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Jewish schools in the United Kingdom have stepped up security over fears of antisemitism that could be directed at children amid Israel’s war with Hamas. 

Police patrols around some schools have increased in and around London and Manchester, the BBC reported. Parents have said they fear for their children’s safety. 

‘History has shown us that Jews in the UK are targeted in response to actions in the Middle East, completely inappropriately so,’ Foreign Secretary James Cleverly told the BBC.

Students at the Jewish Free School in Kenton, north London, were told there would be no after-school detentions and that wearing a blazer with the school’s logo is now optional.

‘The most important thing is to ensure the safe passage of students between home and school and to make sure that this school is set up to care for our children during the school day,’ headteacher David Moody said in an email to parents, according to the news outlet. 

Added a person identified only as Suzi, whose 14-year-old son attends the school: ‘The waves that are rippling through go beyond the school to the community.’

In Manchester, attendance at a Jewish school has dropped. 

‘They have put extra security in place, canceled school trips, and they’re making sure all doors are locked during the day,’ one unidentified parent told the BBC. ‘The most terrifying thing about it is there are people on the streets of Manchester who are actively celebrating the death of Jewish people.’

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said the government was doing everything it could to keep the UK’s Jewish community safe.

Home Secretary Suella Braverman wrote to police chiefs in England and Wales urging them to use the ‘full force of the law’ against shows of support for Hamas or attempts to intimidate the UK’s Jewish community, the BBC said. 

‘Behaviors that are legitimate in some circumstances, for example the waving of a Palestinian flag, may not be legitimate such as when intended to glorify acts of terrorism,’ Braverman wrote. ‘Nor is it acceptable to drive through Jewish neighborhoods, or single out Jewish members of the public, to aggressively chant or wave pro-Palestinian symbols at.’

Like the United States, the UK has seen protests in support of the Palestinian people since Hamas attacked Israel in an unprecedented incursion, killing and kidnapping civilians Saturday morning. In one Israeli community, at least 40 babies were found dead, some decapitated, according to local media. 

More than 700 Israelis, including men, women, children and the elderly, were indiscriminately killed in one day — the largest terror attack in a single day in Israel’s history.

On Monday night, pro-Palestinian supporters gathered outside the boarded-up Israeli embassy in Kensington, chanting ‘Israel is a terrorist state’ and ‘free Palestine’ while letting off flares and fireworks, the Guardian reported. 

In the U.S., Jewish institutions were on high alert and increasing measures. The Jewish Federations of North America, which represents over 350 Jewish institutions in the U.S., said that while there are no known ‘credible threats’ to the U.S. Jewish community, the group recommends that Jewish facilities ‘review and enforce’ security protocols.

‘Hamas has launched an aggressive assault on Israel in the last hours. SCN (Secure Community Network) is coordinating with law enforcement and key partners,’ the Jewish Federation said in a statement to Fox News Digital. ‘At this time, there are no known credible threats to the U.S. Jewish community. SCN recommends Jewish facilities review and enforce security protocols, and maintain coordination with law enforcement.’

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Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., attacked Israel’s response to an unprecedented assault by Hamas in an extensive thread on social media Monday.

Omar, a longtime critic of Israel and advocate for Palestinians, seemed to equate the Israeli victims killed by Hamas terrorists this weekend and Palestinians killed in the ongoing Israeli response.

‘Just as we honor the humanity of the hundreds of innocent Israeli civilians and 9 Americans who were killed this weekend, we must honor the humanity of the innocent Palestinian civilians who have been killed and whose lives are upended,’ she wrote.

Omar went on to highlight the hardships of living in Gaza, accusing Israel of operating an ‘apartheid’ state in an attempt to explain violence by Hamas.

‘Palestinian residents of the West Bank have scarcely better lives than Gazans — with the routine destruction of their ancestral homes, destruction of their crops, and violent attacks by Israeli settlers,’ Omar wrote on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.

‘Palestinians have few recourses for justice and accountability. Attacks by the IDF and settlers against Palestinians are regularly met with impunity. Efforts to seek justice in international courts are stonewalled by the Israeli government, with U.S. support,’ she added. ‘As the world is condemning Hamas’s attacks, we must also oppose an Israeli military response that has already taken the lives of hundreds of Palestinians, including nearly two dozen children.’

Omar’s office did not respond to questions from Fox News Digital asking her to elaborate on the thread.

