US, Philippines Engage in Joint Military Exercises

The U.S. and the Philippines Monday began a downsized version of their annual joint military exercises, as Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has stated he is looking to strengthen ties with China and Russia.

This year’s maneuvers in the Philippines will focus on disaster response and battling counter-terrorism.

Territorial defense operations will be excluded this year. China has claimed almost all of the South China Sea territory, even though several other nations, including the Philippines, have also staked claims to the region. Duterte has taken a softer stance than his predecessor on the territorial disputes with China. 

Far fewer soldiers on both sides are participating in the joint exercises compared to last year when about 11,500 soldiers took part in the joint venture.  Authorities say about 5,400 solders are participating this year.

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Texas Governor Signs Ban on So-Called Sanctuary Cities

The governor of the southern U.S. state of Texas has signed a law banning so-called sanctuary cities and threatening fines and criminal charges for police departments and officers who refuse to comply with orders from federal immigration agents.

“Texas strongly supports the legal immigration that has been a part of our state from our very beginning.  But legal immigration is different from harboring people who have committed dangerous crimes,” Governor Greg Abbott said.

He added that law enforcement agencies “don’t get to pick and choose which laws they will obey.”

The Republican-led Texas legislature approved the law last week against the objections of Democrats, civil rights groups and an organization of police chiefs representing the state’s largest cities.  It is due to go into effect September 1.

The measure allows police to ask people about their immigration status if they have been lawfully detained.  It also compels police chiefs and sheriffs in Texas to honor detainer requests made by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.  Officials who do not comply could face a misdemeanor charge or be fired.  Departments face fines of up to $25,000 per day.

Opponents say the law puts the state’s large Hispanic population at risk of racial profiling, and that there is an increased risk of victims not reporting crimes for fear they or a family member could be subjected to questions about their immigration status.

David Pughes, interim chief of police for the city of Dallas, and Art Acevedo, police chief for the city of Houston, wrote a joint editorial in the Dallas Morning News saying the measure stretches already limited police resources and amounts to “political pandering” instead of effective immigration reform.

“This will lead to distrust of police and less cooperation from members of the community,” the chiefs wrote.

They further said any effort at controlling immigration will be “ineffective” unless the federal government meets its enforcement obligations, and that if the Texas government wants to take some action it should target businesses that hire undocumented workers.

President Donald Trump signed an executive order last month threatening to cut off federal funding to local governments that refuse to cooperate with immigration authorities to detain undocumented immigrants arrested in criminal cases.  But a federal judge blocked the order while legal challenges against it continue.

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World Leaders Congratulate Macron for French Presidential Election Win

World leaders and other political heavyweights have sent congratulatory messages to France’s president-elect, Emmanuel Macron on his victory over Marine Le Pen.

U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted “Congratulations to Emmanuel Macron on his big win today as the next President of France. I look very much forward to working with him!”

Trump had not publicly endorsed either candidate ahead of the election, but let it be known he generally favored Marine Le Pen’s views.

Former U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, American civil rights leader Jesse Jackson and New York mayor Bill de Blasio, among others, congratulated Macron and the people of France for the presidential election result.

“Your victory is a victory for a strong and united Europe and for French-German friendship,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman said in statement.

Macron spoke with Merkel after his victory was announced, telling her that he would travel to Berlin “very quickly.”

A British spokesman for Prime Minister Theresa May said in a statement that May “warmly congratulates President-elect Macron on his election success. France is one of our closest allies and we look forward to working with the new President on a wide range of shared priorities.”

May also discussed Brexit with Macron, saying “the UK wants a strong partnership with a secure and prosperous EU once we leave,” the spokesman added.

European Union leaders also offered congratulations to Macron: “Happy that the French chose a European future,” European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker wrote on Twitter.

EU Council President Donald Tusk said the French had chosen “liberty, equality and fraternity” and “said no to the tyranny of fake news”.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said “the victory of President-elect Macron is a symbolic victory against inward-looking and protectionist moves and shows a vote of confidence in the EU.”

Chinese President Xi Jinping said in his message to Macron that China is willing to push partnership with France to a higher level. Xi said their countries share a “responsibility toward peace and development in the world.”

Xi recalled that France was the first Western power to establish diplomatic relations with communist-ruled China in 1964.

Other world leaders from Canada to Latin America to Australia also congratulated Macron on his historic victory.

Macron, the youngest French leader since the Emperor Napoleon, will take office on May 14, 2017.

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Obama Hopes Congress Can Show ‘Courage’ on Health Care

Former U.S. President Barack Obama said Sunday it is his “fervent hope” that members of Congress are willing to “look at the facts and speak the truth, even when it contradicts party positions.”

Obama’s comments came as he accepted the John F. Kennedy Foundation’s “Profile in Courage” Award in Boston, and days after the House of Representatives approved a bill that would replace his signature health care program.

Obama did not mention his successor, President Donald Trump, or make any direct reference to Trump’s push to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act beyond noting the “great debate is not settled.” 

But Obama did cite Democratic lawmakers who were new to Congress when they voted for the ACA in 2010 and subsequently became targets for Republicans to challenge their re-election.  He said that group “did the right thing” and acted with courage.

