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Video Shows Aid Workers Killed in Gaza Under Gunfire Barrage, With Ambulance Lights On

A video recording, discovered on the cellphone of one of the paramedics who was found along with 14 other aid workers in a mass grave in the Gazan city of Rafah in late March and obtained by The New York Times, shows that the ambulances and fire truck that they were traveling in were clearly marked and had their emergency signal lights on when Israeli troops hit them with a barrage of gunfire.

Officials from the Palestine Red Crescent Society said at a news conference on Friday at the United Nations moderated by the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies that they had presented the nearly seven-minute recording to the U.N. Security Council.

An Israeli military spokesman, Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani, said earlier this week that Israeli forces did not “randomly attack” an ambulance, but that several vehicles “were identified advancing suspiciously” without headlights or emergency signals toward Israeli troops, prompting them to shoot. Colonel Shoshani said earlier in the week that nine of those killed were Palestinian militants. Israel did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the video.

The Times obtained the video from a senior diplomat at the United Nations who asked not to be identified to be able to share sensitive information.

The Times verified the location and timing of the video. Filmed from what appears to be the front interior of a moving vehicle, it shows a convoy of ambulances and a fire truck, clearly marked with headlights and flashing lights turned on, driving south on a road to the north of Rafah in the early morning. The first rays of sun can be seen, and birds are chirping.

The convoy stops when it encounters a vehicle that had veered onto the side of the road — one ambulance had been dispatched earlier to aid wounded civilians and had come under attack. The new rescue vehicles detoured to the side of the road.

Rescue workers, at least two of whom can be seen wearing uniforms, are seen exiting a fire truck and an ambulance marked with the emblem of the Red Crescent and approaching the ambulance derailed to the side.

Then, the sounds of intense gunfire break out.

A barrage of gunshots is seen and heard in the video hitting the convoy.

The camera shakes, the video goes dark. But the audio continues for five minutes, and the rat-a-tat sound of gunfire does not stop. A man says in Arabic that there are Israelis present on the scene.

The paramedic filming is heard on the video franticly reciting, over and over, the shahada, or a Muslim declaration of faith, which people recite when facing death. “There is no God but God, Muhammad is his messenger,” the paramedic is heard saying. He asks God for forgiveness and says he knows he is going to die.

“Forgive me, mother. This is the path I chose — to help people,” he said. “Allahu akbar,” God is great, he says.

In the backdrop, a commotion of voices from distraught aid workers and soldiers shouting commands in Hebrew at each other can be heard. It was not clear what they were exactly saying.

The Palestine Red Crescent Society spokeswoman, Nebal Farsakh, said in an interview from the West Bank city of Ramallah that the paramedic who filmed the video was later found with a bullet in his head in the mass grave. His name has not been disclosed yet because he has relatives living in Gaza who are concerned about Israeli retaliation, the U.N. diplomat said.

At the news conference, held at the U.N. headquarters, the president of the Palestine Red Crescent Society, Dr. Younis Al-Khatib, and his deputy, Marwan Jilani, told reporters that the evidence the society has collected — including the video and audio from the incident, and forensic examination of the bodies — contradicted Israel’s version of events

The deaths of the aid workers, who first went missing on March 23, has drawn international scrutiny and condemnation in recent days. The U.N. and the Palestine Red Crescent said the aid workers were not carrying weapons and posed not threat.

“Their bodies have been targeted from a very close range,” said Dr. Khatib, adding that Israel did not provide information on the missing medics’ whereabouts for days. “They knew exactly where they were because they killed them,” he said. “Their colleagues were in agony, their families were in agony. They kept us for eight days in the dark.”

It took five days after the rescue vehicles came under attack and fell silent, for the United Nations and Red Crescent to negotiate with the Israeli military for safe passage to search for the missing people. On Sunday, rescue teams found 15 bodies, most in a shallow mass grave along with their crushed ambulances and a vehicle marked with the U.N. logo.

