Arab American voters in Michigan worried about Gaza, economy

Arab American voters in Michigan worried about Gaza, economy
Clockwise, from top left: Samra’a Luqman, Osama Siblani, Soujoud Hamade and Merwan Beydoun. (AFP photos)
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Updated 25 August 2024
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Arab American voters in Michigan worried about Gaza, economy

Arab American voters in Michigan worried about Gaza, economy

DEARBORN, Michigan: As the United States hurtles toward a presidential election this November between Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump, AFP has been taking the temperature in key counties of seven battleground states.
Wayne County, Michigan is steeped in history and influence — it is home to Detroit, the “Motor City” and the birthplace of Motown. It also boasts a significant Arab American population that could play a key role in the election.
Voters were asked two key questions: “What matters most to you in casting your vote?” and “What are your biggest fears for the country?“
Here’s what five people in the Detroit suburb of Dearborn had to say:

• Samra’a Luqman, a progressive activist and member of the Abandon Biden campaign in Michigan, said what matters most to her in this election is “holding a politician accountable for a genocide.”
“My biggest fear is that we fail to hold Biden accountable for aiding, abetting and committing this genocide, and that future politicians and presidents know that there is no red line when it comes to genocide. That’s my biggest fear,” she said.

• Hamzah Nasser moved to the United States from Yemen as a young child and is now CEO of the Haraz Coffee House chain.
“What matters to me the most is a president who wants to rebuild the economy in the United States and create more jobs, just like us as entrepreneurs,” Nasser told AFP.
“The best thing about what I do is creating jobs and giving back to the community and to the economy and this country overall,” he said.
“My biggest fear is a war that expands and where more terrorists are born out of it — and when I say terrorists, it could be homegrown terrorists or abroad,” Nasser added.
“The US has so much concern about other countries and what happens in other countries. And they don’t pay attention to this country, and a lot of the school shootings and crimes and domestic terrorists that are here in this country.”




For Hamzah Nasser, what matters most is "a president who wants to rebuild the economy in the United States and create more jobs." (AFP)

• Merwan Beydoun works at the Cleveland-Cliffs steel mill and is a member of the United Auto Workers union.
When asked what was most important in the upcoming election, Beydoun said: “I don’t think I have one thing. I think I have a multiple of equal things that will matter to me. And I believe the Middle East conflict is one of them. And I believe that the support for the union is another one.”
As for his biggest fear, Beydoun said it would be “if the elected officials in Congress or the president or vice president don’t see the concerns of the American people and act on them.”

• Osama Siblani, publisher of The Arab American News newspaper said foremost on his mind for the election was “Gaza, killing Palestinians, killing children, murdering people.”
“My biggest fear is my country is going downhill very fast — ethically, morally, economically, socially. Divided. It’s very scary,” he told AFP.

• Soujoud Hamade is an attorney and founding partner at HNH Law Group.
“What will matter the most to me in the presidential election when I vote in November is the candidates’ stance on international policy and whether or not they have a humanitarian stance toward what is happening in Gaza, and in the West Bank, and in Lebanon and Syria,” she said.
“My biggest fear for my country is that we will go down in history as a country that supported a genocide against innocent civilians, and that we will become the social pariahs of the world for not standing up against this genocide.”
 


’War has come’: Russians shaken by Ukrainian drone barrage

’War has come’: Russians shaken by Ukrainian drone barrage
Updated 6 sec ago
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’War has come’: Russians shaken by Ukrainian drone barrage

’War has come’: Russians shaken by Ukrainian drone barrage
Like for most Russians, Moscow’s three-year military campaign had until then felt distant — mostly constrained to television screens
The attack shattered the sense of comfort that Svetlana — a supporter of the Kremlin’s offensive — had

