.

“It would be premature to conclude with confidence that we have achieved a sufficiently restrictive stance, or to speculate on when policy might ease,” Mr. Powell said during a recent speech.

Investors think that borrowing costs could come down as soon as the first half of 2024, based on market expectations, though continued economic momentum or stubborn prices could delay that.

Ms. Uruci said that the stickiness in housing costs in Tuesday’s report likely “pushes any expected cuts to later in the year.” Policymakers will not want to reverse course at a moment when price increases might get stuck at a still-elevated rate.

Inflation has surprised forecasters repeatedly since 2021 by cooling only to flare back up, making forecasting how quickly it will fade now a challenge.

“It’s hard to be confident after the last few years,” said Laura Rosner-Warburton, senior economist MacroPolicy Perspectives.

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Ja Morant says in court he punched the teen in self-defense

Photo: Peter Baba

The Memphis Grizzlies star guard Ja Morant spent a hectic day in court on Monday, where he testified about an incident at his home last year. He explained that he punched a teenager in self-defense during a confrontation.

In addition to discussing the altercation, Morant also demonstrated to an attorney how to properly check a ball in a pickup basketball game. This all took place as part of Joshua Holloway’s civil case against Morant.

Holloway alleges that Morant assaulted him while playing basketball at Morant’s residence, but Morant and his legal team argue that the case should be dismissed, asserting that Ja was simply defending himself during the episode.



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Ja Morant appears in court to address claims he assaulted teen

The Memphis Grizzlies star guard Ja Morant makes civil court appearance to address lawsuit which claims he assaulted a teen during a basketball game at Morant’s home:

Continue reading Ja Morant appears in court to address claims he assaulted teen at TalkBasket.net.

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What is the situation in Gaza’s Khan Younis as Israel intensifies attacks? | Israel-Palestine conflict News

Since the one-week truce in Gaza ended on December 1, Israel has expanded its offensive to the besieged enclave’s south, where more than a million Palestinians sought shelter following Israeli bombardment in the north.

Israel has intensified attacks on Khan Younis declaring it a “dangerous combat zone”. Gaza’s second-largest city, which was dubbed a safe zone in the initial days of the war, is now a scene of devastation and suffering. Fear of Israeli strikes haunts people while lack of food and other basic amenities have driven people to misery amid bloody street fighting.

Meanwhile, Israel continues to attack northern Gaza, raiding the Kamal Adwan Hospital on Tuesday.

Here is what is happening in Khan Younis and the rest of southern Gaza.

What is happening in Khan Younis?

Two people were killed in Khan Younis in Israeli artillery shelling on Tuesday.

A bicycle was reportedly hit on Sunday in the centre of Khan Younis, killing two Palestinian children who were riding it, according to the UN humanitarian agency OCHA.

The city has been hit by air strikes and fire belts, causing casualties and injuries. Injured Palestinians were largely taken to the Nasser and European hospitals in the city, the Palestinian news agency Wafa reported.

Israel’s Defence Minister Yoav Gallant pushed back against international calls on Monday to wrap up the country’s military offensive in the Gaza Strip, saying the current phase of the operation against the Hamas group will “take time”.

How many people fled to Khan Younis?

Over one million Palestinians have been displaced from northern Gaza since October 13, when the Israeli military ordered people to evacuate to the south on a 24-hour notice.

More than 215,000 displaced Palestinians took shelter in dozens of UNRWA shelters in Khan Younis.

However, on December 3, Israel ordered an immediate evacuation of about 20 percent of the city, which was home to more than 400,000 people before the war erupted on October 7. The area marked for evacuation included 21 shelters and 50,000 internally displaced people, mostly from the north of Gaza, according to OCHA.

Several of those who were displaced to Khan Younis had to further move to Rafah city near the Egyptian border, some even moving for the fourth time since the outbreak of violence.

Now, thousands of displaced people from Khan Younis itself, as well as the north of Gaza are squeezed in the dangerously overcrowded al-Fukhari, south of Khan Younis. Hospitals and schools in the area are filled beyond capacity, as the Israeli army continues to order Palestinians to move further south.

Shrinking space and the rising danger of health issues and infections due to the lack of water have been an increasing cause for concern.

Attacks on southern Gaza

Thousands of Palestinians have been forced to flee further to the south towards the city of Rafah. Twenty Palestinians, including seven children and at least five women, were killed in Israeli attacks on Rafah on Tuesday. There are reports of more air attacks.

Martin Griffiths, the UN humanitarian affairs coordinator, says his organisation was hopeful and has been informed that once the war moved to southern Gaza, there would be a different, more precise approach to the fighting.

“[But] what’s happened is the assault on southern Gaza has been no less than the north. It’s raging through Khan Younis at the moment, and it is threatening Rafah. The compression of the population is greater. We cannot be sure of any of our points of operation to be safe,” he told Al Jazeera.

Central Gaza has not been spared either as an Israeli air strike overnight flattened a residential building where some 80 people were staying in the Maghazi refugee camp, killing at least 22 on Monday.

Israeli air strikes and the brutal ground invasion have killed at least 18,205 Palestinians and wounded 49,645 others. More than 80 percent of the casualty figures are civilians.

Do southern Gaza residents have access to food?

UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food Michael Fakhri says “every single Palestinian in Gaza is going hungry” and warns world is witnessing a “genocide”.

UN officials and rights groups have been urging Israel to speed up the deployment of humanitarian aid to Gaza by opening the southern Karem Abu Salem (Karem Shalom) border with Israel.

Israel announced that it would conduct security screenings of the aid at Karem Abu Salem beginning on Tuesday. The first batch of humanitarian trucks were inspected and on their way to the Rafah border.

Palestinians who are staying in the north are going hungry as hardly any aid delivery has made its way to the area devastated by Israel’s relentless bombardments.

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Best and worst performers vs. Packers

The New York Giants stunned the Green Bay Packers, 24-22, on Monday Night Football, snapping their primetime curse en route for a 5-8 record.

The three straight wins have the Giants back in the thick of the playoff hunt, just one game out with four weeks remaining. They could — assuming all the dominoes fall into place — leave Week 15 in control of their own destiny.

But before we look ahead, let’s look back.

Here’s a look at the best and worst performers, courtesy of PFF, from the Week 14 victory.

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