Filipinos push back against growing Israeli presence on popular tourist island

Special Local and foreign tourists catch waves at Cloud 9, a popular surf spot on Siaragao Island, the Philippines, March 1, 2025. (Reuters)
Local and foreign tourists catch waves at Cloud 9, a popular surf spot on Siaragao Island, the Philippines, March 1, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 11 July 2025
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Filipinos push back against growing Israeli presence on popular tourist island

Local and foreign tourists catch waves at Cloud 9, a popular surf spot on Siaragao Island, the Philippines. (File/Reuters)
  • Siargao is a premier surfing site and one of the Philippines’ top tourist destinations
  • Facebook users accuse Israeli tourists of disrespecting local rules, harassing residents

MANILA: Concerns over the presence of Israeli visitors are growing on a southern Philippine island, locals say, as they protest plans to establish an Israeli community center amid fears of displacement and reports of tourist misconduct.

Siargao — a resort island off Surigao del Norte province in Mindanao — is the Philippines’ premier surfing site and one of the country’s top tourist destinations.

It has lately become popular among Israelis, whose arrival over the past few months has resulted in numerous complaints. Siargao-based singer and community organizer Maria Lalaine Tokong went viral last week when she highlighted that many of the tourists were “disregarding the culture, the customs,” of the place.

“We are feeling less at home in our home,” she wrote. “I speak up because I refuse to let our identity, our peace, and our safety be erased.”

Tokong’s post has since resulted in tens of thousands of interactions, with Filipinos sharing similar concerns.

It came against the backdrop of Israeli plans to open a Chabad house — a Jewish community center and place of worship — on the island. The plans have been opposed by the local community, which met Israeli embassy representatives in May.

“We don’t want it,” Tokong told Arab News. “When we talked about the cultural center with the Israeli embassy, we specifically told them, ‘What’s the purpose?’ We already have an education system. We already have a church here.”

With new officials taking office following recent elections, she is now preparing with other community members to take the case forward with the local administration.

In April, Project Paradise, a Siargao-based non-governmental organization, held a town hall with residents and local business owners to gather their complaints.

“We received reports primarily regarding disrespect for local customs and values — ranging from noise disturbances, reckless driving, disregard for modesty in dress in rural areas, to environmental irresponsibility such as leaving trash on beaches or protected areas,” Sofia Nicole de Asis, president of Project Paradise, told Arab News.

The incidents “are not isolated to any one group, and our stance has always been that misconduct is a behavioral issue, not a nationality-based one,” she added. 

Project Paradise also had a separate meeting with the Israeli embassy representatives, who they said had “clearly explained” that the planned development of a Chabad House in Siargao “is not meant for disruptive gatherings.” 

“For us, this development doesn’t pose an issue. Being Jewish is not a nationality, and our mission is not to police identity, but to promote coexistence, responsibility, and respect for the island. Our focus is on behavior, not background,” De Asis said. 

“We believe that any effort—be it from a local or foreign entity—that respects the cultural fabric of Siargao and contributes positively to the community should be met with openness, not division.”

Across the island, however, growing complaints over the treatment of locals by Israeli tourists have also featured on the Facebook group Siargao Business Classified 2.0.

In numerous posts, members of the group report Israelis calling local staff “slaves,” illegally raising their flags on boats, trashing local homestays, violating the island’s no-noise curfew past midnight, and verbally and physically assaulting locals.

“They have no right to put up a cultural center as they have no roots or connection to Filipinos’ history. ‘Free Palestine’ today, so we won’t be shouting ‘Free Siargao’ tomorrow,” one user wrote, as others complained over inaction from the island’s administration.

“These people were welcomed into our country and treated with genuine hospitality, yet they choose to disregard our laws and disrespect our people and communities. The local government of Siargao should strictly enforce all local rules and regulations,” another user said.

“For the local government in Siargao, you better act. Remember you’re still part of the Philippines, you might one day be surprised that Siargao is now ‘the promised land,’” another commented.

Officials in General Luna, one of the main towns on Siargao, did not respond to requests for comment from Arab News.


Australia’s Parliament resumes with pro-Palestinian protests and calls for Israel sanctions

Australia’s Parliament resumes with pro-Palestinian protests and calls for Israel sanctions
Updated 21 sec ago
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Australia’s Parliament resumes with pro-Palestinian protests and calls for Israel sanctions

