Santa Barbara County News and Events

A soaked tent or a bombed-out ruin: Gazans face a grim choice this winter

Kraig Pakulski 0 59 Article rating: No rating

By Paula Hancocks, Abeer Salman, CNN

(CNN) — Palestinians in Gaza face an impossible choice this winter. With more than 400,000 homes destroyed in the war, Gazans are being forced to choose between living in tents exposed to the elements or run the risk of living inside the ruins of buildings that could collapse any minute.

Hiyam Abu Nabah has no access to a tent; so that terrible choice has been made for her. She lives with her family in the shell of a building in the Hamad area of Khan Younis, southern Gaza, with no walls to protect them from the elements and the upper floors of the building pancaked above them.

Last week, torrential rains and floods killed at least 17 people in Gaza, including children, Palestinian Civil Defense Spokesperson Mahmoud Basal said. Others, he said, died due to building collapses. More than 90 residential buildings were affected and approximately 90% of shelters for people displaced due to Israel’s war in Gaza were completely flooded.

“On the first day of the storm, we could hear the stones cracking above our heads,” Abu Nabah says. “Sand was falling into our eyes… this is not a life.”

She watches her five-year-old weave in-between electrical wires hanging down from the crumbling ceiling. The wires are now used to hang clothes to keep them off the wet floor; electricity is but a distant memory here.

Her dream of moving back to what is left of her home in Shujaiya, Gaza City, seems remote. It is behind the so-called “yellow line” in an area occupied by the Israeli military as part of the ceasefire agreement to end the two-year war, inaccessible to residents.

In a building nearby, Awn Al Haj pokes at the roof of his shelter with a stick to show stone and sand crumble and fall at his feet. But this roof is the collapsed foundation of the apartment above, twisted steel girders distorted by the pressure of so many stories pancaked above.

Remembering a recent storm that passed through, Al Haj says “three days of it were like the early days of the war… you did not know what (would) happen to you while you are sitting here. Concrete blocks fall, water leaks in, wind and bitter cold.”

Every building still partially standing in this neighborhood carries the same dangers. Shoring up crumbling walls with mud, covering gaping holes with tarpaulin, Al Haj knows this is a band aid solution to a life-threatening problem.

The only alternative, he says, is to sit by the sea, in a tent, inundated by water.

Further north, in the al-Shati camp, a building collapsed Tuesday, killing a man sitting inside and injuring two others. One of the neighbors said it was badly damaged when the building next door was destroyed in an Israeli airstrike; the winter weather and wind was the final straw. “Houses keep collapsing. Someone do something about how we are living,” the neighbor said. “Day after day a house falls, day after day people die.”

Mohammad Fathi of the Gaza Civil Defense, which acts as the emergency service, was on the scene to recover survivors. Fathi says they do not have heavy machinery, such as excavators, to help them rescue survivors trapped under collapsed buildings. “With every winter storm, many families and many children will die,” he warned.

The Civil Defense calls for people to move out of damaged buildings during heavy rain, but the advice falls on deaf ears. For those living amongst the rubble, there is no other choice. The Civil Defense also states tents are simply not

Interfaith Vigil makes Longest Night

Kraig Pakulski 0 72 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT)  An interfaith vigil marked the longest night of the year.

Santa Barbara County workers invited people to come together to remember lives lost while experiencing homelessness.

They gathered for the annual Longest Night Memorial at the Santa Barbara County Courthouse arch.

The event offered space for reflection, remembrance, and community.

The post Interfaith Vigil makes Longest Night appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Interfaith Vigil makes Longest Night

Kraig Pakulski 0 67 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT)  An interfaith vigil marked the longest night of the year.

Santa Barbara County workers invited people to come together to remember lives lost while experiencing homelessness.

They gathered for the annual Longest Night Memorial at the Santa Barbara County Courthouse arch.

The event offered space for reflection, remembrance, and community.

The post Interfaith Vigil makes Longest Night appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

CBS shelves ‘60 Minutes’ story on Trump deportees at the last minute: ‘People are threatening to quit,’ staffers say

Kraig Pakulski 0 60 Article rating: No rating

By Brian Stelter, CNN

(CNN) — “60 Minutes” just suffered a severe blow to its credibility. Now one of its own correspondents fears the program is being “dismantled,” and some employees are threatening to quit.

The trigger: CBS News suddenly shelved a segment featuring the accounts of Venezuelan men deported by the Trump administration to a notorious maximum-security prison in El Salvador.

The correspondent who reported the story, Sharyn Alfonsi, said in an internal memo that “the public will correctly identify this as corporate censorship.”

According to Alfonsi and two CBS sources who spoke with CNN on condition of anonymity, the story had been fully fact-checked and legally vetted by the time the network publicized it on Friday afternoon.