The congresswoman did not clarify how she believed Israel should have responded to Saturday’s attack, which has since left at least 1,000 Israelis dead and 2,700 more wounded. The Minnesota Democrat’s only suggestion for a ‘solution to this horror’ was ‘a negotiated peace — with Israelis and Palestinians enjoying equal rights and security guarantees.’

Later in the thread, Omar said that Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant had called all Palestinians ‘human animals’ in comments earlier this week, though his full statement made clear that he was referring only to Hamas terrorists.

FAMILIES OF ISRAELIS FEARED KIDNAPPED BY HAMAS TERRORISTS SPEAK OUT 

‘We are imposing a complete siege on Gaza. There will be no electricity, no food, no water, no fuel. Everything will be closed,’ Gallant said. ‘We are fighting human animals and we act accordingly.’

Israeli forces have deployed tens of thousands of troops to the area around Gaza City, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has suggested a ground invasion may be imminent.

Other statements from Omar have sparked controversy in the past.

When she took office in 2019, she soon had to answer for a now-deleted 2012 tweet in which she wrote, ‘Israel has hypnotized the world, may Allah awaken the people and help them see the evil doings of Israel.’ She later expressed regret, saying the ‘unfortunate words were the only words’ she could ‘think about expressing at that moment’ in reference to Israel’s 2012 operation against Hamas in Gaza.

Also in 2019, speaking at a Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) fundraiser, Omar said: ‘CAIR was founded after 9/11 because they recognized that some people did something, and that all of us were starting to lose access to our civil liberties.’ Critics accused her of trying to downplay the actions of terrorists by describing it as ‘some people did something.’ She later clarified, ‘Many Americans found themselves now having their civil rights stripped from them, and so what I was speaking to was the fact that as a Muslim, not only was I suffering as an American who was attacked on that day, but the next day I woke up as my fellow Americans were now treating me as a suspect.’

Also, in January 2023, Omar responded to the outrage over a 2019 tweet in which she described America’s relationship with Israel as ‘all about the Benjamins,’ a tweet for which she later apologized.

‘I certainly did not or was not aware that the word ‘hypnotized’ was a trope. I wasn’t aware of the fact that there are tropes about Jews and money. That has been very enlightening part of this journey,’ she told CNN.

Fox News’ Yael Halon and Houston Keene contributed to this report.

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Since the surprise attack on Israel by Hamas terrorists Saturday, hundreds of civilians, including babies, the elderly, and soldiers have been killed, wounded or captured. Israel retaliated against Hamas by firing missiles into Gaza.

A terror attack by Hamas at a music festival in Israel claimed the lives of at least 260 concert-goers with many others kidnapped and injured. Those abducted — including American citizens — are still being held hostage in Gaza.

According to local Israeli outlet i24News, Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers discovered a brutal scene of 40 dead babies, some decapitated at Kfar Aza, one of the communities Hamas terrorists invaded early Saturday morning.

‘We now know that American citizens are among those being held by Hamas,’ President Biden said in a press conference Tuesday afternoon.

Below are the most recent numbers related to the war. Fox News Digital will continue to inform on fatalities, hostages, death toll and more as they are reported and confirmed by officials.

At least 1,000 Israelis have diedAt least 4,250 Palestinians are woundedAt least 2,700 Israelis are injuredAt least 830 Palestinians have been killedAt least 14 Americans are reported deadAt least 150 soldiers and civilians are being held hostage in GazaAt least 4,500 rockets have been fired by Hamas terroristsAt least 1,500 Hamas terrorists have been found deadAt least 260 died at the Tribe of Nova music festivalAt least 70 terrorists invaded Kfar AzaAt least 200 Israelis were found dead in Kfar AzaAt least 40 babies were murdered by Hamas terrorists in Kfar AzaAt least 30 missing persons have been located and rescued at a kibbutzThe population of Gaza is 2,000,000,000The population of Israel is 9,795,00072 hours of silence from President Joe Biden until he first addressed the Israel-Hamas war on Tuesday, October 104 days of war as of Tuesday, October 10

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Former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., raised eyebrows earlier this week when he did not reject the idea of running for his old job, but sources indicated to Fox News Digital that it’s a long shot at best.

It could result in a prolonged race to succeed him, with at least three GOP lawmakers vowing to vote for McCarthy in Wednesday morning’s closed-door election to select House Republicans’ next speaker candidate.

