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Smoke rises as displaced Palestinians take shelter at Al Shifa hospital. REUTERS/Doaa Rouqa/File Photo
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- Israeli forces bombarded southern Gaza after tanks advanced to the gates of the enclave’s biggest hospital in the north where health officials say dozens of patients, including babies, have died due a lack of power and the heavy fighting.
- Reuters has mapped protests and public demonstrations – both pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel – that have rippled around the world over the war in Gaza. The maps were created using data from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project.
- Choking back tears and shaking with anger, families and supporters of Israeli women and girls held captive by Hamas in Gaza lashed out at global women’s rights groups, asking why they have not spoken up for their loved ones.
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- The White House said President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping will discuss strengthening communication and managing competition when they meet on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit this week.
- Migrant children are being treated like adults in the Canary Islands, as the Spanish archipelago has been overwhelmed by a record 32,000 migrants arriving so far this year. Reporter Corina Pons speaks to the daily Reuters World News podcast about the teenagers risking their lives.
- Fighting gripped the area around the shattered eastern Ukrainian town of Avdiivka, Ukraine’s military said, with Moscow’s forces intensifying air bombardments and trying to move forward with ground forces.
- Climate change harms Americans physically, mentally and financially, often hitting those who have done the least to cause it, according to a report produced by more than a dozen US agencies and about 500 scientists. Make sense of how companies and governments are grappling with climate change, diversity, and human rights by signing up for the Sustainable Switch newsletter.
- The FBI has struggled to stop a hyper-aggressive cybercrime gang that’s been targeting corporate America. The FBI has known the identities of at least a dozen members tied to the hacking group responsible for the September break-ins at casino operators MGM and Caesars, according to four people familiar with the investigation.
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A rare earth mine in Mountain Pass, California. REUTERS/Steve Marcus//File Photo
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- The auto industry’s drive to make electric vehicle motors with little to no rare earth content has hit high gear, with European, US and Japanese automakers and suppliers racing for alternatives in an area dominated by China.
- Wages in Britain grew slightly less fast in the three months to September after rising at a record pace previously, according to official data that will leave the Bank of England on alert for inflation pressures.
- Emirates ruled out an immediate deal to buy Airbus A350-1000 jets, blaming a dispute with engine maker Rolls-Royce over the durability of its engines and leaving the European plane maker without a major showcase order at the Dubai Airshow.
- A Glencore-led consortium sealed one of the mining sector’s biggest deals in years, after agreeing to buy Canadian miner Teck Resources’ steelmaking coal unit for $9 billion.
- Microsoft and Google will not challenge an EU law that would require them to make it easier for people to move between competing services – such as social media platforms and internet browsers, the companies said.
- If Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida meets Chinese President Xi Jinping for the first time in a year later this week, he will likely raise the case of a detained company executive that has dealt an outsized blow to their close economic ties.
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Climate change threatens Japan’s cormorant fishing legacy
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Adachi poses for a picture with his cormorant before ukai (cormorant fishing) on the Nagara River in Oze, Seki, Japan. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
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Cormorants have been a constant presence in Youichiro Adachi’s life, and when he was young, he cried whenever one of his family’s birds died. Now 48, Adachi still cares deeply for his birds, drawing them out of their baskets each morning and stroking their long necks to confirm their health and maintain a bond.
“For me, cormorants are my partners,” he said.
Adachi is the 18th generation of his family to be a master cormorant fisherman, and one of about 50 people in Japan carrying on the 1,300-year tradition of using trained birds to dive for fish.
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A lion that escaped from a circus near Rome is seen in front of a house before it was captured. Carabinieri Military Police/Handout via REUTERS
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A lion that escaped from an Italian circus has been taking well-deserved naps to recover from a Saturday night out in the seaside town of Ladispoli that sparked panic before authorities managed to recapture him.
The adult lion, named “Kimba”, escaped from the “Rony Roller” circus on Saturday afternoon and was on the loose for around seven hours before he was sedated with an aesthetic dart.
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