
Shadowy extremist group claims Damascus church attack
BEIRUT: A little-known Sunni Muslim extremist group on Tuesday claimed responsibility for a suicide attack on a Damascus church over the weekend that authorities have blamed on the Islamic State group.
Sunday's attack killed 25 and wounded dozens of others, striking terror into Syria's Christian community and other minorities.
A statement from Saraya Ansar al-Sunna said a group operative 'blew up the Saint Elias church in the Dwelaa neighbourhood of Damascus', saying it came after unspecified 'provocation'.
The Islamist authorities who took power after ousting longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad in December had quickly blamed the attack on IS and announced several arrests on Monday in a security operation against IS-affiliated cells.
But the Saraya Ansar al-Sunna statement on messaging app Telegram, where it counts several hundred followers, said the government's version of events was 'untrue, fabricated'.
The group, which was formed after Assad's ouster, vowed that 'what is coming will not give you respite' warning that 'our soldiers... are fully prepared'.
In March, a dispute took place in front of the Saint Elias church, as residents expressed opposition to Islamic chants being played on loudspeakers from a car.
Sunday's attack was the first suicide bombing in a church in Syria since the country's civil war erupted in 2011, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor.
It followed sectarian violence in recent months including massacres of members of the Alawite sect to which Assad belongs and clashes with Druze fighters, with security one of the new authorities' greatest challenges.
The bloodshed has raised concerns about the government's ability to control radical fighters, after Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) led the offensive that ousted Assad.
HTS was once affiliated with Al-Qaeda before breaking ties in 2016.
Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi, a Syria-based analyst and researcher, said Saraya Ansar al-Sunna could be 'a pro-IS splinter originating primarily from defectors from HTS... and other factions but currently operating independently of IS'.
He also said it could be 'just an IS front group'.
Citing a Saraya source, Tamimi said a disillusioned former HTS functionary heads the group, whose leadership includes a former member of Hurras al-Din, the Syrian Al-Qaeda affiliate which announced in January it was dissolving, upon the orders of the new government.
The Observatory said Saraya Ansar al-Sunna had previously threatened to target Alawites and had carried out an attack in Hama province earlier this year.
The group is accused of involvement in the sectarian massacres in March that the Observatory said killed more than 1,700 people, mostly Alawite civilians.
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The Star
6 hours ago
- The Star
Hungary's LGBTQ+ community reels under Orban's laws, Pride ban
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In March, parliament passed a law that created a legal basis for police to ban Pride marches, key events for the LGBTQ+ community worldwide in campaigning for rights, celebrating diversity and highlighting discrimination. Orban's Fidesz party said Pride could be harmful to children and so protecting them should supersede the right to assemble. "Somehow unconsciously, I started to think whether I should dare to hold Vivi's hand in front of a child now," said Lau (Laura Toth), 37, a DJ and sound technician working in Budapest's vibrant club scene. "This does not mean I will not hold her hand now, but something started to work inside me." Her partner, 27-year-old Vivien Winkler, says it is surreal that they should feel they are doing something wrong if they hug or kiss each other in the street, as they are in love and could even marry down the line - though in another country. Hungary has never allowed gay marriage, only civil unions. The couple fell in love two years ago. With their dog, they have moved into a cosy flat full of books and photos, and have set up a small studio in one room, where Lau makes her own music. She is set to release a track which she calls "a queer love song". Along with love, they also found true inspiration in each other. "This LP is about my personal coming out story," she said with a knowing smile, as this was not easy for her growing up in a town in eastern Hungary. With the help of therapy, she finally came out 2-3 years ago, first to her grandma, who was more accepting than her parents. Vivien had a similar experience with her grandparents in Budapest who were very quick to embrace Lau as a member of the family. They are happy together and both regularly DJ in clubs. But they feel the air is thinning for LGBTQ+ people. "We are continuously discussing that we may need to move abroad next year," Vivien said. DEFYING THE BAN Orban told his supporters in February that Pride organisers "should not even bother" planning the event this year. Some saw this as a tactic to hold on to conservative votes - in 2026 he faces elections and a new opposition party poses a serious challenge to his rule. "We've defended the right of parents to decide how their children are brought up, and we've curbed views and fashions that are against nature," the veteran leader said in May. Passage of the new law allowed police last week to ban the 30th Pride march due on June 28. However, Budapest's liberal mayor said the march will be held on that date nonetheless, as a municipal event celebrating freedom, allowing it to circumvent the ban. Thirty-three foreign embassies including those of France, Germany and Britain, although not the United States, have backed the event. "Pride will not ask for permission: this is a protest," the Budapest Pride organisers have said. Lau and Vivi have attended Pride marches before but said this year's will be especially important. Laszlo Laner, 69, was an organiser of Budapest's first Pride in 1997 and played an active role in Hungary's gay movement after the collapse of the communist regime in 1989. "I think we will have the largest crowd so far, not only of LGBTQ+ people and sympathizers but also... those who march for democracy, freedom of speech and the right to assemble," he said. Hungarians were mostly accepting of the LGBTQ+ community, he added. This has been underpinned by polls. A survey by pollster Median in November 2024 made for HATTER society, a Hungarian LGBTQI group, showed 53% of Hungarians said it was acceptable for two men to fall in love, and 57% said the same about two women. About 49% would support same-sex marriage. People in Hungary are a lot less negative towards LGBTQ+ people than the government is trying to suggest, said Zsolt Hegyi, 57, who is gay and has never attended Pride but will join the march now. Events like Pride can help people who struggle to come to terms with their feelings to open up. "They can get some encouragement that the world will not collapse after their coming out," he said. LIVING