Australia’s Parliament resumes with pro-Palestinian protests and calls for Israel sanctions
  • Hundreds of pro-Palestinian demonstrators gathered outside Parliament House on Tuesday
  • Calls for government to impose sanctions on Israel after Australia joined another 27 countries in issuing a joint statement
MELBOURNE, Australia: Australia’s Parliament resumed Tuesday for the first time since the center-left Labour Party won one of the nation’s largest-ever majorities in the May elections. The day was largely ceremonial, with reminders of conflict in the Middle East.
Hundreds of pro-Palestinian demonstrators gathered outside Parliament House on Tuesday, calling for the government to impose sanctions on Israel after Australia joined another 27 countries in issuing a joint statement, saying the war in Gaza “must end now.”
Security guards prevented 15 demonstrators from entering the public gallery of the Senate while Attorney-General Sam Mostyn, who represents Australia’s head of state King Charles III, was giving a speech to lawmakers on Tuesday afternoon, Australian Broadcasting Corp. reported.
But Sen. Mehreen Faruqi, deputy leader of the minor party Australian Greens, made a silent protest by holding up a sign in the chamber during Mostyn’s speech that said: “Gaza is starving, words won’t feed them, sanction Israel.”
Australia has imposed financial and travel sanctions on individual Israelis, including government ministers Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich. But the Australian government has not imposed wider sanctions on the state.
Joint statement sparks debate
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke described the joint statement as the strongest words his government had used on the conflict in Gaza.
“When you can make a statement together with so many other significant powers, then we’re all hoping that there’ll be something that will break this,” Burke told ABC.
“What we are watching on the other side of the world is indefensible. The hostages still need to be released, but the war needs to end,” Burke added.
But senior opposition lawmaker Jonathon Duniam described Australia joining 27 other nations in signing the statement as “alarming.”
“There is more to this issue than this letter betrays and I think it is a sad turn of events for our government to have joined with other countries in signing this letter,” Duniam said.
Australia’s 48th Parliament was opened with Indigenous ceremonies in Parliament House on a day that was otherwise steeped in centuries of British Westminster political tradition.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese thanked the traditional owners of the national capital, Canberra, at a Welcome to Country ceremony. He noted that such ceremonies performed by Indigenous people to welcome visitors to their traditional land at the start of a new parliament had been introduced by a Labor government in 2007.
“In the 48th Parliament, we write the next chapter. Let us do it with the same sense of grace and courage that First Nations people show us with their leadership,” Albanese said.
Biggest Australian government majority since 1996
Labor won 94 seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives, where governments are formed. Labor’s majority is the largest since Prime Minister John Howard’s conservative coalition won 94 seats in 1996, when the lower chamber had only 148 seats.
Howard stayed in power for almost 12 years, and Albanese is the first prime minister since then to lead a party to consecutive election victories, following an extraordinary era of political instability.
The main opposition Liberal Party has elected its first woman leader, Sussan Ley, after one of the party’s worst election results on record.
Her conservative coalition holds 43 seats in the House, while independent lawmakers and minor parties that are not aligned with either the government or opposition hold 13.
No party holds a majority in the 76-seat Senate. Labor holds 29 seats and the conservatives 27 seats. The Australian Greens hold 10 seats, which is the next largest bloc.
The government will likely prefer to negotiate with the conservatives or Greens to get legislation through the Senate, rather than deal with multiple minor parties and independents.

How did a Bangladesh air force fighter jet crash into a school campus?

How did a Bangladesh air force fighter jet crash into a school campus?
Updated 22 July 2025
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How did a Bangladesh air force fighter jet crash into a school campus?

How did a Bangladesh air force fighter jet crash into a school campus?
  • The jet was an F-7 fighter aircraft — the final and most advanced variant in China’s Chengdu J-7/F-7 aircraft family

NEW DELHI: At least 25 children were among the 27 people killed when a Bangladesh Air Force plane crashed into a college and school campus in the capital city of Dhaka on Monday.

Here is a look at what happened.

HOW DID THE CRASH OCCUR?

The fighter aircraft took off at 1:06 p.m. (0706 GMT) from the air force base in Dhaka’s Kurmitola for a routine training mission, but experienced a mechanical failure soon after.

The pilot attempted to divert the aircraft away from densely populated areas to minimize civilian casualties and damage, but his efforts were unsuccessful and the jet crashed into a building.

WHERE DID THE PLANE GO DOWN?

The two-story building that the plane rammed into belonged to the Milestone School and College in Dhaka’s Diabari area, located about 10 kilometers (six miles) from the air force base.

Visuals from the scene showed the mangled remains of the aircraft dented into the side of the building, dismantling its iron grills and creating a gaping hole in the structure.

HOW MANY PEOPLE WERE KILLED?

The bodies of at least 27 people, including 25 children, a teacher, and the jet’s pilot, were pulled out from the debris.

More than 100 children and 15 other people were also injured, of whom 78 are still admitted in hospitals with burn injuries.

WHICH AIRCRAFT WAS INVOLVED IN THE INCIDENT?

The jet was an F-7 fighter aircraft — the final and most advanced variant in China’s Chengdu J-7/F-7 aircraft family, according to Jane’s Information Group.

Bangladesh had signed a contract in 2011 for 16 such planes, and deliveries were completed by 2013.

HOW HAVE AUTHORITIES REACTED?