‘I don’t put a lot of stock in it,’ a McCarthy ally told Fox News Digital. ‘The conference has moved on. Time for a change.’

‘It might hold things up, but the next speaker will either be [Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio] or [Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La.],’ they added.

Rep. Carlos Gimenez, R-Fla., one of those who spoke out in support of McCarthy at a members-only Monday night meeting, told Fox News Digital on Tuesday that he would vote for the ex-speaker again — and that several others felt the same.

‘Unless Speaker McCarthy suggests otherwise, I intend on voting for [him] for Speaker of the House,’ Gimenez said. ‘Speaker McCarthy should have never been removed and a growing number of our Republican members agree and will be voting for Speaker McCarthy as well.’

Gimenez said McCarthy was a ‘proven leader,’ especially given the developing crisis in the Middle East as Israel wages war on Hamas after its militants slaughtered hundreds of Israeli civilians.

Another of those McCarthy allies who spoke up for him on Monday night, Rep. John Duarte, R-Calif., echoed those sentiments in a ‘Fox & Friends’ interview earlier that morning.

‘There is no greater friend of Israel than Kevin McCarthy and, in terms of American government this last year, Kevin McCarthy, the speaker of the House, has been the adult in the room,’ Duarte said. ‘We need Kevin McCarthy back in the speakership right now. We need to get that vote done this week.’

But convincing the eight Republicans who voted with Democrats to remove McCarthy last week could prove an impossible task.

Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., one of those eight, told reporters on Monday that he could be open to Scalise or Jordan but definitively ruled out voting for McCarthy.

‘Why would we? We’ll have a speaker by Wednesday and honestly, what is Congress’s role in all this in the Middle East? And you know, we’re going to — [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu has basically told America ‘let us handle it,’ and he’ll handle it,’ Burchett said.

Scalise and Jordan are currently the only two formally declared candidates in the race. In the best case scenario, House Republicans choose a speaker on Wednesday morning and the House holds a floor vote later that day.

But if they fail to choose a candidate, that House-wide vote could be delayed to Friday or even next week.

A senior GOP aide told Fox News Digital that McCarthy’s candidacy likely would not go far but has a good chance of delaying the race.

‘It isn’t viable and could draw out the process,’ the senior GOP aide said. ‘McCarthy can’t get to 217 because the eight who voted against him have moved on, as have others in the conference. Most people are looking forward, not backward.’

Another Republican aide suggested McCarthy’s initial base of support to retake the gavel will likely fade as the vote goes on.

‘The people who are pushing him, I mean, they’re gonna fall eventually in line with whoever has the most votes for speaker,’ the second aide said. ‘You know, at a certain point in time, everyone just wants to get on with the business of governing.’

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Secretary of State Antony Blinken will travel to Israel Wednesday to express solidarity in a show of support for the country as it continues to battle Hamas terrorist fighters. 

Blinken will meet with senior Israeli officials and ‘reiterate his condolences for the victims of the terrorist attacks against Israel and condemn those attacks in the strongest terms,’ a statement from his office said Tuesday. 

‘ The Secretary will also reaffirm the United States’ solidarity with the government and people of Israel,’ the statement said. ‘ He will also discuss measures to bolster Israel’s security and underscore the United States’ unwavering support for Israel’s right to defend itself.’

Blinken wrote on social media that he, ‘engage with our Israeli partners directly about the situation on the ground and to discuss ways we can continue to support them in the fight against these terrorist attacks.’

‘Our support for Israel remains unwavering,’ he said. 

Earlier in the day in an address to the nation, President Biden condemned the ‘abhorrent’ attacks by Hamas and pledged to support Israel.

‘We must be crystal clear: We stand with Israel. We stand with Israel. And we will make sure Israel has what it needs to take care of its citizens, defend itself and respond to this attack,’ Biden said from the White House. 

More than 1,000 Israelis have been killed since Saturday, when Hamas launched an unprecedented surprise attack by land, sea and air in southern Israel. Hamas also captured dozens of hostages and killed hundreds of civilians, including children. 

Israel has launched a counteroffensive and bombarded the Gaza Strip, which is controlled by Hamas, with airstrikes in what many believe will precede a ground operation. 

In addition to military aid, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin announced on Sunday that the USS Gerald R. Ford Carrier Strike Group was moving to the Eastern Mediterranean was moving to the Mediterranean to reinforce deterrence in the region. 

