Quake in China’s Tibet kills 126 with tremors felt in Nepal, India

Update An aerial picture shows damaged buildings in Jajarkot district on November 4, 2023, following an overnight 5.6-magnitude earthquake. (AFP)
An aerial picture shows damaged buildings in Jajarkot district on November 4, 2023, following an overnight 5.6-magnitude earthquake. (AFP)
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Updated 08 January 2025

Quake in China’s Tibet kills 126 with tremors felt in Nepal, India

Quake in China’s Tibet kills 126 with tremors felt in Nepal, India
  • The China Earthquake Networks Center (CENC) measured the quake’s magnitude as 6.8, while the US Geological Survey reported it as 7.1
  • A quake in December 2023 in northwest China killed 148 people and displaced thousands in Gansu province

BEIJING: A devastating earthquake in China’s remote Tibet region killed at least 126 people and damaged thousands of buildings on Tuesday, state media reported, with tremors also felt in neighboring Nepal’s capital Katmandu and parts of India.
Videos published by China’s state broadcaster CCTV showed houses destroyed with walls torn apart.
Rescue workers waded through rubble strewn across the ruins in the aftermath, footage showed, while some gave locals thick blankets to keep warm in sub-zero temperatures.
The quake struck rural, high-altitude Tingri county, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) north of Mount Everest near China’s border with Nepal, at around 9:00 am (0100 GMT) on Tuesday.
“Here the houses are made from dirt so when the earthquake came... lots of houses collapsed,” said 34-year-old Sangji Dangzhi, whose supermarket in Tingri suffered considerable damage.
Speaking to AFP by phone, Sangji described the situation as “very serious,” with ambulances taking people to hospital throughout the day.
Surveillance images published by CCTV showed people running through a store’s aisles as shelves shook violently, sending objects like toys tumbling to the ground.
At least 126 people have been confirmed dead and 188 others injured, CCTV said.
Twenty-eight people in critical condition were transferred to hospital for treatment and 3,609 houses had collapsed, it added.
The China Earthquake Networks Center (CENC) measured the quake’s magnitude as 6.8, while the US Geological Survey reported it as 7.1.
When tourist Meng Lingkang arrived in the town of Lhatse, 65 kilometers from the epicenter, “the buildings had cracked open.”
“Some of the older houses collapsed, and a large part of the buildings made from bricks had cracked open, with big fissures,” the 23-year-old told AFP.
Videos geolocated by AFP to Lhatse showed debris scattered in front of streetside eateries.

The area most affected is surrounded by mountainous terrain on the Chinese side of Mount Everest.
Tingri, the epicenter, is home to around 62,000 people, and is much less developed than urban centers like Tibet’s capital Lhasa.
Many of the fallen houses appeared to be constructed using traditional materials such as stone, mud bricks and wooden beams.
CCTV, citing the emergency command center, reported that the earthquake emergency response status in the region was raised to the highest level.
Chinese President Xi Jinping has called for “all-out search and rescue efforts, minimizing casualties to the greatest extent possible, properly resettling affected residents, and ensuring their safety and warmth through the winter,” the state broadcaster said.
Temperatures in Tingri are projected to drop to minus 16 degrees Celsius (3.2 Fahrenheit) overnight, according to the China Meteorological Administration.
Authorities said more than 3,400 rescuers and over 340 medical workers had been deployed.
Aid including cotton tents, quilts and cold-weather equipment had been dispatched by central authorities, state news agency Xinhua said.
Tingri is under the administration of the prefecture-level city of Shigatse, home to the traditional seat of the Panchen Lama, one of the most important spiritual figures in Tibetan Buddhism after the Dalai Lama.
The Dalai Lama said he was “deeply saddened.”
“I offer my prayers for those who have lost their lives and extend my wishes for a swift recovery to all who have been injured,” the exiled spiritual leader said in a statement.
French President Emmanuel Macron offered assistance to those affected, while Russian President Vladimir Putin expressed his “sincerest condolences.”

As well as Katmandu, areas around Lobuche — in the high mountains near Everest in Nepal — were also rattled by the tremor and aftershocks.
“It shook quite strongly here,” said government official Jagat Prasad Bhusal in Namche region, which lies closer to Everest.
Security forces had been deployed but no damage or deaths had been reported so far, Nepali home ministry spokesman Rishi Ram Tiwari said.
Nepal lies on a major geological faultline where the Indian tectonic plate pushes up into the Eurasian plate, forming the Himalayas, and earthquakes are a regular occurrence.
In 2015, nearly 9,000 people died and more than 22,000 were injured when a 7.8-magnitude quake struck Nepal, destroying more than half a million homes.
Some tremors were felt in Bihar state in India but no injuries were reported.
Tuesday’s quake was the most powerful recorded within a 200-kilometer (124-mile) radius in the last five years, the CENC said.
A quake in December 2023 in northwest China killed 148 people and displaced thousands in Gansu province.


