A10 The BulleTin • Monday, May 10, 2021 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY TUESDAY TONIGHT HIGH 68° LOW 38° Mostly sunny and milder Yesterday Normal Record 61° 63° 88° in 1906 37° 35° 14° in 1916 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.54" in 2005 Month to date (normal) 0.03" (0.22") Year to date (normal) 1.40" (4.35") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30.15" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Tue. Sun 5:45am/8:19pm 5:43am/8:20pm Moon 5:29am/7:28pm 5:52am/8:31pm Mercury 6:37am/10:14pm 6:38am/10:17pm Venus 6:21am/9:19pm 6:21am/9:22pm Mars 8:48am/12:24am 8:47am/12:23am Jupiter 2:44am/1:13pm 2:41am/1:10pm Saturn 2:02am/11:48am 1:58am/11:44am Uranus 5:23am/7:29pm 5:19am/7:25pm New First Full Last May 11 May 19 May 26 Jun 2 Tonight's sky: Hercules climbs the eastern sky this evening. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 8 8 5 The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. POLLEN COUNT Trees High Weeds Absent Source: Oregon Allergy Associates Nice and warm with partial sunshine EAST: Mostly sunny and warmer Monday. Mainly clear Monday night. Mostly sunny and warm Tuesday. 75° 41° Warm; partly sunny, then mostly cloudy Astoria 60/45 Hood River NATIONAL WEATHER As of 7 a.m. yesterday Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie 47772 86% Wickiup 92608 46% Crescent Lake 23023 26% Ochoco Reservoir 11139 25% Prineville 88510 60% River fl ow Station Cu.ft./sec. Deschutes R. below Crane Prairie 105 Deschutes R. below Wickiup 1130 Deschutes R. below Bend 80 Deschutes R. at Benham Falls 1460 Little Deschutes near La Pine 153 Crescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 15 Crooked R. above Prineville Res. 58 Crooked R. below Prineville Res. 247 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 31 Ochoco Ck. below Ochoco Res. 11 -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Base 47-83 Mt. Hood Meadows 0 0-0 Timberline Lodge 4 0-144 T-storms Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Rain Showers Snow Flurries Ice Warm Front Stationary Front Cold Front Source: OnTheSnow.com Death toll soars to 50 in school bombing in Afghan capital Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 79/69/0.00 Akron 43/36/2.10 Albany 59/40/0.02 Albuquerque 78/52/0.00 Anchorage 54/43/0.03 Atlanta 83/56/0.00 Atlantic City 57/45/0.01 Austin 87/73/Tr Baltimore 64/41/0.02 Billings 50/41/0.06 Birmingham 84/62/0.25 Bismarck 60/36/0.01 Boise 62/37/0.00 Boston 69/49/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 64/44/0.22 Buffalo 53/40/0.16 Burlington, VT 65/43/0.00 Caribou, ME 60/41/0.00 Charleston, SC 82/57/0.00 Charlotte 82/55/0.00 Chattanooga 84/50/0.29 Cheyenne 51/32/0.07 Chicago 57/40/0.22 Cincinnati 66/48/0.66 Cleveland 45/41/1.13 Colorado Springs 48/40/0.01 Columbia, MO 53/48/0.88 Columbia, SC 86/51/0.00 Columbus, GA 86/53/0.00 Columbus, OH 50/43/1.43 Concord, NH 65/36/0.00 Corpus Christi 88/77/0.00 Dallas 84/74/0.00 Dayton 48/45/1.27 Denver 47/39/0.19 Des Moines 62/40/0.97 Detroit 47/45/0.24 Duluth 48/34/0.00 El Paso 89/66/0.00 Fairbanks 64/43/0.00 Fargo 61/28/0.00 Flagstaff 68/30/0.00 Grand Rapids 61/37/0.00 Green Bay 57/33/0.00 Greensboro 78/49/0.01 Harrisburg 52/41/0.08 Hartford, CT 65/43/0.02 Helena 50/41/0.05 Honolulu 85/74/0.09 Houston 89/77/0.00 Huntsville 