IN the vast and frozen wilderness of Antarctica, scientists at the Sanae IV base are living a real-life horror movie.
Trapped at the remote research base, isolated from the rest of the world, they are now begging for help after a colleague allegedly sexually assaulted a fellow researcher and threatened to kill another.
Sanae IV perched atop Vesleskarvet, isolated in the heart of Antarctica’s harsh environmentCredit: Dr Ross Hofmeyr
The alleged aggression was sparked by the expedition’s team leader making a change to the work schedule, according to a South African government official.
Sanae IV, perched high on the Vesleskarvet nunatak in Queen Maud Land, is as far from civilisation as one can get.
And with no direct flight or quick access, it can take up to 15 days just to reach the base — making any emergency rescue a monumental challenge.
The South African base is a cutting-edge structure designed to withstand Antarctica’s extreme weather.
But even its modern architecture and life-supporting systems can’t shield its inhabitants from the psychological and emotional strain of being almost completely cut off from the world.
The station is buried deep in one of the coldest, harshest places on Earth, where temperatures regularly plummet to -23°C, and winds howl at speeds up to 135 mph.
The isolation is absolute.
With no hope of escape unless the brutal weather allows, the scientists live in constant fear of being stuck for months on end.
The base is so far from any other human outpost that even during the summer resupply mission, the nearest help is 160 km away.
It’s a slow, nerve-wracking ordeal when things go wrong.
Inside the base, the living conditions are harsh but manageable — if you’re lucky enough to avoid the psychological toll.
The research station is divided into three modules that house the kitchen, dining area, sleeping quarters, and a few leisure areas like a gym, library, and bar,
One of the researchers stationed there, clad in a thick coat and woolly hat, recorded a video tour of the base.
It shows a gym kitted out with dumbbells, a rowing machine and a bike – essential as outdoor exercise is all but impossible.
There is even a “braii” out the back – the South African word for a barbequeue – but the luxury ends there.
All of the team’s water comes from melting snow – a labour-intensive chore the team take turns with using the smelter, which they call the “smelly”.
And there is a bare-bones kitchen, where the team take turns to cook for the nine inhabitants.
The station’s design, while practical, is essentially a series of long corridors that link rooms, offering minimal space for privacy.
It’s not a place for comfort or socialising, but rather one for surviving and doing the work.
And surviving is no easy feat.
Staff live in close quarters, with each team member’s personal space limited to tiny rooms.
The long, dark winter months stretch on endlessly.
Overwintering at Sanae IV means months of constant darkness, with the sun dipping below the horizon and never rising again for months.
This endless darkness has a profound impact on mental health, as crew members find themselves trapped in a world where day and night blur together.
For the trapped team members, every waking hour is a reminder of their isolation.
The crew members have no contact with the outside world beyond occasional satellite communications, and even then, it’s a lifeline that offers only the cold comfort of being able to report back to South Africa.
During the winter, when temperatures are unrelenting and the winds roar outside, their communications with the outside world feel more like a cruel reminder that help is too far away to be of any use.
The constant threat of extreme weather, unpredictable storms, and isolation has worn down many of the team.
The psychological pressure gets real — cabin fever sets in.
With no chance for a break, no chance to leave for a weekend getaway, and no real personal time, tempers flare easily.
Arguments break out. Frustration boils over. Without outside stimulation, even small conflicts become magnified, the isolation turning petty disputes into serious rifts.
An email sent last week from one of the scientists trapped at Sanae IV describes how one of their colleagues had begun threatening others.
According to the email, the accused had physically assaulted a fellow researcher and threatened to kill another.
The email further details the growing atmosphere of fear within the base: “I remain deeply concerned about my own safety, constantly wondering if I might become the next victim.”
The team member’s sense of insecurity isn’t just about the threat to their life — it’s the psychological toll of being trapped in a confined space with someone who has crossed the line.
The threat of violence feels immediate and suffocating.
As the crew waits, with no easy escape, there’s a sense of impending doom.
A member of the team, once trusted to work in such an isolated and high-stakes environment, has now become the biggest threat to the others.
The psychological stress is intense and gets worse by the inability to resolve the issue quickly.
What should be a straightforward process of removing an unsafe individual is complicated by the station’s remote location and harsh weather conditions, which could take weeks, if not months, to overcome.
The desperate message continues: “It is imperative that immediate action is taken to ensure my safety and the safety of all employees.”
The astronauts disembarked the capsule on stretchers, as is customary, CNN reported. This precaution is taken by SpaceX for all astronauts returning from long-duration space missions.
Sunita Williams, Butch Wilmore & NASA’s Crew-9 Astronauts Breathe Earthly Air After 9 months, Disembark From SpaceX’s Dragon (Video) |
NASA Crew-9 astronauts Sunita Williams, Nick Hague, Butch Wilmore, and Russian cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov breathed earthly air for the first time in over nine months on Wednesday after the successful splashdown of SpaceX’s Dragon capsule.
The astronauts disembarked the capsule on stretchers, as is customary, CNN reported. This precaution is taken by SpaceX for all astronauts returning from long-duration space missions.
Earlier, a worker rinsed the Crew Dragon spacecraft with fresh water to remove as much salt water as possible.
“Saltwater is corrosive, and we want to try and rinse out as much of the salt water as possible to reduce that corrosion on the metallic structures,” SpaceX’s Kate Tice said.
The side hatch of the Crew Dragon remains closed throughout its time in orbit. After docking with the ISS, astronauts enter and exit through a different hatch on top of the vehicle, CNN reported.
SpaceX’s recovery ship, Megan, used a large rig to lift the capsule carrying the four astronauts out of the water. Nearby crew members closely monitored the spacecraft to ensure there were no fuel leaks.
As the capsule splashed down off the coast of Tallahassee, Florida, several dolphins were seen swimming around it, welcoming the astronauts home. At least five dolphins were captured on video circling the capsule as it bobbed in the water, CNN reported. Boats in the area assisted in stabilizing the capsule and ensuring the astronauts’ safety.
NASA astronauts Nick Hague and Russian cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov have been in space since September 2024. However, Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams had been away much longer–their journey began last June. Initially expected to last just a week, their mission was extended to more than nine months due to issues with their Boeing Starliner capsule, which delayed their return.
President Trump promised to look out for the forgotten man and woman.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt earlier stated that US President Donald Trump had fulfilled his promise to bring home the “forgotten” astronauts.
The New Zealand prime minister began a five-day visit to India on Sunday with a focus on deepening the bilateral trade and economic ties. (Photo: X/narendramodi)
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his New Zealand counterpart Christopher Luxon visited the historic Gurdwara Rakab Ganj Sahib in New Delhi on Monday and paid obeisance at the Sikh shrine.
The New Zealand prime minister began a five-day visit to India on Sunday with a focus on deepening the bilateral trade and economic ties.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and I visited Gurdwara Rakab Ganj Sahib, a place of profound faith and history. The Sikh community’s unwavering commitment to service and humanity is truly admirable across the world.@chrisluxonmppic.twitter.com/RNLfuz5ul2
A federal judge on Monday gave the Trump administration a Tuesday deadline to provide details about plane loads of Venezuelans it deported despite orders not to, in a brewing showdown over presidential power.
President Donald Trump claims the deported Venezuelans are members of the prison gang Tren de Aragua, which he designated as a Foreign Terrorist Organization. The White House on Saturday published a Trump proclamation that invoked the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to declare the gang was conducting irregular warfare against the U.S.
Later on Saturday, U.S. District Judge James Boasberg issued an order blocking the deportations, but the flights continued anyway and 261 people were flown to El Salvador.
A Trump administration lawyer argued both that the judge’s initial oral ruling to block the flights was superseded by a more sparsely written order issued later, and that the government had the legal right to continue with flights once they had left U.S. airspace.
Since taking office in January, Trump has sought to push the boundaries of executive power, challenging the historic checks and balances between the U.S. branches of government.
During a court hearing on Monday, Boasberg, repeatedly pressed the Justice Department attorney, Abhishek Kambli, to provide details on the timing of the flights that transported the Venezuelans to El Salvador, including whether they took off after his order was issued.
“Why are you showing up today without answers?” Boasberg asked.
The judge is trying to ascertain the exact timeline of events surrounding his rulings on Saturday, including when the flights took off and who was on them.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said 261 people were deported in total, including 137 who were removed under the Alien Enemies Act and more than 100 others who were removed via standard immigration proceedings. There were also 23 Salvadoran members of the MS-13 gang, she said. TIMELINE DETAILS SOUGHT
According to a Reuters timeline, Boasberg’s oral ruling that “any plane containing these folks … needs to be returned to the United States” was issued between 6:45 p.m. and 6:48 p.m Eastern Time. At that hour, two flights were in the air.
Salvadoran police officers escort alleged members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua recently deported by the U.S. government to be imprisoned in the Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT) prison, as part of an agreement with the Salvadoran government, in Tecoluca, El Salvador, in this handout image obtained March 16, 2025. Secretaria de Prensa de la Presidencia/Handout via REUTERS Purchase Licensing Rights
A third flight took off at 7:37 p.m., or 12 minutes after the judge’s written order was published. The Trump team has said the third flight carried deportees processed under other immigration authorities and not the Alien Enemies Act and therefore was not subject to the order.
In any event, all three flights, which each made a preliminary stop in Honduras, landed in El Salvador late Saturday night or Sunday morning Eastern Time, hours after the judge’s oral and written rulings.
When Boasberg asked for such details, some of it available on public flight-tracking sites, Kambli told the judge the Trump administration was resistant to sharing information because there was “a lot of operational national security and foreign relations at risk.”
Although Tren de Aragua is a feared criminal organization that trafficks in humans in South America, there has been little documented evidence of large-scale operations in the United States.
The White House has asserted that federal courts have no jurisdiction over Trump’s authority to expel foreign enemies under the 18th-century law. In the hearing, the government argued the court’s jurisdiction was limited by the statute.
Boasberg pressed Kambli about why the Trump administration did not appeal or address any disputes in court rather than let the deportation flights continue. “Isn’t the better course to return the planes to the United States?” the judge asked.
At another point, Boasberg said it was “a heck of a stretch” for the Trump administration to argue that his oral order issued on Saturday to return the planes was not in effect because he had not repeated as much in the written order.
“Urgent security consultations took place at the top security and political levels,” it has been reported.
Hamas fighters hold guns in the distance atop a hill (Image: Getty)
Israeli security convened an emergency meeting after “a recent unusual event that may indicate a Hamas attempt to prepare for a ground invasion into Israel,” according to a new report.
Israeli i24 News’ Ariel Oseran shared information about a sudden meeting on X Monday. No details have emerged at press time about the contents of the gathering.
The report, which has not been confirmed by any third parties, comes as tensions soar in the region amid fragile Gaza ceasefire negotiations as Gaza looks to rebuild after 15 months of bombardment.
“Urgent security consultations took place at the top security and political levels in Israel due to ‘a recent unusual event that may indicate a Hamas attempt to prepare for a ground invasion into Israel.’ The censorship approved to publicize the information,” Oseran wrote on X.
The ceasefire put a halt to over 15 months of fighting, which led to the deaths of around 48,000 Palestinians in Gaza, according to Gaza health officials.
Israel carried out airstrikes in the Gaza Strip, southern Lebanon and southern Syria on Monday, killing at least 10 people, including a child, according to local authorities. The Israeli military said it was targeting militants plotting attacks.
The airstrikes were the latest in what have been frequent and often deadly attacks by Israeli forces during the fragile ceasefires in Gaza and Lebanon.
It has also cut electricity and aid to Gaza in an attempt to force Hamas’ hand in negotiations.
Tension is high in multiple parts of the region, with Yemen’s Houthis threatening to attack Israel ships in its waters after issuing a four-day deadline to resume aid to Gaza.
Sunita Williams and Butch Wilmore are to be transported home with another American astronaut and a Russian cosmonaut aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon craft.
The stranded duo have been on the ISS since June.
A pair of US astronauts stuck for more than nine months on the International Space Station will be returned to Earth on Tuesday evening, NASA said.
Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams are to be transported home with another American astronaut and a Russian cosmonaut aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon craft, which arrived at the ISS early Sunday.
The stranded duo have been on the ISS since June after the Boeing Starliner spacecraft they were testing on its maiden crewed voyage suffered propulsion issues and was deemed unfit to fly them back to Earth.
NASA said in a statement on Sunday evening that it had moved forward the astronauts’ anticipated ocean splashdown off the Florida coast to approximately 5:57 pm Tuesday EDT (3:27 am IST, Wednesday). It was initially slated for no sooner than Wednesday.
“The updated return target continues to allow the space station crew members time to complete handover duties while providing operational flexibility ahead of less favorable weather conditions expected for later in the week,” the space agency said.
NASA astronaut Nick Hague and Roscosmos cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov will also return on the Dragon capsule, with the journey to be broadcast live from Monday evening when hatch closure preparations begin.
For Wilmore and Williams, it will mark the end of an ordeal that has seen them stuck for nine months after what was meant to have been a days-long roundtrip.
The Trump administration has deported alleged members of a Venezuelan gang from the U.S. despite a court order forbidding it from doing so, saying in an extraordinary statement that a judge did not have the authority to block its actions.
The deportation operation followed a move by Judge James Boasberg to block President Donald Trump’s use of the Alien Enemies Act’s wartime powers to rapidly deport more than 200 alleged members of Tren de Aragua, a Venezuelan gang that has been linked to kidnapping, extortion and contract killings.
“A single judge in a single city cannot direct the movements of an aircraft … full of foreign alien terrorists who were physically expelled from U.S. soil,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement.
She said the court had “no lawful basis” and that federal courts generally have no jurisdiction over how a president conducts foreign affairs.
The turn of events represented a remarkable escalation in Trump’s challenge to the U.S. Constitution’s system of checks and balances and the independence of the judicial branch of government.
Patrick Eddington, a homeland security and civil liberties legal expert at the libertarian Cato Institute, said that, whatever it might say, the White House was in “open defiance” of the judge.
“This is beyond the pale and certainly unprecedented,” Eddington said, calling it the most radical test of America’s system of checks and balances since the Civil War.
When asked whether his administration had violated the court order, Trump deferred to the lawyers.
“I can tell you this: these were bad people,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One, referring to the alleged gang members.
‘COMMENSURATE TO WAR’
In a Saturday evening hearing, Boasberg blocked the use of the law for 14 days, saying the statute refers to “hostile acts” perpetrated by another country that are “commensurate to war.”
Trump said he was justified in using the Act because he saw the increase in immigration in recent years as similar to war.
“This is war. In many respects it’s more dangerous than war because, you know, in a war they have uniforms. You know who you’re shooting at, you know who you’re going after.”
Boasberg said during the hearing that any flights carrying migrants processed under the law should return to the U.S. His written notice hit the case docket at 7:25 p.m. ET (23:25 GMT).
The following day, El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele posted footage to the social media site X showing men being hustled off a plane in the dark of night amid a massive security presence.
“Oopsie… Too late,” Bukele posted above a headline, “Fed judge orders deportation flights carrying alleged Venezuelan gangbangers to return to the US.”
Bukele followed the comment by a laughing-so-hard-I’m-crying emoji. His statement was reposted by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who also thanked Bukele for his “assistance and friendship.”
Violent tornadoes ripped through parts of the U.S., wiping out schools and toppling semitractor-trailers in several states, part of a monster storm that has killed at least 32 people as more severe weather was expected late Saturday.
The number of fatalities increased after the Kansas Highway Patrol reported eight people died in a highway pileup caused by a dust storm in Sherman County on Friday. At least 50 vehicles were involved.
In Mississippi, Gov. Tate Reeves announced that six people died in three counties and three more people were missing. There were 29 injuries across the state, he added in a nighttime post on the social platform X.
Missouri recorded more fatalities than any other state as scattered twisters overnight killed at least 12, authorities said. The deaths included a man whose home was ripped apart by a tornado.
“It was unrecognizable as a home. Just a debris field,” said Coroner Jim Akers of Butler County, describing the scene that confronted rescuers. “The floor was upside down. We were walking on walls.”
Dakota Henderson said he and others rescuing people trapped in their homes Friday night found five bodies scattered in the debris outside what remained of his aunt’s house in hard-hit Wayne County, Missouri.
“It was a very rough deal last night,” he said the following day, surrounded by uprooted trees and splintered homes. “It’s really disturbing for what happened to the people, the casualties last night.”
Henderson said they rescued his aunt from a bedroom that was the only one left standing, taking her out through a window. They also carried out a man who had a broken arm and leg.
Officials in Arkansas said three people died in Independence County and 29 others were injured across eight counties.
“We have teams out surveying the damage from last night’s tornadoes and have first responders on the ground to assist,” Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders said on X.
She, Reeves and Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp declared states of emergency. Kemp said he was doing so in anticipation of severe weather moving in later in the day.
On Friday, meanwhile, authorities said three people were killed in car crashes during a dust storm in Amarillo, in the Texas Panhandle.
Extreme weather encompasses a zone of 100 million people
The deaths came as the massive storm system unleashed winds that triggered deadly dust storms and fanned more than 100 wildfires.
Extreme weather conditions were forecast to affect an area that is home to more than 100 million people. Winds gusting up to 80 mph (130 kph) were predicted from the Canadian border to Texas, threatening blizzard conditions in colder northern areas and wildfire risk in warmer, drier places to the south.
The National Weather Service issued blizzard warnings for parts of far western Minnesota and far eastern South Dakota starting early Saturday. Snow accumulations of 3 to 6 inches (7.6 to 15.2 centimeters) were expected, with up to a foot (30 centimeters) possible.
CCTV footage of the incident shows two unidentified men arriving to the Thakur Dwar temple on a motorcycle. After waiting for a few seconds, one of them throws an explosive material towards the temple and then they flee the spot.
CCTV footage of the incident shows two unidentified men arriving to the Thakur Dwar temple on a motorcycle.
Two explosions were reported outside a temple in Amritsar late last night, damaging its walls and shattering its window panes, officials said on Saturday.
While no one was hurt in the incident, the explosion caused panic among the residents in the Khandwala area of Amritsar.
CCTV footage of the incident shows two unidentified men arriving at the Thakur Dwar temple on a motorcycle. After waiting for a few seconds, one of them throws an explosive material (presumably grenade) towards the temple and then they flee the spot
The police were informed about the incident around 2 am by the temple priest. Amritsar Police Commissioner Gurpreet Singh Bhullar said police teams were trying to trace the men involved in the blast and added that they would soon be arrested.
A forensic team has collected samples from the spot, he said, adding that further investigation was underway.
Amritsar Commissioner GPS Bhullar has suggested the hand of Pakistan Intel agency ISI in the blast.
“We got information at 2 a.m. We reached the spot right away. The forensic team was called… We checked the CCTV and spoke to the nearby people. The thing is that Pakistan’s ISI lures our youth into creating disturbances in Punjab,” he said.
Expressing confidence in solving the case swiftly, Bhullar said “We will trace this case within days and catch the culprits soon”.
Punjab Minister Kuldeep Singh Dhaliwal said that the Police has taken control of the situation.
“There were some miscreants who hurled a grenade at a temple after 12 am. There are no injuries or casualties… The situation is under control…Two people have been identified… The police is in action; they will be caught within a day,” the Minister said.
U.S. President Donald Trump launched large-scale military strikes against Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis on Saturday over the group’s attacks against Red Sea shipping, killing at least 31 people at the start of a campaign expected to last many days.
Trump also warned Iran, the Houthis’ main backer, that it needed to immediately halt support for the group. He said if Iran threatened the United States, “America will hold you fully accountable and, we won’t be nice about it!”
The unfolding strikes – which one U.S. official told Reuters might continue for weeks – represent the biggest U.S. military operation in the Middle East since Trump took office in January. It came as the United States ramped up sanctions pressure on Tehran while trying to bring it to the negotiating table over its nuclear program.
“To all Houthi terrorists, YOUR TIME IS UP, AND YOUR ATTACKS MUST STOP, STARTING TODAY. IF THEY DON’T, HELL WILL RAIN DOWN UPON YOU LIKE NOTHING YOU HAVE EVER SEEN BEFORE!” Trump posted on his Truth Social platform.
At least 31 were killed and 101 others injured in the U.S. strikes, mostly from women and children, Anees al-Asbahi, spokesperson for the Houthi-run health ministry said in an updated toll on Sunday.
The Houthis’ political bureau described the attacks as a “war crime.”
“Our Yemeni armed forces are fully prepared to respond to escalation with escalation,” it said in a statement.
Residents in Sanaa said the strikes hit a building in a Houthi stronghold.
“The explosions were violent and shook the neighborhood like an earthquake. They terrified our women and children,” one of the residents, who gave his name as Abdullah Yahia, told Reuters.
Strikes also targeted Houthi military sites in Yemen’s southwestern city of Taiz, two witnesses in the area said on Sunday.
Another strike on a power station in the town of Dahyan in Saada led to a power cut, Al-Masirah TV reported early on Sunday. Dahyan is where Abdul Malik al-Houthi, the enigmatic leader of the Houthis, often meets his visitors.
The Houthis, an armed movement that took control of most of Yemen over the past decade, have launched scores of attacks on ships off its coast since November 2023, disrupting global commerce and setting the U.S. military on a costly campaign to intercept missiles and drones that have burned through stocks of U.S. air defenses.
A Pentagon spokesperson said the Houthis have attacked U.S. warships 174 times and commercial vessels 145 times since 2023. The Houthis say the attacks are in solidarity with Palestinians over Israel’s war in Gaza with Hamas militants.
Iran’s other allies, Hamas and Hezbollah in Lebanon, have been severely weakened by Israel since the start of the Gaza conflict. Syria’s Bashar al-Assad, who was closely aligned with Tehran, was overthrown by rebels in December.
But throughout, Yemen’s Houthis have remained resilient and often on the offensive, sinking two vessels, seizing another and killing at least four seafarers in an offensive that disrupted global shipping, forcing firms to reroute to longer and more expensive journeys around southern Africa.
The U.S. administration of then-President Joe Biden had sought to degrade the Houthis’ ability to attack vessels off its coast but limited the U.S. actions.
U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, say Trump has authorized a more aggressive approach.
A ship fires missiles at an undisclosed location, after U.S. President Donald Trump launched military strikes against Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis on Saturday over the group’s attacks against Red Sea shipping, in this screengrab obtained from a handout video released on March 15, 2025. U.S. Central Command/Handout via REUTERS Purchase Licensing Rights
STRIKES ACROSS YEMEN
The strikes on Saturday were carried out in part by fighter aircraft from the Harry S. Truman aircraft carrier, which is in the Red Sea, officials said.
The U.S. military’s Central Command, which oversees troops in the Middle East, described Saturday’s strikes as the start of a large-scale operation across Yemen.
“Houthi attacks on American ships & aircraft (and our troops!) will not be tolerated; and Iran, their benefactor, is on notice,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth wrote on X. “Freedom of Navigation will be restored.”
Trump held out the prospect of far more devastating military action against Yemen.
“The Houthi attack on American vessels will not be tolerated. We will use overwhelming lethal force until we have achieved our objective,” Trump wrote.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said the U.S. government had “no authority, or business, dictating Iranian foreign policy.”
“End support for Israeli genocide and terrorism. Stop killing of Yemeni people,” he said in an X post on early Sunday.
Iran’s mission to the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
On Tuesday, the Houthis said they would resume attacks on Israeli ships passing through the Red Sea and Arabian Sea, the Bab al-Mandab Strait and the Gulf of Aden, ending a period of relative calm starting in January with the Gaza ceasefire.
The U.S. attacks came just days after a letter to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei from Trump was delivered, seeking talks over Iran’s nuclear program.
Khamenei on Wednesday rejected holding negotiations with the United States.
Still, Tehran is increasingly concerned that mounting public anger over economic hardships could erupt into mass protests, four Iranian officials told Reuters.
Last year, Israeli strikes on Iranian facilities, including missile factories and air defenses, in retaliation for Iranian missile and drone attacks, reduced Tehran’s conventional military capabilities, according to U.S. officials.
Iran has denied wanting to develop a nuclear weapon. However, it is dramatically accelerating the enrichment of uranium to up to 60% purity, close to the roughly 90% weapons-grade level, the U.N. nuclear watchdog – the International Atomic Energy Agency – has warned.
Western states say there is no need to enrich uranium to such a high level under any civilian program and that no other country has done so without producing nuclear bombs. Iran says its nuclear program is peaceful.
In an apparent sign of U.S. efforts to improve ties with Russia, Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke on Saturday with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to inform him about the U.S. strikes in Yemen, the State Department said. Russia has relied on Iranian-provided weaponry in its war in Ukraine, including missiles and drones, U.S. and Ukrainian officials say.
FURIOUS Kim Jong-un could send his own officials to face the firing squad for their “reckless” behaviour.
Iron-fist ruler Kim has wiped one of North Korea’s party committees off the map after being left outraged by their antics.
Kim Jong-un aims a weapon as he visits the training base of the special operations armed force of North Korea’s armyCredit: Reuters
Dozens of party officials were involved in an embarrassing “drinking spree” that ended in a “major incident” at Ryonggang Hot Springs resort in Onchon county.
Insiders believe this could have involved physical fights, abuse towards staff, cavorting with mistresses and trashing the premises
Michael Madden, director of NK Leadership Watch, told The Sun: “North Korean culture has no qualms about alcohol consumption.
“This was not a case of people getting a tad too tipsy or singing too loudly.
“Whatever happened, it was most certainly a stag party atmosphere.
“This involved about 40 officials under a county party committee.
“Whatever happened was so egregious they decommissioned the county party committee.
“That means some pretty hard individuals tied to Kim will directly manage the Onchon area’s affairs for the time being and the county party committee literally wiped off the map”.
Kim is now desperately trying to clamp down on unruly government officials in his Workers’ Party of Korea (WPK) after a series of incidents.
Fuming Kim has demanded his cronies stop abusing their power to clean up their act amid fears it could spell bad news for his party’s future.
His puppet state newspaper Rodung Sinmun recently used its front page to decry bad behaviour and insist on compliance with party discipline.
It warned that disobedience “will cause losses to the party and leave a stain on one’s own political life”.
Kim has forced some local and provincial government officials to work without pay for up to six months as punishment.
But the despot’s wrath could go a lot further – and end in death for the worst offenders.
Mr Madden added: “There were other ruling party meetings at which discipline and bad behaviour were addressed.
“Some local and provincial government officials were sentenced to work without pay for three-to-six-month periods.
“Some of these people will be demoted and/or expelled from the WPK.
“These party meetings, the central Secretariat meeting Kim presided over, and these local level meetings are, in some cases, just the beginning of the process.
“Some of these incidents will be referred to the police or the State Security Department (NK secret police) for further investigation.
“In some of the more egregious cases people will be incarcerated or sent to isolated areas with their family members.
“There is also certainly a high probability that a couple of the most flagrant offenders will be sent to the firing squad and executed.”
North Korea’s implementation of the death penalty has long been condemned by human rights groups.
The nation’s hermetic state means the true number of executions isn’t clear – but defectors have given gruesome accounts.
Murder, rape, drug smuggling, treason, political dissent, piracy, and consumption of media not approved by the government are some of the offences the death penalty is handed down for.
Last year, North Korea admitted carrying out public executions in a rare admission of its treatment of prisoners.
Executions were ordered for 30 officials in September after Kim accused them of failing to prevent flooding and landslides that killed 1,000 people.
Ranjani Srinivasan, an Indian national and a doctoral student at Columbia University, has voluntarily left the United States after her visa was revoked for allegedly “advocating violence and terrorism.”
Indian Doctoral Student At Columbia University Leaves US After Visa Revocation For Alleged Pro-Hamas Activities | X @Sec_Noem
Ranjani Srinivasan, an Indian national and a doctoral student at Columbia University, has voluntarily left the United States after her visa was revoked for allegedly “advocating violence and terrorism.”
In a statement on Friday (local time), US Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said that Srinivasan, a student in Urban Planning at Columbia University, self-deported using the CBP Home App.
“Today, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem announced that one of the Columbia students who had her student visa revoked for advocating for violence and terrorism self-deported using the CBP Home App and ICE arrested a Palestinian student for overstaying her expired F-1 visa,” according to a release by the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
US Department Of State Revokes Srinivasan’s Visa
The US Department of State revoked Srinivasan’s visa on March 5, alleging her involvement in “activities supporting Hammas.”
“Ranjani Srinivasan, a citizen and national of India, entered the United States on a F-1 student visa as a doctoral student in Urban Planning at Columbia University. Srinivasan was involved in activities supporting Hammas, a terrorist organization. On March 5, 2025, the Department of State revoked her visa. The Department of Homeland Security has obtained video footage of her using the CBP Home App to self-deport on March 11,” the release stated.
Secretary Kristi Noem’s Tweet
Additionally, Secretary Noem said that holding a US visa is a privilege.
“It is a privilege to be granted a visa to live & study in the United States of America. When you advocate for violence and terrorism, that privilege should be revoked, and you should not be in this country. I’m glad to see one of the Columbia University terrorist sympathizers use the CBP Home app to self-deport,” she wrote in a post on X.
It is a privilege to be granted a visa to live & study in the United States of America.
When you advocate for violence and terrorism that privilege should be revoked and you should not be in this country.
Russia will spare the lives of Ukrainian soldiers in its western Kursk region if Kyiv tells them to surrender, President Vladimir Putin said on Friday after U.S. President Donald Trump urged him to avoid a “horrible massacre” there.
Ukraine denied its men were encircled, describing that as a Russian fabrication, but President Volodymyr Zelenskiy called the situation “very difficult”.
Trump, in a social media post, said he had asked the Russian president to spare the lives of thousands of Ukrainians who he said were “completely surrounded” and vulnerable.
“I have strongly requested to President Putin that their lives be spared. This would be a horrible massacre, one not seen since World War II,” he said.
Putin, addressing his Security Council, said he had read Trump’s appeal. While accusing Ukrainian troops of carrying out crimes against civilians that he said amounted to “terrorism” – something Kyiv denies – Putin said he understood the call by Trump to take humanitarian considerations into account.
“In this regard, I would like to emphasize that if (the Ukrainian troops) lay down their arms and surrender, they will be guaranteed life and decent treatment in accordance with international law and the laws of the Russian Federation,” Putin said.
“To effectively implement the appeal of the U.S. president, a corresponding order from the military-political leadership of Ukraine is needed for its military units to lay down their arms and surrender.”
The deputy chairman of Russia’s security council, former President Dmitry Medvedev, posted on social media that the flipside for Kyiv was that “if they refuse to lay down their arms, they will all be methodically and mercilessly destroyed”. COUNTER-INVASION
A Russian service member places a flag oh the roof of a house in a part of the Kursk region, which was recently retaken by Russia’s armed forces, in Russia. via Russian Defence Ministry Purchase Licensing Rights
Kursk became a key theatre of the war last August when Ukraine, 2-1/2 years after Putin’s full-scale invasion, turned the tables on Moscow by grabbing a piece of Russia’s own territory.
Seven months on, it is once again in the spotlight, as Russian forces attempt to flush out the last remaining Ukrainians and the U.S. urges Russia to agree to a ceasefire in the wider war. Putin said on Thursday the Ukrainians were trapped and facing a choice of “surrender or die”.
Ukraine’s general staff said on Friday: “Reports of the alleged ‘encirclement’ of Ukrainian units by the enemy in the Kursk region are false and fabricated by the Russians for political manipulation and to exert pressure on Ukraine and its partners.”
It said there had been 13 combat clashes on Friday and the battlefield situation was largely unchanged.
