WASHINGTON: The father of US-Canadian citizen Jacob Flickinger, one of seven aid workers killed in an Israeli strike, said Thursday his son was hesitant to go to Gaza but felt a need to help.
Flickinger, 33, was among a group of World Central Kitchen staff who died on Monday when Israel bombed their vehicle convoy in what it called a “grave mistake,” sparking outrage from world leaders.
In interviews with US media, parents John Flickenger and Sylvie Labrecque paid tribute to their son, who started working with World Central Kitchen in Mexico last year before traveling to Gaza.
“He was hesitant to go, he’s a new father. He has a beautiful 18-month-old son, a beautiful young wife he was very devoted to. But he felt the need and he of course needs to support his family,” John Flickenger told CBS News.
In a separate interview with BBC News, he said his son felt “reasonably confident that he could accomplish the mission safely” in Gaza.
“He felt that the World Central Kitchen knew what they were doing there. They were in de-conflicted zone, controlled by the IDF,” Flickenger said.
He said his son — a Canadian Armed Forces veteran — started working with World Central Kitchen, a non-profit food relief organization, as it appealed to his main passions and skills.
“He loved the work, (it) kind of married his talents — his military training, his love for adventure, and his desire to serve and to help others,” Flickinger said.
In the emotional interview, he said his thoughts went to his son’s family, adding: “Now my grandson will grow up without having his father.”
Monday’s strike was widely condemned by global powers, with President Joe Biden saying he was “outraged and heartbroken,” before warning Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday that continued US support depended on Israel’s protection of civilians in Gaza.
Biden emphasized the need for a series of “specific, concrete, and measurable steps to address civilian harm, humanitarian suffering, and the safety of aid workers,” a White House statement said.
World Central Kitchen, which was founded in 2010 by Spanish-American chef Jose Andres, has paused its operations in Gaza since the attack, which also killed citizens from Australia, Britain and Poland and a Palestinian.
The aid workers had just unloaded supplies at a warehouse in central Gaza when they were killed in the Israeli strike.
Aid worker killed by Israel felt need to help, parents say
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Aid worker killed by Israel felt need to help, parents say

- Jacob Flickinger, a US-Canadian citizen, was killed in an Israeli air strike on April 1, 2024, along with a Palestinian and citizens from Australia, Britain and Poland
- John Flickinger said his son, a Canadian Armed Forces veteran, started working with World Central Kitchen as it appealed to his main passions and skills
South Korea’s balloon crackdown hits anti-North Korea activists

- Several groups in South Korea regularly send balloons to the North carrying leaflets, bibles, food, money and various media
- North Korean officials have labeled leaflet activists in South Korea ‘human scum’
When it became clear that center-left politician Lee Jae Myung was on track to win the June presidential election, Lee Min-bok was among several South Korea-based activists who stopped their missions, anticipating a crackdown by the new, pro-engagement administration.
Lee Jae Myung, a former human rights lawyer, is pushing to ease tensions with Pyongyang and last month said activists should be “severely punished” if they continue the balloon operations that anger North Korea.
“I’ve been doing it quietly and what’s wrong with that? Provoking North Korea? No way,” 67-year-old Lee Min-bok said as he stood next to a rusting truck equipped with a hydrogen tank for filling balloons.
“But realistically, look how serious it is right now. Police are out there and if I move, everything will be reported.”
For years, police have monitored Lee from the home next door — one plainclothes officer told Reuters they are there to protect him from potential North Korean threats — but instead of checking weather reports for ideal balloon launching conditions, Lee now spends his days writing online posts criticizing the South Korean government.
Calls to activists
The activists, many of whom are North Korean defectors like Lee, are used to being at the center of geopolitical tensions.
An attempt by a previous liberal president to ban the balloon launches was struck down as unconstitutional. And last year, North Korea began launching waves of its own balloons into the South, some carrying garbage and excrement.
Lee, who took office on June 4, has promised to improve relations with the nuclear-armed North, saying tensions with Pyongyang have had a real negative economic impact. He has urged diplomacy and dialogue and his administration has also suspended anti-North Korea loudspeaker broadcasts along the border.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, however, last year abandoned a goal of unification with the South and has shown little openness to diplomacy.
After Lee ordered measures to stop leaflet launches, officials and police discussed plans including deploying police to border regions to preempt launches, and punishing the activists by using regulations such as aviation safety laws, according to the Unification Ministry that handles inter-Korea affairs.
Several groups in the South regularly send balloons to the North carrying leaflets, bibles, food, money, and various media.
In the past year, police have investigated about 72 cases of anti-North leaflet activities and sent 13 to prosecutors, another police official said. They are still looking into 23 cases, the official added.
Police are also investigating six Americans who attempted to deliver around 1,300 plastic bottles filled with rice, dollar notes and Bibles to North Korea.
“Fear is spreading. The mood is bloody intense,” said another North Korean defector-turned-activist who had secretly flown balloons once or twice a month for more than a decade.
The activist said he had paused the launches this spring when polls showed Lee was likely to win the election.
“I get calls from the government recently that apparently want to check in, to see whether I am going to send the balloons or not,” said the Seoul-based activist, who declined to be named for fear of reprisals.
Choi Sung-yong, leader of the Abductees’ Family Union who works to bring home South Koreans abducted by North Korea, said his group had decided to suspend the balloon launches after receiving calls from new government officials.
Chung Dong-young, the Unification Minister nominee, said last month he rang Choi and thanked him for reconsidering the balloon launches which Chung described “a catalyst to confrontation and hostilities” between the two Koreas.
‘Right balance’
North Korean officials have labeled leaflet activists in South Korea “human scum” and in 2020 demolished an inter-Korean liaison office during a spat over leaflets. In 2022, they claimed the balloons could carry the coronavirus.
The Lee administration’s moves have been welcomed by some residents who have said the launches put them at risk.
“I feel much more comfortable and hopeful… People couldn’t sleep,” said Park Hae-yeon, 65, a farmer in Paju whose family runs a restaurant near the border. “Now I am hearing leaflets not being distributed, I see a sign of hope.”
James Heenan, who represents the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in Seoul, told Reuters that leaflet operations are a matter of free expression that need to be balanced with legitimate national security concerns.
“We hope the right balance will be struck,” he said, noting that previous punishments were overly harsh.
Trump administration’s crackdown on pro-Palestinian campus activists faces federal trial