“I hope that current members of Congress recall that it actually doesn’t take a lot of courage to aid those who are already powerful, already comfortable, already influential, but it does require some courage to champion the vulnerable and the sick and the infirm, those who often have no access to the corridors of power,” Obama said.  “I hope they understand that courage means not simply doing what is politically expedient but what they believe deep in their hearts is right.”

The award is named after a book written by Kennedy, who served as U.S. president in the early 1960s, profiling eight U.S. senators who risked their careers by taking principled, but unpopular stands.

Previous winners include two former presidents, George H.W. Bush and Gerald Ford, as well as former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and former Ukrainian President Viktor Yuschenko.

Speaking more generally about politics in the United States, Obama said one thing Democrats and Republicans can agree on is that now is a time of “great cynicism about our institutions.”

“It’s a cynicism that’s more corrosive when it comes to our system of self-government, that clouds our history of jagged, sometimes tentative, but ultimately forward progress, that impedes our children’s ability to see in the noisy and often too trivial pursuits of politics the possibility of our democracy doing big things.”

Obama also said the political divide that exists brings the risk of people retreating into being angry at those who do not look like them, have the same kinds of names or the same religion.

At such moments we need courage to stand up to hate, not just in others, but in ourselves.  At such moments we need the courage to stand up to dogma not just in others, but in ourselves,” Obama said.  “At such moments we need courage to believe that together we can tackle big challenges like inequality and climate change.  At such moments it’s necessary for us to show courage in challenging the status quo and in fighting the good fight, but also show the courage to listen to one another and seek common ground and embrace principled compromise.”

The former president has kept a low profile since leaving office in January.  He is visiting Milan, Italy Monday and Tuesday to meet with former Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and to give an address at a summit on the impact of technology on climate change and food security.

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UN Official: ‘The Future of a Generation is Truly on the Brink’ in South Sudan

The United Nations says while more than one million children have fled South Sudan’s escalating violence, the same number of children have been displaced within the country due to the conflict.

The figures illustrate “how devastating this conflict has been for the country’s most vulnerable,” said Leila Pakkala, UNICEF’s regional director for Eastern and Southern Africa.

“That refugee children are becoming the defining face of this emergency is incredibly troubling,” said Valentin Tapsoba, the African Bureau Director of the U.N.’s refugee agency.  “No refugee crisis today worries me more than South Sudan.”

Pakkala says “the future of a generation is truly on the brink.” 

The U.N. organizations on the frontline of the humanitarian crisis in South Sudan are themselves facing a funding crisis.

UNICEF, the U.N. organization that provides humanitarian aid to mothers and children in developing countries, said in a statement Sunday that it has only 52 percent of the $181 million needed to address the acute needs of the South Sudanese refugees until the end of the year.

UNHCR, the U.N.’s refugee agency, meanwhile, says it has just 11 percent of the $781.8 million needed to help the fleeing South Sudanese refugees.

South Sudan has been beset by violence for more than three years because of a political rivalry between the young country’s two leaders.

The power struggle between President Salva Kiir, an ethnic Dinka, and his former deputy, Riek Machar, a Nuer, broke out in December 2013 after the president accused Machar and 10 others of attempting a coup d’état.

Fighting has split the country along ethnic lines, displaced millions of people and caused severe food shortages.

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WFP: Conflict, Drought, Major Drivers of Famine

A new report from the World Food Program adds weight to the notion that human actions, as well as drought or natural disaster, can cause food insecurity and famine. VOA’S Kevin Enochs reports.

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France Elects Macron, Rejects Le Pen

Voters in France have elected pro-EU centrist Emmanuel Macron as the country’s new president, rejecting the anti-EU, anti-immigrant policies of nationalist Marine Le Pen. Preliminary results released immediately after polls closed Sunday showed Macron won 65 percent support compared to 34.5 percent for Le Pen. VOA Europe correspondent Luis Ramirez reports from Paris.

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Nigerian President Meets Freed Chibok Girls

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari has met with 82 Chibok schoolgirls released by Boko Haram Islamist militants. They are from the group of 276 abducted three years ago from their school in northeastern Borno state. The president welcomed the girls in the capital, Abuja, Sunday evening, a day after their release. VOA’s Zlatica Hoke has more.

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German President Says Israel Ties Solid Despite Recent Spat

Germany’s president said Sunday that despite recent disagreement the foundation of his country’s relations with Israel remains solid – a reference to a recent diplomatic spat over an Israeli anti-occupation group.

Frank-Walter Steinmeier is in Israel on his first foreign trip outside Europe since he was elected president earlier this year. It comes two weeks after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu canceled talks with the German foreign minister because the visitor chose to meet Breaking the Silence, a group of former Israeli combat soldiers-turned-whistleblowers who oppose Israel’s rule over the Palestinians.

 

The dispute has cast a shadow over what would otherwise have been a routine visit to Israel by the German president.

 

Netanyahu said after meeting with Steinmeier that Israel has a “unique partnership” with Germany. In an apparent dig at Breaking the Silence, Netanyahu said Israeli troops have “moral standards second to none.”

 

The group says soldiers come forward with their war stories to shine a light on problems either unknown or ignored by the public. But many Israeli leaders have portrayed them as traitors, in part because their reports and lectures are often aimed at foreign audiences.

