Five countries win seats on the UN Security Council

Annalena Baerbock of Germany addresses the United Nations General Assembly after she was elected as president of the 80th session of the body, Monday, June 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Five countries won seats on the United Nations Security Council on Tuesday in uncontested elections and will start serving two-year terms in January on the U.N.’s most powerful but deeply divided body.

The 193-member General Assembly held a secret-ballot vote for the five rotating seats on the 15-member council. Bahrain received 186 votes, Congo 183 votes, Liberia 181 votes, Colombia 180 votes and Latvia 178 votes.

This will be the first time on the council for Latvia, which was forcibly incorporated into the Soviet Union and gained independence again after its collapse in 1991.

Latvian Foreign Minister Baiba Braže told reporters after the vote her Baltic nation is ready for the responsibility, saying, “Our historical experience puts us in the position to understand, empathize with, and forge partnerships across every region in the world.”

“We know the value of freedom,” she said. “We know the fragility of peace and the power of multilateralism to safeguard it.”

Braže said Latvia will spare no effort to achieve just and lasting peace in Ukraine and to alleviate suffering in the Middle East, Gaza, Africa and other conflicts around the globe.

Bahrain will be the Arab representative on the council, and Foreign Minister Abdullatif bin Rashid Al Zayani said his country’s election to the council for a second time reinforces its determination to be “a proactive contributor” to international peace and security.

“Our goal is to fortify peace and stability within our region,” Al Zayani said, stressing that resolving the decades-old Palestinian-Israeli conflict is “the cornerstone for achieving peace in the region.”

The immediate requirement, he said, is a ceasefire and massive influx of humanitarian aid into Gaza, the release of all hostages taken from Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and progress toward a two-state solution and “a viable state of Palestine.”

The Security Council is mandated in the U.N. Charter with ensuring international peace and security, but it has failed in the two major conflicts because of the veto power of Russia on Ukraine and the United States, Israel’s closest ally, on Gaza.

There have been decades of efforts to reform the Security Council to reflect the geopolitical realities of the world in 2025, not of the post-World War II era 80 years ago, when the United Nations was established. But they have all failed.

The council still includes five veto-wielding permanent members — the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France — and 10 elected members from the U.N.’s different regional groups. One major failing is the absence of a permanent seat for Africa or Latin America and the Caribbean.

Under its current rules, five new council members are elected every year. In January, the newly elected countries will replace Algeria, Guyana, South Korea, Sierra Leone and Slovenia.

Foreign Minister Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner of Congo, which will be serving its third term on the council, told the council its election not only reflects confidence in her country, “it is also a reflection of Africa’s unity and its rightful place in shaping the global peace and security agenda.”

Asked about the ongoing fighting by armed groups in the country’s mineral-rich east, she said Congo will bring to the council the knowledge of dealing with decades of conflict, the challenges of U.N. peacekeeping operations and protecting civilians, and “the convergence between conflict, natural resources, and environmental changes.”

Source : https://apnews.com/article/un-security-council-new-members-latvia-36b9ed65e770f6fed3354872fc14dafe

 

Trump Taps Palantir to Compile Data on Americans

The Trump administration has expanded Palantir’s work with the government, spreading the company’s technology — which could easily merge data on Americans — throughout agencies.

Alex Karp, a co-founder and the chief executive of Palantir, at a forum in Washington in April. The Trump administration has expanded Palantir’s work across the federal government.Credit…Caroline Gutman for The New York Times

In March, President Trump signed an executive order calling for the federal government to share data across agencies, raising questions over whether he might compile a master list of personal information on Americans that could give him untold surveillance power.

Mr. Trump has not publicly talked about the effort since. But behind the scenes, officials have quietly put technological building blocks into place to enable his plan. In particular, they have turned to one company: Palantir, the data analysis and technology firm.

The Trump administration has expanded Palantir’s work across the federal government in recent months. The company has received more than $113 million in federal government spending since Mr. Trump took office, according to public records, including additional funds from existing contracts as well as new contracts with the Department of Homeland Security and the Pentagon. (This does not include a $795 million contract that the Department of Defense awarded the company last week, which has not been spent.)

Representatives of Palantir are also speaking to at least two other agencies — the Social Security Administration and the Internal Revenue Service — about buying its technology, according to six government officials and Palantir employees with knowledge of the discussions.

The push has put a key Palantir product called Foundry into at least four federal agencies, including D.H.S. and the Health and Human Services Department. Widely adopting Foundry, which organizes and analyzes data, paves the way for Mr. Trump to easily merge information from different agencies, the government officials said.

Creating detailed portraits of Americans based on government data is not just a pipe dream. The Trump administration has already sought access to hundreds of data points on citizens and others through government databases, including their bank account numbers, the amount of their student debt, their medical claims and any disability status.

Mr. Trump could potentially use such information to advance his political agenda by policing immigrants and punishing critics, Democratic lawmakers and critics have said. Privacy advocates, student unions and labor rights organizations have filed lawsuits to block data access, questioning whether the government could weaponize people’s personal information.

Palantir’s selection as a chief vendor for the project was driven by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency, according to the government officials. At least three DOGE members formerly worked at Palantir, while two others had worked at companies funded by Peter Thiel, an investor and a founder of Palantir.

Some current and former Palantir employees have been unnerved by the work. The company risks becoming the face of Mr. Trump’s political agenda, four employees said, and could be vulnerable if data on Americans is breached or hacked. Several tried to distance the company from the efforts, saying any decisions about a merged database of personal information rest with Mr. Trump and not the firm.

This month, 13 former employees signed a letter urging Palantir to stop its endeavors with Mr. Trump. Linda Xia, a signee who was a Palantir engineer until last year, said the problem was not with the company’s technology but with how the Trump administration intended to use it.

“Data that is collected for one reason should not be repurposed for other uses,” Ms. Xia said. “Combining all that data, even with the noblest of intentions, significantly increases the risk of misuse.”

Mario Trujillo, a lawyer with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group, said the government typically collected data for good reasons, such as to accurately levy taxes. But “if people can’t trust that the data they are giving the government will be protected, that it will be used for things other than what they gave it for, it will lead to a crisis of trust,” he said.

Palantir declined to comment on its work with the Trump administration and pointed to its blog, which details how the company handles data.

“We act as a data processor, not a data controller,” it said. “Our software and services are used under direction from the organisations that license our products: these organisations define what can and cannot be done with their data; they control the Palantir accounts in which analysis is conducted.”

The White House did not comment on the use of Palantir’s technology and referred to Mr. Trump’s executive order, which said he wanted to “eliminate information silos and streamline data collection across all agencies to increase government efficiency and save hard-earned taxpayer dollars.”

Some details of Palantir’s government contracts and DOGE’s work to compile data were previously reported by Wired and CNN.

Palantir, which was founded in 2003 by Alex Karp and Mr. Thiel and went public in 2020, specializes in finding patterns in data and presenting the information in ways that are easy to process and navigate, such as charts and maps. Its main products include Foundry, a data analytics platform, and Gotham, which helps organize and draw conclusions from data and is tailored for security and defense purposes.

In an interview last year, Mr. Karp, Palantir’s chief executive, said the company’s role was “the finding of hidden things” by sifting through data.

Palantir has long worked with the federal government. Its government contracts span the Defense Department and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. During the pandemic, the Biden administration signed a contract with Palantir to manage the distribution of vaccines through the C.D.C.

Mr. Trump’s election in November boosted Palantir’s stock, which has risen more than 140 percent since then. Mr. Karp, who donated to the Democratic Party last year, has welcomed Mr. Trump’s win and called Mr. Musk the most “qualified person in the world” to remake the U.S. government.

At the I.R.S., Palantir engineers joined in April to use Foundry to organize data gathered on American taxpayers, two government officials said. Their work began as a way to create a single, searchable database for the I.R.S., but has since expanded, they said. Palantir is in talks for a permanent contract with the I.R.S., they said.

A Treasury Department representative said that the I.R.S. was updating its systems to serve American taxpayers, and that Palantir was contracted to complete the work with I.R.S. engineers.

Palantir also recently began helping Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s enforcement and removal operations team, according to two Palantir employees and two current and former D.H.S. officials. The work is part of a $30 million contract that ICE signed with Palantir in April to build a platform to track migrant movements in real time.

Some D.H.S. officials exchanged emails with DOGE officials in February about merging some Social Security information with records kept by immigration officials, according to screenshots of the messages viewed by The New York Times.

In a statement, Tricia McLaughlin, a D.H.S. spokeswoman, did not address Palantir’s new work with the agency and said the company “has had contracts with the federal government for 14 years.”

Palantir representatives have also held talks with the Social Security Administration and the Department of Education to use the company’s technology to organize the agencies’ data, according to two Palantir employees and officials in those agencies.

The Social Security Administration and Education Department did not respond to requests for comment.

The goal of uniting data on Americans has been quietly discussed by Palantir engineers, employees said, adding that they were worried about collecting so much sensitive information in one place. The company’s security practices are only as good as the people using them, they said. They characterized some DOGE employees as sloppy on security, such as not following protocols in how personal devices were used.

Source : https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/30/technology/trump-palantir-data-americans.html?unlocked_article_code=1.LE8.MAJY.b1Pkdai-orzG

TRUMP CARD Donald Trump signs travel BAN stopping people from 12 countries entering the US with restrictions to hit in days

DONALD Trump has signed a sweeping new travel ban blocking people from a dozen countries from entering the US — with restrictions set to kick in within days.

The bombshell move, announced late Wednesday, will take effect at 12.01am Monday.

President Donald Trump gestures after speaking during a summer soiree on the South Lawn of the White House on June 4Credit: AP

The countries hit with a full ban include Afghanistan, Burma, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.

In addition to the outright ban, heightened restrictions will be slapped on visitors from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela.

“I must act to protect the national security and national interest of the United States and its people,” Trump said in a proclamation.

The sweeping list stems from a January 20 executive order, in which Trump tasked the State Department, Homeland Security, and the Director of National Intelligence with flagging “hostile attitudes” and countries that pose a national security risk.

The crackdown mirrors Trump’s highly controversial 2017 executive order from his first term, which initially barred citizens from seven majority-Muslim nations — Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen — triggering chaos at airports and global backlash.

Dubbed the “Muslim ban”, it sparked scenes of confusion as travellers, including students and tourists, were blocked from boarding planes or detained after landing in the US.

After legal challenges, the policy was retooled and upheld by the Supreme Court in 2018, with a version targeting Iran, Somalia, Yemen, Syria and Libya, alongside North Korea and Venezuelan officials.

Trump has consistently defended the bans as vital to national security, despite critics accusing him of religious discrimination.

The latest move ramps up his hardline immigration stance as the Republican firebrand gears up for a second term — once again placing border control and national safety at the heart of his presidency.

Earlier on Wednesday, Trump held an hour-long call with Vladimir Putin, revealing the Kremlin tyrant “will have to respond” to Ukraine’s devastating drone blitz on Russian airfields.

“It was a good conversation, but not a conversation that will lead to immediate Peace,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

“President Putin did say, and very strongly, that he will have to respond to the recent attack on the airfields.”

The warning came after Operation Spiderweb — a daring Ukrainian drone assault that wiped out 41 Russian warplanes across four strategic air bases, including nuclear-capable bombers.

The pair also discussed Iran’s nuclear programme, with Trump writing: “I stated to President Putin that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon and, on this, I believe that we were in agreement.”

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/news/14401462/trump-travel-ban-us-dozen-countries-restrictions/

 

Sana Yousaf: Pakistan TikTok star shot dead at home

Islamabad police have launched a murder probe after a teenage social media influencer was shot dead in her home. The news has reignited fears about the safety of women, particularly those in the public eye.

 

Yousaf had nearly 800,000 followers on TikTok and close to 500,000 on InstagramImage: Instagram/sanayousaf22

Police in Islamabad on Tuesday were investigating the killing of 17-year-old Sana Yousaf after she was found shot dead in her home.

The killing of the popular teenager, who had more than a million followers across TikTok and Instagram, has raised renewed concerns over the safety of online personalities in Pakistan, particularly young women.

What we know about the case

Police were said to have filed a case against an unidentified suspect after a complaint by Yousaf’s mother.

“The murder occurred within the victim’s residence and seems to have been carried out by someone she was acquainted with,” Station House Officer Malik Asif from the Sumbal Police Station confirmed to DW.

“The suspect was a familiar guest, indicating a personal relationship between them,” said Asif.

The news website Dawn cited early police information that a man entered the family’s home at around 5 p.m. on Monday and shot Sana twice in the chest.

She was rushed to the hospital but died from her injuries. The suspect was said to have fled the scene and remains to be publicly identified.

The mother said the suspect had a “smart appearance, moderate physique and height,” and was dressed in a black shirt and pants.

She said that both she and her sister-in-law, who was visiting, had witnessed the incident and would be able to identify the suspect in person.

Her mother added that her 15-year-old son was not present at the house as he had gone to their native village while her sister-in-law was visiting them for a few days.

Who was Sarah Yousaf?

Yousaf was widely known on social media for her short videos and lifestyle content. She had nearly 800,000 followers on TikTok and close to 500,000 on Instagram.

She gained popularity for content about culture, women’s rights, and youth empowerment.

Her videos often featured humorous reels, inspirational messages, and cultural insights that resonated with with her young audience.

After her death, tributes appeared on social media platforms with the hashtag #JusticeForSanaYousaf trending and fans and activists demanding a thorough investigation.

The news comes amid growing conversations about the safety of women, particularly those in the public eye, and the challenges faced by female content creators in the country.

Source: https://www.dw.com/en/sana-yousaf-pakistan-tiktok-star-shot-dead-at-home/a-72771300

TRIPLE TRAGEDY Three missing children found dead after vanishing on visit with homeless dad as cops slammed for not issuing Amber Alert

THREE missing sisters have been found dead days after they were reported missing while visiting their dad.

Authorities are being accused of “failing” the sisters by not issuing an Amber Alert for them as cops launch a manhunt for their father, who is charged with kidnapping and killing them.

Whitney Decker with her daughters Olivia, Evelyn, and Paityn DeckerCredit: GoFundMe

Paityn, 9, Evelyn, 8, and Olivia Decker, 5, were found dead on Monday night after cops swarmed Rock Island Campground, about an hour outside of Wenatchee, Washington, where the girls lived with their mother.

Cops are now searching for Travis Decker, 32, who the girls were last seen with on what was supposed to be a three-hour custody visit on Friday.

Decker, who cops say is homeless, didn’t drop his daughters off at the end of the visit, prompting their mom to report them missing that night.

Washington State Patrol then issued an endangered missing persons alert for the siblings after Decker was seen leaving Wenatchee with the girls.

Cops decided not to send out an Amber Alert, designed to warn of child abductions, because they thought it was a custody issue.

“AMBER alerts involve more imminency, like we know something will happen, versus what we were dealing with over the weekend was more of an overdue child scenario,” Wenatchee Police Sergeant Joe Eaton told NCWLIFE.

Now, members of the public are lashing out at police for not doing more to alert people to the unfolding situation.

“This isn’t just heartbreaking, it’s infuriating,” one Facebook user commented on WPD’s Facebook post.

“These girls are gone because the system FAILED them. The police didn’t take it seriously, and the court system let them down too.

“There was a predator out there and instead of protecting our community, you stayed silent. No alerts, no warnings nothing.”

Another wrote, “How come an amber alert was not issued until it made national news? You failed this mother and her kids.

“The amber alert should have been issued the day he didn’t come back and no contact could be made.”

It’s unclear how the three girls died, but Decker has been charged with their murders.

Cops warned members of the public not to approach Decker, a veteran who they believe is mentally unstable.

 

Source: https://www.the-sun.com/news/14390060/travis-decker-missing-girls-sisters-dead-wenatchee/

DEATHTRAP FEST I heard pal’s dying cry as bodies piled on us at Astroworld disaster & begged Travis Scott to stop…mistakes left 10 dead

HEADING out to Travis Scott’s Astroworld concert with a group of pals, excited fan Ayden Cruz was looking forward to the night of his life.

Instead, he found himself in a hellish crush that claimed the life of his close friend Brianna Rodriguez and nine others, including a nine-year-old boy.

Travis Scott at the third annual Astroworld festival, which descended into chaosCredit: AP

What began as a highly anticipated event in the wake of pandemic restrictions, in November 2021, quickly descended into one of the US’ worst concert disasters, with dozens of people left fighting for their lives.

As the rapper took to the stage, the over-capacity crowd at Houston’s NRG Park surged forward, triggering a stampede which left several people trapped.

Fans say their screams for help fell on deaf ears as Scott continued performing amid the chaos.

In the aftermath of Astroworld, the heartbroken families of the victims – the youngest of whom was nine-year-old Ezra Blount – were left questioning how such a tragedy was allowed to occur.

In a new Netflix documentary, Trainwreck: The Astroworld Tragedy, Ayden and other survivors speak out about the harrowing ordeal that has left them traumatised four years on.

“Everyone was really hype. And everyone’s body moves forward. And then the wave comes back,” says Ayden, who was also with girlfriend Mikaela at the festival.

“That was like being stuffed into one little spot and just being squeezed. I started to feel a certain fear. That’s when I was like, ‘Hold on, this is not okay.’

“One of those waves just hit both me and Bri. We all fell to our backs. I could hear her in pain asking, ‘Help me get out,’ and stuff like that. I was the second layer.

“There were people under me. And then me falling on my back, and then people stacking on top of me.”

As Ayden struggled to escape the mountain of bodies piled on top of him, he realised that the more he fought, the worse it became for him.

“I could feel the oxygen leaving my body. I don’t know how long I was under there, but it felt like forever. And then people moved off me. I saw someone’s face. They looked at me.

“He pulled me out, and I just remember feeling so many different things. Where’s Mikaela? Did Bri get out? I looked for Mikaela. I found her.

“I knew where I saw Bri. Anyone who was at the same level as me was not receiving oxygen. I just remember panicking in that moment.”

Ayden tried his best to stop the show so others could get help. In footage taken on the night, Ayden can be seen climbing a camera platform to get the attention of the crew.

I knew where I saw Bri. Anyone who was at the same level as me was not receiving oxygen. I just remember panicking in that moment.

Ayden Cruz
He told the workers: “Shut the f**k up! People are f**king dying. I’m trying to save somebody’s life. That’s somebody’s kid. I want to save them.”

Ayden then frantically went searching for Brianna, believing there was a chance she was still struggling under the crowd. He was eventually told she had been taken to the hospital.

He emotionally recalls: “Right when we get there, her family just starts crying really loudly. We are thinking they are still trying. It’s not over yet. There’s still an opportunity for her to be saved.

“Until they come back and they [said], ‘We can’t do anything.’ Everyone just dropped to the floor. I just remember crying and feeling like this is the worst night of my life. I felt defeated.”

‘Stole my heart’

Raul and his friends, including Rudy Pena, 27, could hardly contain their excitement as they made their way to the main stage to watch Travis’ set.

In the film, he explains: “That’s when it started getting pretty hectic. We lost each other.”

There was a clock counting down the minutes till Travis’ big performance. With each passing minute, the crowd surged forward to get a closer look at the rapper.

When the situation got worse, Raul says he could hear Rudy behind him saying he couldn’t breathe. After assuring him to drink water and calm down, Raul thought all was well.

After the concert, Raul and his friends designated a meeting spot – but as all his mates gathered, one was missing.

He recalls: “Everybody started getting there slowly, but Rudy. That was so strange to me because the whole time I had thought he got out safely. But he’s the only one missing.

“That’s when I hit full panic.”

Their friend Manuel raced towards the emergency crews and ambulances without any sign of Rudy. He even started calling hospitals. One hospital said that Rudy was there.

Manuel says in the film: “There was no information due to us not being family. So that’s when I called Rudy’s mum.”

This was not a case of missing red flags. This was a case of ignoring blaring warning sirens.

Scott Davidson, crowd safety expert
Rudy’s mum, Maria Pena, rushed to Houston to check on her son but, on arrival at the hospital, she was given the devastating news that Rudy had died.

In the film, she tearfully says: “That’s when I just lost it. I was screaming ‘What am I gonna tell his siblings? What am I gonna tell his friends? What am I going to say to my heart, to my soul?

“They stole my heart. They stole a part of my heart. I couldn’t bear it. And I still can’t.”

‘I’m gonna die here’

As the crowd were frantically looking for an escape route, Sofia, who was celebrating getting her nursing certificate, was certain she would not make it out alive.

She says in the film: “The crowd was swaying, and I was swaying with the crowd because of how tight it was. I had no control over my body.

“And I just remember thinking, ‘Don’t fall down because you won’t make it back up. In the commotion, I lost my balance and fell on someone. And I just remember feeling pressure because people were falling on me.

“I remember looking up and just being like, ‘I’m gonna die here.’ And then someone saw my hand and they helped me up. Travis Scott was still playing the whole time. I was shaking.

“At this point, I was like, ‘I need to be out there helping people because I’m a registered nurse. There was this guy on the floor. I do my assessment on him.

“He has a pulse, but it’s really faint. I grabbed his legs, and I just remember putting them up.” Sofia heroically tried several methods to revive him.

Eventually, his heart started beating normally, and he regained consciousness, to Sofia’s relief.