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President Biden was heavily criticized by conservatives on social media for not mentioning Iran, a state sponsor of Hamas, in an address to the nation Tuesday when he reacted to the terrorist group’s attack on Israel that left more than 1,000 Israelis dead.

Speaking from the White House and flanked by Vice President Harris and Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Biden vowed that the U.S. ‘has Israel’s back’ as it prepares for a ground invasion of the Gaza Strip just days after the Hamas terrorist group crossed the border and slaughtered Israeli civilians, including women, children and babies.

‘We must be crystal clear: We stand with Israel. We stand with Israel. And we will make sure Israel has what it needs to take care of its citizens, defend itself and respond to this attack,’ Biden said.

Conservatives took to X, formerly Twitter, after Biden’s speech and slammed him for not mentioning Iran.

‘Biden spoke for 10 minutes and 12 seconds, then turned his back and shuffled away,’ a social media account associated with the Republican National Committee posted on X. ‘He did not even mention Iran.’

After the president’s speech, Fox News contributor Joe Concha posted on X, ’14 Americans are dead. An unknown number have been taken hostage. President Biden just spoke for 11 minutes before quickly walking away without taking any questions. No mention of Iran whatsoever. Utterly irresponsible and weak on both fronts.’

‘After a weekend of BBQs & ½ days, Joe Biden has ZERO answers,’ Republican Sen. Roger Marshall posted on X. ‘Shows up over an hour late to his Address to the nation, Confirms 14 Americans are dead & more Americans are being held hostage, Gives ZERO strategy to save them, Makes no mention of Iran, Takes NO questions.’

‘Biden gives a speech on attack on Israel and does not even mention Iran!’ Marc Thiessen, former speechwriter for President George W. Bush and a Fox News contributor, posted on X.

‘No mention of Iran in Biden’s remarks and restrained verbal response to the murder of Americans,’ Fox News contributor Katie Pavlich posted on X. ‘Weak.’

‘Biden forgot to mention the word Iran,’ Rich Sementa, producer for the Mark Levin radio show, posted on X.

‘ZERO mention of Iran from President Biden,’ Fox News contributor and former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany posted on X. ‘You cannot sever the terrorism against Israel from the actions of Iran.’

TOP US GENERAL HAS MESSAGE FOR IRAN ON ISRAEL: DO NOT ‘GET INVOLVED

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday that Iranian security officials approved Hamas’ plan to attack Israel during a meeting in Beirut on Oct. 2. Hamas and Hezbollah leaders said Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps worked with Hamas since August on air, land and sea attack plans.

A European official who works as an adviser to the Syrian government corroborated the Hamas and Hezbollah leaders’ claims, according to the Wall Street Journal, though U.S. officials say they have not seen evidence of Iran’s involvement in the attacks.

‘We have not yet seen evidence that Iran directed or was behind this particular attack, but there is certainly a long relationship,’ Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on CNN on Sunday.

During a televised speech Tuesday, Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said, ‘We kiss the hands of those who planned the attack.’

Khamenei, who was wearing a Palestinian scarf and delivering his first broadcast remarks since Hamas launched attacks on Israel on Saturday, also said Tehran was not involved, according to Reuters.

‘This destructive earthquake has destroyed some critical structures [in Israel], which will not be repaired easily. … The Zionist regime’s own actions are to blame for this disaster,’ Khamenei reportedly said.

National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said during a press conference Tuesday that while Iran is ‘complicit’ in the attack given its financial and material support of Hamas in recent years, there is not yet evidence that it helped organize the attack.

‘Now, as to the question of whether Iran knew about this attack in advance or helped plan or direct this attack, we do not, as of the moment I’m standing here at the podium, have confirmation of that,’ Sullivan said.

Fox News Digital’s Emma Colton and Greg Norman contributed to this report.

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A pair of amendments offered to the House GOP rules show just how divided the conference is as it gets ready to elect a new speaker.

Just as Republicans began to gather for their candidate forum on Tuesday, an expected amendment by Rep. Chip Roy was circulated to lawmakers aimed at raising the threshold to put up a speaker candidate to 217 votes — a House majority. 

Former Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., was elected by a majority vote in the conference after enduring 15 rounds to finally win the gavel in January.

Supporters of the rule change said that it would prevent a similar battle from playing out in public, arguing it’s the better option for House GOP unity.