“Units of the Defence Forces of Ukraine have successfully regrouped, withdrawn to more advantageous defensive positions, and are executing their assigned tasks within the Kursk region.”
Zelenskiy told reporters that the Kursk offensive had succeeded in diverting Russian forces from elsewhere on the battlefront. Source: https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/russia-says-it-retakes-another-village-drive-push-ukraine-out-kursk-2025-03-14/
Prime Minister Narendra Modi extended greetings for the festival and prayed for joy and happiness in the lives of the countrymen.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi extended greetings for Holi.
As the country begins to mark the festival of color and celebrate the occasion in harmony and joy, Prime Minister Narendra Modi extended greetings for the festival and prayed for joy and happiness in the lives of the countrymen.
“I wish you all a very Happy Holi. This festival filled with joy and happiness will infuse new enthusiasm and energy in everyone’s life and will also deepen the colours of unity among the countrymen,” posted PM on X.
President Droupadi Murmu also greeted everybody on the auspicious occasion of Holi on Friday.
“Heartiest greetings to all countrymen on the auspicious occasion of Holi, the festival of colours. This festival of joy gives the message of unity, love and harmony. This festival is also a symbol of India’s precious cultural heritage. On this auspicious occasion, let us all together pledge to fill the lives of all the children of Mother India with the colours of continuous progress, prosperity and happiness,” posted President Murmu on X.
Meanwhile, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh also extended his greetings on the vibrant occasion of Holi on Friday and prayed for the happiness and health of the public.
“Heartiest greetings to all of you on the auspicious festival of Holi. This festival, a symbol of joy, happiness and new energy, may fill your life with the colours of happiness and good health, this is my wish. May your Holi be joyful and safe!
Best wishes to you on the vibrant festival of Holi! May the colors of joy, enthusiasm and new energy fill your life with happiness and health. Have a wonderful and safe Holi!” posted Rajnath Singh on X.
Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath applied gulal to calves and cows at Gorakhnath temple on Friday on the occasion of Holi.
Additionally, people have begun enthusiastically celebrating the vibrant festival of Holi by applying gulaal (colored powder) on each other and dancing joyously.
Holi, also known as the festival of colors, is a time when people come together to celebrate the arrival of spring, the triumph of good over evil, and the joy of life.
In Sambhal, as in many parts of India, the streets are filled with laughter, music, and dance. People smeared gulaal on friends, family, and even strangers, marking the occasion with a spirit of unity and joy.
Paramilitary forces conducted a flag march in Sambhal on Friday, as Holi celebrations and Jumma Namaz will be held today.
CHILLING pictures showing China’s giant D-Day style invasion barges have fuelled fears that they are preparing to invade Taiwan.
The giant troop-carrying barges are capable of delivering fleets of tanks and thousands of troops directly onto Taiwanese roads.
Pictures have revealed China’s giant D-Day style invasion barges moored off the coastCredit: X/@xaviervavChina’s resources far out power Taiwan’s
China is building at least five of the giant troop-carrying barges, according to satellite imagery and military sources.
The communist state is also building its largest ever aircraft carrier – capable of launching war jets from four runways at the same time.
The intensive work going on in Chinese shipyards suggests China is planning a massive amphibious assault.
Experts say the huge purpose-built barges resemble the floating Mulberry Harbours used by allied forces during the D-Day landings in June, 1944.
The barges were spotted moored off the coast of Taiwan, and sparked new fears that China is preparing to invade Taiwan.
Bringing the self-governed province back in line with mainland China has been a goal of president Xi Jinping’s for a long time and recent military activity has shown that China is ready to take it back by force.
The self-governing nation has been protected by the firepower of ally America for decades.
But alarm was spreading across Taiwan after Donald Trump sent mixed messages about continuing US support.
Stargazers in North and South America will be able to view a red-colored “blood moon” starting Thursday night in the first total lunar eclipse visible on the continents since 2022.
The celestial event, observable with the naked eye, will have more than an hour of totality and can additionally be seen in parts of western Europe and Africa, as well as New Zealand.
A lunar eclipse occurs when the Earth goes between the moon and the sun, casting the Earth’s shadow on the moon.
A rare total lunar eclipse involves the Earth’s umbra, the darkest part of the planet’s shadow, covering the moon.
According to NASA, this type of eclipse can also be called a “blood moon” due to the reddish-orange color the moon can become during totality.
The coloration occurs due to sunlight scattering through the Earth’s atmosphere before reaching the moon’s surface—shorter wavelengths like blue and violet fail to reach the moon, leaving only longer wavelengths such as red and orange to illuminate it.
As a result, the more items there are in the Earth’s atmosphere—such as clouds or dust—the redder the moon will appear during the eclipse.
“Keep a close eye on the weather forecast leading up to the eclipse,” said NASA Chief Scientist Renee Weber in a statement. “That totality will last for close to an hour, so even if it’s cloudy you may still be able to glimpse it if the clouds are scattered.”
NASA and SpaceX on Monday postponed the launch of the Crew-10 Mission to the International Space Station (ISS). The launch was scheduled for Wednesday after US President Donald Trump urged SpaceX CEO Elon Musk to rescue the stranded astronauts – Sunita Williams and Butch Wilmore
Sunita Williams And Butch Wilmore’s Return Delayed As NASA-SpaceX Postpone Mission To Bring Back Stranded Astronauts | X/SpaceX
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and SpaceX on Monday postponed the launch of the Crew-10 Mission to the International Space Station (ISS). Notably, as part of the mission, a crew of four astronauts on board the Falcon 9 rocket would have replaced the stranded NASA astronauts Sunita Williams and Butch Wilmore.
The mission was postponed due to a “hydraulic system issue with a ground support clamp arm for the Falcon 9 rocket at Launch Complex 39A” at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.US. As per the NASA statement, opportunity is no earlier than 7:26 pm EDT on Thursday.
Tweet By SpaceX:
Standing down from tonight’s launch opportunity of @NASA‘s Crew-10 mission to the @Space_Station
Launch coverage will start at 3:25 pm (local time) on NASA+. and docking is targeted at 11:30 pm (local time) on Friday. A crew of four will head to the ISS onboard the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket for a six-month stay.
“With a March 13 Crew-10 launch, the Crew-9 mission with NASA astronauts Nick Hague, Suni Williams, and Butch Wilmore, along with Roscosmos cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov, would depart the space station no earlier than 9:05 a.m. Monday, March 17, pending weather at the splashdown locations off the coast of Florida,” NASA said in a statement.
“Crew-10 is the 10th crew rotation mission of SpaceX’s human space transportation system and its 11th flight with crew aboard, including the Demo-2 test flight, to the space station through NASA’s Commercial Crew Program,” it added.Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams have been stranded on the ISS for nine months after reaching there in June last year. They were supposed to stay there for about a week.The astronauts were transported from Earth to the ISS aboard Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft However, the spacecraft came back to Earth unmanned in September. As per a Fox News report, Starliner had faced “helium leaks” and “issues with the spacecraft reaction control thrusters” while docking with the ISS.Source: https://www.freepressjournal.in/science/sunita-williams-and-butch-wilmores-return-delayed-as-nasa-spacex-postpone-mission-to-bring-back-stranded-astronauts
Pakistani security forces stormed a train on Wednesday that had been hijacked by separatist militants, killing all 33 attackers and ending a day-long standoff involving hundreds of hostages, the military said.
Separatist Baloch militants on Tuesday blew up the railway track and hurled rockets at the Jaffar Express when it was on its way to Peshawar in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province from Balochistan’s capital of Quetta, carrying 440 people.
The military said 21 hostages and four security troops were killed over the course of the standoff.
“Today we freed a large number of people, including women and children … The final operation was carried out with great care,” military spokesperson Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry said, adding that no civilians were killed in the final stage of the operation.
Before the army announcement, the Baloch Liberation Army, which claimed the attack, said it had killed 50 passengers on Wednesday evening. It had said on Tuesday that it was holding 214 people, mostly security personnel.
It had threatened to start executing hostages unless authorities met its 48-hour deadline for the release of Baloch political prisoners, activists, and missing people it says had been abducted by the military.
The BLA is the largest of several ethnic armed groups battling the government in Balochistan, which borders Afghanistan and Iran.
The militants have in recent months stepped up their activities using new tactics to inflict high death and injury tolls and target Pakistan’s military.
Baloch militant groups say they have been fighting for a larger share in the regional wealth of mines and minerals denied by the central government. SUICIDE VESTS
Junior Interior Minister Talal Chaudhry told Geo television earlier on Wednesday that militants were wearing suicide vests as they sat among the passengers held hostage, complicating the rescue attempt. He said 70-80 attackers had hijacked the train.
Plain clothes security force perosnnel, who were rescued from a train after it was attacked by separatist militants, leave Mach railway station in Mach, Balochistan, Pakistan, March 12, 2025. REUTERS/Naseer Ahmed Purchase Licensing Rights
The military sent in hundreds of troops and also deployed the airforce and special forces to tackle the militants, Chaudhry said.
In the final phase of the operation, he said special forces first took out the suicide bombers before troops went from carriage to carriage to kill the rest of the militants.
He did not give a number of those rescued in this phase of the operation and it was not immediately clear how or to where the passengers would be evacuated.
The train driver and several others had already been killed, officials said earlier, before the army statement.
Government officials had said earlier, also before the army statement, that 190 of those on board had already been rescued, with more than 50 taken to Quetta to be reunited with their loved ones.
Muhammad Ashraf, 75, who was travelling on the train, said he heard a loud explosion in the mountainous area, which shook all the carriages.
“We lay on the floor once heavy firing started. Shortly after, armed men entered the train and checked our identities,” he said in Quetta.
Jens-Frederik Nielsen (C) celebrated into the night as it became clear his Democrats party had won the election
Greenland’s centre-right opposition has won a surprise general election victory – in a vote dominated by independence and US President Donald Trump’s pledge to take over the semi-autonomous territory.
The Democratic party, which favours a gradual approach to independence from Denmark – achieved around 30% of the vote, near-complete results show.
“Greenland needs us to stand together in a time of great interest from outside,” party leader Jens-Frederik Nielsen told local media. “There is a need for unity, so we will enter into negotiations with everyone.”
His party will now have to negotiate with other parties in order to form a coalition.
Greenland – the world’s biggest island, between the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans – has been controlled by Denmark, nearly 3,000km (1,860 miles) away, for about 300 years.
Greenland governs its own domestic affairs, but decisions on foreign and defence policy are made in Copenhagen.
Five of the six main parties in the election favour independence from Copenhagen, but disagree over the pace with which to reach it.
Greenland’s election: Why does it matter and how does it work?
Greenland’s vote pivotal for Arctic territory’s future
Why does Trump want Greenland?
The Democratic party, whose vote was up by more than 20% on 2021, is considered a moderate party on independence.
Another opposition party, Naleraq, which is looking to immediately kick off the independence process and forge closer ties with the US, is on course for second place with almost a quarter of the vote.
Support for Naleraq was boosted ahead of the vote by the decision of one of Greenland’s most popular young politicians, Aki-Matilda Hoegh-Dam, to switch from one of the ruling parties. She came second only to Democrats leader Jens Frederik Nielsen in the popular vote.
“It’s the second biggest party, so you can’t avoid them,” Nielsen told local reporters. “But we don’t want to rule out the other parties beforehand.”
The two current governing parties, Inuit Ataqatigiit (IA) and Siumut, are heading for third and fourth place – marking an upset for Prime Minister Mute B Egede.
More than 40,000 Greenlanders out of a population of 57,000 were eligible to cast their votes to elect 31 MPs, as well as the local government. Six parties were on the ballot.
The voting took place at 72 polling stations scattered across the vast island.
“The Democrats need a supporting partner to be able to have a majority,” says Maria Ackren from the University of Greenland. “It would say it can be either Naleraq or Inuit Ataqatigiit. It’s up to the Democrats to try to figure out what they want.”
Since 2009 Greenland has had the right to call an independence referendum.
Although Naleraq is pushing for a vote within a few years, Jens-Frederik Nielsen’s party favours a gradual approach towards independence, focusing first on making self-government a success.
Prof Ackren believes the Democrats won, partly because Greenlanders wanted a change of government, but also because they were unhappy with new fisheries laws and other domestic issues.
Independence is seen as the end goal for most Greenlanders, but not before reforms have been made to the economy, health and other sectors, she says.
Greenland’s strategic location and untapped mineral resources have caught President Trump’s eye in particular. He first floated the idea of buying the island during his first term in 2019.
Since taking office again in January, Trump has reiterated his intention to acquire the territory.
Only seven countries met World Health Organization (WHO) air quality standards last year, data showed on Tuesday, as researchers warned that the war on smog would only get harder after the United States shut down its global monitoring efforts.
Chad and Bangladesh were the world’s most polluted countries in 2024, with average smog levels more than 15 times higher than WHO guidelines, according to figures compiled by Swiss air quality monitoring firm IQAir.
Only Australia, New Zealand, the Bahamas, Barbados, Grenada, Estonia and Iceland made the grade, IQAir said.
Significant data gaps, especially in Asia and Africa, cloud the worldwide picture, and many developing countries have relied on air quality sensors mounted on U.S. embassy and consulate buildings to track their smog levels.
However, the State Department has recently ended the scheme, citing budget constraints, with more than 17 years of data removed last week from the U.S. government’s official air quality monitoring site, airnow.gov, , including readings collected in Chad.
“Most countries have a few other data sources, but it’s going to impact Africa significantly, because oftentimes these are the only sources of publicly available real-time air quality monitoring data,” said Christi Chester-Schroeder, IQAir’s air quality science manager.
Data concerns meant Chad was excluded from IQAir’s 2023 list, but it was also ranked the most polluted country in 2022, plagued by Sahara dust as well as uncontrolled crop burning.
People move through a dusty road, as air quality reduces ahead of the winter in Dhaka, Bangladesh, November 4, 2024. REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir Hossain Purchase Licensing Rights
Average concentrations of small, hazardous airborne particles known as PM2.5 hit 91.8 micrograms per cubic metre (mg/cu m) last year in the country, slightly higher than 2022.
The WHO recommends levels of no more than 5 mg/cu m, a standard met by only 17% of cities last year.
India, fifth in the smog rankings behind Chad, Bangladesh, Pakistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo, saw average PM2.5 fall 7% on the year to 50.6 mg/cu m.
But it accounted for 12 of the top 20 most polluted cities, with Byrnihat, in a heavily industrialised part of the country’s northeast, in first place, registering an average PM2.5 level of 128 mg/cu m.
Climate change is playing an increasing role in driving up pollution, Chester-Schroeder warned, with higher temperatures causing fiercer and lengthier forest fires that swept through parts of South East Asia and South America.
Christa Hasenkopf, director of the Clean Air Program at the University of Chicago’s Energy Policy Institute (EPIC), said at least 34 countries will lose access to reliable pollution data after the U.S. programme was closed.
The health clinic where Alice Okwirry collects her HIV medication in Kenya’s capital Nairobi has been rationing supplies of antiretrovirals to one-month refills since the U.S. government froze foreign aid.
On the outskirts of the city, meanwhile, millions of life-saving doses sit on the shelves of a warehouse, unused and unreachable.
The clinic is a half hour’s drive from the warehouse, but for Okwirry, they may as well be an ocean apart.
Without U.S. funding, distribution from the warehouse, which stocks all U.S. government-donated HIV medicine to Kenya, has ceased, leaving supplies of some drugs worryingly low, according to a former USAID official and a health official in Kenya.
The 90-day foreign aid freeze, ordered by U.S. President Donald Trump after taking office on January 20, has upended the global supply chain for medical products to fight HIV and other diseases. It is also blocking the distribution of drugs that long ago reached their destination countries.
“I was just seeing death now coming,” said 50-year-old Okwirry who was diagnosed with HIV in 2008 and has a 15-year-old daughter, Chichi, who is also HIV-positive.
Okwirry used to receive six-month supplies of ARVs from the clinic but now can only get one month.
“I told Chichi: what about if you hear the drugs are doomed?” Okwirry said, growing emotional. “She told me: Mom, I’ll be leaning on you.”
The State Department issued a waiver last month exempting funding for HIV treatment from the freeze.
But the USAID payments system in Kenya is down after the cuts, meaning contractors who implement the programmes cannot be paid, said Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin, who was the deputy head of communications for USAID, East Africa, until resigning on Feb. 3 in protest at the dismantling of the agency.
“Projects are left wondering: ‘Well, how am I going to resume activities if you’re not paying me money?” he said. “The waivers that have been given are really waivers on paper.”
In Kenya, officials in Washington have not authorised the release of money required to distribute the $34 million worth of medicine and equipment at the warehouse, he added.
According to a Kenyan government document seen by Reuters, about $10 million is needed for that distribution. The Mission for Essential Drugs and Supplies, the Christian charity that runs the warehouse, supplies drugs to some 2,000 clinics nationwide, its website says.
Knowles-Coursin told Reuters the commodities at the warehouse include 2.5 million bottles of ARVs, 750,000 HIV test kits and 500,000 malaria treatments.
Alice Okwirry, 50, a widow living with HIV/AIDS, sits inside her house in Kianda village within Kibera district of Nairobi, Kenya February 28, 2025. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya Purchase Licensing Rights
USAID referred a request for comment to the State Department, which did not respond. The Mission for Essential Drugs and Supplies did not respond to requests for comment.
Kenya’s Health Minister, Deborah Barasa, said she expected her government to mobilise funds to allow the supplies at MEDS to be released within two to four weeks.
“We have identified the resources that are required,” she said in an interview.
‘FEAR AND ANXIETY’
Kenya has the seventh-largest number of people living with HIV in the world, at around 1.4 million, according to World Health Organization data. The President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, the main U.S. vehicle for funding HIV treatment, supplies some 40% of Kenya’s HIV drugs and supplies.
A health official in Kenya, who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter, said stocks of two critical HIV treatments, Dolutegravir and Nevirapine, were low but did not know exactly how much remained nationwide.
Dolutegravir is often used to treat coinfections of HIV and tuberculosis. Nevirapine is often used to prevent mother-to-child transmission.
Barasa, the health minister, said there would be enough Dolutegravir to last five months and Nevirapine to last eight months once the MEDS stocks were released.
For the time being, some patients can only get refills of their ARVS for one week at a time, said Nelson Otwoma, director of the National Empowerment Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS in Kenya.
Lawsuits aiming to compel the Trump administration to restore funding for humanitarian programmes and reinstate thousands of fired or furloughed USAID workers are working their way through U.S. courts.
On Monday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the Trump administration has cancelled more than 80% of all USAID programmes.
The Kenyan government’s council on syndemic diseases estimated in an internal brief last month, seen by the Reuters, that the U.S. cuts had created funding gaps of around $80 million.
Donald Trump (right) and Narendra Modi met at the White House for talks in February
Indian Americans are increasingly optimistic about India’s future, but hold deep concerns about US-India relations under a second Donald Trump administration, a new survey finds.
The 2024 Indian-American Survey, conducted by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and YouGov in October, examined Indian-American political attitudes.
Two pivotal elections happened in India and the US last year, amid a deepening – but occasionally strained – partnership. Tensions between the countries flared over a US federal indictment of Indian billionaire Gautam Adani and allegations of a Delhi-backed assassination plot on American soil.
With more than five million Indian-origin residents in the US, the survey asked some key questions: How do Indian Americans view former president Joe Biden’s handling of US-India ties? Do they see Donald Trump as a better option? And how do they assess India’s trajectory post the 2024 election?
Here are some key takeaways from the report, which was based on a nationally representative online survey of 1,206 Indian-American adult residents.
Trump v Biden on India
Indian Americans rated the Biden administration’s handling of US-India relations more favourably than Trump’s first term.
A hypothetical Kamala Harris administration was seen as better for bilateral ties than a second Trump term during the polling.
Partisan polarisation plays a key role: 66% of Indian-American Republicans believe Trump was better for US-India ties, while just 8% of Democrats agree.
Conversely, half of Indian-American Democrats favour Biden, compared to 15% of Republicans.
Since most Indian Americans are Democrats, this gives Biden the overall edge.
During their February meeting at the White House, both Trump and Prime Minister Narendra Modi praised each other’s leadership, but Trump criticised India’s high trade tariffs, calling them a “big problem.”
‘Murder-for-hire’ controversy
The alleged Indian plot to assassinate a separatist on US soil has not widely registered – only half of respondents are aware of it.
In October, the US charged a former Indian intelligence officer with attempted murder and money laundering for allegedly plotting to assassinate Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, a US-based advocate for an independent Sikh state, Khalistan.
This marked the first time the Indian government has been directly implicated in an alleged assassination attempt on a dissident. India has stated it is co-operating with the US investigation. In January, a panel set up by India to examine Washington’s allegations recommended legal action against an unnamed individual believed to be the former intelligence agent.
A narrow majority of the respondents said that India would “not be justified in taking such action and hold identical feelings about the US if the positions were reversed”.
Israel and the Palestinians
Indian Americans are split along partisan party lines, with Democrats expressing greater empathy for Palestinians and Republicans leaning pro-Israel.
Four in 10 respondents believe Biden has been too pro-Israel in the ongoing conflict.
The attack in October 2023 by Hamas fighters from Gaza killed around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, inside Israel and saw 251 people taken hostage. Most have been released in ceasefire agreements or other arrangements.
Israel’s military offensive has killed more than 48,000 Palestinians in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
Talks to prolong the fragile ceasefire, the first phase of which ended on 1 March, are expected to resume in Qatar on Monday.
India’s outlook brightens
Forty-seven percent of Indian Americans believe India is heading in the right direction, a 10 percentage point increase from four years ago.
The same share approves of Modi’s performance as prime minister. Additionally, four in 10 respondents feel that India’s 2024 election – where Modi’s party did not get a majority – made the country more democratic.
The survey found that many Indian Americans support Modi and believe India is on the right track, yet half are unaware of the alleged assassination attempt on US soil.
Does this indicate a gap in information access, selective engagement or a tendency to overlook certain actions in favour of broader nationalist sentiment?
“It is hard to tease out the precise reason for this, but our sense is that this has more to do with selective engagement,” Milan Vaishnav, co-author of the study, said.
Data collected by Carnegie in 2020 shows that around 60% of Indian Americans follow Indian government and public affairs regularly, leaving a significant portion who “engage only sporadically”.
“Often people form broad impressions based on a combination of the news, social media and interactions with friends and family. Given the deluge of news in the US of late, it is not entirely surprising that the ‘murder-for-hire’ plot did not break through for a large section of the community,” Mr Vaishnav said.
Indian Americans, while cautious about Trump and generally favouring Biden or Harris for US-India relations, continue to strongly support Modi back in India. Given Modi’s nationalist policies, what accounts for this divergence? Is it driven more by personal impact than ideology?
“This is a case of ‘where you sit is where you stand’,” Mr Vaishnav said.
He said in related research, “we’ve explored this question in depth and found that Indian Americans generally hold more liberal views on US policy issues compared to India”.
“For instance, while Muslim Indian-Americans – minorities both in India and the US – maintain consistently more liberal attitudes, Hindu Indian-Americans express liberal views in the US (where they are a minority) but more conservative stances in India, where they belong to the majority.
“In other words, a person’s majority or minority status plays a key role in shaping their political views,” Mr Vaishnav said.
If Indian Americans viewed Trump as a threat to bilateral ties, why did they embrace him during his first term, as seen at events like ‘Howdy Modi!’? Has their opinion of Trump shifted due to his policies, or is it more about changing political currents?
“We should not generalise from one event or even one segment of the Indian American population. More than 50,000 Indian Americans gathered at ‘Howdy, Modi!’ first and foremost to see Modi, not Trump. Recall that Trump was added at a later date,” Mr Vaishnav said.
“Second, this is a diverse diaspora with a range of political views. While Indian Americans lean overwhelmingly toward the Democratic Party, a very sizeable minority – we estimate around 30% in 2024 – support the Republicans under Trump.”
Indian Americans remain committed to the Democratic Party, but attachment has waned. Some 47% identify as Democrats, down from 56% in 2020, a survey found last year.
Do Indian Americans have a nuanced understanding of political developments in both countries, or are their views more influenced by diaspora-driven narratives and media echo chambers?
Mr Vaishnav said data from 2020 shows that online news was the primary source of information about India, followed by television, social media and word of mouth. Within social media, YouTube, Facebook and WhatsApp were the most common platforms.
PM Modi receives grand welcome in Mauritius. (News18)
Prime Minister Narendra Modi received a grand welcome in Mauritius on Tuesday. The PM is in the island nation for a two-day state visit where he will participate as the chief guest in the country’s national day celebrations and engage with its top leadership.
Despite the early hour, he was welcomed by the country’s top dignitaries, with Mauritius Prime Minister Navin Ramgoolam greeting him with a garland. He was joined by the Deputy Prime Minister, Chief Justice of Mauritius, Speaker of the National Assembly, Leader of the Opposition, Foreign Minister, Cabinet Secretary, Chairperson of the Grand Port District Council, and several other high-ranking officials.
A total of 200 dignitaries, including MPs, MLAs, members of the Diplomatic Corps, and religious leaders, were present to welcome PM Modi, underscoring the significance of his visit.
At the invitation of his Mauritius counterpart, Navin Ramgoolam, Modi’s visit will see the signing of several agreements aimed at enhancing cooperation in capacity building, trade, and combating cross-border financial crimes.
Before departing for Mauritius, Modi expressed optimism, stating that his visit would mark a “new and bright” chapter in India-Mauritius relations.
During his stay, he will meet the President of Mauritius, hold discussions with the Prime Minister, and engage with senior officials and political leaders. He will also interact with the Indian community and inaugurate the Civil Service College and the Area Health Centre, both built with India’s grant assistance.
PM To Inaugurate India-Funded Projects
Prime Minister Narendra Modi will inaugurate over 20 India-funded projects, ranging from capacity building to community-linked infrastructure, during his two-day state visit to Mauritius, beginning Tuesday, officials said.
The prime minister will also announce new major infrastructure projects aimed at strengthening democracy in the Southeast African island nation.
Prime Minister Modi, along with his Mauritian counterpart Navin Ramgoolam, will jointly inaugurate the Civil Services College building. The construction of the building was completed at an approximate cost of USD 4.75 million. A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for the project was signed in 2017.
A crew member remains missing after an oil tanker and cargo ship collided in the North Sea off the coast of East Yorkshire.
Dozens of people abandoned the vessels after the crash just before 9.50am, with the Coastguard rescuing 36 people.
All 23 on board the oil tanker Stena Immaculate are accounted for – but one of the 14 crew members of the Solong cargo ship is still missing.
A Coastguard search was called off around 9.40pm, while both vessels were both still on fire.
One of the 36 people rescued was taken to hospital.
Sky News understands there is a five-mile air and sea exclusion zone around the location of the incident, which may be widened to 10 miles if later required.
Both ships are on fire following the collision
The Stena Immaculate was carrying jet fuel and was on a short-term charter to the US Navy at the time of the incident.
The cargo ship was reportedly carrying 15 containers of sodium cyanide and an unknown quantity of alcohol.
Two maritime security sources told Reuters there was “no indication” of any malicious activity or other actors involved in the incident.
‘Multiple explosions onboard’
US logistics group Crowley, which manages oil tanker Stena Immaculate, confirmed the vessel had released some jet fuel after sustaining a ruptured cargo tank.
The firm said it initiated its emergency vessel response plan and is “actively working with public agencies to contain the fire and secure the vessel”.
Crowley added: “Our first priority is the safety of the people and environment. We will provide more updates as information becomes available.”
Downing Street ‘monitoring situation’
The prime minister’s official spokesman said it was an “extremely concerning situation”.
He said: “We thank the emergency services for their rapid response. I understand the Department for Transport is working closely with the coastguard to help support the response to the incident.
“We’re obviously monitoring the situation, we’ll continue to coordinate the response and we’re grateful to emergency personnel for their continued efforts.”
Meanwhile, Hull City Council leader Mike Ross has called for the UK government to set out a rapid response plan in response to the events.
Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander later praised the work of the emergency services, adding: “The Maritime Accident Investigation Branch (MAIB) has begun a preliminary assessment and I am working closely with the MCA (Maritime and Coastguard Agency) as they conduct an assessment of any counter pollution response which may be required over the coming days.”
Coastguard’s emergency message
Moments after the collision, a message broadcast by the Coastguard warned other ships to stay away from the area.
In audio shared on social media, the Coastguard can be heard warning Solong “has collided” with Stena Immaculate.
“Both vessels are abandoning,” the message continued.
“Vessels who have firefighting equipment or can assist with search and rescue, contact Humber Coastguard.
“Stena is carrying Jet-A1 fuel, which is on fire and in the water. Vessels – remain at safe distance.”
‘Inspectors are gathering evidence’
The Marine Accident Investigation Branch is now investigating the collision.
A spokesperson said: “Our team of inspectors and support staff are gathering evidence and undertaking a preliminary assessment of the accident to determine our next steps.”
The oil tanker was sailing under a US flag, while the Solong cargo ship was Portuguese-flagged, according to Marinetraffic.com.
Overall responsibility for investigating this collision rests with the flag states of the vessels – in this case, Portugal and the United States.
MAIB has an interest as the incident occurred in UK waters, UK authorities are co-ordinating the response, and the crews of both ships were recovered to the UK.
The Solong had been due to travel to Rotterdam in the Netherlands after departing from Grangemouth in Scotland on Monday morning, Marinetraffic.com shows.
Moving images on the tracking site suggest the oil tanker had remained stationary as the Solong headed straight towards it before the collision.
It is believed the Stena Immaculate, which was travelling from Greece to the UK, was anchored at the time.
David McFarlane, director Maritime Risk and Safety Consultants, told Sky News it can take up to an hour to raise an anchor – meaning the tanker might not have had time to get out of the way.
It comes as Martyn Boyers, chief executive of the Port of Grimsby East, said the container ship may have been on autopilot at the time of the crash.
“Autopilot just steers a course, they don’t deviate, there’s no bend in the sea,” he added.
North Korean hackers have reportedly cash out $300million out of their record breaking $1.5billion crypto scamCredit: Getty
These criminals reportedly swipe online money to help fund Kim Jong-Un’s nuclear programme.
The Lazarus Group’s latest hit was orchestrating the world’s largest heist in crypto history two weeks ago.
Fraudsters were able to access the £1.5billion wallet and transfer the contents to an unidentified address.
Authorities have attempted to track the digital coins and stop criminals from turning them into real cash.
Despite this, the alleged North Korean hackers have been able to cash out on around an eye-watering $300million.
Experts have revealed that Kim’s nation has unexpectedly become one of the best countries at crypto crime, according to the BBC.
These criminals are thought to be working round-the-clock to turn as much of their stolen Ethereum into usable cash.
Dr Tom Robinson, co-founder of crypto investigators Elliptic said: “Every minute matters for the hackers who are trying to confuse the money trail and they are extremely sophisticated in what they’re doing.”
Robinson added: “I imagine they have an entire room of people doing this using automated tools and years of experience.
“We can also see from their activity that they only take a few hours break each day, possibly working in shifts to get the crypto turned into cash.”
North Korea has never admitted to being behind the Lazarus group but the FBI has named Park Jin Hyok as one of the alleged hackers.
Dubai-based exchange Bybit admitted that around 20 per cent of the stolen crypto has “gone dark”, meaning it will probably never be found.
The group of high-profile, extremely skilled hackers has developed what experts describe as a powerful and sophisticated system that can breach security layers and steal money.