The area where the convoy stops in the video was captured in a satellite image a few hours later and analyzed by The Times. At that point, the five ambulances and the fire truck had been moved off the road and clustered together.

Two days later, a new satellite image of the area showed the vehicles were apparently buried. Next to disturbed earth are three Israeli military bulldozers and an excavator. Additionally, bulldozers erected earthen barriers on the road in both directions from the mass grave.

One member of the Palestinian Red Crescent is still missing and Israel has not said whether he is detained or has been killed, Dr. Khatib said.

Dr. Ahmad Dhair, a forensic doctor who examined some of the bodies in Gaza’s Nasser hospital, said four out of the five aid workers he examined were killed by multiple gunshots, including wounds to the head, torso, chest and joints. One paramedic employee of the Red Crescent in the convoy was detained and then released by the Israeli military and provided witness account of Israeli military shooting at the ambulances, the U.N. and Red Crescent Society said.

Dylan Winder, the representative of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies to the U.N., called the incident an outrage and said it represented the single deadliest attack on Red Cross and Red Crescent Society workers any where in the world since 2017.

Volker Türk, the U.N.’s High Commissioner for Human Rights, told the council that an independent investigation must be conducted into Israel’s killing of the aid workers and that the incident raises “further concerns over the commission of war crimes by the Israeli military.”

Neil Collier, Sanjana Varghese and Ephrat Livni contributed reporting. Natalie Reneau contributed video editing.

Pentagon confirms four-star general’s firing amid Trump security purge | Donald Trump News

The United States Department of Defense has confirmed it fired the head of the National Security Agency, in a move that sparked outrage over an alleged purge of security officials.

On Friday, Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell released a short statement, acknowledging the departure of four-star Air Force General Timothy Haugh as director of the National Security Agency (NSA), one of the government’s top intelligence-gathering bodies.

Haugh also led the US Cyber Command, which prepares for and defends against attacks in the digital sphere.

“The Defense Department thanks General Timothy Haugh for his decades of service to our nation, culminating as US Cyber Command commander and National Security Agency director. We wish him and his family well,” Parnell said.

Multiple media reports, however, suggested that Haugh’s ouster came at the suggestion of a far-right internet activist, Laura Loomer, who supported President Donald Trump’s campaign for re-election in 2024.

Democrats also seized upon the fact that Trump did not fire anyone involved in the recent controversy over the use of the messaging app Signal to discuss sensitive plans to bomb Houthi targets in Yemen – something that came to light after a journalist was accidentally added to the chat.

“Gen. Haugh led the NSA and Cyber Command with steady, effective leadership,” Senator Mark Kelly of Arizona wrote on social media Friday.

“By dismissing him and failing to hold anyone accountable for the threat to U.S. pilots over Signal, Trump has shown he values loyalty over competence – making us all less safe.”

Another Democratic senator, Mark Warner of Virginia, echoed that sentiment, calling the situation “so crazy it defies belief”.

“Trump refused to fire the people that embarrassed America and risked servicemembers’ lives in the Signalgate scandal,” Warner wrote, “but fired Gen. Haugh, a nonpartisan national security expert, at the advice of a self-described ‘pro-white nationalist’.”

Laura Loomer arrives with Donald Trump at the Philadelphia international airport on September 10, 2024 [Chris Szagola/AP Photo]

Haugh was just one in a slate of firings this week that came after Trump met with Loomer at the White House.

Media reports indicate Haugh’s civilian deputy at the NSA, Wendy Noble, was booted from her position as well and reassigned.

In addition, multiple members of the National Security Council also appear to have been removed from their positions, including Brian Walsh, a senior director of intelligence, and Thomas Boodry, the senior director of legislative affairs.

The Reuters news agency estimated that more than a dozen security officials were dismissed as part of the alleged purge.

As he flew to South Florida for a golf tournament on Thursday, Trump addressed the rumours, acknowledging “some” people were fired but refusing to give specifics about the total.

“Always, we’re going to let go of people – people we don’t like or people that we don’t think can do the job or people who may have loyalties to someone else,” Trump said from Air Force One.

