Tuesday, April 07, 2026

Amanah likely to go on the defensive in GE16, says analyst


FMT:

Amanah likely to go on the defensive in GE16, says analyst


2 hours ago
Elill Easwaran

Awang Azman Pawi says the party faces structural disadvantages against PAS and must sharpen its progressive Islamic identity to retain Malay support


Formed in 2015 by dissidents of PAS, Amanah positions itself as a moderate Islamic party within Pakatan Harapan. (Facebook pic)


PETALING JAYA: Amanah is expected to adopt a defensive stance at the next general election with a focus on retaining its existing seats rather than seeking expansion, says a political analyst.

Awang Azman Pawi of Universiti Malaya said any gains to be made by Amanah would be likely to depend on shifts among moderate Malay voters or weaknesses among opponents, particularly on issues of the economy and cost of living.

Amanah remains highly vulnerable in Malay-majority constituencies, he said, while PAS holds a structural advantage.


“It has strong grassroots machinery, a more ‘authentic’ religious narrative among traditional voters, and disciplined organisation. Amanah is often perceived as a ‘softer’ alternative with weaker emotional mobilisation,” he said.

Formed in 2015 by PAS dissidents, Amanah positions itself as a moderate Islamic party within Pakatan Harapan (PH).


Despite only having eight seats in the Dewan Rakyat, the party has two Cabinet ministers and two deputy ministers.

Its middle-of-the-road approach on Islamic and sensitive Malay issues has so far failed to attract the Malay-Muslim voters, whose support has shifted mainly to PAS and Bersatu.

Awang Azman said Amanah must sharpen its identity as a progressive Islamic party distinct from PAS, rather than just another PH component party.

“The key issue is the clarity of Amanah’s political narrative,” he said, adding that calls for leadership change should be approached cautiously as the party’s challenges go beyond individual personalities.


Mat Sabu and future leaders

He noted that party president Mohamad Sabu has kept Amanah relevant within the government through his credibility and cross-party networks, but said the party still lacked clear ideological differentiation among Malay voters.

In a similar vein, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia’s Mazlan Ali said Mohamad’s leadership remains necessary for now.

“If we look at his track record in PAS, he was a very strong and influential leader who could attract crowds and support,” he said.

However, Mazlan said that Amanah should begin preparing for a leadership transition.

“He is the backbone of the party, but I believe Amanah has a leadership transition plan where, at the right time, Mohamad will hand over leadership to a new generation to continue the party’s momentum in Malaysian politics,” he said.


***


The Amanah bloke, and a PAS man before that, that I like has been former Sepang MP Hanipa Maidin. Sadly he was dropped from the last election lineup because of serious health reasons - In 2016, Hanipa underwent surgery for brain haemorrhage, and then in 2018, he was found to suffer from vasovagal syncope, which causes one to faint due to certain triggers.

Sad to lose such a talent, an intellectual - a potential PM material.



Trump renews criticism of Japan, S. Korea over Iran war support


FMT:

Trump renews criticism of Japan, S. Korea over Iran war support


In contrast, the US leader praises Gulf nations including Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, for being 'good' partners


President Donald Trump takes questions from reporters during a media briefing on Iran at the White House. (EPA Images pic)


WASHINGTON: US president Donald Trump on Monday renewed his criticism of Japan, South Korea, Australia and the Nato alliance for not providing naval assistance to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz amid the US-Israeli war against Iran.

Kyodo news reported that during a press conference at the White House, Trump complained that Japan and South Korea “didn’t help us” despite the presence of tens of thousands of US troops in the two countries to protect them from North Korea, which he noted has “a lot of nuclear weapons.”

Trump’s suggestion that US military support for the two key US allies in Asia, as well as Australia, should be reciprocated came after he again decried the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation as a “paper tiger.”


In contrast, Trump praised some countries in the Middle East, including Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, for being “good” partners with the United States since it and Israel launched the war on Feb 28.

While reiterating his threat to Iran, Trump asserted that the United States has already won the war militarily. Unless Tehran makes a deal with Washington, he said, Iran’s critical infrastructure could be destroyed within a span of four hours starting in just over a day’s time.