That stranger was Arturo, who also appears in the film.

He says: “I was practically being suffocated to death. What led up to me passing out was like a heart attack. The doctors had to really explain to me what had really happened.

“And I was like ‘Holy shit, she brought me back to life. She was there for me. God bless her.'”

 

Source: https://www.the-sun.com/news/14386784/astroworld-tragedy-scott-stop/

VLAD THE MAD Deranged Putin lays out wish list of ‘surrender demands’ for Ukraine… despite being humbled by Russia’s ‘Pearl Harbour’

Putin’s payback strike in Odesa on June 3, days after the humiliating operation SpiderwebCredit: Reuters

VLADIMIR Putin has brazenly listed his “surrender demands” for Ukraine – despite being humiliated by Russia’s “Pearl Harbour”.

The deranged tyrant’s negotiators said an end to the war would only be agreed if Kyiv surrenders huge chunks of territory and accepts limits on the size of its army.

Moscow’s audacious demands came just a day after Ukraine orchestrated Operation Spiderweb – which wiped out a third of Putin’s nuclear bombers.

The sophisticated attack saw 117 drones smuggled into Russia before unleashing hell on Putin’s airfields.

Spiderweb – dubbed Russia’s “Pearl Harbour” – took 18 months to plan and is understood to have cost Putin billions in damages.

Despite being left red-faced by the mammoth assault, Putin’s mouthpieces shamelessly gave his terms for a ceasefire during a second round of direct peace talks in Istanbul on Monday.

Its first section contained Moscow’s “basic parameters of a final settlement”.

The sham proposal demands Ukraine withdraw its troops from four eastern regions that Russia only partly occupies at the moment.

It also ordered that the international community recognise Crimea as Russia’s sovereign territory – after they annexed the peninsula in 2014.

Putin’s shopping list of demands went on to detail that Kyiv must commit to limiting the size of its military.

The tyrant also wants Ukraine to permanently declare neutrality and host no foreign troops whatsoever on its territory.

Other terms of the settlement included a bizarre ban on the “glorification or promotion of Nazism and neo-Nazism” in Ukraine – an accusation that Putin’s propaganda teams have consistently peddled.

Moscow also asked for diplomatic and economic ties between the neighbouring countries to be reinstated.

This would include the resumption of Russian natural gas flowing through Ukraine in order to be sold to other countries.

The unrealistic demands have been seen as yet another ploy to stall peace talks while Putin continues to carry out his bloody invasion.

The second section in the settlement listed the Kremlin’s conditions for agreeing to a temporary 30-day ceasefire.

It gave Kyiv two choices -either withdraw troops from four regions claimed by Russia, or agree to cancelling martial law and holding elections.

Additional requirements packaged up with the two options included a total cessation of all foreign military aid, and for Ukraine to start demobilising.

The negotiations were brokered by the US and Turkey at the Ciragan palace – but appeared to bring neither side closer to a truce.

But they did manage to agree to an exchange of 6,000 dead bodies, and an “all-for-all” swap of seriously wounded prisoners of war, and captured servicemen under the age of 25.

Source: https://www.the-sun.com/news/14384845/putin-ukraine-surrender-demands-deranged/

‘PORK-FILLED’ BILL Elon Musk blasts Donald Trump’s ‘big, beautiful’ tax and spending bill in wild rant days after leaving White House

Musk has launched his first public attack on the government since leaving the Trump administration last week

ELON Musk has slammed Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful” tax and spending bill as “disgusting” and “pork-filled” – just days after leaving the White House.

The tech tycoon’s scathing attack on one of the US president’s signature policies comes as he stepped down as head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) on Friday.

The bill promises multi-trillion dollar tax breaks, increased defence spending and funding for Trump’s mass deportations of undocumented migrants.

Musk, who campaigned to reduce the national debt, fumed on his platform X: “I’m sorry, but I just can’t stand it anymore.

“This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination.

“Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong. You know it.

“It will massively increase the already gigantic budget deficit to $2.5trillion and burden American citizens with crushingly unsustainable debt.

“Congress is making America bankrupt.”

In American politics, “pork” refers to spending added to bills by lawmakers to benefit their own constituencies – and are implicitly, unnecessary.

Musk had previously called the bill “disappointing”, claiming it undermined the DOGE’s work.

Mike Johnson, speaker of the US House of Representatives, soon after said: “With all due respect, Elon is terribly wrong about the one big beautiful bill.”

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt similarly said: “The President already knows where Elon Musk stood on this bill.”

“This is one, big, beautiful bill,” she added. “And he’s sticking to it.”

The “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” pledges to extend Trump’s 2017 tax cuts and introduce new tax breaks.

It narrowly passed the House of Representatives in May by just one vote – despite warnings from the Congressional Budget Office that it would add $3.8trillion (£3trillion) to the current national debt of $36.2trillion (£28.3trillion).

The bill also proposes raising America’s debt ceiling – the government’s borrowing limit – to $4trillion (£3.1trillion).

Trump sent the bill to Congress several days ago, where it awaits approval from the Senate.

Republicans have set a July 4 deadline to get the bill passed and signed into law.

Musk’s rant on X come just days after his farewell press conference, where Trump praised him for doing a “fantastic job” in the White House.

The US president listed the billionaire’s achievements, which included slashing many offshore projects said to be funded by USAID.

Source: https://www.the-sun.com/news/14391272/elon-musk-blasts-donald-trumps-bill/

Gaza: UN chief demands probe as more killed at aid site

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said it is “unacceptable that Palestinians are risking their lives for food.” Witnesses have reported a second attack on civilians waiting for aid.

The UN condemned alleged shootings near aid sites in GazaImage: AFP/Getty Images

Witnesses and relief workers on Tuesday said that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) in Gaza had fired on Palestinian civilians waiting for aid for the second time in three days. Medics said at least 27 people were killed.

The IDF said that it had fired at people who “posed a threat” near the the Al-Alam roundabout in the southern Gaza city of Rafah. The location is close to an aid center run by the controversial US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) aid center.

Witnesses reported being fired at by drones and helicopters.

UN human rights chief Volker Türk condemned the shootings, saying: “Deadly attacks on distraught civilians trying to access the paltry amounts of food aid in Gaza are unconscionable…Attacks directed against civilians constitute a grave breach of international law and a war crime.”

UN’s Guterres saying killings are ‘unacceptable’
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday had called for an independent investigation into the deaths of dozens of Palestinians near an aid distribution site in Gaza, prompting a fierce response from Israel.

Guterres said in a statement that he was “appalled by the reports of Palestinians killed and injured while seeking aid in Gaza.”

“It is unacceptable that Palestinians are risking their lives for food,” the UN leader’s statement said.

“I call for an immediate and independent investigation into these events and for perpetrators to be held accountable,” Guterres said.

Aid workers and civilians said on Sunday that Israeli forces fired on Palestinians waiting to receive aid close to a distribution site in Gaza. Journalists also reported receiving an off the record statement from the Israeli military saying that they had fired on “suspects” who posed a threat.

At least 21 were killed and scores more injured, according to a Red Cross field hospital and numerous witnesses.

Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned Guterres’ statement as a “disgrace,” and criticized him for ignoring the role of the Palestinian militant group Hamas. Hamas, which is in charge of Gaza, is considered a terrorist group by Israel, the US and several other countries.

Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Oren Marmorstein wrote in a post on X that Guterres’ statement did not mention “the fact that Hamas is the one shooting civilians and trying to prevent them from collecting aid packages.”

Marmorstein’s claims have not been confirmed by any other source.

Source: https://www.dw.com/en/gaza-un-chief-demands-probe-as-more-killed-at-aid-site/a-72769111

Bill Gates to give most of $200 billion fund to Africa

Bill Gates has urged African leaders to join him in advancing health and development on the continent. He says his foundation will partner with nations putting people’s health first.

Microsoft founder Bill Gates is hoping to spur African leaders to invest in health care and innovation (FILE: January 8, 2025)Image: Jae C. Hong/AP

US billionaire Bill Gates on Tuesday announced that the majority of his philanthropic Gates Foundation’s $200 billion (€175 billion) endowment will be spent in Africa over the next two decades.

Gates, who on May 8 said he would wind down the foundation by 2045, made the pledge while addressing African leaders in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

“I recently made a commitment that my wealth will be given away over the next 20 years. The majority of that funding will be spent on helping you address challenges here in Africa,” Gates said as he urged leaders to boost health and development through partnership and innovation.

“By unleashing human potential through health and education, every country in Africa should be on a path to prosperity… and that path is an exciting thing to be part of,” Gates told government officials, diplomats and health workers.

Gates makes pitch as US government slashes aid
“Investing in primary healthcare has the greatest impact on health and wellbeing,” he said. “With primary healthcare, what we’ve learned is that helping the mother be healthy and have great nutrition before she gets pregnant, while she is pregnant, delivers the strongest results. Ensuring the child receives good nutrition in their first four years as well makes all the difference.”

US businessman-philanthropist Gates singled out Ethiopia, Mozambique, Nigeria, Rwanda, Zambia and Zimbabwe as examples of countries that to his mind show strong leadership fostering innovation. He did not comment on allegations of authoritarianism and rights abuses against the governments of, for example, Ethiopia and Rwanda.

“Our foundation has an increasing commitment to Africa,” Gates said. “Our first African office was here in Ethiopia about 13 years ago. Now we have offices in South Africa, Kenya, Nigeria and Senegal. That’s a great way for us to strengthen partnerships.”

Gates’ pitch comes amid halts to US foreign aid on the advice of US President Donald Trump’s donor and budget oversight advisor, Elon Musk — the world’s richest man — who bragged of “feeding USAID to the wood chipper.”

A recent study in the medical journal The Lancet projected that cuts to American spending on PEPFAR — the program to deliver HIV and AIDS relief abroad — could cost the lives of 500,000 children by 2030. The journal Nature suggested a sustained halt to US aid funding could result in some 25 million additional deaths over 15 years.

The Gates Foundation has invested heavily in projects aimed at reducing childhood and maternal deaths; advancing progress on vaccines for infectious disease, such as malaria or HIV; as well as lifting poor populations out of poverty.

The foundation claims that it has contributed to more than 100 innovations that have saved more than 80 million lives, citing partnerships with GAVI and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.

Gates says ‘rich should do more in philanthropy’
Gates, who made his fortune with the computer software company Microsoft and started the Gates Foundation with his ex-wife, Melinda, has urged other wealthy individuals to spend their money on humanity not just personal possessions.

When recently asked by The New York Times about why he is donating his fortune he first said, “It makes a big difference to take the money and spend it now versus later,” pointing to its impact on developments in agriculture and AI.

“What am I going to do?” he added, “Just go buy a bunch of boats or something? Go gamble? This money should go back to society in the way that it has the best chance of causing something positive to happen.”

Source: https://www.dw.com/en/bill-gates-to-give-most-of-200-billion-fund-to-africa/a-72769394

Mount Etna: 5 facts about Europe’s most active volcano

Researchers can document eruptions at Mount Etna back at least 2,700 yearsImage: Marco Restivo/REUTERS

Where is Mount Etna?

Mount Etna rises 3,357 meters (11,014 feet) above Catania, a city on the east coast of Sicily, Italy.

It covers an area of 1,250 square kilometers (482 square miles).

What type of volcano is Mount Etna?

Mount Etna is what geologists and volcanologists call a stratovolcano or composite volcano.

Stratovolcanoes typically have steep inclines and many separate vents, formed over tens to hundreds of thousands of years.

According to Italy’s National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV), Etna has more than 500,000 years of eruptive history, but it’s only taken its current, conical shape in the past hundred thousand years.

Stratovolcanoes can be highly explosive when they erupt. They spew a variety of magma types, including basalt, andesite, dacite, and rhyolite.

When UNESCO inscribed Mount Etna as a World Heritage Site in 2013, it said it was “an iconic site” that continued “to influence volcanology, geophysics and other Earth science disciplines. The volcano also supports important terrestrial ecosystems including endemic flora and fauna, and its activity makes it a natural laboratory for the study of ecological and biological processes.”

How dangerous is Mount Etna?

It is difficult to determine the exact level of danger posed by Mount Etna. When it began erupting in June 2025, INGV set its alert level for Etna as “basic.”

While the volcano has been spewing lava non-stop for thousands of years, volcanologists can pinpoint new eruptions at least once or twice a year.

According to the INGV, Mount Etna is in a state of persistent activity, with “continuous outgassing [which] can evolve into low energy Strombolian activity.”

“Strombolian” describes a type of eruption, caused by expanding gas that ejects clots of glowing lava in a cycle of almost continuous, small eruptions.

Etna is also prone to “terminal and sub-terminal eruptions” at craters at the top of the volcano or nearby, and “lateral and eccentric eruptions” at vents along the slopes of the volcano.

What threat does Mount Etna pose to people?

Few people live within 5-10km (3.1-6.2 miles) of Mount Etna, but they do face a constant threat of debris and dust, even from the smallest eruptions.

Lava flows have been known to reach as far as the eastern seaboard of Sicily and run off into the Ionian Sea.

It is about 40km from Etna to Catania, which has a population of more than 300,000 people, mostly in its outskirts.

Research by the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research in Kiel, Germany, suggested the eastern flank of Mount Etna was “slowly sliding towards the sea.”

In 2021, researchers at the Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences said the flank was sliding into the Ionian Sea at a rate of centimeters per year: “Such unstable flanks could fail catastrophically, triggering landslides that could generate tsunamis.”

This has happened in the past, about 8,000 years ago.

Source : https://www.dw.com/en/mount-etna-5-facts-about-europes-most-active-volcano/a-72775252

Brooke Shields calls out ‘too precious’ Meghan Markle for awkward SXSW panel gig

Brooke Shields didn’t hold back when sharing comments about Meghan Markle’s awkward appearance at a 2024 SXSW panel.

The actress, along with the Duchess of Sussex, participated in an International Women’s Day conversation called “Breaking Barriers, Shaping Narratives: How Women Lead On and Off the Screen” and moderated by journalist Katie Couric at the iconic film festival last March.

“Katie asks the first question to Meghan and she talks about how at a young age, she was already advocating for women,” Shields told India Hicks on the latest episode of her “An Unexpected Journey” podcast, via the Independent.

“She starts telling a story about how when she was 11 — and she keeps saying, ‘Well, when I was 11, I saw this commercial and they were talking about how washing dishes was for women’ And she said, ‘I didn’t think only women wash dishes. It wasn’t fair, so I wrote to the company.’”

Brooke Shields recalled Meghan Markle’s awkward appearance at a SXSW panel in March 2024.
Getty Images

“She kept saying she was 11!” the “Mother of the Bride” star exclaimed.

“She wrote to the company, they changed the text, they changed the commercial. It was just too precious, and I was like, ‘They’re not going to want to sit here for 45 minutes and listen to anybody be precious or serious.’”

Shields, 60, recalled intervening at one point in an effort to switch up the mood.

“I go, ‘Excuse me, I’m so sorry, I’ve got to interrupt you there for one minute.’ I was trying not to be rude, but I wanted to be funny because it was so serious,” Shields remembered.

“I just want to give everybody here a context as to how we’re different. When I was 11, I was playing a prostitute,” she joked, referencing her 1978 historical drama, “Pretty Baby.”

“The place went insane,” Shields shared, claiming the crowd became “more relaxed” after her comments.

The story Markle shared during the panel was nothing new, as the “Suits” alum has previously spoken about how she took matters into her own hands after seeing the controversial Ivory dishwashing soap campaign.

During the 2019 International Women’s Day panel at SXSW, Markle said the ad — which originally featured the slogan “Women all over America are fighting greasy pots and pans” — had inspired a formative feminist experience for her.

“Truth be told, at 11 I don’t think I even knew what sexism meant. I just knew that something struck me internally that was telling me it was wrong, and I knew that it was wrong,” she said at the time, per People.

Source : https://pagesix.com/2025/06/03/celebrity-news/brooke-shields-calls-out-meghan-markle-for-awkward-sxsw-panel-gig/

Ukraine says it hit Russia’s bridge to Crimea with underwater explosives

A view shows the Crimean Bridge, a section of which was damaged by an alleged overnight attack, as seen form the city of Kerch, Crimea, Jul 17, 2023. (Photo: REUTERS/Alexey Pavlishak)

Ukraine’s SBU security service said on Tuesday (Jun 3) that it had hit the road and rail bridge linking Russia and the Crimean peninsula below the water level with explosives.

In a statement, the SBU said it had used 1,100 kilograms of explosives that were detonated early in the morning and damaged underwater pillars of the bridge, a key supply route for Russian forces in Ukraine in the past.

The official Russian outlet which provides regular status updates on the bridge said its operation had been suspended for about three hours between 4 am and 7 am local time (9 am and 12 pm, Singapore time).

It gave no reason for the temporary closure, but said the bridge had been reopened and was functioning as normal.

“Previously, we hit the Crimean Bridge twice, in 2022 and 2023. So today we continued this tradition underwater,” the SBU said in its statement, adding that the operation had been prepared over several months.

The SBU shared video footage that showed an explosion next to one of the many support pillars of the bridge.

Reuters was able to confirm the location from the structure and bearing elements of the bridge that matched satellite and file imagery of the area. Reuters was not able to independently verify when the video was filmed.

Russian military bloggers said the attack had been unsuccessful and speculated that it had been carried out by a Ukrainian sea drone.

On Sunday, Ukraine launched drones in an operation codenamed “Spider’s Web” to attack Russian nuclear-capable long-range bomber planes at distant airfields across Russia.

The 19 km Crimea Bridge over the Kerch Strait is the only direct link between the transport network of Russia and the Crimean peninsula, which Moscow annexed from Ukraine in 2014.

Source : https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/ukraine-says-it-hit-russias-bridge-crimea-underwater-explosives-5164341

Philippines warns of health emergency as HIV cases soar

A staff entering a laboratory at a social hygiene clinic in Quezon City, Metro Manila on May 10,2023. (File photo: AFP/Jam Sta Rosa)

Philippine medical authorities on Tuesday (Jun 3) warned of a looming “public health emergency” as HIV infections have soared this year, with young males especially hard-hit.

On average, 57 new cases a day were tallied in the country of 117 million people over the first three months of 2025, a 50 per cent jump from a year earlier, health department data shows.

“We now have the highest number of new cases here in the Western Pacific,” Health Secretary Ted Herbosa said in a video message released Tuesday.

“What is frightening is, our youth make up many of the new cases,” he said.

“It would be in our interest to (declare) a public health emergency, a national emergency for HIV to mobilise the entire society, the whole of government to help us in this campaign to reduce the number of new HIV cases,” Herbosa added.

The health department said 95 per cent of newly reported cases were male, with 33 per cent aged 15 to 24 and 47 per cent aged 25 to 34.

The government did not explain the causes behind the surge, which it said had set back government attempts to hit global targets set by a United Nations campaign to end the AIDS epidemic by 2030.

Under Philippine law, the president can declare a health emergency if an epidemic poses a threat to national security. The start of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 was the last time that was done.

Just 55 per cent of those living with HIV in the Philippines have been diagnosed, the health department said, while only 66 per cent of those diagnosed are on life-saving antiretroviral therapy.

Source : https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/philippines-warns-health-emergency-hiv-cases-soar-5164051

South Korean opposition wins presidency after months of political chaos

South Korea has handed a decisive victory to opposition candidate Lee Jae-myung six months after his predecessor’s martial law bid failed.

The brief yet disastrous move set off huge protests and ended former president Yoon Suk Yeol’s career: impeached and removed from office, he still faces criminal charges for abusing his power.

But the political chaos that followed means victorious Lee’s biggest challenge is still ahead of him. He must unite a polarised country that is still reeling from it all.

He also faces challenges abroad – crucially, negotiating a trade deal with US President Donald Trump to soften the blow of tariffs from South Korea’s closest ally.

His main rival was the ruling party candidate and a former member of Yoon’s cabinet, Kim Moon-soo.

He had been trailing Lee for weeks in polls and in the early hours of Wednesday, he conceded defeat, congratulating Lee “on his victory”.

In an earlier speech, Lee had hinted at the win but stopped short of declaring it. He said “recovering” South Korea’s democracy would be his first priority.

The snap election comes just three years after the 61-year-old lost his last presidential bid by a razor-thin margin to Yoon.

It’s a remarkable comeback for a man who has been caught in several political scandals, from investigations over alleged corruption to family feuds.

Analysts say Lee’s win is also a rejection of the ruling People Power Party (PPP), which was tarred by Yoon’s martial law order.

“Voters weren’t necessarily expressing strong support for Lee’s agenda, rather they were responding to what they saw as a breakdown of democracy,” Park Sung-min, president of Min Consulting, told the BBC.

“The election became a vehicle for expressing outrage… [and] was a clear rebuke of the ruling party, which had been complicit in or directly responsible for the martial law measures.”

Lee’s win, he adds, shows that voters had put South Korea’s democracy “above all else”.

What lies ahead

Yoon’s departure also left his former party divided and in disarray, with infighting delaying the announcement of a presidential candidate until early May.

The chaos in the PPP went beyond just Yoon, as two acting presidents who followed were also impeached, before one of them was reinstated – a sign of how contentious South Korean politics had become.

All of this certainly helped the opposition Democratic Party and its candidate Lee, who signalled more stability.