He also addressed his meeting with Loomer earlier in the week, offering high praise for the internet personality.

“Laura Loomer is a very good patriot,” he said. “She’s a very strong person, and I saw her yesterday for a little while. She makes recommendations.”

When pressed about what that meant, he conceded that Loomer not only recommends individuals to hire – but also to fire. He did, however, dismiss reports that Loomer was involved in a purge of security officials.

Loomer herself addressed Haugh’s removal on Thursday, accusing the four-star general of insufficient loyalty to the Trump administration. She also attempted to paint Haugh as an acolyte of former President Joe Biden, the Democrat who bested Trump in the 2020 election.

“NSA Director Tim Haugh and his deputy Wendy Noble have been disloyal to President Trump. That is why they have been fired,” she wrote.

“Their firings are a blessing for the American people. Thank you President Trump for being receptive to the vetting materials provided to you and thank you for firing these Biden holdovers.”

Loomer has long been a controversial figure on the US right. She once called herself a “proud Islamophobe” and has spread the debunked conspiracy theory that the attacks on September 11, 2001, were an “inside job”.

Her proximity to the president has caused ripples of concern within Trump’s administration – and has been seized upon as a point of criticism for Democrats.

The ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, Jim Himes, demanded an “immediate explanation” for Haugh’s firing, arguing it makes “all of us less safe”.

“I have known General Haugh to be an honest and forthright leader who followed the law and put national security first,” Himes wrote. “I fear those are precisely the qualities that could lead to his firing in this Administration.”

Map: Earthquake Near Papua New Guinea Prompts Tsunami Alert

Note: Map shows the area with a shake intensity of 4 or greater, which U.S.G.S. defines as “light,” though the earthquake may be felt outside the areas shown. The New York Times

A strong, 6.9-magnitude earthquake struck in the Solomon Sea on Saturday, according to the United States Geological Survey. A “tsunami threat” was issued for some parts of the coast of Papua New Guinea.

The U.S. Tsunami Warning System said waves of 3 to 10 feet above normal tidal levels were possible near the quake’s epicenter. The system did not issue alerts for places elsewhere in the Pacific Ocean.

The temblor happened at 6:04 a.m. Papua New Guinea time about 121 miles southeast of Kimbe, Papua New Guinea, data from the U.S.G.S. shows.

As seismologists review available data, they may revise the earthquake’s reported magnitude. Additional information collected about the earthquake may also prompt U.S.G.S. scientists to update the shake-severity map.

Aftershocks in the region

An aftershock is usually a smaller earthquake that follows a larger one in the same general area. Aftershocks are typically minor adjustments along the portion of a fault that slipped at the time of the initial earthquake.

Quakes and aftershocks within 100 miles

Aftershocks can occur days, weeks or even years after the first earthquake. These events can be of equal or larger magnitude to the initial earthquake, and they can continue to affect already damaged locations.

When quakes and aftershocks occurred

Source: United States Geological Survey | Notes: Shaking categories are based on the Modified Mercalli Intensity scale. When aftershock data is available, the corresponding maps and charts include earthquakes within 100 miles and seven days of the initial quake. All times above are Papua New Guinea time. Shake data is as of Saturday, April 5 at 6:20 a.m. Papua New Guinea time. Aftershocks data is as of Saturday, April 5 at 8:34 a.m. Papua New Guinea time.

What are the implications of the US-China tariffs war? | TV Shows

Beijing hits back with its own set of tariffs on all US goods after Trump’s latest levies.

China has announced tariffs on US products in response to new levies imposed on Chinese goods by US President Donald Trump.

Beijing unveiled a 34-percent tariff on all US goods and restrictions on exports of rare earth minerals.

With global financial markets sliding, how far are both countries willing to go?

And will this back-and-forth change trade policies?

