At least 32 people have been confirmed dead after a major earthquake struck China's mountainous Tibet region on Tuesday morning, Chinese state media reported.
The earthquake that hit Tibet's holy Shigatse city around 09:00 local time (01:00 GMT) had a magnitude of 7.1 and a depth of 10 kilometres (six miles), according to data from the US Geological Survey, which also showed a series of aftershocks in the area.
Tremors were also felt in neighbouring Nepal and parts of India.
Earthquakes are common in the region, which lies on a major geological fault line.
Shigatse is considered one of the holiest cities of Tibet. It is the traditional seat of the Panchen Lama, a key figure of Tibetan Buddhism whose spiritual authority is second only to the Dalai Lama.
Chinese state media reported the earthquake as having a slightly lesser magnitude of 6.8, causing "obvious" tremors and leading to the collapse of many houses.
Social media posts show collapsing buildings and there have been several strong aftershocks.
"After a major earthquake, there is always a gradual attenuation process," Jiang Haikun, a researcher at the China Earthquake Networks Center, told CCTV.
While another earthquake of around magnitude 5 may still occur, Jiang said, "the likelihood of a larger earthquake is low".
The Chinese air force has launched rescue efforts and drones to the affected area, which sits at the foot of Mount Everest and where temperatures are well below freezing.
Both power and water in the region have been cut off.
While tremors were felt in Nepal, no damage or casualties were reported, a local official in Nepal's Namche region, near Everest, told AFP.
Tibet's earthquake bureau told the BBC on Tuesday that they were unable to provide estimates on casualties as they were still verifying the numbers.
The region, which lies on a major fault line where the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates collided, is home to frequent seismic activity. In 2015, a 7.8 magnitude earthquake near Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal, killed nearly 9,000 people and injured over 20,000.
An image taken from social media and supplied by the Reuters news agency appears to show a soldier holding up a Russian flag in Kurakhove. The image has not been verified by the BBC.
Viktor Trehubov, spokesperson for Ukraine's Khortytsia group of forces, told Reuters news agency that, as of Monday morning, Ukrainian forces were still engaging Russian troops inside Kurakhove.
Kurakhove is linked to Pokrovsk by roads that are part of the infrastructure to move troops and supplies along the front line.
The taking of Kurakhove would allow the Russians to go north to attack Pokrovsk from a new direction, analyst Roman Pohorily said.
Russia's defence ministry also claimed on Monday that the village of Dachenske, which about 8km south of Pokrovsk, had been captured by its forces.
Kyiv's forces are reportedly suffering from manpower shortages and have been losing ground in the east of Ukraine in recent months, as Russian troops advance.
US President Joe Biden has called the exiled candidate for Venezuela's opposition, Edmundo González, "the true winner" of the country's presidential election last July after meeting him at the White House.
In a post on social media, Biden said Venezuela deserved a "peaceful transfer of power".
González fled to Spain in September after turmoil following Venezuela's election, in which incumbent President Nicolás Maduro claimed victory - something disputed by González and many sections of the international community.
Caracas reacted to the meeting with fury, calling it "grotesque" and accusing Biden of backing a violent anti-democratic project, Reuters news agency reports.
Maduro is due to be re-inaugurated on Friday.
González, currently exiled in Spain, says July's presidential election was rigged and says he himself actually won it.
The opposition has called for mass protests this week, while the Maduro government offering a $100,000 (£81,000) reward for information leading to the arrest of González.
The voting tallies - a detailed official breakdown of the votes from each polling station - have been at the centre of the dispute over who won the election.
The government-aligned National Electoral Council declared Maduro the winner but failed to provide the tallies to back up its claim.
The opposition, which with the help of accredited election witnesses collected and published more than 80% of the voting tallies, says these prove that González was the overwhelming winner.
The UN Human Rights Committee in December ordered Venezuela "to refrain from destroying" the voting tallies from July's election.
North Korea has fired what appears to be an intermediate-range ballistic missile towards the sea to its east, South Korea's military said, in what is Pyongyang's first missile launch in two months.
The missile flew 1,100km before falling into the sea, the military said, adding that it "strongly condemns" this "clear act of provocation".
The launch comes as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visits Seoul for talks with some of South Korea's key leaders.
Earlier on Monday, Blinken met with acting president Choi Sang-mok, where he described the alliance between Washington and Seoul as a "cornerstone of peace and stability on the Korean peninsula".
South Korea's military says it has strengthened surveillance for the North's future missile launches and is "closely sharing information" on today's launch with the US and Japan.
Today's launch also comes amid political chaos in South Korea, which has embroiled the country for weeks after suspended President Yoon Suk Yeol's short-lived martial law attempt in December.
Yoon, who was stripped of his presidential powers after lawmakers voted to impeach him, now faces arrest. The constitutional court is also deliberating whether he should be removed from office.
Pyongyang previously mocked Yoon's shock martial law declaration as an "insane act" and accused Yoon of "brazenly brandishing blades and guns of fascist dictatorship at his own people".
The international community considers North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un a dictator. Kim's family has ruled the hermit nation for decades by developing and promoting a cult of personality.
The last time Pyongyang fired missiles was in November, a day before the US presidential election, when it launched at least seven short-range ballistic missiles off its east coast.
Earlier that week, the US had flown a long-range bomber during trilateral military drills with South Korea and Japan in a show of power, drawing condemnation from Kim's sister Kim Yo Jong.
While cases are climbing in China, the situation is very different from what it was when Covid-19 emerged five years ago, medical experts say. HMPV is common and decades old.
The shooting in Ciudad Juárez was being investigated. A prosecutor said the driver, from Texas, had accelerated in the officer’s direction and nearly hit him.
Tencent’s shares plunged nearly 10 percent after it was designated a military company. The Chinese battery manufacturer CATL was also added to the list.
While cases are climbing in China, the situation is very different from what it was when Covid-19 emerged five years ago, medical experts say. HMPV is common and decades old.
Watch: Moment Justin Trudeau resigns as Canadian prime minister
Under growing pressure from his own party, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced he will step down and end his nine-year stretch as leader.
Trudeau said he would stay on in office until his Liberal Party can choose a new leader, and that parliament would be prorogued - or suspended - until 24 March.
"This country deserves a real choice in the next election and it has become clear to me that if I'm having to fight internal battles, I cannot be the best option in that election," he said during a press conference Monday.
Trudeau's personal unpopularity with Canadians had become an increasing drag on his party's fortunes in advance of federal elections later this year.