But not everyone in the caucus feels that way. Rep. Tom McClintock, R-state, sent a letter to colleagues on Tuesday evening calling that proposal ‘an absurdity on its face.’

He pointed out in a letter to colleagues that the existing rules on removing a speaker — a process which can be triggered by just one member — still means that Republicans’ ‘choice may be removed by any five of them with a grievance, and every member must accept their decision.’

‘This is childish despotism and utter nonsense. Why are we still entertaining it?’ he said.

McClintock suggested his own amendment to House GOP rules that would expel a member from the conference if they cast a House floor vote that goes against the conference position on procedural issues like the speaker vote, rules changes and other measures. 

That expelled member could be reinstated if two-thirds of the conference votes in favor of it.

McClintock also called for a vote to reinstate McCarthy as speaker — a longshot after McCarthy told podcast host Guy Benson that he does not want members to select him.

House Republicans are expected to hear from the two formally declared candidates for speaker, Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., and Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, on Tuesday night. They are set to huddle behind closed doors again on Wednesday morning to select a candidate for speaker.

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Former Colombia President Ivan Duque recently sat down with Fox News Digital to discuss Latin American foreign policy, economics, the rise of Russian and Chinese influence in the region and his work on environmental initiatives.

Duque, an attorney who represented Colombia at the Inter-American Development Bank before serving four years as a senator, won the 2018 presidential election, defeating current President Gustavo Petro and serving until 2022.

Duque has long been a strong voice condemning the rise of authoritarian and socialist regimes across the region, often linked to China and Russia. As Chinese economic and geopolitical influence has skyrocketed throughout Latin America, Duque has expressed concern that the U.S. is often standing by on the sidelines.

‘One of the concerns that I have is that when people raise the issue of why Chinese companies are winning bids on so many critical and strategical infrastructure projects in Latin America… there is not a big amount of U.S. companies that are willing to bid on these projects… and I think that’s something that has to be changed,’ he said.

China has made no secret of its interest in developing its economic and strategic interests in the Western Hemisphere.

‘We should have more American companies interested in developing strategic infrastructure in Latin America,’ said Duque.

Pivoting to Russia, Duque differentiates between the largely economic and geopolitical strategy of Beijing and the more nefarious machinations of Moscow.

‘I really want to distinguish between China and Russia, because it’s clear that Russia, in the case of Latin America, has been not only supporting dictatorial regimes and oppressive regimes… like Venezuela or Nicaragua or Cuba, but has been participating actively in espionage,’ he explained.

Tuque continued, ‘I had to basically, as president, expel two Russian agents that were doing espionage in Colombia, as has happened in other European countries. And there’s no doubt that in terms of cybersecurity, there’s a big risk that Russia will be supporting cyberattacks driven from Latin American countries. And I think those are serious hemispheric security concerns that have to be raised and that require a strong voice saying to Russia, ‘We’re not your playground. Don’t you dare come and try to influence our electoral democratic systems and don’t you dare try to breach our data security.”

Duque has long been a leading voice speaking out against the Venezuelan dictatorship of Nicolas Maduro, who has been charged with drug trafficking by the U.S. in the Southern District of New York. Yet Duque believes Maduro has been successful in exploiting the current situation to maintain his iron grip on power.

‘I think the tragedy of Venezuela is evident. More than six million people have left the country. The economy has been absolutely destroyed… and the migration is going to continue. And sadly, I believe many people look at Maduro as a hot potato that nobody wants to handle. So that’s sad, because he’s going to use that sentiment of being a hot potato to keep himself in office. And try to keep on brutalizing the opposition and consolidating his power,’ he said.

‘I think the international organizations, the international community, needs to put more pressure on the regime and obviously needs to put more pressure to guarantee imminent, rapid, trustworthy — with international scrutiny — democratic elections.’

The Andean region has lately been beset by skyrocketing political instability and violence. Looking south to Colombia’s neighbor Ecuador, Duque lauds the efforts of President Guillermo Lasso to forcefully confront drug trafficking and criminality.

‘In the case of Ecuador, what’s interesting is that President Lasso, who has been a brave president, has had to struggle with the rising levels of violence,’ he said. ‘But that has happened because instead of doing what others did in the past, which was to remain silent and try to have under-the-table agreements with the armed groups and cartels… he decided to confront them, to dismantle them, to put pressure on them, and obviously the way they want to get revenge is by trying to create instability and a sentiment of national insecurity.’

