Palestinians clash with troops during a protest along the Israel border with Gaza. REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa.
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4th week, March 2018.
This Week in War: A Friday round-up of what happened and what’s been written in the world of war and military/security affairs this week.
It’s a mix of news reports, policy briefs, blog posts, and long-form journalism.
- Israel has deployed 100 sharpshooters to the Gaza border ahead the planned mass Palestinian protest.
- 85-year-old Holocaust survivor, Mirelle Knoll, was found dead with 11 stab wounds and her apartment set ablaze in Paris, France. French police are investigating if it was a hate crime.
- North and South Korea will hold their first and historical summit in more than a decade on April 27, 2018.
- Kim Jong Un has met China’s leader and later pledged his commitment to denuclearization and to meet U.S. officials.
- US President Donald Trump has said he is keen to meet Kim Jong-un after being told the NK leader's trip to China "went very well”.
- The US and its European allies are expelling dozens of Russian diplomats in a co-ordinated response to the poisoning of a former Russian spy in the UK.
- Sergei Skripal, the ex-Kremlin spy poisoned in the UK, sent Putin a letter asking if he could return to Russia.
- More than 500 Palestinians injured after clashes with Israeli forces and 7 dead after thousands of Palestinians, including women and children, marched along the Gaza-Israel border on Friday.
- A “high-ranking” official in al-Qaeda has been killed in a US airstrike over Libya.
- 7 missiles fired by the Houthi rebels have been shot down after entering Saudi territory.
- Human rights lawyer, Amal Clooney, has joined the legal team representing 2 Reuters reporters jailed in Myanmar, who are accused of possessing secret government papers exposing a Rohingya massacre.
- India has ruled that sex with a child bride is always rape, in a massive win for girl’s rights.
- The Syrian government and army are preparing to launch a “huge” operation against the last rebel-held town in eastern Ghouta, unless the insurgents hand over the area.
- After a police officer was shot dead, an alleged revenge mission by the police in the Rocinha favela in Brazil left 8 innocent victims executed.
- The Australian federal government has outlined its plan to cut income support from up to 7,000 asylum seekers.
- Rioting and a fire in the cells of a Venezuelan police station killed 78 people. Families wanting information about relatives were tear gassed.
- Fired VA Secretary, David Shulkin, says White House “muzzled” him
- A new study has found that immunizations could put an end to world poverty by 2030.
- The Inuit oral historian who tied ancestral stories to an ill-fated 1840s expedition to find the North-West Passage, dies at 58.
- A security guard had turned off the fire alarm system and illegally blocked exits during a fire that killed at least 64 people at a busy shopping mall in the Russian Siberian city of Kemerovo.
- The March for Our Lives movement swept across the United States on Saturday. Protestors marched in hoards totalling hundreds of thousands united in a plan to ‘Vote them out’, a movement to vote out pro-gun politicians.
- In a tit-for-tat response to US action, Russia has expelled 60 US diplomats and closed the country's St Petersburg consulate over a spy poisoning case in the UK.
- The daughter and victim in the UK spy poisoning case is now conscious and talking.
- The mayor of Tripoli, Libya has been abducted from his home.
- Azeri journalist Rahim Namazov has been shot and his wife killed in a possible political score-settling. He had been an outspoken critic of the Azeri political leadership and served time in prison before seeking exile in France in 2010.
- Trump officials end policy exempting pregnant immigrants from detention.
- llegal workers have invaded the farm of former Zimbabwean first lady Grace Mugabe to mine for gold. The farm is in Mazowe, where she had forcefully evicted villagers in 2015 - while her husband was still in power.