"Last night, over dinner, I told my kids about the decision that I'm sharing with you today," he told the news conference in Ottawa.
"I intend to resign as party leader, as prime minister, after the party selects its next leader through a robust nationwide competitive process," he said.
The president of the Liberal Party, Sachit Mehra, said a meeting of the party's board of directors would be held this week to begin the process of selecting a new leader.
In a statement, he added: "Liberals across the country are immensely grateful to Justin Trudeau for more than a decade of leadership to our Party and the country."
"As Prime Minister, his vision delivered transformational progress for Canadians," he said, citing programmes his government has implemented like the Canada Child Benefit and the establishment of dental care and pharmacare coverage for some medication.
Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre said "nothing has changed" following Trudeau's resignation.
"Every Liberal MP and Leadership contender supported EVERYTHING Trudeau did for 9 years, and now they want to trick voters by swapping in another Liberal face to keep ripping off Canadians for another 4 years, just like Justin," Poilievre wrote on X.
Trudeau, 53, had faced growing calls to quit from inside his Liberal Party, which ramped up in December when deputy prime minister and long-time ally Chrystia Freeland abruptly resigned.
Trump has promised to impose a tax of 25% on imported Canadian goods - which economists have warned would significantly hurt Canada's economy - unless the country takes steps to increase security on its shared border.
Watch: Trudeau’s nine years as Canada's prime minister... in 85 seconds
Trudeau said Monday that he had hoped Freeland would have continued as deputy prime minister, "but she chose otherwise".
Canada has since announced that it will implement sweeping new security measures along the country's US border in response to the threat.
In an online post, Trump claimed that pressure over tariffs led to Trudeau's resignation and repeated his jibe that Canada should become "the 51st State".
"If Canada merged with the U.S., there would be no Tariffs, taxes would go way down, and they would be TOTALLY SECURE from the threat of the Russian and Chinese Ships that are constantly surrounding them," he wrote.
Since 2019, the Liberal Party has governed as a minority party.
Following Freeland's resignation, Trudeau lost the backing of parties that had previously helped keep the Liberals in power - the left-leaning New Democrats, who had a support agreement with the Liberals, and the Quebec nationalist party, Bloc Quebecois.
The largest opposition party, the Conservatives, have maintained a significant two-digit lead over the Liberals in polls for months - suggesting that if a general election were held today, the Liberals could be in for a significant defeat.
Liberals will now choose a new leader to take the party into the next election, which must be held on or before 20 October.
A senior government official told the BBC that the race is an open contest, and that the Prime Minister's Office will fully stay out of the process, leaving it to Liberal Party members to decide their future.
Speaking to reporters, the Bloc Quebecois leader Yves-François Blanchet suggested that an early election be called once the Liberals choose their new leader.
End of the Trudeau era
Trudeau is the son of Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, who dominated the country's politics in the 1970s and '80s.
The younger Trudeau became prime minister after the Liberal Party won a sweeping majority in 2015 amid a promise to usher in a new, progressive era of "Sunny Ways".
His record includes a commitment to gender equality in his cabinet, which continues to be 50% women; progress on reconciliation with Indigenous people in Canada; bringing in a national carbon tax; implementing a tax-free child benefit for families; and legalising recreational cannabis.
Assembly of First Nations National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak praised Trudeau's track record on indigenous issues following his resignation, saying in a statement that he "has taken meaningful steps to address issues that matter to First Nations".
"While much work remains, these actions have laid a foundation for future governments to build upon."
Clouds began to hang over Trudeau's government in recent years, which weathered a series of often self-inflicted scandals, including a controversy over a deal with a Canadian firm facing corruption charges and photos that emerged of the prime minister wearing brownface makeup.
Vaccine mandates and other restrictions were also met with fierce backlash by some Canadians, leading to the Freedom Convoy truck protests in early 2022. Trudeau eventually used unprecedented emergency powers to remove the protesters.
As Canada began to emerge from the pandemic, housing and food prices skyrocketed, and his government pulled back on ambitious immigration targets as public services began to show strain.
By late 2024, Trudeau's approval rating was at its lowest - just 22% of Canadians saying they thought he was doing a good job, according to one polling tracker.
In Ottawa, a small group of protestors danced outside Parliament Hill in celebration of his resignation.
One passer-by, however, said he thinks things were fine under Trudeau's watch.
"I'm a carpenter," Hames Gamarra, who is from British Columbia, told the BBC. "I mind my own business, I get my wages, I pay the bills. It's been OK."
Another Canadian, Marise Cassivi, said it feels like the end of an era. Asked if she feels any hints of sadness, she replied: "No."
Just before New Year, 21-year-old Shatha al-Sabbagh was out buying chocolate for her family's children from a shop in Jenin, in the occupied West Bank.
The "fearless" journalism student – who wanted to shed light on the suffering of the Palestinians – was with her mother, two young nephews and another relative.
"She was laughing and saying we'll be up all night tonight," her mother recalls.
Then she was shot in the head.
For Shatha's mother Umm al-Motassem, the pain is still raw. She stops to take a breath.
"Shatha's eyes were wide open. It looked like she was staring at me while lying on her back with blood gushing from her head.
"I started screaming, 'Stop shooting! My daughter is dead. My daughter is dead.'"
But the shooting lasted for around 10 minutes. Shatha died in a pool of her own blood.
Shatha's family holds the Palestinian Authority's (PA) security forces fully responsible for her killing, saying their area is controlled by the PA.
"It couldn't have been anyone other than PA... because they have such a heavy presence in our neighbourhood - no-one else could come or go," she told the BBC.
But the PA blames "outlaws" - the term they use for members of the Jenin Battalion, made up of fighters from armed groups including Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) and Hamas.
The PA exercises limited self-rule in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
It launched a major security operation in the refugee camp in Jenin last month targeting the armed groups based there, which they see as a challenge to their authority. Nearly four weeks on, it continues.
The Jenin Battalion is accused of blowing up a car in the camp and carrying out other "illegal activities".
"We have confiscated large numbers of weapons and explosive materials," says the PA's Brig Gen Anwar Rajab.
"The aim is to clear the camp from the explosive devices that have been planted in different streets and alleyways... These outlaws have crossed all red lines and have spread chaos."
Gen Rajab also accuses Iran of backing and funding the armed groups in the camp.
The Jenin Battalion denies links to Iran. In a recent video posted on social media, spokesman Nour al-Bitar said the PA was trying to "demonise" them and "tarnish their image", adding that fighters would not give up their weapons.