RAMENSKOYE, Russia: As a drone smashed into the side of her apartment block early on Tuesday, Russia’s full-scale offensive on Ukraine literally came home to Svetlana in a suburb southeast of Moscow.
Like for most Russians, Moscow’s three-year military campaign had until then felt distant — mostly constrained to television screens.
Despite militaristic propaganda and a mass recruitment of soldiers, authorities have tried to keep society at arm’s length from the conflict’s death and destruction — especially in and around the capital.
“You understand that it is war, but you don’t realize it properly,” Svetlana, wearing a winter coat with a fur collar, said. “But now, yes, it has come.”
In her town of Ramenskoye, around 40 kilometers (25 miles) southeast of central Moscow, police had cordoned off an area where a drone hit.
The attack shattered the sense of comfort that Svetlana — a supporter of the Kremlin’s offensive — had.
“Yes, we were weaving camouflage nets, collecting humanitarian aid, accompanying fighters there, but we still didn’t realize it. Now it has come,” Svetlana said.
“I’m scared for the children,” said Andrei, an electrician who lives on the 12th floor of a building that was hit.
He was sweeping up broken glass from his car, which was hit by falling shrapnel after the drone crashed into the 18th-22nd floors.
“My six-year-old daughter was sleeping with me, she woke up crying from the noise,” he told AFP.
Kyiv said it wants the attack — which involved more than 300 drones — to convince Russian President Vladimir Putin to agree to an aerial ceasefire.
The Kremlin has previously ruled that out.
Ukraine says the strikes are just a taste of what Russia has subjected its citizens to over the last three years, with Moscow having fired near daily bomb, missile and drone attacks across the country.
“There is not even any thought that tonight will be peaceful. It’s scary,” said Olga, a 21-year old who works in IT and lives in the adjacent building to one hit.
She ran out to the street after being woken at 5 am (0200 GMT) by the rumbling.
“People just have fear in their eyes,” she told AFP, the ground around her covered with shrapnel.
Unlike in Ukraine — where air alerts ring out practically every night in almost every city — there was no such warning of an incoming attack in the Russian capital or its suburbs.
“We don’t understand what to do in such situations,” said Olga.
“The news says that more and more drones are being shot down. It’s scary to even go to sleep after such a thing,” she added. “It could have been us.”
The idea of peace — previously seen as within reach amid US President Donald Trump’s rapprochement with Moscow — now felt far away in Ramenskoye.
“In my opinion, this attack won’t be the last,” said retiree Sergei, criticizing Ukraine’s “bloodthirsty” European backers who were supplying it with arms.
For 75-year-old Yulia, who lives next to the building that was hit, there was just frustration.
“My heart is bad. I don’t believe there will be peace,” she told AFP.
“Why can’t they agree? Why not? What are they thinking about?,” she said, through tears. “It’s terrible.”

Poland wants 100,000 volunteers to take part in military training in 2027

Poland wants 100,000 volunteers to take part in military training in 2027
Updated 33 min 38 sec ago
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Poland wants 100,000 volunteers to take part in military training in 2027

Poland wants 100,000 volunteers to take part in military training in 2027
  • “The most important thing for us is that every person interested can participate in such training no later than 2026,” Tusk said
  • The government backed giving military training to all adult males last week as Warsaw prepares for threats from Moscow

WARSAW: Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said on Tuesday the government wants to launch a new program to offer voluntary military training from next year, with a target to train 100,000 volunteers in 2027.
“The most important thing for us is that every person interested can participate in such training no later than 2026. And that is a difficult task, but I know it is doable,” Tusk said ahead of a government sitting.
“In 2027 we will achieve the ability to train 100,000 volunteers per year... Apart from the professional army and beyond the Territorial Defense Force, we must de facto build an army of reservists and our actions will serve this purpose.”
The government backed giving military training to all adult males last week as Warsaw prepares for threats from Moscow.
Galvanized by Russia’s invasion of neighboring Ukraine three years ago, Poland now spends a higher proportion of GDP on defense than any other NATO member.
Tusk said that as an incentive, the government would analyze the possibility of, for example, getting a professional driving license, including for heavy goods vehicles, during the military training.
“This will be useful in the event of war, but it will also be useful in life for those who are interested in such qualifications,” he said. The government is also considering providing specialist training to specific professional groups.
Tusk later said in a post on social media platform X that he told ministers that government members and officials would also undergo training on a voluntary basis, which, he said, was met with full understanding.


