Palestinian student describes destruction and fear in Gaza amid Israel’s siege

Palestinian student describes destruction and fear in Gaza amid Israel’s siege
Palestinian student describes destruction and fear in Gaza amid Israel’s siege
pawel.gaul/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — Gazan Younes Elhallaq is hiding from airstrikes in a home with 30 of his family members — seven families housed in four rooms under one roof.

Many of them evacuated to the south of the Gaza Strip looking for safety from the onslaught of Israeli retaliatory airstrikes following the Oct. 7 surprise terror attack from Hamas in Israel.

But safety and security are still not guaranteed, the 24-year-old said. Their fears are heightened not just by the explosions around them, he said, but the dwindling access to food, clean water, electricity and a growing disconnection from the rest of the world as internet and cell service remain unstable.

“We are dying,” Elhallaq told ABC News. “Slowly, slowly, slowly.”

He says Israeli airstrikes hit one of his family’s homes, killing three children inside.

“We didn’t know ’till the dawn when the internet came back and we could go to the house to check those injuries and martyrs,” he said.

“Everything here in Gaza is targeted,” he said. “We have bodies everywhere in the hospitals. Like yesterday, I went to the hospital. I saw all the injuries in the rooms of the hospital … It’s like a film. Even the films couldn’t imagine this.”

Gaza, home to more than 2 million Palestinians, has been under siege since the militant Palestinian Islamist group Hamas carried out an unprecedented terrorist attack into Israel from the neighboring Gaza Strip on Oct. 7, killing more than 1,400 people and taking over 200 others hostage, according to Israeli authorities.

In response, the Israeli military has conducted wide-scale airstrikes on Gaza, killing more than 8,000 people and injuring over 21,000 others, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry.

ABC News has not independently confirmed the casualty figures.

The IDF said it has struck more than 11,000 targets in Gaza since the attack.

Elhallaq said he couldn’t discern a reason as to why their college, the Islamic University of Gaza — a place where young Gazans were learning marketing, accounting, English literature and medicine — was targeted in the strikes.

Elhallaq was a student, and his 22-year-old sister-in-law Batoul Abu Ali was a graduate of the college. The two reminisced about the institution, which had been bombed and completely destroyed.

“They don’t have any relations with Hamas, didn’t have any relation with the resistance,” Elhallaq said. “I lived one of my perfect and, like, amazing moments in my life in the Islamic University. … We have never expected to be bombed or targeted because we don’t have any relation with the resistance in these universities.”

Ali added, “In the blink of an eye, everything was destroyed. So we lost everything, knowledge and our freedom.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, when pressed on whether Israel is inflicting collective punishment on Palestinians for Hamas’ actions, said civilians don’t have to die, that safe zones have been set up. Netanyahu claims Hamas is preventing civilians from evacuating.

“As Hamas’ use of Palestinian human shields results in the international community blaming Israel, Hamas will continue to use it as a tool of terror, and so will others,” Netanyahu said in a press conference Monday. “While Israel is doing everything to get Palestinian civilians out of harm’s way, Hamas is doing everything to keep Palestinian civilians in harm’s way.”

The Israel-Hamas war comes amid the backdrop of a longstanding history of conflict over land and independence that has plagued the region. Israel disengaged from the Gaza Strip in 2005, but when Hamas, which the U.S. has designated a terrorist organization, overtook the region, Israel and Egypt later imposed a blockade on the Gaza Strip that greatly restricts the movement of people and goods into and out of the area.

These restrictions have been a concern of humanitarian groups around the world about the conditions in which Palestinians are forced to live. Humanitarian agencies have repeatedly warned of an unprecedented humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza amid Israel’s total siege.

Elhallaq said they’ve lost hope that the international community will come to their protection: “If they wanted to do something, they would do it.”

Still, both the days and nights are “hell,” Ali said.