79/57/0.60 Indianapolis 47/45/1.01 Jackson, MS 82/65/0.94 Jacksonville 87/53/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 64/57/c 56/37/pc 58/40/c 79/50/s 52/41/c 76/61/t 63/52/pc 80/64/t 67/47/c 54/36/pc 72/58/c 61/29/pc 67/41/pc 58/50/c 60/47/pc 52/36/c 61/43/sh 62/40/c 85/67/pc 81/55/t 72/55/c 34/28/sn 53/39/pc 61/41/pc 55/39/pc 43/32/sn 63/46/pc 82/62/c 76/65/t 59/38/pc 63/42/sh 88/76/c 67/59/c 59/38/pc 43/31/sn 63/41/pc 57/35/pc 51/30/pc 89/62/s 64/46/c 59/31/pc 67/32/s 54/32/pc 54/33/pc 76/53/t 65/44/pc 62/44/c 57/35/c 85/73/pc 89/74/c 68/53/c 60/40/pc 73/62/t 89/67/c Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Dublin Edinburgh Geneva Harare Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Lima Lisbon London Madrid Manila 63/49/sh 76/57/s 68/61/r 104/74/pc 95/80/pc 77/47/pc 78/67/s 82/59/pc 65/51/c 77/52/pc 64/47/pc 85/73/s 95/67/s 57/36/s 89/80/pc 58/42/r 59/47/sh 60/51/r 75/50/s 88/80/pc 65/52/s 82/59/pc 69/47/s 68/63/s 62/51/r 60/47/pc 65/45/pc 97/83/pc Tuesday Hi/Lo/W 68/50/t 54/35/sh 56/39/sh 76/47/s 52/41/pc 74/57/t 64/46/pc 74/61/t 67/42/pc 60/40/pc 71/56/t 66/37/pc 72/47/s 63/45/pc 63/45/pc 49/37/sh 56/41/sh 55/39/sh 78/61/t 67/50/c 73/51/pc 36/27/sn 56/38/s 59/39/s 52/40/pc 41/32/r 62/44/c 73/54/c 81/61/t 57/36/s 61/40/sh 86/73/c 65/54/t 58/36/s 42/30/sn 61/41/c 55/37/pc 59/38/s 89/59/s 63/46/r 66/39/s 69/33/s 55/32/pc 58/33/s 66/48/pc 63/41/s 63/42/pc 62/38/pc 85/73/pc 83/68/t 69/52/c 59/37/s 73/61/t 88/67/t 75/54/0.46 75/64/0.00 66/58/0.31 102/72/0.00 91/75/0.04 81/51/0.00 100/67/0.00 79/50/0.00 70/54/0.02 70/34/0.00 61/57/0.00 91/68/0.00 100/83/0.00 39/34/0.23 88/73/0.00 58/48/0.07 59/45/0.26 81/50/0.00 76/49/0.00 90/80/0.00 64/54/0.00 91/72/0.00 64/43/0.00 68/56/0.00 64/59/0.26 66/55/0.03 68/59/0.48 97/82/0.00 64/49/sh 78/56/s 69/61/sh 102/75/c 95/81/s 76/49/pc 77/65/s 80/56/sh 67/50/r 80/53/s 61/47/s 85/73/pc 91/65/s 55/34/r 89/81/s 56/40/sh 60/43/pc 59/47/r 75/50/s 89/80/t 67/51/s 78/62/s 72/49/s 69/62/pc 65/55/pc 60/48/pc 66/45/pc 98/82/pc Mariam Zuhaib/AP Afghan men bury a victim of deadly bombings, which happened Saturday near a school, at a cemetery west of Kabul, Afghanistan, on Sunday. The Interior Ministry said Sunday the death toll in the bombing at the entrance to a girls’ school in the Afghan capital has soared to some 50 people, many of them pupils between 11 and 15 years old, and the number of wounded in Saturday’s attack climbed to more than 100. terrorist attack in Kabul, an in- humane action that struck so many girls as they were com- ing out of school.” He said. The pontiff then added: “May God give Afghanistan peace.” The Dasht-e-Barchi area has been hit by several incidents of violence targeting minority Shiites and most often claimed by the Islamic State affiliate operating in the country. No one has yet claimed Saturday’s bombings. In this same neighborhood in 2018, a school bombing killed 34 people, mostly stu- dents. In September 2018 a wrestling club was attacked kill- ing 24 people and in May 2020 a maternity hospital was bru- tally attacked killing 24 people, including pregnant women and infants. And in October 2020, the Kawsar-e-Danish tutoring center was attacked, killing 30 people. Most of the attacks were claimed by the Islamic State af- filiate operating in Afghanistan. The radical Sunni Muslim group