Presenter: James Bays

Guests:

John Gong – Professor at the University of International Business and Economics

Robert Koepp – Director of the Asia-Pacific Geoeconomics and Business Initiative at Chapman University

Robert Kelly – Professor of political science at Pusan National University

Israeli Military Expands Ground Operations in Gaza City

The Israeli military pressed deeper into northern Gaza by ground on Friday after issuing a series of evacuation orders calling on Palestinians to flee, part of its escalating offensive against Hamas in the war-battered Gaza Strip.

The expansion of ground operations came after the Palestinian health authorities said on Thursday that dozens of people, including children, were killed in Israeli strikes on a school turned shelter in the Tuffah neighborhood of Gaza City. On Friday, the Israeli military said the strikes were targeting well-known militants in a Hamas command and control center, without naming them.

The evacuation orders have brought renewed hardship to Palestinians who had already endured displacement from their homes and miserable conditions during the first 15 months of the war. A shaky two-month cease-fire between Israel and Hamas collapsed in March after the two sides failed to reach an agreement to extend it, ending a brief respite for Palestinians in Gaza.

The Israeli military has since embarked on a major bombing campaign and seized territory in Gaza in a tactic that Israeli officials have said was intended to compel Hamas to release more hostages.

As the Israeli military operation expanded, Hamas’s military wing on Friday appeared to threaten the remaining Israeli and foreign hostages held in Gaza. In a statement that did not mention the plight of its own people, Hamas said its fighters were holding some captives in the evacuation zones under “strict security measures that are extremely dangerous to their lives.”

The armed group has in the past threatened the well-being of hostages in the face of Israeli bombardments.

The military said its recent campaign had dismantled weapons infrastructure and killed militants, including Mohammed Awad, whom it described as a senior military commander in the Mujahedeen Brigades, a small armed group in Gaza.

The military said that Mr. Awad had taken part in Hamas-led attacks on Oct. 7, 2023, and was “likely personally involved in the abduction and brutal murders of Shiri, Ariel and Kfir Bibas,” though it did not explain how it had come to that conclusion. Mrs. Bibas and her two young children became symbols for many Israelis of their suffering on Oct. 7, when about 1,200 people were killed and about 250 abducted to Gaza.

Avichay Adraee, the military’s Arabic-language spokesman, said in a post late Thursday on social media that he was providing a “final” warning before a new attack, urging people to relocate southward. Mr. Adraee suggested that militant groups were operating among civilians.

US Federal Reserve warns of inflation, unemployment from Trump tariffs | Business and Economy

NewsFeed

The US now faces a higher risk of inflation and increased unemployment because of President Donald Trump’s sweeping global tariffs, the Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell announced just days after their implementation.

What One Image Shows About a Strike in Gaza

The cease-fire between Israel and Hamas collapsed last month, and the dead and wounded again pour into the hospital. The injured are triaged at a tent in the hospital’s courtyard, set up to relieve the pressure on the packed emergency room inside.

When people arrive, medical workers sort them into three categories: green, yellow and red. Those classified green are given basic treatment, like bandages, and are sent on their way. Yellow means treatment is required in the hospital. Red indicates an urgent case that requires immediate care, possibly surgery.

But nurses and doctors can only do so much. There is still a severe shortage of medical supplies and equipment — one of Gaza’s two CT scanners broke down there on Thursday — and many of the injured require extensive treatment.

Children are especially vulnerable to the injuries that can be caused by explosions in Gaza’s dense living conditions, experts say. Israel’s bombardment of Gaza, which began after Hamas led the October 2023 attack that started the war, has packed even more people into close quarters around the territory as it has displaced people from neighborhoods and towns.

Many have fled to crowded encampments in the south or to schools converted into shelters, like the one hit in Gaza City on Thursday. At least 27 people were killed in the strike, according to the Gaza health ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its casualty figures. Israel, as well as Palestinian civilians, have accused Hamas of embedding its forces in civilian spaces, including shelters and hospitals.

Videos verified by The New York Times showed an explosion and its aftermath at the shelter, the Dar al-Arqam school in the Tuffah neighborhood of Gaza City. The videos showed people carrying victims, children among them, as fires burned in the background.