“We hate the night,” Ali said. “In the end of our day, we pass our time waiting. We pass our time waiting for the night.”

ABC News’ Camilla Alcini contributed to this report.

 

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Judge in Trump’s classified docs case to hear arguments on extending deadlines

Judge in Trump’s classified docs case to hear arguments on extending deadlines
Judge in Trump’s classified docs case to hear arguments on extending deadlines
Scott Olson/Getty Images

(MIAMI) — The judge overseeing the probe into former President Donald Trump’s handling of classified documents is set to hear arguments Wednesday as she considers a request from Trump to extend deadlines in the case.

At issue is how the classified materials at the center of the probe are to be handled by the defendants and their attorneys, based on national security requirements.

After Judge Aileen Cannon established several deadlines for ruling on those issues, Trump’s legal team filed a motion asking her for a three-month extension, saying that Trump and his co-defendants have still not received access to “significant portions of the materials that the Special Counsel’s Office has characterized as classified.”

Cannon subsequently paused any litigation involving the classified materials in question in order to consider the request.

Special counsel Jack Smith previously said that some documents were so sensitive that they couldn’t even be viewed in a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility or SCIF — a specially-equipped secure room for viewing highly classified materials. In a subsequent filing, the government said that a SCIF had been approved to store the documents, and that they were prepared to arrange for delivery of those documents.

Last month, Cannon issued a protective order over the classified information central to the case, clearing the way for the special counsel to begin providing classified discovery materials to Trump and his lawyers to review in a SCIF.

On Tuesday, Trump joined his attorneys in Miami for a visit to a SCIF to conduct his first known review of classified evidence, according to sources.

Trump’s legal team has also asked the judge to consider their request for the trial to take place following the 2024 presidential election. The trial is currently set to begin this coming May.

Wednesday’s hearing could provide an indication from Cannon as to whether she intends to keep or move the trial date.

Trump pleaded not guilty in June to 37 criminal counts related to his handling of classified materials, after prosecutors said he repeatedly refused to return hundreds of documents containing classified information ranging from U.S. nuclear secrets to the nation’s defense capabilities, and took steps to thwart the government’s efforts to get the documents back.

The former president has denied all wrongdoing.

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Trump fraud trial live updates: ‘Leave my children alone,’ Trump says ahead of sons’ testimony

Trump fraud trial live updates: ‘Leave my children alone,’ Trump says ahead of sons’ testimony
Trump fraud trial live updates: ‘Leave my children alone,’ Trump says ahead of sons’ testimony
ftwitty/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — Former President Donald Trump is on trial in New York in a $250 million lawsuit that could alter the personal fortune and real estate empire that helped propel Trump to the White House.

Trump, his sons Eric and Don Jr., and Trump Organization executives are accused by New York Attorney General Letitia James of engaging in a decade-long scheme in which they used “numerous acts of fraud and misrepresentation” to inflate Trump’s net worth in order get more favorable loan terms. The trial comes after the judge in the case ruled in a partial summary judgment that Trump had submitted “fraudulent valuations” for his assets, leaving the trial to determine additional actions and what penalty, if any, the defendants should receive.

The former president has denied all wrongdoing and his attorneys have argued that Trump’s alleged inflated valuations were a product of his business skill.

Here’s how the news is developing. All times Eastern:

Nov 01, 8:45 AM EDT
‘Leave my children alone,’ Trump says ahead of sons’ testimony

Former President Trump attacked Judge Arthur Engoron and New York Attorney General Letitia James on social media ahead of today’s expected testimony from his son Donald Trump Jr.

“Leave my children alone, Engoron. You are a disgrace to the legal profession!” Trump wrote overnight on his Truth Social platform.

Donald Trump Jr. is expected to begin his testimony in the afternoon today.

If that testimony concludes today, his brother Eric Trump could also begin his testimony.

Both of them are executive vice presidents in the Trump Organization.