 

Steinmeier addressed the dispute at a speech in German at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.

 

He said diverse voices are “the oxygen of democracy” and said he believes “those who raise their voice, who criticize, but also respect the voices of others – they are not traitors of the people, but guardians of the people.”

 

Complex ties

Israel and Germany have had a long, close and complicated relationship. Israel was established in 1948 on the ashes of the Holocaust, in which 6 million Jews were systematically killed by Nazi Germany and its collaborators during World War II. The countries only established diplomatic relations in 1965.

 

Today, Germany is a key Israeli trade partner and ally in Europe, and assumes responsibility for the atrocities committed during the Holocaust.

 

But tensions occasionally flare up over Israeli policies toward the Palestinians. Germany, along with most of the international community, considers Israeli settlements in territory claimed by the Palestinians illegal. Israel says settlements should be resolved along with other core issues in peace talks.

 

Steinmeier said some advised he cancel or postpone his visit over the spat but he decided otherwise “not because I agreed with your prime minister’s cancellation of the meeting with the German foreign minister, but because I believe that I would be amiss if I allowed the relationship between the two nations to get deeper into a dead end, which would harm both sides,” he said.

 

“The relationship between Germany and Israel will always remain unique. We must not forget then when it is difficult and the wind is a bit stormy. Especially in such times, we are called upon to protect this precious heritage,” said Steinmeier.

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US Health Care Debate Passes from House to Senate

The U.S. Senate is beginning work on an issue that shifted control of Congress in 2010 and could do so again next year: America’s costly and complex health care system. VOA’s Michael Bowman reports, the House of Representatives passed a Republican bill repealing former president Obama’s health care law, but the bill faces major hurdles going forward.

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Regional al-Shabab Leader Killed in Somali Raid

The Somali government says the leader of al-Shabab in the Lower Shabelle region and three of his associates have been killed in a raid in the village of Barire.

 

The Somali government identified the man as Moalin Osman Abdi Badil. In a statement by the Information Ministry the government says the operation on May 5 was conducted by the Somali national security forces.

The Somali government says the death the al-Shabab leader Badil “significantly disrupts” the group’s ability to operate in the Lower Shabelle region.

“The operation marks a turning point in our fight for security,” the statement read.

 

The Somali statement did not mention if U.S. were involved in the operation in Barire. Last Friday, the U.S. said a Navy SEAL was killed an operation to ‘advice and assist” the Somali national army in the same area.

US Navy SEAL killed

The U.S. Navy SEAL killed was identified as Senior Chief Special Warfare Operator Kyle Milliken. The 38-year-old is the first American service member killed in combat in the war-torn country since a deadly battle in 1993 — the clash that inspired the movie Black Hawk Down. At least two other Navy SEALs and an interpreter were wounded in the recent attack in the village of Barire, west of Mogadishu.

“This was a Somali mission,” Navy Captain Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, told reporters Friday. American forces were “operating in support of” the Somali units, in an attack targeting a compound associated with attacks on nearby facilities used by both U.S. and Somali forces, he added.

A former Somali army commander who is familiar with U.S. operations told VOA Somali he believes there was a small number of special U.S. forces and helicopters that accompanied Somali special forces to a targeted location.

Meanwhile, al-Shabab has published purported photos of items they said were left behind by the U.S. forces at the scene including a small-sized American flag, military clothes, a glove and electronic kits marked Fort Lauderdale. One of the photos also showed blood stains on the ground.

Security sources and officials in the Lower Shabelle region say Friday’s attack was led by Somalia’s Danab commando team, accompanied by U.S. special forces. Danab or “lightening” in English are Somali commandos trained by the US forces.

Last month, dozens of American soldiers deployed to Mogadishu for a separate mission to train and equip Somali and AMISOM (African Union Mission in Somalia) forces fighting extremism in Somalia, U.S. military officials told VOA.

Somali officials say more than 500 Somalia commandos have been trained by the U.S., and the Somali government has said it wants to increase the number of trained commandos to 4,000.

Carla Babb contributed to this report.

 

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Trump Confident Senate Will Join House in Repealing US Health Law

U.S. President Donald Trump is voicing confidence the Senate will join the House of Representatives in repealing health care reforms championed by former President Barack Obama.

“Republican Senators will not let the American people down!” Trump said Sunday on his Twitter account, just days after the House narrowly voted to repeal the seven-year-old health law popularly known as Obamacare.

The long-running U.S. health care debate now moves to the Senate, where the fate of the repeal effort is uncertain. Some Republican lawmakers have expressed concerns the House-approved proposal would leave millions without insurance, while Democrats are uniformly opposed to overturning the statute and hope to stymie efforts to change the law, which national polls show has grown in popularity.

In his Twitter comment, Trump contended, “ObamaCare premiums and deductibles are way up — it was a lie and it is dead!”

Trump’s Health and Human Services chief, Tom Price, appeared on several news talk shows to defend the repeal effort.

“The goal is to have the kind of insurance [Americans] want, not that government forces them to buy,” Price told NBC’s Meet the Press.

Pre-existing conditions

The health secretary said Republicans believe insurance under their plan “is going to be more affordable. This is different [than Obamacare]. We believe it’s a better way to cover those with pre-existing [medical] conditions” that are often costly to treat.

