WORST IN 7 YEARS ESCALATE ATTACKS; Youths in U.S. In ...
Transcript of WORST IN 7 YEARS ESCALATE ATTACKS; Youths in U.S. In ...
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ASHKELON, Israel — Theworst fighting between Israelisand Palestinians in seven yearsintensified on Tuesday night, asIsraeli airstrikes began targetingHamas offices in Gaza City andmilitants in Gaza fired rockets atthe metropolis of Tel Aviv, thesouthern city of Ashkelon and Is-rael’s main airport.
In Gaza, at least 30 Palestin-ians, including 10 children, hadbeen killed by Tuesday night, and203 had been wounded, accordingto health officials. In Israel, threepeople had been killed in strikeson Tel Aviv and the seaside city ofAshkelon, and at least 100 hadbeen wounded, according to medi-cal officials.
Away from the military conflict,a wave of civil unrest spreadacross Arab neighborhoods asPalestinian citizens of Israel ex-pressed fury at the killings inGaza and longstanding com-plaints of discrimination inside Is-rael itself.
While the surge in strikes, theworst since 2014, brought fear tomillions in Gaza and Israel, theynevertheless bolstered an un-likely pair: Hamas, the Islamistmilitant group that runs the GazaStrip, and Prime Minister Ben-jamin Netanyahu of Israel.
For Hamas, the conflict has al-lowed it to revitalize its claims tothe leadership of Palestinian re-sistance. It framed its rockets as adirect response to a pair of Israelipolice raids on the Aqsa Mosque
compound, a religious site in EastJerusalem sacred to both Mus-lims and Jews. In the process, thegroup presented itself as a protec-tor of Palestinian protesters andworshipers in the city.
For Mr. Netanyahu, the distrac-tion of the war, and the divisions itcreates between the disparate op-position parties currently negoti-ating a coalition to topple himfrom power, have given him half achance of remaining in office, justdays after it seemed like he mightfinally be on the way out.
“It is the story of every previouswar between Israel and Hamas,”said Ghassan Khatib, a politics ex-pert at Birzeit University in theoccupied West Bank. Both gov-ernments “come out of it victori-ous, and the public of Gaza comesout of it as losers.”
Both sides seized on thecharged symbolism of the holycity. The Israeli military code-named its operation Guardians ofthe Walls, a reference to the an-cient ramparts of the Old City ofJerusalem. The militants used asa code name Sword of Jerusalem.
For the victims of the violence,the first 36 hours brought little butterror and loss. The Palestinianmilitants and Israeli military areunevenly matched — the formerarmed with rockets, the latterwith fighter jets and a sophis-ticated antimissile defense sys-tem, the Iron Dome, partly fi-nanced by the United States.
ISRAEL AND HAMASESCALATE ATTACKS;
WORST IN 7 YEARSCivilians Again Bear Brunt of a Conflict
That May Buttress Their Leaders
By PATRICK KINGSLEY and ISABEL KERSHNER
GAZA CITY Smoke rising after an Israeli airstrike against Hamas targeted its Hanadi compound.MOHAMMED ABED/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE — GETTY IMAGES
ISRAEL The scene after a rocket fired by Hamas from the Gaza Strip struck in Holon, near Tel Aviv.HEIDI LEVINE/ASSOCIATED PRESS
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The race is on to vaccinate thenation’s nearly 17 million 12- to 15-year-olds against Covid-19.
The Food and Drug Administra-tion’s decision on Monday to au-thorize the Pfizer-BioNTech vac-cine for younger adolescentspresents a new opportunity in thepush for broad immunity againstthe coronavirus in the UnitedStates. But the challenges of get-ting them vaccinated are morecomplicated than for adults andolder teenagers.
“The game changes when yougo down as young as 12 years old,”said Nathan Quesnel, the superin-tendent of schools in East Hart-ford, Conn., adding, “You need tohave a different level of sensitiv-ity.”
A recent survey by the KaiserFamily Foundation’s VaccineMonitor found that many parents— even some who eagerly gottheir own Covid shots — are reluc-tant to vaccinate pubescent chil-dren. Yet doing so will be criticalfor further reducing transmissionof the virus, smoothly reopeningmiddle and high schools and re-gaining some sense of nationalnormalcy.
