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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Indonesia flash flood death toll rises Indonesiaʼs disaster agency on Monday raised the death toll from flash floods in the countryʼs easternmost province, saying at least 77 people had died. Scores were injured and more than three dozen left missing after torrential downpours sent flash floods and mudslides through mountainside villages in Papua, the agency said. National Disaster Mitigation Agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said rescue efforts had been hampered by the destruction of roads and bridges in several areas of Jayapura district after days of fierce rain. The worst-hit area was Sentani subdistrict, where rescuers evacuated more than 4,000 people after a river burst its banks early on Sunday morning, according to an official from the local disaster agency. In a stroke of good fortune, soldiers managed to save a 5-month-old baby from rubble inside a house and reunite him with his father. The mother and siblings were killed in the disaster, a military spokesman said.

Cyclone Idai: Death toll rises in Zimbabwe and Mozambique More than 100 people have died in Mozambique and Zimbabwe in the wake oftropical cyclone Idai. Authorities in both countries have warned that the death toll could climb, as many more remain missing. According to local media, some 84 people died in Mozambique, while officials said at least 70 were killed in Zimbabwe, after the cyclone tore across the region on Friday and Saturday. Idai first made landfall on Mozambiqueʼs central coast on Thursday night before hitting Zimbabwe. Mozambiqueʼs environment minister, Celso Correia, told news agency AFP the deaths occurred in the hard-hit coastal community of Beira and nearby inland Dondo district. "We will certainly end with a higher toll," he warned. "I think this is the biggest natural disaster Mozambique has ever faced.

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Turkeyʼs Recep Tayyip Erdogan uses New Zealand attack video at campaign rally New Zealandʼs foreign minister has warned such actions could cause real damage

Turkeyʼs president is showing livestreamed footage of the mass shooting in Christchurch to his supporters at campaign rallies. Foreign Minister Winston Peters told a press conference on Monday that the Turkish presidentʼs decision to screen footage from the Christchurch shooting could endanger New Zealanders. Fifty people werekilled in attacks on two mosquesin the southern city on Friday. The alleged gunman, Australian Brenton Tarrant,broadcast the carnage live on Facebook. Social media companies have been scrambling ever since to remove the viral video from their platforms. Now the footage has made an appearance at several political rallies in Turkey. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan used snippets from the recording at televised campaign events over the weekend in an apparent attempt to boost support ahead of upcoming polls. He also projected excerpts purported to be from the gunmanʼs manifesto onto a giant screen and told the crowd the suspect had made threats against Turkish Muslims. When asked about Erdoganʼs use of the footage, Peters

said it was "totally unfair." "Anything of that nature that misrepresents this country, given that this was a nonNew Zealand citizen, imperils the future and safety of the New Zealand people and our people abroad," he said. The minister added that he had made it clear to Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu and deputy Vice President Fuat Oktay — who are both visiting New Zealand — that the countryʼs image should not be distorted. "We are for a free and open society ... we did not start or bring about this disaster, and they clearly understood that," he said. New Zealand authorities have ordered news outlets and social media usersnot to share the graphic content. Facebook said it had removed 1.5 million videos in the first 24 hours after the attack, but critics accused the social media giant of being too slow to act. A New Zealand teenager charged with distributing the footage appeared in court on Monday.

Three dead, five injured in Utrecht shooting A gunman opened fire on a tram in the central Dutch city of Utrecht on Monday, killing at least three people and wounding five, said city Mayor Jan van Zanen. "At this stage, we can confirm three deaths and nine wounded, three of them seriously," van Zanen said in a video message on Twitter. He added that a "terror motive" was a plausible reason for the attack. The number of injured was later readjusted to five. Police said they had launched a manhunt for the attacker and were investigating the shooting as a possible terrorist incident. "Multiple people have been injured," Utrecht police said on Twitter. "It is a shooting incident in a tram. Several trauma helicopters have been deployed to provide help." The head of the Dutch national counterterrorism service, Pieter-Jaap Aalbersberg told a press conference that "a major police operation" was underway to arrest the gunman. He added that the terrorism threat level had been raised to the maximum of five in the province of Utrecht.

Paris police chief replaced, PM signals tougher rules on yellow vest protests Franceʼs prime minister said on Monday that anti-government ʼyellow vestʼ protesters would be banned from the Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris if authorities deem that violent groups are taking part with a view to causing chaos. Edouard Phillippeʼs announcement followsone of the most violent weekends of protestsin the French capital.

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