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Al Jazeera
3 minutes ago
- Al Jazeera
Columbia University agrees to rules making teaching 'Impossible'
Trump rules to make teaching some topics 'impossible' Quotable Video Duration 01 minutes 00 seconds 01:00 Video Duration 00 minutes 45 seconds 00:45 Video Duration 00 minutes 53 seconds 00:53 Video Duration 01 minutes 14 seconds 01:14 Video Duration 01 minutes 34 seconds 01:34 Video Duration 01 minutes 21 seconds 01:21 Video Duration 00 minutes 42 seconds 00:42


Al Jazeera
3 minutes ago
- Al Jazeera
Italy greenlights plan to build world's longest suspension bridge
Italy has given final approval to a long-delayed plan to construct the world's longest suspension bridge, connecting the mainland to Sicily in a project worth €13.5bn ($15.5bn). Transport Minister Matteo Salvini hailed the Strait of Messina Bridge as 'the biggest infrastructure project in the West' after a key government committee cleared the path on Wednesday. He said the project would generate 120,000 jobs annually and revitalise southern Italy through wider investment in infrastructure. Preliminary work could begin as early as October, pending a green light from Italy's court of audit, with construction expected to start in 2026. Salvini estimated the bridge could be completed by 2033. With a span of 3.3km, the bridge would surpass Turkey's Canakkale Bridge and carry six lanes of traffic and two railway lines, cutting the current 100-minute ferry crossing to just 10 minutes by car. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said the bridge would become 'an engineering symbol of global significance'. The project, first proposed in 1969, has stalled repeatedly due to environmental objections, mafia fears and seismic risks. The design is inspired by Turkiye's Canakkale structure, featuring a wing-shaped deck meant to improve stability in high winds. Defence or development? Rome says the bridge could help it meet NATO's defence spending goals by classifying it as 'dual-use' infrastructure, a designation that has caused controversy. More than 600 academics warned that such a move would require further military safety assessments and could make the bridge a potential target. Salvini said it was up to the defence and economy ministries to decide, but insisted 'keeping organised crime out of the project is the top priority'. Environmental groups, meanwhile, have raised complaints with the European Union, warning of potential disruption to migratory birds and a lack of proof that the project meets public interest thresholds. The bridge contract was awarded to Webuild, the same firm that won the initial bid in 2006 before the plan was cancelled. The company says its design will withstand earthquakes, pointing to similar bridges in Japan and California. 'The bridge will be transformative for the whole country,' said Webuild CEO Pietro Salini.


Al Jazeera
33 minutes ago
- Al Jazeera
US-made bombs used in deadly Israeli strikes on Gaza schools, HRW says
Israel has used US-made bombs in 'unlawful attacks' on schools sheltering displaced civilians in Gaza, Human Rights Watch (HRW) has said. In a report released Thursday, HRW said Israel had carried out hundreds of strikes on schools since the start of its war on Gaza in October 2023, including 'unlawfully indiscriminate attacks' using US munitions, which violated international law. In its report, HRW investigated two incidents in 2024 in which it found that GBU-39 Small Diameter Bombs supplied by the United States were used. One attack on the Khadija girls' school in Deir el-Balah on July 27, 2024, killed at least 15 people, and another attack on the Zeitoun C school in Gaza City on September 21, 2024, left at least 34 dead. Israeli authorities have not publicly shared information relating to the attacks. Israel has often said that its attacks on schools were targeting Hamas fighters. It has provided no evidence to indicate the presence of military targets at the sites of the attacks documented by the rights group. In both attacks, HRW and that there was no evidence of a military presence at the schools on the days of the attacks. The rights group also warned that recent Israeli attacks on schools sheltering displaced people were worsening the dire humanitarian situation in the territory. HRW said that from July 1-10, 2025, Israeli forces struck at least 10 schools where displaced people were sheltering, killing 59 people and displacing dozens of families, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). The group emphasised that schools used to house civilians remain protected under international law unless used for military purposes. The rights group called for an immediate halt to arms transfers to Israel, warning of potential complicity by governments providing military support. 'These strikes on schools sheltering displaced families are just one window into the carnage in Gaza,' said Gerry Simpson, associate director at HRW. 'Other governments should not tolerate this horrendous slaughter of Palestinian civilians merely seeking safety.' It also urged states to uphold their obligations under international law, including the Genocide Convention. 'Governments supporting Israel militarily can't say they didn't know what their weapons are being used for,' said Simpson. According to the United Nations, nearly 1 million displaced Palestinians have taken shelter in Gaza's schools since October 2023. HRW said the repeated targeting of civilian infrastructure, including shelters, hospitals and schools, showed a pattern of attacks that may amount to war crimes. HRW noted that nearly all of Gaza's 564 schools have sustained damage, with 92 percent requiring full reconstruction or major repairs. The UN has reported that at least 836 people sheltering in schools have been killed.