Up First from NPR - Israeli Airstrike In Rafah, Papua New Guinea Landslide, U.S. Military Repatriation
Episode Date: May 27, 2024The Gaza health ministry says that an airstrike in Rafah killed 35 Palestinians and injured dozens more in what was supposed to be a safe zone for people displaced by the war. Rescue and recovery effo...rts are underway in Papua New Guinea where hundreds of people are feared dead following a massive landslide. And the U.S. is increasingly focused on repatriating the remains of military service members who were killed in WWII and the Korean War. Want more comprehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.Today's episode of Up First was edited by John Helton, Andrew Sussman, Lisa Thomson and HJ Mai. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Ben Abrams and Lindsay Totty.. We get engineering support from Phil Edfors Our technical director is Zac Coleman.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Israeli airstrikes killed at least 35 people and wounded dozens more in the southern Gaza
city of Rafah, that according to Palestinian officials. The attack comes two days after
judges at the International Court of Justice ordered Israel to halt its military assault
on the city. I'm Michelle Martin, that's A. Martinez, and this is Up First from NPR News.
Relief efforts are underway in Papua New Guinea, where a landslide decimated a village.
Why has support been so slow to arrive?
And the U.S. is focused on repatriating the remains of military service members who were killed in wars that happened more than 70 years ago.
Probably about 60 to 70 percent we're dealing with now never knew the soldier.
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The Gaza Health Ministry says 45 people are dead after an Israeli airstrike hit Rafah.
The attack started a fire at an encampment there, injuring hundreds in what was supposed to be a safe zone for people displaced by the war.
World leaders condemned the strike.
This strike comes just days after the U.N.'s International Court of Justice ordered an immediate halt to the Israeli operation in Rafah.
NPR's Hadil Alshalchi joins us now from Tel Aviv.
So what happened in Rafah last night?
Yeah, late last night, the Israeli military says it was targeting a Hamas installation
and that it killed two senior Hamas militants.
This strike caused a fire in a tent encampment where dozens of displaced Palestinians were sheltering.
All right, now that tent encampment was an area considered to be safe for refugees.
What's been the reaction there?
That's right.
The strike hit the western neighborhood of Tel Es-Sultan in Rafah,
which the Israeli government had designated as a safe and humanitarian zone.
The Israeli military, in fact, dropped leaflets last week telling people that humanitarian aid would be available there.
NPR's producer in Rafah, Anas Baba, was at the scene of the strike and he spoke to people there.
What we can see here is a total destruction.
And when we talked here to multiple persons, they told us that we cannot even realize if this is a reality of a dream or even a nightmare. We're expecting that
we are living inside of the safe area, the one that the Israelis announced before.
Before this month, Rafah had been the last refuge for Palestinians during this war,
with so much of Gaza being devastated. In fact, almost 1.3 million Palestinians were
sheltering in Rafah. But now the United Nations says over 800,000
have fled since the Israeli military expanded its ground operations there.
But it's still densely populated in the areas that are not under evacuation order.
What do we know about the people who were killed?
Yeah, the Gaza health ministry says many people are still under the rubble and that the majority
killed were women and children. And officials say that the number of killed will probably rise. NPR talked to Dr. James Smith. He's an emergency
doctor working just outside of Rafah. He said that many of the injured were taken to a trauma
stabilization center in Tel-Esultan and then referred to surrounding field hospitals for
further treatment. People we're hearing literally burnt alive in their tents. The trauma
stabilization team that we work alongside have received people with varying degrees of injury.
He said that the airstrike is the worst he's seen in the weeks he's been working in Gaza.
You know, the timing of this strike comes just after the International Court of Justice ordered
the Israeli military to halt its campaign in Rafah, and also after Israelis are protesting for their government to negotiate a ceasefire to bring hostages home.
Given all that and everything else, what's the state of negotiations to end the war?
I mean, for weeks there have been talks about the talks. Israeli media is reporting that
officials say that negotiations are supposed to resume next week. There were some high-level
discussions in Paris this weekend.
The Mossad, the CIA, and the Qatari prime minister were all there.