has declared war on Af- ghanistan’s Shiites. Washington blamed IS for a vicious attack last year in a maternity hospi- tal in the same area that killed City Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, WI Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfi eld, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Yakima Yuma Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 50/42/0.29 55/47/1.46 55/37/0.00 89/66/0.00 68/52/0.20 57/42/0.32 84/69/Tr 71/60/0.00 69/54/0.33 61/39/0.00 79/68/0.09 84/77/0.61 55/42/0.00 63/40/0.00 73/55/0.45 86/72/0.00 65/46/0.33 65/43/0.31 80/51/0.00 67/53/0.00 61/42/0.82 90/65/0.00 96/69/0.00 57/41/2.19 57/47/0.01 96/70/0.00 43/40/1.16 65/42/0.00 67/44/0.02 83/48/0.00 50/36/0.05 73/42/0.00 78/42/Tr 54/36/0.27 89/66/0.00 53/49/0.17 61/41/0.00 91/74/0.00 69/61/0.00 76/54/0.00 81/53/0.00 74/40/0.00 83/56/0.00 64/48/0.10 61/41/0.01 61/37/0.00 59/53/1.70 91/71/0.00 92/58/0.00 65/56/Tr 69/47/0.00 56/48/0.00 71/35/0.00 94/65/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 53/42/c 63/47/pc 54/31/pc 88/66/s 60/41/pc 62/40/pc 65/51/c 73/58/pc 65/46/pc 54/33/pc 66/53/c 88/76/pc 50/38/pc 57/38/pc 64/48/c 84/75/t 62/47/pc 64/48/pc 73/57/t 65/50/sh 64/42/pc 92/71/pc 96/68/s 60/39/pc 66/48/pc 94/68/s 57/37/pc 60/46/sh 60/47/c 77/53/t 53/34/c 70/43/s 69/49/t 56/35/pc 92/57/s 63/46/pc 58/42/pc 85/68/t 68/61/pc 76/51/s 84/55/s 75/42/s 86/66/c 67/47/pc 62/34/pc 67/43/pc 59/43/sh 90/75/pc 92/59/s 66/51/c 67/49/c 60/47/sh 74/42/s 93/62/s Tuesday Hi/Lo/W 51/42/r 62/44/c 53/32/pc 87/67/s 60/39/s 62/39/c 62/51/r 75/59/pc 64/44/s 59/35/s 66/52/sh 90/78/t 53/38/s 63/41/s 69/50/pc 86/74/t 62/45/pc 65/45/pc 66/54/s 56/48/r 62/42/c 93/73/t 100/71/s 59/37/pc 65/44/pc 94/69/s 55/34/sh 60/42/pc 63/43/pc 65/49/c 55/35/sh 77/48/s 70/47/s 50/37/sh 93/55/s 62/44/pc 64/46/s 80/65/t 68/61/pc 74/51/s 84/55/s 71/40/pc 84/64/t 70/51/s 63/40/pc 71/47/s 61/45/r 90/76/t 92/62/s 61/50/r 68/46/pc 57/45/r 77/49/s 95/62/s pregnant women and newborn babies. Soon after the bombing, angry crowds attacked ambu- lances and even beat health workers as they tried to evac- uate the wounded, Health Ministry spokesman Ghulam Dastigar Nazari said. He had implored residents to cooperate and allow ambulances free ac- cess to the site. Arian, the Interior Ministry spokesman, blamed the attack on the Taliban despite their de- nials. Bloodied backpacks and schools books lay strewn out- side the Syed Al-Shahda school. In the morning, boys attend classes in the sprawling school compound and in the after- noon, it’s girls’ turn. On Sunday, Hazara leaders from Dasht-e- Barchi met to express their frustration with the government failure to pro- tect ethnic Hazaras, deciding to cobble together a protection force of their own from among the Hazara community. The force would be deployed outside schools, mosques and public facilities and would co- operate with government se- curity forces. The intention is to supplement the local forces, said Parliamentarian Ghulam Hussein Naseri. The meeting participants decided that “there is not any other way, except for people themselves to provide their own security alongside of the security forces,” said Naseri, who added that the govern- ment should provide local Haz- aras with weapons. Naseri said Hazaras have been attacked in their schools, in their mosques