But while he has won the election, his challenges are far from over.

He faces a trial in the Supreme Court over charges of violating the election law. The court postponed the trial until after the election to avoid interference because a conviction could have barred him from contesting.

But it’s not clear what happens if Lee is now found guilty, though the law says sitting presidents cannot be prosecuted for criminal offences, with the exception of insurrection or treason.

Lee has had a controversial career in which he has built a loyal base but he has also drawn disapproval and ire for what some have called an abrasive style.

He has spoken openly of a tough childhood in a working class family, before he went to college and became a human rights lawyer.

He then switched to a political career, making his way up the DP until – in 2022 – he became their presidential candidate. He campaigned on a more liberal platform, promising to address gender inequality, for instance.

But after he lost the vote, he pivoted, opting this time to move more toward the centre and play it safer with his policies.

In office, he will also need to reach across the aisle and work with the PPP, a party he battled regularly during Yoon’s term. But he may need some of them to work with him to rebuild public trust and mend a fractured country.

“Years of escalating polarisation under both the [previous] Moon and Yoon administrations have left South Korea’s political landscape bitterly divided,” Mr Park said.

“Lee may speak of national unity, but he faces a profound dilemma: how to pursue accountability for what many view as an attempted insurrection without deepening the very divisions he seeks to heal.”

Despite the PPP’s loss, Yoon still has a considerably strong and vocal support base – and they are unlikely to go away anytime soon.

His supporters, mainly young male voters and the elderly, often echo strong right-wing narratives and many of them believe his declaration of martial law was necessary to protect the country.

Many also peddle conspiracy theories, believing Yoon’s party was a victim of election fraud.

Thousands protested against his impeachment and in January, shortly after his arrest, a pro-Yoon crowd stormed a courthouse and assaulted police officers.

With Yoon gone, there are questions about who might fill that vacuum for his base.

One name in particular has emerged: Lee Jun Seok, who also ran for president, but dropped out earlier on Tuesday, when exit polls suggested he was trailing too far behind, with just 7.7% of the votes.

Still, he has been especially popular with many young men for his anti-feminist views, which has reminded some of Yoon, under whom equality for women became a polarising subject.

Young men in their 30s came out in higher numbers than usual to vote this time, drawn in part by candidates like Lee Jun-seok. Those wanting to hold the PPP-led government accountable, and others wanting to ensure Lee Jae-myung’s presidency was dashed, led to this year’s voter turnout reaching 79.4% – the highest since 1997.

However, it is not just healing these divides at home that will keep Lee busy in the immediate future. He also faces urgent challenges abroad, such as navigating the US-Korea alliance under the new Trump administration.

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c861yyqxg4do

US steel and aluminium tariffs doubled to 50%

US President Donald Trump has signed an order doubling tariffs on steel and aluminium imports from 25% to 50%.

The move hikes import taxes on the metals – key inputs in everything from cars to canned food – for the second time since March.

Trump has said the measures, which come into effect on Wednesday, are intended to secure the future of the American steel industry.

However, critics say the protections could wreak havoc on steel producers outside the US, spark retaliation from trade partners, and come at a punishing cost for American users of the metals.

Hours before he hiked the duties, many firms directly affected could scarcely believe the plan was moving forward, hoping it would turn out to be temporary or some kind of negotiating ploy.

Even as Trump moved forward with the deal, the UK was granted a carve-out from the measures, leaving duties on its steel and aluminium at 25%, a move Trump said reflected its ongoing trade discussions with the US.

“Always the question with Mr Trump is, is this a tactic or is this a long-term plan?” said Rick Huether, chief executive of Independent Can Co, a Maryland-based business, which brings in steel from Europe and turns it into decorative cookie tins, popcorn boxes, and other products.

He said he had put investments on hold and feared the abrupt changes, and price increases would lead his customers to turn to alternatives such as plastic or paper boxes.

“There’s a lot of chaos,” he said.

The US is the biggest importer of steel in the world, after the European Union, getting most of the metal from Canada, Brazil, Mexico and South Korea, according to the US government.

During his first term, Trump imposed tariffs of 25% on steel and 10% on aluminium, citing a law that gives him authority to protect industries considered vital to national security.

But many imports ultimately escaped the duties after the US struck trade deals with allies and granted exemptions to certain imports at the request of firms.

Trump ended those carve-outs in March, saying he was unhappy with the way the protections had been weakened.

At Friday’s rally at the US Steel factory, he said wanted to make tariffs so high that US businesses would have no alternative but to buy from American suppliers.

“Nobody’s going to get around that,” he said of the 50% rate. “That means that nobody’s going to be able to steal your industry. It’s at 25% – they can get over that fence. At 50%, they can no longer get over the fence.”

Reaction in the UK and Europe

As of May, imports and the rate of raw steel production in the US had changed little since last year before Trump raised tariffs, according to the American Iron and Steel Institute.

But steel imports fell 17% in April, compared to March. And businesses selling the metals into the US said they expected Trump’s latest announcement to lead to an even more dramatic drop.

Trump’s moves in March had already prompted Canada and the European Union to prepare to hit back with tariffs of their own American products.

On Tuesday, Olof Gill, spokesperson for economic security and trade for the European Commission told the BBC the two sides were engaged in intense talks to try to make progress toward an agreement.

“We’re negotiating hard to try and make good deals,” he said.

“We really hope that the Americans will roll back on this latest tariff threat, as they have done on others, but that remains to be seen.”

In the UK, Trump’s announcement put new pressure on the government to pin down the trade deal in the works with the US, which had been expected to provide some protection from the March metals tariffs.

Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds met with US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer in Paris on Wednesday.

His office said it was “pleased” that the trade talks had protected UK steel from the latest duties.

“We will continue to work with the US to implement our agreement, which will see the 25% US tariffs on steel removed,” he said.

Gareth Stace, director general of UK Steel, which represents steelmakers, told the BBC that his members had already seen orders cancelled and delayed as a result of the 25% tariffs put in place in March.

He warned that a 50% tariff would be “catastrophic” for UK exports to the US, about 7% of overall exports.

“The introduction of 50% tariffs immediately puts the shutters up,” he said. “Most of our orders, if not all of them, will now be cancelled.”

Economists said the US economy is also facing damage, as prices rise as a result of the new measures.

A 2020 analysis estimated that Trump’s first term tariffs created roughly 1,000 jobs in the steel industry, but cost the economy 75,000 jobs in other sectors, such as manufacturing and construction.

Erica York, vice president of federal tax policy at the Tax Foundation, said that she expected to see even more extreme job losses this time.

“Some of the strongest evidence is against tariffs on intermediate inputs like steel and aluminium, finding they are much more harmful because they increase the cost of production in the United States,” she said. “It’s just very foolish to double down on this type of tariff in particular.”

Chad Bartusek is director of supply chain management at Drill Rod & Tool Steels, a small, family-owned manufacturing business in Illinois, which brings in about 800,000 pounds of Austrian-made steel each year, at specifications he says are not produced in the US.

Mr Bartusek said he was currently waiting on three containers worth of steel rod, which would have entered the US without duties at the start of the year.

As of last week, he had expected to pay tariff costs about $72,000. Instead, he is looking at a tariff bill of almost $145,000.

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cj3j7z73yv2o

FEMA staff baffled after head said he was unaware of US hurricane season, sources say

A person sits at a desk inside of a mobile FEMA command center after tornadoes ripped through several U.S. states in downtown Dawson Springs, Kentucky, U.S., December 14, 2021. REUTERS/Jon Cherry/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

Staff of the Federal Emergency Management Agency were left baffled on Monday after the head of the U.S. disaster agency said he had not been aware the country has a hurricane season, according to four sources familiar with the situation.
The remark was made during a briefing by David Richardson, who has led FEMA since early May. It was not clear to staff whether he meant it literally, as a joke, or in some other context.

The U.S. hurricane season officially began on Sunday and lasts through November. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration forecast last week that this year’s season is expected to bring as many as 10 hurricanes.
A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security, FEMA’s parent agency, said the comment was a joke and that FEMA is prepared for hurricane season.
The spokesperson said under Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Richardson “FEMA is shifting from bloated, DC-centric dead weight to a lean, deployable disaster force that empowers state actors to provide relief for their citizens.”

Richardson said during the briefing that there would be no changes to the agency’s disaster response plans despite having told staff to expect a new plan in May, the sources told Reuters.
Richardson’s comments come amid widespread concern that the departures of a raft of top FEMA officials, staff cuts and reductions in hurricane preparations will leave the agency ill-prepared for a storm season forecast to be above normal.
Democrats criticized Richardson following the Reuters report.
Top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer posted the Reuters headline about Richardson on X and said he was “unaware of why he hasn’t been fired yet.”
Representative Bennie Thompson, the senior Democrat on the House Homeland Security Committee with oversight of FEMA, issued a statement to Reuters that read:
“Suffice to say, disaster response is no joke. If you don’t know what or when hurricane season is, you’re not qualified to run FEMA. Get someone knowledgeable in there.”

Hurricanes kill dozens of people and cost hundreds of millions of dollars annually across a swath of U.S. states every year. The storms have become increasingly more destructive and costly due to the effects of climate change.
Richardson’s comment purporting ignorance about hurricane season spread among agency staff, spurring confusion and reigniting concern about his lack of familiarity with FEMA’s operations, said three sources.
Richardson, who has no disaster response experience, said during Monday’s briefing, a daily all-hands meeting held by phone and videoconference, that he will not be issuing a new disaster plan because he does not want to make changes that might counter the FEMA Review Council, the sources said.
President Donald Trump created the council to evaluate FEMA. Its members include DHS head Noem, governors and other officials.

In a May 15 staff town hall, Richardson said a disaster plan, including tabletop exercises, would be ready for review by May 23.

CONFUSION

The back-and-forth on updating the disaster plan and a lack of clear strategic guidance have created confusion for FEMA staff, said one source.
Richardson has evoked his military experience as a former Marine artillery officer in conversations with staff.
Before joining FEMA, he was assistant secretary at DHS’ office for countering weapons of mass destruction, which he has told staff he will continue to lead.
Richardson was appointed as the new chief of FEMA last month after his predecessor, Cameron Hamilton, was abruptly fired.
Hamilton had publicly broken with Trump over the future of the agency, but sources told Reuters that Trump allies had already been maneuvering to oust him because they were unhappy with what they saw as Hamilton’s slow-moving effort to restructure FEMA.
Trump has said FEMA should be shrunk or even eliminated, arguing states can take on many of its functions, as part of a wider downsizing of the federal government. About 2,000 full-time FEMA staff, one-third of its total, have been terminated or voluntarily left the agency since the start of the Trump administration in January.

US gives nod to Syria to bring foreign jihadist ex-rebels into army

A member of the former rebel group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham stands guard near an image of Syria’s Bashar al-Assad at the fourth division headquarters in Damascus, Syria, January 23, 2025 REUTERS/Yamam Al Shaar/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

The United States has given its blessing to a plan by Syria’s new leadership to incorporate thousands of foreign jihadist former rebel fighters into the national army, provided that it does so transparently, President Donald Trump’s envoy said.
Three Syrian defence officials said that under the plan, some 3,500 foreign fighters, mainly Uyghurs from China and neighbouring countries, would join a newly-formed unit, the 84th Syrian army division, which would also include Syrians.

Asked by Reuters in Damascus whether Washington approved the integration of foreign fighters into Syria’s new military, Thomas Barrack, the U.S. ambassador to Turkey who was named Trump’s special envoy to Syria last month, said: “I would say there is an understanding, with transparency.”
He said it was better to keep the fighters, many of whom are “very loyal” to Syria’s new administration, within a state project than to exclude them.
The fate of foreigners who joined Syria’s Hayat Tahrir al-Sham rebels during the 13-year war between rebel groups and President Bashar al-Assad has been one of the most fraught issues hindering a rapprochement with the West since HTS, a one-time offshoot of al Qaeda, toppled Assad and took power last year.

At least until early May, the United States had been demanding the new leadership broadly exclude foreign fighters from the security forces.
But Washington’s approach to Syria has changed sharply since Trump toured the Middle East last month. Trump agreed to lift Assad-era sanctions on Syria, met Syria’s interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa in Riyadh and named Barrack, a close friend, as his special envoy.
Two sources close to the Syrian defence ministry told Reuters that Sharaa and his circle had been arguing to Western interlocutors that bringing foreign fighters into the army would be less of a security risk than abandoning them, which could drive them into the orbit of al Qaeda or Islamic State.
The U.S. State Department and a Syrian government spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment.

CHINESE CONCERNS

Thousands of Sunni Muslim foreigners joined Syria’s rebels early in the 13-year civil war to fight against Assad, who was himself aided by Iranian-backed Shi’ite militias.
Some fighters formed their own factions, while others joined established groups such as Islamic State, which briefly declared a caliphate in swathes of Syria and Iraq before being routed by an array of forces backed both by the United States and Iran.
Foreign fighters within HTS earned a reputation as loyal, disciplined and experienced militants, and formed the backbone of the group’s elite so-called suicide units. They fought against Islamic State and against other wings of al Qaeda from 2016, when HTS broke away from the group founded by Osama bin Laden.
The Uyghur fighters from China and Central Asia are members of the Turkistan Islamic Party, a group designated as terrorists by Beijing. A Syrian official and a foreign diplomat said China had sought to have the group’s influence in Syria restricted.

A Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said: “China hopes that Syria will oppose all forms of terrorism and extremist forces in response to the concerns of the international community.”
Osman Bughra, a TIP political official, told Reuters in a written statement that the group had officially dissolved and integrated into the Syrian army.
“At present, the group operates entirely under the authority of the Ministry of Defence, adheres to national policy, and maintains no affiliations with external entities or groups,” he said.
In December, the appointment of a handful of foreign jihadists who were part of HTS’s senior leadership to top military posts had alarmed Western governments, raising concerns over the direction of Syria’s new Islamist leadership.
Demands to freeze the appointments and expel rank-and-file foreign fighters became a key point of contention with Washington and other Western countries up until the week of Trump’s landmark meeting with Sharaa.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/us-gives-nod-syria-bring-foreign-jihadist-ex-rebels-into-army-2025-06-02/

BATTLEFIELD EUROPE Nato must be ready for war with Russia by 2029 – Putin is ALREADY planning attack, Germany warns as Starmer pledges subs

NATO must be ready for war in the next four years, Germany’s defence chief warned, as he claimed Russia is gearing up to attack more European nations.

Keir Starmer meanwhile announced 12 new nuclear submarines to combat the “immediate and pressing threat” from Putin.

Russian Belaya Air Base in Irkutsk region, Siberia, was ablaze after a major Ukrainian drone strike over the weekendCredit: East2West

General Carsten Breuer said Nato is facing a “very serious threat” from Russia – the most severe he has seen in his 40 years of service.

Breuer explained that Russia is producing weaponry at a rapid pace – with around 1,500 battle tanks and four million rounds of artillery each year.

Crucially, not all of this is being directed to Ukraine – possibly indicating munitions are being stockpiled for use against Nato countries.

He said: “There’s an intent and there’s a build up of the stocks.”

Breuer doubled down on his warning that “analysts are assessing 2029” as Russia’s potential timeframe for an assault, concluding: “We have to be ready by 2029”.

“If you ask me now, is this a guarantee that’s not earlier than 2029? I would say no, it’s not. So we must be able to fight tonight,” he said.

In April, the general warned that Putin will have amassed a 3million-strong army by next year, and that he wants to “weaken and destroy Nato as an alliance and discredit our Western form of society”.

The Baltic states of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia are particularly vulnerable, according to the defence expert.

Breuer said: “The Baltic States are really exposed to the Russians, right?

“And once you are there, you really feel this […] in the talks we are having over there.”

The Estonians use the analogy of being close to a wildfire and being able to “feel the heat, see the flames and smell the smoke”.

Germany and other European nations “probably see a little bit of smoke over the horizon and not more,” Breuer said.

The general added a call to action, urging fellow Nato nations to rebuild their militaries.

He said: “What we have to do now is really to lean in an to tell everybody: ‘Hey, ramp up […] get more into it because we need it.

“We need it to be able to defend ourselves and therefore also to build up deterrence.”

Recognising this need, the British government announced that the UK will build a dozen new nuclear submarines armed with Tomohawk missiles.

The UK’s nuclear warhead programme will also be bolstered, with Defence Secretary John Healey saying the deterrent is “what Putin fears most”.

The government is in talks with US officials over the move, which would be the UK’s biggest deterrent development since the Cold War.

The news came as part of the strategic defence review, designed to get Britain moving “to war-fighting readiness”.

Starmer will say during a trip to Scotland: “From the supply lines to the front lines, this government is four-square behind the men and women upholding our freedom and security.”

Up to 12 nuclear-powered subs will be built under the AUKUS security partnership with the US and Australia.

They are conventionally-armed with Tomahawk missiles and are mainly used as intelligence gatherers, lurking off hostile coastlines to intercept communications.

They can also deploy special forces and drones.

Russia’s weapon stocks took a hit over the weekend when a daring Ukrainian drone plot blitzed 34 percent of Putin’s cruise missile carriers, according to Volodymyr Zelensky.

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/news/14377007/nato-ready-war-russia-planning-attack-germany-warns/

STUPID STUNT Shock moment tourist jumps railing and plunges 18ft into Terracotta Army pit before smashing two priceless statues

THIS is the shocking moment a tourist jumps a railing around the famous Terracotta Army and smashes up two of the priceless statues.

The 30-year-old visitor leapt over the guard rail surrounding the clay warrior figures at a museum in the city of Xi’An in China on Friday.

The tourist leapt down into the 18ft-deep pit, landing amongst Terracotta Army warriorsCredit: News Flare

Footage shows the aftermath of his jump and senseless destruction of the 2000-year-old artefacts.

He can be seen lying on his back and rolling around – apparently in pain – at the bottom of an 18ft-deep pit.

The alleged vandal is leaning against one of the ancient statues as alarmed onlookers peer down into the pit.

Another angle shows the devastating extent of the damage to the statues.

Two have been knocked over and lie in pieces on the floor after the man “pushed and pulled” the clay figures.

Officials reported they were damaged to “varying degrees”.

Security guards for the museum quickly stepped in to grab the intruder before he inflicted more damage.

Authorities said the man, identified only by his surname Sun, suffers from mental health problems.

They also confirmed an investigation has been launched into the circumstances surrounding the incident.

Concerns have been raised about how Sun managed to breach the security measures – consisting of a railing protective net – to plunge into the deep pit.

Despite the intrusion, museum staff confirmed that the Xi’An exhibition remains open to the public.

In 2017, an American man admitted to stealing a thumb from one of the terracotta warriors while it was on exhibition in Pennsylvania.

Michael Rohana, in his early 20s, snapped it off when it was on display at the Franklin Institute museum.

In that case, the statue was estimated to be worth $4.5million.

By that figure, the damage inflicted by the rogue tourist in Xi’An could amount to a whopping $9million, if the statues are ruined.

Rohana was acquitted after his prosecution ended in a mistrial.

His lawyer successfully argued that he was wrongly charged under laws that usually apply to major museum thefts.

Surveillance footage had captured him “clowning around” with the statues and taking selfies, before appearing to break something from one before leaving.

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/news/14378481/tourist-jumps-railing-plunges-terracotta-army-smashing/

South Korea: Polls open in snap presidential election

Lee Jae-myung (left) and Kim Moon Soo are the two main candidates in South Korea’s presidential electionImage: Yonhap/YNA/dpa/picture alliance

The legal controversy around frontrunner Lee Jae-myung explained

Lee Jae-myung is widely expected to win South Korea’s presidential election.

But he is facing charges — for a second time — of violating election laws in his 2022 presidential campaign.

Prosecutors appealed to retry Lee after the constitutional court overturned his original conviction.

But the high court in Many then postponed Lee’s trial until June 18, which is two weeks after the election.

If his original conviction had been upheld, Lee wouldn’t have been eligible to run for president.

The case is just one of five that Lee is currently fighting.

Impeached former President Yoon Suk Yeol casts vote

Impeached former President Yoon Suk Yeol and his wife Kim Keon Hee have voted at a school near their private residence in the capital, Seoul

They were accompanied by security guards, according to South Korea’s Yonhap news agency.

Neither made any comment to the waiting media, with Yoon turning to smile at the press as they peppered him with questions.

It was the first time that Yoon’s wife had been seen in public for more than 50 days.

Yoon was formally stripped of his office in April after being impeached and suspended for imposing martial law in December.

He attended his fifth court hearing last week over charges of leading an insurrection and abuse of power for declaring martial law on December 3, 2024.

South Korea’s foreign policy battles await new president

The winner of South Korea’s presidential election will immediately face foreign policy challenges dealing with the United States and China.

The Asian country is already under pressure on trade and security issues from the Trump administration, even though the United States is its most important ally against North Korea.

At the same time, South Korea has to walk a fine line with China, South Korea’s top trading partner.

“The winner is going to face a lot of big issues very quickly,” said Chinese foreign policy expert Choo Jae-woo, from Seoul’s Kyung Hee University.

