Connect with us

Published

on

Northern Ireland’s first minister will not attend the White House for St Patrick’s Day in protest at the “injustice” of Donald Trump’s recent comments on Gaza.

Michelle O’Neill, who is also the vice president of Sinn Fein, will be joined by the party’s leader Mary Lou McDonald in boycotting the annual ceremony to mark the national holiday on 17 March.

Ms McDonald said she will not attend the event at the White House over “a principled stance against the threat of mass expulsion of the Palestinian people from Gaza” – a reference to recent comments by US President Donald Trump.

Speaking at a press conference in Dublin, Ms O’Neill said she “cannot ignore” Mr Trump’s comments and that her decision not to travel to the White House meant she was standing “on the side of humanity”.

Politics latest: Lib Dems call for tax hike on tech giants to boost defence spending

“The decision to not travel to the White House has not been taken lightly, but it is taken very conscious of the responsibility that each of us have as individuals to call out injustice when we see it,” she said.

“We are all heartbroken whenever we witness the suffering of the Palestinian people, and the recent comments by the US president around the mass expulsion of the Palestinian people from Gaza is just simply something that I cannot ignore.”

More on Gaza

She added: “At times like this, people look towards political leaders to stand against injustice. So in the future whenever our children and grandchildren ask us what did we do when the Palestinian people endured unimaginable suffering, I can say firmly that I stood on the side of humanity.”

Mr Trump sparked international alarm earlier this month when he laid out his plans for the Middle East in a news conference alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House.

The US president called Gaza a “demolition site” and said the two million Palestinians who currently live there could go to “various domains” – and that his “takeover” plans would not include a right of return for those who left.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Trump says US will take over Gaza

Mr Trump did also not rule out sending US troops to the region, and said his plan would “develop” Gaza and create “thousands and thousands of jobs”.

“Everybody I’ve spoken to loves the idea of the United States owning that piece of land, developing and creating thousands of jobs,” Mr Trump said, adding that Gaza could become “the Riviera of the Middle East” where “the world’s people” could live.

America traditionally enjoys a close relationship with Ireland owing to ancestral ties and history, but the war in Gaza and US support for Israel in the aftermath of the Hamas attack on 7 October 2023 has put that under strain.

Ireland has been one of the world’s most vocal supporters of the Palestinian cause and in 2024, along with Norway and Spain, it officially recognised Palestine as a separate state – prompting Israel to recall its ambassadors from two of the European states.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Palestinians react to Trump’s Gaza comments

Last year Ms McDonald rejected calls for a boycott of the White House over the US position on Gaza under Joe Biden’s presidency, arguing that she had used the “unparalleled” influence Ireland ha sin Washington to raise concerns about the Middle East.

President Trump’s proposal to transfer the Palestinian population out of Gaza and redevelop it under US ownership has been criticised by Palestinians, human rights groups, regional powers and US allies, but last week Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said it was “the only viable plan to enable a different future”.

Read more:
Canadian PM hits out at Trump after hockey win
Farage says Zelenskyy is not a dictator and Trump ‘should not be taken literally’

The decision of Sinn Fein to boycott the White House comes after Israel accused Hamas of a “serious violation” of the ceasefire deal after it failed to hand over the body of Israeli hostage Shiri Bibas, instead returning the remains of an “anonymous body without identification”.

Hamas has since said it will investigate the claims.

Ms Bibas was kidnapped with her sons – four-year-old Ariel, and nine-month-old Kfir – from the Niz Or kibbutz during the Palestinian militant group’s incursion into Israel in October 2023, which killed 1,195 people, according to Israeli authorities, including 815 civilians.

Israel‘s subsequent invasion of the Gaza Strip has killed more than 47,000 Palestinians, according to health officials in Gaza, and 405 Israeli soldiers, according to the Israeli military.

Continue Reading

World

Pope in critical condition after respiratory crisis, Vatican says in latest update

Published

on

By

Pope in critical condition after respiratory crisis, Vatican says in latest update

Pope Francis is in a critical condition after a “prolonged respiratory crisis” that required a high-flow of oxygen and is “suffering more than yesterday”, the Vatican has said.

The 88-year-old has been in hospital for more than a week being treated for double pneumonia and chronic bronchitis.

In an update on Saturday evening, the Vatican said “the Holy Father’s condition continues to be critical”, adding that this morning he “presented with a prolonged asthmatic respiratory crisis” which required the application of high-flow oxygen.

He also had blood transfusions after tests revealed thrombocytopenia, which is associated with anemia.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Pope Francis ‘not out of danger’

“The Holy Father continues to be vigilant and spent the day in an armchair even though he was suffering more than yesterday. At the moment the prognosis is reserved,” the Vatican’s statement said.

In an update earlier on Saturday morning – the shortest since Francis was admitted to hospital on 14 February – the Vatican said he will not lead Sunday prayers for the second week running, adding: “The Pope rested well.”

Francis is likely to prepare a written homily for someone else to read at Sunday’s Angelus.

More on Pope Francis

Millions of people around the world have been concerned about the Pope’s increasingly frail health – and his condition has given rise to speculation over a possible resignation, which the Vatican has not commented on.

Doctors on Friday said he was “not out of danger” and was expected to remain at Rome’s Gemelli hospital for at least another week.

Sergio Alfieri, the chief of the pontiff’s medical team, said: “Is he out of danger? No. But if the question is ‘is he in danger of death’, the answer is ‘no’.”

