Refresh

This website english.aawsat.com/varieties/4735131-more-300-rescued-floodwaters-northeast-australia%C2%A0?amp is currently offline. Cloudflare's Always Online™ shows a snapshot of this web page from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. To check for the live version, click Refresh.

More than 300 Rescued from Floodwaters in Northeast Australia 

This picture shows cars amid floodwaters at Cairns Airport in Cairns on December 18, 2023. (AFP)
This picture shows cars amid floodwaters at Cairns Airport in Cairns on December 18, 2023. (AFP)
TT

More than 300 Rescued from Floodwaters in Northeast Australia 

This picture shows cars amid floodwaters at Cairns Airport in Cairns on December 18, 2023. (AFP)
This picture shows cars amid floodwaters at Cairns Airport in Cairns on December 18, 2023. (AFP)

More than 300 people were rescued overnight from floodwaters in northeast Australia, with dozens of residents clinging to roofs, officials said on Monday.

Cairns Airport was closed on Monday due to flooding and authorities were concerned that the city of 160,000 people will lose drinking water.

While rain was easing in Cairns, severe weather warnings were in place in nearby Port Douglas, Daintree, Cooktown, Wujal Wujal and Hope Vale, with more rain forecast.

Queensland state Police Commissioner Katarina Carroll described the flooding as “absolutely devastating.”

“Last night, we had an extraordinarily challenging, challenging evening, rescuing some 300 people,” Carroll told reporters.

There were no deaths or serious injuries, she said.

All 300 residents would be evacuated by helicopter from the Aboriginal community of Wujal Wujal, where nine adults and a 7-year-old child spent hours overnight on a hospital roof, officials said.

A Category 2 tropical cyclone passed close by Wujal Wujal on Wednesday. But while strong winds did little damage to the community, heavy rains have continued to lash the region.

Roads and railway lines were cut, communities were isolated and 14,000 homes and businesses were without power on Monday.



KAUST Professor with Disabilities Begins Bicycle Journey Across Kingdom

Photo by SPA
Photo by SPA
TT

KAUST Professor with Disabilities Begins Bicycle Journey Across Kingdom

Photo by SPA
Photo by SPA

Associate Professor of Applied Mathematics and Computational Science at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) Matteo Parsani began on Sunday his hand-bike journey from the east to the west of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
His 30-day journey aims to promote physical activities and sports, raise awareness about people with disabilities, showcase KAUST research, and highlight the beauty of the Kingdom’s regions and the hospitality of the Saudi people, SPA reported.

Parsani said that through the journey, he seeks to promote the importance of physical activity for a healthy lifestyle among various segments of society, and not only for people with disabilities. It also aims to study the effect of intense physical exercise on the musculoskeletal system and mental health of people with limited mobility.

Parsani will hand-cycle through Dammam, Riyadh, Qassim, Hail, AlUla, Red Sea Global, Madinah, Makkah, Jeddah and KAUST, over a distance of more than 3,000 kilometers, at a rate of some 150 kilometers per day.

During his ambitious journey to traverse Saudi Arabia from its east to west, Parsani will make use of innovative products aimed at ensuring his safety and tracking his health and physical status in real time.

The products include helmet, jacket and shirt embedded with advanced biosensors that have been developed by a team of KAUST researchers and scientists at their cutting-edge lab.

The sensors will monitor Parsani's heart rate, dopamine and energy levels, sweat secretion rate, and body motion, among others.


Thai Rice Farmer Makes Art with Plantings That Depict Cats 

A lively cat image created by Thunyapong Jaikum, a Thai farmer and artist, is seen in rice fields in Chiang Rai province, north of Thailand, December 16, 2023. (Reuters)
A lively cat image created by Thunyapong Jaikum, a Thai farmer and artist, is seen in rice fields in Chiang Rai province, north of Thailand, December 16, 2023. (Reuters)
TT

Thai Rice Farmer Makes Art with Plantings That Depict Cats 

A lively cat image created by Thunyapong Jaikum, a Thai farmer and artist, is seen in rice fields in Chiang Rai province, north of Thailand, December 16, 2023. (Reuters)
A lively cat image created by Thunyapong Jaikum, a Thai farmer and artist, is seen in rice fields in Chiang Rai province, north of Thailand, December 16, 2023. (Reuters)

A sleeping cat hugs a fish in a picture seen from the air, picked out in sprouting rainbow seedlings in a rice field in Thailand to illustrate a traditional proverb about abundance.