The Republican plan would allow insurers to charge sicker people much higher rates than they do for healthy people under Obamacare, which Price defended as “pricing for what peoples’ health status is.”

The House voted 217 to 213 for the repeal legislation, Trump’s first major legislative victory of his presidency. Only Republicans voted for the repeal and 20 Republicans joined all House Democrats in opposing the effort.

In the coming days, the independent Congressional Budget Office is set to release its assessment of how much the Republican plan would cost in the next decade and how many millions of people would lose their insurance under it. The agency said an earlier version of the Republican proposal would leave 24 million people without insurance in 10 years.

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Los Angeles Volunteers Welcome Arriving Air Passengers

Hundreds of volunteers held “welcome” signs in multiple languages near Los Angeles International Airport, ahead of an appeals court hearing in Virginia on Monday regarding the Trump administration’s revised travel ban. The Saturday event, organized by the Los Angeles tourism office, was intended to show arriving passengers that the city welcomes visitors from all parts of the world.

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Los Angeles Volunteers Hold Welcome Signs for Arriving Air Passengers

Hundreds of volunteers held signs “welcome” signs in multiple languages near Los Angeles International Airport, ahead of an appeals court hearing in Virginia on Monday regarding the Trump administration’s revised travel ban.

The ban has been placed on hold in the courts, and if reinstated, would temporarily bar travelers from six majority-Muslim countries.

The Los Angeles event on Saturday was organized by the city’s tourism office, and although nonpolitical, organizers say it is intended to show the city’s openness.

Tourism in California has been growing for the past seven years and supports 1 million jobs, according to the state’s tourism agency, Visit California. The agency expects slowing growth, however, because of the strong U.S. dollar and President Donald Trump’s actions and statements on immigration.

The Los Angeles campaign, called Everyone is Welcome, assembled volunteers near the airport’s northern runways to hold placards whose characters, in Arabic, Chinese, Spanish and English, could be read from the air. As aircraft arrived at several-minute intervals, volunteers hoisted the signs to display their message.

 

 

“The message today is that you meet new people here,” said volunteer Donna Singleton, an African-American and part of a diverse group of volunteers. She said she has been helping at events that promote her home city since the summer Olympics in 1984, and said Los Angeles reflects the same diversity as the visitors it welcomes from all parts of the world.

‘We are all human beings’

Another volunteer, Indian immigrant Koushik Cattopadhyay, is a medical scientist who has become a Hollywood actor. He said this rally is not about politics but reaching out to others.

“It doesn’t matter what accent the person has, what skin color the person has, what religious faith or what sexual orientation the person has. We are all human beings,” Cattopadhyay said.

Volunteer Nicole Woyack, who moved to Los Angeles from neighboring Arizona nine years ago, said she found the city welcoming and that the “welcome” message is needed “because there’s so much division going on in the world right now.”

Volunteer Demi Mann said she is sharing her affection for Los Angeles. “It’s a beautiful city,” said the British-born actress, who divides her time between London and Hollywood.

“Travel brings people together,” said Jamie Foley of Discover Los Angeles. She said the message directed to the airborne passengers celebrates “diversity and inclusivity,” and lets them know that everyone is welcome in L.A.

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Little Being Left to Chance for Trump’s Saudi Visit

It isn’t the first time a new U.S. President has promised a fresh start in American-Arab relations. Eight years ago Barack Obama promised a beneficial reset in a speech delivered in Cairo entitled “A New Beginning.”

The speech honored a campaign pledge Obama made to give a major address to Muslims from a Muslim capital during his first few weeks in office.

Obama hoped it would mark the start of “a new way forward, based on mutual interest and mutual respect.” The speech raised expectations of a new era in U.S.-Arab relations, but disappointment quickly followed with the Arab world increasingly critical of the Obama administration’s handling of the Syria conflict.

Frustration deepened also with the lack of tangible progress on a Palestinian-Israeli peace deal.And for Arab leaders in the Gulf, the Iranian nuclear deal heralded a dangerous shift, as far as they were concerned, in the balance of power in the region, away from the Sunni monarchies and in favor of their diehard foes, the Shi’ite mullahs in Tehran.

Some Arabs praise for Trump

Now Donald Trump, who a few weeks ago was being blasted for his proposed travel restrictions on visitors from several Muslim-majority countries, is receiving gushing reviews in much, although not all, of the Arab media, as well as praise from many of the region’s leaders. First for his enforcement of a “red line” on the use of chemical weapons by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, as well as his tough criticism of Iran, and then for picking Saudi Arabia to be the first stopover on his maiden international trip as U.S. president, before visiting the Vatican and Israel.

Saudi leaders have dubbed Trump’s scheduled visit “historic.” And hopes are high among them that Trump and they will continue to track each other when it comes to confronting Iran and restraining Iranian expansionism.

“It’s a clear and powerful message that the U.S. harbors no ill will toward the Arab and Muslim world,” Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister Adel al-Jubeir said after last week’s trip announcement.

Earlier this year Arab and Muslim reaction to Trump’s proposed travel ban was fierce. The 57-nation and Saudi-based Organization of Islamic Conference denounced the ban, warning it would embolden extremists.