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Trump visits secure facility to view evidence in classified documents case: Sources

Trump visits secure facility to view evidence in classified documents case: Sources
Trump visits secure facility to view evidence in classified documents case: Sources
U.S. Department of Justice via Getty Images

(MIAMI) — Former President Donald Trump on Tuesday conducted his first known review of classified evidence shared by special counsel Jack Smith as part of his case against Trump for allegedly mishandling the nation’s secrets and obstructing the government’s efforts to retrieve them, sources familiar with the matter tell ABC News.

Trump joined his attorneys Tuesday in Miami for a visit to a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility — or SCIF — in order to view the highly classified materials gathered by Smith’s team over the course of their investigation, including those seized by the FBI during their search of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in August 2022, the sources said.

Trump’s visit comes as the judge overseeing the probe, U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, is set to hold a hearing Wednesday in Fort Pierce, Florida, on Trump’s request to extend the deadlines in the case. Cannon has paused any litigation involving the classified materials in question as she considers the request.

Last month, Cannon issued a protective order over the classified information central to the case, clearing the way for the special counsel to begin providing classified discovery materials to Trump and his lawyers to review in the SCIF.

According to public court filings, the material in the classified discovery includes “classified documents that had been stored at Mar-a-Lago as well as other classified material generated or obtained in the Government’s investigation, including documents related to witness interviews such as reports and transcripts.”

It’s standard procedure for defendants charged with illegal retention of national defense information to be able to review the classified evidence gathered against them, while adhering to a strict set of standards and rules barring them from disclosing that information.

Trump pleaded not guilty in June to 37 criminal counts related to his handling of classified materials, after prosecutors said he repeatedly refused to return hundreds of documents containing classified information ranging from U.S. nuclear secrets to the nation’s defense capabilities, and took steps to thwart the government’s efforts to get the documents back. His longtime aide, Walt Nauta, also pleaded not guilty to related charges.

Trump’s lawyers have said they have yet to gain access to a handful of the documents charged in Smith’s indictment against the former president.

The special counsel previously said that some documents were so sensitive that even the SCIF wasn’t sufficiently secure to store them, requiring alternate arrangements be made for viewing.

“Although the defense SCIF is now approved for the review and discussion of all classified discovery, it is not yet approved for the storage of certain extremely sensitive materials, which the Government has referred to as ‘special measures documents,'” the special counsel wrote in a court filing, noting that there are about 127 total pages designated as such.

In a subsequent filing, the government said that the SCIF had been approved to store the special measures documents, and that they were prepared to arrange for delivery of those documents.

The special counsel says they have produced about 5,431 pages of classified discovery to Trump and his defense counsel, which includes “four discs of photographs, audio recordings, and material extracted from electronic devices.”

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Donald Trump Jr. to testify in Trump Organization’s $250 million fraud trial

Donald Trump Jr. to testify in Trump Organization’s 0 million fraud trial
Donald Trump Jr. to testify in Trump Organization’s 0 million fraud trial
Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg via Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — The Trump Organization’s $250 million civil fraud trial will become a family affair Wednesday when Donald Trump Jr. becomes the first of former President Donald Trump’s children to take the witness stand.

The trial, which is in its fifth week, centers on allegations that Donald Trump and his business fraudulently inflated his net worth to get better loans, secure insurance deals and burnish his reputation as a highly successful businessman.

Trump, who has blasted the trial as being politically motivated, denies all wrongdoing and has appealed a pretrial ruling that he used fraudulent statements to do business.

New York Attorney General Letitia James initially named the three Trump children who served as Trump Organization executive vice presidents — Donald Trump Jr., Eric Trump and Ivanka Trump — as defendants in her lawsuit, alleging that they were “intimately involved” in operating the family’s business.

“The public desire to inflate his net worth was well known amongst his children,” James alleged in her complaint.

Ivanka Trump was subsequently dismissed from the AG’s lawsuit in June because she was no longer with the firm by 2016.