Farmer Tanyapong Jaikham and a team of workers planted the seedlings at various spots in the field in the northern province of Chiang Rai to depict cartoon cats, hoping to lure tourists and cat lovers.

"We're expecting tens of thousands to come and see the art in the rice fields," he said.

The process relies on GPS coordinates to position the seedlings as designated in an initial artist's sketch, he said, with the plants changing tint as they grow.

"It's crucial to position them accurately, and the rice will gradually change shades over time," he added, until in the final harvest stage, the rice straw yields the portrait of Cooper, the cat on which it was modelled.

Viewing towers are being built in the surrounding area to give visitors a glimpse of the artwork, which is based on a Thai saying, "There is fish in the water and rice in the fields."

The world's second largest exporter of the grain after India, Thailand aims to ship 8.5 million metric tons this year.

Young people wanting to learn more about the interaction of art and technology could also benefit from visiting the site, Tanyapong said.

"Previously, rice was mainly considered for consumption," he said. "This approach allows us to develop tourism and agriculture simultaneously."


Rare Snowfall in Southern China as Deep Freeze Grips the North 

In this photo taken on December 17, 2023, Siberian tigers relax in their enclosure after a snowfall at the Siberian Tiger Park in Hailin, in China's northeast Heilongjiang province. (AFP)
In this photo taken on December 17, 2023, Siberian tigers relax in their enclosure after a snowfall at the Siberian Tiger Park in Hailin, in China's northeast Heilongjiang province. (AFP)
TT

Rare Snowfall in Southern China as Deep Freeze Grips the North 

In this photo taken on December 17, 2023, Siberian tigers relax in their enclosure after a snowfall at the Siberian Tiger Park in Hailin, in China's northeast Heilongjiang province. (AFP)
In this photo taken on December 17, 2023, Siberian tigers relax in their enclosure after a snowfall at the Siberian Tiger Park in Hailin, in China's northeast Heilongjiang province. (AFP)

The cold weather sweeping China brought rare snowfall on Monday as far south as the province of Guangdong, while temperatures in the chilly north plunged to near historic lows for the month.

In a week of unexpectedly frigid weather, temperatures have fallen to lows below zero in northern areas, disrupting road, rail and air transport and even causing a brake failure in a commuter train in Beijing, the capital.

Forecasters early in November had predicted a warmer winter this year due to the El Nino phenomenon, while warning that temperatures could fluctuate after one of the warmest Octobers in decades.

On Monday in Guangdong, where snow is generally limited to the northernmost areas, snowfall blanketed the top of a mountain in a city just 80 km (50 miles) north of the provincial capital Guangzhou by the coast.

A low of 8 degrees Celsius (46.4 Fahrenheit) was forecast for Guangzhou, compared to the province's typical early winter temperatures that hover in the double digits, while January averages around 14 Celsius (57 Fahrenheit).

Guangzhou officials urged precautions, especially for the old and young who may be vulnerable to "cold wave illnesses", as winter advances.

In neighboring Guangxi, where President Xi Jinping called last week for an "all-out" emergency response, sleet has been forecast for some cities, including Guilin.

Snow flurries were seen in the commercial hub of Shanghai on Monday.

In Beijing, Monday morning temperatures dropped to minus 15.5 C (4.1 F) - near the 1952 historic low of minus 15.2 C (4.64 F) for Dec. 19 and minus -17.7 C 0.14 F) for Dec. 20 that year. The lowest recorded December temperature was minus 18.3 C (minus 0.9 F).

Trapped tourists

Low temperatures will prevail until Thursday, the national forecaster warned, with northern areas, Inner Mongolia and some areas around the Yangtze river to be 7 C lower than is typical.

On Monday, the city of Hohhot in Inner Mongolia, is expected to experience a low of minus 22 C (minus 7.6 F) while the mercury will sink to minus -5 C (23 F) in Zhengzhou, in the central province of Henan.