"To the PA and President Mahmoud Abbas, why has it come to this?" he asked, holding shrapnel from what he claimed was a rocket-propelled grenade fired at the camp by security forces.
The PA, led by President Abbas, was already unpopular among Palestinians dissatisfied by its rejection of armed struggle and its security co-ordination with Israel.
This anger intensified with the PA's crackdown on the armed groups in the camp, which has been unprecedented in its ferocity and length.
Israel sees those groups as terrorists, but many Jenin locals consider them to be a form of resistance to the occupation.
"These 'outlaws' that the PA is referring to – these are the young men who stand up for us when the Israeli army raids our camp," says Umm al-Motassem.
At least 14 people have been killed in the crackdown, including a 14-year-old, according to the Palestinian health ministry.
Now many Jenin locals say they fear the PA as much as they fear Israel's military raids. Shatha al-Sabbagh's death has only renewed their contempt.
Before she was killed, Shatha shared several posts on social media showing the destruction from the PA operation in Jenin - as well as Israeli raids on the camp last year.
Other posts showed pictures of armed young men who were killed in the fighting, including her brother.
Her killing was condemned by Hamas, which identified her brother as a slain member of the group's armed wing, the Izzedine al-Qassam Brigades.
The group described her "murder... in cold blood" as part of an "oppressive policy targeting the Jenin camp, which has become a symbol of steadfastness and resistance".
Mustafa Barghouti, who leads the political party Palestinian National Initiative, sees the fighting in Jenin as a consequence of the divisions between the main Palestinian factions - Fatah, which makes up most of the PA, and Hamas, which has governed Gaza since 2007.
"The last thing Palestinians need is to see Palestinians shooting each other while Israel crushes everyone," he says.
Inside the camp, residents say daily life has ground to a halt.
Water and electricity supplies have been cut off and families suffer from a lack of food, bitterly cold weather and relentless gun battles.
Locals who spoke to us asked for their names to be changed, saying they feared reprisals by the PA.
"Things are dire here. We can't move freely in the camp," says Mohamed.
"All the bakeries, the restaurants and shops are closed. The restaurant I work in opens for a day and closes for 10. When it is open, no-one comes.
"We need milk for the children, we need bread. Some people can't open their doors because of the continuous shooting."
The UN humanitarian agency, the OCHA, has called for an investigation into what it describes as human rights violations by the PA forces.
Gen Rajab said some of the "outlaws" who had "hijacked" the Jenin camp had been arrested and that others with pending cases would be brought to justice.
But Mohamed describes the PA's operation - with innocent people caught in the crossfire - as "collective punishment".
"If they want to go after outlaws, that doesn't mean they should punish the whole camp. We want our lives back."
Even going out to get food or water is a risk, says 20-year-old Sadaf.
"When we go out, we say our final prayers. We prepare ourselves mentally that we may not come back.
"It's very cold. We've taken down the doors in our home to use as firewood just to keep warm."
The BBC has heard similar accounts from four residents in the camp.
My conversation with Sadaf is interrupted by the sound of gunfire. It is unclear where it is from or who is firing. It starts and stops several times.
"Warning shots maybe," she suggests, adding it happens sometimes when PA forces are changing shifts.
Sadaf continues describing the camp, with "rubbish filling the streets and almost going into homes". More gunfire can be heard.
Sadaf's mother joins the call. "Listen to this... Can anyone sleep with this sound in the background?
"We sleep in shifts now. We're so scared they might raid our homes. We're as scared of this operation as we are when the Israeli soldiers are here."
People say security forces have deliberately hit electricity grids and generators, leaving the camp in a blackout.
The PA again blames "outlaws" - and insists it has brought in workers to fix the grid.
The armed groups want to "use the people's suffering to pressure the PA to stop the operation", says Gen Rajab. He says the security operation will continue until its objectives are met.
Gen Rajab says the PA's goal is to establish control over the Jenin camp and ensure safety and stability.
He believes stripping the armed groups of control would take away Israel's excuse to attack the camp.
At least 36 Palestinians were killed - 21 from Jenin governorate - according to the Palestinian health ministry.
Analysts say that the PA is trying to reassert its authority in the West Bank and show the US it is capable of taking a role in the future governance of Gaza.
"What would be the harm in that?" says Gen Rajab.
"Gaza is part of the Palestinian state. Gaza and the West Bank are not separate entities. There's no Palestinian state without Gaza. The president [Mahmoud Abbas] has said that and that is our strategy."
But Barghouti says this approach is an "illusion". "All you need is to listen to what [Benjamin] Netanyahu says," he adds.
Under the Israeli prime minister's vision for a post-war Gaza, Israel would control security indefinitely, and Palestinians with "no links to groups hostile to Israel" - so none of the existing major Palestinian political parties - would run the territory.
But the US, Israel's major ally, wants the PA to govern Gaza after the war. Netanyahu has previously ruled out a post-war role for the internationally backed PA.
For the residents of Jenin camp, there has been no let-up in the violence and loss.
"The PA say they're here for our safety. Where's the safety when my daughter was killed? Where's the safety with the non-stop shooting?" Umm al-Motassem cries.
"They can go after the 'outlaws' but why did my daughter have to die? Justice will be served when I know who killed my daughter," she says.
North Korea has fired what appears to be an intermediate-range ballistic missile towards the sea to its east, South Korea's military said, in what is Pyongyang's first missile launch in two months.
The missile flew 1,100km before falling into the sea, the military said, adding that it "strongly condemns" this "clear act of provocation".
The launch comes as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visits Seoul for talks with some of South Korea's key leaders.
Earlier on Monday, Blinken met with acting president Choi Sang-mok, where he described the alliance between Washington and Seoul as a "cornerstone of peace and stability on the Korean peninsula".
South Korea's military says it has strengthened surveillance for the North's future missile launches and is "closely sharing information" on today's launch with the US and Japan.
Today's launch also comes amid political chaos in South Korea, which has embroiled the country for weeks after suspended President Yoon Suk Yeol's short-lived martial law attempt in December.
Yoon, who was stripped of his presidential powers after lawmakers voted to impeach him, now faces arrest. The constitutional court is also deliberating whether he should be removed from office.
Pyongyang previously mocked Yoon's shock martial law declaration as an "insane act" and accused Yoon of "brazenly brandishing blades and guns of fascist dictatorship at his own people".
The international community considers North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un a dictator. Kim's family has ruled the hermit nation for decades by developing and promoting a cult of personality.