Trump has set Tuesday at 8pm in Washington as the deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway vital for global oil supplies. Tehran has largely blocked the strait since the war began, upending energy markets.

The reopening of the shipping lane, Trump said, is a “very big priority.”

“We have to have a deal that’s acceptable to me, and part of that deal is going to be we want free traffic of oil and everything,” he said.

Otherwise, he said, “We have a plan, because of the power of our military, where every bridge in Iran will be decimated by 12 o’clock tomorrow night, where every power plant in Iran will be out of business, burning, exploding, and never to be used again.”

Speaking alongside Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth, the president said the United States would rather not demolish Iran’s important infrastructure.

“It will take them 100 years to rebuild right now. If we left today, it would take them 20 years to rebuild their country, and it would never be as good as it was,” he added. “The only way they’re going to be able to rebuild their country is to utilise the genius of the United States of America.”

Earlier in the day, Iran’s official IRNA news agency said the country wants a permanent end to the war, instead of a ceasefire.

Rejecting Washington’s 15-point cease-fire proposal, which the news agency said was delivered through Pakistan, Iran presented its own 10-point plan, including a framework to stop regional hostilities and ensure safe passage through the strategic waterway.

In comments at a separate event before the press conference, Trump called the Iranian counterproposal a “significant step” but not yet sufficient.


Israeli air strike kills at least 10 Palestinians near Gaza school



Israeli air strike kills at least 10 Palestinians near Gaza school

Drones are reported to have fired missiles into an area near Maghazi refugee camp.

An Israeli air strike has killed at least 10 ⁠people and wounded several ⁠others near a school housing displaced Palestinians in central Gaza, according to health officials.

The strikes on Monday came as Palestinians had clashed with members of ⁠an Israeli-backed militia that had reportedly attacked the school in an attempt to abduct some people, according to medics and residents.

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“At least 10 people were killed and dozens injured, including six in critical condition, by Israeli shelling and clashes east of Maghazi refugee camp,” the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital said in a statement.

In the midst of the clashes, Israeli ⁠drones fired two missiles, killing at least 10 people and wounding several others, the witnesses added.

“The residents tried to defend their homes, but the occupation forces targeted them directly,” Ahmed al-Maghazi told the Reuters news agency.

The leader of the Israeli-backed militia said in a video published later that they killed some five Hamas members.

Al Jazeera cannot independently verify this claim. There was no immediate comment from Hamas.

Family members arrive at the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah, where victims have been brought following an Israeli strike on the Al-Maghazi refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on April 6, 2026.
Family members arrive at the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir el-Balah, where victims have been brought following an Israeli strike on the Maghazi refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip [AFP]

‘Safe zone’

During Israel’s two-year genocidal war on Gaza, the Maghazi refugee camp was designated by the Israeli military as a so-called safe zone.

It was previously one of the Palestinian enclave’s smallest refugee camps, according to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinians in the Near East (UNRWA), with about 30,000 residents. In the first months of war, the population more than tripled.

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Despite its designation as a “safe zone”, the Israeli military targeted it in numerous deadly strikes. One attack in December 2023 killed more than 100 people, mostly displaced women and children.

Since a fragile “ceasefire” was reached in October, Israel has continued to attack sites across the Gaza Strip, including the Maghazi camp.


***


Murderous genocidal shailoks


Trump says US could charge for Strait of Hormuz passage amid Iran war




Trump says US could charge for Strait of Hormuz passage amid Iran war

US president says Washington, as the ‘winner’ of the war, has a ‘concept’ for charging a toll in strategic waterway


Cargo ships sail in the Gulf, near the Strait of Hormuz, as seen from northern Ras al-Khaimah, near the border with Oman’s Musandam governorate, in March [File: Reuters]



By Al Jazeera Staff
Published On 6 Apr 2026


President Donald Trump has suggested the United States may be looking to charge a toll in the Strait of Hormuz after the war, a move that would likely require direct US military control over the strategic waterway.