The three children are each scheduled to testify in the trial over the coming week, beginning with Donald Trump Jr. and possibly Eric Trump on Wednesday. Donald Trump is currently scheduled to testify on Monday, and Ivanka Trump will serve as the state’s final witness next Wednesday.

An ardent defender of his father on the campaign trail and on social media, Trump Jr. is expected to face questions about his role managing Trump’s revocable trust — the mechanism his father used to prevent potential business conflicts while he was president.

In that capacity, Trump Jr. certified the accuracy of financial statements between 2016 and 2021, each of which is alleged by the attorney general to have been inflated.

James alleges that Trump Jr. was particularly involved in the commercial leasing of 40 Wall Street — one of the properties that Judge Arthur Engoron has already decided was overvalued in Trump’s financial statements by more than $300 million.

Trump Jr. could also face questions about why financial statements allegedly inflated the value of rent-stabilized units in the Trump Park Avenue building by 700%, ignoring the fixed rent of the units’ low-income residents. According to James, Trump Jr. remarked that the rent-stabilized tenants in Trump’s Park Avenue Building were “the bane of [his] existence for quite some time.”

When co-defendants and former Trump Organization executives Allen Weisselberg and Jeffrey McConney took the stand earlier in the trial, both said that Trump Jr. was not personally involved in the preparation of his father’s statement of financial condition — the allegedly fraudulent document that underpins the state’s case.

“There was never a material misrepresentation made by Eric Trump or Donald Trump Jr,” their lawyer Clifford Robert said during his opening statement.

However, Weisselberg also testified that Trump Jr. and his siblings became more involved in running the Trump Organization once their father became president in 2016, and that they received documents showing the internal finances of the company.

“They wanted to get up to speed on how the business was running,” Weisselberg testified.

Emails from Trump Jr. have been included in evidence presented during the trial, including a 2017 email chain from the Trump Organization’s general counsel about the value of Trump’s triplex apartment in Trump Tower.

The forwarded email included a list of issues raised by a Forbes magazine reporter about Trump’s financial claims, including Trump’s claim that his penthouse was three times larger than its actual size of 10,996 square feet.

“Insane amount of stuff there,” Trump Jr. replied to the email.

Despite the error being called out, Trump Jr. and Weissberg still signed off on Trump’s 2016 financial statement that falsely claimed Trump’s triplex was 30,000 square feet and worth $327 million.

Ahead of his testimony, Trump Jr. has criticized the trial as a “sham” being held in a “kangaroo court.”

“It doesn’t matter what general practices and business will be. It doesn’t matter,” Trump Jr. said in a Monday interview with Newsmax.

“They have a narrative, they have an end goal, and they’ll do whatever it takes to get there,” he said, referring to the New York attorney general’s office.

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Why suspected Maine gunman allegedly targeted bowling alley, bar

Why suspected Maine gunman allegedly targeted bowling alley, bar
Why suspected Maine gunman allegedly targeted bowling alley, bar
Jessica Rinaldi/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — Suspected Maine gunman Robert Card allegedly targeted a bowling alley and bar he believed were broadcasting messages that he was a pedophile, according to an arrest warrant released Tuesday.

Card’s sister contacted police about two hours after the first shots were fired in last week’s rampage in Lewiston to say the suspect in the photograph authorities distributed was her brother, according to the warrant.

The sister told police that Card had “been delusional since a February 2023 bad break-up” and had lost weight, been hospitalized for mental health treatment and had stopped taking prescribed medication.

The sister told police Card believed the businesses where the shootings unfolded — Just-In-Time Recreation, a bowling alley, and Schemengees Bar & Grille — were broadcasting messages that he was a pedophile, according to the warrant.

At least 18 people were killed in the Oct. 25. mass shooting. Card was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound two days after a massive manhunt, officials said.