and “it is their right to be upset. How many more families lose their loved ones? How many more attacks against this minority has to oc- cur in this part of the city be- fore something is done?” One of the students fleeing the school recalled the attack, the girls’ screams of the girls, the blood. “I was with my classmate, we were leaving the school, when suddenly an explosion happened, “ said 15-year-old Zahra, whose arm had been broken by a piece of shrapnel. “Ten minutes later there was another explosion and just a couple of minutes later another explosion,” she said. “Everyone was yelling and there was blood everywhere, and I couldn’t see anything clearly.” Her friend died. Most of the dozens of injured brought to the EMERGENCY Hospital for war wounded in the Afghan capital, “almost all girls and young women be- tween 12 and 20 years old,” said Marco Puntin, the hospital’s program coordinator in Af- ghanistan. In a statement following the attack, the hospital, which has operated in Kabul since 2000, said the first three months of this year have seen a 21 per cent increase in war-wounded. Even as IS has been degraded in Afghanistan, according to government and US officials, it has stepped-up its attacks par- ticularly against Shiite Muslims and women workers. Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi Nassau New Delhi Osaka Oslo Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Sapporo Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei City Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw 105/76/0.00 79/61/0.08 63/41/0.00 50/40/0.04 75/61/0.20 86/75/0.00 100/81/0.00 79/65/0.00 43/39/0.55 57/41/0.06 82/57/0.21 73/68/0.11 74/52/0.00 68/46/0.00 72/57/0.00 61/49/0.24 72/46/0.17 91/72/0.00 89/79/0.03 49/36/0.33 69/61/0.00 90/75/0.05 95/70/0.00 82/67/0.00 52/36/0.00 57/46/0.00 72/43/0.00 68/34/0.00 103/77/pc 76/59/t 62/43/sh 61/44/s 72/60/t 87/76/s 102/80/s 76/55/pc 54/45/r 58/37/sh 64/49/sh 75/65/s 75/55/s 73/42/s 74/57/pc 53/44/r 61/49/r 95/72/pc 90/79/t 61/46/c 75/60/s 93/76/pc 82/66/s 74/59/s 54/36/sh 59/46/pc 81/61/s 74/55/s 105/77/s 75/57/t 53/41/sh 69/49/s 72/60/t 88/77/s 101/79/s 75/55/pc 56/45/sh 50/39/sh 61/45/sh 78/69/s 72/56/t 75/43/s 78/60/pc 56/40/c 80/59/pc 80/71/r 90/79/t 67/49/pc 69/59/sh 94/77/pc 81/65/s 69/59/pc 50/39/sh 61/50/pc 82/57/s 77/55/s Historic Columbia River Highway reopens, with access to Gorge waterfalls The Oregonian BY RAHIM FAIEZ Associated Press KABUL, Afghanistan — Grieving families buried their dead Sunday following a hor- rific bombing at a girls’ school in the Afghan capital that killed 50 people, many of them pupils between 11 and 15 years old. The number of wounded in Saturday’s attack climbed to more than 100, said Interior Ministry spokesman Tariq Ar- ian. In the western neighbor- hood of Dasht-e-Barchi, fam- ilies buried their dead amid angry recriminations at a gov- ernment they said has failed to protect them from repeated at- tacks in the mostly Shiite Mus- lim neighborhood. “The government reacts af- ter the incident, it doesn’t do anything before the incident,” said Mohammad Baqir, Al- izada, 41, who had gathered to bury his niece, Latifa, a Grade 11 student the Syed Al-Shahda school. Three explosions outside the school entrance struck as stu- dents were leaving for the day, said Arian. The blasts targeted