The last time Pyongyang fired missiles was in November, a day before the US presidential election, when it launched at least seven short-range ballistic missiles off its east coast.
Earlier that week, the US had flown a long-range bomber during trilateral military drills with South Korea and Japan in a show of power, drawing condemnation from Kim's sister Kim Yo Jong.
Orthodox Christians around the world have been celebrating Christmas by attending church services.
While the majority of the Christian world celebrate Christmas Day on 25 December, for many of the world's 200 million Orthodox Christians, the birth of Jesus Christ is marked on 7 January.
This is because they follow the Julian calendar, unlike Christian denominations which follow the Gregorian calendar.
Donald Trump Jr is planning to visit Greenland, two weeks after his father repeated his desire for the US to take control of the island - an autonomous Danish territory.
The US president-elect's son plans to record video footage for a podcast during the one-day private visit, US media report.
Donald Trump reignited controversy in December when he said "ownership and control of Greenland is an absolute necessity" for US national security.
He had previously expressed an interest in buying the Arctic territory during his first term as president. Trump was rebuffed by Greenland's leaders on both occasions.
"We are not for sale and we will not be for sale," the island's Prime Minister, Mute Egede, said in December. "Greenland belongs to the people of Greenland."
Greenland lies on the shortest route from North America to Europe, making it strategically important for the US. It is also home to a large US space facility.
The president-elect's eldest son played a key role during the 2024 US election campaign, frequently appearing at rallies and in the media.
But he will not be travelling to Greenland on behalf of his father's incoming administration, according to the Danish foreign ministry.
"We have noted the planned visit of Donald Trump Jr to Greenland. As it is not an official American visit, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark has no further comment to the visit," the ministry told BBC News.
Hours after President-elect Trump's latest intervention, the Danish government announced a huge boost in defence spending for Greenland. Danish Defence Minister Troels Lund Poulsen described the announcement's timing as an "irony of fate".
On Monday Denmark's King Frederik X changed the royal coat of arms to more prominently feature representations of Greenland and the Faroe Islands.
Some have seen this as a rebuke to Trump, but it could also prove controversial with Greenland's separatist movement.
King Frederik used his New Year's address to say the Kingdom of Denmark was united "all the way to Greenland", adding "we belong together".
But Greenland's prime minister used his own New Year's speech to push for independence from Denmark, saying the island must break free from "the shackles of colonialism".
Trump is not the first US president to suggest buying Greenland. The idea was first mooted by the country's 17th president, Andrew Johnson, during the 1860s.
Watch: Major snowstorm covers beaches and brings skiers to DC
At least five people have died in a winter storm that has seized a swathe of the US in its icy grip, leading to mass school closures, travel chaos and power cuts.
Seven US states declared emergencies: Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, Kansas, Missouri, Kentucky and Arkansas.
More than 2,000 flights have been cancelled, with about 6,500 delays also reported owing to the extreme weather caused by the polar vortex of icy cold air that usually circles the North Pole.
More than a quarter of a million people were without power on Monday afternoon, with snowfall forecast to continue into the night on the East Coast.
According to meteorologists, cold Arctic air is expected to keep conditions icy across a chunk of the country for several more weeks.
In Washington DC - where lawmakers met on Monday to certify Donald Trump's win in November's election - about 5-9in (13-23cm) of snow fell, with up to a foot recorded in parts of nearby Maryland and Virginia.
In front of the Washington Monument, hundreds of local residents gathered at a local park for a snowball fight, a now 15-year-old tradition.
"Just having fun," one local man told the BBC. "Never done a snowball fight before."
Former US Olympic skier Clare Egan was found cross-country skiing on the National Mall, the central thoroughfare of the US capital city.
She told the Associated Press she had thought "my skiing days were maybe behind me".
Washington DC's weather emergency is declared until the early hours of Tuesday as a result of the system, which was named Winter Storm Blair by the Weather Channel.
Children who had been due to go back to classes on Monday after the Christmas and Hanukkah break were instead enjoying a snow day as school districts closed from Maryland to Kansas.
In other parts of the US, the winter storm brought with it dangerous road conditions.
In Missouri, the state's highway patrol said at least 365 people had crashed on Sunday, leaving dozens injured and at least one dead.
In nearby Kansas, one of the worst-hit states, local news reported that two people were killed in a car crash during the storm.
In Houston, Texas, a person was found dead from cold weather in front of a bus stop on Monday morning, authorities said.
In Virginia, where 300 car crashes were reported between midnight and Monday morning, authorities warned local residents to avoid driving in large parts of the state.
At least one motorist was killed, according to local media reports.
Matthew Cappucci, a senior meteorologist at the weather app MyRadar, told the BBC that Kansas City had seen the heaviest snow in 32 years.
Some areas near the Ohio River in Kansas and Missouri turned to "skating rinks" in the frigid temperatures, he added.
"The ploughs are getting stuck, the police are getting stuck, everybody's getting stuck - stay home," he said.
Data from Poweroutage.us, a tracking website, shows that over 260,000 people were without power on Monday afternoon, across the storm's path through Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Virginia and West Virginia.
Eleven Yemeni detainees have been moved from the US military prison in Guantanamo Bay to Oman.
The move has left 15 detainees in the prison in Cuba - the smallest number at any point in its history.
In a statement, the Department of Defense thanked Oman for supporting US efforts "focused on responsibly reducing the detainee population and ultimately closing" the facility.
None of the men captured after the 9/11 terror attacks had been charged with any crimes in their more than two decades in detention.
The transfer, which reportedly happened in the early hours on Monday, comes days before the accused mastermind of the 11 September 2001 attacks on the US, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, is scheduled to plead guilty, following a deal with federal officials to avoid the death penalty.
Monday's transfer of the Yemeni detainees is the largest to a single country at one time under President Joe Biden.
Efforts to resettle the group in Oman began years ago, but the US has said that Yemen, which is locked in a civil war, was too unstable for repatriation.
Those transferred from Guantanamo include Moath al-Alwi, who was cleared for release in 2022 and had become known for building model boats with objects found at the prison, and Shaqawi al Hajj, who went on repeated hunger strikes to protest his detention.
The men were cleared for transfer by federal national security review panels, which determined that doing so was "consistent with the national security interests of the United States", the Defense Department said.
The transfer came less than a week after Ridah Bin Saleh al-Yazidi, one of the prison's original detainees in January 2002, was repatriated to Tunisia.
The Defense Department said three of the 15 remaining detainees also are eligible for transfer.