The Israeli military said on Thursday that it was looking into reports about the strike. As of Friday morning, it said it still could not comment.

Manchester United vs Manchester City – Premier League: Team news, stream | Football News

Who: Manchester United vs Manchester City
What: English Premier League
Where: Old Trafford, Manchester, United Kingdom
When: Sunday at 4.30pm (15:30 GMT)

Follow Al Jazeera Sport‘s live text and photo commentary stream.

The Manchester derby has been a clash for titles in years gone by, or at least qualifying places for the Champions League.

This season, United are battling for pride, while City’s defence of their Premier League title is over.

A top four finish should be City’s for the taking but, for the fans of both teams, bragging rights are the priority in one of the world’s great cross-city rivalries.

Al Jazeera takes a closer look as the teams battle to turn Manchester red or blue.

Where are Man Utd in their latest rebuild?

Manchester United may have a grand vision to win the Premier League title in three years’ time, but manager Ruben Amorim said on Friday that the club may not be title contenders in the next couple of years unless major changes are made.

United are on course for their worst Premier League finish, with the club 13th in the standings after 30 games, and Amorim’s task does not get any easier with a derby against City.

Amid the dire run, the club’s ownership announced a plan to bring the title back to Old Trafford in three years to celebrate United’s 150th anniversary, but Amorim said a lot of work needs to be put into the squad to become genuine contenders.

“I understand, and I am not naive. I don’t want to think we need a lot of years to be competitive. I cannot think like that … I know that we are not going to be the biggest contender in the next year or two years,” Amorim told reporters.

“We are doing a lot of things. Sometimes, we changed players because they have had to learn how to adjust to our new standards … We have changed a lot of staff; we have changed things inside the club.

“I know that is going to take time. I will not say we need a lot of years … Next year is our goal. I am not saying we are going to win the title in the next year, I am not crazy. We are in a rush, we are suffering a lot to be better next year.”

Amorim said the club needs to bring in “one or two big players” but the Portuguese knows that in this day and age, with patience wearing thin among fans and club owners, time will not be on his side.

“The Premier League is so different. When everyone says [former United manager] Sir Alex Ferguson took three or four years to win something, it’s not possible nowadays,” he added.

“The pressure is completely different … No matter the context, we need to be there with the best teams. We will have to face a lot of adversity and big teams, more than in the past.”

What was the score in the reverse fixture?

United won 2-1 in December’s match at Etihad Stadium.

Josko Gvardiol looked to have won the match for City until an 88th-minute penalty from Bruno Fernandes was followed two minutes later by an Amad Diallo winner.

That was a result Amorim does not consider a highlight, even though the shock win came early in his United tenure.

“I don’t see one win as a special moment. Special moments are to be competitive and win titles. Even in the third division, you can beat the best team in the country,” he said.

“We want to improve [our position] in the league table and especially we want to win games. We are going to have full focus on this game.”

What is Man City’s reaction to De Bryune leaving?

City manager Pep Guardiola hailed Kevin De Bruyne as one of the Premier League’s greatest midfielders after the Belgian announced on Friday that he would leave the club at the end of the season, after a decade at the Etihad Stadium.

The 33-year-old De Bruyne has lifted 16 trophies since joining City from German side VfL Wolfsburg in 2015 — a haul that includes six Premier League titles and the Champions League in 2023.

De Bruyne has played 413 games for City, scoring 106 goals and providing 174 assists, including 118 in the Premier League — the second-most, behind Ryan Giggs (162).

“One of the greatest midfielders ever to have played in this country, and I think with Manchester City, there is no doubt,” Guardiola told a news conference.

“Greatest/not The Greatest, always you have to be careful with players that played at Maine Road [City’s former stadium], incredible players in the last 20-30 years in this club [too].

“But come on, there’s no doubt he’s one of the greatest, for sure, because of his consistency in important games, the not important games, being there every three days all the time. There is no doubt.”

The Spaniard added that he had known about De Bruyne’s departure a few days before it was announced, though Friday’s news still carried a bittersweet feeling.