They have previously ripped a whopping $5billion worth of digital money from the West.
The Lazarus group then used their system on 21 February to carry out what the CEO of Bybit, Ben Zhou, called “the worst hack in history”.
Zhou said he would cover the lost money but the attack caused the value of Ethereum to drop by about four per cent.
Bybit, which oversees $20billion worth of assets, did not have enough on hand to cover the $1.5billion loss so borrowing from other firms to keep the company afloat.
India lifted the 2025 Champions Trophy in Dubai Photo : AP
The Indian cricket team sealed back-to-back International Cricket Council (ICC) titles after beating New Zealand in the final of the 2025 Champions Trophy at the Dubai International Stadium on Sunday by four wickets. This is the third time (2nd Outright) the Men in Blue have won the title. This victory also means that the Men in Blue have won consecutive ICC titles for the first time in history after lifting the 2024 T20 World Cup. Previously, only Australia achieved the feat (2006 Champions Trophy, 2007 World Cup 2023 World Test Championship, and 2023 World Cup).
India won all five games in the tournament to replicate their 2013 title under MS Dhoni’s leadership. The Rohit Sharma-led side also won the T20 World Cup last year without losing any match. Over the last three ICC tournaments, India lost just one match having reached the 2023 World Cup final with 10 wins in a row.
Rohit Sharma Leads From the Front
Chasing 252, Indian captain Rohit Sharma and vice-captain Shubman Gill took the Men in Blue off to a quick start with a 106-run opening partnership. Glenn Phillips pulled off a stunning catch to end the partnership as Gill departed after making 31 runs in 47 balls. Gill’s departure triggered a collapse as Virat Kohli failed to continue this golden run of form with Michael Bracewell trapping him in front of the stumps in the second delivery of his innings. Skipper Rohit was outfoxed by Rachin Ravindra but by then the India captain had caused significant damage with his 83-ball 76 run inning.
Shreyas Iyer and Axar Patel put India back on track in the run-chase with a gritty partnership of 62 runs. However, Santner kept New Zealand in the game after dismissing Shreyas for 48 while Bracewell sent Axar Patel (29) back to the dressing room soon after.
However, KL Rahul (34*) and Hardik Pandya (18) held their nerve with a crucial 38-run partnership to take India close to the target before Ravindra Jadeja hit the winning runs.
Indian Spinners Spin A Web Over New Zealand
Earlier, New Zealand won the toss and chose to bat first. This marked the 15th ODI in a row in which India lost the toss, marking a rare event with a mathematical probability of 0.00305%. Rohit lost the toss for 12 consecutive games in which he has been captain and equaled the world record of Brian Lara.
Rachin Ravindra, who came into the game on the back of two centuries in three matches in the tournament, gave New Zealand a quick-fire start with a knock of 37 in 29 balls. Rachin and Will Young added 57 in just 47 balls for the opening stand, which was broken by Varun Chakravarthy.
Later, Kuldeep Yadav turned the match on its head after dismissing Rachin in the first ball of his spell. The star wrist spinner put the Men in Blue on top after dismissing Kane Williamson for 11 as New Zealand were forced to enter a rebuilding phase.
Daryl Mitchell led a lone fight for New Zealand with a gritty knock of 63 in the middle overs. Tom Latham failed to leave a mark as Ravindra Jadeja dismissed him after he made just 11 runs. Micheal Bracewell gave his team a quick-fire finish with a 40-ball 53, that propelled the Black Caps to 251 after 50 overs.
DONALD Trump has warned “monster” nuclear weapons could “end the world” as he sounded the alarm over atomic armageddon.
The President issued the stark warning in a TV interview on Sunday morning after he floated new arms controls with Russia and China.
Trump speaking on Fox News on Sunday
In an interview with Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo on her show Sunday Morning Futures, Trump said he believes nukes are one of the greatest threats to mankind.
In a chilling warning, he said if nukes are ever used again it could trigger the apocalypse.
The US has the second largest nuclear weapons stockpile in the world with around 5,000 weapons.
Russia has the most with nearly 6,000, with China a distant third with around 350.
Nuclear weapons have only been used in anger twice – when the US bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki to end World War 2.
Speaking on Fox, Trump said: “We spend a lot of money of nuclear weapons – the level of destruction is beyond anything you can imagine.
“It’s just bad that you have to spend all this money on something that if it’s used, it’s probably the end of the world.”
The 78-year-old went on to say that too many people are focused on claims of climate change – rather than tackling the global threat posed by nukes.
The President said the threat of nuclear weapons is immediate, warning: “It could happen tomorrow.”
Trump explained: “I watched Biden for years say the existential threat is from the climate.
“I said ‘no’.
“The greatest is sitting on shelves in various countries called ‘nuclear weapons’ that are big monsters that can blow your heads off for miles and miles and miles.”
It comes France offered to use its nukes to protect Europe from Russia.
Fears over nuclear war loom amid unprecdented tensions worldwide as war rages in Ukraine, China threatens the US over trade tensions, and North Korean despot Kim Jong-un continues to arm.
Iran is also feared to be developing nukes – with Trump sending them a letter this week calling for a new round of talks.
Nuclear weapons […] are big monsters that can blow your heads off for miles and miles and miles
Russia has repeatedly rattled the nuclear sabre in the war in Ukraine – and Putin has long threatened the world with his ambitious “super weapons”, such as the Satan 2 nuke.
Trump has long vowed to be the president of peace and said he wants to end wars worldwide – especially the raging conflict in Ukraine.
His comments came mere days after he revealed on Friday that it would be “great” for the world to “get rid of nuclear weapons” – prompting a response from the Kremlin.
The Republican said on Friday: “I know Russia and us have by far the most.
“China will have an equal amount within 4-5 years.
“It would be great if we could all denuclearise because the power of nuclear weapons is crazy.”
Trump’s de-nuking suggestion prompted a response from Kremlin spokesman and Putin puppet Dmitry Peskov.
He said: “Dialogue between Russia and the US on arms control is necessary, especially concerning strategic stability.”
Since taking office Trump has dramatically veered in favour of Putin’s Russia, withdrawn US military aid for Ukraine, and stopped sharing intelligence with the invaded nation.
European countries have been scrambling to chip away their reliance on the US, with Keir Starmer announcing a hike to defence spending in the UK.
And on Wednesday, French President Macron said that his country could gear up its nuclear deterrent to protect the continent under a defensive umbrella against Russian aggression.
Moscow said the speech was threatening towards Russia and had “notes of nuclear blackmail”.
Trump also labelled Zelensky as “ungrateful” and believes the Ukrainian president took US cash like “candy from a baby” for war-torn Ukraine.
Top diplomats from the US including Secretary of State Marco Rubio will meet the Ukrainian delegation for talks on ending the war in Saudi Arabia in a few days.
The US President said: “It was like taking candy from a baby what he did.
“He’s a smart guy, and he’s a tough guy, and he took money out of this country under Biden like candy from a baby – it was so easy with that same attitude.
“I just don’t think he’s grateful. We gave him $350 billion.”
Trump also stressed that he has been “very tough with Russia, tougher than anyone has ever been to Russia”.
Trump’s past comments, including labelling the Ukrainian leader a “dictator,” fuelled speculation that he was siding with Moscow, and he has previously cast doubt on continued US support for Ukraine.
Slamming these claims, the Republican said: “I stopped the Russian pipeline, I’m the one that put sanctions on Russia, I’m the one that gave the Javelins, but I get along well with Putin.
“Nobody has been tougher on Russia than Donald Trump and they know that.”
He added that despite the tough measures previously taken against mad Vlad’s nation, he “got along with Putin,” just like he “got along with Kim Jong-un” and China’s President Xi Jinping.
Putin is said to be ready to talk about a truce with Ukraine as long as his conditions are met, sources in Moscow have said.
The Kremlin’s conditions for a potential truce were shared last month at the US-Russian talks in Saudi Arabia, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg.
To secure a temporary ceasefire, Putin wants a clear understanding of an eventual peace settlement and what that entails, two people with knowledge of the matter said.
As part of the agreement, Putin will demand to establish the parameters of a peacekeeping mission and which countries take part, one of the sources said.
It comes as thousands of Ukrainian troops who took control of Russian territory over the summer, have almost been “cut off” by Russian forces who have encircled them.
As Trump left Kyiv’s troops “fighting blind” axing intelligence sharing, the Ukrainian soldiers have almost lost their main supply lines, open source maps revealed on Friday.
Over the past three days, a Russian counteroffensive has managed to reclaim territory in the Kursk region and almost cut Zelensky’s forces in two.
Nuuk is the capital of Greenland, home to around 20,000 peopleImage: Evgeniy Maloletka/AP Photo/picture alliance
In normal times, this election probably wouldn’t be of too much interest to the rest of the world. Around 40,000 voters will choose just 31 parliamentarians, and it will all take place on an island that isn’t even fully autonomous.
But these are not normal times and this election is in Greenland on March 11, which means it could prove a starting point for further geopolitical upheaval in the Northern Hemisphere.
Firstly, because supporters of independence for Greenland hope the ballot may result in a strong mandate for Greenland’s complete separation from Denmark. Currently Greenland, a former Danish colony, is a self-governing territory of the latter.
And secondly, and probably most importantly, because US President Donald Trump has been talking about making Greenland part of the US ever since he was elected last November.
Greenland’s mineral wealth
Trump has frequently spoken of how it would be in the interests of US security to control Greenland. Since the 1950s, the US has run the Pituffik Space Base, in the northwest of Greenland.
It is the Americans’ northernmost post and plays a key role in missile warnings and space surveillance. Previously, during the Cold War, it was called the Thule Air Base and was there to send early warnings and initiate defense against potential Soviet attacks.
Other than security issues, economics might also play a part in Trump’s claims on Greenland. In the south of Greenland, there are thought to be valuable deposits of oil, gas, gold, uranium and zinc.
Thanks to climate change, which is thawing Greenland’s ground out, mining these deposits will eventually become easier.
During his first term in office, in 2019, Trump offered to buy Greenland. The government in Denmark swiftly rejected that.
But this term, Trump has continued to express expansionist intentions, over Canada, the Panama Canal and Gaza, as well as Greenland.
Even before he took up office in January, Trump sent his son, Donald Trump Jr., to Greenland — although officially he was there as a tourist.
A few weeks later, a poll was published showing that only 6% of Greenlanders wanted their island to become part of the US, while 85% opposed to the idea.
In his speech to Congress early in March, President Trump addressed his desire again, directing his comments to the people of Greenland.
“We strongly support your right to determine your own future,” Trump said. But just two sentences later, he seemed to renege on that, stating, “I think we’re going to get it [Greenland] — one way or the other, we’re going to get it.”
Foreign interference?
Given this and upcoming elections, Greenland has had to deal with the possibility that there could be external attempts to influence the country’s vote — for instance, from Russia or China, both of whom are also pursuing their own security agendas in the Arctic.
Denmark’s national security and intelligence service, PET, warned of Russian disinformation in particular.
“In the weeks preceding the Greenlandic elections’ date announcement, several cases of fake profiles were observed on social media, including profiles masquerading as Danish and Greenlandic politicians, which contributed to a polarization of public opinion,” PET stated, although it did not link those accounts to any specific country.
Johan Farkas, an assistant professor in media studies at the University of Copenhagen, is familiar with these kinds of posts as they also circulate in Russian media. But he doesn’t think they’d have much impact on Greenland’s elections because, besides Danish, most locals speak Greenlandic, an Inuit language.
“Greenland is a very small and tight-knit community in many ways,” Farkas told DW. “And so, influencing fake accounts, or these kinds of things that we have seen in the past and in other elections, my assessment is that it’s not an easy thing to do.”
But that doesn’t mean there’s nothing to worry about. “My concern as a disinformation researcher has more been around how this plays out in macro-politics. Would we suddenly see Elon Musk hosting live podcast interviews with specific candidates or Trump endorsing specific candidates? That is a very problematic and threatening thing for a free and fair election,” Farkas argues, referring to the weeks before Germany’s own recent federal election.
During that time, US billionaire Musk appeared on social media with the leader of Germany’s far-right political party and US Vice President JD Vance called on German centrist parties to cooperate with the far right.
Political controversies
Since the beginning of the year, there have been a number of controversies around Greenland’s upcoming elections. Reports suggest that influencers from Trump’s “Make America Great Again” movement distributed $100 bills in Greenland’s capital, Nuuk.
Local member of parliament Kuno Fencker traveled to Washington where he met a Republican politician who spoke to him about how Greenland should become an American territory.
Media studies professor Farkas doesn’t think the danger has passed — the elections will be held on March 11. “But,” he says, “I was more concerned about a month ago than I am right now.”
In early February, Greenland’s parliament, the 31-seat Inatsisartut, passed a law banning foreign and anonymous donations to local political parties. Danish donations are excluded.
And Trump’s offer to buy their country is not the only thing locals will be voting on in the upcoming election.
Independence from Denmark
The approximately 57,000 Greenlanders, who call themselves Kalaallit, are also worried about other issues. For example, which mineral resources their island should be developing and whether, and which, foreign partners should get concessions to do this.
The debate around mining revenues is part of the argument some make for becoming independent from Denmark. Allowing foreign interests to mine in Greenland would make Greenland less dependent on Denmark.
This is because “Denmark contributes over half of Greenland’s budget revenue to cover employment, health care, and education, with the annual cost of administrative support and direct financial transfers amounting to at least $700 million [€645.5 million] per year,” researchers at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, pointed out in January.
Independence is a long-term goal, Greenlandic Prime Minister Mute Egede said after Trump’s speech to Congress. “We do not want to be Americans, nor Danes; we are Kalaallit. The Americans and their leader must understand that,” Egede wrote on social media. “We are not for sale and cannot be taken. Our future is determined by us in Greenland.”
Reliance Industries ventures into blockchain with Jio Coin, though its official launch is pending. Jio Platforms partners with Polygon Labs for Web3 innovation. Users can earn JioCoins via Jio apps and JioSphere. Valued at Rs 21.99 per token, JioCoins can be used for mobile recharges and shopping discounts.
Reliance Jio Coin: Mukesh Ambani’s Crypto Moves Reshape India’s Digital Economy, Check How To Buy It And Its Latest Price
Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries entered the blockchain and cryptocurrency market with Jio Coin, taking India’s crypto market to the next level. Jio Coin has not yet been officially launched with no publicly available information on its features and uses. However, people are still curious to know about the coin and are eager to know how one can buy it.
Significantly, Reliance’s technology arm, Jio Platforms, collaborated with Polygon Labs to introduce Web3 and blockchain innovation to India. In Reliance’s FAQ section, Jio Coin’s definition is given as, “JioCoins are blockchain-based reward tokens that users can earn by engaging with different mobile or internet-based apps as decided by Jio Platforms Limited (JPL) using their Indian-based mobile numbers.”
As per Wallet Investor, on March 8, 2025, the value of 1 JIO Token is Rs 21.995 with 100 Jio Coins amounting to Rs 2199.529 Additionally, the market cap of this digital currency stands at Rs 38,635,984, with a circulating supply of 1,908,130 tokens. The site did not indicate its trading volume over the past 24 hours, nor did it mention the percentage change during that time.
How To Earn Jio Coins?
Follow the following steps to buy Jio Coin
Step 1: Obtain and set up the JioSphere Browser.
Step 2: Register with Jio Number.
Step 3: Open Jio Coin Wallet.
Step 4: Sign In and Begin Earning.
The actor’s wife Betsy Arakawa died after developing hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) around 11 February, a pathologist said.
An illustration of what hantavirus particles look like. Pic: iStock
Actor Gene Hackman died of heart disease around a week after his wife Betsy Arakawa died of a rare infectious disease at their home, a pathologist has said. But what do we know about the rare virus?
The couple were found dead on 26 February in separate rooms of their Santa Fe home, along with one of their dogs, and on Friday the results of medical tests were released in New Mexico.
Two-time Oscar winner Hackman was in the advanced stages of Alzheimer’s when he died of heart disease, and it was likely he was at home alone with the body of his wife for a week before he passed away himself.
Dr Heather Jarrell, chief medical examiner for New Mexico, told reporters Betsy Arakawa is believed to have died around 11 February.
The post-mortem examination showed Ms Arakawa, also known as Betsy Hackman, died of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome – a rare but potentially fatal disease.
But, what is it – and how do you get infected?
HPS, commonly referred to as hantavirus disease, is a respiratory disease caused by hantaviruses which are carried by several types of rodents.
It is a rare condition in the US, with most cases concentrated in the western states of New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado and Utah.
The New Mexico Department of Health says hantaviruses are spread by the saliva, droppings and urine of infected rodents, which in North America is most likely to be the eastern deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus).
The virus is often transmitted through the air when people sweep out sheds or clean closets where mice have been living, or by eating food contaminated with mouse droppings.
It is not transmissible from person to person, Dr Jarrell said.
What are the symptoms?
Symptoms, which vary between people, are thought to develop between one and eight weeks after exposure and the likelihood of death in the southwest of the US is about 38% to 50%.
Early symptoms of HPS include fatigue, fever, and myalgia (muscle aches), with about half of patients also experiencing malaise, headaches, dizziness, lightheadedness, chills, sweats, and abdominal problems including nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea, according to the American Lung Association.
Later symptoms include coughing, shortness of breath, and pneumonia (lungs filling with fluid). Rapid breathing and rapid heartbeat are also typical.
At this stage, the disease progresses rapidly, requiring hospital treatment and often mechanical ventilation to help with breathing.
What is the treatment for HPS?
There is no specific cure, treatment, or vaccine for HPS, but patients have a better chance of survival when they are diagnosed early.
How common is it in the US?
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention began tracking the virus after a 1993 outbreak in the Four Corners region – the area where Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and Utah meet.
The agency said that, as of the end of 2022, 864 cases of hantavirus disease were reported in the US since that tracking began.
A protester holding a Palestinian flag gestures from the side of the Elizabeth Tower, commonly known by the name of the clock’s bell “Big Ben”, at the Palace of Westminster, home to the Houses of Parliament, in central London, on Mar 8, 2025. (Photo: AFP/Ben Stansall)
A man who scaled London’s Big Ben, and spent the day perched on the historic clock tower with a Palestinian flag, was arrested shortly after he came down after midnight on Sunday (Mar 9), police said.
Pictures from the scene showed a cherry picker transporting him to waiting emergency crews on the ground.
London’s Metropolitan Police force, which was first alerted to the climber around 7am local time (3pm Singapore time) on Saturday, said the man was arrested after the “protracted incident”.
The man spent the day perched barefoot on a ledge several metres up the landmark, even as emergency crews urged him to come down from the Elizabeth Tower in central London, more commonly known for its clock bell, Big Ben.
Negotiators had boarded a fire truck lift and used a megaphone to speak with the man, but footage on social media showed the figure in a hoodie and baseball cap saying: “I will come down on my own terms.”
In the footage, negotiators indicated concerns about an injury to his foot, saying there was “quite a lot of blood” and that his clothes were not warm enough as temperatures dropped after nightfall.
AFP journalists at the scene earlier said the man appeared to be bleeding from his foot.
Crowds gathered from behind a police cordon, with supporters chanting “Free Palestine” and “you are a hero”.
Police had closed off the surrounding area, including Westminster Bridge, while the Houses of Parliament cancelled tours.
Westminster police later said all roads in the area had been reopened.
“Every day in Parliament I see dozens of armed police officers patrolling Portcullis House and the parliamentary estate. Where were they today?” Conservative MP Ben Obese-Jecty posted on X.
The Singaporean man accused of stealing and laundering US$230 million worth of cryptocurrency will go on trial on Oct 6 in the United States.
Malone Lam’s trial date was set after he appeared in court in Washington DC on Friday (Mar 7), wearing a green prison jumpsuit.
Singaporean Malone Lam and the cars he bought after he allegedly stole US$230 million in cryptocurrency from a victim in Washington. (Photos: Broward Sheriff’s Office, court documents)
The 20-year-old had previously requested a “speedy” legal process.
The prosecution expects to have a new indictment related to the case in the next 30 to 45 days, said Assistant US Attorney Kevin L Rosenberg. He added that he expects the trial to last around two weeks.
After the court hearing on Friday, one of his defence lawyers, Scott Armstrong, said in a statement to CNA: “Malone Lam looks forward to exercising his right to trial by jury in this case.”
Lam is being held in a prison in Virginia. More pre-trial hearings are expected in the coming months and he will have an opportunity to enter a formal plea at these hearings.
Together with accomplice Jeandiel Serrano, Lam is accused of taking 4,100 bitcoins from a “high net worth investor” by pretending to be a Google support team member.
US prosecutors have described the scam as “one of the largest cryptocurrency thefts from a private individual … in the history of the United States”.
Serrano, a 21-year-old from Los Angeles, did not appear in court.
For each offence, Lam faces up to 20 years in jail, a fine of up to US$250,000, or up to twice his gains from the scams.
SPENDING SPREE
The case has drawn interest in Singapore after news of Lam’s lavish spending from the alleged theft.
He is said to have rented luxury homes, spent US$400,000 to US$500,000 per night at nightclubs in Los Angeles and Miami, as well as bought dozens of luxury cars that included custom Lamborghinis, Ferraris and Porsches.
Social media videos purportedly show him in nightclubs, gifting Hermes Birkin bags to models and influencers.
According to the indictment, Malone Lam goes by the online monikers “Anne Hathaway” and “$$$”.
He and Serrano allegedly sent “unauthorised Google account access” notifications to the victim in the week leading up to the theft.
They used proxy and virtual private network (VPN) services to make it appear as if the access attempts were coming from overseas. This laid the groundwork for the theft through “sophisticated social engineering”, according to court documents.
The court heard that on Aug 18, 2024, Lam and his accomplice called the victim, pretending to be Google support team members and telling the victim there had been a hack attempt on his account. The pair ultimately convinced the victim to provide the security codes to his account before Lam allegedly accessed the victim’s OneDrive and Gmail accounts to locate the cryptocurrency assets.
He also looked for additional information on the victim’s private accounts and found Gemini cryptocurrency exchange records, said court documents.
The conspirators agreed that one of them should call the victim back and pose as a Gemini security team member to convince the victim that his cryptocurrency accounts had also been compromised.
More than 300,000 properties are without power as a tropical storm edges closer to Australia’s east coast, lashing the region with heavy rain.
Storm Alfred has been downgraded from a cyclone to a tropical low, but local authorities have warned that the threat it poses is “not over”.
Violent winds have already downed trees and power lines, with roads flooded in low-lying areas as the storm approaches landfall. Alfred is forecast to hit the coast near Brisbane before moving further inward later on Saturday.
Tens of thousands of people have been told to evacuate from the storm’s path, while others have been urged to stay indoors.
Four million people across Queensland and northern New South Wales are in the firing line of the storm, with dozens of weather warnings in place across both areas.
The emergency services say they are working with energy companies, after some residents were told they could be without power for days.
Around 287,000 customers are experiencing outages in south east Queensland, according to energy provider Energex, while Essential Energy said more than 42,600 homes and businesses in New South Wales had experienced blackouts.
People in Brisbane, Queensland’s capital, went to bed on Friday bracing for strong winds and heavy rain.
They woke up on Saturday to learn that the cyclone had been downgraded and the city would escape the worst of the weather.
But the danger’s not over in other parts of southeastern Queensland and northern New South Wales.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has said “the worst is yet to come”, and along the Gold Coast, which has been pummelled by bad weather the past few days, conditions are still pretty extreme.
There is driving rain and strong winds. There are power lines down, hundreds of trees have blown over in gardens, parks and along the main roads. There is lots of debris and emergency services have sectioned off areas most at risk.
“This emergency is not over,” said New South Wales state premier Chris Minns, adding that it is “crucially important” that the public does not “dismiss” the storm.
“It really doesn’t matter to us whether it’s been downgraded from a tropical cyclone to a weather event,” he said.
The state’s emergency service operations commander, Stuart Fisher, warned people not to be “complacent” and said authorities in the region expect flooding to continue over the next few days.
As the storm has edged closer to landfall, nearly 1,000 schools have closed, public transport has been suspended and airports are shut. Elective surgeries have also been cancelled.
Flights are not expected to resume until Sunday at the earliest.
The BBC has spoken to several people from Brisbane’s homeless community, who have taken refuge at Emmanuel City Mission, which has become a round-the-clock shelter.
Indian Air Force plane involved in an “incident” (PTI File Image)
A transport plane of the Indian Air Force, AN-32 aircraft, crash-landed at West Bengal’s Bagdogra Airport, officials said on Friday, clarifying that the crew was safe.
The Russian-origin aircraft is being recovered from the site.
The IAF officials said that the plane was involved in an “accident”.
“An accident involving an AN-32 transport aircraft at Bagdogra airport has come to light today. The aircraft is being recovered from the site. The crew of the aircraft is safe,” the Indian Air Force officials said.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Thursday that he would soon decide whether to revoke temporary legal status for some 240,000 Ukrainians who fled the conflict with Russia, following a Reuters report that his administration planned to take that step.
Such a move would be a stunning reversal of the welcome Ukrainians received under President Joe Biden’s administration and potentially put them on a fast-track to deportation.
“We’re not looking to hurt anybody, we’re certainly not looking to hurt them, and I’m looking at that,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office when asked about revoking the Ukrainians’ status and deporting them. “There were some people that think that’s appropriate, and some people don’t, and I’ll be making the decision pretty soon.”
The planned rollback of protections for Ukrainians would be part of a broader Trump administration effort to strip legal status from more than 1.8 million migrants allowed to enter the U.S. under temporary humanitarian parole programs launched under the Biden administration, a senior Trump official and three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
A move to revoke the Ukrainians’ status could come as soon as April, all four said. They said the plans to revoke their status got underway before Trump publicly feudedwith Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy last week.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt pushed back on the Reuters report in a post on X, saying “no decision has been made at this time.” U.S. Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said on Wednesday that the department had no new announcements. Ukrainian government agencies did not respond to requests for comment.
A Trump executive order issued on January 20 called for DHS to “terminate all categorical parole programs.”
The administration plans to revoke parole for about 530,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans as soon as this month, the Trump official and one of the sources familiar with the matter said, requesting anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. The plan to revoke parole for those nationalities was first reported by CBS News.
Migrants stripped of their parole status could face fast-track deportation proceedings, according to an internal ICE email seen by Reuters.
Immigrants who cross the border illegally can be put into the fast-track deportation process known as expedited removal, for two years after they enter. But for those who entered through legal ports of entry without being officially “admitted” to the U.S. – as with those on parole – there is no time limit on their rapid removal, the email said.
The Biden programs were part of a broader effort to create temporary legal pathways to deter illegal immigration and provide humanitarian relief.
In addition to the 240,000 Ukrainians fleeing the Russian invasion, and the 530,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans, these programs covered more than 70,000 Afghans escaping the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan.
An additional 1 million migrants scheduled a time to cross at a legal border crossing via an app known as CBP One.
Thousands more had access to smaller programs, including family reunification parole for certain people in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Trump as a candidate pledged to end the Biden programs, saying they went beyond the bounds of U.S. law.
The Trump administration last month paused processing immigration-related applications for people who entered the U.S. under certain Biden parole programs – placing Ukrainian Liana Avetisian, her husband and her 14-year-old daughter, in limbo. Avetisian, who worked in real estate in Ukraine, now assembles windows while her husband works construction.
The family fled Kyiv in May 2023, eventually buying a house in the small city of DeWitt, Iowa. Their parole and work permits expire in May. They say they spent about $4,000 in filing fees to renew their parole and to try to apply for another program known as Temporary Protected Status.
Avetisian has started getting headaches as she worries about their situation, she said.
A Ukrainian boy seeking asylum in the U.S. plays with a Ukrainian flag after arriving at the PedWest border crossing at the San Ysidro Port of Entry in San Diego, California, U.S., April 13, 2022. Purchase Licensing Rights
“We don’t know what to do,” she said.
Ukrainian community leaders are informing people of their rights, in case they are approached by immigration officers, and what their options are for staying in the country long-term, said Andrij Dobriansky, the director of communications for the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America.
“Many of these people do not have homes to return to,” he said. “We’re talking about people whose entire towns have been leveled altogether. Where would we be sending them back to? Nothing.”
WANING WELCOME
U.S. allies from Afghanistan who entered under Biden have also been swept up in Trump’s crackdown.
Rafi, a former Afghan intelligence officer who asked to be identified only by his first name to protect family members still in Afghanistan, entered the U.S. legally in January 2024 using the CBP One mobile app at the U.S.-Mexico border. He was given a temporary humanitarian parole status that allowed him to live and work in the United States for two years.
On February 13, just over a year into that status, he was detained at a check-in appointment at an ICE office in Chantilly, Virginia. His status was revoked.
In Afghanistan, Rafi was trained by American officers and provided intelligence on “High Value Targets”, according to an October 2022 recommendation letter.
“As a result of his active efforts against the enemy, he is currently in extreme danger, and in need of assistance in departing the country,” the former CIA officer who trained him wrote.
The officer described Rafi as “truly one of the most dedicated and hardworking individuals I had the honor to serve with in Afghanistan.” Reuters reviewed the letter but was not able to reach the officer.
In the United States, Rafi applied for asylum and was scheduled for a hearing before an immigration judge in April.
At his February ICE check in – one of the conditions for his temporary status – he was asked to remove his belt and shoelaces, he said. He knew immediately what was happening, he said, and still, he asked: “Are you arresting me? I have broken no law.”
Rafi said he felt betrayed.
“When someone stands shoulder to shoulder with American troops and puts his life in danger…” he said in a phone call from detention, his voice shaking.
“I wasn’t expecting this behavior from them. I wasn’t expecting it.”
On February 24, his lawyer wrote to ICE asking them to release her client, noting his lack of a criminal record, that he was not a flight risk and had an active asylum case related to his work supporting the U.S. military in Afghanistan.
The incident happened on a Jetstar service at a Melbourne airport
Police in Australia have charged a 17-year-old who got on a plane with a shotgun and ammunition.
He was filmed being wrestled to the ground by passengers and crew as the aircraft prepared to take off from Avalon Airport, near Melbourne, carrying 160 people bound for Sydney on Thursday afternoon.
Police believe the teenager got onto the airport tarmac by breaching a security fence, before climbing the front steps to the plane, where he was tackled to the ground near the front door.
The 17-year-old – who has not been identified – was taken into custody and will appear in youth court to face eight charges.
Among them are unlawfully taking control of an aircraft, endangering the flight’s safety and creating a bomb hoax.
Victoria Police said a bomb specialist had to be brought in to search a car and two bags which were located nearby.
Footage published by Australian outlet 7News showed the suspect being restrained by a passenger, while a member of ground crew and a pilot removed a utility belt containing tools that the suspect was carrying.
The pilot can also be seen kicking the shotgun away from the teen, who is wearing a fluorescent jacket.
“How is this possible?” someone onboard can be heard saying in the footage.
Victoria Police said the 17-year-old, who is from the nearby Ballarat area, was being held in custody.
Superintendent Michael Reid told reporters that passengers had noticed the teen was carrying a gun as he climbed the steps up to the plane.
“The male was overpowered by three of the passengers, at least,” he said.
Supt Reid said the local force was in contact with counterterrorism police but that it was too early to establish a motive.
“No doubt this would have been a very terrifying incident for the passengers,” he said, while commending the “bravery” of those who had overpowered the suspect.
Barry Clark, one of the passengers, told Australian public broadcaster ABC that the teen appeared to be dressed like an airport worker and was “agitated”.