- Plaintiffs want US District Judge William Young to rule the arrest and deportation policy violates the First Amendment and the Administrative Procedure Act
- Plaintiffs single out several activists by name, including Palestinian activist and Columbia University graduate Mahmoud Khalil
BOSTON: A federal bench trial begins Monday over a lawsuit that challenges a Trump administration campaign of arresting and deporting faculty and students who participated in pro-Palestinian demonstrations and other political activities.
The lawsuit, filed by several university associations against President Donald Trump and members of his administration, would be one of the first to go to trial. Plaintiffs want US District Judge William Young to rule the policy violates the First Amendment and the Administrative Procedure Act, a law governs the process by which federal agencies develop and issue regulations.
“The policy’s effects have been swift. Noncitizen students and faculty across the United States have been terrified into silence,” the plaintiffs wrote in their pretrial brief.
“Students and faculty are avoiding political protests, purging their social media, and withdrawing from public engagement with groups associated with pro-Palestinian viewpoints,” they wrote. “They’re abstaining from certain public writing and scholarship they would otherwise have pursued. They’re even self-censoring in the classroom.”
Several scholars are expected to testify how the policy and subsequent arrests have prompted them to abandon their activism for Palestinian human rights and criticizing Israeli government’s policies.
Since Trump took office, the US government has used its immigration enforcement powers to crack down on international students and scholars at several American universities.
Trump and other officials have accused protesters and others of being “pro-Hamas,” referring to the Palestinian militant group that attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. Many protesters have said they were speaking out against Israel’s actions in the war.
Plaintiffs single out several activists by name, including Palestinian activist and Columbia University graduate Mahmoud Khalil, who was released last month after spending 104 days in federal immigration detention. Khalil has become a symbol of Trump ‘s clampdown on campus protests.
The lawsuit also references Tufts University student Rumeysa Ozturk, who was released in May from a Louisiana immigration detention. She spent six weeks in detention after she was arrested walking on the street of a Boston suburb. She claims she was illegally detained following an op-ed she co-wrote last year that criticized the school’s response to Israel’s war in Gaza.
The plaintiffs also accuse the Trump administration of supplying names to universities who they wanted to target, launching a social media surveillance program and used Trump’s own words in which he said after Khalil’s arrest that his was the “first arrest of many to come.”
The government argued in court documents that the plaintiffs are bringing a First Amendment challenge to a policy “of their own creation.”
“They do not try to locate this program in any statute, regulation, rule, or directive. They do not allege that it is written down anywhere. And they do not even try to identify its specific terms and substance,” the government argues. “That is all unsurprising, because no such policy exists.”
They argue the plaintiffs case also rest on a “misunderstanding of the First Amendment, ”which under binding Supreme Court precedent applies differently in the immigration context than it otherwise does domestically.”
But plaintiffs counter that evidence at the trial will show the Trump administration has implemented the policy a variety of ways, including issuing formal guidance on revoking visas and green cards and establishing a process for identifying those involved in pro-Palestinian protests.
“Defendants have described their policy, defended it, and taken political credit for it,” plaintiffs wrote. “It is only now that the policy has been challenged that they say, incredibly, that the policy does not actually exist. But the evidence at trial will show that the policy’s existence is beyond cavil.”
South Korea court to hold July 9 hearing on former leader Yoon’s detention warrant