Vaccination for the age group isexpected to begin across the coun-try later this week. Sites are an-ticipating an initial surge in de-mand before an inevitable soft-ening, much as happened withadults.
States, counties and school dis-tricts around the country are try-ing to figure out the most reassur-ing and expedient ways to reachyounger adolescents as well astheir parents, whose consent isusually required by state law.They are making plans to offervaccines not only in schools, butalso at pediatricians’ offices, daycamps, parks and even beaches.
Children’s Minnesota, a Minne-apolis-based hospital systemwhere the main Covid vaccinationsite has offered stress balls, col-ored lights and images of playfuldolphins projected on the ceiling,is planning to provide shots begin-ning later this week in at least adozen middle schools and aY.W.C.A.
In Columbus, Ohio, publichealth nurses will drive a mobilevaccination unit around neighbor-hoods “just like you would an icecream truck,” said Dr. Mysheika
Getting CleverIn InoculatingYouths in U.S.
The Ice Cream Truck? No, a Vaccine Van.
By ABBY GOODNOUGHand JAN HOFFMAN
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China’s population is growing atits slowest pace in decades, with aplunge in births and a grayingwork force presenting the Com-munist Party with one of itsgravest social and economic chal-lenges.
Figures from a census releasedon Tuesday show that China facesa demographic crisis that couldstunt growth in the country, theworld’s second-largest economy.China has long relied on an ex-panding and ambitious work forceto run its factories and achieveBeijing’s dreams of building aglobal superpower and industrialgiant. An aging, slow-growingpopulation — one that could evenbegin to shrink in the comingyears — threatens that dynamic.
China’s aging-related chal-lenges are similar to those of de-veloped countries like the UnitedStates. But its households live onmuch lower incomes on averagethan in the United States and else-where.
In other words, China is grow-
Drop in BirthsRisks StuntingChina’s Growth
By SUI-LEE WEE
Many in China are put off bythe cost of raising children.
LORENZ HUBER FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES
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The National Rifle Association’sattempt to evade a legal challengefrom New York regulators wastossed out by a federal bank-ruptcy judge on Tuesday, in a rul-ing that cast further doubt onwhether the group’s embattledchief executive, Wayne LaPierre,would remain at the helm afterthree decades in power.
The ruling was a victory for Le-titia James, the New York attor-ney general, whose office is seek-ing to remove Mr. LaPierre andshut down the gun rights groupamid a long-running corruptioninvestigation.
Mr. LaPierre, the face of theAmerican gun lobby, now batteredby the N.R.A.’s internecine war-fare and revelations of luxuriantpersonal spending, had sought toend-run Ms. James by relocatingto Texas and filing for bankruptcythere. But the gambit insteadproved a strategic blunder: Thetestimony over a 12-day trial onlybuttressed Ms. James’s con-tentions of corruption, and led thejudge, Harlin D. Hale, to declare,“The N.R.A. is using this bank-ruptcy case to address a regula-tory enforcement problem, not afinancial one.”
Judge Hale, the chief of the fed-eral bankruptcy court in Dallas,also said Mr. LaPierre’s move tofile for bankruptcy without tellingthe group’s board of directors, orhis own chief counsel or chief fi-nancial officer, was “nothing lessthan shocking.”
And he warned that any effortto revive the case was likely tolead to another unpalatable out-come: the appointment of an out-side trustee to take control of theorganization and its finances.
Blow to N.R.A.As Judge DeniesBankruptcy Bid
By DANNY HAKIM
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The eastbound train shud-dered to a stop at the Maplewoodstation like a dog shaking offrain. In another time, dozens ofthe commute-hardened wouldhave begun to board, headsdown, shoulders angled, mindsas focused on a particular seat asthat of a rightful heir to a throne.
But on this early-spring, late-pandemic morning in New Jer-sey, only a scattered few climbedaboard, every one of us masked.All that grounded the moment innormality was the lateness of thetrain.
After more than a year sincemy last rush-hour train, I foundmyself suppressing the musclememory of contact sports as Ilaid claim to a throne in a carwith just two other passengers.The blue seats were the same,the clouded windows, the air-conditioning hush; yet it felt asthough I’d boarded a train inanother country.
Before the pandemic, thetrains of New Jersey Transitcould be cattle-car crowded, withstrangers pressed so closely
against you that you could de-duce their last meal. That level offorced intimacy now seemedunimaginable.