Source : https://www.dw.com/en/south-korea-polls-open-in-snap-presidential-election/live-72767996

German govt defiant despite court ruling against migration crackdown

FILE PHOTO: Suspected illegal migrants sit on the ground after they were detained by German police during their patrol along the German-Polish border to prevent illegal migration, in Forst, Germany, September 20, 2023. REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/File Photo

The new German government on Monday (Jun 2) said it would continue its flagship policy of turning asylum seekers away at its borders, despite a court ruling against the practice.

The policy was brought in on May 7, just a day after conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz and his cabinet took office with a promise to crack down on irregular migration.

However, Berlin’s Administrative Court ruled on Monday that people “who express the wish to seek asylum while at a border check on German territory may not be sent back” before it was determined which state was responsible for processing their claim under the EU’s so-called “Dublin” system.

Despite this, Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt said hours after the judgement that “we will continue with the pushbacks”, adding that “we think we have the legal justification for this”.

Monday’s court decision follows an appeal made by three Somali nationals who encountered an immigration check at a train station at Frankfurt an der Oder on the Polish border on May 9.

They expressed their wish to claim asylum in Germany but were sent back to Poland the same day.

The court said that their pushback was illegal and that its “findings can also be applied to other cases” of people being turned away at Germany’s borders.

However, the court also ruled that “the petitioners cannot demand to be allowed into” Germany.

The process of establishing which EU state is responsible for the asylum application “can be carried out at or close to the border”, the court said.

The court rejected the government’s argument that the Dublin procedure could be disregarded if this is necessary to “keep public order and protect domestic security”.

The government had failed “to demonstrate a danger to public security or order” that would justify such a move, the court said.

Dobrindt insisted that Monday’s judgment only had a direct impact on the “individual case” of the three Somali complainants.

He said he wanted the court to start another procedure in which the government could explain its case “more firmly”.

However, it is unclear whether this is legally possible given that the court said Monday’s decision was final.

Under the Dublin procedure, irregular migrants should be registered in the EU country they first enter. Should they head to another nation in the bloc, they can in most cases be returned to their first port of call in the EU.

IRRITATED NEIGHBOURS

The new policy of pushing back undocumented migrants at Germany’s borders, including almost all asylum seekers, was quickly introduced after Merz’s government took office early last month.

This was despite worries voiced by some in his coalition’s junior partner, the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD), that the policy was not legally sound.

The government has also stressed that the pushbacks were temporary and that the longer-term solution has to be improved security at the EU’s external borders.

According to the interior ministry, more than 2,800 people have been denied entry to Germany in the first two weeks of the new policy being applied, including 138 people who wanted to claim asylum.

A crackdown on irregular migration was a key plank of Merz’s platform for February’s general election.

That vote saw the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) score its best-ever result of just over 20 per cent, and Merz insists that action on migration is the only way to halt the party’s growth.

The new government’s pushback policy has led to some irritation among Germany’s neighbours as well as fears of adverse impacts on cross-border commuters and border communities.

Source : https://www.channelnewsasia.com/world/german-govt-defiant-despite-court-ruling-against-migration-crackdown-5163356

Ukraine drones strike airbases deep in Russian territory; 41 aircraft reportedly destroyed or damaged

A drone (left) lifts off from wooden sheds loaded onto a truck that was driven to the perimeter of an air base, as smoke rises in the background, in Mal’ta, Irkutsk Region, Russia; and smoke rises above the area following what local authorities called a drone attack on a military unit in the Sredny settlement, in the course of Russia-Ukraine conflict in the Usolsky district of the Irkutsk region, Russia, in these still images obtained from social media video released on Jun 1, 2025. (Images: Social media via REUTERS, Handout via REUTERS/Governor of Irkutsk Region Igor Kobzev via Telegram)

Ukraine said on Sunday (Jun 1) that its drones destroyed Russian bombers worth billions of dollars as far away as Siberia in its longest-range assault of the war, as it geared up for talks on prospects for a ceasefire.

In a spectacular claim, Ukraine said it damaged US$7 billion worth of Russian aircraft parked at four airbases thousands of kilometres across the border, with unverified video footage showing aircraft engulfed in flames and black smoke.

A source in the Ukrainian security services (SBU) said the strikes hit 41 planes that were used to “bomb Ukrainian villages”.

The drones were concealed in the ceilings of transportation containers that were opened remotely for the assault, the source added.

CEASEFIRE TALKS

The long-planned operation came at a delicate moment three years into Russia’s invasion.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Sunday that he was sending a delegation to Istanbul led by his Defence Minister Rustem Umerov for talks on Monday with Russian officials.

Türkiye is hosting the meeting, which was spurred by United States President Donald Trump’s push for a quick deal to end the three-year war.

Zelenskyy, who previously voiced scepticism about whether Russia was serious in proposing Monday’s meeting, said priorities included “a complete and unconditional ceasefire” and the return of prisoners and abducted children.

Russia, which has rejected previous ceasefire requests, said it had formulated its own peace terms but refused to divulge them in advance.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his US counterpart Marco Rubio spoke by telephone on Sunday about “several initiatives aimed at a political solution to the Ukraine crisis”, including Monday’s talks, the Russian foreign ministry said in a statement carried by the TASS news agency.

“SPIDER’S WEB”

Zelenskyy on Sunday hailed “brilliant” results of the coordinated attack, code-named “Spider’s Web”, which he said had used 117 drones and was the country’s “most long-range operation” in more than three years of war.

Russia’s defence ministry confirmed on Telegram that several of its military aircraft “caught fire”, adding that there were no casualties.

Rybar, an account on the Telegram message platform that is close to the Russian military, called it a “very heavy blow” for Moscow and pointed to what it called “serious errors” by Russian intelligence.

The SBU source said the strikes targeted Russian airbases in the eastern Siberian city of Belaya, in Olenya, in the Arctic near Finland, and in Ivanovo and Dyagilevo, both east of Moscow.

The operation was prepared for over a year and a half, the SBU source said, and aimed to destroy “enemy bombers far from the front”.

Zelenskyy said one of the targeted locations was right next to one of the offices of the FSB Russian security services.

“FIRST SUCH STRIKE ON SIBERIA”

Russia said it had arrested several suspects, including the driver of a truck from which a drone had taken off, state agencies said.

But Zelenskyy said people involved in preparing the attacks were “extracted from Russian territory in time”.

Igor Kobzev, governor of Russia’s Irkutsk region, which hosts the Belaya airbase, said it was “the first attack of this sort in Siberia”.

He called on the population not to panic and posted an amateur video apparently showing a drone in the sky and a large cloud of grey smoke.

RUSSIA DRONE STRIKES

Russia has been announcing Ukrainian drone attacks on a near-daily basis, usually saying they had all been shot down.

At the same time, Russia has been carrying out constant attacks on Ukraine.

On Sunday, Ukraine’s air force said it was hit by 472 Russian drones and seven missiles overnight, a record number since the beginning of the invasion in February 2022.

In a rare admission of its military losses, the Ukrainian army said Russia’s “missile strike on the location of one of the training units” had killed a dozen soldiers, most of whom had been in shelters during the attack, and wounded more than 60.

Source : https://www.channelnewsasia.com/world/ukraine-drone-strike-deep-russia-territory-5162241

Meghan Markle snubbed by A-list singer who turned down invite to appear on Netflix show: report

Dolly Parton reportedly snubbed Meghan Markle after she turned down an invite to appear on the actress’s Netflix series “With Love, Meghan.”

“Her team was livid,” celebrity commentator Kinsey Schofield claimed on a recent podcast appearance of “The Nerve with Maureen Callahan.”

“Because no, they don’t want to risk Dolly’s reputation Q score [and] her popularity by associating with Meghan Markle.”

An A-list celebrity reportedly bashed Meghan Markle after refusing to appear on “With Love, Meghan.”
Netflix

“They knew that this ask was just to give Meghan Markle credibility in this lifestyle space, a space that Dolly does have a lot of credibility in,” she continued.

Schofield, 40, elaborated on Parton’s success in the country music industry and as a lifestyle guru with her variety of baking batter mixes and beauty products.

“Dolly is not only incredibly popular and loved by the general public, but she also is somebody who can float around within these different places,” she added.

“Her team really feels like Meghan was trying to take advantage of her popularity,” Schofield alleged.

Callahan described Parton as “authentic” and claimed it would’ve been “spontaneous combustion of good versus evil” if she agreed to appear alongside “a fake royal” in her “fake kitchen.”

Reps for Parton, 79, and Markle, 43, weren’t immediately available to Page Six for comment.

The Duchess of Sussex’s lifestyle series was released on Netflix in March.

It was immediately renewed for Season 2 despite criticism from trolls claiming that Markle was “thirsty” for fame.

Several celebrities joined the “Suits” alum in her show, including Mindy Kaling and Abigail Spencer.

Source : https://pagesix.com/2025/06/02/celebrity-news/meghan-markle-snubbed-by-a-list-singer-who-turned-down-invite-to-appear-on-netflix-show/

Blake Lively makes shocking legal move in her heated battle against Justin Baldoni

Blake Lively is attempting to drop claims that Justin Baldoni caused her emotional distress while working on their 2024 blockbuster “It Ends With Us.”

Court documents obtained by Page Six on Monday revealed that the “Gossip Girl” alum requested to withdraw claims that she suffered from “intentional infliction of emotional distress” and “negligent infliction of emotional distress” as a result of Baldoni’s alleged misconduct.

Lively’s filing came after the “Jane the Virgin” star’s legal team requested she sign a release form for them to access her medical and mental health records.

Blake Lively is attempting to drop allegations that her “It Ends With Us” co-star Justin Baldoni caused her emotional distress.
©Sony Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

Baldoni’s legal team argued the records were vital to the actress’s “emotional distress” allegations cited in her December 2024 lawsuit.

“Instead of complying with the Medical RFPs, Ms. Lively’s counsel recently advised us, in writing, that Ms. Lively is withdrawing her [infliction of emotional distress] Claims,” Baldoni’s team responded in a filing viewed by Page Six.

The court will determine if Lively’s request will be approved.

Attorneys for the “Another Simple Favor” star told Page Six via a statement that her request was “a routine part of the litigation process that is being used as a press stunt.”

“We are doing what trial lawyers do: preparing our case for trial by streamlining and focusing it,” they said, adding that Baldoni’s team was “desperately seeking” media attention.

“The Baldoni-Wayfarer strategy of filing retaliatory claims has exposed them to expansive new damages claims under California law, rendering certain of Ms. Lively’s original claims no longer necessary,” the statement continued.

“Ms. Lively continues to allege emotional distress, as part of numerous other claims in her lawsuit, such as sexual harassment and retaliation, and massive additional compensatory damages on all of her claims.”

Lively, 37, accused Baldoni, 41, of inflicting upon her “severe emotional distress and pain, humiliation, embarrassment, belittlement, frustration and mental anguish” in her bombshell sexual harassment lawsuit.

According to the filing, a “hands-on” meeting had to be held with Lively, Baldoni and the movie’s production team to discuss his alleged behavior, including how he allegedly showed her “nude videos or images of women” and discussed his past addicition to porn.

She accused Baldoni of launching a smear campaign to destroy her reputation as a result of reporting the alleged sexual harassment.

Lively later claimed her and Ryan Reynolds’ children — James, 10, Inez, 8, Betty, 5, and Olin, 2 — were also “traumatized” by the ongoing drama.

At the time, the “Five Feet Apart” producer’s lawyer, Bryan Freedman, slammed the “shameful” and “false accusations.”

“These claims are completely false, outrageous and intentionally salacious with an intent to publicly hurt and rehash a narrative in the media,” he told Page Six.

Baldoni filed his own $400 million lawsuit against Lively and Reynolds in January.

In the docs, he accused Lively of using Reynolds’ and her bestie Taylor Swift’s influence to get her way.

Source : https://pagesix.com/2025/06/02/celebrity-news/blake-lively-makes-surprising-move-in-her-heated-legal-battle-against-justin-baldoni/

UN calls for investigation into killings near Gaza aid distribution site

The US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation has set up four aid distribution centre in southern and central Gaza

The UN secretary-general has called for an independent investigation into the killing of Palestinians near an aid distribution centre in Gaza on Sunday, amid disputed reports that Israeli forces had opened fire on people waiting to collect aid.

Witnesses reported being shot at while waiting for food from the centre in Rafah run by the US and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

The Red Cross said its hospital received 179 casualties, 21 of whom were dead. The Hamas-run Civil Defence agency put the death toll at 31.

On Sunday, the Israeli military denied its troops fired at civilians near or within the site and said reports to this effect were false.

The GHF said the reports were “outright fabrications” and that it was yet to see evidence of an attack at or near its facility.

Israel does not allow international news organisations, including the BBC, into Gaza, making verifying what is happening in the territory difficult.

UN Secretary-General Guterres said in a statement on Monday: “I am appalled by the reports of Palestinians killed and injured while seeking aid in Gaza yesterday.

“I call for an immediate and independent investigation into these events and for perpetrators to be held accountable.”

Israel’s foreign ministry responded by branding his comments a “disgrace” in a post on X, and criticised him for not mentioning Hamas.

Later on Monday, UN human rights chief Volker Turk told the BBC the way humanitarian aid is now being delivered is “unacceptable” and “dehumanising”.

“I think what it shows is utter disregard for civilians. Can you imagine people that have been absolutely desperate for food, for medicine, for almost three months and then they have to run for it or try to get it in the most desperate circumstances? Mr Turk told the BBC World Service’s Newshour programme.

“It does show a huge dehumanisation of the people who are desperately in need.”

The Civil Defence agency said 31 people were killed and 176 wounded “after Israeli gunfire targeted thousands of civilians near the American aid centre in Rafah” early on Sunday morning.

According to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), the Red Cross Field Hospital in Rafah received a “mass casualty influx” of 179 cases, including women and children, at that time.

The majority suffered gunshot or shrapnel wounds, and 21 were declared dead upon arrival, it said, adding “all patients said they had been trying to reach an aid distribution site”.

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) said its teams at Nasser hospital in Khan Younis also treated people with serious injuries, some of whom were in a critical condition.

It added the patients “reported being shot at from all sides by Israeli drones, helicopters, boats, tanks and soldiers”, and that one staff member’s brother was “killed while attempting to collect aid from the distribution centre”.

A journalist in Rafah told the BBC a crowd of Palestinians had gathered near al-Alam roundabout in Rafah, close to the GHF’s site, when Israeli tanks approached and opened fire.

One video posted online on Sunday morning appeared to show Palestinians taking cover in an open area of sandy terrain while what sounds like automatic gunfire rings out. However, the BBC was unable to verify the location because there are not enough features visible.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) put out a statement on Sunday afternoon that said an initial inquiry indicated its troops “did not fire at civilians while they were near or within the humanitarian aid distribution site and that reports to this effect are false”.

Spokesman Brig Gen Effie Defrin accused Hamas of “spreading rumours” and “trying bluntly and violently to stop the people of Gaza from reaching those distribution centres”.

The IDF also released drone video it said showed armed men firing at civilians on their way to collect aid, although the BBC was unable to verify where or when it was filmed.

Later on Sunday, an Israeli military official briefed reporters that soldiers had acted to “prevent a number of suspects from approaching the forces” approximately 1km from the GHF site, before it opened.

“Warning shots were fired,” the official said, before insisting there was “no connection between the incident in question and the false allegations against the IDF”.

The GHF said in a statement on Monday that the reports were “the most egregious in terms of outright fabrications and misinformation fed to the international media community.

“There were no injuries, fatalities or incidents during our operations yesterday. Period. We have yet to see any evidence that there was an attack at or near our facility.”

The US ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, accused major news outlets of “reckless and irresponsible reporting” on the matter.

“Drone video and first-hand accounts clearly showed that there were no injuries, no fatalities, no shooting, no chaos,” he said on Monday.

“The only source for these misleading, exaggerated, and utterly fabricated stories came from Hamas sources, which are designed to fan the flames of antisemitic hate that is arguably contributing to violence against Jews in the United States,” he added.

Meanwhile on Monday, health officials and local media reported that another three Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire near the same GHF centre in Rafah’s Tal al-Sultan area.

A Red Cross spokesman told the Associated Press that its field hospital in Rafah received 50 wounded people, mostly with gunshot and shrapnel wounds, including two declared dead on arrival, while Nasser hospital in nearby Khan Younis said it received a third body.

The Israeli military said in a statement that “warning shots were fired toward several suspects who advanced toward” troops approximately 1km from the site.

The military added it was “aware of reports regarding casualties, and the details of the incident are being thoroughly looked into”.

Also on Monday, the Civil Defence reported that 14 people, including six children and three women, were killed in an Israeli strike on a house in the northern town of Jabalia. More than 20 others were believed to be missing under the rubble of the destroyed building, it said.

There was no immediate comment from the IDF, but it said in a statement that its aircraft had struck dozens of targets across Gaza over the past day, including “military structures belonging to terror organisations”, underground tunnels, and weapons stores.

Israel imposed a total blockade on Gaza on 2 March and resumed its military offensive two weeks later, collapsing a two-month ceasefire with Hamas. It said the steps were meant to put pressure on the armed group to release the 58 hostages still held in Gaza, at least 20 of whom are believed to be alive.

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c753e0p29z0o

One death every seven minutes: The world’s worst country to give birth

At the age of 24, Nafisa Salahu was in danger of becoming just another statistic in Nigeria, where a woman dies giving birth every seven minutes, on average.

Going into labour during a doctors’ strike meant that, despite being in hospital, there was no expert help on hand once a complication emerged.

Her baby’s head was stuck and she was just told to lie still during labour, which lasted three days.

Eventually a Caesarean was recommended and a doctor was located who was prepared to carry it out.

“I thanked God because I was almost dying. I had no strength left, I had nothing left,” Ms Salahu tells the BBC from Kano state in the north of the country.

She survived, but tragically her baby died.

Eleven years on, she has gone back to hospital to give birth several times and takes a fatalistic attitude. “I knew [each time] I was between life and death but I was no longer afraid,” she says.

Ms Salahu’s experience is not unusual.

Nigeria is the world’s most dangerous nation in which to give birth.

According to the most recent UN estimates for the country, compiled from 2023 figures, one in 100 women die in labour or in the following days.

That puts it at the top of a league table no country wants to head.

In 2023, Nigeria accounted for well over a quarter – 29% – of all maternal deaths worldwide.

That is an estimated total of 75,000 women dying in childbirth in a year, which works out at one death every seven minutes.

The frustration for many is that a large number of the deaths – from things like bleeding after childbirth (known as postpartum haemorrhage) – are preventable.

Chinenye Nweze was 36 when she bled to death at a hospital in the south-eastern town of Onitsha five years ago.

“The doctors needed blood,” her brother Henry Edeh remembers. “The blood they had wasn’t enough and they were running around. Losing my sister and my friend is nothing I would wish on an enemy. The pain is unbearable.”

Among the other common causes of maternal deaths are obstructed labour, high blood pressure and unsafe abortions.

Nigeria’s “very high” maternal mortality rate is the result of a combination of a number of factors, according to Martin Dohlsten from the Nigeria office of the UN’s children’s organisation, Unicef.

Among them, he says, are poor health infrastructure, a shortage of medics, costly treatments that many cannot afford, cultural practices that can lead to some distrusting medical professionals and insecurity.

“No woman deserves to die while birthing a child,” says Mabel Onwuemena, national co-ordinator of the Women of Purpose Development Foundation.

She explains that some women, especially in rural areas, believe “that visiting hospitals is a total waste of time” and choose “traditional remedies instead of seeking medical help, which can delay life-saving care”.

For some, reaching a hospital or clinic is near-impossible because of a lack of transport, but Ms Onwuemena believes that even if they managed to, their problems would not be over.

“Many healthcare facilities lack the basic equipment, supplies and trained personnel, making it difficult to provide a quality service.”

Nigeria’s federal government currently spends only 5% of its budget on health – well short of the 15% target that the country committed to in a 2001 African Union treaty.

In 2021, there were 121,000 midwives for a population of 218 million and less than half of all births were overseen by a skilled health worker. It is estimated that the country needs 700,000 more nurses and midwives to meet the World Health Organization’s recommended ratio.

There is also a severe lack of doctors.

The shortage of staff and facilities puts some off seeking professional help.

“I honestly don’t trust hospitals much, there are too many stories of negligence, especially in public hospitals,” Jamila Ishaq says.

“For example, when I was having my fourth child, there were complications during labour. The local birth attendant advised us to go to the hospital, but when we got there, no healthcare worker was available to help me. I had to go back home, and that’s where I eventually gave birth,” she explains.

The 28-year-old from Kano state is now expecting her fifth baby.

She adds that she would consider going to a private clinic but the cost is prohibitive.

Chinwendu Obiejesi, who is expecting her third child, is able to pay for private health care at a hospital and “wouldn’t consider giving birth anywhere else”.

She says that among her friends and family, maternal deaths are now rare, whereas she used to hear about them quite frequently.

She lives in a wealthy suburb of Abuja, where hospitals are easier to reach, roads are better, and emergency services work. More women in the city are also educated and know the importance of going to the hospital.

“I always attend antenatal care… It allows me to speak with doctors regularly, do important tests and scans, and keep track of both my health and the baby’s,” Ms Obiejesi tells the BBC.

“For instance, during my second pregnancy, they expected I might bleed heavily, so they prepared extra blood in case a transfusion was needed. Thankfully, I didn’t need it, and everything went well.”