Card’s concerns over being labeled a pedophile began months before the shooting, according to a Sagadahoc County Sheriff’s Office incident report obtained by ABC News via records requests.

His son told a Sagadahoc County deputy that around January “he noticed his father was starting to claim that people were saying things about him, while out in public,” the deputy wrote in the report.

Card’s son said his father was “likely hearing voices or starting to experience paranoia,” a “re-occurring theme” as Card claimed derogatory things were being said about him, “such as calling him a pedophile,” the deputy wrote.

In July, Card — an Army reservist — accused fellow soldiers of calling him a pedophile before getting into a physical confrontation with one of them, according to a letter from Card’s Army reserve unit sent to the sheriff’s office.

That incident led to Card being evaluated by an Army psychologist who determined he needed further treatment; Card was taken to Four Winds Psychiatric Hospital in Katonah, New York for treatment and evaluation in mid-July and was released after 14 days, according to an email from a member of Card’s army reserve unit to the sheriff’s office.

The Sagadahoc County Sheriff’s Office conducted a health and welfare check on Card at the request of his Army unit in September “after they became concerned for his well-being,” the Army said Tuesday. A reserve soldier expressed concern that Card was going to commit a mass shooting, documents from the sheriff’s office show.

In a police incident report on the welfare check, a responding officer wrote it had come to the Army Reserves’ attention that “Card is having psychotic episodes where he is hearing voices that are insulting him calling him a pedophile.”

Card refused to answer the door, according to the incident report.

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Cop who tased suspect several times as man begged him to stop charged with cruelty

Cop who tased suspect several times as man begged him to stop charged with cruelty
Cop who tased suspect several times as man begged him to stop charged with cruelty
Connecticut State Police

(NEW YORK) — A police officer has been charged with third-degree assault for cruelty against a person after he fired his taser several times at a suspect in an Oct. 14 incident in Naugatuck, Connecticut.

The officer, Nicholas Kehoss, was arrested on Monday after the Naugatuck Police Department released body camera video showing the incident in which Kehoss deployed his taser after a brief pursuit of 33-year-old Jarell Day, who police say was being arrested for stealing $200 worth of beer.

The four-minute, forty-five-second video shows the moment Officer Kehoss and fellow Naugatuck officer John Williams first encounter Day in his car with several cases of beer in the back seat. As Williams attempted to open the passenger door, Day drove off.

Kehoss pursued Day’s vehicle, ultimately catching up to him when Day crashed into a pole. Kehoss got out of his vehicle and started running after Day, yelling “better [expletive] stop” as he drew his taser and fired at Day.

Kehoss told Day to get on his stomach and activated his taser again as Day rolled to his stomach and said “Officer, I’m sorry, I don’t know what the [expletive] happened.” Kehoss put his hand on Day’s face as he grabbed his hands and placed them behind Day’s back.

Day continued to plead with Kehoss before the officer said, “You’re getting another ride,” and fired his taser again as Day laid on his stomach on the ground.

Documents provided to ABC News by the Naugatuck Police Department show Kehoss has been disciplined by the department several times during his 13-year tenure as a police officer.

Most recently, Kehoss was suspended in Aug. 2022 for completing a version of what Police Chief C. Colin McAllister described as a “boxing-in maneuver” during a traffic stop, a move not authorized during that type of incident.

In a letter to the Naugatuck Police Commission notifying of the disciplinary action taken against Kehoss, Chief McAllister said the same tactic and boxing-in maneuver was cited as the underlying cause that led to Kehoss discharging his firearm at a suspect during a traffic stop incident in 2020.

In 2017, Kehoss responded to help during an attempted traffic stop by another officer, in which Kehoss claimed he’d been struck by the vehicle. An investigation into the incident stated that video evidence showed that Kehoss’ vehicle “clearly had not” been hit, adding that while “this review is unable to provide that officer Kehoss made a false report that his cruiser was struck by the suspect vehicle, it does find the situation troubling and raises reasonable doubt.”