He said: “All I could do was get the gun out of the way… and then put him in a hold and throw him to the ground until the police came.”
No one was injured during the incident, police said. Investigators located a car and two bags belonging to the suspect nearby.
Avalon Airport is exclusively served by Jetstar, a budget airline operated by Qantas.
In a statement to the BBC’s US partner CBS News, the company said it was working with authorities to investigate the incident.
SpaceX’s Starship rocket exploded during a test flight. Pic: @_ericloosen_ / Reuters
SpaceX’s Starship rocket exploded during a test flight, months after a previous failed launch attempt – with multiple flights having to be grounded in Florida due to debris.
The 403-foot rocket blasted off from Starbase in Boca Chica, Texas, at around 6.30pm eastern time (12.30am UK time).
But, within minutes of launch, contact was lost as the spacecraft – designed to land astronauts on the moon and ferry crews to Mars – went into an out-of-control spin.
Engines on top of Starship started shutting down as it streaked eastward. The flight was supposed to be a controlled entry over the Indian Ocean.
It was not immediately clear where the rocket came down, but images of flaming debris seen from Florida and the Caribbean were posted online.
In a statement, SpaceX said: “During Starship’s ascent burn, the vehicle experienced a rapid unscheduled disassembly and contact was lost.
“Our team immediately began coordination with safety officials to implement pre-planned contingency responses.
“We will review the data from today’s flight test to better understand root cause. As always, success comes from what we learn, and today’s flight will offer additional lessons to improve Starship’s reliability.”
The megarocket’s Super Heavy booster was successfully caught by giant mechanical arms and returned to the launch pad as planned.
The US Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) issued a ground notice for multiple flights after the test launch, and said it will require SpaceX to carry out a mishap investigation into the loss of Starship.
Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Palm Beach and Orlando airports were issued the notice because of “space launch debris” until 8pm (1am UK time).
Departures at the four Florida airports were delayed by an average of 45 minutes due to the incident.
It comes after the previous Starship test flight in January failed eight minutes into flight when the rocket exploded over the Bahamas.
Blazing debris was sent miles across the sky over the Turks and Caicos, a British Overseas Territory. No injuries or major damage were reported.
EAM S Jaishankar Faces Security Scare In London As Pro-Khalistani Extremists Try To Attack Him, Tear Indian Flag (Screengrab) | X
External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar faced a security scare in London as he was heckled by Khalistani extremists on Wednesday, They even tried to attack him. The incident took place when the EAM was leaving in a car after attending an event at the Chatham House think tank. Khalistani protestors stage demonstrations staged a demonstration outside the building.
A video of a Khalistani extremist approaching Jaishankar’s vehicle and tearing the Indian national flag in front of London Police officials also surfaced online. However, the police officers remained unresponsive despite vandalism by Khalisatni extremists.
Pro-Khalistan protestors held flags and raised anti-India slogans outside the building where Jaishankar was participating in a discussion. During his ongoing visit to the United Kingdom, EAM Jaishankar held discussions with UK’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Foreign Secretary David Lammy and several other senior leaders.
In his meeting with UK’s Home Secretary Yvette Cooper on Tuesday, Jaishankar noted that the two leaders held discussions on areas such as flow of talent and joint efforts between India and the UK to tackle “trafficking and extremism”.
He said on X, “A good meeting with Home Secretary @YvetteCooperMP today in London. We discussed the flow of talent, people to people exchanges, and joint efforts in tackling trafficking and extremism.” https://x.com/DrSJaishankar/status/1896933587989193067 Earlier in January, a group of pro-Khalistan extremists had gathered outside the Indian High Commission in London to stage a protest.
They had also previously stormed a cinema in the London town of Harrow and attempted to stop the screening of the Kangana Ranaut starrer film “Emergency”.
When asked about the destructions being caused by Khalistani forces in some UK theatres screening ‘Emergency’, MEA Spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal had said, “We consistently raise concerns with the UK Government regarding incidents of violent protest and intimidation by anti-India elements, freedom of speech and expression cannot be applied selectively and those obstructing it must be held accountable”.
An aerial view shows cargo vessels docked at Balboa Port at the Panama Canal, in Panama City. Pic: Reuters
Two major Panama Canal ports have been sold from their Hong Kong owner to a consortium including American multinational investment company BlackRock.
It comes after US President Donald Trump expressed a desire for America to “take back” the key shipping lane from alleged Chinese control.
Hong Kong-based logistics giant CK Hutchison Holdings announced plans to sell a majority stake in the business that controls Balboa and Cristobal ports – which sit at each end of the shipping lane.
The sale is of a 90% interest in Panama Ports Company, which is contracted to run the important ports until 2047.
The Panamanian ports are being sold to a consortium including US financial behemoth BlackRock for nearly $23bn (£17.8bn).
It comes after President Donald Trump applied pressure to end what he says is China’s influence and control over the important shipping lane through which most goods pass.
As part of wider comments, on taking control of other sovereign territories, Mr Trump threatened earlier this year to “take [the canal] back” having said, “China is running the Panama Canal”.
However, on Wednesday, CK Hutchinson Holdings insisted that the deal was “wholly unrelated to recent political news”.
The deal was made a month after a visit to Panama City by US secretary of state Marco Rubio and was welcomed by Trump on Tuesday night.
A happy Trump
“My administration will be reclaiming the Panama Canal, and we’ve already started doing it,” Mr Trump told Congress.
“Just today, a large American company announced they are buying both ports around the Panama Canal and lots of other things having to do with the Panama Canal and a couple of other canals.”
The purchase is part of a wider deal for Hutchison Port’s global business. In total, the consortium will control 43 ports in 23 countries, CK Hutchison Holdings said.
The conglomerate pushed back against the idea the deal was impacted by politics.
“I would like to stress that the transaction is purely commercial in nature and wholly unrelated to recent political news reports concerning the Panama Ports,” CK Hutchison co-managing director Frank Sixt said.
CK Hutchison Holdings is also the owner of UK mobile phone network Three, which is being merged with Vodafone to form the UK’s biggest provider.
US DEFENCE Secretary Pete Hegseth declared that the US is “prepared” for war with China in response Beijing’s chilling World War Three threat.
President Trump’s fresh 25 per cent tariffs on imports from Mexico and Canada took effect on Tuesday, along with doubled duties on Chinese goods – sparking devastating trade wars.
US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth speaks as he meets with Saudi Defense Minister in FebruaryCredit: AFP
Trump doubled the tariff on all Chinese imports from 10 per cent to an eye-watering 20 per cent, prompting a chilling warning from Xi Jinping’s nation.
China’s foreign affairs ministry said: “If war is what the US wants, be it a tariff war, a trade war or any other type of war, we’re ready to fight till the end.”
Hegseth slammed Beijing’s threat, warning “we’re prepared” and stressing the importance for the US to “be strong” as the tariff scrap continues to dramatically escalate.
The Defence Sec said on Fox News: “Those who long for peace must prepare for war.
“That’s why we’re rebuilding our military. That’s why we’re re-establishing deterrence in the warrior ethos.
“We live in a dangerous world with powerful, ascendant countries with very different ideology.”
Making a nod to Beijing’s threat, Hegseth added that other nations are “rapidly increasing their defence spending, modern technology, they want to supplant the United States”.
He said: “If we want to deter war with the Chinese or others, we have to be strong.”
In his first address to Congress of his second term, Trump said more crippling tariffs would follow in early April, including “reciprocal tariffs” and non-tariff actions addressing years of trade imbalances.
Citing high duties imposed on US goods by the EU and China among others, Trump said: “Other countries have used tariffs against us for decades, and now it’s our turn.”
The steep tariffs on the United States’ three largest trading partners came into effect at 12:01 am on Tuesday – igniting a trade war that has seen swift retaliation measures from Canada and China.
Trump believes China has not done enough to stop the production of chemicals used to make the drug fentanyl.
China slammed the Republican over the claim and described fentanyl as America’s problem.
The country has also said the tariffs are a “serious violation” of World Trade Organisation rules and lodged a WTO dispute complaint in February.
China responded to Tuesday’s tariffs by announcing 15 per cent additional tariffs on key US farm products.
These include chicken, wheat, corn, and cotton from the US, as well as 10 per cent tariffs on imports of sorghum, soybeans, pork, beef, aquatic products, fruits, vegetables, and dairy products.
Lin Jian, a spokesperson for China’s Foreign Ministry, said the country will “fight till the end”.
“I want to reiterate that the Chinese people have never feared evil or ghosts, nor have we ever bowed to hegemony or bullying,” Jian said.
“Pressure, coercion and threats are not the right ways to engage with China.
“Trying to exert maximum pressure on China is miscalculation and a mistake.”
Trump’s sweeping tariffs will have wide-ranging implications for American businesses and consumers.
US shoppers may soon encounter price hikes on several categories of goods, including vehicles, clothing, toys and gadgets, and groceries and alcohol.
The United States gets 75 per cent of its imported toys and sports equipment from China.
Only Bitcoin is suitable to be included in a U.S. strategic reserve, as per some crypto leaders. Kanchanara/Unsplash
The United States is all set to have its own cryptocurrency reserve following President Donald Trump’s announcement; however, crypto executives are pushing back against the idea of the reserve having multiple digital assets.
Several crypto executives believe Bitcoin, the world’s largest crypto asset by market capitalization, is the only coin suitable for a crypto reserve, even as Trump has specifically said “valuable” coins will be included.
“Just Bitcoin”: Coinbase CEO
Brian Armstrong said he was looking forward to learning more about the strategic crypto reserve and was still coming up with his opinions about the matter. However, currently, he believes:
“Just Bitcoin” – The Coinbase CEO said he thinks BTC “would probably be the best option” due to its “clear story” as a potential successor to the world’s most valuable asset, gold.
Weighted assets – If the majority of the crypto space believes that a U.S. crypto reserve should have variety, a market cap weighted index of crypto assets should be established “to keep it unbiased,” he recommended.
Still, Armstrong noted that the first option was the “easiest,” especially given Bitcoin’s core purpose as a store of value.
Excited to learn more. Still forming an opinion on asset allocation, but my current thinking is:
1. Just Bitcoin would probably be the best option – simplest, and clear story as successor to gold
2. If folks wanted more variety, you could do a market cap weighted index of crypto… https://t.co/jv8Gcn8N2S
Prominent cryptographer and cypherpunk Adam Back agrees with Armstrong, with many other Bitcoin maximalists also believing the Coinbase chief made the right call.
Only $BTC “meets the bar”: Cameron Winklevoss
The Gemini crypto exchange co-founder said he was “surprised” by the digital assets being considered by the national reserve.
Bitcoin only – Only BTC “meets the bar for a store value of value reserve asset.”
Probably ETH too – He did acknowledge that Ethereum, the second-largest crypto by market cap, may also meet the said bar.
A very high bar to beat – He argued that it was still possible for other cryptocurrencies to meet the requirements for a store of value, but Bitcoin had set “a very high bar.”
He went on to note that he thinks it will work if other big market cap assets such as XRP and Cardano (ADA), or Solana (SOL) were placed into the reserve via forfeiture or seizure, but not through active acquisition.
While I’m excited about a Strategic Reserve, I was surprised by the digital assets being contemplated. Bitcoin is the only asset that meets the bar for a store of value reserve asset. Maybe Ethereum. Digital gold and digital oil. Which mirrors America’s physical reserves of gold…
The other co-founder of the Gemini exchange and Cameron’s twin, also shared his brother’s sentiments, saying he had “nothing against” the other cryptocurrencies specifically mentioned by the U.S. president (XRP, ADA, SOL, and ETH), but he doesn’t believe they were suitable assets for a strategic reserve.
A woman from Uttar Pradesh, Shahzadi Khan, who was facing death sentence in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) for the alleged murder of a four-month-old child was executed on February 15 in Abu Dhabi, as informed to the Delhi High Court on Monday during a hearing on her father’s plea regarding her well-being.
On February 15, the phone rang in a small home in Goyera Mughli village, Banda, nestled in UP’s Bundelkhand region. The voice on the other end was familiar, yet heavy with a sense of finality. “This is my last call,” said 33-year-old Shahzadi Khan.
Shahzadi’s brother gripped the phone tighter. “They asked me about my final wish,” she said, further adding, “I asked to speak to ammi and abbu.”
Her mother gasped in the background, grasping for a daughter she could neither save nor hold-one who was facing execution for the murder of a four-month-old child, thousands of miles away in Abu Dhabi. Too far to reach, yet too close to lose. And then, silence. Shahzadi was gone.
“We didn’t hear from her afterward,” Shamsher said Monday. “We filed a writ petition in Delhi High Court, where we were informed Monday about her execution,” the brother said.
“Shahzadi’s last rites will be held on March 5,” Additional Solicitor General Chetan Sharma told the court. On March 1, Shabbir Khan, the father of Shahzadi Khan, approached the Delhi High Court, requesting a directive to the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) and relevant authorities to issue a bulletin and determine the exact legal status and well-being of his daughter.
Shabbir Khan further alleged that Shahzadi was inadequately represented before the local courts in the case over the alleged murder of her employer’s four-month-old child and she was pressured into confessing, leading to the imposition of the death penalty on her.
People gather near an ambulance outside a hospital after a suicide bombing in Bannu, Pakistan March 4, 2025. REUTERS/Stringer Purchase Licensing Rights
A pair of suicide bombers drove two explosive-filled vehicles into a security installation in northwestern Pakistan on Tuesday, killing at least 12 civilians including seven children, police and rescue services said.
The explosion brought down the roof of a nearby mosque soon after residents had broken their Ramadan fast and the local market was teeming with shoppers, a military official said, asking not to be identified.
The official said more militants had tried to enter the military facility after the blast but the attempt was foiled by security forces. Six militants were killed in an exchange of fire, the official said.
Bannu Hospital spokesperson Muhammad Nauman said 12 people were killed and 30 wounded in the attack, adding they were all civilians who had been caught under collapsed buildings and walls. At least seven children were among those killed, a hospital list showed.
The local Rescue 1122 service said it was searching for more casualties under the debris of the collapsed buildings.
Video footage from the scene showed residents sifting through piles of bricks and clearing metal scaffolding amid the wreckage.
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif condemned the attack and said the “evil ambitions of the enemies of Pakistan will never be allowed to succeed”.
It was not immediately clear who was behind the attack. Attacks by the Pakistani Taliban (TTP) Islamist militant group have risen in recent years against Pakistani police and military in areas near the Afghan border.
M23 rebels sit on a truck during the escort of captured FDLR members (not pictured) to Rwanda for repatriation, at the Goma-Gisenyi Grande Barrier border crossing, March 1, 2025. REUTERS/Arlette Bashizi/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
Rwanda-backed M23 rebels launching an offensive in east Congo abducted at least 130 sick and wounded men from two hospitals in the city of Goma last week, the United Nations said on Monday.
M23 fighters raided CBCA Ndosho Hospital and Heal Africa Hospital during the night of February 28, taking 116 and 15 patients respectively, U.N. Human Rights Office spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani said in a statement.
The abducted men were suspected of being Democratic Republic of Congo soldiers or members of a pro-government militia known as Wazalendo.
“It is deeply distressing that M23 is snatching patients from hospital beds in coordinated raids and holding them incommunicado in undisclosed locations,” Shamdasani said, calling for their immediate release.
M23 spokespersons Willy Ngoma and Lawrence Kanyuka Kingston did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Tutsi-led M23 marched into the city of Goma at the end of January and have since made an unprecedented advance into east Congo, seizing territory and gaining access to valuable minerals.
Their ongoing advance, which started in late December, is already the gravest escalation a long-running conflict rooted in the spillover into Congo of Rwanda’s 1994 genocide and the struggle for control of Congo’s vast mineral resources.
Congo, U.N. experts and Western powers accuse Rwanda of backing the group.
Rwanda denies this and says it is defending itself against ethnic Hutu-led militias bent on slaughtering Tutsis in Congo and threatening Rwanda.
About 7,000 people have been killed in east Congo since January and almost half a million people were left without shelter after 90 displacement camps were destroyed in the fighting, according to the government.
The F-35 in action at Aero India 2025, the region’s biggest air show, in Bengaluru city
India faces a crucial choice in modernising its air force – but is a cutting-edge American fighter jet the answer?
During his Washington visit last month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi met US President Donald Trump, who announced they were “paving the way” for India to acquire F-35s, a jet primarily sold to close allies and partners.
The F-35 is a “fifth-generation” multi-role fighter jet with advanced sensors, AI-driven combat systems and seamless data-sharing capabilities. Built to evade radar, it’s the most sophisticated jet in the skies – but at $80m a pop, also one of the most expensive. (Stealth is a key characteristic of a “fifth-generation” fighter.)
Many believe that with its fighter squadrons dwindling and China’s military growing, India faces a high-stakes choice: splurge on the state-of-the-art but costly F-35 from the US or strengthen defence ties with Russia through local production of its most advanced stealth fighter jet Sukhoi Su-57.
Experts believe the reality is more nuanced, with the US-Russia “dogfight” largely a media hype – fuelled more recently by the appearance of both jets at Asia’s biggest air show, Aero India, in the southern city of Bangalore last month.
Trump’s F-35 offer seems more “symbolic” than practical, driven by his push to sell US weapons, according to Ashley J Tellis, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Integrating a “fifth generation” aircraft into the India air force (IAF) plans – centred on the homegrown Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) and more Rafales – would be challenging, especially without co-production rights. Being developed by India’s Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), the AMCA is India’s own stealth fighter.
“It is unlikely that the F-35 will be offered for co-production to India – any acquisition will likely be a straightforward sale. This is unlikely, among other things, to sit well with Modi’s emphasis on making in India and the significant end-user monitoring in the event of an F-35 sale will likely not be welcomed by India either,” Mr Tellis told me.
India’s challenges with the F-35 are its steep cost, heavy maintenance and operational issues – the jet’s availability is around 51% for the US Air Force, according to security expert Stephen Bryen, author of a Substack column, Weapons and Strategy. “The question is whether India is willing to invest billions of rupees in the F-35, knowing it could do better buying the Russian jet.”
But many dismiss the Su-57 as a real contender, noting that India exited the decade-long programme to co-produce the jet with Russia in 2018 over disputes on technology transfer, cost-sharing and specifications.
To be sure, India’s air force is ageing and short on fighter jets.
It operates 31 fighter and combat squadrons – mostly Russian and Soviet-era aircraft – far below the sanctioned 42. A key challenge is finding a long-term replacement for the Sukhoi-30, the IAF’s versatile workhorse from Russia.
Christopher Clary, a political scientist at the University of Albany, recently pointed to unsettling data from the ISS Military Balance for India: between 2014 and 2024, China added 435 fighter and ground attack aircraft, Pakistan gained 31, while India’s fleet shrank by 151.
India’s planned fighter jet expansion is largely homegrown, with plans to acquire over 500 jets, mostly light combat aircraft.
Orders for 83 Tejas Mark 1A – an agile multirole homegrown fighter – are confirmed, with another 97 expected to be ordered shortly. Meanwhile, the heavier, more advanced Mark 2 is in development. The homegrown stealth jet remains at least a decade away.
India also has plans to buy 114 multirole fighter jets under the IAF’s $20bn Multi-Role Fighter Aircraft (MRFA) programme requiring foreign jets to be built in India under a transfer of technology deal – its biggest hurdle.
Stalled since 2019, the Indian government is looking at a transparent and non-controversial procurement process after it faced criticism over the acquisition of 36 Rafales in a government-to-government deal. Five jets are in contention, with Rafale leading as it is already in service with the IAF.
Experts say India’s air force modernisation faces three key hurdles: funding, delays and dependence on foreign jets.
Defence spending has shrunk in real terms. The foreign fighter jets programme risks a drawn-out fate. While India prioritises home-made, DRDO’s delays force stopgap foreign purchases, creating a repeating cycle. Breaking it requires delivering a capable homegrown jet on time. Deliveries are also delayed due to a holdup in supplies of General Electric’s F-404 engines for the jets.
A key challenge is the mismatch between the defence ministry’s vision and the IAF’s needs, says Rahul Bhatia, an analyst at Eurasia Group, a geopolitical risk consulting firm.
The Tejas Mark 1 faced early scepticism from the air force, leading to upgrades like the Mark 1A and Mark 2. “But the decades-long development cycles frustrate the armed forces, especially as their requirements keep evolving as newer technologies become available, which in turn contributes to further delays,” Mr Bhatia told me.
Even the Indian Air Force chief AP Singh has made no secret of his frustration over delays.
“I can take a vow that I will not buy anything from outside or I will wait for whatever is developed in India, but it may not be possible if it does not come at that pace [on time],” Air Marshall Singh told a seminar recently.
“At the moment, we all know that we are very badly off when it comes to numbers [of fighters]. And the numbers which were promised are also coming a little slow. So, there will be a requirement to go and look for something which can quickly fill up these voids,” he said, referring to the delayed Tejas Mark 1A deliveries, which were supposed to begin last February but have yet to start.
India’s clear priority is a homegrown stealth fighter, with more than $1bn already committed to its development. “A foreign stealth jet would only be considered if India’s immediate threat perception shifts,” says Mr Bhatia. China has two so-called stealth fighters – the J-20 and J-35 – but they likely fall short of US standards.
President Donald Trump said Monday that 25% taxes on imports from Mexico and Canada would start Tuesday, sparking renewed fears of a North American trade war that already showed signs of pushing up inflation and hindering growth.
“Tomorrow — tariffs 25% on Canada and 25% on Mexico. And that’ll start,” Trump told reporters in the Roosevelt Room. “They’re going to have to have a tariff.”
Trump has said the tariffs are to force the two U.S. neighbors to step up their fight against fentanyl trafficking and stop illegal immigration. But Trump has also indicated that he wants to eliminate the Americas’ trade imbalances as well and push more factories to relocate in the United States.
His comments quickly rattled the U.S. stock market, with the S&P 500 index down 2% in Monday afternoon trading. It’s a sign of the political and economic risks that Trump feels compelled to take, given the possibility of higher inflation and the possible demise of a decades-long trade partnership with Mexico and Canada as the tariffs would go into effect at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday.
Yet the Trump administration remains confident that tariffs are the best choice to boost U.S. manufacturing and attract foreign investment. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said Monday that the computer chipmaker TSMC had expanded its investment in the United States because of the possibility of separate 25% tariffs.
In February, Trump put a 10% tariff on imports from China. He reemphasized Monday that the rate would be doubling to 20% on Tuesday.Trump provided a one-month delay in February as both Mexico and Canada promised concessions. But Trump said Monday that there was “no room left for Mexico or for Canada” to avoid the steep new tariffs, which were also set to tax Canadian energy products such as oil and electricity at a lower 10% rate.
Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday that “there is no justification” for Trump’s tariffs.
“Because of the tariffs imposed by the U.S., Americans will pay more for groceries, gas and cars, and potentially lose thousands of jobs,” he said. “Tariffs will disrupt an incredibly successful trading relationship. They will violate the very trade agreement that was negotiated by President Trump in his last term.”
Trudeau said his country will retaliate by putting 25% tariffs on American goods worth $155 billion Canadian ($107 billion U.S.) over the course of 21 days, starting with tariffs on $30 billion Canadian ($21 billion U.S.) after midnight Tuesday.
Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum went into Monday waiting to see what Trump would say.
“It’s a decision that depends on the United States government, on the United States president,” Sheinbaum said ahead of Trump’s statement. “So whatever his decision is, we will make our decisions and there is a plan, there is unity in Mexico.”
Both countries have tried to show action in response to Trump’s concerns. Mexico sent 10,000 National Guard troops to their shared border to crack down on drug trafficking and illegal immigration. Canada named a fentanyl czar, even though smuggling of the drug from Canada into the United States appears to be relatively modest.
As late as Sunday, it remained unclear what choice Trump would make on tariff rates. Lutnick told Fox News Channel’s “Sunday Morning Futures” that the decision was “fluid.”
“He’s sort of thinking about right now how exactly he wants to play it with Mexico and Canada,” Lutnick said. “And that is a fluid situation. There are going to be tariffs on Tuesday on Mexico and Canada. Exactly what they are, we’re going to leave that for the president and his team to negotiate.”
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Mexico has also offered to place 20% taxes on all imports from China as part of talks with the United States.
Bessent told CBS News on Sunday that China would “eat” the cost of the tariffs, instead of passing them along to the U.S. businesses and consumers that import their products in the form of higher prices.
But companies ranging from Ford to Walmart have warned about the negative impact that tariffs could create for their businesses. Similarly, multiple analyses by the Peterson Institute for International Economics and the Yale University Budget Lab suggest that an average family could face price increases of more than $1,000.
“It’s going to have a very disruptive effect on businesses, in terms of their supply chains as well as their ability to conduct their business operations effectively,” said Eswar Prasad, an economist at Cornell University. “There are going to be inflationary impacts that are going to be disruptive impacts.”
Democratic were quick to critize the announced tariffs for making inflation worse and alienating allies.
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer of New York said voters in last year’s election were primarily upset by inflation and “now Donald Trump is making it worse.”
Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., predicted the cost of fertilizer will go up for farmers in her state.
Blue Ghost Mission has become the second commercial spaceship to land on the moonImage: NASA/Firefly Aerospace/AP Photo/picture alliance
A US private spacecraft achieved its first-ever uncrewed lunar landing on Sunday, marking the second commercial moon landing.
Firefly Aerospace’s lunar lander Blue Ghost touched down near an ancient volcanic vent on Mare Crisium, a large basin in the northeast corner of the moon’s Earth-facing side.
“We’re on the moon,” Mission Control reported, adding the lander was “stable.”
The mission is part of a NASA partnership with industry to cut costs and support the Artemis program, which strives to return astronauts to the moon.
“We’re going to be putting America first, we’re making America proud, we’re doing this for the US citizens,” said acting NASA director Janet Petro.
What do we know about the mission?
Blue Ghost was launched in mid-January from Florida, carrying 10 experiments from NASA to the lunar surface. The space agency paid $101 million (roughly €97.3 million) for the delivery, and $44 million more for the science.
The four-legged lunar lander is roughly the size of a compact car.
The lander is carrying a vacuum that would suck up moon dirt for analysis. There is also a drill on board that can measure temperature at depths of up to 10 feet (3 meters) below the surface.
The demos should run for roughly two weeks before lunar daytime is up and the lander shuts down.
The lander captured stunning footage of Earth and the moon along its journey.
It is due to capture high-definition imagery of a total eclipse on March 14, when Earth blocks the sun from the moon’s horizon. It will then record a lunar sunset on March 16, in an effort to provide insight into how dust levitates above the surface under solar influence.
“Anora,” a dramedy about a sex worker who marries the pampered son of a Russian oligarch, triumphed at the 97th Academy Awards on Sunday, winning five Oscars, including the prize for best picture. Its victory capped a tumultuous awards season, one that cycled through frontrunners at a dizzying pace with contenders like “Emilia Pérez” and “The Brutalist” seeing their fortunes rise and fall as controversies over everything from offensive tweets to the use of AI upended their campaigns.
It was also a race that unfolded during one of the worst natural disasters in Los Angeles history, something that the Oscars reflected with tributes to the firefighters who came to the aid of communities impacted by the wildfires, as well as with a montage highlighting the many films shot in the city, from “The Long Goodbye” to “Licorice Pizza.”
Sean Baker, the maverick behind “Anora,” was recognized for producing, directing, editing and writing the film’s screenplay, becoming the first person to win four Oscars for the same movie. It was an extraordinary embrace by the entertainment industry of a filmmaker who has largely operated outside of it, making low-budget fare like “Tangerine” and “The Florida Project.” Baker’s latest film was a favorite with critics and its Oscar success is a statement-making moment for Neon, the indie distributor behind “Anora,” which previously guided “Parasite” to a best picture statue in 2020.
However, having earned $40 million globally, “Anora” also ranks as one of the lowest-grossing best picture winners in history. But most of the movies that the Oscars honored this year were made by independent producers and companies. It’s a sign of how averse studios, which focus most of their resources on franchise fare, have become to producing the kind of adult-oriented films that dominate awards season. Those blockbusters that received best picture nominations, such as “Dune: Part Two” and “Wicked,” only scored wins in technical categories.
Adrien Brody (“The Brutalist”) and Mikey Madison (“Anora”) took the top acting honors. Brody, a previous winner for “The Pianist,” played a brilliant, but troubled architect, while Madison scored an upset victory for her portrayal of an exotic dancer under pressure to get an annulment from her rich husband.
A shocked Madison, who had been widely expected to lose the award to “The Substance’s” Demi Moore, said, “I grew up in Los Angeles, but Hollywood always felt so far away from me, so to be here, standing in this room today is really incredible.” She went on to pledge her support to the sex worker community, calling herself, “an ally.”
Brody’s win, one of three prizes for “The Brutalist,” came after a series of setbacks had seen him shunted aside by the movie business. It was a change in fortunes he referenced while accepting his award. “Acting is a very fragile profession,” Brody, who had to hand his gum to his partner Georgina Chapman before taking the stage, said. “No matter where you are in your career, no matter what you’ve accomplished, it can all go away. And I think that what makes this night most special is the awareness of that. And the gratitude that I have to still do the work that I love.”
Kieran Culkin (“A Real Pain”) was named best supporting actor for his turn as a troubled man on a tour of Poland with his cousin, while Zoe Saldaña (“Emilia Pérez”) won best supporting actress for her performance as an attorney who helps a cartel leader undergo gender affirmation surgery.
With tears streaming down her face, Saldaña declared herself “a proud child of immigrant parents.” She also noted “I am the first American of Dominican origin to accept an Academy Award, and I know I will not be the last.”
In a freewheeling speech, Culkin dropped an f-bomb and reminded his wife, Jazz Charton, that after he won an Emmy for “Succession” she had promised to have more children if he won an Oscar. “Let’s get cracking on those kids,” he said. “What do you say?”
Among other major winners, “I’m Still Here,” a family drama set during Brazil’s military dictatorship, was named best international feature. It was the first time the country had ever won the honor. “Flow,” a fantasy adventure from Latvia about a cat’s efforts to survive a flood, picked up best animated feature over the likes of “The Wild Robot” and “Inside Out 2.” And “No Other Land,” a look at the Israeli government’s efforts to force Palestinians from their homes in the West Bank, won best documentary despite struggling to get distribution. The film was directed by a Palestinian-Israeli collective of four activists
“We call on the world to take serious actions to stop the injustice and to stop the ethnic cleansing of Palestinian people,” said Basel Adra, a Palestinian journalist who is one of the film’s directors. “About two months ago, I became a father, and my hope to my daughter that she will not have to live the same life I’m living now.”
Conan O’Brien, a former late night TV staple turned podcasting impresario, hosted the Oscars for the first time, taking over from Jimmy Kimmel, who had emceed three previous editions. His opening monologue poked fun at everything from the fact that the show began at 4:00 in the afternoon (“everyone here just had brunch”) to “Emilia Pérez” star Karla Sofia Gascón’s social media scandal (“Karla, if you are going to tweet about the Oscars, my name is Jimmy Kimmel.”) There was also a song and dance number about the Academy Awards’ long running time, as well as an appearance by a hoodie-wearing Adam Sandler.
Yet Donald Trump went largely unmentioned, a departure from previous Oscar ceremonies during his first term and the interregnum between his administrations when his name was repeatedly invoked. There were a few allusions to “our chaotic times” and presenter Daryl Hannah offered support for Ukraine, whose leader recently had an uncomfortable Oval Office meeting, but most criticism of the president was implicit, rather than explicit.