The military prison is part of a US naval base complex in southeastern Cuba. It was established by the Bush administration in 2002, following the 9/11 attacks, to hold suspects captured in counter-terrorism operations. At its peak, it held about 800 detainees.
Controversy has centred around the treatment of detainees and how long they were held without being charged.
As president, Barack Obama pledged to close the prison during his terms. He said the prison is contrary to US values, undermining the nation's standing in the world - a standing based on support for the rule of law.
Obama, who left office in 2017, also argued that its existence harms partnerships with countries needed to help the US fight terrorism and that it helps fuel the recruitment of jihadists.
But while in office, Obama faced opposition in Congress to shuttering the prison - some of it due to questions about what would happen to the existing prison population. He transferred or ordered the release of more than 100 detainees to other countries.
US Congress has not allowed the transfer of detainees to US states and has blocked their transfer to certain countries, including those with ongoing conflicts like Yemen.
Efforts to lower the prison's population and close it halted under Donald Trump who signed an executive order to keep it open during his first term. Trump said efforts to release detainees or close the facility made the US look weak on terrorism.
Since taking office in 2021, President Joe Biden has worked to remove more detainees from the facility in hopes of shuttering it - though that appears unlikely before Trump takes office later this month.
The US has added several Chinese technology companies, including gaming and social media giant Tencent and battery maker CATL, to a list of businesses it says work with China's military.
The list serves as a warning to American companies and organisations about the risks of doing business with Chinese entities.
While inclusion does not mean an immediate ban, it can add pressure on the US Treasury Department to sanction the firms.
Tencent and CATL have denied involvement with the Chinese military, while Beijing said the decision amounted to "unreasonable suppression of Chinese companies".
The Department of Defense's (DOD) list of Chinese military companies, which is formally known as the Section 1260H list, is updated annually and now includes 134 firms.
It is part of Washington's approach to counteracting what it sees as Beijing's efforts to increase its military power by using technology from Chinese firms, universities and research programmes.
In response to the latest announcement Tencent, which owns the messaging app WeChat, said its inclusion on the list was "clearly a mistake."
"We are not a military company or supplier. Unlike sanctions or export controls, this listing has no impact on our business," it said in a statement to Reuters news agency.
CATL also called the designation a mistake and said it "is not engaged in any military related activities."
"The US's practices violate the market competition principles and international economic and trade rules that it has always advocated, and undermine the confidence of foreign companies in investing and operating in the United States," said Liu Pengyu, a spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington.
The Pentagon had come under pressure from US lawmakers to add some of the firms, including CATL, to the list.
This pressure came as US car making giant Ford said it would invest $2bn (£1.6bn) to build a battery plant in Michigan. It has said it plans to license technology from CATL.
Ford did not immediately respond to a BBC request for comment.
The announcement comes as relations between the world's two biggest economies remain strained.
Meanwhile, President-elect Donald Trump, who has previously taken a tough stance against Beijing, is due to return to the White House this month.
The Pentagon was sued last last year by drone maker DJI and Lidar-maker Hesai Technologies over their inclusion on the list. They both remain on the updated list.
Meta has announced the appointment of three new board members including the chief executive of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) and close Donald Trump ally, Dana White.
It comes as Meta's chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, appears to be making efforts to mend ties with Trump, ahead of the US president-elect's inauguration this month.
The other new members of Meta's board include John Elkann, who leads European investment firm Exor, and Charlie Songhurst, a former Microsoft executive.
"Dana, John and Charlie will add a depth of expertise and perspective that will help us tackle the massive opportunities ahead with [artificial intelligence], wearables and the future of human connection," said Mr Zuckerberg in a statement.
The social media giant also praised Mr White's role in turning UFC into a global business.
In a post on Meta's Instagram, Mr White said he loves social media and is "excited to be a small part of the future of [artificial intelligence] and emerging technologies."
Mr White has previously rejected any suggestion that UFC platforms hate speech, insisting he supports free speech.
A year ago his tense exchange with a reporter who questioned why he allowed fighters to make anti-LGBT remarks went viral.
"People can say whatever they want and they can believe whatever they want," Mr White retorted.
Mr White's appointment follows news that Sir Nick was being replaced at Meta by his deputy, prominent Republican Joel Kaplan, who has handled relations between the social media firm and the Republican Party.
There has been an apparent thawing between Meta and Trump in recent months.
Relations had been frosty at least since Trump was barred from Facebook and Instagram following the US Capitol riot in January 2021.
In August, Trump wrote in a book that Mr Zuckerberg would "spend the rest of his life in prison" if he attempted to interfere in the 2024 US election.
But the president-elect later softened his position, telling a podcast in October it was "nice" that Mr Zuckerberg was "staying out of the election", and thanking him for a personal phone call after he faced an assassination attempt.
Mr Zuckerberg visited Mar-a-Lago and had dinner with Trump after his electoral victory in November. Earlier this month, he donated $1m (£800,000) to the president-elect's inauguration fund.
President-elect Donald Trump has asked a New York judge to halt the sentencing in his felony hush money case, which is scheduled for 10 January.
His lawyers announced on Monday that Trump would appeal the decision by Justice Juan Merchan ordering that the sentencing would proceed.
In court filings, Trump's attorneys wrote they would seek "a dismissal of this politically motivated prosecution that was flawed from the very beginning".
Trump was found guilty on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in May 2024, making him the first former president convicted of a crime.
The charges stemmed from Trump's attempt to disguise reimbursements for a hush money payment to an adult film star as legal expenses.
Trump pleaded not guilty and denied any wrongdoing. His lawyers said that filing an appeal should halt the criminal proceedings in his New York case.
The sentencing had been delayed repeatedly by the 2024 presidential election and Trump's attempt to have the case thrown out based on a claim of presidential immunity. Justice Merchan ultimately rejected the immunity argument in December.
On 3 January, Justice Merchan issued an order saying he would move ahead with the sentencing before Trump took office, but wrote that he would not consider any sentence of incarceration.
He ordered Trump to appear virtually or in-person for the hearing.
"The American People elected President Trump with an overwhelming mandate that demands an immediate end to the political weaponisation of our justice system and all of the remaining Witch Hunts," said Steven Cheung, a spokesman for Trump's presidential transition.
Trump's team has not publicly commented on whether the president-elect will be in court, but in its response Monday afternoon to the request for a stay, the Manhattan district attorney's office referred to "defendant's decision to appear for sentencing virtually instead of in person". The reference to a virtual hearing was repeated again several pages later.