Duque continued: ‘So what model do I prefer?… I think the cartels and the criminal organizations have to be fought with the rule of law and law and order… I think it’s much better to confront the criminal organizations and try to mobilize the whole society to fight them than remaining silent by just allowing them to keep on capturing the country in a subtle way.’

Looking at Argentina, Duque believes it’s possible that this month’s upcoming electoral contest will see firebrand economist Javier Milei and center-right Patricia Bullrich move on to the second round, with Peronist candidate Sergio Massa finishing third.

‘It’s clear that people are fed up, with high levels of inflation, and people are fed up with the deterioration in the value of their assets, and people are fed up with promises that were never accomplished, and people just want to see a change… which Milei and Patricia Bullrich both represent,’ he said.

‘As polls might reveal today… in a second round, maybe the two front-runners are going to be Milei and Patricia Bullrich. Now why is that? Because, you know, people don’t believe that the Peronist party, or [Cristina] Kirchner, have been able to deliver what they promised.’

Duque said Argentina needs ‘growth to generate employment, to generate stability and to create trust again in the markets and obviously in those considerations, who’s going to be able to have governability is going to be essential, because what you’re going to do… you require a coalition. And I think people will have to evaluate whether it’s Milei or Patricia Bullrich — the one that can really bring people together and Congress to achieve.’

Finally, Duque expressed concerns over the direction that Colombia is headed under the direction of his successor, the leftist Petro.

‘When I have had to speak about policy, I’ve done it always in a constructive way… when I have seen that is important to raise red flags, I’ve also done so. But I think there’s a big worry on multiple fronts,’ he said.

‘I think there’s a clear deterioration in the security of the country in recent days, the National Association of Enterprises and companies sending… a very troubling letter to the president about the increase of robberies and piracy on the roads of Colombia. Of the fight against narcotics… most of the eradication has been stopped, and also there is non-commitment from the government to have precision aerial spraying, and also most of the operations against narcotrafficking have reached record lows.’

He added, ‘So all that has now impacted in having more illegal crops and obviously more coca is less peace in the case of Colombia.’

‘We have seen high levels of inflation… a lack of foreign direct investment… we might have investments in portfolio, but real capital formation investment has started to reach record lows and also our exports have been dropping down. So all this is going to lead that maybe this year the economy is barely going to grow above 1%, if it does extremely well,’ the former Colombian leader said.

‘Otherwise, it’s going to be maybe grow 0.5% or something like that. And that’s worrying, especially since we grew 10.7% in 2021 and 8.5% in 2022. So all these things generate a lot of concern.’

Since leaving office, Duque has been involved in a variety of environmental initiatives, including joining the Bezos Earth Fund, working as a member of the McKinsey Sustainability Advisory Council and spearheading the Concordia Amazon Initiative, which seeks to protect the South American rainforest.

Duque has devoted much of his career to environmental issues, and now that he has returned to the private sector, he has sought out further opportunities for leadership roles in academia and public policy.

‘During my presidency, I worked hard to increase protected areas in the whole country from 13% to 30% of maritime and land territories… I also was a promoter of the energy transition, increasing our share of renewables from 0.2%, to reach almost 15% by the end of next year,’ he said.

Deforestation is also an issue in which Duque has emerged as a global leader.

‘The Amazon has lost, in the last four decades, an area the equivalent to the size of France and Germany due to deforestation,’ he explained, and without a change, ‘it is going to be more difficult, and maybe impossible, for the world to reach our global NDCs (Nationally Determined Contributions) by 2030, and to reach carbon neutrality by 2050.’

Duque believes that free markets hold the key to solving the planet’s pressing environmental issues, advocating ‘market-driven nature-based solutions.’

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Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations Gilad Erdan rebuked recent statements on the Hamas terrorist attacks from the Human Rights Council and its commissioner, calling them ‘false’ and ‘immoral.’

A seemingly anti-Israel statement from the HRC was delivered by Ambassador Zaman Mehdi from Pakistan on Monday.

‘On behalf of the IOC member states, we express our deep concerns over the loss of innocent lives in the occupied Palestinian territory and elsewhere,’ Mehdi said. ‘Regrettably, this huge loss of lives and unabated violence is a sad reminder of more than seven decades of illegal foreign occupation, aggression and disrespect for the international law, including UNESCO resolutions.’