Rain and snow could lash the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze and its south, including parts of Anhui, Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces as well as Shanghai. Local heavy snow can be expected, the forecaster added.

Taking advantage of the early sub-freezing weather, Harbin, a city in the northeastern province of Heilongjiang, will host its largest-ever ice sculpture festival in a park sprawling across 810,000 sq m (970,000 sq yards).

More than 1,000 ice and snow features landscapes in the park have been fashioned from about 250,000 cubic meters of ice and snow harvested from the frozen Songhua river.

But efforts to cash in on the cold weather led to a downside for more than 50 tourists trapped for over two hours on Saturday in cable cars ascending a mountain in eastern Zhejiang province, after windy weather triggered a halt for safety reasons.

All were unharmed despite freezing conditions in the cable cars, media said.


Rashid Masharawi Announces New Film Project Inspired by Gaza War

Palestinian Filmmaker Rashid Masharawi. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Palestinian Filmmaker Rashid Masharawi. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
TT

Rashid Masharawi Announces New Film Project Inspired by Gaza War

Palestinian Filmmaker Rashid Masharawi. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Palestinian Filmmaker Rashid Masharawi. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Palestinian Filmmaker Rashid Masharawi announced that he established a fund to support filmmakers in his city, Gaza.

In an interview with Asharq Al-Awsat, he said the Palestinian cinema has affected the Palestinian cause and promoted it in international festivals. He also said that he is currently making the final touches on a new feature film which he shot in Palestine before the war. He is also preparing a documentary inspired by the ongoing war.

Masharawi slammed the suspension of Arab film festivals and hailed the “Window on Palestine” program, which he was keen to attend at Egypt’s Gouna Film Festival.

The Palestinian filmmaker believes that the film festivals are platforms of culture, awareness and promotion of art, and that they must keep going despite the war. “The cinema is highly important to support people and highlight their culture and identity anywhere,” he said.

About the films screening as part of the “Window on Palestine” program at the Gouna Festival, he said: “I liked their diversity, features and documentaries, and the variety of the covered topics,” noting that “it’s very important, especially during this time, to present a different image of Palestine.”

Masharawi assures that “the aggression didn’t start on October 7, but 75 years ago. These facts are presented in films more than in the news. These films should be screened so the Arab and western audiences know the truth.”

Masharawi is the first Palestinian filmmaker who made features and documentaries inside the occupied Palestinian territories, including “Laila’s Anniversary”, “Falastine Stereo” and “Letters from Yarmouk.”

The director believes that the Palestinian cinema has served the cause of his country, noting that “it has certainly highlighted the cause and affected a large audience inside and outside Palestine, especially some works that partook in international festivals qualified by their artistic value, not only their political view.”

Masharawi, who has been working in filmmaking for 40 years, said: “I know how us, filmmakers, work on an identity that cannot be occupied. Our identity is emphasized by history, language, culture and traditions, which are all highlighted in cinema. The occupation kills people and destroys buildings, but it’s hard to erase an identity.”

The Palestinian director, who lives between France and Palestine, revealed that he “established a fund to support cinema and filmmakers in Gaza,” noting that “this is the first time I talk about the fund aimed at creating and helping a new generation of young filmmakers in Gaza, who have myriads of stories that they lived during the war. I also promise to make a documentary inspired by the war in Gaza. Many cinematographers are already working on it.”

He added that he has many projects that he still didn’t reveal, noting that the “Gaza fund” is a continuation of his project to support the Palestinian cinema, which he started years ago to train young filmmakers.

As a Gazan, he knows well the disasters that war has caused and how much of his favorite places it has destroyed. “The cultural center I built and our houses were demolished, we lost family members, friends and neighbors, but we are ashamed of talking about them because death has affected everybody. I live the war like if I was there, like if the bombs hit me every day although I am not in Gaza,” he explained.

Before the war, he wrote a script of a feature film that anticipates what’s happening right now. “The film ends with a bloody war in Gaza. I wrote it before the outbreak of this ongoing, unstoppable war,” he said.

Masharawi is currently making final touches on his film “Ephemeral Dreams”, which he finished before the war. It tells the story of a Palestinian boy who lost a bird, and then embark on a journey from Bethlehem to Jerusalem and Jaffa to find it. He passes by checkpoints and a wall, witnessing the tragedies inflicted by the occupation. The film will be ready for display within two months, he concluded.