In the response, the district attorney asked the judge to deny Trump's request for an immediate stay of his sentencing, and argued he would not be prejudiced by such a decision.
The weeks after the election featured a flurry of legal filings from both Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, who brought the case, and Trump's legal team.
Bragg's office had previously indicated that they would not oppose delaying Trump's sentencing until after he finishes his term in office, four years from now.
But after Justice Merchan decided to move ahead with the sentencing, Bragg has asked the judge to proceed with the sentencing on Friday.
In his order last week, Justice Merchan wrote that "it is this court's firm belief that only by bringing finality to this matter" will the legal quandaries at play be resolved.
However, the judge left the door open to the possibility that Trump would seek to appeal the sentencing, writing that he "must be permitted to avail himself of every available appeal".
Tencent’s shares plunged nearly 10 percent after it was designated a military company. The Chinese battery manufacturer CATL was also added to the list.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has said those who cover up or fail to report child sexual abuse could face professional or criminal sanctions under a new offence to be introduced this year.
The proposal was one of 20 recommendations made by Professor Alexis Jay following her seven year inquiry into child sexual abuse, which concluded in 2022.
Cooper said the change would be added to the Crime and Policing Bill this spring.
The Conservative shadow home secretary Chris Philp welcomed the move but urged the home secretary to announce a national statutory public inquiry into sexual abuse of children by grooming gangs.
He argued that the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA), led by Prof Jay, had been "mainly directed" at other child sexual abuse issues and only covered six of the towns involved in the "gang rape scandal".
"We need to get to the truth," he told MPs, and said an inquiry, with powers to compel witnesses to attend and give evidence under oath, was needed.
He added that if the government would not agree to an inquiry, the Conservatives would try to amend the Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill to force the government to hold one.
Cooper did not commit to holding a new inquiry and instead stressed the importance of implementing the recommendations of inquiries that had already been completed.
Introducing mandatory reporting of child sexual abuse was one of the key recommendations from the IICSA report.
It said there should be a legal requirement for those who work in "regulated activity or work in a position of trust" to report abuse in certain circumstances including if they "observed recognised indicators" of child sexual abuse.
The report also said it should be a criminal offence not to report abuse if they are told about it by the child or perpetrator, or if they have witnessed a child being sexually abused.
Addressing the House of Commons on Monday afternoon, Cooper said she would introduce mandatory reporting and a new offence targeting those who fail to report abuse or cover it up.
The home secretary also promised to make grooming an aggravated factor in the sentencing of abuse cases and "overhaul" how information and evidence on child sexual abuse is gathered.
Earlier in the day, Prof Jay who now chairs the Act on IICSA campaign group urged ministers to adopt a "clear timeline" to accept all the report's recommendations.
Cooper said Safeguarding Minister Jess Phillips had met with Prof Jay last year and had convened a cross-government group to "drive forward change". She said she would set out timescales following work with a new victims and survivors panel.
Maggie Oliver, a former Greater Manchester police detective who resigned in 2012 over poor handling of abuse cases in Rochdale, told BBC Radio 4's World Tonight that the home secretary's statement on child abuse was "a bit of a kneejerk reaction to international horror at what has happened in our country".
The subject of grooming gangs has come under the spotlight, in part due to interventions on social media from Elon Musk.
The tech-entrepreneur and adviser to US President-elect Donald Trump called safeguarding minister Jess Phillips a "rape genocide apologist" and accused Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer of being "complicit in the rape of Britain".
Speaking at a press conference, Sir Keir defended his record as director of public prosecutions saying that when he left office "we had the highest number of child sexual abuse cases being prosecuted on record".
He said he enjoyed robust debate but said it had to be "based on facts and truth, not on lies".
"What I won't tolerate is politicians jumping on the bandwagon simply to get attention, when those politicians sat in government for 14 long years, tweeting, talking, but not doing anything about it. Now, so desperate for attention that they're amplifying what the far-right is saying."
McDonald's workers have said they are still facing sexual abuse and harassment, a year after the boss promised to clean up behaviour at the fast-food chain.
One 19-year-old worker, Matt, told the BBCsome of his colleagues were scared of going into work, and that managers would "touch up" other members of staff.
Since the BBC's original investigation into the company, the UK equality watchdog has heard 300 reported incidents of harassment. It now plans to intervene again.
A McDonald's spokesperson said the company had undertaken "extensive work" over the past year to ensure it has industry-leading practices in place to keep its workers safe.
The UK boss of McDonald's has been summoned on Tuesday to answer MPs' questions for a second time, including over claims of sexual abuse.
Warning - this article contains distressing content
Claims include:
A worker quit her job in the West Midlands at the end of 2023, after she says managers inappropriately touched her and customers sexually harassed her. When she raised it, she says she was told to "suck it up".
A 16-year-old current employee based in the West Midlands says he was bullied, shouted at and sworn at by managers.
A female worker, 20, says a male manager sent her topless pictures. She left her McDonald's branch in the East of England in August.
These claims all relate to events after November 2023, when the boss of McDonald's UK, Alistair Macrow first appeared in front of parliament's Business and Trade Committee.
Mr Macrow told MPs then that the firm was taking action to improve working conditions, after the BBC uncovered widespread concerns over the treatment of staff.
However, one current and two former workers from different parts of the country, claim that the restaurant audits that were promised, were stage-managed by the branches.
More than 700 current and former junior employees are now taking legal action against the firm, accusing it of failing to protect them.
'Scared to go in'
Matt said he quit his McDonald’s branch in the Midlands last year because of what he calls a "toxic" work environment.
He said he was bullied for having a learning disability and an eye condition.
"And then it was stuff you noticed, managers and staff being racist to other staff. Managers trying to touch other staff up," he said.
He said some staff members felt scared to go into work, because they feared something "horrible" happening.
Matt said the work culture had not changed by the time he left in May.
'Just banter'
Alan, not his real name, said he has been repeatedly subjected to "degrading and humiliating" verbal abuse by his colleagues at a McDonald's branch in southwest Scotland.
"It’s just homophobic slurs a lot, sometimes to my face, sometimes behind my back," the 19-year-old said.
When he reported the problem to a senior manager, he says he was told it was "just a bit of banter".
Alan has worked in other fast-food restaurants where he said homophobia was taken more seriously.
"It just seems like McDonald's don't care as much," he said.
'Sex for shifts'
Claire, not her real name, who worked at a branch in the Midlands until May 2023, says a shift manager asked her for sex in return for extra shifts, which she refused. She was 17, he was in his 30s.
