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  • Delta apologizes for post disparaging attendants’ Palestinian flag pins

    Delta apologizes for post disparaging attendants’ Palestinian flag pins

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    Delta Air Lines apologized Thursday for a now-deleted post on its X account that appeared to sympathize with a social media user who complained about flight attendants wearing Palestinian flag pins on their uniforms.

    An X user posted two pictures Tuesday of Delta flight attendants donning the pins and called the accessories “Hamas badges.” The next day, Delta replied to the post.

    “I hear you as I’d be terrified as well, personally,” the airline wrote, according to screenshots on social media of the deleted response. “Our employees reflect our culture and we do not take it lightly when our policy is not being followed.”

    A Delta spokesperson said in a statement to The Washington Post on Thursday that the airline’s social media post “was not in line with our values and our mission.” The spokesperson said the team member who wrote the post “has been counseled and no longer supports Delta’s social channels,” but did not specify whether the team member still worked for Delta.

    The flight attendants, who were photographed on separate flights, are still working for the airline and have received support from the company, Delta said in a statement. Although it previously permitted pins representing countries outside the United States to be worn on uniforms, Delta said that starting Monday, only U.S. flag pins will be allowed — a move the airline said it made in response to this week’s incident.

    Palestinian activists condemned Delta’s response, and several social media users said they planned to boycott the airline.

    Edward Ahmed Mitchell, the national deputy executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), a Muslim civil rights and advocacy group, told The Post that he initially hoped Delta’s tweet had not been written by someone who worked at the airline. He said the post could make people think the Palestinian flag is “an icon of a hate group.”

    “What happened with Delta is just the latest example of anti-Palestinian racism,” Mitchell said, adding that CAIR welcomed Delta’s apology. “And my hope is that this incident will begin to slowly, slowly move the needle in a different direction.”

    CAIR said in April that it had received more than 8,000 civil rights complaints in 2023, the highest in its 30-year history. Palestinian Americans have faced fear and violence amid the war in Gaza, The Post reported, with their support for civilians in the Gaza Strip misconstrued as support for Hamas, the militant group that has governed Gaza since 2006.

    Hamas’s flag has Islamic text on a green background, while the Palestinian flag is a black, white and green tricolor with a red triangle on the left.

    Federal officials said last year that they had identified a spike in threats against Arab, Jewish and Muslim communities after the war began.

    Israel launched a military assault in Gaza after Hamas militants crossed the border into Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people and taking some 250 hostage. More than 38,000 Palestinians have died in the enclave in the past nine months.

    Israel’s war in Gaza and the rising death toll have triggered protests across the United States, including in corporate America. In April, Google fired 28 employees for publicly protesting a contract Google had with the Israeli government.

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    Kyle Melnick, Andrew Jeong

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  • In photos: Scenes of Christmas around the world

    In photos: Scenes of Christmas around the world

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    Dec. 25

    King Charles III and Queen Camilla, followed by, from left, Catherine, Princess of Wales; Princess Charlotte; Prince George; Prince William, Prince of Wales; Prince Louis; and cousin Mia Tindall arrive for the royal family’s traditional Christmas service at St Mary Magdalene Church on the Sandringham Estate in England.

    Adrian Dennis/AFP/Getty Images

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    Washington Post staff

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  • Live updates: Two people dead after car crashed, exploded at border checkpoint in Niagara Falls, N.Y., law enforcement officials say

    Live updates: Two people dead after car crashed, exploded at border checkpoint in Niagara Falls, N.Y., law enforcement officials say

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    FBI agents rushed to respond Wednesday to a vehicle explosion that killed two and injured a third person on the Rainbow Bridge connecting Canada to Niagara Falls, N.Y., said two law enforcement officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a fast-moving investigation. Two people familiar with the investigation said there was no immediate evidence of any nexus to terrorism, but officials continue to investigate and their understanding could change. The explosion, which also injured a U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer, occurred on one of the United States’s heaviest travel days. One eyewitness told local news station WGRZ that the car was speeding and swerving as it approached the border from the U.S. side, but shortly after it passed another car, it suddenly went careening toward the U.S. security checkpoint.

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    Devlin Barrett, Anumita Kaur, Justine McDaniel

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  • In photos: The scene after Otis slammed into Acapulco as a category 5 hurricane

    In photos: The scene after Otis slammed into Acapulco as a category 5 hurricane

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    Hurricane Otis, a tropical storm that strengthened suddenly into the most powerful cyclone known to have hit Mexico’s Pacific Coast, slammed into the tourist resort of Acapulco on Wednesday and battered nearby beach communities.

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    Washington Post Staff

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  • In photos, video: The scene as deadly wildfires spread in Greece

    In photos, video: The scene as deadly wildfires spread in Greece

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    Eighteen people, believed by fire officials to be migrants or refugees, were found dead in Greece’s Dadia forest after a wildfire swept through the northeastern region.

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    Washington Post Staff

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  • In photos: Typhoon Doksuri hits southern China after killing dozens in Philippines

    In photos: Typhoon Doksuri hits southern China after killing dozens in Philippines

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    Hundreds of thousands of people were evacuated in Fujian, a southern Chinese province, after Typhoon Doksuri wreaked havoc in the Philippines.

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    Jintak Han

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  • In photos: Jenin left in rubble after Israeli raid killed 12 Palestinians

    In photos: Jenin left in rubble after Israeli raid killed 12 Palestinians

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    Israel on Wednesday ended a two-day operation in the Jenin refugee camp in which 12 Palestinians and an Israeli soldier were killed and thousands forced from their homes.

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    Washington Post Staff

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  • In photos: The scene following the deadly India train crash

    In photos: The scene following the deadly India train crash

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    At least 200 people were killed and more than 900 injured in a train collision in eastern India on Friday, official told local media outlets — figures expected to climb. After the accident, many people remain trapped inside train cars and under the wreckage.

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    Washington Post Staff

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  • In photos: The scene in New Zealand after hostel fire kills at least six people

    In photos: The scene in New Zealand after hostel fire kills at least six people

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    May 16 | Wellington

    Prime Minister Chris Hipkins, center left, and Finance Minister Grant Robertson survey the scene. Hipkins told reporters that first responders were pulled in from “across the region” to help fight the blaze. He promised a full investigation into the fire, which he described as “an absolute tragedy.”

    Ben Mckay/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

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    Washington Post Staff

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  • Pirates, Vikings and a dry-river regatta — nowhere but Australia

    Pirates, Vikings and a dry-river regatta — nowhere but Australia

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    ALICE SPRINGS, Australia — For 60 years, Australians have gathered in the Outback town of Alice Springs to cheer on one of the oddest events on the planet: a dry river race called the Henley-on-Todd Regatta.

    The name is a not-so-regal knockoff of an annual royal river boat race hosted by the British town of Henley-on-Thames. The Australians’ competition takes place in the waterless Todd River.

    “They only have sculling,” Peter Mostran, the dry regatta’s “commodore,” said of the more staid British version. “We have everything.”

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    Michael E. Miller

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  • The scene after a series of blasts rocked the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv

    The scene after a series of blasts rocked the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv

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    Russian President Vladimir Putin boasted of a “massive strike” across Ukraine at a meeting of his Security Council on Monday.

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    Washington Post Staff

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