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Here's a rundown of all the news that you need to start your Monday with, including the UK experiencing its worst wave of riots in 13 years, Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov saying that the "Doomsday Clock" is reading "2 minutes to midnight" and Israeli airstrikes on two schools sheltering displaced Gazans killing at least 30 people.
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The UK is going through its worst wave of riots in 13 years, with far-right demonstrators targeting asylum seekers and ethnic minority communities across the country.
A storm of anti-Muslim disinformation on social media has fueled Islamophobic and far-right violence in the aftermath of the fatal stabbing attack of three girls in the northern English seaside town of Southport on July 29.
False reports spread by extremist far-right social media accounts claimed the suspect was a Muslim and a migrant, which were echoed in the mob’s Islamophobic vitriolic chants.
Russia's deputy foreign minister said Sunday that the “Doomsday Clock” reads “two minutes to midnight,” referring to the rising tensions between Moscow and Washington.
“I would say that this clock is now showing something like two minutes to (midnight), but this does not mean that the clock is irreversible and the ‘Doomsday Clock’ will begin to strike,” Sergey Ryabkov said in remarks on Russia’s state broadcaster Rossiya-1.
The “Doomsday Clock” is a symbolic representation of the likelihood of a human-made global catastrophe which was inaugurated in 1947 by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, an organization founded two years prior by a group of Manhattan Project researchers.
At least 30 Palestinians were killed and scores injured in Israeli airstrikes on two schools sheltering displaced people in Gaza City, the Civil Defense Agency said.
The attacks targeted the Hassan Salama and Al-Nasr schools, Civil Defense spokesman Mahmoud Basal said.
“Around 80% of the victims are children,” he added in a statement.
NEWS IN BRIEF
SPORTS
Team Belgium has withdrawn from Monday's Paris 2024 triathlon relay after an Olympian fell sick.
In a statement, the team said that Belgian triathlete Claire Michel, one of the members of the relay, is "unfortunately ill and has to withdraw from the competition."
It added that after consultation with the athletes and their entourage, the Belgian team will not "take part in the mixed relay at the Paris Olympic Games tomorrow."
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