Asked on Monday whether he would accept a deal that would allow Iran to take fees from ships to traverse the strait, the US president said: “What about us charging tolls? I’d rather do that than let them have them. Why shouldn’t we? We’re the winner. We won.”


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Trump reiterated that Iran has been militarily defeated, a claim that he has been making since the early days of the war, despite Iran’s sustained drone and missile attacks across the region and its continuing blockade of Hormuz.

“The only thing they have is the psychology of, ‘Oh, we’re going to drop a couple of mines in the water.’ All right, no, I mean, we have a concept where we’ll charge tolls,” Trump told reporters.

Hormuz, which connects the Gulf to the Indian Ocean, lies mostly within Omani and Iranian territorial waters. About 20 percent of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) passed through the strait before the war.



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Trump’s latest comments came as he issued what he called a “final” ultimatum to Tehran to reopen the strait and agree to Washington’s terms or face attacks against Iran’s civilian infrastructure, including bridges and power plants.

The US president told reporters on Monday that any deal with Iran must include reopening the Strait of Hormuz.

“We have to have a deal that’s acceptable to me, and part of that deal is going to be, we want free traffic of oil,” he said.

Reports have suggested that Iran is already charging a toll for some of the few ships it is allowing to pass through the strait.

“The Strait of Hormuz situation won’t return to its pre-war status,” Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf wrote on X last month.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has also called for “new arrangements” to manage the waterway after the war, ensuring safe passage for ships and protecting Iran’s interests.

“I believe that after the war, the first step should be drafting a new protocol for the Strait of Hormuz,” he told Al Jazeera in March. “Naturally, this should be done between the countries that lie on both sides of the strait.”

The White House said last week that Trump is considering asking Arab countries to pay for Washington’s expenses in its war on Iran.


***


S-Whole is just your base kampong thug looking for extortion opportunities.




Monday, April 06, 2026

Trump the Rambo

 

From the FB page of:

😂😂😂







MACC to apply for red notice against Daim’s 2 sons over no-show


FMT:

MACC to apply for red notice against Daim’s 2 sons over no-show


The anti-graft agency will also work with the immigration department to restrict Amir Zainuddin and Amin Zainuddin’s movements


The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission says it will not tolerate any failure to comply with its instructions.


PETALING JAYA: The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission will apply to Interpol for a red notice against former finance minister Daim Zainuddin’s two sons after they failed to turn up at the anti-graft agency’s headquarters to provide their statements.

MACC said it viewed the no-show by Amir Zainuddin and Amin Zainuddin “seriously”, especially since their lawyers had agreed and promised that their clients would turn up.

“However, they once again failed to do so without any reasonable excuse,” MACC said in a statement.


MACC also said it will work with the immigration department to restrict and monitor their movements.

Amir and Amin will also be dragged to court over their no-show, MACC said.


“MACC stresses that any failure to comply with the lawful instructions of this agency will not be tolerated, and enforcement action will be carried out without exception.”

MORE TO COME

Penang moves to evict ineligible PPR tenants as waiting list tops 1,000





Penang moves to evict ineligible PPR tenants as waiting list tops 1,000



Penang housing exco Datuk Seri S. Sundarajoo said about 30 per cent of occupants in PPR and RSKN units are no longer eligible, as the state begins issuing notices to vacate. — Picture by Opalyn Mok

Monday, 06 Apr 2026 4:17 PM MYT


GEORGE TOWN, April 6 — The Penang state government will begin a compliance review process requiring ineligible occupants to vacate Program Perumahan Rakyat (PPR) units, to ensure the housing benefits only those who qualify.

State Housing and Environment Committee chairman Datuk Seri S. Sundarajoo said about 30 per cent of existing occupants in Penang’s PPR and State Rental Housing (RSKN) units are no longer eligible to continue living there.


He said tenants who have overstayed or exceeded income eligibility under PPR and RSKN guidelines will need to vacate the units to make way for others.

“We have issued 18 notices to those who have stayed for a long time and those who have lost eligibility due to increased household income in our pilot project in Taman Manggis,” he said at a press conference today.