The ceremony also included a tribute to the James Bond franchise, which made headlines last month after Amazon MGM bought creative control of the series from the Broccoli family. Introducing a musical performance featuring 007 theme songs like “Live and Let Die” and “Diamonds are Forever,” Halle Berry called Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson, the producers of the films, “the heart and soul of this franchise.”
“Every generation does have their Bond, you know — the world revolves, it evolves, and so does he,” she added. “But that signature mix of danger, style, and intrigue, well, that’s timeless.”
Only now, in a sign of how much Hollywood itself is evolving, an e-retailing giant, and not a traditional studio, will determine the direction of the movie business’s most enduring franchise.
It was Baker who made the most passionate defense of the moviegoing tradition, pleading with the audience to support cinemas.
“Movie theaters, especially independently-owned theaters are struggling,” Baker said. “During the pandemic, we lost 1,000 screens in the U.S. And we continue to lose them regularly. If we don’t reverse this trend, we’ll be losing a vital part of our culture. This is my battle cry. Filmmakers, keep making films for the big screen. I know I will.”
See the full list of winners below.
Best Picture
“Anora,” (Neon) Alex Coco, Samantha Quan and Sean Baker, Producers (WINNER)
“The Brutalist” (A24)
“A Complete Unknown” (Searchlight) Fred Berger, James Mangold and Alex Heineman, Producers
“Conclave” (Focus Features) Tessa Ross, Juliette Howell and Michael A. Jackman, Producers
“Dune: Part Two” (Warner Bros.) Mary Parent, Cale Boyter, Tanya Lapointe and Denis Villeneuve, Producers
“Emilia Pérez” (Netflix)
“I’m Still Here” (Sony Pictures Classic)
“Nickel Boys” (Orion Pictures/Amazon MGM Studios)
“The Substance” (MUBI)
“Wicked” (Universal) Marc Platt, Producer
Best Director
Sean Baker, “Anora” (WINNER)
Brady Corbet “The Brutalist”
James Mangold, “A Complete Unknown”
Jacques Audiard, “Emilia Pérez”
Coralie Fargeat, “The Substance”
Actor in a Leading Role
Adrien Brody, “The Brutalist” (WINNER)
Timothée Chalamet, “A Complete Unknown”
Colman Domingo, “Sing Sing”
Ralph Fiennes, “Conclave”
Sebastian Stan, “The Apprentice”
Actress in a Leading Role
Cynthia Erivo, “Wicked”
Karla Sofía Gascón, “Emilia Pérez”
Mikey Madison, “Anora” (WINNER)
Demi Moore, “The Substance”
Fernanda Torres, “I’m Still Here”
Actor in a Supporting Role
Yura Borisov, “Anora”
Kieran Culkin, “A Real Pain” (WINNER)
Edward Norton, “A Complete Unknown”
Guy Pearce, “The Brutalist”
Jeremy Strong, “The Apprentice”
Actress in a Supporting Role
Monica Barbaro, “A Complete Unknown”
Ariana Grande, “Wicked”
Felicity Jones, “The Brutalist”
Isabella Rossellini, “Conclave”
Zoe Saldaña, “Emilia Pérez” (WINNER)
Adapted Screenplay
“A Complete Unknown”, Screenplay by James Mangold and Jay Cocks
“Conclave,” Screenplay by Peter Straughan (WINNER)
“Emilia Pérez,” Screenplay by Jacques Audiard in collaboration with Thomas Bidegain, Léa Mysius and Nicolas Livecchi
“Nickel Boys,” Screenplay by RaMell Ross & Joslyn Barnes
“Sing Sing,” Screenplay by Clint Bentley, Greg Kwedar, Story by Clint Bentley, Greg Kwedar, Clarence Maclin, John “Divine G” Whitfield
Original Screenplay
“Anora,” Written by Sean Baker (WINNER)
“The Brutalist,” Written by Brady Corbet, Mona Fastvold
“A Real Pain,” Written by Jesse Eisenberg
“September 5,” Written by Moritz Binder, Tim Fehlbaum, Co-Written by Alex David
“The Substance,” Written by Coralie Fargeat
Animated Short Film
“Beautiful Men,” (Miyu Distribution) Nicolas Keppens and Brecht Van Elslande
“In the Shadow of the Cypress,” Shirin Sohani and Hossein Molayemi (WINNER)
“Magic Candies,” (Toei Animation) Daisuke Nishio and Takashi Washio
“Wander to Wonder,” ” (Miyu Distribution) Nina Gantz and Stienette Bosklopper
“Yuck!” (Miyu Distribution) Loïc Espuche and Juliette Marquet
Costume Design
“A Complete Unknown,” Arianne Phillips
“Conclave,” Lisy Christl
“Gladiator II,” Janty Yates and Dave Crossman
“Nosferatu,” Linda Muir
“Wicked,” Paul Tazewell (WINNER)
Live Action Short Film
“A Lien,” Sam Cutler-Kreutz and David Cutler-Kreutz
“Anuja,” Adam J. Graves and Suchitra Mattai
“I’m Not a Robot” (The New Yorker) Victoria Warmerdam and Trent (WINNER)
“The Last Ranger,” Cindy Lee and Darwin Shaw
“The Man Who Could Not Remain Silent” (Manifest) Nebojša Slijepčević and Danijel Pek
Makeup and Hairstyling
“A Different Man,” Mike Marino, David Presto and Crystal Jurado
“Emilia Pérez,” Julia Floch Carbonel, Emmanuel Janvier and Jean-Christophe Spadaccini
“Nosferatu,” David White, Traci Loader and Suzanne StokesMunton
“The Substance,” Pierre-Olivier Persin, Stéphanie Guillon and Marilyne Scarselli (WINNER)
“Wicked,” Frances Hannon, Laura Blount and Sarah Nuth
Original Score
“The Brutalist,” Daniel Blumberg (WINNER)
“Conclave,” Volker Bertelmann
“Emilia Pérez,” Clément Ducol and Camille
“Wicked,” John Powell and Stephen Schwartz
“The Wild Robot,” Kris Bowers
Animated Feature Film
“Flow” (Sideshow/Janus Films) (WINNER)
“Inside Out 2” (Walt Disney) Kelsey Mann and Mark Nielsen
“Memoir of a Snail” (IFC Films) Adam Elliot and Liz Kearney
“Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl” (Netflix)
“The Wild Robot” (Universal) Chris Sanders and Jeff Hermann
Cinematography
“The Brutalist,” Lol Crawley (WINNER)
“Dune: Part Two,” Greig Fraser
“Emilia Pérez,” Paul Guilhaume
“Maria,” Ed Lachman
“Nosferatu,” Jarin Blaschke
Documentary Feature Film
“Black Box Diaries” (MTV Documentary Films) Shiori Ito, Eric Nyari and Hanna Aqvilin
“No Other Land,” Basel Adra, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal and Yuval Abraham (WINNER)
“Porcelain War” (Picturehouse) Brendan Bellomo, Slava Leontyev, Aniela Sidorska and Paula DuPre’ Pesmen
“Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat” (Kino Lorber) Johan Grimonprez, Daan Milius and Rémi Grellety
A petrol giant in Norway has announced a ban on fuel sales to all US forces following Donald Trump’s treatment of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the White House, it has been reported.
Norwegian firm Haltbakk Bunkers announced it will stop providing fuel to all American forces in Norway as it declared “No fuel to Americans!”. The firm posted on social media to declare its support for Zelensky as it dealt a hammer blow to US President Trump following the heated spat televised from the Oval Office.
It said: “We have today been witnesses to the biggest s***how ever presented “live on tv” by the current American president and his vice president. Huge credit to the president of Ukraine restraining himself and for keeping calm even though USA put on a backstabbing tv show. It made us sick. Short and sweet. As a result, we have decided to immediate STOP as fuel provider to American forces in Norway and their ships calling Norwegian ports.
US vessels in Norway ‘will be refused fuel’ (Image: Getty)
“No Fuel to Americans! We encourage all Norwegians and Europeans to follow our example. SLAVA UKRAINA”
Owner of the firm Gunnar Gran has told Norwegian maritime news site Kystens Næringsliv that ‘not a litre of fuel’ will be delivered ‘until Trump is finished’.
It reported: “As you probably understand, not a liter will be delivered until Trump is finished, the owner tells Kystens Næringsliv.
“We run a private limited company and choose our customers!”
The owner also said that the group has excluded Russians since Putin’s invasion, adding: “It gave a lot of our competitors a lot of extra revenue. We lost a lot of revenue. But we have a moral compass. Now the United States is excluded based on their behavior towards the Ukrainians.”
The fuel ban takes effect immediately and applies to vessels calling at Norwegian ports, it says. Haltbakk Bunkers also sends a further appeal.
It comes as Volodymyr Zelensky thanked the “American people” and leadership and held out hope for “strong relations”, the day after an astonishing clash with Donald Trump left many uncertain where the once staunch allies stood.
Ukraine had walked into a meeting at the White House on Friday prepared to sign a mineral deal with the US, hoping it would be a step towards a just ceasefire, but left empty-handed.
In a series of posts on X on Saturday, the Ukrainian president said his people are “very grateful to the United States for all the support”, and specifically thanked Mr Trump and Congress alongside the “American people”.
“Our relationship with the American President is more than just two leaders: It’s a historic and solid bond between our peoples. … American people helped save our people,” he wrote.
“We want only strong relations with America and I really hope we will have them.”
The shouting match that unfolded in the final minutes of the meeting between the two leaders at the Oval Office on Friday seemed to dash, at least for now, Ukrainian hopes that the US could be confirmed as a reliable partner in helping to fend off, and conclude, Russia’s three-year onslaught.
The exchange saw the frustrated Ukrainian president lectured by Mr Trump and vice president JD Vance over what they saw as his lack of gratitude for previous US support.
“You’re gambling with millions of people … You’re gambling with World War Three,” Mr Trump told Mr Zelensky of his attempts to resist the Russian invasion.
It delighted officials in Moscow who saw it as a final breakdown in relations between Washington and the Ukrainian leader.
Sadhguru’s app comes with an AI-powered wisdom tool to offer insights from the spiritual leader’s teachings.
Sadhguru seen next to a sign with his app’s name on it Credit: X/@SadhguruJV
Sadhguru’s Miracle of the Mind — a free meditation app — has crossed one million downloads in just 15 hours, outpacing ChatGPT’s adoption at the early stages.
The app was launched on Feb 26 which coincided with Mahashivratri and is now trending in 20 countries, including India, Canada, the USA, the UK, Germany, and Australia, India Today reported.
The app is available in English, Tamil, Hindi, Russian, and Spanish. It has a seven-minute guided meditation feature which has reportedly gone viral due to its simple and effective approach.
Sadhguru’s offering comes with an AI-powered wisdom tool to offer insights from the spiritual leader’s teachings.
It is expected that by 2050, about 30-33% of the world’s population would be mentally ill. This is because we always think that solutions to our challenges are outside of us. All the solutions are within us, but we have no “Inward access.” The Miracle of Mind app will teach you… pic.twitter.com/Q5h0JSwj7U
Meanwhile, he emphasised on the importance of mental health while addressing the success of the app on X.
In other news, the Supreme Court on Friday refused to interfere with an order passed by the Madras High Court, quashing notices of the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board against Sadhguru’s Isha Foundation in connection with the construction of buildings in the foothills of Velliangiri mountains, allegedly without prior environmental clearance.
According to reports, there have been disagreements over whether to continue on to phase two of the ceasefire, where a permanent peace will be negotiated, or extend phase one.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. File pic: AP/Evelyn Hockstein/Pool
Israel says it is stopping all goods and supplies into Gaza.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office claimed Hamas has refused to “accept the Witkoff outline for continuing the talks, which Israel agreed to”.
Under a plan put forward by US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff, the first phase of the ceasefire deal would continue through Ramadan and Passover, or until 20 April.
Israel said in a statement that Mr Netanyahu “decided that starting this morning, all entry of goods and supplies into the Gaza Strip would cease”.
It added: “Israel will not allow a ceasefire without the release of our hostages.
“If Hamas continues its refusal, there will be further consequences.”
The holy month of Ramadan started on Friday and is usually between 29 and 30 days. Pictures emerged from Gaza of Palestinians celebrating among the rubble.
The Jewish holiday of Passover is shorter, but this year finishes on Sunday 20 April.
The first phase of the previously agreed ceasefire expired on Saturday.
Phase one halted 15 months of fighting and saw the release of 33 Israeli hostages held in Gaza and five Thai nationals, in exchange for around 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees.
The extension would push back phase two of the ceasefire, which was intended to introduce talks to bring about a permanent end to the war.
Hamas said earlier on Saturday the group rejected Israel’s “formulation” of extending the first phase of the ceasefire in Gaza, but did not explicitly mention Mr Witkoff’s plan.
Hamas’s response to the plan is not yet clear.
Both sides have previously traded accusations that the other violated the fragile ceasefire.
Meanwhile, talks on the long-term future of Gaza are yet to seriously materialise after the UN said it would take decades to rebuild the enclave.
Israeli statement
A statement from the prime minister’s office originally published in Hebrew said that on the first day of the proposed extension, half of the hostages and bodies of the dead would be released.
It added that at the end, if an agreement on a permanent ceasefire was reached, the remaining hostages and bodies would also be released.
The statement added: “Witkoff proposed the outline for extending the ceasefire after he was impressed that at this stage there was no possibility of bridging the positions of the parties to end the war, and that additional time was needed for talks on a permanent ceasefire.”
It went on to add that Israel could return to fighting “after the 42nd day if it feels that the negotiations are ineffective”, pointing out that this was supported by the Trump administration.
It isn’t clear what dates these days correspond to.
All it took was 90 seconds for weeks of tortured diplomacy to unwind in spectacular fashion.
President Donald Trump’s Oval Office thrashing of Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Friday laid bare the limits of a full-court press by America’s allies aimed at reshaping Trump’s determination to end Russia’s invasion even if the terms are not to Ukraine’s liking.
It also stressed the profound ways Trump feels emboldened to redirect U.S. foreign policy priorities toward his “America First” agenda in ways that extend well beyond those of his tumultuous first term.
The sudden blowup was the most heated public exchange of words between world leaders in the Oval Office in memory, as the usual staid work of diplomacy descended into finger-pointing, shouting and eye-rolling.
The encounter left the future of the U.S.-Ukraine relationship, and Kyiv’s ability to defend itself in the brutal conflict with Russia, in mortal jeopardy.
“You either make a deal or we are out,” Trump told Zelenskyy, underscoring the American leader’s plans to dictate a swift end to the war or leave its longtime ally to continue the fight without its strongest backer.
Less than a day later, Zelenskyy used a series of posts on X to express his thanks to the American people, Trump and Congress for “all the support,” which he said Ukrainians “have always appreciated,” especially during the war.
“Our relationship with the American President is more than just two leaders; it’s a historic and solid bond between our peoples. That’s why I always begin with words of gratitude from our nation to the American nation,” he added. Ukrainians want “only strong relations with America, and I really hope we will have them,” he said.
Zelenskyy was in London to meet with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer before a summit Sunday of European leaders.
Episode capped intense lobbying effort by American allies
The stunning episode in Washington had capped a week of what turned out to be largely futile efforts by U.S. allies to paper over differences between Washington and Kyiv and to try to steer Trump away from his flirtations with Moscow.
On Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron huddled with Trump to lay the groundwork for an eventual European-led peacekeeping force in Ukraine aimed at deterring future Russian aggression and to encourage the U.S. president to be more skeptical of Vladimir Putin.
But even as Trump and Macron greeted each other with a vise-like grip, the U.S. was splitting with its European allies at the United Nations by refusing to blame Russia for its invasion of Ukraine in a series of resolutions marking the third anniversary of the war.
On Thursday, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer visited Washington and appealed to Trump for a U.S. “backstop” for European nations who would provide front-line security for Ukraine. He was in essence looking for insurance that, should a peace deal be reached, Russia won’t restart the fighting in the future. Starmer brought flattery and a state visit invitation from King Charles III to soften the ask.
The approach seemed to work, as Trump struck a more conciliatory tone toward Ukraine, calling America’s support for the country against Russia’s invasion “a very worthy thing to do” and disclaiming any memory that he had called the Ukrainian leader a “dictator.”
But Trump also brushed aside Putin’s past broken diplomatic promises, claiming they occurred under different presidents, and saying the Russian leader had never violated a commitment to him. It came as his aides were planning a series of negotiating sessions with Russian officials to lay the groundwork for a potential meeting between Trump and Putin in the coming weeks.
Students in Bangladesh who led a mass uprising to topple former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina last summer are now diving into politics by forming the new National Citizen Party.
The aim is to create new political space in a fiercely divisive dynastic political landscape. For decades, the country’s politics have been dominated by two former prime ministers and archrivals — Sheikh Hasina and Khaleda Zia.
The announcement came Friday at a rally in front of Parliament in Dhaka, during which political reforms were promised for a country born in 1971 through a bloody war against Pakistan.
Thousands of people, mainly youths, gathered to witness the moment. Critics of Nobel Peace laureate Muhammad Yunus, who heads the interim government, say the new party is nothing but a “King’s Party” blessed by him. But political analysts say the new platform might be able to break the decades-long traditional political power structure in the South Asian nation.
Who are they?
The new party has been named the Jatiya Nagarik Party, or National Citizen Party.
Nahid Islam, a 26-year-old prominent student leader, was named as the head of the party. Nine other officials — all of them student leaders who rose to prominence during the mass uprising in July and August — have been named to top positions, according to Bangladeshi media.
A 151-member committee of the party was announced during the launch.
Supporters say a party is needed to bring reforms to the country’s political culture of nepotism, and to tackle corruption and lack of democratic practices.
What is the party’s mission?
Islam announced that the party’s mission is to dismantle “constitutional autocracy and adopt a new democratic constitution.”
“We must eliminate all possibilities of restoring constitutional autocracy. Now is the time to dream anew, to march forward, and to build a new Bangladesh,” Islam said as he read out the declaration.
He said that the mass uprising wasn’t merely about ousting a government, but also about reshaping the entire political framework.
The party is committed to fostering a political culture where “unity prevails over division, justice replaces vengeance, and merit triumphs over dynastic politics,” Islam said.
Who was invited to the launch?
The organizers said that they invited Yunus, his interim government’s other advisers, heads of political parties, including Zia’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party and others.
Hasina’s Awami League Party and its 13 other previous allies weren’t invited to the launching ceremony. Yunus or other advisers from his interim Cabinet didn’t attend the event. Foreign diplomats were also invited but diplomats from India and other major global powers weren’t spotted at the rally.
Islam and his colleagues have been campaigning for months for Hasina to be put on trial for hundreds of deaths during the July-August uprising. The student leaders involved in the new party have also talked fiercely against India, accusing the neighboring country of exhibiting hegemony over Bangladesh, drawing a sharp reaction from India.
On Friday, a giant stage was installed on a major thoroughfare just in front of the Parliament building in Dhaka. The organizers said they expected up to 300,000 people during the party’s launch. But witnesses said up to 50,000 attended the event.
Who is funding the new party?
After the installation of the interim government, Yunus repeatedly said that he was appointed by the students who led the anti-Hasina uprising.
It wasn’t clear if Yunus had any direct role behind forming the new party, but many critics of Yunus said, mainly on social media, that the formation of the party is an effort to unveil a “king’s party.”
But Bangladeshi analyst Nazmul Ahsan Kalimullah told The Associated Press: “Most probably it’s more than that.
“They have an aspiration to connect young people who felt disconnected in a great way with the mainstream political forces like Hasina’s Awami League party and Zia’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party,” he said. “And, of course this new party has blessings from Muhammad Yunus.”
Kalimullah said the new party “most probably” has “a future.”
India and the European Union have agreed to finalize a long-pending free trade agreement this year and boost cooperation in trade, technology, connectivity and defense, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the European Commission chief said Friday.
Modi said after meeting with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen that the two sides have directed their teams to conclude the bilateral free trade deal by end of this year. Modi said many decisions were taken to “elevate and accelerate India-EU partnership” in the meeting.
“India-EU strategic partnership is natural. Its core is trust and shared belief in democratic values,” Modi said.
The European Commission chief said the “free trade agreement between the EU and India would be the largest deal of this kind anywhere in the world.”
Brussels is ramping up efforts to seal with deal with New Delhi in the face of potential U.S. tariffs. U.S. President Donald Trump has said he is planning to hit goods made in the EU with tariffs of 25%.
“It is time to be pragmatic and ambitious. And to realign our priorities for today’s realities,” von der Leyen said at an address to a think tank in New Delhi before meeting with Modi. “You can count on my full commitment to make sure we can deliver.”
The European Commission chief is in India on a two-day visit from Thursday and is accompanied by top leaders of EU member nations.
India and the EU relaunched talks on the bilateral agreement in 2021, but issues like market access for products such as cars and alcoholic beverages have been sticking points. The next round of negotiations is set to take place in March.
India and the EU cooperate closely on issues including foreign policy, security and technology. The EU is India’s largest trading partner, ahead of the U.S. and China.
In the 2023-24 fiscal year, exports and imports to the European bloc accounted for more than $130 billion, marking an increase of about 90% over the past decade. Over 6,000 European companies are also present in India.
Von der Leyen said the EU and India have the potential to be one of the defining partnerships of this century.
“I want this visit to be the start of this new era. Prime Minister Modi and I share the same view. It is time to take our EU-India Strategic Partnership to the next level,” she said.
For New Delhi, the trade talks have renewed significance after Trump’s decision to impose reciprocal tariffs on imported goods from countries including India.
Citigroup has reportedly made 10 near misses of $1 billion or more in the last one-year period.(Getty Images via AFP)
The US-based multinational investment bank Citigroup’s employees accidentally credited $81 trillion to a customer’s account instead of $280 due to an operational error, reported the news portal Financial Times on Friday, February 28.
According to the news portal’s report, this error from the US-based investment bank took hours to reverse the transactions, a “near miss” which shows the bank’s operational issues it aimed to fix in front of the banking regulators.
The error occurred in April 2023 and was missed by a payments employee, and the second official, who was assigned to check the transaction before it was cleared the next day for processing, reported the news portal, citing people aware of the development.
According to the news portal’s report, a third employee caught the error after one-and-half hours of the transaction and was then reversed several hours later.
Due to the operational error, no funds were left with Citigroup, which termed this a “near miss” in front of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and the US Federal Reserve. A bank can reverse the process of the wrong transaction if a wrong amount is credited in order to recover the funds, according to the report.
According to the Reuters news agency report, Citigroup, in an email statement, said that its “detective controls” identified the error between two ledger accounts and reversed the transaction entry. The institutional lender also added that the incident had no impact on the bank or the client.
Past Errors
According to the news portal’s report, Citigroup made 10 near misses of $1 billion or more in the last one-year period, which has reduced from the 13 near-miss levels the previous year.
According to the news report, these near misses do not need to be reported to banking regulators, hence, no comprehensive public data is available on the frequency across the sectors.
Citigroup has refused to comment on this development as per the news report.
The US-based multinational investment bank is investing more into addressing its compliance issues, referring to regulatory penalties for risk management and data governance, according to the report citing chief financial officer (CFO) Mark Mason’s comment from January.
Beijing-based tour operators are the first to lead groups into the reclusive nation’s Rason Special Economic Zone, which borders Russia and China.
Tourists pose at the bronze statues of the late North Korean leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il, when the country reopened to foreign travellers in 2025. (Photo: Young Pioneer Tours)
For Nicolas Pasquali, North Korea was the only country left on his checklist – until last Thursday (Feb 20).
The Argentine-Italian was among the first group of Western tourists to enter the hermit kingdom for the first time in five years. North Korea had been closed to foreign tourists since the COVID-19 pandemic.
Beijing-based tour operators are the first to lead groups into the reclusive nation’s Rason Special Economic Zone, which borders Russia and China.
Pasquali told CNA: “I got a phone call saying, ‘Okay, North Korea is open. Are you coming?’ I said: ‘Boom, sure. I already have my backpack, my passport, some money with me’.
“When it’s your last country, you’re excited; you’re happy; you’re emotional.”
The 32-year-old crossed the border from China’s Yanji to North Korea’s Rason with 11 other tourists. By doing so, he has now visited every country in the world.
During his four days there, he was shown the special economic zone where there are schools, factories and breweries.
“They were kind of cautious with us, taking care of us. They were concerned about how we were going to behave,” he added.
“So if we did something wrong, (there is a) high chance that they will ban any foreign tourists after us because of this reason.”
Beijing-based tour operator Young Pioneer Tours, which has been taking tourists to North Korea since 2008, also said the itinerary was less flexible and more structured this time round, but that new attractions have been added.
Its marketing director Justin Martell said they visited a so-called traders’ market in Rason which sells mostly foreign products.
“There’s also a great place where you can buy local street food from street food vendors, and go to local bars that are within that market as well,” he revealed.
PYONGYANG STILL CLOSED
North Korea remains one of the world’s most repressive regimes, with heavy international sanctions lobbed against it due to its nuclear weapons programme.
Tourists must be accompanied by an official guide at all times. Those who behave inappropriately in North Korea’s eyes – such as talking to North Koreans without authorisation – could face fines, arrest or detention.
Russian tourists have been allowed to enter North Korea since February 2024, amid warming ties between Moscow and Pyongyang.
They are also the only ones who can currently enter Pyongyang, which remains closed to all other foreign visitors.
Analysts said the reopening of the capital will send an important signal that the country is more open to the outside world.
“I love North Korea, and I’m happy to go back because we only saw Rason. But what about the rest? I want to go to Pyongyang, I want to explore more about the south. I want to know more,” said Pasquali.
The head of a HIV foundation in South Africa has warned that US funding cuts could lead to half a million deaths and as many new HIV infections over 10 years.
Around 7.8 million people in South Africa are HIV positiveImage: Bram Janssen/AP/picture alliance
US funding cuts to South Africa’s HIV/AIDS programs could trigger more than 500,000 deaths over the next decade, the head of the Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation, Linda-Gail Bekker, told reporters on Thursday.
“We will see lives lost,” said Bekker after South African groups were notified that they would lose their USAID grants.
“In excess of half a million unnecessary deaths will occur because of the loss of the funding and up to a half a million new infections,” Bekker added, citing studies that assess the potential impact of the funding cuts.
Around 13%, or 7.8 million, people in South Africa are HIV positive — one of the highest rates of HIV in the world, according to government data.
South Africa is one of the largest recipients of funds from the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), a project launched by then-US President George W. Bush in 2003 to combat global HIV/AIDS. USAID helps provide funding through PEPFAR.
Why did the US cut funds to South Africa?
South African groups that receive funds through USAID said they had received termination letters from the US State Department overnight.
The notices, seen by the AFP news agency, said the grants were not in line with US priorities and were “terminated for convenience and the interest of the US government.”
The move comes after US President Donald Trump’s announcement to freeze foreign assistance for 90 days last month.
The cuts risk undoing years of progress. PEPFAR, which provides about 17% of South Africa’s HIV budget, ensures that some 5.5 million are on anti-retroviral medication for HIV, according to the Health Ministry.
Following USAID cuts, activists stressed an urgent need to find alternative ways to fund the HIV/AIDS programs.
“We cannot afford delays right now. We need top-tier prioritization,” said Lynne Wilkinson, a public health expert in South Africa.
What’s next for South Africa’s fight against HIV?
The government has tried to reassure the public about the funding gap and pledged to bolster its health care system.
“We are looking at various interventions to address the immediate needs and ensure the continuity of essential services,” President Cyril Ramaphosa said in a national address earlier this month.
Last week, South Africa’s Health Ministry announced a goal of having 1.1 million people living with HIV on treatment by the end of next year.
Pope Francis attends the consistory ceremony to elevate Roman Catholic prelates to the rank of cardinal, in Saint Peter’s Square at the Vatican, September 30, 2023. REUTERS/Remo Casilli/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
Before he was hospitalized for double pneumonia, Pope Francis was battling firm resistance from some of his own cardinals about how to plug a widening gap in the Vatican’s finances.
Three days before his hospitalization, Francis ordered the creation of a new high-level commission to encourage donations to the headquarters of the 1.4-billion-member Catholic Church.
The new “Commission on Donations for the Holy See”, announced by the Vatican on Wednesday as Francis was spending his 13th day in hospital, was formed after the pope faced push back against his proposals for Vatican budget cuts from within the Roman Curia.
In a closed-door meeting late last year, Vatican department chiefs, including senior cardinals, argued against cuts and against the Argentine pope’s desire to seek outside funding to fix the deficit, two officials told Reuters.
The officials asked not to be named due to the sensitive nature of the information.
Francis, known to work himself to exhaustion, has continued leading the Vatican from hospital, as staff appointments requiring his approval are announced daily.
He has been seeking to patch up the budget for several years. He has cut cardinals’ salaries three times since 2021 and demanded a “zero deficit” agenda in September.
But his efforts appear to have had little impact.
Although the Vatican hasn’t published a full budget report since 2022, the last set of accounts, approved in mid-2024, included an 83-million-euro ($87 million) shortfall, the two sources said.
Reuters was not able to verify the deficit figure independently.
While the Vatican has operated with a deficit for years by rebalancing accounts and drawing on the dividends from its investment income, the gap has grown significantly in recent years. In 2022, the gap reported by the Vatican was 33 million euros.
Two cardinals who oversee the Vatican’s budget declined Reuters’ requests for interviews and did not provide current budget information. The Vatican did not respond to a request for comment.
GROWING PENSION WOES
Adding to the budget concerns are growing liabilities within the Vatican’s pension fund, which were estimated to total some 631 million euros by the Vatican’s finance czar in a 2022 media interview.
There has been no official update to this figure, but several insiders told Reuters they believe it has ballooned.
“The budget problems are going to force the Vatican to do a lot of things it doesn’t want to do,” said Rev. Tom Reese, a Jesuit priest and commentator who has written about the Vatican’s finances.
The Vatican may have to limit its charitable works or down-size its diplomatic presence at embassies across the world, he said.
“The footprint of the pope could be severely reduced,” said Reese. “If you can’t pay your bills, you can’t do much.”
Reuters could not determine the precise reasons behind the Vatican’s growing budget shortfall. The Vatican suffered a substantial loss of tourist income during the Covid pandemic. And in October, the pope also said there would have to be cuts to the at-least 40 million euro budget for the Vatican’s extensive multi-language media operations.
Delivering India’s powerful response, Tyagi said it is unfortunate that this Council’s time continues to be “wasted by a failed state, which thrives on instability and survives on international handouts. Its rhetoric reeks of hypocrisy; its actions, of inhumanity; and its governance, of incompetence.”
Counsellor at India’s Permanent Mission to the UN in Geneva Kshitij Tyagi
India has slammed Pakistan after it raked the issue of Jammu and Kashmir in the UN Human Rights Council, saying the “failed state” that survives on “international handouts” “dutifully” spreads “falsehoods handed down by its military-terrorist complex.”
India exercised its Right of Reply at the high-level segment of the 58th Regular Session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on Wednesday to lodge a strong retort to Pakistan after it raised, as it habitually does, the issue of Jammu and Kashmir at the multilateral global organisation.
“India is exercising its Right of Reply in response to the baseless and malicious references made by Pakistan. It is regrettable, yet unsurprising, to see Pakistan’s so-called leaders and delegates continuing to dutifully spread falsehoods handed down by its military-terrorist complex,” Counsellor at India’s Permanent Mission to the UN in Geneva Kshitij Tyagi said.