“A sad day. A happy day for the fact that [I had] the pleasure personally [to] live with him. He gave all of us his humility and, with his influence in our success in the last decade, that would have been impossible to imagine without him.”

What does Guardiola think De Bruyne’s legacy will be?

Asked whether De Bruyne deserved a statue at the stadium like other club greats, such as Sergio Aguero and Vincent Kompany, the coach said De Bruyne certainly deserved it. “I will bet a lot of money that it will happen,” Guardiola said.

De Bruyne has made 20 league appearances this season after an injury in September and fitness struggles.

After a difficult campaign for City, they still have an FA Cup semifinal to come against Nottingham Forest on April 26, with the competition offering De Bruyne the chance to add more silverware to his trophy cabinet.

City will also play in the 32-team Club World Cup in the United States, which runs from June 14 to July 13.

Asked whether De Bruyne would feature in the Club World Cup, Guardiola said: “I don’t know. He has to decide. The Club World Cup is new with contracts … The club has to talk to him or he has to say what he wants to do.

“The first three games are under contract until June 30, but after that, if we go through, I don’t know … Hopefully, he can continue playing football in another place – it depends on the risk for the contracts and the future.”

Head-to-head

This is the 174th Manchester derby, of which United have won 68 and City 56.

Man Utd team news

Kobbie Mainoo could return to the United midfielder after two months out with a calf injury.

Matthijs de Ligt picked up a knock against Nottingham Forest and is a doubt.

Ayden Heaven, Jonny Evans, Lisandro Martinez and Luke Shaw are all definitely out of the game.

Man City team news

City will be without striker Erling Haaland. The Norwegian netted twice on his last visit to Old Trafford, but an ankle injury will keep him out until the end of the season.

Manuel Akanji, Nathan Ake, Rodri and John Stones remain sidelined.

Garbage Strike in UK’s Second Largest City Leaves Trash Piled High

A pungent smell of rotting garbage fills the air. Bulging sacks of trash pile high, some spilling their festering contents. And, with vermin plaguing parts of the city, at least one resident has claimed to have been bitten by a rat.

With its heritage as a manufacturing powerhouse and its proud civic history, Birmingham likes to call itself Britain’s second city.

Right now, it’s the nation’s garbage capital.

A standoff between striking refuse workers and city officials has left an estimated 17,000 tons of trash piled on city streets that is attracting rats, foxes, cockroaches and maggots. On Monday, Birmingham’s municipality declared it a “major incident,” which allows it to access more resources from the government and other nearby regions.

Some garbage collections are still taking place and the city has managed to keep many areas, including the center, clear of trash. But in several residential districts and parks it was highly conspicuous on Wednesday.

In Small Heath, a neighborhood two miles from the city center, black plastic bags had piled up at the end of some streets, and people from other areas had added to the mess by dumping their uncollected garbage.

“I have lived in England for 36 years. I have never seen a situation like this before,” said Javad Javadi, 51, a delivery driver who is originally from Iran, as he walked past overflowing plastic trash bins that lined Malmesbury Road.

“Of course, at night time, if you come after 10 o’clock you see many rats,” he said. “So many that the cats don’t chase them.”

Birmingham’s garbage pileup has caused a political stink in Britain’s Parliament where Jim McMahon, a minister from the governing Labour Party, warned of public health risks, and one Birmingham lawmaker, Preet Kaur Gill, said a constituent had written to say “that they had been bitten by a rat.”

An opposition lawmaker, Julian Lewis, compared the situation to an infamous 1978 garbage collection strike during industrial unrest under the Labour government of James Callaghan. The period became known as the “winter of discontent,” and the following year Labour lost a general election, ushering Margaret Thatcher into power.

This dispute, however, is confined to Birmingham, where more than 350 workers began limited walkouts in January that last month escalated into an indefinite full-scale strike.

“We cannot tolerate a situation that is causing harm and distress to communities,” Birmingham City Council leader, John Cotton, said in a statement.