Afghanistan’s ethnic Hazaras who dominate the Dasht-e- Barchi neighborhood, where the bombings occurred. Most Hazaras are Shiite Muslims. The Taliban denied responsibil- ity, condemning the attack and the many deaths. The first explosion came from a vehicle packed with ex- plosives, followed by two oth- ers, said Arian, adding that the casualty figures could still rise. In the capital rattled by re- lentless bombings, Saturday’s attack was among the worst. Criticism has mounted over lack of security and growing fears of even more violence as the U.S. and NATO complete their final military withdrawal from Afghanistan. At Vatican City, in his tradi- tional Sunday remarks to faith- ful in St. Peter’s Square, Pope Francis cited the bombing. “Let us pray for the victims of the Mostly sunny with a shower possible INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 107° at Zapata, TX National low: 7° at Daniel, WY Precipitation: 2.75" at Lima, OH SKI REPORT New snow 0 Beautiful with plenty of sunshine NATIONAL Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 58/49/0.02 60/45/c 62/48/pc La Grande 59/38/0.00 65/38/pc 71/40/s Portland 66/52/Tr 71/46/pc 76/50/s Baker City 58/29/0.00 65/31/pc 70/37/s La Pine 57/28/0.00 66/33/s 72/39/s Prineville 59/37/0.00 71/35/s 72/40/s Brookings 65/48/0.00 65/51/s 68/50/s Medford 71/41/0.00 78/45/s 83/50/s Redmond 62/34/0.00 69/34/s 75/39/s Burns 59/27/0.00 65/33/pc 71/38/s Newport 55/43/0.00 56/42/pc 58/45/pc Roseburg 69/45/0.00 75/46/pc 79/49/s Salem 68/51/0.00 72/44/pc 77/47/s Eugene 69/46/0.00 71/42/pc 75/46/s North Bend 60/46/Tr 59/45/pc 61/47/pc Sisters 58/36/0.00 70/36/s 75/43/s Klamath Falls 63/27/0.00 68/33/s 75/37/s Ontario 68/47/0.00 72/41/s 76/43/s The Dalles 72/52/0.00 76/47/s 81/51/s Lakeview 61/35/Tr 64/31/s 72/34/s Pendleton 65/42/0.00 71/42/s 76/46/s Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday -10s 68° 37° TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 77/44 Rufus Hermiston 73/45 76/44 76/46 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 75/47 70/41 71/46 63/34 Wasco 62/35 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles CENTRAL: Sunshine Tillamook 60/33 73/44 71/42 Sandy 76/47 McMinnville 61/41 and a few clouds Joseph Heppner La Grande 68/43 Maupin Government 72/42 around Monday; 65/38 59/35 Camp 73/42 Condon 69/44 Union warmer. Clear to partly Lincoln City 66/41 59/36 65/36 Salem 57/45 Spray cloudy Monday night. Granite Warm Springs 72/44 Madras 70/41 Albany 56/31 Newport Baker City 72/38 72/37 Mitchell 56/42 69/41 65/31 WEST: Clouds and Camp Sherman 65/39 Redmond Corvallis John Unity sunshine Monday and Yachats 70/36 69/34 68/42 Day Prineville 62/32 warmer. Partly cloudy 56/44 Ontario Sisters 71/35 Paulina 64/38 72/41 Monday night. Mostly Florence Eugene 70/36 Bend Brothers 64/35 Vale sunny Tuesday. 