Delivering India’s powerful response, Tyagi said it is unfortunate that this Council’s time continues to be “wasted by a failed state, which thrives on instability and survives on international handouts. Its rhetoric reeks of hypocrisy; its actions, of inhumanity; and its governance, of incompetence.”
Asserting that the Union Territories of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh were, are and will always remain an integral and inalienable part of India, Tyagi said the unprecedented political, social and economic progress in Jammu and Kashmir in the past few years speaks for itself.
“These successes are a testament to the people’s trust in the government’s commitment to bring normalcy to a region scarred by decades of Pakistan-sponsored cross-border terrorism,” he said.
He emphasised that as a country where human rights abuses, persecution of minorities and systematic erosion of democratic values constitute state policies, and which brazenly harbours UN-sanctioned terrorists, Pakistan is in no position to lecture anyone.
India’s Prime Minister Modi (left) and Brazil’s Lula are the architects of the realignment between the two countriesImage: Eraldo Peres/AP Photo/picture alliance
Earlier this month, Brazil’s state-controlled oil giant Petrobras couldn’t have found a bigger event to unveil a major new customer. At the Brazil Energy Forum in Rio de Janeiro, the company’s director of logistics, commercialization and markets, Claudio Romeo Schlosser, said an agreement had been reached with India’s Bharat Petroleum Corporation for the delivery of 6 million barrels of oil annually between 2025 and 2026.
“We are expanding our international customer base. Until now, it has been heavily concentrated on China,” Schlosser said in Rio, before traveling to India 10 days later where the deal was finalized and signed on February 12.
Bharat Petroleum, which is owned by the Indian state, is the world’s third-largest importer of oil, securing most of India’s oil supply — roughly 85% of which was imported from other countries last year. The deal will be a massive boost to Petrobras’ exports to India, currently only about 4%.
Petrobras signed the deal with Bharat in the hope of expanding exports to India to 24 million barrels per year, Schlosser said.
The deal comes as India and Brazil are seeking to intensify their economic ties as members of the BRICS group of nations, which also includes Russia, China and South Africa.
Latin America’s pivot to diversifying trade
With the oil agreement, the government of Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva also wants to highlight the growing importance of India for Brazil’s foreign trade, after recently rejecting a chance to be part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative.
Rising geopolitical tensions make India an attractive partner for many countries in Latin America as it is perceived as independent and largely neutral in the power struggles between the US, China and Russia.
And India, too, is seeking new economic ties as part of its geopolitical realignment that includes expanding its presence in Latin American countries.
Similar developments are taking place in Argentina, where state-owned oil company YPF signed a deal with three Indian firms in January to export up to 10 million tons of liquefied natural gas (LNG) annually. The agreement also covers cooperation in lithium, critical minerals, and hydrocarbon exploration and production, YPF said in a statement announcing the deal.
YPF CEO Horacio Marin sees the Asian market as being key to Argentina’s energy expansion plans. “We are convinced that the country has an opportunity to become an energy exporter and achieve the objective sought by the entire industry to generate revenues of $30 billion over the next 10 years,” said Marin.
In pursuit of ‘strategic autonomy’
Sabrina Olivera from the Argentine Council for International Relations (CARI) said India’s foreign policy had traditionally been characterized by “non-alignment” but was now evolving into what is now known as “strategic autonomy.”
“This means that India maintains relationships with as many players as possible without committing to alliances,” Olivera, the coordinator of CARI’s South Asia working group, told DW.
Now India is present at the negotiation table for all global issues, but it is not bound by military commitments.
Latin America holds significant growth potential for India, Olivera added, even though the country is less present in the region compared with, for example, the US, China, or the EU.
Olivera pointed to recent supplies of medical aid that India sent to Cuba following a devastating hurricane, saying that this strategy of forging closer political, economic, and cultural ties was well received across the Caribbean region.
And in Chile, which is known for its mineral wealth, she added, India’s ambassador to the country, Abhilasha Joshi, recently stated that the country was a “gateway to the rest of Latin America.”
India trusted as the world’s biggest democracy
India’s push into Latin America began two years ago with a widely noted visit by Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar to Panama — the first in six decades of bilateral relations.
“Since Prime Minister [Narendra] Modi took office, our relations with Latin America and the Caribbean have taken a new direction,” Jaishankar said at the time, marking a shift toward greater Indian engagement in the region.
According to the Uruguay-based portal Dialogo Politico, trade between India and Latin America totaled $40 billion (€38.8 billion) in 2023. The region’s top trade partners with India are Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Colombia, and Peru.
TAIWAN has mobilised its sea, air and land forces in response to a surprise Chinese military invasion drill.
China deployed 32 aircraft alongside its warships and announced “live-fire exercises” just off the island’s coast.
The shocking military drill was conducted just a few miles off the island’s coast near Kaohsiung and Pingtung – where Taiwan has naval and air bases.
Taiwan’s military responded by sending sea, air and land forces to “monitor, alert and respond appropriately”, the country’s defence ministry said.
It added: “This move not only caused a high degree of danger to the safety of international flights and vessels at sea but is also a blatant provocation to regional security and stability.”
China has ramped up the deployment of fighter jets and warships around Taiwan in recent years to press its claim of sovereignty over the island, which Taipei rejects.
Just days ago, China launched shock war drills near Australia and New Zealand – forcing flights to dramatically divert.
The unusual appearance of Chinese naval ships in the Tasman Sea sparked fears, putting the area on high alert.
Airlines like Emirates, Qantas, and Air New Zealand flights reported changing their flight paths over the Tasman Sea.
China’s potential live-fire drills were a shock to Australian authorities who reportedly only learned about these exercises from surprised commercial pilots, Defense Minister Richard Marles revealed on Friday.
The drills come after Taiwan seized a Chinese-crewed cargo ship on Tuesday suspected of severing a subsea telecoms cable serving Taiwan’s Penghu island group.
There is growing concern in Taiwan over the security of its cables after a Chinese-owned cargo ship was suspected of cutting one northeast of the island this year.
SHOW OF STRENGTH
This has not been China’s first shock military exercise on the waters.
Xi Jinping’s military has increased its naval presence around its neighbours too.
China’s President issued a brutal New Year warning to Taiwan as the nation continues its war games against the self-ruled province.
Bringing the self-governed province back in line with mainland China has been a goal of Xi’s for a long time and recent military activity has shown that China is ready to take it back by force.
A swarm of fighter jets and warships were launched to circle and intimidate the island in October 2024.
A damaged deep-sea cable, off the coast of Taiwan in January, launched fears of potential Chinese sabotage.
A telecommunications cable was reportedly damaged near Yehliu, New Taipei City.
Officials believed the cable was cut near the busy port of Keelung on Taiwan’s north coast.
Amid chants of ‘Har Har Mahadev’, hordes of pilgrims from Gujarat to Karnataka on Wednesday took a holy dip at the Triveni Sangam on Mahashivratri as the 45-day Maha Kumbh inched towards its closure. Maha Kumbh, the spectacle that takes place once in 12 years, began on January 13 (Paush Purnima) and saw grand processions of Naga Sadhus and three ‘Amrit Snans’.
Har Har Mahadev! Maha Kumbh Mela’s Final ‘Snan’ Draws Crores Of Devotees To Triveni Sangam On Mahashivratri (VIDEO) | ANI
Mahakumbh Nagar: Amid chants of ‘Har Har Mahadev’, hordes of pilgrims from Gujarat to Karnataka on Wednesday took a holy dip at the Triveni Sangam on Mahashivratri as the 45-day Maha Kumbh inched towards its closure.
Maha Kumbh, the spectacle that takes place once in 12 years, began on January 13 (Paush Purnima) and saw grand processions of Naga Sadhus and three ‘Amrit Snans’.
VIDEO | Dhananjay, a resident of Ghaziabad, cycles over 600km to Prayagraj to attend Mahakumbh Mela. Here’s what he said:
VIDEO | Dhananjay, a resident of Ghaziabad, cycles over 600km to Prayagraj to attend Mahakumbh Mela. Here’s what he said:
“I have come from Ghaziabad…I started on Sunday at about 3AM and cycled continuously to reach here. I took small breaks during my ride. I am also promoting… pic.twitter.com/vbriEHberV
The mega religious gathering has drawn a record over 64 crore pilgrims so far.
Being the last auspicious ‘snan’ of the Maha Kumbh, a large number of devotees had begun to gather on the banks of the Sangam from close to midnight, and while some camped and waited patiently to take the dip at ‘Brahma Muhurt’, scores of them performed the bathing rituals much before the appointed time.
Billed as the world’s largest spiritual gathering on earth, the mega religious festival on its last day attracted pilgrims from all four corners of the country.
Rajvir Singh Jhala (20), a BBA student from Rajkot took the holy dip right at the Sangam nose, as did his mother and other family members who arrived in Prayagraj from Gujarat in a bus on Wednesday night.
“Lord Shiva for me means ‘Shunyata’, one must feel that he is she is nothing in front of him. Besides, one must have goodness inside. If one has dirt inside, washing oneself in holy Sangam will not even cleanse any sin,” Jhala told PTI right after the ‘snan’.
As pilgrims milled around and took the holy dip at various ghats at or near the confluence site, security personnel kept a vigilant eye, not allowing crowding at any place for long duration, as they sought to manage the sea of pilgrims pouring into the mela grounds.
#WATCH | #Mahakumbh | Prayagraj, UP | A devotee from London, says, “… I feel so much joy and peace. You can feel the environment of the crowd, and it’s amazing. Everyone is celebrating today. It feels more special than every other day than I have been here so far… I knew this… pic.twitter.com/OkozzhOO9x
The US President says the card would offer residency and a path to citizenship and attract ‘wealthy people.’
Trump said the programme is set to begin in about two weeksImage: Yuri Gripas/Pool via CNP/AdMedia/picture alliance
Trump said the programme is set to begin in about two weeksImage: Yuri Gripas/Pool via CNP/AdMedia/picture alliance
US President Donald Trump on Tuesday revealed plans to sell new “gold card” US residency permits at $5 million (€4.8 million) a pop, replacing a 35-year-old visa for investors.
“We’re going to be selling a gold card. You have a green card, this is a gold card. We’re going to be putting a price on that card of about $5 million,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.
Speaking about the target audience, Trump said: “They’ll be wealthy and they’ll be successful, and they’ll be spending a lot of money and paying a lot of taxes and employing a lot of people, and we think it’s going to be extremely successful.”
The Trump ‘gold card’
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick clarified that the new permit — dubbed the ‘Trump Gold Card’ by reporters — would replace the EB-5 visas in two weeks.
Created in 1990 by Congress, the EB-5 visas aimed at generating foreign investment and were made available to people who would spend $1 million on a US company that employs at least 10 people.
Lutnick said the gold card was ultimately a green card or a permanent residency card, which raised investors’ entry price in the US. He said it would do away with fraud and “nonsense” that plagues the EB-5 program, eventually leading to citizenship.
Some 8000 people have used the EB-5 visa to enter the US in the 12-month period ending September 30, 2022, according to government immigration data.
In 2021, a Congressional Research Service report said that the program posed a risk of fraud.
Skywatchers are in for a treat this week as seven planets – Mars, Jupiter, Uranus, Venus, Neptune, Mercury, and Saturn will all be briefly visible in the evening sky.
This phenomenon, known as a ‘planetary parade’ is a rare sight, and it will be the last time seven planets can be seen simultaneously so well until 2040.
The best chance to see as many planets as possible will be just after sunset on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.
Four of the planets – Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Mars – will be visible to the naked eye. Saturn will be harder to see because it will be low in the horizon. You will need a telescope to spot the other two planets – Uranus and Neptune.
How an artist imagines the planets in our solar system lined up in a row – of course it isn’t quite that straightforward
A good view of the horizon and clear skies will offer the best chance of spotting them all. However, the window to see all seven planets will be very brief.
Dr Edward Bloomer, astronomer at the Royal Observatory Greenwich said: “There’s a rare opportunity to have seven planets in essentially a convenient place for you to look for them.”
As the sun sets, Saturn and Mercury will also be setting, making them particularly difficult to see.
“You really only have a few minutes after sunset to catch them before they drop below the horizon. After that, you’ll still be able to see Venus, Jupiter, and Mars clearly for a much longer time,” Dr Bloomer added.
The planets in our solar system orbit the Sun within roughly the same flat plane as the Earth.
As they orbit at different speeds and distances from the Sun, there are moments when they appear to line up from Earth’s perspective creating a spectacular visual display, although the planets remain separated by vast distances in space.
Venus and Jupiter will be the easiest to spot due to their brightness, while Mars will have a distinct reddish hue.
“Uranus is technically visible with the naked eye, but you’d need perfect eyesight and ideal conditions,” Dr Bloomer explains.
To improve your chances of seeing as many planets as possible, Dr Bloomer advises heading to a location with a clear view of the horizon and minimal light pollution.
“If you just pop out of your kitchen into your back garden, you will take time to adjust to the light levels. Give it a bit of time – your eyes take about half an hour to fully adjust,” said Dr Bloomer.
“Avoid looking at your phone, get comfortable, and ensure you have an unobstructed view of the horizon.”
While this is an exciting opportunity, Dr Bloomer encourages people to make a habit of gazing at the night sky.
“See how things change,” he said, adding that observing the heavens is “a chance to witness the ongoing mechanics of the solar system at work.”
TERRIFIED Delta Air Lines passengers had to evacuate a plane by emergency slide during a scary landing at an airport in Atlanta.
The Boeing 717-200 was going to Columbia Metropolitan Airport in South Carolina when smoke suddenly filled the plane cabin.
The Delta flight was en route from Atlanta to South Carolina when it had to turn around.
When it landed, all 94 passengers, two pilots, and three flight attendants were forced to escape the aircraft using the emergency exit slides.
Shocking photos showed passengers standing on the left wing of the plane clutching their belongings as they tried to get to safety.
The Federal Aviation Administration said, “Delta Air Lines Flight 876 returned safely to Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport around 9 am local time on Monday, February 24, after the crew reported possible smoke in the flight deck.”
Crew members reported the smoke shortly after takeoff, with an emergency declared to get priority handling from air traffic control.
A Delta spokesperson told The Sun: “The flight crew followed procedures to return to Atlanta when a haze inside the aircraft was observed after departure.
“Nothing is more important than the safety of our customers and people, and we apologize to our customers for the experience.”
Footage showed passengers using their clothes to cover their faces as the terrifying haze filled the cabin.
The airline said teams brought customers to the terminal via ground transportation and were working to get them rebooked on other flights.
The incident had a “moderate impact to operations,” an air spokesperson told ABC News.
Travelers are on high alert when it comes to flying after a series of concerning plane crashes and mishaps.
Just over a week ago, a Delta plane from Minneapolis crashed and flipped before erupting into flames at Toronto Pearson Airport.
PLANE PANIC IN TORONTO
Panicked passengers were forced to crawl along the ceiling after the jet slammed into the icy runway in the near-disaster.
No one was killed as smoke surrounded the jet in the aftermath of the terrifying scene.
A passenger named John Nelson shared a video from the scary scene on Facebook on Monday.
“We just landed,” he said in a video showing the aircraft upside down.
“Our plane crashed, it’s upside down. The fire department is on site.
“Most people appear to be OK. We’re all getting off, [there’s] some smoke going on.”
Fellow passenger Peter Koukov told CNN they were “upside down hanging like bats” in the horror crash.
The fire department was shown spraying fire retardant on the plane.
“Several customers with injuries were transported to area hospitals. Our primary focus is taking care of those impacted,” Delta said in a statement to The U.S. Sun.
The airline confirmed the Toronto airport, YYZ, was closed “shortly after the incident occurred.”
“Delta is working to connect with customers traveling from, to or through YYZ who should also monitor the status of their flight via the Fly Delta app.”
DISTURBING TREND
More mid-air panic came this weekend when a flight that took off from JFK Airport in New York City had to make a U-turn.
It was on the way to New Delhi, India, but was grounded in Rome due to a “possible security issue” that turned out to be a bomb threat.
The emergency onboard the American Airlines flight was eventually found to be a false alarm.
Italian law enforcement checked and cleared the aircraft to re-depart, according to American Airlines.
Starbucks is cutting 1,100 jobs and simplifying its menu in the US as it tries to improve flagging business in its home market.
The first items to get the axe include the Royal English Breakfast Latte, White Hot Chocolate and several kinds of blended frappuccinos.
But Starbucks said more offerings would be cut, as it aims to shrink its menu by nearly a third over the next year, hoping to reduce wait times and improve quality and consistency.
The company has been wrestling with a sustained fall in sales since last year, which has been particularly pronounced in the US.
Chief executive Brian Niccol, who previously headed the Mexican food chain Chipotle, was brought into Starbucks last year to help turn the business around.
He has said he wants to see the company return to its roots as a coffee house.
The drinks set for the chopping block “weren’t commonly purchased, can be complex to make, or are like other beverages on our menu”, Starbucks said. The changes are due to go into effect on 4 March.
“We’re simplifying our menu to focus on fewer, more popular items, executed with excellence,” the company said on Monday.
“This will make way for innovation, help reduce wait times, improve quality and consistency, and align with our core identity as a coffee company.”
The job cuts announced on Monday are focused on corporate “support partner” roles and will not affect jobs or investments at stores, the company said.
The company said it would inform staff affected by the decisions by mid-day on Tuesday. It is also eliminating “several hundred” open and unfilled positions.
“Our intent is to operate more efficiently, increase accountability, reduce complexity and drive better integration,” Mr Niccol wrote in the announcement.
The French President was left perching on the end of a desk (Image: Getty )
French President Emmanuel Macron appeared in humiliating scenes today during a live video meeting of G7 leaders to mark the third anniversary of the invasion of Ukraine.
In awkward footage shared with global leaders, the premiere of France appeared perched on the edge of a desk next to Donald Trump in the Oval Office at the White House.
The 47-year-old looked ill-at-ease with the seating arrangement, which saw him sat to the right of Mr Trump who himself was positioned in the centre of the desk in a large comfortable-looking leather chair.
To Mr Trump’s left, his vice-president JD Vance sat with a nonchalant wide-legged stance with a long red tie passing below his navel.
Earlier it was reported the US President did not greet his French counterpart when Mr Macron arrived at the White House in Washington, instead leaving the greeting to his Chief of Protocol, Monica Crowley.
Macron and Trump also clashed as they discussed the war in Ukraine. The French President challenged his US counterpart over his demands for Ukraine to hand over £400bn’s worth of minerals.
Mr Trump said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky could sign the deal as early as next week.
Downing Street will no doubt be watching closely how Mr Macron was received by the Trump administration who have been at odds with European allies after an apparent warming of relations from Washington towards Moscow in recent days.
Sir Keir Starmer is due to fly to the US on Thursday for talks at the White House.
Mr Trump sparked anger and public rebuke from fellow Western leaders after he recently branded the Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy a “dictator”.
Mr Zelensky, who was on the video call with G7 leaders from the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, had said Mr Trump lived in a “disinformation space”.
President Macron had said he intended to tell Mr Trump it was in the joint interest of Americans and Europeans not to show weakness to Putin during US-led negotiations to end the war in Ukraine.
He also suggested he’ll make the case that how Trump handles Putin could have enormous ramifications for US dealings with China, the United States’ most significant economic and military competitor.
Taking to social media after a serioes of White House statements slamming Ukraine, Mr Macron said: “You can’t be weak in the face of President Putin. It’s not you, it’s not your trademark, it’s not in your interest.
“How can you then be credible in the face of China if you’re weak in the face of Putin?’”
Cricket – ICC Men’s Champions Trophy – Group A – India v Pakistan – Dubai International Stadium, Dubai, United Arab Emirates – February 23, 2025 India’s Virat Kohli in action REUTERS/Satish Kumar Purchase Licensing Rights
Milestone man Virat Kohli anchored a tricky chase with an unbeaten hundred as India put one foot in the semi-finals of the Champions Trophy with a six-wicket victory against Pakistan in a high-octane Group A match between the arch-rivals on Sunday.
An architect of countless successful chases, Kohli made 100 not out as India overwhelmed the 242-run target with 7.3 overs to spare to register their second successive victory of the tournament.
Electing to bat, Pakistan made 241 before being all out with two deliveries left in their stop-start innings with Saud Shakeel (62) and Mohammad Rizwan (46) scoring the bulk of the runs.
Player of the match Kohli also became only the third batter, after compatriot Sachin Tendulkar and Sri Lankan Kumar Sangakkara, to complete 14,000 runs in ODIs, reaching the mark quicker than them.
“I think the way we started with the ball was superb,” India captain Rohit Sharma said.
“To restrict them to that kind of score was a great effort from the bowling unit.
“We knew it would get slightly better to bat under lights… we backed the experience that we have in our batting line-up to go out there and get those runs.”
India seamer Mohammed Shami began with an 11-ball over that included five wides after Pakistan captain Mohammed Rizwan won the toss and elected to bat.
Shami looked in discomfort in his third over and, replacing him, Hardik Pandya had Babar Azam (23) caught behind. Pakistan lost their other opener in the next over when Imam-ul-Haq departed run out.
Saud and Rizwan added 104 runs to steady Pakistan but Pakistan lost both their set batters after Axar Patel bowled Rizwan and took a catch to send back Saud.
Spinner Kuldeep Yadav (3-40) dismissed Salman Agha and Shaheen Afridi in successive deliveries but was denied a hat-trick.
Khushdil Shah contributed 38 down the order but played three dot balls in the final over before holing out in the deep to be the last man out.
Rohit (20) began briskly when India came out to chase but the opener had his stumps rearranged by an unplayable yorker from Afridi in the fourth over.
Shubman Gill (46) played some gorgeous drives and seemed to have luck on his side too as he pulled Haris Rauf but Khushdil at midwicket spilled the catch.
Gill fell short of his half-century when his defence was breached by a sharply turning delivery from Abrar Ahmed.
Shreyas Iyer (56) joined Kohli in accumulating risk-free runs to calm any nerves in the Indian dressing room.
Kohli manoeuvred the field with ease and sealed India’s victory with a four that also brought up his 51st ODI hundred.
USAID has provided over $17 billion of economic assistance to India since its commencement in 1951. (IMAGE: AFP)
Amid a raging political controversy over USAID’s alleged role in influencing Indian elections, the latest annual report of the finance ministry has disclosed that the agency funded seven projects worth USD 750 million in 2023-24.
“Currently, seven projects worth a total budget of USD 750 million (approx.) are being implemented by USAID in partnership with Government of India,” as per the Finance Ministry annual report for 2023-24.
For the financial year 2023-24, an obligation of a total of USD 97 million (about Rs 825 crore) has been made by the US Agency for International Development (USAID) under the seven projects, it said.
The Department of Economic Affairs under the Finance Ministry which is the nodal department for bilateral funding arrangements has also shared the details of projects funded in 2023-24 in the report.
During the year, no funding was made for enhancing voter turnout but to projects related to agriculture & food security programme; water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH); Renewable Energy; disaster management and health.
Besides, it said, funds were committed for Sustainable Forests and Climate Adaptation Program and Energy Efficiency Technology Commercialization and Innovation Project.
The United States of America’s bilateral development assistance to India started in 1951 and it is mainly administered through USAID. Since its commencement, USAID has provided economic assistance of over USD 17 billion to India in various sectors for over 555 projects.
Political controversy erupted in the country earlier this month after the Elon Musk-led DOGE (Department of Government Efficiency) claimed that it had cancelled a USD 21 million grant to India to boost “voter turnout”.
US President Donald Trump also repeatedly claimed that USAID under the previous administration led by Joe Biden allocated USD 21 million in funding to India for ‘voter turnout’.
External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Saturday said the information put out by the Trump administration is “concerning” and that the government is looking into it.
The USAID was allowed in India “in good faith, to do good faith activities”, and suggestions are being made out of America that “there are activities which are in bad faith,” Jaishankar had said.
On the other hand, the Congress party on Sunday accused the BJP of indulging in “anti-national work” by spreading “fake news from America” and asserted that Prime Minister Narendra Modi and External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar will also have to answer as to why the government is silent when US President Donald Trump and Elon Musk are “insulting” India repeatedly.
Pope Francis, battling double pneumonia, remains in a critical condition for a second day running and has shown an “initial, slight insufficiency” in his kidney function, the Vatican said on Sunday.
The prognosis for the 88-year-old pope, who required a transfusion of two units of blood on Saturday after experiencing a “prolonged asthma-like respiratory crisis,” remains “guarded”, according to the latest medical update.
Francis was admitted to Rome’s Gemelli hospital on February 14. The Vatican first described his condition as critical on Saturday.
“The condition of the Holy Father remains critical; however, since last night he has not experienced further respiratory crises,” the Vatican said on Sunday.
Blood tests also indicated “an initial, slight renal insufficiency, which is currently under control,” it said, referring to the functioning of the kidneys, which filter waste products in the blood.
“The complexity of the clinical picture, and the necessary wait for the pharmacological therapies to show some effect, require that the prognosis remains guarded,” said the statement.
The statement described the pope as “alert and well-oriented” and said he was receiving “high-flow oxygen therapy” through a tube under his nose.
Double pneumonia is a serious infection that can inflame and scar both lungs, making it difficult to breathe. The Vatican has described the pope’s infection as “complex”, saying it is being caused by two or more microorganisms.
Francis, who has been pope since 2013, has suffered bouts of ill health in the past two years. He is particularly prone to lung infections because he developed pleurisy as a young adult and had part of one lung removed.
The Vatican said on Saturday the pope had needed the blood transfusions because tests showed he had a low platelet count, which is associated with anaemia. Platelets are cell fragments in the blood that form clots and stop or prevent bleeding.
On Sunday, the Vatican said the transfusion had shown benefit and resulted in an increase in the pope’s levels of haemoglobin, a protein that helps carry oxygen in the body.
Archbishop Rino Fisichella presides over Sunday’s mass instead of Pope Francis. The Vatican, February 23, 2025. Vatican Media/Simone Risoluti/Handout via REUTERS Purchase Licensing Rights
It also said his platelet levels had remained stable.
PILGRIMS PRAY FOR POPE
Near the Vatican, pilgrims expressed concern for the pope.
“I am very, very sad,” said Elvira Romana, from Italy. “I don’t know how you can continue normally at this moment.”
Matteo Licari, from Sardinia, said he was “extremely worried”. “Let’s hope he can keep living,” said Licari. “We are waiting for him to come back here.”
Outside Gemelli hospital, people gathered to pray near a statue of the late Pope John Paul II, who was treated at the facility many times during his long papacy.
People left flowers and notes for Francis, and lit candles at the base of the late pope’s memorial.
In a written message for his usual Sunday prayer in St. Peter’s Square, which the pope was unable to read out for a second consecutive week, Francis said he was continuing “confidently” with his treatment in hospital. He thanked his doctors and people who have sent him messages of support.
Archbishop Rino Fisichella, a senior Vatican official, told participants at a Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica on Sunday morning they should make their prayers for Francis “stronger and more intense”.
The Diocese of Rome, which the pope leads, held a special Mass on Sunday evening to pray for Francis, so that he will have “the strength necessary to get through this moment of trial”.
On Friday, two of his doctors said the pope was highly vulnerable because of his age and general frailty.
India’s captain Rohit Sharma and teammates Virat Kohli and Shubman Gill during a practice session.(Surjeet Yadav)
India began their Champions Trophy 2025 campaign on a positive note, defeating Bangladesh in their opener. Rohit Sharma and Co. are now in second position in Group A and take on arch-rivals Pakistan in their upcoming fixture on Sunday. Due to political tensions between both countries, India didn’t travel to Pakistan for the tournament, and the match will be played in Dubai.
In terms of history in the format, Pakistan could stage a comeback in the tournament, especially against India. In ODIs, India trail 57-73 in terms of head-to-head. But since 2018, they have faced each other in six ODIs, and India have won all of those fixtures. In Champions Trophy, Pakistan lead 3-2, and beat India in the 2017 final.
Going into the match, India are not expected to make any changes, but they need to improve in certain aspects like the form of their ageing senior batters.
Skipper Rohit will open the innings with Gill, who got a match-winning unbeaten ton in the previous game. Rohit registered 41 runs off 36 balls, hitting seven fours, but he will regret that he failed to build on his fine start. He has been under criticism lately, alongwith Kohli, and their performances in this tournament could decide their future.
Kohli will slot in at no. 3, and was simply disappointing against Bangladesh. The former captain slowly reached 22 off 38 balls, and then lost his wicket to Rishad Hossain. Many Indian fans also took to X to remark that it was a pain to watch the senior star bat.
Like the previous fixture, Iyer will come in at no.4, and then we could see KL Rahul get promoted to no. 5. Rahul will also don the gloves for India. All-rounders Hardik Pandya and Axar Patel will bat at no. 6 and 7. Hardik didn’t get a chance to bat in the previous match, but Axar was promoted higher up the order. He failed to make an impact, getting dismissed for eight off 12 balls.
Telangana tunnel collapse: The incident happened at 8:30 am on Saturday.(X/ANI)
Eight workers are still trapped in an under-construction tunnel in Telangana after it collapsed on Saturday morning. The incident happened at around 8:30 am on Saturday when a portion of the Srisailam Left Bank Canal (SLBC) tunnel collapsed in Telangana’s Nagarkurnool district. While the rescue ops to bring out the eight trapped workers are on, the teams have said that it is difficult to reach the spot due to the mud.
Here are the latest updates on the big story-
The rescue teams which tried to go inside the collapsed portion of the tunnel while inspecting the site had to come back because they couldn’t go further in. One of the rescue personnel of the State Disaster Response Force told news agency ANI, “There’s no chance to go to the spot inside the tunnel. It has completely collapsed and mud is reaching up to the knees. We will have to take another step.”
The Indian Army also joined the rescue operations at the collapse site. Its Engineer Task Force (ETF) was deployed to assist with the rescue ops, reported ANI. The Indian Army’s Engineer Regiment came along with an excavator dozer and was put on standby to help with the rescue ops, said the army.
Telangana Chief Minister Revanth Reddy spoke to Prime Minister Narendra Modi about the incident and detailed the state government’s ongoing efforts to rescue the trapped workers. PM Modi also assured him that the Centre will assist with any necessary help.
On Saturday night, Revanth Reddy also reviewed and inquired the state ministers about the ongoing situation at the SLBC tunnel collapse site. Hand said that the state government will stand with those affected by the collapse.
According to Congress MP from Nagarkurnool, Mallu Ravi, the workers at the tunnel site were working with a tunnel boring machine from the USA and some foreign engineers were also present at the site. After the collapse, mud and water gushed in and blocked the other site of the tunnel, he told news agency PTI.
Rahul Gandhi expressed concern for the trapped workers and said that the state government and the disaster relief teams are doing “everything possible” to rescue them. “Deeply distressed to learn about the tunnel roof collapse in Telangana. My thoughts are with those trapped inside and their families at this difficult time. I have been informed that rescue operations are underway, and the state government along with disaster relief teams are doing everything possible to expeditiously bring back those in danger,” he said in a post on X.
Sharing visuals from the spot, Telangana minister Uttam Reddy said that he interacted with the project manager of the site, who is American. “The 44 km tunnel is envisaged to supply 30 TMC of irrigation water to the fluoride affected & backward areas of Nalgonda district” he said, detailing the purpose of the tunnel. “We will recover from this setback and complete the project,” he added.
He also said that the Fire and disaster management teams, irrigation officials, and the police department are “working together under senior officers’ supervision” to help with the rescue ops.
The Trump administration sent emails on Saturday evening to U.S. federal government employees telling them to detail their work accomplishments from the previous week by Monday night or risk losing their jobs.