Meningitis outbreak kills 26 in northwest Nigeria, official says

Meningitis outbreak kills 26 in northwest Nigeria, official says
Updated 11 March 2025
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Meningitis outbreak kills 26 in northwest Nigeria, official says

Meningitis outbreak kills 26 in northwest Nigeria, official says
  • Kebbi state Health Commissioner Musa Ismaila confirmed the outbreak
  • “We are saddled with the unfortunate situation of an outbreak with a rising number of cases”

ABUJA: At least 26 people have died from a meningitis outbreak in Nigeria’s northwest Kebbi state, a local health official said on Tuesday.
Nigeria is one of the hotspots of the deadly disease in Africa where at least 1,700 cases were reported last year, with more than 150 deaths recorded in seven states.
Kebbi state Health Commissioner Musa Ismaila confirmed the outbreak, citing a surge in cases in three local government areas.
“We are saddled with the unfortunate situation of an outbreak with a rising number of cases,” Ismaila said in a statement, detailing symptoms that include fever, severe headaches, and neck stiffness.
A total of 248 suspected cases have been line-listed, with 11 samples sent to the National Reference Laboratory in the capital Abuja. Two samples returned negative, while nine are pending, he said.
Meningitis is the inflammation of tissue surrounding the brain and spinal cord which can be caused by viral or bacterial infections. It spreads mainly through kisses, sneezes, coughs and in close living quarters.
In response to the outbreak, the state government has distributed drugs to affected areas with isolation centers established with the support of Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Gwandu, Jega, and Aliero, the three affected local government areas, Ismaila said.
Similarly, neighboring Sokoto state has issued a health warning following confirmation of an outbreak.
Last year, Nigeria became the first country in the world to roll out the “revolutionary” new Men5C vaccine against meningitis, according to the World Health Organization.


Missing crew member in North Sea crash likely ‘deceased’: UK minister

Missing crew member in North Sea crash likely ‘deceased’: UK minister
Updated 11 March 2025
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Missing crew member in North Sea crash likely ‘deceased’: UK minister

Missing crew member in North Sea crash likely ‘deceased’: UK minister
  • “Our working assumption is that, very sadly, the sailor is deceased,” Kane said

LONDON: A crew member missing after a cargo ship struck a tanker in the North Sea off the British coast is presumed dead, a UK government minister said Tuesday.
“Our working assumption is that, very sadly, the sailor is deceased,” junior transport minister Mike Kane told the British parliament, adding that the man’s family had been informed.


Pakistan separatists say they have taken 182 hostages in train attack

Pakistan separatists say they have taken 182 hostages in train attack
Updated 11 March 2025
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Pakistan separatists say they have taken 182 hostages in train attack

Pakistan separatists say they have taken 182 hostages in train attack
  • Train had about 400 passengers on board and is trapped in a tunnel with the driver badly wounded
  • The Baloch Liberation Army claims it had killed 20 soldiers and shot down a drone

QUETTA: Separatist militants in southwest Pakistan said they had taken 182 hostages including military personnel on Tuesday in an attack on a train and threatened to kill them if security forces did not leave the area.
The train, which had about 400 passengers, was trapped in a tunnel and the driver was badly wounded, local authorities, police and railway officials said, without confirming the Baloch Liberation Army’s account of hostages.
Security forces said an explosion had been heard near the tunnel and that they were exchanging fire with the militants in a mountainous area.
The BLA, which seeks independence for Balochistan province bordering both Afghanistan and Iran, said it had killed 20 soldiers and shot down a drone. There was no confirmation of that from Pakistani authorities.
The group said it had taken 182 hostages from the train, including Pakistan army members and other security officials traveling on leave.
“Civilian passengers, particularly women, children, the elderly, and Baloch citizens, have been released safely and given a secure route,” it said in a statement emailed to journalists and posted on Telegram.
“The BLA further warns that if military intervention continues, all hostages will be executed.”
The Jaffar Express had been on its way from Balochistan’s capital Quetta to the city of Peshawar in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province when it was fired on.
Pakistan’s interior minister, Mohsin Naqvi, condemned the attack and said the government would not make any concessions to “beasts who fire on innocent passengers.”
The Balochistan government has imposed emergency measures to deal with the situation, spokesperson Shahid Rind said, without giving more details.
The BLA is the biggest of several ethnic groups battling the government for decades, saying it unfairly exploits Balochistan’s rich gas and mineral resources.
The conflict has seen frequent attacks against the government, army and Chinese interests in the region.