The talks have been breaking down over and over again in the past months,
and Prime Minister Netanyahu is under great domestic pressure
to come to a deal to release the remaining hostages in Gaza,
but he's also being pressured by hardliners in his government
who don't want
a complete ceasefire. That's NPR's Hadil Alshalchi in Tel Aviv. Thank you very much. Thank you.
Rescue and recovery efforts are ongoing in Papua New Guinea, where hundreds of people are feared dead following a massive landslide.
Yes, the remains of only six people have been recovered since the landslide on Friday, buried more than 150 homes in the island nation's remote Nga province.
The U.N.'s Migration Agency estimates nearly 700 people may have died, while the country's government has nearly tripled that estimate.
Joined now by Stephen Judgetts.
He's a foreign affairs reporter with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
Stephen, what do we know about the rescue and recovery efforts, starting with this new figure from the government?
Yeah, there have been two separate figures, as you mentioned, that have been put out.
It's quite confusing.
The UN says around 675 people have been killed. Papua New Guinea's government has suggested that figure
could be closer to 2,000, perhaps even more. But A, it's difficult to get a handle on it because
so few bodies have been recovered. As you mentioned, the recovery effort is painfully slow.
That's largely because the area which we're talking about here is very, very
remote. So there's simply no way, at least at this stage, to get heavy earth moving equipment.
That means that people in this part of Enga province are essentially digging through huge
mounds of rubble, sometimes six or eight meters in height with their bare hands, with sticks,
and if they're lucky, with shovels. So it's painfully slow
progress. What is it about the region that makes it very, very difficult to respond to a disaster?
I mean, I know it's a remote region, but what else makes it difficult? Yeah, there are a few
things here. Not only is it remote, but when landslips do happen, and it happens quite a lot
because it's such mountainous terrain. The roads, which
aren't of great quality, are washed away very quickly and very easily. So that means if you
want to get through, it takes time or you have to use something like a helicopter. And helicopters,
as you can imagine, are not non-existent in Papua New Guinea, but they are in short supply.
Then the other thing to consider, sadly, is tribal violence. There's been a resurgence
in that tribal fighting over the last year or two.
It's a long-standing problem, but it's got worse. And so that's another thing that authorities,
including UN agencies and other countries like Australia, have to weigh up closely as they look
to try and go in. The last thing they want to do is get caught up in that. So that's yet another
barrier to effective assistance. But what about a thousand people at least have been displaced?
What are some of the biggest concerns for survivors?
Yeah, well, it could be far more than that,
because not only are you looking at the people who are immediately displaced,
there are also now murmurs that people who are essentially a bit further down the mountain,
some eight or even 10,000 people, they may need to be evacuated as well
because of these persistent concerns that the mountain, which essentially partially collapsed on Friday, that it may collapse further.
So you've not only got around a thousand or perhaps more people who need shelter and water,
some streams have been buried in the debris, but you've also got potentially eight or ten
thousand people further down the mountain who may have to move. That's an enormous, enormous logistical ask on the Papua New Guinean government.
So we know there's been a request for assistance.
What's the status of that request for international support?
Well, only one government has responded so far.
That's the Australian government, which only a few minutes ago actually announced
that it would make an initial contribution of $2.5 million, so not a huge amount, to essentially bring in additional assistance, experts who are
able to coordinate emergency response as well as emergency supplies. I don't know exactly what that
means, but I imagine things like fresh water, meal packs and potentially blankets or tents.
But I don't think this will be the last commitment.
A number of countries, including New Zealand, France and China, have already said that they're
willing to make a contribution as well. I think the main challenge will be not so much bringing
in donors, but coordinating the response, particularly given the constraints that we
see up in Papua New Guinea in terms of getting supplies on the ground.
So there are plenty of willing countries who want to help.
The difficult thing will be making sure they're not treading on one another's toes
and that any response is effectively coordinated.
Any ideas as to what caused this landslide to be so devastating,
or is it maybe too early on that?