The emails came shortly after Elon Musk, the billionaire head of the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency, posted on the social media site X that not responding to the email request would be viewed as a resignation.
“All federal employees will shortly receive an email requesting to understand what they got done last week,” Musk posted on X. “Failure to respond will be taken as a resignation.”
Musk issued his post just hours after President Donald Trump posted on his own social media network, Truth Social, that DOGE should get more aggressive in its attempts to downsize and reshape the 2.3 million-strong federal workforce.
As of Saturday evening, emails were sent to employees across federal agencies, including the Securities and Exchange Commission, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and others with the subject line, “What did you do last week?”
The email, seen by Reuters, asks employees to reply with five bullet points summarizing “what you accomplished at work last week,” and to copy their managers.
It was sent from a human resources address from the Office of Personnel Management, and gives employees until 11:59 p.m. EST on Monday to respond.
It is unclear what legal basis Musk has to terminate federal workers if they fail to respond to his request and what would happen to employees that cannot detail confidential work.
Some federal judiciary employees received the email on Saturday from OPM, even though the court system is not part of the executive branch, people familiar with the matter said. The Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, the judiciary’s administrative arm, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Workers at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau also received the email, according to people with knowledge of the matter. However, most agency staff had been ordered not to perform any tasks since early this month, creating a conundrum. The agency is also under temporary court order not to resume mass firings pending the outcome of legal proceedings.
A spokesperson for DOGE did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Elon Musk listens to U.S. President Donald Trump speak in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 11, 2025. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
UNION PROMISES FIGHT
The AFGE, the union representing federal employees, said in a statement it will challenge any “unlawful terminations.”
“Once again, Elon Musk and the Trump administration have shown their utter disdain for federal employees and the critical services they provide to the American people,” said Everett Kelley, the AFGE’s president.
The Trump administration’s fast-paced and controversial process to reduce government spending by shrinking the federal workforce spearheaded by Musk and his young aides at the cost-cutting DOGE has led to haphazard firings that resulted in numerous mistakes and forced several agencies to quickly rehire vital employees, such as those working on nuclear safety, defense and power generation.
The first wave of job cuts has targeted workers who are easier to fire, such as probationary employees on the job for less than two years or those who have started new roles within an agency.
The indiscriminate firings have led to DOGE terminating people whose jobs are not funded by taxpayers and have begun to anger people across the country who are concerned about a loss of services and the impact of federal job losses on local economies.
Trump has repeatedly talked about Musk as the functional leader of DOGE, which is not a cabinet-level department, but the White House said in a court filing this month that Musk had no authority over DOGE and was not an employee of the program.
Some federal agencies sent follow-up emails to employees advising staff not to respond to the email over the weekend as they assess its validity and devise a protocol for responding to the message.
“To be clear, this is irregular, unexpected and warrants further validation by management,” said one email sent to NOAA employees and seen by Reuters.
The Executive Office for United States Attorneys also sent an email, seen by Reuters, to employees, advising them to wait to respond until they verify the validity of the emails.
Some federal employees, already on edge after two weeks of mass firings, expressed outrage after receiving the email.
Kash Patel was sworn in as the director of the FBI by US Attorney General Pam Bondi.(Bloomberg)
Indian-origin Kash Patel on Friday was sworn in as the ninth director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), taking oath on the sacred Hindu text of Bhagavad Gita.
Kash Patel’s girlfriend and family members were present at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building as he was sworn in by US Attorney General Pam Bondi following his confirmation as the FBI director by the US Senate. He succeeded Christopher Wray.
Kash Patel is not the first Indian-American to have taken his oath of office on the Gita. Earlier, Congressman Suhash Subrahmanyam also took his oath on the Gita.
#WATCH | Washington | Kash Patel takes oath on the Bhagavad Gita, as the 9th Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
Kash Patel called this opportunity to lead the nation’s premier federal law enforcement agency as the “greatest honour” of his life.
He also said he was living the American dream, “and anyone who thinks the American dream is dead, look right here. You are talking to a first-generation Indian who is about to lead the law enforcement agency of the greatest nation on earth. That can’t happen anywhere else”.
Patel also made a strong commitment towards his work within the FBI and promised that there would be accountability both inside and outside of the federal agency.
After Patel’s oath ceremony, the White House posted on its X account, “It’s time we restore integrity and justice at the FBI. MAKE AMERICA SAFE AGAIN!”
US President Donald Trump, while speaking to reporters ahead of Patel’s oath ceremony, said, “I think he’ll go down as the best ever at that position,” adding that the “agents love this guy”.
“Turned out he was very easy to get approved. He is a tough and strong guy. He has his opinions. Trey Gowdy came out with an incredible statement and said that Kash is an incredible person and people’s don’t realise it. When he said that, there was no doubt left. It was a big statement made by someone who is respected and is on the moderate side,” Trump added.
However, the Democrats did not seem very happy with Patel’s appointment, sounding alarms that they fear he will work as a Trump loyalist and abuse the FBI’s powers to go after the adversaries of the president. They even cited past comments from before Patel’s nomination where he had said that he would “come after” anti-Trump “conspirators” in the government and media.
At his confirmation hearing, Patel sought to clarify all these concerns and said that he intended to follow the Constitution, with no intention in pursuing any retribution. Patel also said at his oath ceremony that some reports about him were “fake, malicious, slanderous and defamatory”.
Notably, Patel has also expressed his desire to implement severe changes at the FBI, including a reduced footprint in Washington and renewing emphasis on the bureau’s traditional crime-fighting duties rather than the intelligence-gathering work that has come to define its status over the past two decades.
On Friday, Patel also said that the FBI’s “national security mission” was as important as its efforts to fight violent crimes and drug overdoses.
“Anyone that wishes to do harm to our way of life and our citizens, here and abroad, will face the full wrath of the DOJ and FBI,” Patel said, adding that “if you seek to hide in any corner of this country or planet, we will put on the world’s largest manhunt and we will find you and we will decide your end-state”.
Patel, a former Justice Department counterterrorism prosecutor, was nominated to replace Christopher Wray as the FBI director in November.
Tracers are seen in the night sky as Ukrainian servicemen fire at the drone during a Russian drone strike, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine February 21, 2025. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich Purchase Licensing Rights
U.S. negotiators pressing Kyiv for access to Ukraine’s critical minerals have raised the possibility of cutting the country’s access to Elon Musk’s vital Starlink satellite internet system, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Ukraine’s continued access to SpaceX-owned Starlink was brought up in discussions between U.S. and Ukrainian officials after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy turned down an initial proposal from U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, the sources said.
Starlink provides crucial internet connectivity to war-torn Ukraine and its military.
The issue was raised again on Thursday during meetings between Keith Kellogg, the U.S. special Ukraine envoy, and Zelenskiy, said one of the sources, who was briefed on the talks.
During the meeting, Ukraine was told it faced imminent shutoff of the service if it did not reach a deal on critical minerals, said the source, who requested anonymity to discuss closed negotiations.
“Ukraine runs on Starlink. They consider it their North Star,” said the source. “Losing Starlink … would be a massive blow.”
Zelenskiy has rejected demands from President Donald Trump’s administration for $500 billion in mineral wealth from Ukraine to repay Washington for wartime aid, saying the U.S. has offered no specific security guarantees.
On Friday, the Ukrainian president said the U.S. and Ukrainian teams were working on an agreement and Trump said he expects a deal will be signed soon.
Musk rushed thousands of Starlink terminals to Ukraine to replace communications services destroyed by Russia after its February 2022 invasion. Hailed as a hero in Ukraine, Musk later curtailed access at least once before in the fall of 2022 as he became more critical of Kyiv’s handling of the war.
U.S. lawmakers are divided over Trump’s efforts to find a quick end to the Ukraine war and some have raised questions about Musk’s rapid-fire efforts to cull thousands of federal workers and shut down Federal agencies.
Melinda Haring, a senior fellow with the Atlantic Council, said Starlink was essential for Ukraine’s operation of drones, a key pillar of its military strategy.
“Losing Starlink would be a game changer,” Haring said, noting that Ukraine was now at 1:1 parity with Russia in terms of drone usage and artillery shells. Ukraine has a wide range of different drone capabilities, ranging from sea drones and surveillance drones to long-range unmanned aerial vehicles.
The Ukrainian embassy in Washington, the White House and the U.S. Department of Defense did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
SpaceX, which operates Starlink, also did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Last fall, Ukraine floated the idea of opening its critical minerals to investment by allies. This was part of a “victory plan” that sought to put it in the strongest position for talks and force Moscow to the table.
Trump has embraced the idea, saying he wants Ukraine to supply the U.S. with rare earths and other minerals in return for financially supporting its war effort.
Zelenskiy rejected a detailed U.S. proposal last week that would have seen Washington and U.S. firms receiving 50% of Ukraine’s critical minerals, which include graphite, uranium, titanium and lithium, a key component in electric car batteries.
VOLODYMYR Zelensky should flee Ukraine “immediately” amid escalating tensions between Washington and Kyiv, insiders in the White House have warned.
US-Ukraine relations exploded this week, with military intelligence suggesting Russia is just days from declaring victory over the almost three-year war.
Sources say Volodymyr Zelensky should flee UkraineCredit: AP
Donald Trump and Zelensky have been waging a war of words with the US President openly criticising the Ukrainian leader and branding him a “dictator.”
In response, Kyiv slammed his attempts at peace talks with Russia and accused him of being “in a disinformation bubble”.
As the relationship between the two leaders continues to deteriorate, a source close to the American President told the New York Post “the best case for [Zelensky] and the world is that he leaves to France immediately.”
Asked about the growing tensions between the US and Kyiv, another source close to the White House said the public spat was a long-time coming.
They said: “It’s nothing new to me.
“I heard months ago it’s time for an election and new leadership,”
The “real question is, has anyone told [Trump] they really, really like him?”
Meanwhile, Ukraine’s military intelligence agency says the Kremlin is only days away from declaring victory in Vladimir Putin’s war.
The Russian leader may portray it as a triumph over NATO as well, amounting to a defeat for the West, according to the GUR.
The agency said: “Russia is preparing to declare an alleged ‘victory’ in the war against Ukraine by the ‘round date’ – 24 February 2025, the third anniversary of the beginning of the full-scale war.
“Moreover, these plans may also include a ‘Russian victory over NATO’, as Muscovite propaganda has long described the war against Ukraine as a war with the Alliance.”
A key aim is to “cover the status of an aggressor and war criminal isolated by the civilised world with the cloak of a supposedly ready for peaceful settlement ‘constructive side of the conflict”.
Countries hostile to Russia gaining territory through its war of aggression will be branded “enemies of peace”.
Lt-Gen Kyrylo Budanov said Putin’s propaganda machine and intelligence services “on instructions from the Kremlin, are stepping up efforts to incite disbelief among Ukrainian society, destabilise the situation inside our country and discredit Ukraine among partner states that provide critical military assistance to our Security and Defence Forces in the fight against the occupiers.”
The diplomatic turmoil escalated after Kyiv rejected the US’s proposed mineral deal as a repayment for military aid.
On Thursday the US cancelled last minute a joint press conference with Zelensky after he met with one of Trump’s envoys.
Wrong, Donald
The Sun Says…
DONALD Trump’s smearing of the Ukraine regime as scam artists who provoked a war using US taxpayers’ money is a rant beneath the dignity of his office.Almost nothing in it is true.It reads like a post on a forum for conspiracy theorists. It is an unprecedentedly shocking statement from the President of the United States.Vladimir Putin has made no secret of his imperialist ambitions, nor his denial of his neighbour’s right to exist as a sovereign, free country.He invaded Ukraine, butchered and raped its people, stole its children and bombed its cities.President Zelensky — far from duping anyone or inviting the conflict, far from being a “dictator without elections” — has been a heroic wartime leader who needs Western aid to overcome staggering odds.The idea he is riding a “gravy train” is laughable. And his people, with whom he remains highly popular whatever Trump claims, have resisted conquest with immense bravery.It is troubling and short-sighted in the extreme for the so-called leader of the free world to have no interest in a war raging in Europe because he is separated from it by the Atlantic.America is not a business where Trump, as CEO, has no task except to slash costs and maximise profits. It is the most powerful democracy on Earth with global responsibilities and — let’s be frank — a duty to discern right from wrong with absolute moral clarity.Others in the White House should urgently point this out.
Trump lashed out at Zelensky on social media and accused him of “refusing to have elections”.
He warned “modestly successful comedian” Zelensky must “move fast or he is not going to have a country left”.
Trump also claimed the Ukrainian president talked the US into “spending $350 billion dollars to go into a war that couldn’t be won”.
He also later insisted he “trusts” that Russia wants peace after branding Zelensky a “dictator without elections”.
While Don’s close ally Elon Musk joined in and branded Zelensky a “despised dictator” in a fiery social media rant.
He said: “If Zelensky was actually loved by the people of Ukraine, he would hold an election.
“He knows he would lose in a landslide.
“In reality, he is despised by the people of Ukraine, which is why he has refused to hold an election.
“I challenge Zelensky to hold an election and refute this. He will not.
“President Trump is right to ignore him and solve for peace independent of the disgusting, massive graft machine feeding off the dead bodies of Ukrainian soldiers.”
Fears have grown over the course of the war ever since Trump bypassed Ukraine and continental leaders to do business directly with Moscow.
The UK and France have since suggested a peacekeeping plan that UK PM Sir Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron are set to propose to Trump in Washington next week.
It is said to involve putting up to 30,000 UK and European troops on the ground, an idea that Putin has said is “unacceptable.”
But US Secretary of State Marco Rubio pushed back against accusations that the Trump administration has given in to Russia, saying Washington first wants to see whether Moscow was “serious”.
He said: “US President Donald Trump “wants this war with Ukraine to end.
“And he wants to know: Are the Russians serious about ending the war, or not serious about ending the war?”
And US National Security Advisor Mike Waltz warned Ukraine’s leader to stop hurling “insults” at Trump.
He told a Thursday briefing at the White House: “Some of the rhetoric coming out of Kyiv, frankly, and insults to President Trump were unacceptable.
“President Trump is obviously very frustrated right now with President Zelensky, the fact that he hasn’t come to the table, that he hasn’t been willing to take this opportunity that we have offered.
Veena Reddy is an Andhra Pradesh-born American diplomat.
A war of words has erupted between the Bharatiya Janata Party and the Congress over US President Donald Trump’s comments on the funding of USD 21 million for voter turnout in India. While the BJP on Thursday sought to link Donald Trump’s comments and Rahul Gandhi’s 2023 remarks apparently ruing lack of concerns abroad to protect democracy in the country, the Congress demanded that the Indian government should bring out a white paper on the US agency’s support to both governmental and non-governmental institutions in India over the decades.
Senior BJP leader Ravi Shankar Prasad played audio clips of Donald Trump and Rahul Gandhi, who had made the comments in the UK in 2023, to slam the Congress and its main face.
Prasad said, “It is a matter of shame what the Congress has done. Rahul Gandhi has made a joke of Indian democracy abroad and sought help from democracies abroad. It means he sought support to help him win as the Congress keeps losing elections.”
Referring to his government’s decision to cancel the funding of USAID, Donald Trump said, “Why do we need to spend USD 21 million for voter turnout in India? I guess they were trying to get somebody else elected.”
The Congress dubbed Donald Trump’s claims related to USAID as “nonsensical”.
Amid the $21 million controversy, attention also turned to Veena Reddy, former India director for the US Agency for International Development (USAID), after BJP MP Mahesh Jethmalani raised questions about her role in the funding.
“So, DOGE has discovered that USAID allocated $21 million for ‘voter turnout’ in India, a euphemism for paying voters to cast their votes to effect regime change. Veena Reddy was sent to India in 2021 (ominous?) as head of USAID’s Indian mission. Post Lok Sabha elections 2024 (presumably her voter turnout mission done), she returned to the US. Pity because investigating agencies here could have asked her some questions about who this money was given to for applying it to voter turnout operations,” said Mahesh Jethmalani posted on X.
So #DOGE has discovered that #USAID allocated $21million for “voter turnout” in India ,a euphemism for paying voters to cast their votes to effect regime change. #VeenaReddy was sent to India in 2021 ( ominous?) as head of USAIDs Indian mission . Post #loksabha elections 2024 (…
Veena Reddy is an Andhra Pradesh-born American diplomat.
Veena Reddy is a career member of the US Senior Foreign Service and has served as the mission director for the USAID in India and Bhutan. Appointed in 2021, she was the first Indian-American to lead USAID’s operations in these countries.
On July 17, 2024, Veena Reddy said she was returning to the US more than a month after the Lok Sabha elections were announced, India Today reported.
Before her tenure in India, Reddy held various positions within the USAID, including mission director in Cambodia, where she oversaw programmes in food security, environment, health, education, child protection, and democracy and governance.
She also served as deputy mission director in Haiti, managing post-earthquake reconstruction efforts and economic growth initiatives.
Kash Patel, a longtime loyalist to President Donald Trump, was confirmed by the Senate on Thursday as director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation — an agency he has talked about drastically restructuring while echoing Trump’s claims of the “weaponization” of the bureau’s powers in its Capitol riot investigations and other recent cases.
Patel was opposed by a pair of Republican senators: Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski and Maine’s Susan Collins. But he won support from every other Republican, including Sen. Mitch McConnell, of Kentucky, who had opposed some of Trump’s other nominees. The final vote was 51-49, with all Senate Democrats opposing Patel.
Patel’s confirmation comes at time of significant turmoil and turnover at the FBI. Since Trump took office a month ago, an Elon Musk affiliate was among those brought into the bureau, sparking worries about partisan political figures taking the reins of the powerful law enforcement agency. The head of the Washington Field Office — which oversaw the sprawling Jan. 6 probe — was forced out, as were six of the FBI’s most senior executives and multiple heads of FBI field offices around the country.
Acting FBI Director Brian Driscoll sparred with Trump-appointed Justice Department superiors over an order that he said would ultimately help them fire FBI agents involved in Jan. 6 cases. The FBI ultimately handed over the names of FBI employees who worked on Jan. 6 cases as requested, and Trump has said he will fire “some” FBI personnel who worked on Capitol riot cases.
Altogether, it adds up to what many within the FBI see as the largest crisis facing the organization since the Watergate era. It stems in large part from FBI investigations into Trump himself, including two separate felony cases that were dropped when Trump was re-elected: one involving Trump’s handling of classified documents, and the other his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss.
Patel previously worked on Capitol Hill and in the first Trump administration, after working as a federal prosecutor in Washington and a federal public defender in Florida. He was considered to take over the FBI during the first Trump administration, but then-Attorney General Bill Barr, among others, vehemently opposed the plan, saying that Patel was unqualified.
Kash Patel appears before the Senate Judiciary Committee for his confirmation hearing on Jan. 30.Ben Curtis / AP file
Patel, a firebrand who appeared on a broad array of conservative media shows and has spoken about his desire to “come after the people in the media,” has attempted to walk back some of his more pugnacious comments from his podcast appearances.
At his confirmation hearing in late January, Patel distanced himself from Trump’s sweeping pardons of Capitol rioters, saying he disagreed with the commutations of individuals who assaulted law enforcement officers on Jan. 6. Democratic senators also confronted Patel about his repeated false contentions that the 2020 election was stolen.
Patel has a close relationship with a network of conservative former FBI agents who were pushed out over the past several years, one of whom said he was “screaming to the heavens” when Trump nominated Patel.
Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum looks on at the National Palace, in Mexico City, Mexico January 21, 2025. REUTERS/Henry Romero/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum said on Thursday she will propose a constitutional reform aimed at further protecting Mexico’s national sovereignty, after the U.S. designated various Mexican cartels as foreign terrorist organizations.
“The Mexican people will under no circumstances accept interventions, intrusions, or any other action from abroad that are detrimental to the integrity, independence, or sovereignty of the nation… (including) violations of Mexican territory, whether by land, sea, or air,” Sheinbaum said during her regular morning news conference.
The United States on Wednesday designated the Sinaloa Cartel and other Mexican drug cartels as global terrorist organizations, a move that comes as concerns mount among some Mexican officials that U.S. President Donald Trump may be setting the stage to take unilateral military action inside Mexico, an idea floated repeatedly during his presidential campaign.
Sheinbaum said Mexico was not consulted by the United States about the decision to designate the groups as terrorist organizations.
Mexico has long opposed the move, arguing the cartels are not motivated by political ends like others on the terror list, but by profit.
The designation risks complicating international business in Mexico, including the operations of U.S. companies. It could also shift the legal landscape for U.S. asylum claims, potentially hurting migrants who are forced to pay extortion or ransoms to cartels, as they could be accused of supporting a terrorist organization.
Multiple iPhone 16e phones with the new C1 cellular modem are stress tested at an Apple lab, where hundreds of devices go through thousands of hours of continuous, repetitive testing, in Sunnyvale, California, U.S., February 18, 2025. REUTERS/Stephen Nellis Purchase Licensing Rights
Apple (AAPL.O) launched on Wednesday a budget-minded phone with artificial intelligence, the iPhone 16e, designed to win back mid-market customers at home and in crucial growth markets China and India.
The new phone, which drops the SE naming convention for Apple’s budget series, will take on popular Android smartphones at a time when rivals Samsung (005930.KS) and China’s Huawei are adding AI tools to their devices.
Sales of Apple phones dropped last quarter, and sales of its budget line of phones have plummeted as a proportion of iPhone revenue over the last decade.
The 16e will cost $599, a $170 boost from the previous entry level phone, the SE, although its features are closer to Apple’s flagships and include a powerful chip to run Apple Intelligence, a set of features with access to ChatGPT. Aside from having no wide-angle camera lens, one missing button and a slightly different display, the 16e looks much like its pricier siblings.
Apple stock was barely changed in midafternoon trade.
Late last month, Apple forecast strong sales growth, signaling iPhone sales would recover from a dip as it rolls out artificial intelligence features to more regions and languages. Analysts have cautioned that the roll-out is slow and Apple has not yet announced a data partner in China for the AI features.
“We’ve seen a limited appetite among many of the installed base to upgrade from previous versions, but the new phone reduces the cost hurdle of joining the Apple Intelligence bandwagon,” said Forrester principal analyst Dipanjan Chatterjee.
Sales of SE model as a share of total revenue for iPhones has dropped from 10% at its introduction in 2016 to about 1% last year, according to Counterpoint Research.
The 16e will likely help Apple in cost-sensitive markets such as Europe and China where buyers tend to pay for phones upfront, said Ben Bajarin, principal analyst at consulting firm Creative Strategies.
The iPhone 16e will be powered by the A18 chip used in more expensive models launched in September 2024 and will support Apple Intelligence out of the box.
It will be about $200 less expensive than the cheapest version of iPhone 16 launched in September and will be available only in black and white colors, while the more expensive iPhone 16 models come in a slew of bright shades.
The 16e will also be the first device from Apple to feature the C1 chip, its first in-house modem designed for cellular connectivity and a shift from chips made by Qualcomm (QCOM.O).
NO WIDE-ANGLE LENS
Its camera system will have a 48-megapixel sensor and two lenses, one of which will be a two times zoom lens integrated into the primary camera, but it will miss out on a wide-angle lens seen in more expensive models.
The 16e will have a notch at the top of its screen for the front-facing camera, while more advanced models have a screen that surrounds the camera.
It also leaves out a camera control button that can tweak camera settings and is available on the main iPhone 16 series.
SE models were known for their smaller screen size, but the 16e comes with a 6.1 inch display, the same as the least expensive iPhone 16 model.
This year’s much-anticipated update brings a change to its slab-design, nixing the SE’s physical home button and introducing Apple’s Face ID feature.
The iPhone 16e will be available for pre-order in 59 countries, including the U.S., China and India from February 21, with shipments starting from February 28.
Chief Minister-designate Rekha Gupta and her Council of Ministers will take oath at the Ramlila Maidan on Thursday afternoon in the presence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, marking a return of the BJP in Delhi after 26 years.
Gupta, 50, was chosen as Leader of the House in the newly constituted 8th Delhi Assembly, in a meeting of the BJP legislature party on Wednesday.
Delhi LG VK Saxena Invites Rekha Gupta To Form The New Govt
Delhi Lieutenant Governor V K Saxena invited Gupta to form the new government after she staked claim for it late Wednesday evening at Raj Niwas. She will become the 9th Chief Minister of Delhi after the administration of oath by the LG.
Besides Gupta, six newly elected MLAs — Parvesh Verma who defeated AAP supremo Arvind Kejriwal from the New Delhi seat, Ashish Sood, Pankaj Singh, Manjinder Singh Sirsa, Kapil Mishra and Ravinder Indraj — will take oath as members of the new Council of Ministers, according to a government notification.
The new Council of Ministers headed by Gupta is likely to hold its first meeting at the Delhi Secretariat around 3 pm and could implement the Mahila Samriddhi Yojna, under which eligible women will get a monthly payment of Rs 2,500, and Ayushman Bharat health insurance scheme, party sources claimed.
BJP Ends Decade-Long Rule Of Arvind Kejriwal-Led AAP In Delhi
The BJP ended a decade-long rule of Arvind Kejriwal-led AAP in Delhi, winning 48 of the 70 seats in the Assembly polls held on February 5. The BJP last had power in Delhi way back in 1993-98.
About Delhi CM-Designate Rekha Gupta
First-time MLA Gupta having risen through the ranks of the BJP, shares close ties with the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh, party leaders said.
A former Delhi University Students’ Union (DUSU) president and civic body councillor, Gupta is set to become the fourth woman chief minister of Delhi after Sushma Swaraj, Sheila Dikshit, and Atishi.
The Pentagon building is seen in Arlington, Virginia, U.S, April 6, 2023. REUTERS/Tom Brenner/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
The Pentagon said on Wednesday it was directing military leaders to draw up a list of potential cuts totaling about $50 billion from the upcoming budget for fiscal year 2026 to be redirected into President Donald Trump’s priorities for national defense.
The review could set the stage for Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to follow through with goals to invest more in the Asia-Pacific and prioritize securing the U.S. border with Mexico, along with other reforms.
It was unclear how the effort would square with other cost-savings initiatives led by Elon Musk’s government downsizing teams, which have started working from the Pentagon as civilian employees brace for job cuts.
Robert Salesses, performing the duties of the deputy defense secretary, said the military would develop a list of potential savings after examining the budget drawn up by the previous administration of President Joe Biden.
“The offsets are targeted at 8% of the Biden administration’s FY26 budget, totaling around $50 billion, which will then be spent on programs aligned with President Trump’s priorities,” Salesses said.
The statement clarifies a memo reported on Wednesday by Reuters from Hegseth, who asked some parts of the military to propose what could be cut as part of a potential 8% spending reduction for them over each of the next five years, U.S. officials said on Wednesday.
There was a long list of exemptions, including U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, funding for the military’s mission along the U.S. border with Mexico, as well as missile defense and autonomous weapons, one of the officials said.
The military’s commands that oversee operations in Europe, the Middle East and Africa were not exempt.
The Pentagon’s budget is approaching $1 trillion per year. In December, then-President Joe Biden signed a bill authorizing $895 billion in defense spending for the fiscal year ending September 30.
Hegseth has said publicly that the Pentagon’s focus is on U.S. border security and threats posed by China. He has said the U.S. can no longer be “primarily focused on the security of Europe”.
As Musk’s teams start their review, some civilian employees in the military said they had started receiving emails on Thursday saying they could be separated from the government since they were hired less than a year ago.
Leaders from across the political spectrum have long criticized waste and inefficiency at the Defense Department. But Democrats and civil service unions have said Musk, the world’s richest person, lacks the expertise to restructure the Pentagon, and the efforts of his team risk exposing classified programs.
Attempting to cancel defense programs could trigger pushback from lawmakers to defend spending in their electoral districts, a fact defense contractors are well aware of.
A sign for customers shopping for eggs at Trader Joe’s hangs by the cartons in Merrick, New York, U.S., February 16, 2025. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
Turkey has begun exporting around 15,000 tonnes of eggs to the United States as a devastating outbreak of bird flu is slashing U.S. production and sending prices soaring, a leading sector official said on Wednesday.
Deaths of millions of laying hens imperil U.S. President Donald Trump’s pledge to bring down everyday costs, as grocery stores ration supplies and restaurants raise prices for egg dishes.
Shipments to the U.S. from Turkey began this month and will continue until July, said Ibrahim Afyon, chairman of the Egg Producers Central Union in Turkey.
“The export will take place through our member companies with the required authorizations, while two firms will coordinate the process,” Afyon said.
“A total of 15,000 tonnes of eggs — equivalent to 700 containers — will be shipped,” he added.
The U.S. has been working to contain bird flu, which was first detected in dairy cattle in Texas last March and has since spread to more than 970 herds in 17 states. The virus has infected nearly 70 people since April, primarily farm workers exposed to infected poultry or cattle. One person who was infected died.
The outbreak in poultry began in 2022 and has wiped out about 162 million chickens, turkeys and other birds, according to U.S. data. A surge in recent infections is fuelling egg shortages.
“We support the temporary import of egg products to help ease the strain on the U.S. egg supply,” said Chad Gregory, CEO of United Egg Producers, a cooperative that represents U.S. egg farmers.
Faced with supply constraints, U.S. companies have sought alternative import markets, leading to negotiations with Turkish producers, Afyon said. The deal is expected to generate around $26 million in export revenue, he added.
Adani Group Chairman Gautam Adani. Credit: Reuters Photo
The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has told a federal judge here that its efforts to serve its complaint on Gautam Adani and Sagar Adani in the alleged bribery scheme are “ongoing”, including through a request for assistance to the Indian authorities.
The SEC submitted a status update Tuesday to Judge Nicholas Garaufis at the United States District Court, Eastern District of New York regarding its efforts to serve its complaint on Gautam Adani and Sagar Adani.
The SEC said that both Gautam Adani and Sagar Adani “are located in India, and the SEC’s efforts to serve them there are ongoing, including through a request for assistance to the Indian authorities to effect service under the Hague Service Convention for Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Matters.”
The SEC said that its complaint dated November 20 last year alleges that Gautam Adani and Sagar Adani violated the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws by “knowingly or recklessly making false and misleading representations concerning Adani Green Energy Ltd in connection with a September 2021 debt offering by Adani Green.
It said that because the “defendants are located in a foreign country, Rule 4(f) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) governs service of the Summons and Complaint.
FRCP 4(f) contains no set time limit for service, and the SEC may serve Defendants “by any internationally agreed means of service that is reasonably calculated to give notice,”… such as the Hague Service Convention.”
The SEC update, submitted by its Counsel Christopher Colorado, cited a case which notes that service via the Hague Service Convention is one permissible means of serving defendants located in India.
“Since the filing of its Complaint, SEC staff has been working to serve Defendants in accordance with FRCP 4(f). SEC staff has contacted Defendants or their counsel (to the extent SEC staff is aware of such counsel) and has sent them Notices of Lawsuit and Requests for Waiver of Service of Summons, including copies of the Complaint.
“Additionally, under Article 5(a) of the Hague Service Convention, the SEC has requested assistance from India’s Ministry of Law and Justice, the Central Authority for India under the Hague Service Convention.”
“That process is ongoing, and the SEC will continue its efforts to serve Defendants in India by the methods prescribed by FRCP 4(f)—including under the Hague Service Convention—and will keep the Court apprised of its progress,” the SEC said.
In November last year, the Securities and Exchange Commission had charged Gautam Adani, Sagar Adani and Cyril Cabanes, an executive of Azure Power Global Ltd., for conduct arising out of a massive bribery scheme.