But CBS News editor-in-chief Bari Weiss weighed in with questions on Saturday morning, the two sources said. Alfonsi said Weiss “spiked the story.”

One of the main issues Weiss raised was the lack of a response from the Trump administration to the reporting.

According to Alfonsi, “we requested responses to questions and/or interviews with DHS, the White House, and the State Department.”

But the administration did not engage, which concerned Weiss. At one point, Weiss suggested that the program try to interview White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller, and provided Miller’s number, one of the CBS sources said.

Alfonsi argued in her memo that the administration’s strategic silence cannot be allowed to become a “veto” of a critical story.

“Their refusal to be interviewed is a tactical maneuver designed to kill the story,” she wrote. “If the administration’s refusal to participate becomes a valid reason to spike a story, we have effectively handed them a ‘kill switch’ for any reporting they find inconvenient.”

Weiss responded in a statement to The New York Times late Sunday night, “My job is to make sure that all stories we publish are the best they can be. Holding stories that aren’t ready for whatever reason—that they lack sufficient context, say, or that they are missing critical voices—happens every day in every newsroom. I look forward to airing this important piece when it’s ready.”

Earlier in the day, CBS News said of the decision to hold the segment, “We determined it needed additional reporting.”

But Alfonsi disputed that in her memo. “Our story was screened five times and cleared by both CBS attorneys and Standards and Practices,” she wrote. “It is factually correct. In my view, pulling it now—after every rigorous internal check has been met is not an editorial decision, it is a political one.”

“60 Minutes” segments are commonly screened several times before air, but five screenings is an unusually high number, the CBS sources said.

It is unclear when Weiss first viewed the story. But she has recently become personally involved in “60 Minutes” stories about politics, the CBS sources told CNN.

In another recent turn of events, President Trump has been blasting the newsmagazine on Truth Social, sounding disappointed in CBS’s new owners.

In late 2024, Trump sued CBS and its parent company, Paramount, then under different ownership, alleging “60 Minutes” deceptively edited a Kamala Harris interview to benefit her campaign.

That lawsuit, which legal experts widely viewed to be legally dubious, loomed large over Paramount’s attempt to merge with Skydance Media, a production company led by David Ellison and supported by Ellison’s father, Larry, the Oracle billionaire.

The lawsuit became a flashpoint inside CBS News, where journalists worried that both the old and new corporate leaders sought to mollify Trump at the cost of the newsroom’s credibility.

Eventually, the outgoing Paramount leadership team agreed to settle Trump’s lawsuit, and the incoming leadership team agreed to several concess

Chabad Ventura Rabbi, who is from Australia, shares thoughts during Light up The Harbor

Kraig Pakulski 0 58 Article rating: No rating

VENTURA, Calif. (KEYT) The Light Up the Harbor Chanukah Celebration in Ventura was led by Rabbi Yakov Latowicz from Melbourne, Australia.

His wife Sarah seemed glad he would get to share his thoughts following the tragedy during the first night of Chanukah at a Bondi Beach celebration one week ago.

"All the Chabad Rabbis around the world are resolved not to cancel a single menorah lighting, to add menorah lightings, to add public menorahs," said Yakov Latowicz.

Some people skipped the local celebration in wake of the deadly shooting that is being investigated as terrorism against Jews.

Latowicz said they want everyone to feel the light and love and hope of Chanukah.

"I want people to know that they shouldn't be afraid, they should specially for the Jews, they should be proud to be Jewish, they've got to be bold, the kind of people who perpetrated the atrocity in Bondi they want us to cower, to hide, to hide under the bed to take our star of David, our Chai, take the mezuzah off the door, at times like this, we have to be prouder than ever, we've got to take our Judaism outside, not hide it indoors, very, very important and it is important to the non-Jewish community, we need you guys, we are part of your community and we need allies, we need friends, that is why we do public lightings," said Latowicz.

He said he was sent to the local community by the worldwide leader of the Chabad movement.

"You counter random acts of violence with random acts of kindness and goodness and charity and that is the message we want to send out to everybody, be kinder than you were yesterday, be sweeter to another person than you where yesterday that is the message of Chanukah."

Chabad Ventura invited Chris the Juggler to entertain the crowd in Ventura Harbor Village before the lighting of seventh candle on the menorah.

During the celebration children had a chance to make Chanukah cards that sparkled.

 Some people wore menorah inspired clothing including light blue Micky Mouse ears.

One dog owner dressed his four-legged-friend in a Chanukah outfit.

Chanukah began Sunday, Dec. 14 and ends at nightfall on Monday, Dec. 22.

For more information about Chabad Ventura at https://www.chabadventura.com

The post Chabad Ventura Rabbi, who is from Australia, shares thoughts during Light up The Harbor appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

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