He said PPR and RSKN units are meant to be temporary rental housing and not permanent residences, with a standard tenancy period of three years, extendable based on need.


However, Sundarajoo noted that some tenants have remained in PPR units for up to 20 years.

“If someone entered with a household income of RM1,500 twenty years ago and claims it is still the same today, it is difficult to accept. It is unrealistic,” he said.

Penang currently has four PPR schemes — Taman Manggis, Taman Bagan Jaya, Mak Mandin and Permatang Tok Suboh — comprising 999 units, of which 934 are occupied.

He said the waiting list for PPR units now totals more than 1,000 applicants.

“There are many who are waiting, some in desperate situations, unable to afford rental and even forced to sleep in public spaces,” he said.

He said existing tenants whose household income has increased to more than RM1,500 must be responsible and vacate the units to give way to those who really need them.

Sundarajoo said there are also significant rental arrears exceeding RM2 million accumulated over several years.

PPR arrears total RM254,633 involving 268 units, while RSKN arrears total RM1.77 million involving 907 units.

“Even with rents as low as RM100 to RM124 per month, there are tenants who have not paid for years,” Sundarajoo said.

He clarified that the notices issued to tenants give them three months to vacate.

He said extensions may be considered on a case-by-case basis, particularly for vulnerable groups such as the elderly, disabled or those without income.

“We are still a caring government. If there are genuine hardships, we will consider and assist accordingly,” he said.

However, he drew a clear line against those who have the means but continue to occupy PPR units.

“We have seen cases where occupants own cars, even luxury vehicles, yet continue paying minimal rent in PPR units,” he added.

Sundarajoo said the state also offers rent-to-own schemes, with monthly payments as low as RM250, for those whose income exceeds the RM1,500 threshold.

“This scheme allows tenants to eventually own their homes within 15 years,” he said.

He said the state currently has affordable housing units priced between RM42,000 and RM300,000, according to buyers’ affordability.

“Our target is for everyone to own their own home,” he said.

Kremlin: The whole Middle East is ‘on fire’





Kremlin: The whole Middle East is ‘on fire’




US President Donald Trump, in an expletive-laden Easter Sunday social media post, threatened to target Iran’s power plants and bridges tomorrow if the Strait of Hormuz is ⁠not reopened. — US Air Force via AFP pic

Monday, 06 Apr 2026 6:26 PM MYT


MOSCOW, April 6 — The Kremlin today said that the Iran war was escalating in both geography and economic impact, and that the whole Middle East region was “on fire” due to the US and Israeli attacks on the Islamic Republic.

US President Donald Trump, in an expletive-laden Easter Sunday social media post, threatened to target Iran’s power plants and bridges tomorrow if the Strait of Hormuz is ⁠not reopened.


When asked by Reuters ⁠about Trump’s remarks, ⁠Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told ⁠reporters that ⁠Russia had seen them but that the Kremlin preferred not to comment directly.

“We ⁠note that the level of tension in the region is growing and continues to grow,” Peskov said. “In fact, the entire region is on fire. These ⁠are all very dangerous and negative consequences of the aggression that was unleashed against ⁠Iran.”


“The geography of this conflict has expanded, ⁠and ⁠now we are all aware of the consequences that we have, including very, very negative consequences for the global economy.” — Reuters

Trump declares victory after rescue but threats to US operation in Iran still loom




Trump declares victory after rescue but threats to US operation in Iran still loom


12 hours ago
Bernd Debusmann Jr
White House reporter


Getty Images


US President Donald Trump was swift to declare victory after the second crew member of a F-15 fighter jet downed over Iran was recovered, claiming that the dramatic and successful rescue in Iranian territory "proves, once again, that we have achieved overwhelming air dominance and superiority".

Observers, however, paint a more complicated picture of what this means for the US in Iran.

While the mission was a success, the events of the last few days - in which two aircraft were downed and at least one helicopter was hit by gunfire - highlight that threats to US aircraft and personnel remain even after weeks of heavy US and Israeli strikes against Iran's military infrastructure and boasts from the president that Tehran had "no anti-aircraft equipment" left.