In the Emirates-based National newspaper in February, James Zogby, Arab American Institute president, cautioned, “It would be a grave error for this administration to fail to understand the connection between how it treats, and is perceived to treat, Arab and Muslim people and its ability to achieve its broader policy objectives in the Middle East,” he cautioned.

But the leaders of the Gulf states noticeably muted their criticism of the travel restrictions as public outrage swept the region, the Saudi government didn’t even comment officially on the ban.

And that reticence appears to have paid off. Not only with a presidential visit, but a likely a multi-billion dollar arms deal, which could include the sale of four multi-mission surface combatant ships suspended by the Obama administration because of Saudi Arabia’s military campaign in Yemen.

For the Saudis and other Arab Gulf leaders there’s relief the Trump administration appears as determined as them to clip Iranian wings. In March, Saudi Arabia’s deputy crown prince described Trump as a “true friend of Muslims,” dismissing the argument his controversial immigration ban targeted Islam.

Arab youth not convinced

While Saudi leaders have repeatedly said they do not view Trump as being anti-Muslim, that isn’t the view of most Arabs, who, especially the young, remain wary of Trump.

Almost half of young Arab men and women view the United States as a foe, according to a poll released last week, which surveyed 3,000 Arabs in 16 countries across the Middle East and North Africa.

According to the annual Arab Youth Survey, 49 percent of those polled said they think of the United States as somewhat of an enemy or a strong enemy, up from 32 percent in the same poll last year.The number who view the United States as an ally has fallen from 63 percent last year to 46 percent.

Eighty-three percent of 18 to 24 year olds told pollsters they viewed Trump unfavorably, far worse than Barack Obama, who scored a 52 percent unfavorable rating and George W. Bush at 77 percent.

Overall, 70 percent of young Arabs said Trump is anti-Muslim.Arab public opinion over time will impact how the region’s governments interact with the Trump administration.The honeymoon with the region’s leaders could also end quickly, if there’s not some progress towards an accommodation between the Israelis and Palestinians.

 

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Israel-Germany Row Shines Spotlight on Anti-Occupation Group

Former Israeli combat soldiers who were thrust into the center of a recent diplomatic row between Israel and Germany, say the sudden international spotlight has given them a bigger stage to speak out against Israel’s 50-year rule over millions of Palestinians.

Breaking the Silence is a group of ex-soldiers-turned-whistleblowers who view Israel’s open-ended occupation of lands sought for a Palestinian state as an existential threat to their country.

Since 2004, the group has collected testimony from more than 1,100 fellow soldiers who describe the dark side of that rule, including seemingly routine mistreatment of Palestinian civilians stripped of basic rights. The veterans hope such accounts by former fighters will carry weight and spark public debate about the moral price of the occupation.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and top officials in his nationalist government have a starkly different view. They have branded Breaking the Silence as foreign-funded subversives who are trying to defame Israel and its military.

Most recently, Netanyahu even seemed willing to rattle Israel’s relationship with key European ally Germany to score points against Breaking the Silence, which has 16 paid staffers, several dozen volunteers and an annual budget of about $2 million.

Two weeks ago, he said he would not receive German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel if the visitor stuck to plans to meet with Breaking the Silence. Gabriel chose the soldiers instead. Netanyahu, who also serves as foreign minister, said that shunning visitors who meet with Breaking the Silence is now official policy.

The fallout continues this week. The dispute has cast a shadow over what would otherwise have been a routine Israel visit by German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier. Media reports suggest Steinmeier will praise the group during a speech Sunday, but not meet with its representatives to avoid another spat with Netanyahu.

Yehuda Shaul, a co-founder of Breaking the Silence, said the recent attention has been a mixed blessing.

The focus on the diplomatic dust-up “diverts a lot of attention from the real issue, what goes on in the occupied territories,” he said in an interview at the group’s office, tucked away in an old walk-up in a grubby industrial area of Tel Aviv.

“On the other hand, it gives us more stages to speak about it,” said Shaul, citing more media attention and public speaking invitations that draw larger audiences.

Israelis have been bitterly divided over what to do with the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem, lands they captured in June 1967. Israel annexed east Jerusalem immediately after the war and retains overall control over the West Bank, with enclaves of Palestinian self-rule. Israel unilaterally withdrew from Gaza in 2005 and has enforced a border blockade of the territory since it was seized by the Islamic militant Hamas two years later.

Many Israelis support the idea of Palestinian statehood in principle, but believe it’s not safe to cede war-won territories now. Fears were stoked by three Israel-Hamas wars since 2008 and an escalation of regional conflicts. Meanwhile, partition is increasingly difficult, with 600,000 Israelis already living on occupied lands and settlements expanding steadily.

Netanyahu has said he is willing to resume partition talks with the Palestinians, but gaps remain wide. A majority of his Cabinet ministers oppose a two-state solution and some even call for annexing parts of the West Bank, raising fears among some Israelis that their rule over disenfranchised Palestinians will become permanent.

Shaul said he and his comrades are the true patriots, not those clinging to occupied territories.

“I believe Jews have a right to self-determination in the Holy Land. But I refuse to accept that the only way I will be allowed to implement my right to self-determination is if I strip my neighbors, the Palestinians, of the exact same right I demand for myself,” he said. “A permanent occupation is the most anti-Zionist position one can ever have because it says we are doomed to live in a sin.”