Palestine Action to challenge UK ban

Palestine Action to challenge UK ban
Updated 30 June 2025

Palestine Action to challenge UK ban

Palestine Action to challenge UK ban
  • Palestine Action said an urgent hearing to challenge the proscription will be held at the High Court in London on Friday
  • The ban of Palestine Action is set to be debated in parliament on Wednesday and Thursday, and could take effect from Friday

LONDON: UK campaign group Palestine Action on Monday said it would challenge its planned proscription as a terrorist group, as the British government said it could be banned by the end of the week.
The government announced last week plans to designate the pro-Palestinian group as a “terrorist” organization after its activists broke into a British air force base and vandalized two planes.
The group, which has condemned the move as an attack on free speech, said an urgent hearing to challenge the proscription will be held at the High Court in London on Friday.
The challenge was backed by Amnesty International and other rights groups.
Huda Ammori, co-founder of Palestine Action, said in a statement the proposed ban would have “far-reaching implications” on “fundamental freedoms of speech, expression and assembly in Britain.”
After announcing the measure last week, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper launched the process to ban the group on Monday in parliament.
The ban is set to be debated in parliament on Wednesday and Thursday, and could take effect from Friday.
Labour holds a massive majority in the House of Commons, meaning the proposal should pass easily.
Palestine Action said it was seeking an injunction or interim relief from the courts “because of the Home Secretary’s decision to try to steamroll this through Parliament.”
Earlier this month, two of its activists broke into the RAF Brize Norton base in southern England and sprayed two planes with red paint.
Cooper last week said the vandalism was “the latest in a long history of unacceptable criminal damage” committed by the group since it formed in 2020.
The government cites previous damage claimed by the group in actions at a Thales defense factory in Glasgow in 2022 and on Israeli defense tech firm Elbit Systems UK last year in Bristol, in the country’s southwest.
“Such acts do not represent legitimate acts of protest and the level of seriousness of Palestine Action’s activity has met the test for proscription under the Terrorism Act 2000,” the government said in a statement.
Palestine Action says it is a “direct action and civil disobedience protest movement” seeking “to prevent serious violations of international law by Israel.”
“Spraying red paint on war planes is not terrorism. Causing disruption to the UK-based arms factories used by Israel’s largest weapons firm, Elbit Systems, is not terrorism,” co-founder Ammori said.
“The terrorism and war crimes are being committed in Palestine by Israel, which is being armed by Britain, and benefitting from British military support.”


Trump is expected to sign an executive order ending US sanctions on Syria

Trump is expected to sign an executive order ending US sanctions on Syria
Updated 30 June 2025

Trump is expected to sign an executive order ending US sanctions on Syria

Trump is expected to sign an executive order ending US sanctions on Syria
  • White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the move was designed to ‘promote and support the country’s path to stability and peace’

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump is expected to sign an executive order on Monday ending US sanctions on Syria, following through on his earlier promise to do so.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the move was designed to “promote and support the country’s path to stability and peace.” Sanctions will remain in place on former President Bashar Assad, his associates and others, she said.
The US granted Syria sweeping exemptions from sanctions in May, which was a first step toward fulfilling the Republican president’s pledge to lift a half-century of penalties on a country shattered by 13 years of civil war.
Trump met with Syria’s interim leader, Ahmed Al-Sharaa, in in May and told Al-Sharaa that he would lift sanctions and explore normalizing relations in a major policy shift between the US and Syria.
“This is another promise made and promise kept,” Leavitt said Monday.
The European Union has also followed through with lifting nearly all remaining sanctions on Syria.


Palestine’s Red Crescent chief tells UK’s Prince William of humanitarian crisis in Gaza

Palestine’s Red Crescent chief tells UK’s Prince William of humanitarian crisis in Gaza
Updated 30 June 2025

Palestine’s Red Crescent chief tells UK’s Prince William of humanitarian crisis in Gaza

Palestine’s Red Crescent chief tells UK’s Prince William of humanitarian crisis in Gaza
  • The prince meets representatives of the organization and the British Red Cross to discuss the challenges aid workers face in the territory
  • They tell of the worsening conditions in Gaza, increasingly urgent humanitarian requirements, and the need to protect medical teams

LONDON: Younis Al-Khatib, the president of the Palestine Red Crescent Society, held talks with the UK’s Prince William during an official visit to Kensington Palace in London on Monday.

William, the Prince of Wales, met Al-Khatib and other representatives of his organization, along with members of the British Red Cross, to discuss the humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip and explore ways in which international humanitarian efforts might be enhanced.

The prince’s guests described the worsening conditions in Gaza, the increasingly urgent humanitarian needs in the territory, the challenges faced by aid workers and the need to protect medical teams, the Palestine News Agency reported. They also reviewed the efforts being made to help those affected by ongoing Israeli attacks.

Al-Khatib said that more than 1,600 Palestine Red Crescent Society employees and volunteers continue to work under extremely hazardous conditions in Gaza to provide emergency medical services and distribute relief supplies. Since the war in Gaza began in late 2023, he added, 28 Red Crescent personnel have been killed amid the Israeli attacks or while performing their duties.