The investigation also recommended Kehoss be “verbally counseled in regards to making radio transmissions that could be construed as trying to justify a pursuit, and that his actions in any future pursuit reviews be closely examined.”

Day is currently facing charges for robbery, larceny, interfering with an officer/resisting, reckless driving and disobeying the signal of an officer but was released on a $200,000 bond.

Kehoss was released on a $50,000 bond on Monday and is scheduled to appear at Waterbury Superior Court on Nov. 8.

Kehoss and Day did not immediately respond to ABC News’ requests for comment.

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Man arrested for pointing gun at 6-year-old boy’s head over Halloween goody bag

Man arrested for pointing gun at 6-year-old boy’s head over Halloween goody bag
Man arrested for pointing gun at 6-year-old boy’s head over Halloween goody bag
Nassau County Police Department

(NEW YORK) — A man has been arrested after allegedly pulling a gun on a 6-year-old and pointing it at his head over Halloween candy, police say.

The incident occurred at approximately 7:25 p.m. on Saturday in Manhasset on Long Island, New York, when a 42-year-old mother was driving her daughter, two sons and nephew to a nearby residence to drop off a goody bag.

“The daughter was dropping a goody bag off at her friend’s house,” Nassau County Police Department said in a statement. “The daughter, 10, and son, 6, exited the vehicle and approached the house. They rang the doorbell and left a goody bag full of candy for Halloween on the porch, before returning to the vehicle.”

It was moments later when the woman’s daughter noticed that the address they dropped the goody bag may have been the wrong home and told her mother, police said in their statement.

“They returned to the address and the male, 6, exited the vehicle to retrieve the goody bag from the porch,” authorities continued. “At this time, the front door opened, a male stepped out of the house and pointed a black handgun at the victim’s head.”

The Nassau County Police Department were immediately notified of the event and the 43-year-old suspect — Michael Yifan Wen — was arrested without incident and charged with menacing in the second degree and endangering the welfare of a child.

Police say that he was arraigned the next day on Sunday at the First District Court in Hempstead, New York, but have not released any further information on the case.

The investigation into the incident is currently ongoing.

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Infant mortality rate increases 3% in 2022, rising for first time in two decades: CDC

Infant mortality rate increases 3% in 2022, rising for first time in two decades: CDC
Infant mortality rate increases 3% in 2022, rising for first time in two decades: CDC
Isabel Pavia/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — Infant mortality rates in the United States increased last year for the first time in two decades, according to new federal provisional data.

For the report, published early Wednesday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Vital Statistics, researchers looked at birth/infant death data collected through the National Vital Statistics System.

Provisional data showed there were 5.6 infant deaths per 1,000 live births in 2022, which is 3% higher than the rate of 5.44 per 1,000 live births in 2021.

Although rates have been declining over the last several years, this marks the first year-to-year increase in more than two decades when the rate rose from 6.8 deaths per 1,000 in 2001 to 7.0 deaths in 2002.

The neonatal mortality rate — infant deaths at less than 28 days of life — also rose 3% from 3.49 per 1,000 live births in 2021 to 3.58 in 2022 and the postneonatal mortality rate — infant deaths between 28 and 364 days of life — grew 4% from 1.95 per 1,000 to 2.02 over the same period.

Dr. Tracey Wilkinson, an associate professor of pediatrics at Indiana University School of Medicine who is an expert on women’s access to reproductive health care, told ABC News she’s not surprised by the findings and that she sees a couple of reasons for the increase in infant mortality rates.

One is maternity care deserts — where’s there a lack or absence of maternity care — which limits the ability to care for infants properly. The second is limiting of access to abortion, particularly following the Supreme Court decision of Dobbs v. Jackson in June 2022, which overturned Roe v. Wade.