Sergio Alfieri (R) said Pope Francis was a 'fragile patient' but was in 'good spirits'. Pic: AP
Image:
Sergio Alfieri (R) said Pope Francis was a ‘fragile patient’ but was in ‘good spirits’. Pic: AP

He said Francis was affected by seasonal flu before being taken to hospital and that, “due to his challenging duties”, he had suffered fatigue.

He is also fighting a multipronged infection of bacteria and viruses in the respiratory tract.

Read more from Sky News:
Trump says US close to Ukraine minerals deal
Body of Israeli hostage Shiri Bibas returned

The doctors warned that while he did not have sepsis – where germs enter the bloodstream – there was always a risk the infection could spread in his body, and they said that was the biggest concern.

Sepsis is a complication of an infection that can lead to organ failure and death.

Pope Francis has a history of respiratory illness, having lost part of one of his lungs to pleurisy as a young man. He had an acute case of pneumonia in 2023.

Continue Reading

World

One dead and police officers seriously injured in ‘terror’ stabbing in Mulhouse

Published

on

By

One dead and police officers seriously injured in 'terror' stabbing in Mulhouse

One person has been killed and two police officers seriously injured in a knife attack in eastern France.

A man attacked people in Mulhouse, near the German border, at around 4pm on Saturday.

Prosecutors said a 37-year-old Algerian had been arrested and the person who died was a civilian who tried to intervene.

“Horror has just gripped our city,” mayor Michele Lutz said on Facebook.

The man shouted “Allahu Akbar” (“God is greatest”) as he attacked the police officers, prosecutors added.

President Macron told BFMTV it was “beyond doubt” it was an “Islamist terrorist act”. He said the interior minister was heading to Mulhouse and would speak later.

The attacker is said to have been at a police station – where he was due to sign a document for his detention – but refused and ran into the market where he launched the attack.

More on France

One police officer was stabbed in the neck and another in the chest, according to French media. Three other police sustained very minor injuries.

Read more from Sky News:
Pope ‘suffering more’ and in ‘critical condition’

Trump fires top US military officers

The knifeman had reportedly been under house arrest and was on a terror watchlist.

The French attack comes a day after a stabbing by a 19-year-old Syrian refugee at Berlin’s Holocaust memorial.

A Spanish tourist was badly injured but is expected to survive.

The attacker is said to have wanted to kill Jewish people after being motivated by the conflict in the Middle East, according to prosecutors.

Continue Reading

World

Starmer tells Zelenskyy this is ‘significant moment’ for European security ahead of US visit

Published

on

By

Starmer tells Zelenskyy this is 'significant moment' for European security ahead of US visit

Sir Keir Starmer and Volodymyr Zelenskyy said this is a “significant moment” for European security amid the continued fallout between the Ukrainian leader and Donald Trump.

In a phone call this morning, the prime minister reiterated the UK’s “ironclad support” for Ukraine and said he would discuss safeguarding Kyiv’s sovereignty with the US president.

Sir Keir also spoke with the European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen this morning, in which they agreed that Europe must “step up” for the good of collective security on the continent.

Keir Starmer and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy shake hands.
Pic: Reuters
Image:
Starmer and Zelenskyy last month. Pic: Reuters

Sir Keir will meet Mr Trump in the coming days for what will be a critical moment in the fragile relations between America and Europe after the US leader launched an extraordinary verbal attack on Mr Zelenskyy.

Mr Trump labelled the Ukrainian leader a “dictator” and said the prime minister and French President Emmanuel Macron, both of whom will visit the White House next week, “haven’t done anything” to end the war.

Since Russia‘s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the UK, France and other allies have been providing Kyiv with weapons and aid.

Mr Trump has also suggested that Ukraine “started” the war.

More on Donald Trump

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Starmer and Macron ‘haven’t done anything’

In a Downing Street readout of Sir Keir’s call with Mr Zelenskyy, a spokesperson said: “The prime minister began by reiterating the UK’s ironclad support for Ukraine and commitment to securing a just and enduring peace to bring an end to Russia’s illegal war.

“The leaders reflected on recent developments in the conflict, as the third anniversary of the full-scale invasion approaches, and agreed on the need to continue working together with allies to achieve peace through strength.

“They agreed that this was a significant moment for the future of Ukraine and European security at large.”

Read more:
Envoy says US is ‘with’ Ukraine – in contrast to Trump’s remarks

Sombre Starmer and Europe confront emerging new world order

The spokesperson added: “The prime minister repeated that Ukraine must be at the heart of any negotiations to end the war and that safeguarding Ukraine’s sovereignty was essential to deter future aggression from Russia.”

Meanwhile, a Downing Street spokesperson said of Sir Keir and Ms von der Leyen’s call: “Ahead of the three-year anniversary of Russia’s barbaric illegal war, they discussed the need to secure a just and enduring peace in Ukraine, and agreed that Europe must step up for the good of collective European security.”

On Saturday afternoon, Sir Keir also spoke with Finland’s president Alexander Stubb and discussed “the need to secure enduring peace for Ukraine and bring an end to Russia’s illegal war”, a Downing Street readout said.

“The leaders agreed the need for Europe to step up support to achieve this, and the prime minister said the UK is ready to play a role in future security guarantees.”

The US president’s recent statements, which echo Russian president Vladimir Putin’s narrative, and plans to have direct negotiations with Moscow about the end of the war in Ukraine have left European allies and Ukrainian officials worried.

Mr Trump told US governors on Friday he “had very good talks with Putin” and “not such good talks with Ukraine”.

The US president also said a deal on minerals in Ukraine in exchange for weapons was close, but a source with knowledge of the negotiations told Sky News the Ukrainian president is not ready to sign and sees a “number of problematic issues” with the draft agreement.

Continue Reading

Trending