The Bangladesh Air Force has formed a high-level investigation committee to probe the cause of the accident.

Muhammad Yunus, the head of the country’s interim government, has also vowed to “take all necessary measures” to investigate its cause.

In the meantime, the government says it is providing “all kinds of assistance” to those affected.


Two dead, 10 missing after flash floods in eastern China

Two dead, 10 missing after flash floods in eastern China
Updated 22 July 2025
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Two dead, 10 missing after flash floods in eastern China

Two dead, 10 missing after flash floods in eastern China
  • Natural disasters are common in China, particularly in summer when some regions experience heavy rainfall while others bake in searing heat waves

BEIJING: Flash floods in eastern China’s Shandong province killed two people and left 10 missing on Tuesday, state media said.

Up to 364 millimeters (14 inches) of rain lashed parts of the provincial capital Jinan between midnight and 5 am, according to state broadcaster CCTV.

The downpours triggered flash floods in two villages in the town of Dawangzhuang, “destroying or damaging” 19 homes, CCTV said.

“At present, all-out efforts are being made to search for and recover the missing persons,” the broadcaster said.

It added that authorities would “carry out post-disaster rescue and follow-up work in an orderly manner.”

Natural disasters are common in China, particularly in summer when some regions experience heavy rainfall while others bake in searing heat waves.

China is the world’s biggest emitter of the greenhouse gases that scientists generally agree cause climate change and make extreme weather more frequent and intense.

But it is also a global renewable energy powerhouse that aims to make its massive economy carbon-neutral by 2060.

Six people were killed and more than 80,000 evacuated due to floods in southern Guizhou province in June, according to state media.

A landslide on a highway in Sichuan province this month also killed five people after it swept several cars down a mountainside.


Ukraine’s new prime minister seeks new IMF funding, aid from US

Ukraine’s new prime minister seeks new IMF funding, aid from US
Updated 22 July 2025
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Ukraine’s new prime minister seeks new IMF funding, aid from US

Ukraine’s new prime minister seeks new IMF funding, aid from US
  • Negotiations are ongoing with NATO and EU members as Ukraine seeks $60 billion in funding from partners

KYIV: Ukraine’s new prime minister, Yulia Svyrydenko, said she will probably seek more financing from the International Monetary Fund, and will speak with US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent about new funding, Bloomberg News reported on Tuesday.

“If the baseline scenario assumes the war will continue into next year, it is very likely we will have a new IMF program,” Svyrydenko told Bloomberg News in an interview.

$120 billion for defense

Ukraine will need at least $120 billion for defense spending next year, Ukrainian Defense Minister Denys Shmyhal said on Tuesday.

Negotiations are ongoing with NATO and EU members as Ukraine seeks $60 billion in funding from partners, he added in a statement on the Telegram messaging app. 


Landslide, heavy rain in Pakistan sweeps away cars, killing 3

Landslide, heavy rain in Pakistan sweeps away cars, killing 3
Updated 22 July 2025
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Landslide, heavy rain in Pakistan sweeps away cars, killing 3

Landslide, heavy rain in Pakistan sweeps away cars, killing 3
  • Monsoon season brings South Asia 70 to 80 percent of its annual rainfall
  • In 2022, monsoon floods submerged a third of Pakistan and killed 1,700 people

KHAPLU, Pakistan: A landslide triggered by torrential monsoon rains swept away cars on a mountainous highway in northern Pakistan, killing at least three people, with more cars buried under the debris, officials said Tuesday.

Flashfloods, collapsed buildings and electrocutions have killed more than 180 people since monsoon season arrived in late June.

More than eight vehicles were swept away on Monday when heavy rains triggered a landslide on a highway in Diamer district of Gilgit-Baltistan, Abdul Hameed, a senior police officer in the area, said.

“Three dead bodies have been recovered and more than 15 are still missing,” Abdul Hameed, the district police officer for Diamer district, said.

He said at least 10 vehicles were buried under the debris.

“The rescue operation has been launched again at 6:00 am today,” he added.

Faizullah Faraq, spokesperson of the Gilgit-Baltistan government, confirmed the death toll to AFP.

Floods in the area on Monday have damaged 50 houses, four bridges, a hotel, a school and blocked major highways and damaged communication signals.

“Hundreds of trapped tourists have since been brought to safety; government teams cleared debris and escorted them off the mountain road, while local villagers provided emergency shelter and assistance,” Faraq added.

The region is a popular tourist destination, marked by towering mountains, deep valleys and wide rivers.

Monsoon season brings South Asia 70 to 80 percent of its annual rainfall, and runs from June until September in India and Pakistan.

The annual rains are vital for agriculture and food security, and the livelihoods of millions of farmers, but also bring destruction.

In late June, at least 13 tourists were swept to their deaths while sheltering from flash floods on a raised riverbank.

In 2022, monsoon floods submerged a third of the country and killed 1,700 people.