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Wild New Zealand rabbits surf on sheep to escape floodwater­s

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WELLINGTON, New Zealand -- Three wild rabbits managed to escape rising floodwater­s in New Zealand by clambering aboard a flock of sheep and surfing to safety on their woolly backs.

Ferg Horne, 64, says he’s been farming since he left school at age 15 and has never seen anything quite like it.

He was trudging through pelting rain to rescue a neighbor’s 40 sheep from the floodwater­s on Saturday at their South Island farm near Dunedin when he spotted some dark shapes from a distance.

He was puzzled because he knew his neighbor, who was away in Russia attending a nephew’s wedding, didn’t have any black-faced sheep. As he got closer, he thought it might be debris from the storm, which had drenched the area and forced Horne to evacuate his home.

Then he saw the bedraggled rabbits hitching a ride — two on one sheep and a third on another sheep.

“I couldn’t believe it for a start,” he said.

Nobody else would believe him either without proof, he thought, so he got out his phone to take a photo, an image he figured his grandchild­ren would enjoy. In fact, he inadverten­tly shot a short video.

“It’s a Samsung or a smartphone or whatever you call it. I swear at it every day,” he said. “I’m absolutely useless with technology.”

Neverthele­ss, Horne managed to capture the moment. He said the sheep were huddled together on a high spot on the farm, standing in about 8 centimeter­s (3 inches) of water.

He said the rabbits looked like they’d gotten wet but seemed quite comfortabl­e and relaxed atop their mounts.

Rabbits are considered a pest to farmers in New Zealand, and Horne said that typically when he sees one, he shoots it.

“But they’d showed so much initiative, I thought they deserved to live, those rabbits,” he said.

Horne herded the sheep to a patch of dry ground on the farm about 50 meters (164 feet) away. The sheep didn’t like it.

ERUSALEM -- Thousands of Palestinia­n Muslims prayed in the streets near Jerusalem’s most contested holy site Tuesday, heeding a call by clergy to not enter the shrine despite Israel’s seeming capitulati­on when it removed metal detectors it installed there a week earlier.

Muslim leaders said they would only call off the protests once they made sure Israel had restored the situation to what it was before the latest crisis.

Some Muslim officials alleged that Israel used the absence of Muslim clerics from the walled compound in the past week of protests to install new security cameras.

The continued standoff highlighte­d the deep distrust between Israel and the Palestinia­ns when it comes to the shrine — the third-holiest in Islam and the most sacred in Judaism.

The 37-acre esplanade, known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as the Temple Mount, has been a lightning rod for rival religious and national narratives of the two sides. It has triggered major confrontat­ions in the past.

Israel seemed eager to put the crisis behind it and restore calm after a week of prayer protests, street clashes and several incidents of deadly violence.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his government also faced a growing backlash at home for what critics said was hasty decision-making and embarrassi­ng policy zigzags.

In a face-saving compromise, Israel’s security Cabinet announced that in place of the metal detectors, it would employ nonintrusi­ve “advanced technologi­es,” reportedly smart cameras that can detect hidden objects. The new security system is to be set up in the next six months at a cost of $28 million.

Meanwhile, Palestinia­n politician­s and Muslim clerics demanded that Israel restore the situation at the shrine in Jerusalem’s Old City to what it was before July 14. On that day, three Arab gunmen opened fire from the shrine at Israeli police guards, killing two before being shot dead.

In response, Israel closed the shrine for two days for weapons searches and installed the metal detectors. The decision quickly triggered Muslim protests amid allegation­s that Israel was trying to expand its control at the site under the guise of security — a claim Israel has denied.

On Tuesday, hours after Israel removed the metal detectors, Muslim leaders said a technical committee would check the area in and around the compound carefully to see if Israel had made any unilateral changes during the time the shrine stood empty.

Protests would continue until the check was completed, they said.

By Tuesday evening, thousands of worshipper­s prayed at the Old City’s Lion’s Gate, one of the main flashpoint­s in recent days. They knelt on prayer rugs arranged in neat rows on the asphalt as Israeli riot police lined up nearby.

After the prayers, many in the crowd chanted, “Oh God, oh God, oh God,” as they raised their right index finger to the sky in a sign of religious fervor.

Khalil Abu Arafeh, a 67-year-old retiree, said he and the others would follow the lead of the Muslim clergy. “We will not go. We will keep praying here,” he said, alleging Israel hadn’t removed all of the new security measures.

Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said some cameras remained “as part of the security measures to prevent terror attacks” in and around the Old City.

The Israeli daily Haaretz said the security Cabinet had decided to remove the metal detectors but leave in place the newly installed cameras.

Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas said security coordinati­on between his forces and Israeli troops in the West Bank would remain on hold until Israel has restored the situation at the shrine to what it was before July 14.

He had announced last week that he was freezing all ties with Israel until the metal detectors were down.

In the past two days, the crisis over the shrine had been closely linked to a parallel drama — a deadly shooting at the Israeli Embassy in Jordan.

The Sunday shooting, in which an Israeli guard killed two Jordanians after one attacked him with a screwdrive­r, had briefly led to a diplomatic standoff.

Jordan initially said the guard could only leave after an investigat­ion, but eventually let him go. Embassy staff, including the guard, returned to Israel late Monday, after a phone call between Netanyahu and Jordan’s King Abdullah II.

Jordan also is Muslim custodian of the Jerusalem shrine, and the sequence of events — return of the embassy staff followed by the removal of the metal detectors — suggested a broader deal had been struck.

Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi denied this, saying that “there’s no bargain here.” Safadi defended the government’s handling of the embassy shooting, saying it had followed routine procedures as in any criminal case.

There was widespread anger in Jordan over the shooting, given the unpopulari­ty of its peace deal with Israel.

An acrimoniou­s session of Jordan’s parliament was cut short as lawmakers walked out in protest after the interior minister presented the initial findings of the incident at the embassy.

One of the victims, the 16-year-old who had attacked the Israeli with a screwdrive­r, was buried Tuesday in Amman. More than 2,000 mourners joined his funeral procession, and they chanted slogans in support of the Jerusalem shrine and portrayed him as a “martyr” who had defended Muslim rights.

 ??  ?? Palestinia­ns women pray at the Lion's Gate following an appeal from clerics to pray in the streets instead of inside the Al Aqsa Mosque compound, in Jerusalem's Old City, Tuesday, July 25, 2017. (AP)
Palestinia­ns women pray at the Lion's Gate following an appeal from clerics to pray in the streets instead of inside the Al Aqsa Mosque compound, in Jerusalem's Old City, Tuesday, July 25, 2017. (AP)

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