"You don't expect that to happen," she said. "It was totally inappropriate."
Like most McDonald's workers, Claire was employed on a zero-hours contract
McDonald's outlets are run as franchises, so local managers are responsible for employing the staff for their restaurants. Across the UK, 89% of their workers are on zero-hours contracts.
McDonald's says workers can choose to switch to minimum guaranteed hours. But we have spoken to 50 workers across the country who say they were not given that choice.
Some workers told the BBC the insecure hours leads to an imbalance of power. Others, however, said zero-hours contracts worked well for them.
Claire says she felt "dependent" on her managers for work. "I was always asking for more shifts, as I needed more money," she said.
A McDonald's spokesperson said that in 2018, it offered all employees the choice of a flexible or guaranteed hours contract, and that every staff room should still display information on how to request one.
"Additionally, after four weeks in role, every new employee has a formal conversation with management – in which managers check that employees are aware of the option of a guaranteed hours contract," the company said.
The company said it did not recognise the incident where a manager asked for sex in return for shifts. "If provided with sufficient information we would ensure a full investigation is carried out, and appropriate action taken if necessary," the company said.
'Traumatised'
Most McDonald's staff are aged between 16 and 25. For many, it is their first job.
Even senior managers are often young.
Elliott, not his real name, was in charge of a store in the South of England by his early twenties. He left last February.
"If I had a sister, or if I had a daughter, I wouldn't want them working in McDonald's," he said.
When the McDonald's boss spoke to MPs in 2023 he said the company had stopped a practice of moving managers around so they could avoid disciplinary action.
But Elliott says that days after Mr Macrow gave evidence, a manager was moved to his store to avoid being disciplined, following allegations they had sent sexually explicit messages to female colleagues who were 16-18 years old.
Following the BBC investigation, McDonald’s brought in outside consultants, Price Waterhouse Cooper (PwC), to audit their restaurants and check on the wellbeing of their staff. But Elliott says the franchise he worked for “rigged” its inspection in February.
"They were meeting the best employees, hand-plucked from different stores," he said. "The people that can be coached on the correct answers."
According to Elliot the audit gave the restaurant a 100% rating. Yet, he told us, two months before the audit, a manager working there had been accused of performing a Nazi salute to a Jewish employee. He said PwC was not told of this allegation.
"I think I am a bit traumatised by it," he said. "And I think I'll continue to have bad memories of my employment for the rest of my life."
PwC said that while it doesn't comment on individual clients, its site visits are "subject to a stringent set of processes" and are refined as required.
A McDonald's spokesperson said PwC's independent site visits "play a crucial role" in assessing each restaurant against specific criteria and ensuring standards are met.
"In the few instances where our expectations have not been met, we have taken prompt corrective action," the spokesperson said.
"The assessment procedures are under constant review by PwC and were refined early in the programme to ensure that employee interviews - which form part of the assessment - are selected randomly by independent assessors, further safeguarding the integrity of the process."
The BBC first began investigating working conditions at McDonald's in February 2023, after the company signed a legally binding agreement with the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), in which it pledged to protect its staff from sexual harassment.
The EHRC also set up a dedicated hotline for abuse claims.
More than 160 people approached the BBC with allegations after our initial investigation, while 300 incidents were reported to the EHRC.
Now, the watchdog says it is taking stronger action against the fast-food chain.
In a new statement provided exclusively to the BBC, the EHRC said: “We are actively working with McDonalds to update our ongoing legal agreement in light of serious allegations raised by our work with the company, and the BBC investigation."
Its action plan will involve strengthening the existing measures - which included providing more training and conducting a survey of workers - as well as announcing new steps, the BBC understands.
McDonald's said the agreement with the EHRC was signed "with the intention that it continues to evolve to ensure the robust measures we have in place are aligned with any updated guidance".
Separately, law firm Leigh Day said it had been instructed to start legal action against McDonald's by hundreds of staff and former staff, with more than 450 restaurants implicated in the claims.
A McDonald's spokesperson said: "Ensuring the 168,000 people that work in McDonald's restaurants are safe is the most important responsibility for both us and our franchisees, and we have undertaken extensive work over the last year to ensure we have industry-leading practices in place to support this priority.
"Any incident of misconduct and harassment is unacceptable and subject to rapid and thorough investigation and action."
The company said: "Our relentless focus on eliminating all forms of harassment at McDonald's is led by a newly created team and informed by the experience and guidance of external experts."
It said it had rolled out company-wide programmes to improve safeguarding, drive awareness and enhance training, and in addition to the four existing channels, it had introduced an additional way for employees to speak up, confidentially, at any time, allowing employees to "instantly raise issues digitally", and which was "specifically designed to ensure they feel empowered to speak up".
It also said its new investigations unit was "dedicated to rooting out any behaviour that falls below the high standards" it demands of its workers.
"We are confident that we are taking significant and important steps to tackle the unacceptable behaviours facing every organisation," the spokesperson added.
It said its latest anonymous employee survey showed that 92% of its franchisees' people are now comfortable speaking up, and 93% believe management will act.
"However, we know that we must be constantly vigilant, and we will challenge and confront any behaviour that falls below those standards," it said.
What to do if you have been sexually harassed at work
Report it: The charity Victim Support suggests telling your manager, HR representative or trade union
Keep a record: Include dates, times and details of any incidents. Save any relevant emails.
Get help: Victim Support operates a free and confidential 24/7 helpline and live chat service. Call 0808 16 89 111 or use the live chat at: victimsupport.org.uk/live-chat.
Call the police: If sexual harassment escalates into violence, threats or sexual assault, report this to the police by calling 101. If you are in danger, call 999.
If you have been affected by any of the issues in this story, information and support is available via the BBC Action Line.
Some of the names in this story have been changed to protect identities.
Just before New Year, 21-year-old Shatha al-Sabbagh was out buying chocolate for her family's children from a shop in Jenin, in the occupied West Bank.
The "fearless" journalism student – who wanted to shed light on the suffering of the Palestinians – was with her mother, two young nephews and another relative.
"She was laughing and saying we'll be up all night tonight," her mother recalls.
Then she was shot in the head.
For Shatha's mother Umm al-Motassem, the pain is still raw. She stops to take a breath.
"Shatha's eyes were wide open. It looked like she was staring at me while lying on her back with blood gushing from her head.
"I started screaming, 'Stop shooting! My daughter is dead. My daughter is dead.'"