Trade union members claim that a restructuring plan pushed by the municipality would leave around 150 workers up to £8,000 (about $10,400) a year poorer. The council disputes this, saying that “the number of staff that could lose the maximum amount (just over £6,000) is 17 people.”

While the two sides remain deadlocked, the results were evident in Malmesbury Road where black plastic bags were heaped at both ends of the street and in an alleyway halfway down. Some despairing residents had begun taking their trash to the dump.

As he loaded around 20 sacks into his car, Shakeel Ahmed explained that garbage had accumulated for three weeks outside his home and in his garden shed.

Driving to a waste facility, Mr. Ahmed, 69, a retired train manager, kept the windows open and apologized for the smell in his car, adding that he would have it professionally cleaned after depositing the trash. “If I get angry it is not going to solve the problem,” he said, philosophically.

At the refuse and recycling center in Tyseley, a few miles southeast of the city center, others had a similar story about the stench, the vermin and the damage to the city’s reputation.

“We can’t open the window because of the smell, it’s rubbish everywhere — it’s ridiculous,” said Rubina Yaqoob, 43, describing the situation in Stechford, in east Birmingham. Her vehicle is new and she had lined its trunk with a sheet before loading it with 10 bags of trash. “Look at my car!” she said, pointing to the mess the garbage had made.

Some don’t have this option, including Robert Shaw, 60, a school cleaner, who has found himself living next to a mounting pile of refuse bags at Henshaw Road. “What the council said to us is that we can take it to Tyseley,” he said. “But if you haven’t got a car, how are you supposed to take it?”

The crisis has forced some city dwellers to be inventive. Sitting in the sunshine in Morris Park, waiting to collect her three children from school, Tasnima Tafader recounted how her husband had called relatives to find space in their bins for some of the family’s garbage. His mother came through.

Then, when a refuse truck arrived around 7:30 a.m. one morning, residents came out of their homes to load bags from the street into the truck, said Ms. Tafader, 34, an interpreter.

At another depot in Tyseley, strikers gathered at the gates in front of departing refuse trucks, delaying their journeys by walking in front of them at a snail’s pace for several hundred yards.

Lee Haven, a member of the Unite trade union, disputed the city’s claim that no worker “need lose any money,” arguing that planned changes could cost some £600 a month at a time when household bills are rising sharply.

The origins of the dispute lie in 2023 when Birmingham City Council declared itself essentially bankrupt, partly as a result of equal pay cases brought by workers, and began to implement far-reaching cuts to services.

As part of a restructuring plan, the municipality now wants to scrap one position on refuse teams, known as the waste recycling and collection officer, which it says does not exist in other municipalities. Workers in that role can take voluntary redundancy or move to another position.

It says that simplifying the pay structure is crucial and keeping the role would risk “creating a huge future equal pay liability,” but declined requests to explain exactly why.

“There is a feeling we are being made a scapegoat,” Mr. Haven said, as around 10 police officers looked on. “I think the normal working class family in this country will understand that nobody can afford to take that £600 loss.”

Even as they bemoan the state of their streets, some city dwellers sympathize with the refuse collectors.

“I don’t blame them because I don’t think their wages should be cut,” said Zeenat Hussain, 53, a health service administrator from Saltley. “What they are doing is an essential job.”

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie on her new book, Trump and ‘mass murder’ in Gaza | TV Shows

Redi Tlhabi talks with award-winning author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie about her new book, Trump’s second term and Gaza.

Award-winning author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is back with her first novel in more than a decade, Dream Count, about the lives and dreams of four women in the United States, Nigeria and Guinea. She spotlights familiar themes including issues of gender, immigrant experiences, class and free speech.

As the US continues its crackdown on pro-Palestinian speech, including arresting, deporting and revoking the visas of international students, what will the future of education and learning look like? And has the current political climate shaped her writing?

This week on UpFront, Redi Tlhabi talks to author Chimamanda Ngozi Adhichie about her new book, Dream Count.