The beginnings of Breaking the Silence go back to Hebron, the West Bank’s largest Palestinian city, where hundreds of troops guard roughly the same number of Jewish settlers in an Israeli-controlled center partly off limits to Palestinians.

Shaul, who grew up in an Orthodox Jewish home, spent more than a year of his compulsory three-year army service in Hebron at the height of an armed Palestinian uprising of bombings and shootings that erupted in 2000.

 

He became increasingly disillusioned with his army mission, which he felt was largely aimed at making Palestinians fear him and his comrades. He said that while his parents and grandparents fought against armies to defend Israel, “the stories I can tell you about is breaking into houses in the middle of the night to intimidate people and seeing children crying and peeing in their pants.”

In 2004, Shaul and dozens of members from his unit presented a photo exhibit about Hebron in Tel Aviv.

 

Since then, the group has collected recorded testimony from hundreds of soldiers, including those who fought in recent Israel-Hamas wars. Some of the soldiers described an atmosphere in which the mission and safety of the troops trumped other considerations, such as the lives and property of Palestinians.

More than 100 soldiers have gone on the record, while the rest remain anonymous, for fear of repercussions, but are known to the group’s researchers who check their stories, Shaul said. The research department was able to flag four false testimonies by right-wing activists trying to undermine the group’s credibility, he said. All material is submitted to the military censor before publication to avoid inadvertent harm to Israel’s security, he added.

Critics allege that the group is hiding behind anonymous testimony to smear Israel soldiers and help Israel’s enemies press future war crimes charges at the International Criminal Court. They say the group, which does not call for a boycott of Israel, nonetheless feeds into what many Israelis believe is a global trend of unfairly singling out and delegitimizing Israel.

Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely recently said her office is urging European countries to stop funding what she called “anti-Israel organizations,” including Breaking the Silence. “We will ask our friends in the world to respect this red line and to stop contributing to this organization,'” she said.

Some of the group’s defenders in Israel said they believe it and other anti-occupation organizations are being targeted in an escalating government assault on Israel’s civil society.

Amos Oz, Israel’s most famous living author, has said the ex-soldiers play a critical role in Israel’s society, comparing them to biblical prophets who spoke uncomfortable truths. “Moral impulse is a matter of utmost existential importance,” Oz said in a November speech that media reports said would be cited by the German president.

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In Pictures: French Voters Select New President in Key Election

In a race dominated by the issues of jobs, immigration and security, the choice before voters in this second and final round Sunday is stark, with centrist, pro-EU former economy minister, Emmanuel Macron facing nationalist, anti-immigration crusader Marine Le Pen.

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Freed Chibok Schoolgirls Arrive in Nigeria’s Capital

The International Committee of the Red Cross posted a photograph on its Twitter account of the girls lining up to get into a helicopter.   

The ICRC said it on Twitter that it “acted as a neutral intermediary to facilitate” the girls’ transport back home.

WATCH: Released Chibok Girls at Medical Center

The  girls are expected to meet with President Muhammadu Buhari later in the day.

The group of girls, released Saturday, had been kidnapped in 2014  in the town of Chibok near Nigeria’s borders with Chad and Niger.

Nigerian government officials confirmed the releases early Sunday.

 

The girls gained their freedom following protracted negotiations between Boko Haram and government envoys. A statement from President Buhari’s office says the girls were released “in exchange for some Boko Haram suspects held by the authorities.”

According to the statement, Buhari is optimistic about the release of the remaining girls seized in the Chibok raid.

The president expressed his appreciation in the statement to the Nigerian security agencies and the military for their roles in the release of the girls. He also thanked the government of Switzerland, the International Committee of the Red Cross, and local and international NGOs.

Kidnapping sparked international uproar

Authorities say 276 girls were kidnapped from a government-run girls’ secondary school in Chibok on April 14, 2014. Nearly 60 girls who escaped during the first hours said their abductors forced them from dormitories into trucks that headed into the bush.

Days later, a widely distributed video purported to show about 100 of the missing girls. Boko Haram claimed the captives had converted to Islam, and said they would only be released in exchange for militants held by the Nigerian government.

At the time, Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau vowed to sell the girls as slave brides.

The abductions triggered an international outcry, including condemnation from the U.N. Security Council. U.S. first lady Michelle Obama co-launched a media campaign to gain the girls’ release.

First girls released last year

There was no sign of the Chibok schoolgirls for more than two years, until one girl — by then a mother with a young infant — turned up last May. Two other girls made their way to government-controlled areas later in the year, and a group of 21 captives was released in October.

Nigerian Defense Minister Manir Dan Ali, however, told VOA’s Hausa service last month it might take years to find all of the Chibok girls. He spoke as grieving families marked the third anniversary of the girls’ disappearance, and as government troops searched known Boko Haram hideouts in the Sambisa forest — a vast area extending into three states in Nigeria’s northeast.

 

Boko Haram, whose declared aim is to create an Islamic state, has killed thousands of people and displaced more than 2 million during its insurgency, now in its eighth year.

Boko Haram’s other victims

U.N. officials have stressed that the Chibok girls are not Boko Haram’s only victims.