However, a family friend of hers was not so lucky.

During her second labour, “the birth attendant couldn’t deliver the baby and tried to force it out. The baby died. By the time she was rushed to the hospital, it was too late. She still had to undergo surgery to deliver the baby’s body. It was heart-breaking.”

Dr Nana Sandah-Abubakar, director of community health services at the country’s National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA), acknowledges that the situation is dire, but says a new plan is being put in place to address some of the issues.

Last November, the Nigerian government launched the pilot phase of the Maternal Mortality Reduction Innovation Initiative (Mamii). Eventually this will target 172 local government areas across 33 states, which account for more than half of all childbirth-related deaths in the country.

“We identify each pregnant woman, know where she lives, and support her through pregnancy, childbirth and beyond,” Dr Sandah-Abubakar says.

So far, 400,000 pregnant women in six states have been found in a house-to-house survey, “with details of whether they are attending ante-natal [classes] or not”.

“The plan is to start to link them to services to ensure that they get the care [they need] and that they deliver safely.”

Mamii will aim to work with local transport networks to try and get more women to clinics and also encourage people to sign up to low-cost public health insurance.

It is too early to say whether this has had any impact, but the authorities hope that the country can eventually follow the trend of the rest of the world.

Globally, maternal deaths have dropped by 40% since 2000, thanks to expanded access to healthcare. The numbers have also improved in Nigeria over the same period – but only by 13%.

Despite Mamii, and other programmes, being welcome initiatives, some experts believe more must be done – including greater investment.

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c5yk8ek86kdo

Al-Qaeda linked group says it carried out huge attack on Mali’s army

The Malian army says it defended itself “vigorously”

An al-Qaeda linked group says it carried out a major attack on the Malian town of Boulikessi and the seizure of an army base there.

More than 30 soldiers were killed in Sunday’s attack, according to sources quoted by the news agency Reuters, however that figure has not been confirmed by the authorities.

On Monday the same group, Jama’a Nusrat ul-Islam wa al-Muslimin (JNIM), said it targeted the military in the historic city of Timbuktu, with residents reporting hearing gunfire and explosions.

Mali’s army said in a statement late on Monday that it had repelled an “infiltration attempt by terrorist fighters” in Timbuktu, “neutralising” 14 militants and arresting 31 suspects.

It added that weapons, vehicles and other items were seized, but did not name the group responsible for the attack. The army said search operations across Timbuktu were ongoing.

In an earlier statement, the army said it “reacted vigorously” to Sunday’s attack, before “withdrawing” – suggesting a tactical retreat.

“Many men fought, some until their last breath, to defend the Malian nation,” the statement added.

An unnamed local source told Reuters that JNIM had left many casualties and “cleared the camp”.

Unverified video footage showed dozens of militants storming the base, including one which captured them stepping on bodies, according to Reuters.

In Monday’s attack, JNIM said its fighters had attacked a military airport and Russian mercenaries.

Military and security sources told the AFP news agency they were “fighting back”, but that the militants were “everywhere in the city”.

A local official said the attackers had arrived “with a vehicle packed with explosives” that detonated close to the army camp.

Timbuktu, a UN World Heritage Site, was captured by Islamist militants in 2012 before they were driven out, but has once more been under siege in recent years.

The attacks, the latest sign of collapsing security in Mali and the wider Sahel region, came after the United States Africa Command warned about growing efforts by various different Islamist militant groups which operate in the Sahel to gain access to West Africa’s coastline.

Source :https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4g3exnnd6po

Tomatoes fly during Colombia’s Gran Tomatina festival

The festival, created to mirror Spain’s La Tomatina festival, was hosted in Sutamarchan, north of Colombia’s capital Bogota, for its 15th edition this year after many years of suspension.

People play with tomato pulp during the annual “Tomatina” (tomato fight) in Sutamarchan, Colombia June 1, 2025. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez
People play with tomato pulp during the annual “Tomatina” (tomato fight) in Sutamarchan, Colombia June 1. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez
People play with tomato pulp during the annual “Tomatina” (tomato fight) in Sutamarchan, Colombia June 1. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez
People play with tomato pulp during the annual “Tomatina” (tomato fight) in Sutamarchan, Colombia June 1. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez
People play with tomato pulp during the annual “Tomatina” (tomato fight) in Sutamarchan, Colombia June 1. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez
People play with tomato pulp during the annual “Tomatina” (tomato fight) in Sutamarchan, Colombia June 1. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez
People play with tomato pulp during the annual “Tomatina” (tomato fight) in Sutamarchan, Colombia June 1. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez
People play with tomato pulp during the annual “Tomatina” (tomato fight) in Sutamarchan, Colombia June 1. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez
People play with tomato pulp during the annual “Tomatina” (tomato fight) in Sutamarchan, Colombia June 1. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez
People play with tomato pulp during the annual “Tomatina” (tomato fight) in Sutamarchan, Colombia June 1. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez
Men unload tomatoes from a truck before the “Tomatina” (tomato fight) in Sutamarchan, Colombia June 1. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez

Source :https://www.reuters.com/pictures/tomatoes-fly-during-colombias-gran-tomatina-festival-2025-06-02/

‘Bachelorette’ star Katie Thurston is losing her memory as she fights Stage 4 cancer

Katie Thurston is going through the wringer in her Stage 4 breast cancer battle.

The “Bachelorette” alum, 34, gave a heartbreaking health update in an Instagram video posted Sunday.

“I just finished my second month of treatment and if you’re asking how long treatment is, technically forever,” Thurston told her followers. “I am optimistic about medical advancements in the future — fingers crossed as a stage 4 girly.”

“But right now, after finishing two months of my medication, my hair is coming out in an unnatural amount of clumps,” the reality star shared. “I’m losing my memory. That’s great. Going through customs and them being like, ‘Where are you coming from?’ And I looked at him and I was like, ‘I don’t remember.’”

Thurston explained that she recently got into a “little disagreement” with her husband, comedian Jeff Arcuri, where she couldn’t defend herself because of her memory issues.

Katie Thurston with her husband Jeff Arcuri.
thekatiethurston/Instagram

“I was like, ‘This has happened before,’” she recalled. “He was like, ‘When?’ I was like, ‘I don’t know but I know it has!’ We’re able to laugh about it now.”

“Cancer is s–t,” Thurston continued. “Sometimes I’m like, ‘Stop feeling bad for yourself.’ Other times I’m like, ‘You’re allowed to feel bad for yourself. Cancer f—ing sucks.’”

Thurston explained that she’s reached the phase of her treatment where she has to make “big decisions” about how to treat her liver. She said she’s opted for histotripsy, which uses focused ultrasound to destroy cancer cells without cutting into the body.

“It’s National Cancer Survivors Day,” she said. “Every day that I’m alive, I’m a survivor. So go me, I guess.”

Thurston originally competed on Matt James’ season of “The Bachelor” in 2021 and then became the star of “The Bachelorette” Season 17.

One month before her intimate wedding to Acuri, 37, in New York City in March, Thurston publicly revealed her breast cancer diagnosis.

“I experienced a range of emotions over the past two weeks. Despair. Anger. Sadness. Denial. And then strength. Purposeful. Ready. I cried a lot,” she said in a message on Instagram.

In March, Thurston shared that her cancer had spread to her liver and was Stage 4.

Source : https://nypost.com/2025/06/02/entertainment/bachelorette-star-katie-thurston-losing-memory-amid-cancer/

HATE CRIME Vile remark by Boulder suspect Mohamed Sabry Soliman as he admits he spent over a YEAR planning antisemitic bomb attack

THE suspect accused of the antisemitic attack in Boulder, Colorado, has admitted that he spent over a year planning his sick crime.

Mohamed Sabry Soliman, 45, allegedly threw Molotov cocktails and used a makeshift flamethrower to target a crowd that peacefully gathered to raise awareness on Israeli hostages in Gaza, injuring 12 people.

 

Twelve people were injured in the attack, which Soliman said he spent a year planningCredit: EPA

Witnesses said they saw Soliman yelling “Free Palestine” as he used a converted garden sprayer as a flamethrower in the attack on Sunday.

Soliman confessed to the crime with vile remarks after being taken into custody.

He told police that “he wanted to kill all Zionist people and wished they were all dead,” according to an FBI affidavit.

“Soliman stated he would do it (conduct an attack) again.”

He was charged with a federal hate crime on Monday, and his mugshot was released, showing his face covered in bruises and a large bandage.

Soliman admitted that he planned the attack for a year, wanting to target what he called a “Zionist group,” said the FBI.

The attack happened at the Pearl Street Mall in downtown Boulder, where the group gathers weekly to bring attention to the hostages.

Soliman hid behind bushes near the mall and allegedly threw a Molotov cocktail into the crowd, burning himself in the process.

After taking off his shirt and revealing that he had a bulletproof vest underneath, Soliman allegedly used the flamethrower and gasoline to set several people on fire.

Video showed Soliman holding two clear bottles with a clear liquid in them as he yelled at onlookers.

Twelve people were injured in the attack, including an 88-year-old Holocaust survivor, but there were no deaths.

“As a result of these preliminary attacks, it is clear that this is a targeted act of violence and the FBI is investigating this as an act of terrorism,” Mark Michalek, the special agent in charge at the FBI’s Denver field office, said on Sunday.

His bond is set at $10 million.

CHILLING FIND

More than a dozen unlit Molotov cocktails were found near where Soliman was arrested, said the FBI.

Inside his car, investigators found papers with the words “Israel,” “Palestine,” and “USAID.”

Soliman told authorities that he made the Molotov cocktails at home after researching on YouTube.

“He stated that he had been planning the attack for a year and was waiting until after his daughter graduated to conduct the attack,” said the FBI.

Soliman had been living in the US illegally after entering the country in August 2022 on a B2 visa that expired in February 2023, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

Soliman filed for asylum in September 2022 and was given a work authorization in March 2023 that had expired, DHS assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin said.

President Donald Trump blamed former President Joe Biden for the attack in a statement on Monday.

“Yesterday’s horrific attack in Boulder, Colorado, WILL NOT BE TOLERATED in the United States of America,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/news/us-news/14382914/mohamed-sabry-soliman-colorado-attack-anti-semetic/

Trump says Iran deal would not allow ‘any’ uranium enrichment

Iran’s and the US’ flags are seen printed on paper in this illustration taken Jan 27, 2022. (File photo: REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration)

United States President Donald Trump on Monday (Jun 2) ruled out allowing Iran to enrich uranium under any nuclear deal between the foes – as Tehran defended what it said was its “peaceful” pursuit of fuel for power generation.

Uranium enrichment has remained a key point of contention in five rounds of talks since April to ink a new accord to replace the deal with major powers that Trump abandoned during his first term in 2018.

“Under our potential Agreement – WE WILL NOT ALLOW ANY ENRICHMENT OF URANIUM!” Trump said on his Truth Social network after the Axios news outlet said Washington’s offer would let Tehran enrich some of the nuclear fuel.

Republican Trump also blamed predecessor Joe Biden for the impasse, saying the Democrat “should have stopped Iran a long time ago from ‘enriching'”.

Axios said the latest proposal that Washington had sent Tehran on Saturday would allow limited low-level uranium enrichment on Iranian soil, for an amount of time that has yet to be determined.

Iran has insisted that it has “nothing to hide” on its nuclear program.

Speaking in Cairo, where he met the UN nuclear watchdog’s chief Rafael Grossi, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said: “If the goal is to deprive Iran of its peaceful activities, then certainly no agreement will be reached.”

The remarks came after Grossi of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) on Monday called for more transparency from Iran following a leaked report that showed Tehran had stepped up uranium enrichment.

“NEED FOR MORE TRANSPARENCY”

The IAEA report showed that Iran has ramped up production of uranium enriched up to 60 per cent – close to the roughly 90 per cent level needed for atomic weapons.

“There is a need for more transparency – this is very, very clear – in Iran, and nothing will bring us to this confidence (besides) full explanations of a number of activities,” Grossi said ahead of meeting Araghchi.

Grossi added that some of the report’s findings “may be uncomfortable for some, and we are … used to being criticised”.

Iran has rejected the report, warning it would retaliate if European powers that have threatened to reimpose nuclear sanctions “exploit” it.

“Some countries are trying to abuse this agency to pave the way for escalation with Iran. I hope that this agency does not fall into this trap,” Araghchi said of the IAEA.

Iran meanwhile pushed for the United States to drop sanctions that have crippled its economy as a condition for a nuclear agreement with Trump’s administration.

Araghchi said on Saturday that he had received “elements” of the US proposal for a nuclear deal following the five rounds of talks, mediated by Oman.

“WITH OR WITHOUT A DEAL”

Both Araghchi and Grossi met Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who praised the US-Iran talks and called for “de-escalation in order to prevent a slide into a full-fledged regional war”.

On Monday, Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei told a news conference: “We want to guarantee that the sanctions are effectively lifted.”

“So far, the American side has not wanted to clarify this issue,” he said.

The US envoy in the nuclear talks said last month that Trump’s administration would oppose any Iranian enrichment.

“An enrichment program can never exist in the state of Iran ever again. That’s our red line. No enrichment,” Steve Witkoff told Breitbart News.

Following a phone call with Witkoff the day before about the ongoing nuclear talks, Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty urged a peaceful solution and a nuclear-weapon-free Middle East, saying in Monday’s press conference that “the region is already experiencing enough problems and crises”.

He warned that military confrontation would create “a state of chaos from which no one will be spared”.

Source : https://www.channelnewsasia.com/world/trump-says-iran-deal-would-not-allow-any-uranium-enrichment-5162736

Shockwaves in space: Earthquakes found to shake up satellite signals

When the Earth shakes, the impact doesn’t stop at the surface. New research reveals that powerful earthquakes can send shockwaves all the way into space, disrupting satellite signals and GPS systems by disturbing the charged upper layers of our atmosphere.

Scientists from Nagoya University in Japan have made the first 3D visualisation of how the atmosphere reacted to a powerful 7.5-magnitude earthquake that hit the Noto Peninsula on 1 January 2024. They used data from over 4,500 Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) receivers across Japan.

Their research, published in the journal Earth, Planets and Space, shows how earthquakes can send complex sound waves into the upper atmosphere, disturbing a layer called the ionosphere. These disturbances can affect satellite communications and GPS signals, and challenge what scientists previously believed about how these waves travel.

What is the Ionosphere, and why does it matter?

The ionosphere is a part of the atmosphere that lies 60 to 1,000 kilometres above the Earth. It’s filled with charged particles and plays an important role in sending radio signals from satellites to the ground.

When the earthquake happened, it created sound waves that travelled upward into the ionosphere. These waves changed the amount of charged particles, which slowed down satellite signals. By measuring the delays in these signals, the researchers were able to calculate these changes and use a technique similar to a medical CT scan to build 3D images of the disturbances.

Surprising patterns in the sky

About 10 minutes after the earthquake, wave-like ripples appeared in the ionosphere, similar to the way water ripples after a stone is dropped in a pond. However, the team noticed something unusual – some of the waves tilted in a strange direction, south of the earthquake’s epicentre, and slowly straightened out as they rose higher.

Old models, which assumed that these waves came from a single point, couldn’t explain this pattern.

The breakthrough came when the scientists considered that the earthquake didn’t rupture in one spot, but along a 150-kilometre fault line. Dr Weizheng Fu, the lead author, said, “Earthquakes don’t rupture at one point, but spread along faults.” Their updated model showed that the sound waves were created at different places along the fault, around 30 seconds apart. This matched what they observed in the sky.

Why does this matter for technology and safety?

These atmospheric changes can interfere with GPS systems and satellite signals, which are used in everything from smartphones to aeroplanes. Co-author Professor Yuichi Otsuka said, “Understanding these patterns can help reduce the risk of technology failures during earthquakes.” 
The research could also help improve earthquake early warning systems. By watching for these atmospheric waves as well as ground movements, scientists may be able to give faster and more accurate alerts.

 

ETNA ESCAPE Terrifying video shows Mount Etna tourists running for their lives as volcano explodes behind them

THIS terrifying video shows the moment tourists run for their lives as the mammoth Mount Etna erupts behind them.

Groups of hikers were on the volcano’s slopes when it began spewing smoke and hot ash, with some just metres from the mouth forced to flee urgently.

Shocked tourists filmed the explosionCredit: @aurelienpouzin

Long lines of tourists could be seen snaking down the mountainside in the shadow of an enormous growing black cloud.

“Very intense and almost continuous” eruptions were reported from the Sicilian stratovolcano – Europe’s highest tinderbox.

Part of the southeastern crater is thought to have collapsed into the bubbling magma setting off the eruption.

A lava fountain has then sent boiling rock, ash, and the poisonous gas sulphur dioxide spewing from Etna’s mouth, visible for miles.

The cloud is now 4miles high – but it is slowly moving northwest and away from the nearby city of Catania.

Despite this the Volcanic Ash Advisory Center Toulouse (VAAC) has issued a code red for flights due to the eruption.

A code red means that there is a “significant” amount of ash in the atmosphere.

Only a small number of flights at Catania airport have been delayed as authorities respond to the safety challenge.

Italian civil aviation is yet to close any airspace.

Eruptions previously around the world have seen planes grounded for days due to risks posed by volcanoes.

Tourists on the fabled mountain captured the moment the eruption happened and the thick grey plume of smoke and ash rushed into the sky.

Other sightseers could be seen running for their lives as their holiday turned into a nightmare.

A terrifying volcanic tremor was felt just moments before the eruption.

The tremor began at roughly 10pm last night before reaching a peak three hours later in the middle of the night.

It was localised at an altitude of 1.7miles below the crater area.

They explained that an ash cloud made predominantly of water and sulphur dioxide was “drifting towards the south west”.

Italy’s National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology said: “Over the past few hours, the activity flagged in the previous statement issued at 4.14am (3.14am BST) has carried on with strombolian explosions of growing intensity that, at the moment, are of strong intensity and nearly continuous.”

They explained that explosive activity from the Southeast Crater has “moved to a lava fountain,” adding that the “volcanic tremor has reached very high values”.

In the past, Etna’s eruptions have caused nearby towns to be covered in black volcanic ash.

The mountain is one of the most active volcanoes in southern Italy, with the last eruption occurring in May.

In February, Mount Etna turned into a fiery peak as hot lava spewed from the erupting volcano.

Marco Bassot, who has 416,000 Instagram followers, captured the moment on camera.

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/news/14377404/etna-erupts-tourists-flee/

Man attacks Colorado crowd with firebombs, 8 people injured

While he did not provide further details, Patel said in a social media post: “Our agents and local law enforcement are on the scene already, and we will share updates as more information becomes available.”

Purported attacker as seen in social media images Credit: X/@EndWokeness

Boulder, Colorado: Eight people were injured on Sunday when a 45-year-old man yelled “Free Palestine” and threw incendiary devices into a crowd in Boulder, Colorado where a demonstration to remember the Israeli hostages who remain in Gaza was taking place, authorities said.

Four women and four men between 52 and 88 years old were transported to hospitals, Boulder police said. Authorities had earlier put the count of the injured at six and said at least one of them was in a critical condition.

“As a result of these preliminary facts, it is clear that this is a targeted act of violence and the FBI is investigating this as an act of terrorism,” the FBI special agent in charge of the Denver Field Office, Mark Michalek, said.

Michalek named the suspect as Mohamed Soliman, who was hospitalized shortly after the attack. Reuters could not immediately locate contact information for him or his family.

FBI Director Kash Patel also described the incident as a “targeted terror attack,” and Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser said it appeared to be “a hate crime given the group that was targeted.” Boulder Police Chief Stephen Redfearn said he did not believe anyone else was involved.

“We’re fairly confident we have the lone suspect in custody,” he said.

The attack took place on the Pearl Street Mall, a popular pedestrian shopping district in the shadow of the University of Colorado, during an event organized by Run for Their Lives, an organization devoted to drawing attention to the hostages seized in the aftermath of Hamas’s 2023 attack on Israel.

In a statement, the group said the walks have been held every week since then for the hostages, “without any violent incidents until today.”

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said on X he was shocked by the “terrible antisemitic terror attack,” describing it as “pure antisemitism.”

The incident comes amid heightened tensions in the United States over Israel’s war in Gaza, which has spurred both an increase in antisemitic hate crime as well as moves by conservative supporters of Israel led by President Donald Trump to brand pro-Palestinian protests as antisemitic. His administration has detained protesters of the war without charge and cut off funding to elite U.S. universities that have permitted such demonstrations.

In a post to X, a social network, Trump’s deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller said Soliman had overstayed his visa and been allowed to work by the previous administration. He said it was further evidence of the need to “fully reverse” what he described as “suicidal migration.”

Reuters was not able to independently verify the suspect’s immigration status. When asked about Soliman, the Department of Homeland Security said more information would be provided as it became available.

Victims burned

Brooke Coffman, a 19-year-old at the University of Colorado who witnessed the Boulder incident, said she saw four women lying or sitting on the ground with burns on their legs. One of them appeared to have been badly burned on most of her body and had been wrapped in a flag by someone, she said.

She described seeing a man whom she presumed to be the attacker standing in the courtyard shirtless, holding a glass bottle of clear liquid and shouting.