MET to Return 16 Artifacts to Cambodia, Thailand

This image released by the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York on December 15, 2023, shows a 10th century goddess sandstone statue from Koh Ker, Cambodia. (Photo by Handout / US Attorney’s Office Southern District of New York / AFP)
This image released by the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York on December 15, 2023, shows a 10th century goddess sandstone statue from Koh Ker, Cambodia. (Photo by Handout / US Attorney’s Office Southern District of New York / AFP)
TT

MET to Return 16 Artifacts to Cambodia, Thailand

This image released by the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York on December 15, 2023, shows a 10th century goddess sandstone statue from Koh Ker, Cambodia. (Photo by Handout / US Attorney’s Office Southern District of New York / AFP)
This image released by the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York on December 15, 2023, shows a 10th century goddess sandstone statue from Koh Ker, Cambodia. (Photo by Handout / US Attorney’s Office Southern District of New York / AFP)

The Metropolitan Museum of Art has begun the repatriation process for 16 sculptures previously held in its permanent collection, returning 14 to Cambodia and two to Thailand, according to the Art Newspaper.

The artifacts, date back between the ninth and fourteenth centuries, have been under scrutiny from the Attorney General of the Southern District of New York for their connection to dealer Douglas Latchford, who was indicted in the US for illegal sales of antiquities in 2019 and died in 2020, before he could stand trial on those charges.

The Met has undergone an intensive investigation into the provenance of its objects this year, hiring a research team following spring seizures of illegally obtained works.

Claims from the Cambodian government regarding Khmer works in the Met’s collection extend back significantly further.

Investigators had tracked a large number of antiquities believed to have been looted and smuggled to a single gallery of the museum, almost entirely sourced Latchford. When initial requests for information and repatriation by Cambodia went unfulfilled, the country enlisted the aid of the US Justice Department, as well as a former looter capable of providing evidence of the illegal removal and sale of antiquities from protected sites.

Toek Tik, provided additional links between Latchford and the illegal trade, claiming that the dealer used intermediaries to move objects out of Cambodia. The Met’s relationship with Latchford began during institutional leaders’ push to grow their collection of Southeast Asian art in the 1970s, and the museum partnered with the dealer to acquire high-quality works of Khmer sculpture through purchase and donation.

After Latchford’s death in 2020, investigators were left to parse a trove of documents and records relating to his business.In its announcement about the repatriations, the Met said that following the indictment, it “proactively reached out to the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York and to Cambodian officials, and through this cooperative partnership, the museum received new information about the sculptures that made it clear that the works should be transferred”.

The 16 works scheduled for return will remain on view in the Met until repatriation arrangements are made, with new wall texts noting their upcoming removal from the museum.


Eritrean Conjoined Twins Arrive in Saudi Arabia for Possible Separation Surgery

Upon arrival, the conjoined twins were transferred to King Abdullah Specialist Children's Hospital at the Ministry of National Guard for further tests. SPA
Upon arrival, the conjoined twins were transferred to King Abdullah Specialist Children's Hospital at the Ministry of National Guard for further tests. SPA
TT

Eritrean Conjoined Twins Arrive in Saudi Arabia for Possible Separation Surgery

Upon arrival, the conjoined twins were transferred to King Abdullah Specialist Children's Hospital at the Ministry of National Guard for further tests. SPA
Upon arrival, the conjoined twins were transferred to King Abdullah Specialist Children's Hospital at the Ministry of National Guard for further tests. SPA

Eritrean Siamese twins Asma and Somaya Jaafar Abdo and their parents arrived on Sunday at King Khalid International Airport in Riyadh on a medevac plane, in implementation of Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud's directives.

Upon arrival, they were transferred to King Abdullah Specialist Children's Hospital at the Ministry of National Guard for further tests, to explore the possibility of performing a surgical separation.

Supervisor General of the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) and head of the medical team Dr. Abdullah Al Rabeeah thanked King Salman and the Crown Prince for this noble humanitarian initiative.