Trump issues expletive-laden threat to Iran over Hormuz Strait blockage



Several Washington sources who spoke to the BBC speculated that the loss of aircraft and the complexity of the operation to recover the pilots could potentially dissuade Trump from any ground operation to take control of Iran's key oil export terminal at Kharg Island and other sites in the Gulf, or to seize highly enriched uranium buried deep underground in Iran.

These operations – scoped by military planners and presented to the president as options – are deeply complex and risk exposing US forces to lingering Iranian capabilities, including difficult-to-find man portable air defence systems, known as Manpads, which are shoulder-launched missiles most effective against low-flying aircraft.





On the other hand, the fact that US troops were able to enter a contested environment, and set up a forward airfield and refuelling point under the nose of the Iranians - then hold it for hours while two stuck aircraft were destroyed and replacements sent - might embolden him.

It could convince the administration that an airborne or amphibious operation against targets in Iran stands a good chance of success.

That message is one that would be heard, loud and clear, by US service members flying over Iranian skies as the conflict goes on, and by those preparing for a potential deployment.

Trump has also has sent mixed messages about the path forward, telling reporters in a series of phone calls on Sunday that he believes a "deal" with Iran could be just around the corner.

If that fails, he has said repeatedly on Truth Social, the clock is ticking on a self-imposed deadline to begin striking Iranian power plants and bridges.

If the Strait of Hormuz was not opened, he posted in an expletive-laden message on Sunday to the Iranian regime, they would be "living in Hell". In a brief phone interview with Fox, Trump also suggested he might move to "take" Iran's oil, without providing further details.


Getty Images
Iranian authorities have claimed a US military helicopter crashed during a mission to rescue the missing crew member


An expanded campaign against Iranian infrastructure and energy targets would represent an escalation, with human rights groups warning of the impact on civilians and potential war crimes.

The president's critics are likely to take it as a sign of Trump's frustration that the US has been unable to secure freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz, a vital global corridor for oil and other commodities.

So far, the president's supporters have rallied behind the administration and its effort to rescue the crew members.

For Trump, the rescue represents a "win" both in the eyes of the public and those inside the US military.

The rescue served to reinforce the administration's willingness to put other Americans in harm's way in an effort to abide by the ethos in the Soldier's Creed that no US service member would be abandoned.

But some - even fervent Maga supporters - have already grown uncomfortable with the prospect of an expensive, messy war with an unclear endgame which could lead to US casualties.

However, the recovery of the two pilots robbed Iran of what would have amounted to a massive propaganda victory.

The sight of US military personnel in Iranian captivity would have very likely become the primary war-related story in the US and hijacked Trump's narrative of a quick, clean victory.

Trump's comments over the weekend stand in contrast to several he made last week, including a televised address on 1 April, in which he suggested that the US had already created the conditions necessary for other countries to engage in the Strait. "Take it, protect it, use it for yourselves," he told allies.

Trump had also recently suggested that he was willing to "leave" Iran even if a deal eluded him.

But he now appears to have shifted course in the hopes that doubling down on the threat of devastating attacks on the country's core infrastructure can prompt Tehran's leadership to come to the table.


***


A SAR ops would NOT have involved two special mission C-130s and approx 100 personnel (or more). SAR ops, even combat SAR ops usually require a long range chopper (or even 2, which is unusual) with approx 2 to 3 fighters as cover for the choppers, and involve pinpointing the pilot's location followed by a quick extraction and cabut for home. While landing a C130 at a forward rough airstrip is possible, it would not usually be required for combat SAR, particularly of ONLY one pilot, and in fact would be unduly cumbersome and operationally bothersome.

That's why the wanks frigged up so many aircraft, unbelievably for the supposed rescue of 1 pilot.

I am more inclined to believe the C130s and 100 men (or more) were there to seize the enriched uranium at Isfahan, where the wreckage of the American C130 aircraft are at.


Pakistan offers ‘two-phased’ truce deal to end US-Israel war on Iran



Pakistan offers ‘two-phased’ truce deal to end US-Israel war on Iran

Iran, while still reviewing the proposal, says it won’t reopen Hormuz as part of a temporary ceasefire.