“Any pregnancy that is intended and planned tends to be a healthier outcome and healthy infant outcome,” Wilkinson, who was not involved in the report, said. “So, when you remove the ability for people to decide if and when to have families and continue pregnancies, ultimately, you are having more pregnancies continue that don’t have all those factors in place.”

She added, “Furthermore, we are hearing over and over again, women with non-viable fetuses with diagnoses that mean that they will not survive outside of the womb for any significant period of time, being forced to continue those pregnancies. And so that will also contribute to infant mortality because once those infants are born, they’re counted in these numbers.”

A recent analysis from ABC News and Boston Children’s Hospital found more than 1.7 million women, nearly 3% of women of reproductive age in the U.S., live in a county without access to abortion and with no access to maternity care.

The CDC report also looked at infant mortality rates when broken down by race/ethnicity of the mother.

Data showed increases in this rate among almost all ethnicity groups, except for Asian women, but the only statistically significant increases were for infants born to American Indian/Alaskan Native women and white women.

For American Indian/Alaskan Native women, the rate increased from 7.46 infant deaths per 1,000 to 9.06 deaths in 2022. For white women, the rate rose from 4.36 per 1,000 to 9.06.

“Disparities in health care and outcomes exist in everything,” Wilkinson said. “When you have restrictions to health care access, that always impacts minoritized communities more and what this data is showing is that now it’s also impacting non-minoritized communities like white women.”

When broken down by state, the report showed significant increases in the infant mortality rate in four states — Georgia, Iowa, Missouri and Texas — in 2022 compared with 2021 and a decrease in one state, Nevada.

Mortality rates also increased significantly for two of the 10 leading causes of death: maternal complications and bacterial sepsis.

Wilkinson said in her state of Indiana, and likely others, hospitals have been closing their labor & delivery wards, meaning many centers are lacking the capacity of people providing care for labor and delivery.

“You’re gonna have people delivering at hospitals that don’t have the expertise to take care of moms that get sick during pregnancy and delivery and infants that gets sick very soon after delivery, which is what I think of as bacterial sepsis of newborns,” she said.

She also added that in many states that have limited access to abortion and other reproductive health care, OB/GYNs may leave, which dwindles the number of experts available to care for pregnant patients in life-threatening situations, which could lead to even higher rates of infant mortality.

“As OBs decide to leave and not practice in certain areas, their ability to staff these hospitals decreases,” she said. “Not to ding any of my colleagues, but like emergency room doctors and internal medicine doctors are not experts in this field, but they might be the only people at that hospital when somebody presents in an obstetrical emergency.”

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Biden’s handling of Israel-Hamas war faces criticism — from some Democrats

Biden’s handling of Israel-Hamas war faces criticism — from some Democrats
Biden’s handling of Israel-Hamas war faces criticism — from some Democrats
Official White House Photo by Adam Schultz

(WASHINGTON) — President Joe Biden is facing increasingly vocal opposition from a small group inside his own party on what they suggest is his bias toward Israel and against Palestinians following the Hamas terrorist attack on Israel.

Biden has offered full-throated support for Israel, an ally, as its war with Hamas rages on in the Middle East — yet several members of the Democrats’ progressive wing, including Reps. Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, have criticized his approach.

In a joint news conference with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier this month, Biden said the U.S. “will continue to have Israel’s back” and that the U.S. will stand with Israel “today, tomorrow and always — we promise you.”

But that approach does not acknowledge the Palestinian point of view, said Tlaib, the first woman of Palestinian descent in Congress.

“President Biden has not expressed one bit of empathy for the millions of Palestinian civilians facing brutal airstrikes and the threat of a ground invasion of Gaza that would intensify this humanitarian crisis,” Tlaib said in a statement earlier this month.

She said the Biden administration is failing in its duty to protect all civilian and American lives in Gaza. Hamas terrorists’ surprise attack killed more than 1,400 people, according to Israeli officials. More than 8,000 people have since been killed in Gaza, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry.