The family of the twins expressed great appreciation to the government and people of the Kingdom for the warm welcome and hospitality they received upon their arrival in Saudi Arabia, and confidence in the capability of the Saudi medical team, which has a distinguished experience in such cases.


King Abdulaziz Falconry Festival 2023 Enters Guinness Records as Largest Falconry Competition Globally

Saudi Arabia’s King Abdulaziz Falconry Festival 2023 has set a new world record by entering the Guinness World Records for the third time in its history. SPA
Saudi Arabia’s King Abdulaziz Falconry Festival 2023 has set a new world record by entering the Guinness World Records for the third time in its history. SPA
TT

King Abdulaziz Falconry Festival 2023 Enters Guinness Records as Largest Falconry Competition Globally

Saudi Arabia’s King Abdulaziz Falconry Festival 2023 has set a new world record by entering the Guinness World Records for the third time in its history. SPA
Saudi Arabia’s King Abdulaziz Falconry Festival 2023 has set a new world record by entering the Guinness World Records for the third time in its history. SPA

Saudi Arabia’s King Abdulaziz Falconry Festival 2023 has set a new world record by entering the Guinness World Records for the third time in its history.

It is now recognized as the largest falconry competition in the world, with 2,654 falcons participating.

The festival was held between November 28 and December 14 and was organized by the Saudi Falcons Club at its headquarters in Malham, north of Riyadh.

This accomplishment stands as a testament to the steadfast backing of the Saudi leadership in safeguarding the Kingdom's cultural and civilizational heritage. In its inaugural year, the festival secured a Guinness World Record with 1,723 falcons, and in the following year in 2019, it repeated this feat by involving 2,350 falcons.

The festival drew participation from an esteemed gathering of falconers hailing from the Kingdom, Gulf countries, and across the globe. Competing for the festival's awards over a span of 17 days, they vied in Al-Mazayen and Al-Milwah competitions, with prizes exceeding SAR 33.6 million.

As part of ongoing efforts to enhance the ancient falconry heritage in the Kingdom, the Saudi Falcons Club is partnering with the Royal Commission for AlUla to organize the first edition of the AlUla Falconry Cup 2023.

The competition will be held in AlUla from December 28 to January 5, with prizes worth up to SAR60 million in the Al-Milwah and Al-Mazayen competitions. These represent the largest financial prizes ever in the history of falconry competitions in the world.


Australia Swelters through Heat Wave as Firefighters Battle Bushfires

Cattle take refuge from the summer sun under trees at a farm near Adelong in Australia December 4, 2023. (Reuters)
Cattle take refuge from the summer sun under trees at a farm near Adelong in Australia December 4, 2023. (Reuters)
TT

Australia Swelters through Heat Wave as Firefighters Battle Bushfires

Cattle take refuge from the summer sun under trees at a farm near Adelong in Australia December 4, 2023. (Reuters)
Cattle take refuge from the summer sun under trees at a farm near Adelong in Australia December 4, 2023. (Reuters)

Large parts of Australia on Saturday sweltered under heat wave conditions that prompted the nation's weather forecaster to issue bush fire warnings in several states.

In New South Wales, Australia's most populous state, more than 50 fires were burning on Saturday and a total fire ban was in place for many areas, including Sydney, the state's rural fire service said.

The agency said on social media platform X that more than 700 firefighters and incident management personnel were working statewide to fight blazes amid "widespread high and extreme fire danger".

Heat wave alerts and fire warnings were also in place for parts of Western Australia and the Northern Territory, while in South Australia heat wave conditions were forecast but no fire warning was issued, according to the Bureau of Meteorology.

The hot weather lifts the risk of bush fires in an already high-risk fire season amid an El Nino weather event, which is typically associated with extreme events such as wildfires, cyclones and droughts.

In the town of Fitzroy Crossing, in remote Western Australia, a maximum temperature of 46 degrees Celsius (114.8 degrees Fahrenheit) was forecast on Saturday, more than five degrees above the average December maximum, according to forecaster data. It was 38.8C (101.8 F) there at 11 a.m. local time.

Authorities have warned of a high-risk bush fire season this Australian summer after a quiet two seasons compared with the 2019-2020 "Black Summer" fires that destroyed an area the size of Türkiye and killed 33 people.