- Former president Yoon Suk Yeol on trial for insurrection related to his short-lived martial law
- He is also under investigation for allegations of abuse of power and obstruction of justice
SEOUL: A Seoul court plans to hold a hearing on Wednesday to review a request by special prosecutors to detain former South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, a court official said on Monday.
The special counsel team investigating Yoon’s martial law declaration in December has filed a request to the Seoul Central District Court to detain Yoon on allegations of abuse of power and obstruction of justice.
Yoon has been accused of mobilizing presidential guards to stop authorities from arresting him in January. He eventually was taken into custody but released from jail after 52 days on technical grounds.
The special prosecution that kicked off its investigation after new leader Lee Jae Myung was elected in June has been looking into additional charges against Yoon, who is already on trial for insurrection related to his short-lived martial law.
The detention warrant request was made on the grounds of the risk of him being a flight risk and concerns that he might interfere with witnesses linked to his case, local media reported, citing a special prosecutors’ request.
Yoon’s lawyers have rejected the allegations against him.
Australia mushroom murder jury to deliver verdict today

- Erin Patterson allegedly murdered three elderly relatives of her estranged husband using poisonous mushrooms
SYDNEY: The jury in the trial of an Australian woman who allegedly murdered three elderly relatives of her estranged husband using poisonous mushrooms will deliver its verdict on Monday, the court said in a statement.
Erin Patterson, 50, is charged with the murders of her mother-in-law Gail Patterson, father-in-law Donald Patterson and Gail’s sister, Heather Wilkinson, along with the attempted murder of Ian Wilkinson, Heather’s husband, in July 2023.
North Korea bars Western influencers from trade fair tour

- Diplomatically isolated North Korea has welcomed sporadic groups of international visitors in recent months
- Foreign tourists to be taken on a trip to the authoritarian state from October 24 to November 1 via Beijing
BEIJING: North Korea has barred Western influencers from joining a delegation of tourists to an international trade fair in October, a China-based tour operator said on Monday.
Diplomatically isolated North Korea has welcomed sporadic groups of international visitors in recent months, including hundreds of foreign athletes in April for the first Pyongyang International Marathon in six years.
Travel agency Young Pioneer Tours (YPT) announced Saturday that it would take a group of foreign tourists on a trip to the authoritarian state from October 24 to November 1.
But the tour would not be open to journalists, travel content creators or influencers, the company said on its website.
YPT co-founder Rowan Beard said the curbs on creators were “a specific request from the North Korean side.”
“We anticipate that once the country officially reopens, there may be stricter scrutiny or limitations on influencers and YouTubers joining tours,” Beard said.
The company had “no visibility” on when Pyongyang would restart official media delegations, he added.
Several online influencers have shared slickly produced videos from inside North Korea in recent months.
Priced at €3,995 ($4,704), the YPT tour will depart from the Chinese capital Beijing and take in the Pyongyang Autumn International Trade Fair, North Korea’s biggest international business exhibition.
Participants will have a “unique chance” to stroll through over 450 trade booths exhibiting machinery, IT, energy, pharmaceuticals, consumer goods and household items, YPT said.
The company added that the Pyongyang Chamber of Commerce would “hold a VIP presentation for us for an in-depth overview and insights into the (North Korean) economy.”
The itinerary also includes major sights in Pyongyang as well as the first Western visit in over five years to Mount Myohyang – a mystical peak boasting a museum of lavish gifts presented to former North Korean leaders.
China has historically been the biggest diplomatic, economic and political backer of North Korea, which remains under crippling international sanctions.
Chinese people used to make up the bulk of foreign tourists and business visitors to the isolated nuclear nation before it sealed its borders during the Covid-19 pandemic.
But numbers have not rebounded despite Pyongyang’s post-pandemic reopening, a trend that some analysts have attributed to Beijing’s anger at North Korea’s explicit support for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.