“I cannot believe I have to beg our country to value every human life, no matter their faith or ethnicity. We cannot lose sight of the humanity in each other,” Tlaib said.

Biden said last week that the lives on both sides are precious.

“Israelis and Palestinians equally deserve to live side by side in safety, dignity, and peace,” the president said during a joint news conference with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

Biden also came under fire when last week he expressed skepticism about the death toll numbers coming out of Gaza, saying he had “no confidence in the number that the Palestinians are using.”

Some progressive Democrats say Biden is giving lip service when he says lives on all sides matter. Omar said there appears to be a double standard when it comes to lives of civilian Israelis compared to Palestinians.

“How do you look at one atrocity and say, ‘This is wrong,’ but you watch as bodies pile up as neighborhoods are leveled? Israel has dropped more bombs in the last 10 days than [the U.S.] dropped in a whole year in Afghanistan. Where is your humanity? Where is your outrage? Where is your care for people?” Omar said.

Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., an ardent Biden supporter, said she is uneasy about the president’s attitude toward Israel.

“I am certainly concerned about his approach to this,” Jayapal said on NBC’s Meet the Press Sunday.

“He needs to call us to a higher moral place,” she added.

Rep. Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y., spoke at a cease-fire rally on Friday where he condemned the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist attacks and said “every single life is precious.”

“I am ashamed, quite ashamed to be a member of Congress at times when Congress doesn’t value every single life,” Bowman said. “I am ashamed to be a member of Congress when I hear our president not valuing every single life.”

White House spokesperson John Kirby said during Monday’s White House press briefing that all loss of life should be prevented, and that all efforts are being made to avoid civilian casualties — no matter the side.

“Every single innocent life lost is a tragedy, every one, whether it’s a Palestinian life lost or an Israeli life loss. Every one should be prevented,” Kirby said. “There’s no reason for these families to keep grieving — and we’re going to keep doing everything we can to work with our Israeli counterparts on the minimization of civilian casualties.”

Many Democrats are deviating from Biden when it comes to a call for a cease-fire as Israeli ground forces push deeper into Gaza.

More than a dozen lawmakers introduced a resolution that urged the Biden administration to “call for an immediate de-escalation and cease-fire in Israel and occupied Palestine, to send humanitarian aid and assistance to Gaza, and to save as many lives as possible.”

Biden has said of a cease-fire, “we should have those hostages released, and then we can talk.” Kirby said last week that a “cease-fire right now really only benefits Hamas.”

Netanyahu on Monday rejected calls for a ceasefire to facilitate the release of captives or end the war.

“Calls for a cease-fire are calls for Israel to surrender to Hamas,” Netanyahu said at a news conference Monday. “That will not happen.”

And it’s not just lawmakers who have expressed dissatisfaction with the administration and its perceived Israel bias — some younger voters and college students have spoken out on the topic as pro-Palestinian students in colleges and universities around the country have held protests and walkouts.

Notably, multiple student groups at Harvard University, led by the Palestinian Solidarity Committee, released a statement on the day of the attack saying Israel was “entirely responsible for all unfolding violence” — a move that prompted backlash from Jewish student groups and university leaders. Even before the Oct. 7 surprise attack by Hamas, the U.S. had designated it as a terrorist organization.

The intraparty divide comes as Biden’s 2024 presidential campaign ramps up, and he works to present himself as a tested leader on the global stage — and one with his party’s support.

Jayapal said, to win in 2024, the president has demonstrated courage with his domestic policy, but needs to match that with his handling of the Israel-Hamas conflict.

“The president needs to be just as courageous on this issue so that we keep the unity within our country for the support of the incredible things he has done,” she said on Meet the Press.

“The American people are actually quite far away from where the president and even a majority of Congress has been on Israel and Gaza,” Jayapal said. “They support the right for Israel to defend itself to exist, but they do not support a war crime exchange for another war crime. And I think the president has to be careful about that.”

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