“Everybody is yelling, ‘get water, get water,'” Coffman said.

Source : https://www.deccanherald.com/world/fbi-investigating-targeted-terror-attack-in-boulder-colorado-director-says-3567056

Bangladesh’s International Crimes Tribunal indicts Sheikh Hasina, orders her to be produced in Dhaka on June 16

Former Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who remains in self-imposed exile in India, has rejected the charges as politically motivated. File | Photo Credit: Reuters

The International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) of Bangladesh on Sunday indicted former Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina for ordering police action against protesters last year, and directed the authorities in Bangladesh to produce her before the tribunal on June 16.

The proceedings of the tribunal came nearly ten months after Ms. Hasina left Bangladesh and took refuge in India on August 5, 2024. The ICT has issued warrants to arrest Ms. Hasina and former Bangladesh Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal. Former Bangladesh Inspector General of Police Chowdhury Abdullah Al Mamun was also indicted.

The ICT is a domestic war crimes tribunal which Ms. Hasina’s government had set up in 2010, primarily to prosecute those accused of collaborating with Pakistan in 1971.

‘Systematic attack’

“We do hereby take into cognizance the charges,” the ICT’s three-judge bench said, after a prosecution team argued that as Prime Minister, Ms. Hasina had overseen a “systematic attack” against students and common people who were demanding that she step down from power.

The tribunal’s verdict, telecast live on state-run BTV, came as the result of multiple cases lodged against Ms. Hasina by the victims of police violence in July and August 2024, when an anti-quota movement led by students quickly turned into a wider “single-agenda movement” to overthrow Ms. Hasina.

During the last stages of her government, a video went viral on social media showing Mr. Kamal inspecting the police crackdown. The video was cited by the interim administration as a proof of the former Home Minister’s involvement in the violent crackdown.

Strain on bilateral ties

Ms. Hasina’s presence in India was confirmed by External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar. On August 6, 2024, he had briefed both Houses of Parliament about the Union government’s decision to grant her refuge on short notice due to the volatile developments in Bangladesh.

Bilateral relations between India and Bangladesh have been uneasy since last August because of Ms. Hasina’s presence in India. The ICT’s demand to Dhaka’s interim government to produce Ms. Hasina before the tribunal is expected to exacerbate frictions in the relationship.

Mr. Kamal’s location is not known, though it is believed that he has also been living abroad. Mr. Al Mamun is currently in police custody in Dhaka, as he was arrested along with former IGP A.K.M. Shahidul Hoque on September 4, 2024.

ICT’s mixed record

The ICT faced a setback last week after A.T.M. Azharul Islam, a leader of the Al Badr militia and the Jamat-e-Islami of Bangladesh, was acquitted by an appellate bench of the Bangladesh Supreme Court. Mr. Islam had been given a death sentence by the ICT in 2014 but the appellate bench of the Supreme Court overturned the ICT’s verdict on May 27

Source : https://www.thehindu.com/news/international/bangladeshs-international-crimes-tribunal-hears-ex-prime-minister-sheikh-hasina-charges-update-on-june-1/article69644825.ece

LESSER CHARGE Diddy can still come out of trial a ‘winner’ even if found guilty & despite damning trial abuse allegations, lawyer says

SEAN “Diddy” Combs can still come out of his federal trial as a winner if he’s not convicted on all charges, despite the scandalous evidence and testimony from witnesses, according to an attorney.

Week three of Combs’ federal trial has wrapped up as more witnesses, including another former assistant, continued to testify about the violence the music executive, 55, inflicted behind closed doors.

Combs pictured at the 2022 Billboard Music Awards at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas in May 2022Credit: Getty Images

The testimonies dived into the prosecution’s accusations that the hitmaker, with the help of an inner circle of close confidants, used his far-reaching power and intimidation to cover up his alleged crimes and protect his public image.

However, Combs’ defense team has argued that the alleged victims all engaged in consensual sexual acts and remained by his side for years because of his lavish lifestyle and career advancements.

Neama Rahmani, a former federal prosecutor who is not involved in the trial, said even if the music mogul is convicted of some crimes but not all, he will come out as a winner.

“Diddy’s defense is that these individuals engaged in these sex acts willingly,” Rahmani told The U.S. Sun.

“There was no force. There was no coercion. They chose to do drugs. They weren’t drugged.

“And the fact that they may have been paid may be unlawful under the prostitution charges, but to the extent that the defense gets guilty verdicts on prostitution only, and not guilties on racketeering and sex trafficking, that would be a huge win for Diddy in the defense.”

WEEK THREE

For the second day, the courtroom heard on Friday gut-wrenching testimony from Combs’ former assistant, referred to only as Mia, about the total control he held over her.

Mia, who worked for Combs for eight years in various capacities starting in 2009, testified how he made her work grueling hours and violently attacked her.

The former assistant, one of Combs’ many ex-employees who have taken the stand, broke down in tears as she told the jury about the multiple times he allegedly raped her.

Mia admitted in her testimony that she never disclosed the alleged sexual assaults to anyone, saying, “I was going to die with this.”

The emotional victim recalled Combs’ spurts of violence towards her and Ventura, telling jurors about the times he allegedly threw a computer and his bowl of spaghetti at her head.

“I wondered, what did I do to make him like this to me?” Mia testified.

The jury heard from Scott Mescudi, better known as rapper Kid Cudi, during the trial’s second week.

Mescudi testified about his brief relationship with Cassandra “Cassie” Ventura in late 2011, and told the court about when Combs flew into a jealous rage over the relationship.

The Mr. Rager rapper, 41, accused Combs of breaking into his house, messing with his dog and locking his pet in the bathroom.

Mescudi’s testimony was dominated by the January 2012 incident when his Porsche was blown up on his driveway by a Molotov cocktail, which he accused Combs of being responsible for.

The jurors were shown pictures of Mescudi’s charred sports car with the cut-up roof where the explosive was thrown.

The trial opened up with powerful testimony from Ventura, Combs’ ex-girlfriend of over a decade.

The singer, 38, emotionally spoke about how Combs forced her to participate in weekly drug-fueled sex marathons, which he called “freak-offs,” with male escorts.

Ventura, who said she did not want to engage in the sex acts, told the court her music career took a backseat due to the toll the “freak-offs” took on her day, testifying how she needed days at a time to recover.

Prosecutors also released photos of the injuries Ventura allegedly suffered from Combs’ years-long abuse, including a gash on her forehead that had become a permanent scar.

Dawn Richard, a singer who once competed in Combs’ reality show Making the Band, also testified how she witnessed the music executive’s abuse of Ventura.

Richard, who was signed to Bad Boy Records and part of the trio Diddy – Dirty Money, described how Combs hit Ventura “on the head and beat her on the ground” during a visit to his home recording studio in 2019.

Combs’ trial is expected to continue until the first week of July, with the prosecution’s case slated to rest the week of June 9.

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/entertainment/14362896/diddy-not-guilty-sex-trafficking-trial-winner-lawyer/

OPERATION ‘SPIDERWEB’ Moment Ukraine launches drones from trucks inside Russia destroying 40 planes – as Zelensky celebrates ‘historic’ blitz

VOLODYMYR Zelensky has hailed Ukraine’s daring drone blitz on Russian airbases as one for the “history books”.

Dramatic footage captured the moment 117 expertly smuggled drones being stored inside trucks in Russia were launched by Ukraine.

The moment one of dozens of Ukrainian drones flies out of a truck in the Irkutsk region, in Siberia, before striking the ‘Belaya’ air base

President Zelensky revealed it took over 18 months to pull off the masterful attack.

It marks Kyiv’s longest range operation of the conflict so far with at least 40 aircraft being attacked as part of the expert operation codenamed “Spiderweb”.

In an embarrassing result for a raging Vladimir Putin 34 per cent of his cruise missile carriers at the targeted airfields were blasted, Zelensky said.

A £260million AWACS aircraft and bombers capable of dropping nuclear weapons were also struck.

Dramatic video shows one Ukrainian FPV drone taking off from the back of a lorry and heading towards an enemy airbase.

Another clip then captures the moment one of the drones locks on to a target before diving near the aircraft, believed to be a Tu-95 bomber, and explodes.

Zelensky hailed the strikes as he described it as an “absolutely brilliant result”.

Speaking on X, the heroic leader said: “A result achieved solely by Ukraine. One year, six months, and nine days from the start of planning to effective execution. Our most long-range operation.

“Of course, not everything can be revealed at this moment, but these are Ukrainian actions that will undoubtedly be in history books.

“Ukraine is defending itself, and rightly so – we are doing everything to make Russia feel the need to end this war.”

Russia’s Ministry of Defence also confirmed the strikes.

They branded them “terrorist attacks” and claimed that the drones had all been “repelled” despite the damning footage.

Stunned Kremlin commentators described the blitz as “Russia’s Pearl Harbour” as they called on Putin to hit back with a nuclear response.

In total, four airbases were targeted, according to Ukrainian media.

Large swarms of drones attacked Olenya airbase in the Murmansk region, home to Russia’s strategic bomber fleet.

The second base under fire was the Belaya airbase in the Irkutsk Oblast in Sibera – some 2,500 miles from the Ukrainian border.

The two other airbases hit were Ivanovo and Diaghilevo, with Moscow later claiming the Amur Oblast had also been attacked.

More than £1.5billion worth of damage has been inflicted on the Russian air force, say Ukrainian sources.

This included to long-range Tu-22M3 bombers – used in daily raids on Ukraine – as well as an A-50 air reconnaissance aircraft.

The A-50 is an Early Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) (AWACS), carrying a price tag of £260million.

A source told Kyiv Post it marked a “turning point” in the war and said Russia’s “impunity is over”.

The air assault is believed to have been launched from within Russia – from the backs of lorries driving near the bases.

Ukraine’s RBC news agency reported that the SBU special operation – said to be supervised by President Zelensky – took more than 18 months to plan.

These FPV drones were hidden under remote-controlled roofs on trucks.

When triggered, the roofs opened and kamikaze drones launched toward Russian bombers.

The drones were reportedly trained by artificial intelligence (AI) to recognise the Russian bombers and execute automatic dive attack algorithms.

Pictures shared by the Ukrainian intelligence service showed a huge stockpile of FPV drones – some of them appeared to be placed inside lorries.

Maria Avdeeva, Senior Fellow at Foreign Policy Research Institute, said: “Ukraine secretly delivered FPV drones and wooden mobile cabins into Russia.

“The drones were hidden under the roofs of the cabins, which were later mounted on trucks.

“At the signal, the roofs opened remotely. Dozens of drones launched directly from the trucks, striking strategic bomber aircraft.

“Russia can’t produce these bombers anymore. The loss is massive.”

Unconfirmed reports also said that explosions were heard in Severomosk – the home port of Putin’s nuclear submarine base and prized Northern Fleet.

Unverified footage showed plumes of black smoke rising over the town located on the Kola Bay near the Barents Sea.

A source told the Kyiv Independent: “Enemy strategic bombers are burning en masse in Russia — this is the result of a special operation by the SBU.

“Right now, the Security Service of Ukraine is conducting a large-scale special operation to destroy enemy bomber aircraft in the rear of the Russian Federation.

“SBU drones are practising on aircraft that bomb Ukrainian cities every night.”

They added: “Currently, more than 40 aircraft are known to have been hit, including the A-50, Tu-95 and Tu-22 M3.

Russia’s governor of the Murmansk region confirmed that the drone strike had taken place.

Unverified footage showed smoke billowing from Russian air bases as local civilians watched on in horror.

Ukraine’s Pravda Gerashchenko Telegram channel said: “A special operation ‘Web’ is being conducted to demilitarise Russia.

“The [SBU] report the destruction of Russian bomber aircraft behind enemy lines.”

Local residents reported hearing explosions as swathes of Ukrainian UAVs struck Putin’s bases.

Both airfields are miles from the bloody frontline, but were still “under drone attack” by Ukrainian forces.

It marks one of the bleakest days of the war for President Putin, who continues to blitz Ukraine relentlessly.

A report said the driver of the truck that released the drones “may not have known” that his vehicle was full of the Ukrainian UAVs.

According to Baza Media, the driver has since been detained.

Local reports said: “A truck stopped at a gas station at the entrance to the city.

“Drones started flying out of the back of the truck and then attacked various objects.”

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/news/14371994/ukraine-drone-blitz-destroys-russian-airfields/

Russia and Ukraine step up the war on eve of peace talks

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks to the media during a press conference, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on May 13, 2025. (Photo: REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko)

On the eve of peace talks, Ukraine and Russia sharply ramped up the war with one of the biggest drone battles of their conflict, a Russian highway bridge blown up over a passenger train and an ambitious attack on nuclear-capable bombers deep in Siberia.

After days of uncertainty over whether or not Ukraine would even attend, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Defence Minister Rustem Umerov would sit down with Russian officials at the second round of direct peace talks in Istanbul on Monday.

The first round of the talks more than a week ago yielded the biggest prisoner exchange of the war – but no sense of any consensus on how to halt the fighting.

Amid talk of peace, though, there was much war.

At least seven people were killed and 69 injured when a highway bridge in Russia’s Bryansk region, neighbouring Ukraine, was blown up over a passenger train heading to Moscow with 388 people on board. No one has yet claimed responsibility.

Ukraine attacked Russian nuclear-capable long-range bombers at a military base deep in Siberia on Sunday, a Ukrainian intelligence official said, the first such attack so far from the front lines, more than 4,300km away.

Ukraine’s domestic intelligence service, the SBU, acknowledged it carried out the attack, codenamed “Operation Spider’s Web”, planned for more than a year and a half.

The intelligence official said the operation involved hiding explosive-laden drones inside the roofs of wooden sheds and loading them onto trucks that were driven to the perimeter of the air bases.

A total of 41 Russian warplanes were hit, the official said.

Zelenskyy expressed delight at the “absolutely brilliant outcome”, and noted 117 drones had been used in the attack.

“And an outcome produced by Ukraine independently,” he wrote. “This is our longest-range operation.”

RUSSIA SAYS AIRCRAFT FIRES PUT OUT

A Ukrainian government official told Reuters that Ukraine did not notify the United States of the attack in advance.

Russia’s Defence Ministry acknowledged on the Telegram messaging app that Ukraine had launched drone strikes against Russian military airfields across five regions on Sunday.

Air attacks were repelled in all but two regions – Murmansk in the far north and Irkutsk in Siberia – where “the launch of FPV drones from an area in close proximity to airfields resulted in several aircraft catching fire”.

The fires were extinguished without casualties. Some individuals involved in the attacks had been detained, the ministry said.

Russia launched 472 drones at Ukraine overnight, Ukraine’s air force said, the highest nightly total of the war so far. Russia had also launched seven missiles, the air force said.

Russia said it had advanced deeper into the Sumy region of Ukraine, and open source pro-Ukrainian maps showed Russia took 450 square km of Ukrainian land in May, its fastest monthly advance in at least six months.

US President Donald Trump has demanded Russia and Ukraine make peace and he has threatened to walk away if they do not – potentially pushing responsibility for supporting Ukraine onto the shoulders of European powers – which have far less cash and much smaller stocks of weapons than the United States.

According to Trump envoy Keith Kellogg, the two sides will in Turkey present their respective documents outlining their ideas for peace terms, though it is clear that after three years of intense war, Moscow and Kyiv remain far apart.

Putin ordered tens of thousands of troops to invade Ukraine in February 2022 after eight years of fighting in eastern Ukraine between Russian-backed separatists and Ukrainian troops. The United States says over 1.2 million people have been killed and injured in the war since 2022.

In June last year, Putin set out opening terms for an immediate end to the war: Ukraine must drop its NATO ambitions and withdraw its troops from the territory of four Ukrainian regions claimed and mostly controlled by Russia.

Source : https://www.channelnewsasia.com/world/russia-ukraine-step-up-war-drone-attacks-eve-peace-talks-5162001

 

Taylor Swift celebrates regaining masters with bestie Selena Gomez during NYC dinner outing

Taylor Swift celebrated regaining the masters to her first six albums by enjoying a lavish dinner outing in NYC with her bestie Selena Gomez.

The “Bad Blood” singer and the “Only Murders in the Building” actress were photographed Saturday night together inside Monkey Bar, a restaurant that was established in 1936 and serves shellfish, steaks, pastas and more.

In the photo shared on X, Swift, 35, was seated across from Gomez, 32, and the women appeared to be engaged in a deep conversation, with the “Cruel Summer” songstress sporting a look of shock on her face while her BFF stared at her.

Taylor Swift celebrated regaining the masters to her first six albums by enjoying a lavish dinner outing in NYC with her bestie Selena Gomez.
Selena Gomez / Instagram

Monkey Bar posted on its website that it would be closing the bar at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday for a “private event,” however, it’s unclear if that was due to the presence of the two pop stars.

Page Six has reached out to the Monkey Bar for comment but did not immediately hear back.

The celebratory outing came one day after Swift announced on her website that she bought back the masters to her first six albums.

“I’m trying to gather my thoughts into something coherent, but right now my mind is just a slideshow,” she began in her handwritten letter.

“A flashback sequence of all the time I daydreamed about, wished for, and pined away for a chance to get to tell this news. All the times I was thiiiiiiiiiiis close, reaching out for it, only for it to fall through,” the 14-time Grammy winner added.

“I almost stopped thinking it could ever happen, after 20 years of having the carrot dangled and then yanked away. But that’s all in the past now. I’ve been bursting into tears of joy at random intervals ever since I found that this is really happening. I really get to say those words.

“All of the music I’ve ever made … now belongs… to me.”

Scooter Braun bought the rights to Swift’s first six albums — “Taylor Swift,” “Fearless,” “Speak Now,” “Red,” “1989” and “Reputation” — in 2019 when his company Ithica Holdings acquired her former label, Big Machine Records.

The retired music manager then sold her masters to Shamrock Capital.

At the time, the billionaire pop star claimed “bully” Braun, 43, “stripped me of my life’s work, that I wasn’t given an opportunity to buy.”

Source : https://pagesix.com/2025/06/01/celebrity-news/taylor-swift-celebrates-regaining-masters-with-bestie-selena-gomez-during-nyc-dinner-outing/

 

Gaza ministry says Israel kills more than 30 aid seekers, Israel denies

More than 30 Palestinians were killed and nearly 170 injured on Sunday in south Gaza near a food distribution site, the health ministry said, as witnesses reported Israeli soldiers fired on people trying to collect aid and Israel denied it.
The U.S.-based Gaza Humanitarian Foundation said food was handed out without incident on Sunday at the distribution point in Rafah and there were no deaths or injuries.

GHF released undated video to support its statement that showed dozens of people gathering around piles of boxes. Reuters could not independently verify the video or what took place.
Witnesses said the Israeli military opened fire as thousands of Palestinians gathered to receive food aid. Israel’s military said that an initial inquiry found soldiers had not fired on civilians while they were near or within the distribution site.
The Hamas-controlled Gaza health ministry said 31 people were killed with a single gunshot wound to the head or chest from Israeli fire as they were gathered in the Al-Alam district aid distribution area in Rafah. It said 169 were injured.

In addition to Israeli gunshots, residents and medics said an Israeli tank had opened fire at thousands of people en route to the Rafah site.
The International Committee of the Red Cross said its field hospital in Rafah received 179 casualties, most with gunshot or shrapnel wounds.
“All patients said they had been trying to reach an aid distribution site. This is the highest number of weapon-wounded in a single incident since the establishment of the field hospital over a year ago,” ICRC said.
The United Nations has said most of Gaza’s 2 million population is at risk of famine after an 11-week Israeli blockade on aid entering the strip.
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation launched its first distribution sites last week and said it would launch more. The Israeli military has said GHF had established four sites so far.

The organization’s aid plan, which bypasses traditional aid groups, has come under fierce criticism from the United Nations and humanitarian organizations which say GHF does not follow humanitarian principles.
There were chaotic scenes as hungry Gazans rushed its sites last last week. Hamas reported deaths and injuries in the tumult, and Israel said its troops fired warning shots.
Because the GHF distribution points are few and all in south Gaza, U.N. officials have said its plans force Palestinians, especially in the north, to relocate and face unsafe conditions.
Philippe Lazzarini, head of the UN’s Palestinian relief agency, condemned Sunday’s deaths and said in a statement on X that “aid distribution has become a death trap”.

A Palestinian, wounded in an Israeli strike, receives treatment in the Intensive Care Unit at Nasser Hospital, according to ministry of health, following an Israeli strike, in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, June 1, 2025. REUTERS/Hatem Khaled Purchase Licensing Rights

The Hamas-run Gaza government media office accused Israel of using aid as a weapon, “employed to exploit starving civilians and forcibly gather them at exposed killing zones, which are managed and monitored by the Israeli military”.
At Nasser Hospital in nearby Khan Younis city where some casualties were brought, Gaza paramedic Abu Tareq said there was “a tragic situation in this place. I advise them that nobody goes to aid delivery points.”
Israel denies that people in Gaza are starving because of its actions, saying it is facilitating aid deliveries and pointing to its endorsement of the new GHF distribution centres and its consent for other aid trucks to enter Gaza.
U.S. President Donald Trump said last month that a lot of people in Gaza were “starving”.
Israel accuses Hamas of stealing supplies intended for civilians and using them to entrench its hold on Gaza. Hamas denies looting supplies and has executed a number of suspected looters.
Reda Abu Jazar said her brother was killed as he waited to collect food near the Rafah aid distribution centre. “Let them stop these massacres, stop this genocide. They are killing us,” she said, as Palestinian men gathered for funeral prayers.
The Red Crescent reported that 14 Palestinians were injured on Sunday near a separate GHF aid site in central Gaza.