The meeting was part of ongoing coordinated efforts by the Red Crescent to highlight the escalating crisis in Gaza, where more than 55,000 Palestinians have been killed during the ongoing conflict, most of them women and children.


Week of heavy rains and floods across Pakistan kills 46 people

A boy pushes his cousin on wheelchair through a flooded road caused by heavy monsoon rains, in Lahore, Pakistan, Sunday, June 29
A boy pushes his cousin on wheelchair through a flooded road caused by heavy monsoon rains, in Lahore, Pakistan, Sunday, June 29
Updated 30 June 2025

Week of heavy rains and floods across Pakistan kills 46 people

A boy pushes his cousin on wheelchair through a flooded road caused by heavy monsoon rains, in Lahore, Pakistan, Sunday, June 29
  • The deaths from the past week include 13 tourists from a family of 17 who were swept away Friday
  • Other four family members were rescued from the flooded Swat River in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province

PESHAWAR: Nearly a week of heavy monsoon rains and flash floods across Pakistan has killed at least 46 people and injured dozens, officials said Monday.
The fatalities caused by abnormally strong downpours since Tuesday include 22 in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 13 in eastern Punjab province, seven in southern Sindh, and four in southwestern Balochistan, the National Disaster Management Authority and provincial emergency officials said.
“We are expecting above-normal rains during the monsoon season and alerts have been issued to the concerned authorities to take precautionary measures,” said Irfan Virk, a Pakistan Meteorological Department deputy director.
Virk said that forecasters cannot rule out a repeat of extreme weather like the devastating floods in 2022. Rains inundated a third of the country, killing 1,737 people and causing widespread destruction.
The deaths from the past week include 13 tourists from a family of 17 who were swept away Friday. The other four family members were rescued from the flooded Swat River in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
Rescuers found 12 bodies from the group and divers continued searching Monday for the remaining victim, said Bilal Faizi, a provincial emergency service spokesman.
The incident drew widespread condemnation online over what many called a slow response by emergency services.
On Sunday, the National Disaster Management Authority had warned of potential hazards and advised people against crossing rivers and streams.


Dalai Lama expected to reveal succession plan during 90th birthday celebrations

Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama (L) attends a Long Life Prayer offering ceremony at the Main Tibetan Temple.
Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama (L) attends a Long Life Prayer offering ceremony at the Main Tibetan Temple.
Updated 30 June 2025

Dalai Lama expected to reveal succession plan during 90th birthday celebrations

Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama (L) attends a Long Life Prayer offering ceremony at the Main Tibetan Temple.
  • Nobel laureate and one of the world’s most influential figures, the Dalai Lama turns 90 on Sunday
  • Spokesman of Tibetan government-in-exile says a statement by Dalai Lama expected this week

NEW DELHI: The Dalai Lama announced on Monday that he was preparing to share details about his succession, as followers gathered to attend a public ceremony ahead of his 90th birthday celebrations in Dharamshala in northern India.

The 14th Dalai Lama, the spiritual head of Tibetan Buddhism, has been living in India since 1959, after he fled Tibet with thousands of others following a failed uprising against Chinese rule.

His residence is in Dharamshala, a town in the state of Himachal Pradesh, which also hosts the Tibetan government-in-exile.

A Nobel peace laureate and one of the world’s most influential figures, the Dalai Lama will turn 90 on Sunday.

“The rest of my life I will dedicate ... for the benefit of others, as much as possible,” he told his followers through a translator as they offered prayers for his long life.

“There will be some kind of a framework within which we can talk about the continuation of the institution of the Dalai Lamas.”

When a Dalai Lama dies, Tibetan Buddhists believe he is reincarnated.

Senior monks and members of the Tibetan government-in-exile search for the child who is the reincarnation, relying on dreams and visions, rituals at sacred lakes, signs at the Dalai Lama’s death, and other omens.

“For the Tibetan Buddhist tradition, it’s not about succession, it’s about reincarnation,” Tenzin Lekshay, spokesperson of the Tibetan government-in-exile, told Arab News.

“There’ll be a written statement by his holiness on July 2.”

The 14th Dalai Lama was 2 years old when a search party decided he was the 14th reincarnation of Tibet’s spiritual leader.

Over the years, he has indicated that the continuation of the Dalai Lama institution was ultimately up to the Tibetan people and if they no longer found it relevant, it could cease to exist, and there would be no 15th Dalai Lama.

“His holiness has said many times also that if the Tibetan people wish the Dalai Lama institution to remain, then the Dalai Lama institution will remain,” Lekshay said.

In his autobiography published in March 2025, the Dalai Lama said he had been receiving petitions requesting that the lineage be carried on, and that when he turns 90, he would “consult the high lamas of the Tibetan religious traditions as well as the Tibetan public, and if there is a consensus that the Dalai Lama institution should continue.”

If they decide in favor, “then formal responsibility for the recognition of the 15th Dalai Lama should rest with the Garden Phodrang Trust (the office of the Dalai Lama).”