The militants have seized at least 2,000 other girls and boys since 2014. Many of those captives were used as cooks, sex slaves, fighters and even suicide bombers, according to Amnesty International.

Boko Haram has increased its use of children as suicide bombers in the Lake Chad region, where 27 such attacks were recorded during the first three months of this year, three times as many as during the same period in 2016, according to U.N. children’s agency UNICEF.

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Kidnapped Frenchman Freed in Rescue Mission in Sudan’s Darfur

A Frenchman who was kidnapped in Chad in March and taken to the restive Darfur area of Sudan has been rescued in a raid organized by France, Chad and Sudan and was handed over to French authorities on Sunday, Sudanese officials said.

They said the kidnappers had demanded an undisclosed ransom for the man, an employee of a French mining company operating in Chad. He was abducted south of Abeche, a mining area about 800 km (500 miles) east of Chad’s capital, N’Djamena, and 150 km from the border with Sudan.

The Frenchman arrived on Sunday morning in the Sudanese capital Khartoum, where he was handed over to French Embassy officials at the airport.

The French president’s office confirmed that the hostage had been freed, without giving details of the rescue.

“The President of the Republic has learned with great satisfaction about the release of our compatriot who was abducted in eastern Chad and then taken by his captors to Sudan,” it said in a statement.

Sudan has been working with Chadian and French authorities for weeks to secure the release of the Frenchman.

Mohamed Tabiedy, a spokesman for the Sudanese security and intelligence service, told reporters that the Frenchman had been freed in a rescue mission carried out in coordination with Chad and French intelligence. Five kidnappers were arrested in the raid and would be tried, he said, adding that no one was hurt.

Sudanese Foreign Ministry official Khalid Attaras said no ransom was paid.

Sudanese officials said the Frenchman had not been abducted by any of the known rebel movements that are battling Sudan’s government but by an armed group in the border area.

Kidnappings are rare in Chad, a former French colony in West Africa, but the remote eastern border area has seen decades of back-and-forth movement by armed groups, including rebels fighting the Sudanese government.

Before this case, the last French national kidnapped in Chad was an aid worker seized in the eastern frontier area in 2009.

He was released nearly three months later in Darfur.

Around 1,000 French troops are stationed in Chad, which hosts the headquarters of France’s 4,000-strong regional anti-militant operation, known as Barkhane.

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50,000 Evacuated in German City after 5 WWII Bombs Uncovered

German authorities are evacuating around 50,000 people from their homes in the northern city of Hannover while five suspected aerial bombs from World War II are made safe for removal.

City officials say two suspected bombs were found at a construction site and three more nearby. Germany was heavily bombed by Allied planes during the war and such finds are common.

 

Leaflets in German, Polish, Turkish, English and Russian were delivered door-to-door to make sure everyone evacuated on Sunday. The city’s museums are open for free and the senior citizen’s agency organized an afternoon Scrabble and card-playing gathering so evacuated residents would have places to go.

Authorities say they hope people will be able to return to their homes by evening.

 

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France Elects Macron

Voters have elected Emmanuel Macron president of France, rejecting the anti-EU, anti-immigrant policies of Marine Le Pen.

Preliminary results released after polls closed showed Macron winning 61.3 percent support compared to Le Pen’s 38.7 percent.  

 

Sunday culminated a presidential election campaign that many French say is the country’s most acrimonious and contentious in modern history.  

 

“A new hopeful and confident chapter for France begins,” Macron told the French news agency, AFP.

 

Minutes after preliminary results were released, Le Pen told her supporters at a restaurant in eastern Paris she had called Macron and conceded.  “The French have chosen a new president.  They voted in favor of continuity.  I have called Macron because I have the best interests of France in mind and I wanted to wish him the very best,” she said.

U.S. President Donald Trump reacted on Twitter to the results of the French presidential election, congratulating Macron on a “big win” and saying he very much looks forward to working with him.

Macron’s view

Surveys going into Sunday had suggested Macron would win the election with a substantial lead over Le Pen.  But Macron supporters filled the main courtyard of the Louvre Museum for a celebration, and expressions of relief.  

 

“I feared Marine Le Pen because she sowed division in this country,” said Frank Kamandoko, a reveler waving a large French flag at the Louvre on Sunday night. “That is why I had no choice but to support Emmanuel Macron,” Kamandoko, a French citizen originally from the Central African Republic.  

 

At 39, Macron a former banker and economy minister, becomes France’s youngest president.  He is pro-EU but wants reforms to make the grouping more democratic and has warned that continuing business as usual with the European Union will trigger a Frexit, or a French exit similar to Britain’s.

Macron’s view is held by many young, urban, largely affluent voters who see their nation as a cosmopolitan experiment that has worked and globalization as not only inevitable, but the key to future economic prosperity.

Anti-EU Le Pen

 

While Macron was widely favored by pollsters to win the election, it was Le Pen, her anti-EU position and her drive to stop the flow of Muslim immigration to France who drew world attention to the race.

“We are being submerged by a flood of immigrants that are sweeping all before them.  There are prayers in the street, cafes that ban women and young women who get threatening looks if they wear a skirt,” Le Pen said at a rally in April.  She called for the expulsion of Islamists, the closure of mosques whose imams preach extremism, cuts in immigration, scrapping the euro, and a referendum on France’s EU membership.