In a parallel action, the US Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York unsealed criminal charges against Gautam and Sagar Adani and Cabanes, among other individuals connected to Adani Green and Azure Power.
Adani is being indicted by the US Department of Justice for his role in an alleged years-long scheme to pay $250 million (Rs 2173 crore) bribes to Indian officials in exchange for favourable solar power contracts.
The Adani group has said that the allegations by the Department of Justice and the SEC are “baseless” and has denied them.
“The allegations made by the US Department of Justice and the US Securities and Exchange Commission against directors of Adani Green are baseless and denied,” a spokesperson for the Adani Group had said in a statement.
The spokesperson pointed to a US Department of Justice statement that said “The charges in the indictment are allegations and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty”.
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, U.S., February 18, 2025. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque Purchase Licensing Rights
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday he has instructed the Justice Department to terminate all remaining Biden-era U.S. attorneys, asserting that the department had been “politicized like never before.”
“We must ‘clean house’ IMMEDIATELY, and restore confidence. America’s Golden Age must have a fair Justice System – THAT BEGINS TODAY,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social.
The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Last week, the White House sent termination notices to several U.S. Attorneys around the country who had been appointed by Democratic former President Joe Biden.
On Monday, several U.S. attorneys appointed by Biden announced they were stepping down. Others left the government last week.
While it is customary for U.S. Attorneys to step down after a change in the presidential administration, usually the incoming administration asks for their resignations and does not issue tersely worded termination letters, current and former Justice Department lawyers say.
The termination of the U.S. attorneys, who serve as the top federal law enforcement officers in their districts, is the latest in shake-ups at the Justice Department since Trump took office last month.
Career Justice Department officials normally remain in office from one administration to the next. Yet dozens in cities including Washington and New York have been fired or quit since Trump took office.
Donald Trump has taken aim at Ukraine after its President, Volodymyr Zelensky, said it was a “surprise” his country had not been invited to talks in Saudi Arabia on ending the war with Russia.
Saying he was “disappointed” by Ukraine’s reaction, he appeared to blame Ukraine for starting the war, saying the country “could have made a deal”.
A full-scale Russian invasion sparked the war in Ukraine almost three years ago.
Earlier on Tuesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov met US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Riyadh for the first high-level, face-to-face talks between the two countries since the invasion.
They agreed to appoint teams to start negotiating the end of the war.
Lavrov said his country would not accept peacekeeping forces from Nato countries in Ukraine under any peace deal, a proposal raised at a meeting of European members of Nato in Paris on Monday.
European Nato states, who remain committed to supporting Ukraine against Russia, have been smarting at being sidelined by Trump’s unilateral peace initiative, which reversed the resolutely pro-Ukraine policy of his predecessor as president, Joe Biden.
Speaking to reporters at his Mar-a-Lago residence, Trump was asked by the BBC what his message was to Ukrainians who might feel betrayed.
“I hear that they’re upset about not having a seat, well, they’ve had a seat for three years and a long time before that. This could have been settled very easily,” he said.
“You should have never started it. You could have made a deal,” he later added.
“I could have made a deal for Ukraine,” he said. “That would have given them almost all of the land, everything, almost all of the land – and no people would have killed, and no city would have been demolished.”
After the meeting in Riyadh, Trump said he was “much more confident”.
“They were very good,” he said. “Russia wants to do something. They want to stop the savage barbarianism.”
“I think I have the power to end this war,” he added.
Asked about the prospect of European countries sending troops to Ukraine, Trump said: “If they want to do that, that’s great, I’m all for it. If they want to do that, I think that’d be fine. I mean, I know France has mentioned it, others have mentioned it, UK has mentioned it.”
However, he added: “We won’t have to put any over there because, you know, we’re very far away.”
After Monday’s meeting in Paris, British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said any Ukraine peace deal would require a “US backstop” to deter Russia from attacking its neighbour again.
Sir Keir said a “US security guarantee was the only way to effectively deter Russia”, and vowed to discuss the “key elements” of a peace deal with Trump in Washington next week.
Sergei Lavrov and Marco Rubio held talks in Saudi Arabia
Also at the talks in Riyadh were US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and US National Security Advisor Mike Waltz, as well as Russian presidential aide Yury Ushakov and the head of Russia’s sovereign wealth fund, Kirill Dmitriev.
Stressing that Moscow would not agree to peacekeeping forces from Nato countries in Ukraine under any peace deal, Lavrov said: “Any appearance by armed forces under some other flag does not change anything. It is of course completely unacceptable.”
He said the US and Russia would appoint ambassadors to each other’s countries as soon as possible and create conditions to “restore co-operation in full”.
“It was a very useful conversation. We listened to each other, and we heard each other,” he said.
He reiterated Russia’s previous position that any expansion of the Nato defence alliance – and Ukraine joining it – would be a “direct threat” to Russia.
Rubio for his part said he was “convinced” Russia was “willing to begin to engage in a serious process” to end the conflict.
“There has to be concessions made by all sides. We’re not going to predetermine what those are.”
“Today is the first step of a long and difficult journey, but an important one”, he added.
Rubio said the European Union was going to “have to be at the table at some point because they have sanctions as well that have been imposed”.
On the absence of Ukraine at the meeting, he insisted “no-one is being sidelined”.
“Everyone involved in that conflict has to be OK with it, it has to be acceptable to them,” he added.
The talks in Paris, which were hastily arranged in response to the apparent rapprochement between Russia and the US under Trump, did not agree a unified position.
Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz said discussing sending troops to Ukraine at present was “completely premature”.
Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk also said he did not intend to send troops while Italy’s Giorgia Meloni – the only European leader to attend Trump’s inauguration – expressed doubts.
She told the meeting in Paris that deploying European troops would be “the most complex and the least effective” way of securing peace in Ukraine.
Ukraine’s leader looked visibly tired and upset when he gave his reaction to the Roiyadh meeting during a news conference in Turkey.
“We want everything to be fair and so that nobody decides anything behind our back,” Zelensky said.
“You cannot make decisions without Ukraine on how to end the war in Ukraine.”
He will be alarmed by all the smiles on both American and Russian faces in Riyadh, but he will know that he can do little to change whatever they agree on over his head.
The Ukrainian president will also know that his country’s chances of resisting – let alone defeating – Russian troops without American help are very slim.
Palakkad, Kerala: A procession in Kerala’s Palakkad district displaying images of Hamas leaders during an annual cultural fest drew sharp criticism on the social media.
The banners, carried atop elephants by a group of youths, were part of the “Thrithala Fest” in Thrithala, Palakkad, on Sunday evening.
The display of the images led to heated discussions on the social media, with some alleging the event was linked to a religious festival and many questioning the organisers for allowing such banners.
The participation of Congress leader and former MLA VT Balram has further fuelled the debate.
However, a person, who is part of the organising committee and wishes to remain anonymous, accused a section of young people of attempting to trigger a communal issue over the procession, which is in no way connected to a religious festival.
In a Facebook post, Congress leader Balram criticised a section of the media for allegedly using the controversy surrounding the Thrithala Fest to target the Muslim community and Kerala, even at the national level.
He stated that all Indians who are not affiliated with the Sangh Parivar support the Palestinian people and their aspirations for independence.
The Congress leader said that whether Hamas leaders should be glorified is a separate issue but condemned the Sangh Parivar for allegedly using the matter as part of an anti-Muslim hate campaign.
“Thrithala will stand united against such divisive attempts,” he wrote.
Clarifying the nature of the festival, he stated that ‘Thrithala Fest’ is an annual public celebration of the region, not a religious event linked to any mosque or place of worship.
He noted that the festival’s organising committee includes representatives from various religious and political backgrounds. Leaders from various parties, officials, and tourists regularly participate in the event.
He also mentioned that a festival supplement had included congratulatory messages from Minister M B Rajesh, MP Abdusamad Samadani, himself, the BJP constituency president, and others. This would serve as evidence that ‘Thrithala Fest’ is a national event rather than a religious gathering, he said.
Meanwhile, the BJP on Monday demanded that a case be registered against the event’s organisers.
BJP state president K Surendran termed the incident “shocking” and accused both the ruling and opposition parties of appeasement politics.
A Delta Air Lines jet flipped on its roof while landing Monday at Toronto’s Pearson Airport, but all 80 people on board survived and those hurt had relatively minor injuries, the airport’s chief executive said.
Snow was being blown by winds gusting to 40 mph (65 kph) when the flight from Minneapolis carrying 76 passengers and four crew attempted to land at around 2:15 p.m. Communications between the tower and pilot were normal on approach and it’s not clear what went so drastically wrong when the plane touched down.
Canadian authorities held two brief news conferences but provided no details on the crash. Video posted to social media only showed the aftermath with the Mitsubishi CRJ-900LR overturned, the fuselage seemingly intact and firefighters dousing what was left of the fire as passengers climbed out and walked across the tarmac.
“We are very grateful there was no loss of life and relatively minor injuries,” Deborah Flint, CEO of Greater Toronto Airports Authority, told reporters.
Toronto Pearson Fire Chief Todd Aitken said 18 passengers were taken to the hospital. Earlier in the day, Ornge air ambulance said it was transporting one pediatric patient to Toronto’s SickKids hospital and two injured adults to other hospitals in the city.
Emergency personnel reached the plane within a few minutes and Aitken said the response “went as planned.” He said “the runway was dry and there was no cross-wind conditions.”
The crash was the fourth major aviation accident in North America in the past three weeks. A commercial jetliner and an Army helicopter collided near Reagan National Airport in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 29, killing 67 people. A medical transportation plane crashed in Philadelphia on Jan. 31, killing the six people on board and another person on the ground. And on Feb. 6, 10 people were killed in a plane crash in Alaska.
The last major crash at Pearson was on Aug. 2, 2005, when an Airbus A340 landing from Paris skidded off the runway and burst into flames amid stormy weather. All 309 passengers and crew aboard Air France Flight 358 survived the crash.
On Monday, Pearson was experiencing blowing snow and winds of 32 mph (51 kph) gusting to 40 mph (65 kph), according to the Meteorological Service of Canada. The temperature was about 16.5 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 8.6 degrees Celsius).
The Delta flight was cleared to land at about 2:10 p.m. Audio recordings show the control tower warned the pilots of a possible air flow “bump” on the approach.
“It sounds to me like a controller trying to be helpful, meaning the wind is going to give you a bumpy ride coming down, that you’re going to be up and down through the glide path,” said John Cox, CEO of aviation safety consulting firm Safety Operating Systems in St. Petersburg, Florida.
“So it was windy. But the airplanes are designed and certified to handle that,” Cox said. “The pilots are trained and experienced to handle that.”
The plane came to a rest at the intersection of Runways 23 and 15L, not far from the start of the runway. Just after the crash, tower controllers spoke with the crew of a medical helicopter that had just left Pearson and was returning to help.
“Just so you’re aware, there’s people outside walking around the aircraft there,” a controller said.
“Yeah, we’ve got it. The aircraft is upside down and burning,” the medical helicopter pilot responded.
Cox, who flew for U.S. Air for 25 years and has worked on U.S. National Transportation Safety Board investigations, said the CRJ-900 aircraft is a proven aircraft that’s been in service for decades and does a good job of handling inclement weather.
He said it’s unusual for a plane to end up on its roof.
“We’ve seen a couple of cases of takeoffs where airplanes have ended up inverted, but it’s pretty rare,” Cox said.
Among the questions that need to be answered, Cox said, is why the crashed plane was missing its right wing.
“If one wing is missing, it’s going to have a tendency to roll over,” he said. “Those are going to be central questions as to what happened to the wing and the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder. They will be found, if not today, tomorrow, and the Transportation Safety Board of Canada will read them out and they will have a very good understanding of what actually occurred here.”
The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement that the Transportation Safety Board of Canada would head up the investigation and provide any updates. The NTSB in the U.S. said it is leading a team to assist in the Canadian investigation.
Delta CEO Ed Bastian said in a statement that “the hearts of the entire global Delta family are with those affected by today’s incident at Toronto-Pearson International Airport.”
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said he has been in touch with Delta about the crash.
Israeli PM revealed a blueprint to redevelop Gaza into an idyllic urban and rural settlement (Image: Israel PMO)
Benjamin Netanyahu has unveiled a vision for the future of Gaza, following closely on the heels of Donald Trump’s contentious plans for the region.
The Israeli Prime Minister shared a blueprint, complete with striking CGI renderings, proposing the transformation of Gaza into an urban oasis. This plan mirrors Trump’s idea to convert Gaza into “the Riviera of the Middle East” which the former U.S. President announced last week during a press conference with Netanyahu.
According to The Sun, speculation is rife that Trump may have been briefed on Netanyahu’s AI-enhanced vision of Gaza. Nadav Shtrauchler, a previous strategist for Netanyahu, commented to the publication: “I think it’d been shown to Trump one way or another.
“Trump didn’t wake up in the morning and come up with the idea, there would have been routes to this, probably from Israel. It was planted somehow.”
The futuristic designs, labeled “Gaza 2035” potentially influencing Trump, depict the area adorned with avant-garde skyscrapers and connected by a 132-mile railway to NEOM.
The ambitious proposal touts “US dominance” and aims to elevate Gaza “from crisis to prosperity” by completely reconstructing the territory “from nothing”.
This revelation comes amidst the furor caused by Trump, who infamously pledged to “take over” the Gaza Strip and transform it into a luxurious Middle Eastern “Riviera”. The Republican, aged 78, faced global backlash after suggesting that displaced Palestinians should be resettled elsewhere.
Trump claimed his strategy would generate “thousands of jobs” and turn the area into a “magnificent” destination inhabited by “the world’s people”.
Trump remarked: “The US will take over the Gaza Strip, and we will do a job with it too. We’ll make that into an international unbelievable place. The potential in the Gaza Strip is unbelievable. You have to learn from history, you just can’t let it keep repeating itself.”
Among the numerous leaders to criticise these comments was Sir Keir Starmer, who reiterated his support for a two-state solution as the key to resolving the region’s issues.
4.0 Magnitude Earthquake Hits Delhi-NCR on February 16, 2023 | PTI
Strong tremors were felt in the national capital and adjoining areas as an earthquake of 4.0 magnitude struck the region early on Monday. There are no reports of any injuries or collateral damage. The depth of the earthquake was only 5km.
Notably, shallow earthquakes, originating five or 10 kilometres below the surface, tend to cause more damage than those originating deep below the surface. Panic gripped the region as buildings started shaking due to the earthquake. Residents rushed out of their apartments and houses for safety.
Netizens shared videos of of the earthquake on social media showing houses, electric poles, fans and solar panels swaying due to the earthquake.
A woman in her 50s who was out on a morning walk in E Block of Noida Sector 20 said, “‘Hum log bahar park me walk kar rahe the toh pata nahin chala. Lekin kafi tej tha. Log bahar aa gaye. (We were walking in the park, so we didn’t feel it strongly. But it was quite strong. People came rushing out)’,” she told PTI.
Naresh Kumar, a resident of West Delhi, said this was the first time that he had experienced such a strong tremor.
Ratanlal Sharma, who was waiting at New Delhi railway station for a train to Prayagraj, said he was at the platform when he felt a sudden jolt. “It felt like a train suddenly came to a screeching halt,” he said.
Kim Sae-ron on the red carpet in 2017. Pic: Reuters
South Korean actress Kim Sae-ron has been found dead at her home in Seoul, according to the Yonhap news agency.
A friend discovered the Netflix actress after going to her house.
They called the police who found no signs of foul play, according to Yonhap.
Kim, 24, was one of South Korea’s most promising actresses and starred in a number of box-office hits, most recently in the 2023 hit Netflix series Bloodhounds.
Her career took a hit, however, after she crashed her car while driving drunk in 2022.
She was fined 20 million won (£11,000) over the incident and largely withdrew from acting.
She attempted to return to acting last year but later removed herself again over health issues, according to Yonhap.
Kim rose to prominence in 2009 with her role in A Brand New Life, which saw her appear at the Cannes Film Festival.
JD Vance has taken aim at the UK and Europe over what he claimed was “backsliding” free speech and democracy.
The US vice president pulled no punches when addressing European leaders at the Munich Security Conference in Germany on Friday.
“When I look at Europe today, it’s sometimes not so clear what happened to some of the Cold War’s winners,” he said, during a speech that roamed across Europe targeting perceived infringes on free speech.
Speaking with unusual directness to some of the US’s closest allies, he added: “Perhaps most concerningly, I look to our very dear friends, the United Kingdom, where the backslide away from conscience rights has placed the basic liberties of religious Britons, in particular, in the crosshairs.”
Pic: Boris Roessler/picture-alliance/dpa/AP
Mr Vance criticised the country for the conviction of 51-year-old Adam Smith-Connor, who was given a conditional discharge for breaching a safe zone around an abortion clinic in Bournemouth.
“After British law enforcement spotted him and demanded to know what he was praying for, Adam replied simply, it was on behalf of the unborn son he and his former girlfriend had aborted years before,” Mr Vance said.
He then went on to talk about “safe access zones” in Scotland – a 200m wide area (150m in England) outside abortion clinics to stop anti-abortion campaigners leafleting, holding vigils, or showing graphic images to people near the sites.
‘New sheriff in town’
“In Britain, and across Europe, free speech I fear is in retreat,” he said.
“In Washington, there is a new sheriff in town and under Donald Trump’s leadership we may disagree with your views but we will fight to defend your right to offer it in the public square, agree or disagree,” Mr Vance said to muted applause.
He then switched his focus to the car attack in Munich on Thursday, in which 36 people were injured.
Mr Vance wrongly described the suspect in that attack as an asylum seeker, when in reality he has lived in Munich since he arrived as an unaccompanied minor in 2016 and has a work permit.
Mr Vance also spoke about an annulled election in Romania, and issues in Sweden, Germany and Brussels.
‘Like it or not, Brexit won’
As he listed values he believes Europe is diverging away from the US over, he raised immigration.
“I can’t bring it up again without thinking about the terrible victims who had a beautiful winter day in Munich ruined,” he said.
“Our thoughts and prayers are with them and will remain with them. But why did this happen in the first place?”
He went on: “No voter on this continent went to the ballot box to open the floodgates to millions of unvetted immigrants.
“But you know what they did vote for in England? They voted for Brexit and, agree or disagree, they voted for it.
“And more and more all over Europe, they’re voting for political leaders who promised to put an end to out-of-control migration.”
UKRAINE’S brave President Volodymyr Zelensky has today called for the creation of an “Army of Europe” to take on Russia.
Zelensky spoke about his ambitions to create a continental military force at the Munich Security Conference – as he blasted Vladimir Putin a “liar, weak and predictable”.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has called for the creation of an ‘Army of Europe’ to take on RussiaCredit: AFP
The 47-year-old Ukrainian leader made the comments as he notably left out Washington’s involvement in his European army dream.
It comes amid Donald Trump urging Ukraine to find a resolution to end the war quickly.
President Trump has already shared a phone call with both Zelensky and Putin with all three men looking to agree to a peace deal.
Tyrant Putin is expected to make a number of deranged demands when he finally meets Trump for Ukraine peace for talks.
Whereas Zelensky has said he won’t accept any peace deal unless his country is given security guarantees.
Speaking in Germany today, Zelensky proposed a new plan to achieve safety for Ukraine going forwards.
He said: “Many leaders have talked about Europe and that needs its own military, an army of Europe and I believe the time has come.
“The Armed Forces of Europe must be created.
“Without Ukraine’s army, Europe’s army’s will not be enough to stop Russia.
“Only our army in Europe has real, modern battlefield experience but our army alone is not enough too.
“And we need what you can provide weapons, training, sanctions, financing, political pressure and unity.”
The Ukrainian president said Europe should be looking to create such a military separate from Nato in case “America might say no to Europe on issues that threaten it”.
He added that after three years of fighting, Ukraine has managed to build up the foundations of a European army and should now act on it.
“As we fight this war and lay the groundwork for peace and security we must build the Armed Forces of Europe so that Europe’s future depends only on Europeans and decisions about Europe are made in Europe,” he said.
“Europe has everything it takes but it needs to come together.
“We need confidence in our own friends so that others have no choice but to respect Europe’s power and without a European army that is impossible.”
Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk appeared to support Zelensky’s calls as he said Europe urgently needs a plan over security.
He said he fears “global players will decide” Europe’s future if they don’t prepare.
The calls for a united force on the continent comes as disagreements over Ukraine’s potential Nato membership continues to rage on.
Ukraine has wanted to be a part of Nato for years – an issue that helped spark Vlad’s initial invasion three years ago.
This would give them protection from any foreign forces as an attack on a Nato country would result in a counter strike conducted by the remaining nations.
Moscow has constantly said they will not allow Ukraine to join the alliance with Putin vowing to continue his assault until he is given these assurances.
The US has also been accused of rolling over to Russia before negotiations had even started following on from Putin and Trump’s positive chat.
Over the past few days, those close to The White House have said Ukraine won’t be allowed to go back to its 2014 borders before the annexing of Crimea.
US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has also been adamant that there is no chance Ukraine would be allowed to join Nato.
Zelensky told global leaders in Munich he is refusing to accept that Ukraine won’t be allowed a Nato membership.
He even said the organisation needs to stop allowing Putin to dictate things on his terms and instead help Ukraine to prevent a wider war breaking out in Europe.
A general view of a construction site where many tall apartment buildings have been constructed in recent years, in Parramatta, Sydney, August 14, 2023. REUTERS/Stella Qiu/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
Australia will ban foreign investors from buying existing homes in the country for two years, its government said on Sunday, in an effort to boost under-pressure housing supply.
“We’re banning foreign purchases of established dwellings from April 1, 2025, until March 31 2027,” treasurer Jim Chalmers said in a statement with housing minister Clare O’Neil. It added that a review would be undertaken on whether the ban would be extended.
Dissatisfaction with housing in Australia reached an all-time high last year and it is an issue that is expected to dominate a general election due by May.
O’Neil said in comments televised by the Australian Broadcasting Corp that the ban would likely free up around 1,800 properties per year for local buyers.
“These initiatives are a small but important part of our already big and broad housing agenda which is focused on boosting supply and helping more people into homes,” the ministers’ statement said.
Housing is the largest contributor to the rising cost of living in Australia and is set to be a key issue at the upcoming election. A recent poll had the centre-left Labor government lagging its main conservative political opposition.
The government recently passed housing reforms including a shared equity scheme and tax incentives for developers, to ease cost pressures and achieve a target of building 1.2 million new homes by 2030.\
Delhi Railway Station News: A stampede situation at New Delhi Railway Station claimed 18 lives and left several others injured due to an uncontrollable crowd surge. Authorities have launched a high-level inquiry into the incident.
15 Dead in Delhi Railway Station Stampede Photo : PTI
Delhi: At least 18 people, including five children, died, and several others were injured in a stampede-like situation at New Delhi Railway Station on Saturday night. The Delhi railway station stampede incident created chaos among passengers, but authorities managed to bring the situation under control. The injured were rushed to hospital, as confirmed by the Ministry of Railways.
The deceased include nine women, 4 men and five children. Delhi Station Stampede: What Happened at New Delhi Railway Station?
The incident occurred when the Prayagraj Express was stationed at platform number 14, with a large crowd gathered there, said Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP) Railway, KPS Malhotra. The situation worsened as Swatantrata Senani Express and Bhubaneswar Rajdhani were delayed, leading to more passengers gathering on platforms 12, 13, and 14.
According to DCP Malhotra, the sudden surge in the number of passengers was due to the sale of 1,500 general tickets. “That’s why the crowd became ‘uncontrollable.’ There was a stampede-like situation at platform no. 14 and near the escalator near platform no. 1,” he said.
While Indian Railways dismissed reports of a stampede as “a rumour,” they confirmed that an undisclosed number of people had been injured and taken to hospital. The Ministry of Railways stated that the incident occurred at around 10 pm when an “unprecedented rush situation” developed near platforms 13 and 14.
“Some of the passengers present there on the platforms fainted due to this sudden rush further leading to the rumours of a stampede-like situation. This led to the spread of panic. The situation was later controlled by easing the rush situation,” the Ministry said. “Northern Railways immediately ran four special trains to evacuate the unprecedented sudden rush. Now rush has been reduced. In the meanwhile, the fainted & injured passengers have been taken to nearby hospitals by RPF & Delhi Police.” PM Modi Extends Condolences
The tragic incident has prompted a high-level inquiry by the Railways. Several leaders, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, expressed their sorrow over the loss of lives.
PM Modi took to X (formerly Twitter) and wrote, “Distressed by the stampede at New Delhi Railway Station. My thoughts are with all those who have lost their loved ones. I pray that the injured have a speedy recovery. The authorities are assisting all those who have been affected by this stampede.”
As per the notification issued by the Department of Revenue, bourbon whiskey would now attract 50 per cent customs duty on its import.
The US is the primary exporter of bourbon whiskey to India accounting for about one-fourth of all such liquor imported into India. (Representative image)
As per the notification issued by the Department of Revenue, bourbon whiskey would now attract 50 per cent customs duty on its import.
India has slashed import duty on bourbon whiskey to 50 per cent as it warmed up to negotiating a mega trade deal with the US.
The reduction in customs duty on bourbon whiskey was notified on February 13 just ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s talks with US President Donald Trump.
However, there has been no reduction in basic customs duty on import of other liquors. They would continue to attract 100 per cent duty.
The US is the primary exporter of bourbon whiskey to India accounting for about one-fourth of all such liquor imported into India.
As per the notification issued by the Department of Revenue, bourbon whiskey would now attract 50 per cent customs duty on its import.
Paris 2024 Olympics – Athletics – Men’s 5000m Final – Stade de France, Saint-Denis, France – August 10, 2024. Grant Fisher of United States reacts. REUTERS/Aleksandra Szmigiel/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
American Grant Fisher smashed the world indoor 5,000 meters record at the Boston University David Hemery Valentine Invitational on Friday, just a week after setting the indoor 3,000 meters record.
Fisher clocked 12 minutes 44.09 seconds, lowering the 12:49.60 mark set by Ethiopia’s Kenenisa Bekele in 2004.
The 27-year-old Fisher, who won bronze in both the 5,000 and 10,000m at last year’s Paris Olympics, had broke the world indoor 3,000m record at the Millrose Games in New York on Saturday.
The UK must be prepared to go to war with Russia if Vladimir Putin decides to escalate his war in eastern Europe, a senior MP has said.
European leaders are scrambling to respond to Donald Trump’s announcement yesterday that he discussed a plan to end the war in Ukraine with the Russian president.
In the House of Commons on Thursday, MPs sharply criticised the move, comparing it to Neville Chamberlain’s ill-fated appeasement campaign that failed to stop the Second World War.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has also drawn a stark line between the US president’s position and his own, saying: ‘There’s no negotiation about Ukraine which doesn’t include Ukraine.’
Directing questions at defence minister Maria Eagle in the chamber this afternoon, MPs made clear their concerns over the potential repercussions of Trump’s move.
Sir Julian Lewis, the Conservative former head of the defence select committee, asked: ‘Will the Government impress on President Trump at every possible opportunity that the reason why appeasement led to World War Two was that it left a vacuum in Europe? ‘
He continued: ‘Whereas the reason why the occupation of Eastern Europe at the end of that war did not lead to World War Three was the United States filled any possible vacuum and contained further aggression.
‘So if he is going for a settlement against the wishes of the Ukrainian people, the least he can do is to guarantee directly the security of that part of Ukraine which remains unoccupied.’
Vladimir Putin’s call with Donald Trump was his first with a US president since the invasion of Ukraine (Picture: AP)
Johanna Baxter, the Labour MP for Paisley and South Renfrewshire, echoed his sentiment, saying ‘if reports of the call between President Trump and Moscow are to be believed, then this is less the Art of the Deal and more a charter for appeasement’.
Eagle responded: ‘I’ve already said quite clearly that the fate of Ukraine in these negotiations can’t be determined without Ukraine being fully involved, and that is our priority.
‘At the moment to put them in the strongest position, war fighting is still happening, to put them in the strongest possible position to negotiate from strength.’
Tory MP Sir Bernard Jenkin told the minister ‘some of the defence chiefs have been expressing this, that we must be ready to fight a war with Russia if necessary, in order to be able to deter Russia’.
He added that this would be necessary ‘if we are to be in any position to guarantee the security of an independent and sovereign Ukraine, after whatever is agreed between President Trump and President Putin’.
Speaking to ITV’s Robert Peston, Sir Keir said his ‘position is the NATO position’.
The PM said: ‘Ukrainians want this conflict to end. It could end tomorrow if Russia stopped the aggression and withdrew its troops, and we must never lose sight of that.
‘But Ukraine needs to be in the strongest possible position. Ukrainians want peace. Those that have had to flee their country want to go back to their country.
‘But this has to be led by Ukraine.’
On Friday, Sir Keir Starmer said Britain is committed to Ukraine being on an ‘irreversible path’ to joining Nato after the US stated Nato membership for Kyiv is not a realistic prospect.
Britain has so far sought to strike a delicate balance between supporting Ukraine against Russia’s invasion and keeping Donald Trump, who says he has agreed with Vladimir Putin to start ‘negotiations’ to end the conflict, on side.
But David Lammy, the UK Foreign Secretary, has told broadcasters: ‘We are still some way from a negotiated peace.’
In a readout of the Prime Minister’s conversation with Mr Zelensky, a Downing Street spokeswoman said: ‘The Prime Minister began by reiterating the UK’s concrete support for Ukraine, for as long as it’s needed.
‘He was unequivocal that there could be no talks about Ukraine, without Ukraine.
‘Ukraine needed strong security guarantees, further lethal aid and a sovereign future, and it could count on the UK to step up, he added.
‘The Prime Minister reiterated the UK’s commitment to Ukraine being on an irreversible path to Nato as agreed by allies at the Washington Summit last year.’
THIS is the ultra-luxury UFO submarine that can dive 650ft under the ocean and host 12-hour undersea parties.
The posh pod can be rented out for all-night bashes – and you can even get married hundreds of metres underwater.
The Triton 660/9 AVA is kitted out with surround sound, mood lighting and climate control for the ultimate custom experience.
The Florida-based engineers Triton Submarines said they “threw out the rule book” when designing the new model.
It can transform into anything from a casino to a cocktail bar during its 12-hour cruises.
The makers promise that “activities are limited only by the owner’s imagination”.
Guests on board are treated to stunning 360-degree views of the ocean, fine dining, spa treatments and subsea gaming experiences.
The swanky sub is oval-shaped and 3 metres long by 5 metres wide.
The space inside is 2.3 metres, leaving plenty of room for even the tallest of passengers.
Eight guests can fit in the plush leather seats alongside the pilot – or six if you plump for the smaller version.
The underwater craft also weighs a hefty 11 tonnes.
That’s because a lot of tough material is needed for the sub to endure the extreme conditions of the deep ocean.
The sub dives to depths where the pressure is 20 times greater than we experience on land.
The all-important controls for the sit in the middle of the vessel, in a space known as the Halo Cockpit.
This sub is also the first to feature the new wireless Hammerhead Controller, which can be used to drive the vessel from any seat in the pod.
Passengers can even have a crack at driving the thing around, under the watchful eye of the pilot.
Triton says the secret to creating such a roomy sub is their “world-first free-form acrylic hulls”.
They add: “As the shape remains constant across its width, so much more of the space is realised as additional headroom, legroom and usable space.”
The Triton sub can be booked for locations around the world, with past dive spots including the Great Barrier Reef, Antarctica, Japan, the Galapagos and the Red Sea.