Meanwhile in Queensland, ex-Tropical Cyclone Jasper, which tore through the state's northeast this week, was forecast to bring more heavy rain and possible flooding in areas near the tourist town of Cairns.

"More wet weather is on the cards," Bureau of Meteorology spokesperson Angus Hines said in an update.


Women and Children First? Experts Say That in Most Crises, It’s More like Everyone for Themselves

 A Palestinian child looks on at the site of an Israeli strike on a house, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas, in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, December 16, 2023. (Reuters)
A Palestinian child looks on at the site of an Israeli strike on a house, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas, in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, December 16, 2023. (Reuters)
TT

Women and Children First? Experts Say That in Most Crises, It’s More like Everyone for Themselves

 A Palestinian child looks on at the site of an Israeli strike on a house, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas, in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, December 16, 2023. (Reuters)
A Palestinian child looks on at the site of an Israeli strike on a house, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas, in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, December 16, 2023. (Reuters)

So much for women and children first.

The phrase and its grave implications about who to save first in a catastrophe are rooted in the shipwrecks of centuries past and popularized by Hollywood's treatment of the Titanic disaster. It is getting another airing at a time when, in many societies, women are expected to do most everything men do. Experts say the unwritten law of the sea is a Hollywood-fed myth and a relic of Victorian-era chivalry.

At the center of this round of questions is the prisoners-for-hostages deal between Israel and Hamas in November that prioritized releasing women and children after negotiators agreed that mothers and their children should not be separated. Israelis are overwhelmingly supportive of this approach. But it leaves behind elderly and injured men, a result that has angered some families.

"To say ‘women and children’ in the 21st century — as if families can be whole without the fathers, as if children that have come back with their fathers still there can in any way start recovering from the trauma — is unthinkable," Sharone Lifshitz, whose mother was freed in October and whose 83-year-old father, Oded, remains in captivity, told The Associated Press.

Of about 240 people who were kidnapped during Hamas' Oct. 7 rampage, 86 Israelis were released. Seventeen Thai men also were let go. That left 119 men — many of them injured or elderly — and 17 women and children as hostages in Gaza.

In a private meeting on Dec. 5, Israeli media reported, the families of the remaining captives ripped Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for agreeing to prioritize women and children — then resuming Israel’s bombardment of Gaza with no known plans to negotiate the release of anyone else.

"You think the men are strong? It’s too hard for them. Bring them all home," Sharon Cunio, whose husband, David, and other family members are still hostages, told Netanyahu and Israel’s war cabinet, according to local media.

WHAT'S BEHIND THE NOTION? "Children first" seems to be a widely agreed-upon crisis action plan, whether it's a rescue from a natural disaster or a hostage-taking. And women and children generally pay an outsized price in crises: The death toll from Israel's bombardment of Gaza tops 18,700 — around two-thirds of them women and children.

But other standards, such as women before men, can lead to fraught judgments about whose lives are most valuable — and reflect the human impulse to sort each other.

Experts say the choice nowadays often is to save the most vulnerable first, which would include children but also older people and those who are sick and the injured, no matter their gender. When everyone can’t be rescued at once, the critical factors seem to be the exercise of leadership and all players making a choice — typically between themselves and others.

Other dynamics weigh heavily, such as how much time people have before a ship sinks as well as the societal and cultural norms of the people involved.

"What is considered ‘valuable’ is determined by the actors controlling the situation," says Edward Galea, a professor at the University of Greenwich who specializes in evacuation and human behavior. In a fire or other disaster, it's those directly involved — say, a ship captain or passengers. In a hostage situation, he says, "it's external actors" — in the case of the Gaza war, it's intense politics and a watching world.

"For example, it could be considered valuable to be seen to attempt to release the most vulnerable first or to release women and children first or to be gender and age neutral," Galea said in an email. There's no law or regulation that says women and children must be saved first; rather, he's said, it's a tradition ingrained by Hollywood.

In real time, human behavior in catastrophes often plays out more like every person for themselves, according to experts who have studied the dynamics. There's often no time to consider who belongs to which group, or to fight over terms as in a wartime hostage release. Leadership is key; someone has to go first.