AUTHENTICALLY Ballroom culture, which originated as a safe and inclusive space for Black and Latino LGBTQ+ individuals in New York, also offers a safe space in Budapest with its regular balls, where participants compete with dances in various categories. In Turbina, an arts and inclusive community space in the heart of Budapest, over a hundred people gathered on March 15 for a ballroom event where participants donned costumes inspired by iconic queer personalities. Iulian Paragina from Romania, a dental technician who has lived in Budapest for four years, acted as Master of Ceremony and also danced. "As a queer person, one of the biggest challenges is simply having the courage to live authentically," Iulian said. "Personally, I used to feel relatively safe in Budapest, up to a point... Today, our voices are being silenced, whether it's through banning Pride, limiting freedom of expression, or pushing harmful narratives." The gradual erosion of LGBTQ+ rights has had a chilling effect on the community, said Armin Egres Konig, 25, who is trans and non-binary, and works as a social worker for the rights group HATTER society. Konig was personally affected by the 2020 law which made it impossible for transgender people to legally change their gender, as it was enacted before their coming out. While Konig found an inclusive and accepting community at university, they find being trans can be difficult in everyday life. "In the world out there it is very hard to be a trans person and I faced harassment in the street." (Writing and reporting by Krisztina Than, additional reporting by Marton Monus and Krisztina Fenyo, Editing by Alexandra Hudson)


Malaysiakini
12 hours ago
- Malaysiakini
Weapons of mass deception in war
COMMENT | Why do some non-Malays online support the bombing of Iran? They probably feel bullied by Malay-Muslim ketuanan or supremacy at home and, therefore, have little sympathy when Muslims overseas are attacked. It's also strange how Sunni Muslim Malaysia is openly supporting a country which practices Shia Islam, which is officially an 'ajaran sesat' or deviant teaching at home. When religion and politics get mixed up, strange things can happen.


The Star
19 hours ago
- The Star
Study: Children of divorce earn less, at risk of teen births and jail
In the United States, children whose parents divorce when they are age five or younger have reduced earnings as adults and increased chances by young adulthood of teen pregnancy, incarceration and death, according to a study released recently. After a divorce, a household's income typically is halved as a family splits into two households, and it struggles to recover that lost income over the ensuing decade. Families after divorce also tend to move to neighbourhoods with lower incomes that offer reduced economic opportunities, and children are farther away from their non-custodial parent, according to the working paper by economists at the University of California in Merced, the US Census Bureau and the University of Maryland. The three events – loss of financial resources, a decline in neighbourhood quality and missing parental involvement because of distance or an increased workload required to make up for lost income – accounted for 25% to 60% of the impact divorce has on children's outcomes, the study said. 'These changes in family life reveal that, rather than an isolated legal shock, divorce represents a bundle of treatments – including income loss, neighbourhood changes and family restructuring – each of which might affect children's outcomes,' the economists wrote. Almost a third of American children live through their parents' divorcing before reaching adulthood, according to the study. Many children of divorce have reached the heights of professional success, including former President Barack Obama and vice-president JD Vance, who lamented that divorce was too easily accessible during a 2021 speech at a Christian high school in California. Declining trend The US divorce rate has been on a decline for the past decade and a half, going from over 10% in 2008 to about 7% in 2022, according to the Census Bureau. The economists' study can't show the emotional impact of divorce, but some children of divorce said it resonated through adulthood, no matter what age they were when it happened. Brandon Hellan, 54, said it took him until his mid-30s before he felt like he could commit to getting married and having children. He thinks his parents' divorce when he was in his early 20s played a role since it felt at the time like an immense betrayal. 'I really think my parents' divorce made me put up these walls and treat relationships like they were rentals, temporary,' said Hellan, who lives in the St. Louis area and wasn't connected to the study. While the study shows the negative impacts of divorce, it can't show what families' lives would have been like if parents had stayed together, said Philip Cohen, a University of Maryland sociologist with no ties to the study. 'Probably nobody can tell better than the parents facing the conditions of the marriage and the opportunity for divorce,' Cohen said. 'I believe parents are aware divorce may have harmful consequences for their children, and make difficult judgements about what is in their own best interest, as well as the interest of their children.' Different conclusions Previous academic studies reached different conclusions about the impact of divorce on children. Some argued that unhappy marriages harm children by exposing them to conflict between their parents and that, generally, divorce is a better option for both parents and children. Other studies said divorce leads to reductions in financial resources, the time parents have to spend with their children and the emotional stability of their offspring. Yet other studies concluded that divorce has a minimal impact one way or another. A big shortfall in reaching any conclusions has been a lack of data. But the authors of the new study said they overcame that limitation by linking data from federal tax records, the Social Security Administration and the Census Bureau for all children born in the US between 1988 and 1993. The tax data traced marital histories and income of the parents and the census data provided information about households and outcomes from childhood to adulthood. The study compared outcomes among siblings by the amount of time a childhood was spent with divorced parents. It found that children whose parents divorced when they were age five or younger had a 13% smaller income by age 27, but there was little or no impact if the child was older than 18 when their parents divorced. A parental divorce increased the chances of teen pregnancy if it took place before the child turned 15. But that effect disappeared by age 20, as did the impact of any divorce on the chances of incarceration. There also was no noticeable effect on a child of divorce getting married by age 25, according to the study. The impact from divorce was similar across demographic groups, the study found. – AP