59/45 71/42 68/38 62/33 Sunriver 72/39 Nyssa 67/33 Hampton Cottage La Pine 72/40 Juntura Oakridge Grove 66/33 63/33 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 68/36 70/41 73/42 Fort Rock 60/43 65/33 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 66/33 64/33 High: 72° 64/33 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at The Dalles Beaver Frenchglen Silver 59/45 75/46 64/32 60/32 Low: 27° Marsh Lake 63/35 Port Orford 65/33 65/32 at Burns Grants Burns Junction Paisley 61/49 Pass 66/35 Chiloquin 65/32 80/46 Rome Medford 68/35 Gold Beach 78/45 68/34 59/50 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 64/36 75/45 68/33 60/31 65/51 64/31 Seaside 59/45 Cannon Beach 58/46 SUNDAY 69° 38° Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 541-683-1577 WATER REPORT Ski resort Mt. Bachelor SATURDAY OREGON WEATHER TEMPERATURE Grasses Low FRIDAY 78° 43° Very warm with sun and some clouds Mostly sunny and warm ALMANAC THURSDAY 80° 44° 73° 44° Mainly clear Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low WEDNESDAY A section of the Historic Columbia River Highway that has been closed since January has reopened to the public, the Oregon Department of Transportation announced this month, granting access to one of the most scenic drives in the region as well as sev- eral waterfalls that have been off-limits all spring. The 6-mile closure be- tween Bridal Veil and Ainsworth State Park was caused by recurring land- slides triggered by heavy win- ter rainstorms, exacerbated by damage done to the land- scape by the Eagle Creek Fire in 2017, officials in the Co- lumbia Gorge said. The closure blocked access to the Wahkeena and Horse- tail Falls trailheads on either side of Multnomah Falls, as well as the Oneonta Trailhead that had been closed since December due to another landslide. All three of those trailheads are now back open, ODOT said. Additionally, the Oneo- nta Trail is now open to the Horsetail Falls Trail junction, and the Gorge 400 Trail is open between the Oneonta Trail and Multnomah Falls, officials said. The Eagle Creek Trail, which closed due to land- slides in January only two weeks after its long-antici- pated reopening, remains closed to the public. Landslides are not unusual in the Columbia Gorge, but this winter they seemed to be a bigger problem than nor- mal. Officials said the partic- ularly wet winter and damage from the Eagle Creek fire are to blame. Engineers and geologists working for ODOT said the risk of slides should decrease as we enter the drier months of the year. China says most rocket debris burned up during reentry Associated Press BEIJING — China’s space agency said a core segment of its biggest rocket reentered Earth’s atmosphere above the Maldives in the Indian Ocean and that most of it burned up early Sunday. Harvard astrophysicist Jon- athan McDowell, who tracked the tumbling rocket part, said on Twitter, “An ocean reen- try was always statistically the most likely. It appears China won its gamble … But it was still reckless.” People in Jordan, Oman and Saudi Arabia reported sightings of the Chinese rocket debris on social media, with scores of users posting footage of the debris piercing the early dawn skies over the Middle East. Usually, discarded rocket stages reenter the atmosphere soon after liftoff, normally over water, and don’t go into orbit. The roughly 30-meter long rocket stage is among the biggest space debris to fall to Earth. China’s space program, with its close military links, hasn’t said why it put the main component of the rocket into space rather than allowing it to fall back to earth soon after discharging its payload, as is usual in such operations. In March, debris from a Falcon 9 rocket launched by U.S. aeronautics company SpaceX fell to Earth on the Oregon Coast and in Wash- ington.