After the outbreak, ridershipon New Jersey trains, which in
normal times averaged 95,000weekday passengers, plummetedto 3,500 before stabilizing atabout 17,500. A similar patternheld for the Metropolitan Trans-portation Authority’s Metro-
North and Long Island Rail Roadlines: in February 2020, nearly600,000 riders; two months later,fewer than 30,000.
For many months the commut-
Spacious and Quiet. No Brawls. Is This Actually My Commute?By DAN BARRY
New Jersey Transit trains are no longer empty in Maplewood, but they’re hardly at full capacity.BRYAN ANSELM FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES
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Patricia Fahy, a New York Statelegislator, celebrated when a newdevelopment project for the Portof Albany — the country’s first as-sembly plant dedicated to build-ing offshore wind towers — wasapproved in January.
“I was doing cartwheels,” saidMs. Fahy, who represents thearea. But she was soon caught in apolitical bind.
A powerful union informed herthat most of the equipment forNew York’s big investment in off-
shore windmills would not be builtby American workers but wouldcome from abroad. Yet when Ms.Fahy proposed legislation to pressdevelopers to use locally madeparts, she met opposition from en-vironmentalists and wind indus-try officials. “They were like, ‘Oh,God, don’t cause us any prob-lems,’” she said.
Since President Biden’s elec-tion, Democrats have extolled thewin-win allure of the transitionfrom fossil fuels, saying it can helpavert a climate crisis whileputting millions to work. “For toolong we’ve failed to use the mostimportant word when it comes tomeeting the climate crisis: jobs,jobs, jobs,” Mr. Biden told Con-gress last month.
On Tuesday, his administrationgave final approval to the nation’sfirst large-scale offshore windproject, off Martha’s Vineyard in
Green Energy Push Pits U.S. Jobs vs. Low Costs
By NOAM SCHEIBER Leading to Divisions inDemocratic Coalition
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The chain and other megastores like ithave revolutionized how many Asian-Americans shop and eat. PAGE D1
FOOD D1-8
The Allure of H MartIn a speech from the House floor, theembattled representative issued a starkwarning to the G.O.P. PAGE A16
NATIONAL A13-20
Cheney Defiant to the End
Recipes using banana skins have per-plexed, and sometimes delighted, theBritish cooking public. PAGE D1
Think Outside the BananaLawyers working on the contentiousbankruptcy have asked the court formore than $100 million. PAGE A18
Big Legal Fees for Boy Scouts
The Brooklynettes have been electrify-ing as they offer much-needed livedance shows at Nets games. PAGE C1
ARTS C1-6
Big Moves and BasketballThe Pennsylvania teachers’ retirementfund sank many of its assets into riskyinvestments that didn’t pan out. Nowthe F.B.I. is asking questions. PAGE B1
BUSINESS B1-6
Pension Bet Draws ScrutinyAt a Senate hearing, Republicans ex-pressed impatience with the govern-ment’s pace in relaxing control meas-ures as states move to reopen. PAGE A4
TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-8
C.D.C. Defends Its Guidance
Medina Spirit, the Kentucky Derbywinner, got a treatment that contained acorticosteroid, the trainer said. PAGE B8
SPORTSWEDNESDAY B7-9
Bob Baffert Has an ExplanationAfter the assault in Kazan, PresidentVladimir V. Putin ordered a tighteningof civilian gun laws. PAGE A9
INTERNATIONAL A9-12
9 Die in Russia School Shooting
A comeback may prove difficult, andother awards shows could take theirplace, Kyle Buchanan writes. PAGE C1
Can the Globes Shine Again?
Gas stations in the Southeast sold out offuel, and some airlines took steps toavoid service disruptions. PAGE B1
Panic Over Pipeline ShutdownInfections and deaths are advancing inrural areas, unleashing fear in placeswith few medical resources. PAGE A6
Desperation Spreads in India
Carmen Maria Machado PAGE A23
OPINION A22-23
Late Edition
VOL. CLXX . . . . No. 59,056 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 2021
Today, periodic clouds and sunshine,a cool breeze, high 65. Tonight, clearskies, cool, low 48. Tomorrow, sunny,seasonable temperatures, high 69.Weather map appears on Page B10.
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