 

Both candidates were mobbed by journalists as they cast their ballots at separate locations.  Outgoing President Francois Hollande also voted Sunday.

Le Pen’s message resonated among those who see their future threatened by crony capitalism and a destruction of French native culture.  Her strongholds are largely in areas of northeastern France where factory and steel plant closures have killed thousands of jobs, pushing France’s unemployment rate to nearly 10 percent, among the highest in Europe.  

France’s deep divisions were clear in a final, vicious debate where the anger, bitterness and personal dislike between the two candidates were on display, something observers hurt her numbers.

“The high priestess of fear is sitting in front of me,” Macron said.  Le Pen told Macron “You are the France of submission.”

 

Vicious campaign

 

“I am sick of this campaign,” said voter Jasmine Youssi after being among the first to cast ballots at a polling station in the 12th district of Paris.  “It is the first time there’s been such an aggressive campaign.  It was repetitive.  I stopped watching TV because it would make me sick.  I am so glad it is over,” she told VOA.   

Voter turnout was less than expected, with voter disgust and anger causing many voters to abstain or submit blank votes.  

 

Voters braved the rain in Paris and turned out steadily throughout the day.

 

On Paris streets, posters of Macron and Le Pen were pasted side by side, both often defaced.

 

“It says that the people are for neither one or the other.  The French are in distress,” said Brigitte Levoir, a voter in the Paris suburb of Drancy.  “We could perhaps be afraid of Le Pen, but we should be afraid of Macron as well.  What is his plan?   He has none.  We should be afraid of them both.  I want De Gaulle to come back to the world and establish some order,” she told VOA, after casting her ballot.

The vote was historic, and seen by many as a turning point in French politics.  In a sign of revolt against the established political class, the poll was the first in the history of the modern republic where mainstream parties were shut out.

 

France voted for change, but not revolution.

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Blaze Escapes Wildlife Refuge, Prompts Scores to Flee in Georgia

Seventy-nine people in St. George in the U.S. state of Georgia’s southernmost county have been evacuated after a wildfire in the Okefenokee Swamp began encroaching onto private property.

 

The unincorporated community has about 2,000 people. Saturday’s evacuation initially included a sparsely populated rural area of Charleton County. County Administrator Shawn Boatright couldn’t immediately say how many residents might be affected in that area.

Flames escape

 

The wildfire started by lightning April 6 and has since burned more than 150 square miles (389 square kilometers) on public lands. It has burned almost entirely within the Okefenokee refuge boundaries, and some public forestland in north Florida, for the past month, but escaped fire breaks around the refuge Friday and has burned an estimated 1,000 acres on private land.

 

Earlier Saturday the St. George emergency manager said the entire town was under a mandatory evacuation order, according to West Mims Public Information Officer Michael Davis.

 

Davis said the emergency manager later clarified that the evacuation was not mandatory and that only the people in the homes closest to the fire were asked to leave. The fire is now within 3 miles (5 kilometers) of the community, Davis said. 

Smoke advisory

 

The area, on the Georgia-Florida line, is also under a dense smoke advisory that is expected to effect visibility in the towns of St. George, Callahan, Ratliff and northern Duval County near the Jacksonville International airport.

 

A temporary shelter has been opened in the gymnasium at the Folkston Elementary School. Boatright said it would stay open indefinitely. And he encouraged residents to bring whatever personal items they might need for an extended shelter stay.

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Nigeria Boosts Funds to Protect Oil Facilities

Nigeria has almost tripled its budget for an amnesty program for militants in its oil-producing heartland, the presidency said Saturday, a key factor in maintaining a tenuous peace in the Niger Delta and supporting crude production.

In a statement, the presidency said 30 billion naira ($98.47 million) would be released for the former militants and an extra 5 billion naira added at some later stage. 

Until 2016 the annual budget was 20 billion naira.

Payments secure pipeline

Funding of former militants under the 2009 amnesty is key to maintaining the relative stability in the Delta and stopping attacks on oil facilities, as it was last year by militants who cut crude output by as much as a third.

Under the amnesty program, each former militant is entitled to 65,000 naira a month plus job training. But in March a special adviser to Nigeria’s president said the program was facing a cash crunch.

“Currently the Amnesty Office has now paid up all ex-militants backlog of their stipends up to the end of 2016,” the presidency said in a statement.

Authorities had previously cut the budget for cash payments to militants to end corruption. They later resumed payments to keep pipeline attacks from crippling vital oil revenues.

Last month, former militant leaders in the Niger Delta urged the government to pay out delayed amnesty stipends or face protests.

Recession also hurt

The government has been holding talks with militants to end the attacks that cut Nigeria’s output by 700,000 barrels a day (bpd) for several months last year, reducing total production at that time to about 1.2 million bpd. It has since rebounded.

The presidency also said all promises made by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on recent visits of the Niger Delta to boost development would be kept.

The damage from attacks on Nigeria’s oil industry has exacerbated a downturn in Africa’s largest economy, which slipped into recession in 2016 for the first time in 25 years, largely because of low oil prices.

Crude oil sales make up around two-thirds of government revenue.

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