In a Tuesday statement, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk called for both the IDF and Hamas to ‘respect international humanitarian law’ and defuse tensions. He also criticized Israel’s ‘full seige’ of Gaza.

‘They must immediately cease attacks targeting civilians and attacks expected to cause disproportionate death and injury of civilians or damage to civilian objects,’ Turk said.

Speaking to Turk, Erdan said that the HRC had ‘lost its moral compass.’

‘Israel just suffered the gravest human rights atrocity since the Holocaust,’ Erdan said. ‘How many dead Jews does it take to justify a proportionate response against a genocidal terror organization? Is it 1,000? Six million? Maybe it’s 10 million – the population of Israel? This is, after all, Hamas’ publicly declared goal. So I ask you, how many murdered Jews does it take for you to support Israel’s right to self defense?’

Erdan also added that Israel will ‘continue to protect itself’ and that the HRC has been making ‘false, immoral comparisons.’

‘The world cannot accept such a distorted moral standard that sadly guarantees that these atrocities will continue,’ the ambassador concluded. ‘We will obliterate Hamas terror infrastructure!’

Fox News Digital’s Greg Wehner contributed to this report.

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FIRST ON FOX: Amid Israel’s deadly war, a group of Republican senators led by Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn, are urging the Biden administration to freeze Iran’s $6 billion in assets that were released to Qatar from South Korean accounts in exchange for American prisoners last month. 

‘To stand by and allow Iran access to these funds as Hamas infiltrates Israel and murders, rapes, and mutilates countless Israelis is unconscionable,’ lawmakers wrote in a letter to Biden Monday evening. 

While the administration said the funds can only be used for humanitarian aid and other resources for Iranian citizens, lawmakers argue that the ‘money is fungible’ — meaning that a unit of currency is interchangeable with another unit of the same value. 

‘Your administration claims these funds are only available for humanitarian use, but money is fungible, and there is a significant risk they could be used to further efforts by Iran or Hamas against Israel,’ they wrote. ‘Moreover, allowing $6 billion to flow into Iran’s economy, even if the purpose is for humanitarian aid, allows the Iranian regime to reallocate even more funds to supporting terrorism.’

The lawmakers added: ‘The State Department should immediately rescind the waivers that allowed Iranian funds to be converted and moved to more accessible bank accounts, as well as work with U.S. ally Qatar to immediately freeze the accounts containing these funds.’

A group of 20 Republicans in the upper chamber, including Blackburn and Sens. Marco Rubio, R-Fla.; Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.; John Thune, R-S.D.; Mike Lee, R-Utah; Rick Scott, R-Fla.; James Lankford, R-Okla.; John Cornyn, R-Texas, and Tom Cotton, R-Ark., among others, signed the letter.

The report comes as nearly 800 casualties have been reported, and 11 Americans have been killed, the U.S. State Department confirmed Monday. 

Blackburn told Fox News Digital in a statement that ‘President Biden is refusing to freeze the $6 billion ransom payment to Iran because he is afraid to admit it was a catalyst for the attacks.’

‘He still has time to limit the damage,’ she said, adding that Biden should immediately freeze the funds. 

Hamas militant terrorists also took more than 100 people hostage when they launched the surprise attack on Saturday. Israeli soldiers, grandmothers, infants and teenagers were all victims of the hostage-taking. 

The deal, which was reached last month, allowed the transfer of Iran’s frozen assets held in a South Korean bank to accounts in Qatar. The administration said the money can only be used for humanitarian purposes and the U.S. will have oversight as to how and when the funds are used. 

However, Hamas spokesperson Ghazi Hamad told the BBC that they had Iran’s support for the attacks, which began Saturday. A bombshell Wall Street Journal report Sunday also said Hamas and Hezbollah helped Iran plan the attack, contradicting the administration’s statements.

Israel formally declared war on Hamas after the attack. President Biden affirmed Israel’s right to defend itself as the Pentagon catapulted assistance to Israel Defense Forces over the weekend. 

In a post Saturday, State Department spokesperson Matt Miller said on X, formerly known as Twitter, that ‘the deal to bring U.S. citizens home from Iran has nothing to do with the horrific attack on Israel.’ 

‘Not a penny has been spent, and when it is, it can only go for humanitarian needs like food and medicine. Anything to the contrary is false,’ Miller wrote.

Fox News Digital has reached out to the White House for comment. 

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