Look, it's probably too early to say at this
stage. I mean, the first thing to say is that this is not an unusual event. Landslips and landslides
happen quite regularly in the highlands. This does seem to be a particularly devastating one.
Just the scale of it is extraordinary. I mean, the ABC, amongst other organizations, have reported
before about the way that land clearing and the use of
plantations in the highlands have made these things more likely. But whether either land
clearing or plantations have directly contributed to this landslide or not, we simply don't know.
It may be that it's just a very large one, which has had the very terrible misfortune to land
directly on a fairly
highly populated area. It's simply too early to say at this stage. That's Stephen Jadgetts,
a foreign affairs reporter with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Stephen, thanks.
Thanks so much. It's Memorial Day, the day Americans honor members of the military who died while serving their country.
WUNC's Jay Price has been reporting for years on the nation's efforts to find and identify those declared missing in past wars.
But something has profoundly shifted in all those years.
Jay joins us now with more.
Jay, what's with more. Jay,
what's changed? Hey there, Ray. So this whole idea of going to great lengths to account for these remains is normalized now. But 50 years ago, it was all about the families of those missing in
the Vietnam War, the POWMIA movement. Everyone knows those black flags, right? They mobilized and persuaded the government this
was the right thing to do. But there are now just a few hundred MIAs from that war who potentially
can be found. So those recoveries have slowed to maybe a couple of years. But there's funding and
a national will now to do this, thanks to those POW MIA activists. And the goal is to identify about 200
MIAs a year. So nearly all the cases these days have to be from World War II and the Korean War.
Wow. So what does that mean then when the military reaches out to family members?
Well, I'll let one of the Army case officers who notify and work with the families to set
up memorial ceremonies tell us.
Probably about 60 to 70 percent we're dealing with now never knew the soldier.
That's William Cox.
On one case he's working on now, he's down to his 16th and final distant family member,
trying to find one who cares enough to act as next of kin.
Last week, I talked with a family member who got that
call, Barbara Weiss of New Bern, North Carolina. The case officer first asked if her grandparents
were still alive. Then he worked down the list. Here's Barbara. Then the next one would be an aunt.
And then they were asking about my uncle Al. He was gone. Then they asked, do you know Beatrice?
I said, that's my mother.
Can we talk to her?
And I said, she's passed too.
And he mentioned my aunt's name, DeMille.
And I said, no, she's passed too.
Most of those left didn't even know their fallen relative.
At most, they can just recall family stories.
And I should underline the extraordinary lengths the U.S. goes to for these cases.
Links no other nation comes close to.
In fact, most other countries don't even bother with this at all.
The search teams, the lab work, it's some of the most sophisticated in the world.
So, Jay, I mean, I got to ask, and I know this is a terrible question before I ask it,
but, I mean, if no one is left alive who knew these troops,
I mean, is it even worthwhile to keep doing this?
Well, I put that to anthropologist Sarah Wagner of George Washington University, who's written a lot about this.
And she says, absolutely.
Ultimately, this is about belonging and it is about a state sort of performing the necessity of belonging and the need to take care of its military past, present, and future.
So it's aimed at any family that's lost a service member and tells current troops that the nation cares about them and cares a lot.
She also sees this as a message, one about strengthening the things that bind us all together as a society. In fact, at one funeral
last fall, about a thousand people turned out just to pay respects to someone they never knew.
Not a single member of the soldiers' family was still alive.
That's WNC's Jay Price. Jay, fascinating stuff. Thank you.
Thanks for having us.
And that's a first for Monday, May 27th.
I'm A. Martinez.
And I'm Michelle Martin.
For your next listen, check out Consider This from NPR.
It seems like every year we hear the same thing,
that this will be the busiest summer travel season ever.
But this one really does stand out.
Listen to Consider This for tips to survive the summer vacation season.
Today's episode of Up First was edited by John Helton, Andrew Sussman, Lisa Thompson, and H.J. Mai.
It was produced by Zia Butch, Ben Abrams, and Lindsay Totti.
We got engineering support from Phil Edfors, and our technical director is Zach Coleman.
As always, start your day here with us tomorrow. you