In Italy in 2012, that someone was Francesco Schettino, the captain of the luxury liner Costa Concordia who slammed it into a reef, capsizing off the Tuscan island of Giglio. Thirty-two people died. Schettino is serving a 16-year prison sentence for manslaughter, causing a shipwreck and abandoning a ship before all the passengers and crew had evacuated.

On the Israel-Hamas prisoners-for-hostages deal, the negotiators agreed that mothers and children should not be separated. Hamas, which broke hostage-taking norms by abducting women and children, was more open to their release because they were getting in the way. Not all women were released, however: Some are in the army, and some have died.

After Israel resumed its bombing of Gaza on Dec. 1, Netanyahu reportedly told the families of the male hostages that Hamas was now making demands that even they, the relatives of those still missing, would not have accepted in exchange for their loved ones.

A LONG HISTORY OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN FIRST The women-and-children ethos is widely attributed to the 1852 sinking of the HMS Birkenhead a few miles off the coast of South Africa. In the wee hours of Feb. 25, with about 638 people aboard, the steam paddler hit a rock off Danger Point. Water flooded the forward hull and the equipment used to lower most of the lifeboats malfunctioned, according to accounts at the time.

British Lt. Col. Alexander Seton, 38, is widely credited with understanding as the ship sank that fleeing men would swamp the few functioning lifeboats, which were filled with women and children.

He gave the order to his crew: "I implore you not to do this thing and I ask you all to stand fast." They did, according to multiple survivor accounts. Britain's National Army Museum says the 193 survivors included all 26 women and children aboard.

Thus, was born what became known as "the Birkenhead drill," whereby women and children were saved first in shipwrecks. "To stand an’ be still to the Birken’ead drill is a damn tough bullet to chew," Rudyard Kipling wrote in 1896.

The drill would become most closely associated with the sinking of the RMS Titanic on April 15, 1912, killing at least 1,500 of the more than 2,200 people aboard. Accounts differ, but testimony from the inquiries afterward indicates that someone or someones — from Capt. Edward Smith to various passengers — prioritized putting women and children into the lifeboats, of which there were not enough to evacuate everyone aboard.

In the end, 70% of the women and children were saved compared to only 20% of the men, according to a 2012 study by two economists at Uppsala University in Sweden. The 1997 movie "Titanic" immortalized the order when actor Leonardo DiCaprio says the words "women and children first" during a key scene.

That's not how evacuations and rescues tend to play out in real life, according to one of the authors of the 2012 study, which looked at 18 maritime disasters over three centuries. The Titanic was the exception, according to Mikael Elinder, because leadership had an effect on the behavior of the crew.

"We don't see this in most shipwrecks, just chaos," Elinder said. "When there is a threat to loss of life, one tries to save oneself."

In most shipwrecks, the study found, women have a survival disadvantage compared with men. Captains and crew survive at a significantly higher rate than passengers. And it turned out that some survivors later spoke of men trying to save themselves.

And there were other distinctions made, according to Lucy Delap of Cambridge University, a historian of feminism in the United States and Britain.

"It turned out that not all women were equally deserving of protection at sea," she wrote in 2012. "Lower-class women — wives of sailors or soldiers, or poor emigrant women — were frequently excluded from the rule, and women of color were equally marginalized."


IUCN Honors King Salman bin Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Development Authority

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) honored King Salman bin Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Development Authority for its commitment to global standards for joining the Green List. (SPA)
The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) honored King Salman bin Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Development Authority for its commitment to global standards for joining the Green List. (SPA)
TT

IUCN Honors King Salman bin Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Development Authority

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) honored King Salman bin Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Development Authority for its commitment to global standards for joining the Green List. (SPA)
The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) honored King Salman bin Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Development Authority for its commitment to global standards for joining the Green List. (SPA)

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) honored the King Salman bin Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Development Authority for its commitment to global standards for joining the Green List, and for its efforts to enhance the sustainability of ecosystems and biodiversity, SPA said on Saturday.
This program was established to enhance protected areas and highlight nature conservation efforts in accordance with international best practices.
The certificate of honor was received by Abdullah bin Ahmed Al-Amer, the CEO of King Salman bin Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Development Authority, from Dr Grethel Aguilar, the IUCN Director General.
The event was held on the sidelines of the Climate Summit (COP28) held in Dubai.