CEASEFIRE TALKS FALTER

Israel and Hamas meanwhile traded blame for the faltering of a new Arab and U.S. mediation bid to secure a temporary ceasefire and the release of Israeli hostages held in Gaza by Hamas, in exchange for Palestinians in Israeli jails.
Hamas said on Saturday it was seeking amendments to a U.S.-backed ceasefire proposal, but Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff rejected the group’s response as “totally unacceptable”.
Egypt and Qatar said in a joint statement that they are continuing efforts to overcome disagreements and reach a ceasefire.
Hamas on Sunday welcomed those efforts and expressed its readiness to start a round of indirect negotiations immediately to reach an agreement, the group said on Sunday in a statement.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israeli-strike-aid-point-kills-26-rafah-hamas-affiliated-media-say-2025-06-01/

Northern Lights will be visible across most of US thanks to a ‘severe’ geomagnetic storm

The northern lights are expected to put on a breathtaking show over parts of the U.S. Sunday night due to a powerful geomagnetic storm hitting Earth.

The storm reached “severe” strength early Sunday morning, strong enough to push the glowing aurora borealis further south than usual — possibly lighting up skies from Michigan and Washington State, down to Northern California and even Alabama, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said.

“This is going to be a great night to view the lights where skies are clear,” Shawn Dahl, a coordinator at NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center, told the New York Times.

According to NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center, a geomagnetic storm may brew and lead to a rare display of the Northern Lights.
den-belitsky – stock.adobe.com

Clear skies are expected across much of the Pacific Northwest, Northern California, the Midwest, and parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Ohio Valley, making them prime viewing spots.

Star-gazers in the Big Apple, however, shouldn’t count on seeing much due to cloudy skies forcast basically all night.

“New York City isn’t looking great,” Peter Mullinax of the National Weather Service told the outlet.

The aurora is triggered when a burst of material from the sun, called a “coronal mass ejection,” smashes into Earth’s magnetic field.

This specific storm is hitting hard enough to reach G4 levels, one notch below the most extreme level, experts said.

Usually, the lights are only visible if you take a trek to Iceland or Greenland.

For your best shot at catching the lights, head outside the city, get away from light pollution, and face north, Dahl explained.

Even if you can’t see the lights with your own eyes, smartphone cameras may be able to pick up the light show.

Source : https://nypost.com/2025/06/01/us-news/northern-lights-will-be-visible-across-most-of-us-thanks-to-a-severe-geomagnetic-storm/

Martial law fractured South Korea. Can this election heal the nation?

The striking feature of this election has been the leading opposition candidate, Lee Jae-myung, campaigning in a bullet-proof vest.

At a recent rally, he was escorted to the podium by close protection officers, ready to shield him with their ballistic briefcases. He then addressed the crowd from behind bullet-proof glass, under the gaze of rooftop watchers.

This is not South Korean politics as usual. But South Korea has not been itself lately.

It is still recovering from the martial law crisis last December, when the president, Yoon Suk Yeol, tried to orchestrate a military takeover.

He failed, because of resistance from the public and politicians, and was impeached, triggering this snap election to choose his successor.

But the chaos Yoon unleashed that night has festered.

While stuck in limbo, without a president, the country has become more polarised and its politics more violent.

At street protests earlier this year it became commonplace to chant for various political leaders to be executed. And since launching his presidential bid, Lee has been receiving death threats, and his team say they have even uncovered a credible plot to assassinate him.

This election is an opportunity to steer South Korea back onto safer, more stable ground, and heal these fractures.

Martial law shocked South Koreans, sparking mass protests

Given this, the ruling party was always going to struggle, marred by President Yoon’s self-defeating coup. But rather than break away from the disgraced former president, the conservative People Power Party (PPP) has chosen a candidate who repeatedly defended Yoon and his actions.

Kim Moon-soo, Yoon’s former labour minister, was the only cabinet member who refused to stand and apologise during a parliamentary hearing into martial law. He said sorry only well into his campaign, after he had won Yoon’s public endorsement.

This has turned the election into more of a referendum on martial law than anything else. Given most of the public overwhelmingly rejected the move, it has also virtually gilded the path for the opposition leader Lee, who famously livestreamed himself scaling the walls of the parliament complex, to get inside and vote down the president’s order.

Now the Democratic Party politician portrays himself as the only candidate who can ensure this never happens again. He has said he will change the constitution to make it more difficult for future presidents to declare martial law.

“We must prevent the return of the rebellion forces,” Lee urged voters at his recent rally from behind fortified glass.

Such promises have pulled in people from across the political spectrum. “I didn’t like Lee before, but since martial law I now trust and depend on him,” said 59-year-old Park Suh-jung, who admitted this was the first time she had attended a political event.

One man in his 50s said he was a member of another smaller political party, but had decided to back Lee this time: “He is the only person who can end Yoon’s martial law insurrection. We need to stop those who destroyed our democracy.”

Most recent polls put Lee about 10 points ahead of his rival Kim, but he was not always so popular. This is his second time running for president, having lost out to Yoon three years ago. He is a divisive character, who has been embroiled in a series of court cases and political scandals. There are many who do not trust him, who loathe him even.

Kim, hoping to capitalise on this, has branded himself “the fair and just candidate”. It is a slogan his supporters have adopted, many seemingly backing him not for his policies, but because he is not Lee.

“I don’t like Kim but at this point there’s no real choice. The other candidate has too many issues,” said one elderly woman who is planning to vote for him.

Kim has charted an unusual political path. As a student who campaigned for workers’ rights, he was tortured and imprisoned under South Korea’s right-wing dictatorship in the 1980s but then moved sharply to the right himself.

He was picked by the party base, many of whom are still loyal to Yoon. The party leadership, realising he was not the best choice, tried to replace him at the last minute with a more moderate, experienced politician, only to be blocked by furious members.

This has left the party weak and divided, with many suspecting it will splinter into rival factions after voting day. “Haven’t we already imploded?” one party insider said to me recently, their face crumpled in their hands. “This is a miserable campaign.”

“Choosing Kim is the biggest mistake the conservative party have made in this election, and they do know that. They will have to be held accountable for this decision,” said Jeongmin Kim, the executive director of Korea Pro, a Seoul-based news and analysis service.

Lee has seized this opportunity to hoover up centrist votes. He has shifted his policies to the right, and even claimed his left-leaning party is, in fact, conservative.

This, despite his reputation as a staunch leftist. He grew up in a slum outside Seoul, working in factories rather than attending school, and is someone who has previously quoted US senator Bernie Sanders.

But gone are his previous pledges to introduce a universal basic income. This time, he is courting South Korea’s powerful conglomerate businesses, the chaebols. He has even incorporated the conservative colour red into his own blue logo, and hits the campaign trail wearing red and blue trainers.

He has rebranded his foreign policy too. Typically, his Democratic Party is cautious about Korea’s security alliance with the US, preferring to prioritise relations with China and North Korea.

But Lee is casting himself as a “pragmatist” who can adapt to a changing security environment. “The US-Korea alliance is the backbone of our national security. It should be strengthened and deepened,” he said in a recent televised debate.

All this has left voters and diplomats here unsure of what he really stands for, and what he will do if elected – though this seems to be the point.

Ms Kim, Korea Pro’s analyst, believes his makeover is more genuine than might appear. “He was already high up in the polls, so he didn’t need to work hard to win votes,” she said. “I think he is playing a longer game. He wants to be a popular leader, someone who can be trusted by more than half of the country.”

Bringing the country together will be the biggest challenge for whoever wins.

When people vote on Tuesday, it will be six months to the day since they came out onto the streets to resist a military takeover.

After months of chaos, they are desperate to move forward, so the country can start addressing pressing issues that have been on hold, including tariff negotiations with US President Donald Trump.

But more than anything they hope this election can restore their own confidence in their democracy, which has been badly shaken.

At a baseball game in the capital Seoul last week – arguably the only place where Koreans are as tribal as they are about politics – both sides were united, acutely aware of this election’s importance.

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c7069pg4zpko

Two dead and hundreds arrested in France after PSG Champions League win

Two people have died and hundreds have been arrested across France after Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) fans celebrated the club’s victory in the Champions League final, according to the French interior ministry.

In the south-west town of Dax, a 17-year-old boy died after being stabbed in the chest late on Saturday evening, local media reported.

A 23-year-old man who was riding a scooter in central Paris was also killed after being hit by a vehicle, the prosecutor’s office said.

Flares and fireworks were set off, bus shelters smashed and cars torched amid wild celebrations as PSG won the biggest prize in European club football for the first time in their history.

PSG condemned the violence in a statement, adding that these “isolated acts are contrary to the club’s values and in no way represent the vast majority of our supporters”.

French President Emmanuel Macron said the clashes were “unacceptable” and unjustifiable, and that those involved will be found and punished.

The club’s victory parade in central Paris went ahead on Sunday afternoon despite the clashes, but with an increased police and military presence on the ground.

Police set a cap of 100,000 fans for the event, which saw PSG make their way down the Champs-Élysées to the Arc de Triomphe on an open-top bus.

A second commemoration is currently taking place at the club’s home stadium, Parc des Princes, with thousands of fans invited to celebrate their win.

Thousands of fans joined the club’s victory parade on Sunday, which saw a much calmer atmosphere

France’s interior ministry said 192 people were injured in the clashes in the early hours of Sunday and 559 people arrested, including 491 in Paris.

Twenty-two police officers and seven firefighters were injured, the ministry said, adding that 264 vehicles were set on fire.

One of the officers was injured by a firework amidst the chaos and had to be put in an induced coma – with Macron later saying the officer had travelled to a different city to help with policing efforts.

Paris police prefect Laurent Nuñez said: “The toll is lower than what we have seen in the past, but we will never get used to this kind of abuse, with people who only came to commit acts of vandalism and who did not even watch the match, and we will always have a very firm response.”

Nuñez said police expect there to be further clashes on Sunday, but added that supporters “shouldn’t be mixed up with gangs of looters and vandals”.

Separately, the Paris Prosecutor’s Office told the BBC “several shops were looted” in the Place des Ternes area. About 30 people were arrested and taken into custody near a Foot Locker on the Champs-Élysées that was robbed, the office said.

Elsewhere across France, Dax mayor Julien Dubois, reacting to the fatal stabbing, said his “thoughts are with the young victim, his family and friends”.

“We are floored by all the drama tonight,” he wrote on social media. “It is advisable to quickly shed light on these facts in order to severely punish the perpetrator.”

While clashes broke out near the city’s Champs-Élysées avenue and PSG’s Parc des Princes stadium, the majority of fans celebrated PSG’s 5-0 win over Inter Milan peacefully, with many singing and dancing in the streets or blaring their car horns.

The Eiffel Tower was illuminated with PSG’s blue and red colours.

Macron, a keen supporter of rivals Olympique de Marseille, posted on X: “A glorious day for PSG! Bravo, we are all proud. Paris, the capital of Europe this evening.”

The president hosted a ceremony for PSG at the Élysée Palace after Sunday’s parade and congratulated coach Luis Enrique and his team on their victory.

Approximately 5,400 police were deployed across Paris in anticipation of the raucous celebrations.

At least 300 people detained were suspected of possessing fireworks and causing disorder, Paris police said.

“Troublemakers on the Champs-Elysees were looking to create incidents and repeatedly came into contact with police by throwing large fireworks and other objects,” police said in a statement.

Riot police reportedly used a water cannon to stop a crowd reaching the Arc de Triomphe, and fired tear gas into the crowds.

Other clashes between police and crowds occurred on the Paris ring road. At least two cars were torched near the Parc des Princes.

French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau took a hard line against the disorder, writing on social media: “True PSG supporters are enjoying their team’s magnificent match.

“Meanwhile, barbarians have taken to the streets of Paris to commit crimes and provoke the police.

“It’s unbearable that it’s unthinkable to party without fearing the savagery of a minority of thugs who respect nothing.”

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckgqyg325gno

Deadly superbugs thrive as access to antibiotics falters in India

India is among the countries hardest hit by “antimicrobial resistance”

It’s a grim paradox, doctors say.

On the one hand, antibiotics are being overused until they no longer work, driving resistance and fuelling the rise of deadly superbugs. On the other hand, people are dying because they can’t access these life-saving drugs.

A new study by the non-profit Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership (GARDP) looked at access to antibiotics for nearly 1.5 million cases of carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative (CRGN) infections across eight major low- and middle-income countries, including India, Brazil and South Africa. CRGN bacteria are superbugs resistant to last-line antibiotics – yet only 6.9% of patients received appropriate treatment in the countries studied.

India bore the lion’s share of CRGN infections and treatment efforts, procuring 80% of the full courses of studied antibiotics but managing to treat only 7.8% of its estimated cases, the study in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal reports. (A full drug course of antibiotics refers to the complete set of doses that a patient needs to take over a specific period to fully treat an infection.)

Common in water, food, the environment and the human gut, Gram-negative bacteria cause infections such as urinary tract infections (UTIs), pneumonia and food poisoning.

They can pose a serious threat to newborns and the elderly alike. Especially vulnerable are hospital patients with weakened immunity, often spreading rapidly in ICUs and proving difficult – and sometimes impossible – to treat. Treating carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative bacterial infections is doubly difficult because those bacteria are resistant to some of the most powerful antibiotics.

“These infections are a daily reality across all age groups,” says Dr Abdul Gaffar, infectious disease consultant at Apollo Hospital in India’s Chennai city. “We often see patients for whom no antibiotic works – and they die.”

The irony is cruel. While the world tries to curb antibiotic overuse, a parallel tragedy plays out quietly in poorer nations: people dying from treatable infections because the right drugs are out of reach.

“For years, the dominant narrative has been that antibiotics are being overused, but the stark reality is that many people with highly drug-resistant infections in low- and middle-income countries are not getting access to the antibiotics they need,” says Dr Jennifer Cohn, GARDP’s Global Access Director and senior author of the study.

The study examined eight intravenous drugs active against carbapenem-resistant bacteria – ranging from older antibiotics including Colistin to newer ones such as Ceftazidime-avibactam. Of the few available drugs, Tigecycline was the most widely used.

Researchers blame the treatment gap on weak health systems and limited access to effective antibiotics.

For example, only 103,647 full treatment courses were procured of Tigecycline across eight countries – far short of the 1.5 million patients who needed them, the study found. This highlighted a major shortfall in the global response to drug-resistant infections.

What prevents patients with drug-resistant infections in India from getting the right antibiotics?

Physicians point to multiple barriers – reaching the right health facility, getting accurate diagnostic tests, and accessing effective drugs. Cost remains a major hurdle, with many of these antibiotics priced far beyond the reach of poorer patients.

“Those who can afford these antibiotics often overuse them; those who can’t, don’t get them at all,” says Dr Gaffar. “We need a system that ensures access for the poor and prevents misuse by the well-to-do.”

To improve access, these drugs must be made more affordable. To prevent misuse, stronger regulation is key.

“Ideally, every antibiotic prescription in hospitals should require a second sign-off – by an infection specialist or microbiologist,” says Dr Gaffar. “Some hospitals do this, but most don’t. With the right oversight, regulators can ensure this becomes standard practice.”

To fix the access problem and curb misuse, both smarter policies and stronger safeguards are essential, say researchers. But access alone won’t solve the crisis – the pipeline of new antibiotics is drying up. The decline in antibiotic R&D – and the limited availability of existing drugs – is a global issue.

India bears one of the world’s heaviest burdens of antimicrobial resistance (AMR), but it may also hold the key to combating it – both at home and globally, researchers say.

“India is also one of the largest markets for new antibiotics and can successfully advocate for the development and access of new antibiotics,” says Dr Cohn. With a strong pharmaceutical base, the country is emerging as a hub for AMR innovation, from promising new antibiotics to advanced diagnostics.

Dr Cohn says India can strengthen its antibiotic response by generating local data to better estimate needs and pinpoint gaps in the care pathway.

This would allow for more targeted interventions to improve access to the right drugs.

Innovative models are already emerging – Kerala state, for instance, is using a “hub-and-spoke approach” to support lower-level facilities in managing serious infections. Coordinated or pooled procurement across hospitals or states could also reduce the cost of newer antibiotics, as seen with cancer drug programs, researchers say.

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ced262l83gjo

Trump’s tariffs ‘not going away’ as deadline for deals loom, top adviser says

US President Donald Trump is not planning to extend the pause to his sweeping global tariffs, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said.

The president’s plan – where countries face between 11% to more than 100% tariffs on goods brought into the US – was announced in April. But the majority of the tariffs were paused by Trump for 90 days in the wake of stock market volatility.

Speaking with Fox News, Lutnick said he expects the President to stand firm when that 90 day pause expires at the start of July.

A key trade deal would be with China, who US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said has “not been a reliable partner” and claimed it was holding back products in the global supply chain.

The president’s top trade advisers presented a united front in their appearances on separate US morning television programmes on Sunday.

They remained steadfast on the tariff agenda, which has faced ongoing challenges in the nation’s court system.

“Tariffs are not going away,” Lutnick said in response to the court cases.

He added that the US “could sign lots of deals now” but the Trump administration is working to “make them better”.

“You’re going to see over the next couple of weeks, really, first class deals for the American worker,” he said..

And on the expiration of the 90 day pause, Lutnick said: “I think that’s the deadline, and the President’s just going to determine what rates people have if they can’t get a deal done”.

When the pause expires, in theory it would enact sweeping tariffs on countries across the globe.

Imports from about 60 trading partners that the White House has described as the “worst offenders”, including the European Union, Vietnam, South Africa and more, will face higher rates.

On Friday, Trump announced the US will double its current tariff rate on steel and aluminium imports from 25% to 50%, beginning on Wednesday.

Like with most of the announced tariffs, Trump said the move would help boost local steel industry, while reducing US reliance on China.

US steel manufacturing has decreased in recent years and countries like China, India and Japan have become the world’s biggest producers.

The steel tariffs come as many hold their breath waiting for further announcements. from the Trump administration.

Trump’s tariff policies have upended global trade and cracks have formed – or widened – among relationships between the US and other countries, including some of its closest partners.

World watches for news of US-China trade deal

The levies have worsened relations between China and the US, the two largest global economies – and launched the countries into a tit-for-tat trade battle.

Under a trade truce struck in May at Geneva, the US lowered tariffs imposed on goods from China from 145% to 30%. China’s retaliatory tariffs on US goods dropped from 125% to 10%.

But a larger trade deal between the countries has not been established.

On Sunday, Treasury Secretary Bessent told CBS News, the BBC’s US news partner, details of the trade will be “ironed out” once Chinese President Xi Jinping and Trump speak, but he did not say exactly when that conversation is expected.

“What China is doing is they are holding back products that are essential for the industrial supply chains of India, of Europe. And that is not what a reliable partner does,” Bessent said.

The Treasury Secretary claimed China could be withholding some products because of a “glitch”, or he said it could be “intentional” – but the administration would not know for sure until a call with both countries happened.

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cd7g0v53227o

Indian-American banned from MIT graduation ceremony for pro-Palestine speech. Who is Megha Vemuri?

Megha Vemuri’s four-minute speech praised student protests, highlighted the devastation in Gaza, and urged MIT to cut ties with Israeli institutions. (Photo: X)

Indian-American student Megha Vemuri of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), was banned from attending a graduation ceremony on Friday after she delivered a pro-Palestinian speech during a commencement event on May 29. Vemuri was designated to be the marshal at the graduation ceremony, however, the university announced that she and her family were barred from attending the event.

Vemuri, the elected class president and a double major in computation and cognition and linguistics, spoke at MIT’s OneMIT Commencement Ceremony in Cambridge. Her speech, which was not pre-approved, denounced MIT’s research ties with Israel and accused the university of being complicit in the “genocide” of the Palestinian people.

Following the speech, University Chancellor Melissa Nobles informed Vemuri that she would not be allowed to participate in the graduate ceremony on Friday, adding that she would receive her diploma by mail. In a statement, the university said: “MIT supports free expression but stands by its decision, which was in response to the individual deliberately and repeatedly misleading Commencement organizers and leading a protest from the stage.”

In response to MIT’s decision to bar her from the graduation ceremony, Vemuri said she was not disappointed about missing the event. “I see no need for me to walk across the stage of an institution that is complicit in this genocide,” she wrote. However, she expressed disappointment with the university’s handling of the situation, saying school officials “massively overstepped their roles to punish me without merit or due process.”

According to data from the United States Department of Education, MIT received $2.8 million in grants, gifts, and contracts from Israeli entities between 2020 and 2024, as reported by The Boston Globe and cited by The New York Times.

Who is Megha Vemuri?

Born and raised in Alpharetta, Georgia, Vemuri graduated from Alpharetta High School in 2021. She studied computer science, cognition, and linguistics at MIT, recently completing her degree while serving as the class president.