A plume of smoke rises above buildings.

Pakistan has proposed a two-stage plan to end the US-Israel war on Iran and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, with both sides now mulling the framework, a source has told the Reuters news agency.

Esmaeil Baghaei, spokesman for Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, on Monday acknowledged diplomatic efforts by Pakistan, which has shared a plan with Iran and the United States to end hostilities, according to Reuters.

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Baghaei added that Iran is focused o  its security amid the latest attacks from the US and Israel.

A top university in Tehran and the South Pars Petrochemical Plant in Asaluyeh were bombed on Monday, killing at least 34 people in Iran.

Axios first reported on Sunday that the US, Iran and regional mediators were discussing a potential 45-day ceasefire as part of a “two-phased deal” that could lead to a permanent end to the war, citing US, Israeli and regional sources.

The source told Reuters that Pakistan’s army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir, has been in contact “all night long” with US Vice President JD Vance, Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi.

“All elements need to be agreed today,” the source said, adding the initial understanding would be structured as a memorandum of understanding finalised electronically through Pakistan, the sole communication channel in the talks.

Under the proposal, a ceasefire would take effect immediately, reopening the Strait of Hormuz, with 15 to 20 days given to finalise a broader settlement.

The deal, tentatively dubbed the “Islamabad Accord”, would include a regional framework for the strait, with final in-person talks in the capital of Pakistan.

The final agreement is expected to include Iranian commitments not to pursue nuclear weapons in exchange for sanctions relief and the release of frozen assets, the source said.

‘No reopening of Hormuz’

Tehran has responded by stating that it will not reopen the strait as part of a temporary ceasefire, a senior Iranian official told Reuters on Monday, adding that it will not accept deadlines as it reviews the proposal. Washington also lacks the readiness for a permanent ceasefire, the official said.

The US has not yet responded to Pakistan’s plan.

“Pakistan officials tell me that Islamabad is involved in ‘frantic diplomacy’, as they put it,” said Al Jazeera’s Osama Bin Javaid.

“The problem they’re facing, as one official put it, is essentially that it’s a schoolboy brawl that they are dealing with. It is egos that they have to manage, and it is also a sea of distrust over which they have to build bridges.”

One source told Javaid that Pakistan is speaking to Iran’s clergy, diplomats, and military commanders, but the level of distrust is still high.

“You heard the Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman mention that they have come under attack multiple times by the US and Israel. And then, if there is some sort of rapprochement, if there is some sort of agreement, what are the guarantees that their leaders are not going to be targeted?” said Javaid.

US’s 15-point plan ‘illogical’, says Tehran

Baghaei, the Foreign Ministry spokesman, said on Monday that Tehran would never accept a 15-point plan put forward by the US last month. He stated that Tehran had finalised its demands amid recent proposals to end the war, but would reveal them only when appropriate.

He stressed that Iran would not bow to pressure, the IRNA news agency reported.

“A few days ago, they put forward proposals through intermediaries, and the 15-point US plan was reflected through Pakistan and some other friendly countries,” Baghaei said. “Such proposals are both extremely ambitious, unusual, and illogical.”

Baghaei underlined that Iran has its own framework.

“Based on our own interests, based on our own considerations, we codified the set of demands that we had and have,” he said.

The Foreign Ministry spokesman also rejected the idea that engaging with mediators signals weakness.

The latest diplomatic push by Pakistan comes amid escalating hostilities that have raised concerns over disruption to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical artery for global fuel supplies. More than 20 percent of the world’s oil and gas passes through the waterway, which remains under a de facto Iranian blockade.

Trump, in an expletive-laden post on Sunday, threatened to rain “hell” on Tehran if it did not make a deal by the end of Tuesday that would reopen the strait.

More than 2,000 people have been killed in Iran since the war began on February 28, according to Iranian authorities.

Israel has also invaded southern Lebanon and struck Beirut, where Lebanese authorities say 1,461 people, including at least 124 children, have been killed. More than 1.2 million Lebanese have been displaced.