But the shooting lasted for around 10 minutes. Shatha died in a pool of her own blood.
Shatha's family holds the Palestinian Authority's (PA) security forces fully responsible for her killing, saying their area is controlled by the PA.
"It couldn't have been anyone other than PA... because they have such a heavy presence in our neighbourhood - no-one else could come or go," she told the BBC.
But the PA blames "outlaws" - the term they use for members of the Jenin Battalion, made up of fighters from armed groups including Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) and Hamas.
The PA exercises limited self-rule in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
It launched a major security operation in the refugee camp in Jenin last month targeting the armed groups based there, which they see as a challenge to their authority. Nearly four weeks on, it continues.
The Jenin Battalion is accused of blowing up a car in the camp and carrying out other "illegal activities".
"We have confiscated large numbers of weapons and explosive materials," says the PA's Brig Gen Anwar Rajab.
"The aim is to clear the camp from the explosive devices that have been planted in different streets and alleyways... These outlaws have crossed all red lines and have spread chaos."
Gen Rajab also accuses Iran of backing and funding the armed groups in the camp.
The Jenin Battalion denies links to Iran. In a recent video posted on social media, spokesman Nour al-Bitar said the PA was trying to "demonise" them and "tarnish their image", adding that fighters would not give up their weapons.
"To the PA and President Mahmoud Abbas, why has it come to this?" he asked, holding shrapnel from what he claimed was a rocket-propelled grenade fired at the camp by security forces.
The PA, led by President Abbas, was already unpopular among Palestinians dissatisfied by its rejection of armed struggle and its security co-ordination with Israel.
This anger intensified with the PA's crackdown on the armed groups in the camp, which has been unprecedented in its ferocity and length.
Israel sees those groups as terrorists, but many Jenin locals consider them to be a form of resistance to the occupation.
"These 'outlaws' that the PA is referring to – these are the young men who stand up for us when the Israeli army raids our camp," says Umm al-Motassem.
At least 14 people have been killed in the crackdown, including a 14-year-old, according to the Palestinian health ministry.
Now many Jenin locals say they fear the PA as much as they fear Israel's military raids. Shatha al-Sabbagh's death has only renewed their contempt.
Before she was killed, Shatha shared several posts on social media showing the destruction from the PA operation in Jenin - as well as Israeli raids on the camp last year.
Other posts showed pictures of armed young men who were killed in the fighting, including her brother.
Her killing was condemned by Hamas, which identified her brother as a slain member of the group's armed wing, the Izzedine al-Qassam Brigades.
The group described her "murder... in cold blood" as part of an "oppressive policy targeting the Jenin camp, which has become a symbol of steadfastness and resistance".
Mustafa Barghouti, who leads the political party Palestinian National Initiative, sees the fighting in Jenin as a consequence of the divisions between the main Palestinian factions - Fatah, which makes up most of the PA, and Hamas, which has governed Gaza since 2007.
"The last thing Palestinians need is to see Palestinians shooting each other while Israel crushes everyone," he says.
Inside the camp, residents say daily life has ground to a halt.
Water and electricity supplies have been cut off and families suffer from a lack of food, bitterly cold weather and relentless gun battles.
Locals who spoke to us asked for their names to be changed, saying they feared reprisals by the PA.
"Things are dire here. We can't move freely in the camp," says Mohamed.
"All the bakeries, the restaurants and shops are closed. The restaurant I work in opens for a day and closes for 10. When it is open, no-one comes.
"We need milk for the children, we need bread. Some people can't open their doors because of the continuous shooting."
The UN humanitarian agency, the OCHA, has called for an investigation into what it describes as human rights violations by the PA forces.
Gen Rajab said some of the "outlaws" who had "hijacked" the Jenin camp had been arrested and that others with pending cases would be brought to justice.
But Mohamed describes the PA's operation - with innocent people caught in the crossfire - as "collective punishment".
"If they want to go after outlaws, that doesn't mean they should punish the whole camp. We want our lives back."
Even going out to get food or water is a risk, says 20-year-old Sadaf.
"When we go out, we say our final prayers. We prepare ourselves mentally that we may not come back.
"It's very cold. We've taken down the doors in our home to use as firewood just to keep warm."
The BBC has heard similar accounts from four residents in the camp.
My conversation with Sadaf is interrupted by the sound of gunfire. It is unclear where it is from or who is firing. It starts and stops several times.
"Warning shots maybe," she suggests, adding it happens sometimes when PA forces are changing shifts.
Sadaf continues describing the camp, with "rubbish filling the streets and almost going into homes". More gunfire can be heard.
Sadaf's mother joins the call. "Listen to this... Can anyone sleep with this sound in the background?
"We sleep in shifts now. We're so scared they might raid our homes. We're as scared of this operation as we are when the Israeli soldiers are here."
People say security forces have deliberately hit electricity grids and generators, leaving the camp in a blackout.
The PA again blames "outlaws" - and insists it has brought in workers to fix the grid.
The armed groups want to "use the people's suffering to pressure the PA to stop the operation", says Gen Rajab. He says the security operation will continue until its objectives are met.
Gen Rajab says the PA's goal is to establish control over the Jenin camp and ensure safety and stability.
He believes stripping the armed groups of control would take away Israel's excuse to attack the camp.
At least 36 Palestinians were killed - 21 from Jenin governorate - according to the Palestinian health ministry.
Analysts say that the PA is trying to reassert its authority in the West Bank and show the US it is capable of taking a role in the future governance of Gaza.
"What would be the harm in that?" says Gen Rajab.
"Gaza is part of the Palestinian state. Gaza and the West Bank are not separate entities. There's no Palestinian state without Gaza. The president [Mahmoud Abbas] has said that and that is our strategy."
But Barghouti says this approach is an "illusion". "All you need is to listen to what [Benjamin] Netanyahu says," he adds.
Under the Israeli prime minister's vision for a post-war Gaza, Israel would control security indefinitely, and Palestinians with "no links to groups hostile to Israel" - so none of the existing major Palestinian political parties - would run the territory.
But the US, Israel's major ally, wants the PA to govern Gaza after the war. Netanyahu has previously ruled out a post-war role for the internationally backed PA.
For the residents of Jenin camp, there has been no let-up in the violence and loss.
"The PA say they're here for our safety. Where's the safety when my daughter was killed? Where's the safety with the non-stop shooting?" Umm al-Motassem cries.
"They can go after the 'outlaws' but why did my daughter have to die? Justice will be served when I know who killed my daughter," she says.