Newsflash

At least 11 people were killed in the Egyptian port city of Alexandria before dawn yesterday when a four-storey apartment block collapsed as families slept.

Eleven bodies were pulled from the rubble of the building where 35 people lived, and 10 people were injured.

The recovered bodies included a woman locked in an embrace with her baby; the search was still on going for more bodies.

The building collapsed at around 1:00 am as most residents were sleeping.

Saleh Subhi, an MP from the opposition Muslim Brotherhood who was at the scene, blamed municipal authorities for the accident.

He told AFP "The building was known to need renovation work".

Such incidents are relatively frequent in Egypt where building regulations are often flouted and additional floors are added without permission.

Last December, 35 people were killed when a 12-storey building collapsed, also in Alexandria.

In 2005, the collapse of a six-storey building in the Mediterranean port city killed 19 people. Three extra storeys had been added illegally.

Tougher legislation against construction companies which ignore the law was introduced in 1996 after a building in a Cairo residential area caved in, killing 64 people.
  
Sapa-AFP  

 
Home arrow News Headlines arrow UN: Displaced West Bank Palestinians
UN: Displaced West Bank Palestinians PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 28 May 2008

Israel Displaces West Bank Palestinians: UN

Thousands of Palestinians in the occupied West Bank are at risk of being displaced because of Israeli orders to raze their homes, the UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) warned on Tuesday, May 27.

"To date, more than 3,000 Palestinian-owned structures in the West Bank have pending demolition orders, which can be immediately executed without prior warning," the OCHA said in a new report cited by Agence France Presse (AFP).

"At least 10 small communities throughout the West Bank are at risk of being almost entirely displaced due to the large number of pending demolitions orders."

The report said most of the demolition orders were against buildings located in the so-called Area C, the 61 percent of the occupied West Bank where Israel retains full administrative control.

It added that the majority of the orders were issued on the pretext of having no construction permits.

The UN report stressed that Israel, which has the sole authority to issue such permits, rarely do so.

Over 94 percent of applications for building permits in Area C submitted by Palestinians between January 2000 and September 2007 have been denied, according to official data.

In a recent report, the Israeli Peace Now group warned that Israel was pressuring the Palestinian residents of Area C to leave.

"The denial of permits for Palestinians on such a large scale raises the fear that there is a specific policy by the authorities to encourage a 'silent transfer' of the Palestinian population from Area C."

On the Rise

The OCHA warned that the number of demolished Palestinian homes has reached alarming levels this year.

It said 124 houses were razed in the first quarter of 2008 compared with 107 for the whole of 2007, leading to the displacement of 435 Palestinians, including 135 children.

Some 5,000 demolition orders have been issued between January 2000 and September 2007 and over 1,600 Palestinian buildings have been flattened.

The UN agency stressed that such Israeli practices are destroying the lives of thousands of Palestinian families who lose their homes.

It added that Palestinian children bear the full brunt of such acts.

"Children are frequently disproportionately affected by the demolition of their homes and the subsequent displacement of their families."

Amnesty international has recently urged Israeli authorities to cancel all demolition orders and provide reparation to Palestinians whose homes and properties have been destroyed.


Source: IslamOnline.net & News Agencies

Last Updated ( Thursday, 10 July 2008 )
 
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