At MIT, Vemuri was also a part of the Written Revolution, a student group that “platforms revolutionary thought on campus” through writing and art, which it describes as “powerful tools for conducting a revolution.”

Before enrolling at MIT, she interned at the Neuroscience Institute at the University of Cape Town in South Africa and participated in various youth leadership and science outreach programs.

Vemuri’s ONEMIT speech quickly went viral on social media, drawing widespread criticism. In response to the online backlash, she has since taken down her LinkedIn profile.

Taking the stage wearing a red keffiyeh – a symbol of solidarity with Palestine – Vemuri was one of nine speakers at MIT’s OneMIT Commencement Ceremony on Thursday. Read from crumpled sheets of paper, her speech, roughly four minutes long, was addressed to her classmates, highlighting some of their efforts to protest against Israel.

“You showed the world that MIT wants a free Palestine,” she said, adding, “The MIT community that I know would never tolerate a genocide.”

After Vemuri left the stage to a round of applause, MIT President Sally Kornbluth spoke next. She paused as some people began chanting, and then responded, “OK, listen folks. At MIT, we believe in freedom of expression. But today is about the graduates.”

President Kornbluth has found herself on this type of tightrope before. In December 2023, she testified before the US House Committee on Education and the Workforce, alongside student presidents of Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania. The hearing was on how universities were handling campus protests and allegations of antisemitism. Unlike her counterparts Claudine Gay and Liz Magill —both of whom were replaced by their schools — Kornbluth managed to avoid serious consequences.

Source : https://indianexpress.com/article/world/who-is-megha-vemuri-mit-indian-american-us-pro-palestine-speech-10042316/

 

FATAL FLIGHT Two killed after small plane crashes into terraced house and bursts into flames in Germany

TWO people have died after a plane crash landed into a home and sparked a devastating fire.

A 71-year-old woman, believed to be the pilot, and an 84-year-old were confirmed dead after the horror accident on Saturday afternoon.

The plane smashed into the terrace home at midday local time in western Germany.

The crash severely damaged the building in Kleinenbroich, near Dusseldorf, upon impact.

Photos show the roof’s building smoking as around 50 firefighters desperately battled with the fire which sparked when the small plane hit.

Piles of debris could also be seen strewn outside the home which is said to belong to three people.

One of the residents, an elderly woman, is among the victims.

She is believed to have died when the plane first smashed through the roof.

The experienced pilot reported technical problems from the cockpit just above Kleinenbroich shortly before the crash.

Her final destination is believed to have been Moenchengladbach, which sits just 2.5 miles away from Kleinenbroich.

Harrowing images of the plane’s wreckage sat in the back garden were released by officials.

The tail had been completely ripped away from the aircraft’s body with much of the remainder of the plane scattered across the ground.

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/news/14368752/plane-crashes-house-germany/

SKY HIGH Inside world’s wackiest £15million mansion left abandoned on 400ft skyscraper – and why the owner never moved in

THE fate of an abandoned £15million mansion perched on a 400ft skyscraper hangs in balance after the tycoon owner fled to the UK.

Details of what’s inside the unbelievable White House replica have been revealed for the first time – but it remains unclear whether the sprawling home will have any residents.

Businessman Vijay Mallya commissioned to build Sky Mansion on the 34th and 35th Kingfisher TowersCredit: Supplied

Businessman Vijay Mallya, 69, who lives in the UK, commissioned the Sky Mansion on the 34th and 35th Kingfisher Towers in Bengaluru, India in 2010.

But the tycoon could never live in his dream home after he fled the country in 2016 after defrauding at least 17 banks of nearly £1billion.

Now sources familiar with the case say the future of the mansion remains uncertain as lenders and agencies probing the fraud are still trying to recover cash from Mallya.

Sprawled over an unbelievable 40,000sqft on two levels, the wacky mansion sticks out like a sore thumb on the gargantuan tower.

For its ultra-rich owner – if it ever gets one – there’s a helipad, infinity pool and an open deck that offers a 360-degree viewing platform of the city.

And despite the penthouse being part of the skyscraper, it’s a private villa with two of its own elevators.

The Kingfisher Towers were built on 4.5 acres of land where the father-in-law of former Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, Narayan Murthy, reportedly bought a flat last year.

The mansion was one of the first residential penthouses in the country built at such a height.

Chairman of Prestige Group Irfan Razack previously said constructing the gargantuan mansion was a challenge as it was mounted on cantilever – a structure only supported at one end.

He said to local media: “It’s a complex structure. It was a challenge to construct the mansion on a huge cantilever at that height.”

It’s unknown when the build was completed – but the exterior of the mansion appears to be fully finished.

But it’s not clear if the White House replica is finished on the inside.

Interior firm Morph Design and Co, an arm of Prestige Group hired to work on the interiors of the mansion, revealed to The Sun that the “interiors of the mansion were not done”.

While the house is reportedly taken care of by the developers and regularly cleaned, the penthouse lies unoccupied due to legal tangles.

Prestige Constructions didn’t respond to a request from The Sun on its fate.

Before the penthouse was finished, Mallya fled the country after facing legal action over money laundering and alleged fraud charges.

He had taken a loan from a syndicate of banks for the operations of his now-defunct Kingfisher Airlines – but he failed to make the payment.

The tycoon later declared himself bankrupt in the UK.

Indian banks have since been seeking to recover the outstanding loan amount through various legal mean – including the sale of his assets.

Several of his properties have been seized by the Enforcement Directorate, otherwise known as the financial crimes police.

And the mansion is likely part of the recovery procedure.

SS Naganand, the counsel who appeared for one of the banks, told The Sun: “The tower was part of the entire recovery proceeding and all the assets belonging to him are part of the process, certainly that mansion.

“The building was constructed long before the litigation started.

“Prestige Group put up the structure and kept a portion of it, the rest of which came to [his] company and Mallya had built something for him on the top and belonged to him personally.

“From my understanding there were proceedings relating to that both in Indian courts and the UK courts.”

Mallya’s former lawyer EC Agrawala said that the fate of the property can only be decided by the Indian government.

He said: “The mansion was under construction.

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/news/14349811/wackiest-mansion-skyscraper/

NEIGHBOR ON NEIGHBOR Karen Read murder trial is tearing my town apart – my home was attacked, I couldn’t work & even family won’t speak to me

THE explosive Karen Read murder trial has torn a small town apart – and left its residents fearing for the future.

Ever since Boston police officer John O’Keefe was found dead in the snow outside a house party in January 2022, conspiracy theories and unbridled rage have swamped Canton, Massachusetts.

Rita Lombardi (C) cheered on fellow Karen Read supporters down the street from the Norfolk County Superior Courthouse during the first trial last yearCredit: Getty

The first trial last year was unable to reach a verdict on whether Read was guilty of killing her boyfriend O’Keefe by backing into him with her SUV, before leaving him for dead in the snow.

Read is back in court again, currently in the middle of a retrial that started in April, which experts fear could once again end with a hung jury and no closer to finding out the brutal, chilling truth.

Some locals allege a cop cover-up is central to the case, especially with the court performances of high-ranking officials coming under fierce scrutiny.

Others, however, are fully behind the family of O’Keefe, who accuse Read of a malicious attack after a night of drinking on the 46-year-old whom she had been dating for two years.

For local resident Rita Lombardi – who passionatley backs Read’s dramatic push for justice – the torrid saga which has sparked national headlines has also threatened to obliterate relationships and her own health.

During the first trial, she was outside the courtroom for days on end, rallying supporters desperate to uncover the truth. A Facebook group boasted over 20,000 members.

The support was so fervent, she ended up ordering special pom poms from Amazon.

Her dedication to Read’s cause, however, has implications.

People who she claims “wanted to silence me” threw bleach filled balloons onto her lawn, as well as other neighbors’.

It destroyed the grass, yet the 65-year-old’s resolve remained intact.

“It’s taken an enormous toll on me,” she told The U.S. Sun, “the suffering has been excruciating, but I won’t be silenced.”

Rita, who says she had to take five months off work after the first trial because of the “impact” it had on her, points to a tight-knit community with the main players all interlinked.

That in turn, she claims, has seen some family ties severed beyond repair. There have also been threatening letters from elsewhere.

Relatives have lived in Canton for centuries. Her great-grandmother came to the town, which is 18 miles from Boston, in 1907 and her father grew up there.

She says she has strong links with the “other side” – some of her family were in the fire department – and used to have the “upmost” respect for Canton Police.

But when news of O’Keefe’s death sent shockwaves through the town, Rita said she was “totally floored.”

“I’ve been grieving for months,” she admitted. “I lost a niece and a nephew – 23 and 26 years-old – 100 days apart in 2018. And then I lost more by speaking out about this.”

Despite the issues which have fractured relationships dear to her heart, Rita continues to be a “strong and effective” voice for Read who has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder and manslaughter.

Her defense argues she is the victim of a police conspiracy and that O’Keefe was killed by someone else at a party at the house of Brian Albert, a retired Boston cop and lifelong Canton resident.

“An innocent woman has been railroaded,” Rita added. “The town knew the power the police wield.”

COURT CASE HEATING UP

The case has seen extensive debates over forensic evidence, with the defense challenging the reliability of the prosecution’s claims.

Apple health data from O’Keefe’s phone and watch, which recorded a 36-step count around the time of his death, was forensically examined recently.

Read’s case for the defense began this week when her team called their first witness to the stand on Friday, stressing the car crash which is central to the prosecution’s case never occurred and the former finance professor was framed.

She told reporters that unlike the first trial, there will be more witnesses and her attorneys would take at least a week to go through a “broader and deeper” testimony.

It’s still unclear if Read will take the stand herself.

Although her supporters on the streets outside the small Norfolk County Superior Courthouse haven’t been at the same levels as before, she retains a groundswell of local support.

A recent petition to scrub a buffer zone in the vicinity was greenlit by a U.S. District Court judge amid fears of swathes of pom pom-waving supporters polluting the views of jurors.

Judge Myong J. Joun said the public has the right to access the area surrounding the courthouse, but anyone in the streets must protest in the correct manner.

“The Buffer Zone Orders may be enforced only against those individuals who engage in activities that are intended to interfere with the administration of justice or are intended to influence trial participants in the discharge of their duties within the buffer zone,” Joun wrote.

There was a small crowd wishing Read well at the end of proceedings on Friday and now the restrictions have been lifted, it’s believed more people will come to show their support.

“I get messages all the time asking me to go back outside the courthouse every day,” Rita continues, “but it took a lot out of me. I still support justice though – for John O’Keefe, his family, Karen Read, and our country. I believe in her innocence 100%.”

There have been other changes surrounding a case which has local new channels and bloggers producing nightly discussion shows and podcasts which are building up to an emotional, explosive climax.

The high-stakes retrial has a new face leading the prosecution: Hank Brennan, the mob lawyer who once defended notorious gangster James “Whitey” Bulger.

Brennan was handpicked by Norfolk District Attorney Michael Morrissey to take over the case from Adam Lally, who led the original trial but has now been sidelined.

Morrissey praised Brennan as a “highly respected” legal heavyweight with deep experience in law enforcement cases.

Lally is still on the prosecution team, but he’s taken a backseat this time.

Read, who didn’t testify in her first trial, has been vocal in the media speaking out in TV interviews to waiting reporters outside court, conducting an interview with Vanity Fair, and even taking part in a true-crime docuseries.

In court, Brennan played a bombshell clip from Read’s October 2024 Dateline interview, where she seemed to admit she might’ve hit O’Keefe, with her car.

“I didn’t think I hit him,” Read said in the video.

“But could I have clipped him… knocked him out… and in drunkenness and in the cold, he didn’t come to again?”

TWISTS AND TURNS

Meanwhile, another big twist is that State Trooper Michael Proctor, the lead investigator, is no longer in uniform.

Proctor drew immense criticism during the first trial after he admitted under oath to sending vile, sexist texts about Read, calling her a “whack job c**t” and joking about not finding nude photos on her phone.

He apologized, but the damage was done. His credibility shredded.

Proctor was pulled off duty the same day the mistrial was declared last July.

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/news/14328244/karen-read-murder-trial-canton-john-o-keefe-police/

WAR FEARS US warns China attack on Taiwan is ‘real and imminent’ as Beijing warplanes and boats cross into island territory

CHINA is “credibly preparing” for a military invasion of Taiwan and the attack is “real and imminent”, the US Defence Secretary has warned.

Pete Hegeseth said that Communist Beijing was “rehearsing for the real deal” and described the looming threat as a “wake-up call” for the world.

China’s aircraft carrier Liaoning takes part in a military drillCredit: Reuters

Speaking at the annual Singapore defence forum Shangri-la Dialogue, Hegeseth said China was preparing to use military force to upend the balance of power.

The Pentagon boss also accused Beijing of carrying out cyber attacks, harassing its neighbours, and “illegally seizing and militarising lands” in the South China Sea.

His warning comes after China deployed two hulking H-6 bombers capable of carrying nuclear weapons on a strategic island in the South China Sea.

Beijing has ramped up military pressure on Taiwan and held multiple large-scale exercises around the island, often described as preparations for a blockade or invasion.

Hegseth said: “[Beijing is] credibly preparing to potentially use military force to alter the balance of power in the Indo-Pacific.

“The threat China poses is real and it could be imminent.”

China claims almost the entire disputed waterway in the South China Sea – through which more than 60 per cent of global maritime trade passes.

This is despite an international ruling that Beijing’s assertion has no merit.

In recent months, the Chinese navy has also repeatedly clashed with the Philippines in the strategic waters.

Hegseth warned the Chinese military was building the capabilities to invade Taiwan and “rehearsing for the real deal”.

He called on Asian countries to boost military spending to increase deterrence against China.

Reassuring US allies, Hegseth said the Indo-Pacific was “America’s priority theatre”.

Hegseth said: “[US] is reorienting toward deterring aggression by communist China.

“Asian allies should look to countries in Europe for a newfound example,” Hegseth said, citing pledges by Nato members to move toward Trump’s spending target of five per cent of GDP toward defence.

As Hegseth spoke in Singapore, China’s military announced that its navy and air force were carrying out routine “combat readiness patrols” around the Scarborough Shoal.

It is a chain of reefs and rocks that Beijing disputes with the Philippines.

Meanwhile, aerial photos showed two hulking H-6 bombers on an airfield on Woody Island in the South China Sea, taken on May 19.

The long-range aircraft date back to the 1950s and were modelled on Soviet-era warplanes.

But they’ve been souped up to unleash modern weapons, including hypersonic and nuclear missiles.

They are considered China’s most advanced bombers, and this is the first time they’ve been spotted on the outpost in five years.

The photos also show two Y-20 transport aircraft and a KJ-500 early warning plane around Woody Island on the same day.

The KJ-500 is thought vital to China’s expansion of its air and sea campaign, as it tackles increasingly complex operations.

Woody is part of the Paracel Islands, which are roughly halfway between China and Vietnam and the object of an ownership dispute between the two nations.

China built a city called Sansha on Woody Island in 2012, which Beijing uses to lord over the rest of the Paracels and the Spratly Islands.

Hegseth’s comments came after Trump stoked new trade tensions with China, arguing that Beijing had “violated” a deal to de-escalate tariffs as the two sides appeared deadlocked in negotiations.

Meanwhile, a report by the US Defence Intelligence warned that China could begin seizing Taiwan’s smaller outlying islands as a precursor to a full-blown invasion.

The vast majority of Taiwan’s population lives on the main island, but Taipei also controls a smattering of smaller island chains.

These include the Kinmen and Matsu islands close to the Chinese mainland, the Pratas and Taiping in the South China Sea, and the Penghu archipelago nearer to Taiwan.

Storming these islands is one of the options on the table for China’s military generals – who continue to brandish threats of a full-scale invasion of Taiwan.

Experts also told The Sun how China will look to exploit a fragmented West while it waits for the “perfect moment” to launch an attack on Taiwan.

Fears are that the weakening of Western alliances and the unpredictability of US foreign policy under Donald Trump could create the perfect atmosphere for Beijing to trigger an invasion.

And if China does decide to attack, it’s feared it will go in with “full force” using three major military strategies that would wreak havoc on the island.

Defence experts say it’s the “perfect moment” for Xi’s long-standing ambition to reunify Taiwan with the Chinese mainland – and it could launch an attack as soon as 2027.

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/news/14365687/china-attack-taiwan-us/

Middle East updates: Hamas demands permanent end to Gaza war

Hamas has responded to a US-backed ceasefire proposal Image: JACK GUEZ/AFP/Getty Images

US sends ‘detailed proposal’ to Iran

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed that Middle East special envoy Steve Witkoff has sent what she called “a detailed and acceptable proposal to the Iranian regime.”

“It’s in their best interest to accept it,” Leavitt said without providing any more details.

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in a post on X that Iran “will respond to the US proposal in line with the principles, national interests and rights of people of Iran.”

It comes as an IAEA report sent to member states on Saturday warned that Iran’s stock of uranium enriched to up to 60% purity, close to the roughly 90% purity needed for nuclear weapons. If enriched further, the amount would be enough for nine nuclear weapons, according to an IAEA estimate.

Israel blames Hamas for ‘continuing war’

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar reacted to the ongoing talks over a ceasefire deal proposed by the United States by saying Hamas was responsible for the continuation of the war in Gaza by refusing to release hostages and disarm.

Hamas has said it was willing to release 10 living hostages and hand over the bodies of 18 dead in exchange for Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons. But the militant group reiterated demands for an end to the war and withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza, conditions Israel has rejected.

Saar also criticized France and the UK for “attacking Israel.”

“If France and the UK want to reach a ceasefire – pressure should be put on Hamas that continues to say No, instead of attacking Israel, which says Yes,” Saar wrote

His statements come after President Donald Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff rejected Hamas’ call for a permanent ceasefire.

US envoy Witkoff says Hamas’ response ‘unacceptable’

US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff said Hamas’ response to the US-led ceasefire proposal was “totally unacceptable.”

The Palestinian militant group did not say it had accepted the proposal, but did say it was open to it, while emphasizing the need for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.

“It is totally unacceptable and only takes us backward,” Witkoff said, adding that Hamas should accept the framework proposal the US put forth, which would “begin immediately this coming week,” he added.

“That is the only way we can close a 60-day ceasefire deal in the coming days, in which half of the living hostages and half of those who are deceased will come home to their families and in which we can have at the proximity talks substantive negotiations in good-faith to try to reach a permanent ceasefire,” Witkoff said.

Source : https://www.dw.com/en/middle-east-updates-hamas-demands-permanent-end-to-gaza-war/live-72745339

 

China rejects ‘groundless accusations’ at Shangri-La Dialogue, says it opposes unilateralism, hegemonic bullying

Rear Admiral Hu Gangfeng (in white), vice-president of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army National Defense University, arrives for a special session at the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue on May 31, 2025. (Photo: CNA/Wallace Woon)

China’s top official at a global defence dialogue on Saturday (May 31) rejected “accusations” made against the country as unfounded and politically motivated, and asserted its commitment to protecting and improving regional security.

“We do not accept groundless accusations against China. Some of these claims are completely fabricated, some distort the truth, and some are outright cases of ‘the thief crying thief’,” said Rear Admiral Hu Gangfeng, who is leading a delegation from the National Defense University of the People’s Liberation Army at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore.

“They are essentially aimed at provoking conflict, creating division, inciting confrontation, and destabilising the Asia-Pacific,” he said, adding that such actions “go against the tide of the times, are unpopular, and will not succeed.”

Speaking at a session titled “Cooperative maritime security in the Asia-Pacific”, Hu said maritime security in the region remains “generally stable” and the South China Sea remains “one of the world’s safest and busiest sea lanes” for navigation.

He also said China proposes upholding “true multilateralism” and preserving maritime security order in the Asia-Pacific.

“We support the principle of extensive consultation, joint contribution and shared benefits in Asia-Pacific governance. We oppose unilateralism, hegemonic bullying, and turning Asia-Pacific waters into arenas for power games,” he added.

“We firmly oppose illegal actions that sow division, obstruct reunification, and harm sovereign nations’ core interests.”

Hu did not specify which countries or which accusations he was rebutting.

But earlier in the day, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had warned of the “threat” China poses as he called on allies in the Indo-Pacific to spend more on their own defence needs.

“China’s army is rehearsing for the real deal,” Hegseth said in his speech. “We are not going to sugarcoat it – the threat China poses is real. And it could be imminent.”

Hegseth said the US would continue to strengthen its overseas military posture in response to what he described as intensifying threats from Beijing, particularly its assertiveness over Taiwan.

China’s military has repeatedly simulated scenarios resembling a blockade of the self-ruled island, which Beijing claims as part of its territory.

The US, while maintaining a policy of strategic ambiguity, has pledged to support Taiwan’s ability to defend itself.

Besides Taiwan Strait tensions, China also has overlapping claims with various parties including Vietnam, the Philippines, Brunei and Malaysia in the South China Sea, a vital waterway for global trade.

The Shangri-La Dialogue is a key annual defence summit organised by the International Institute for Strategic Studies. Held from May 30 to June 1 this year, it brings together defence ministers, military chiefs, and senior officials from nearly 50 countries.

Hu emphasised the need for constructive engagement rather than confrontation at the forum.

“The original intention of holding this meeting is to address problems, not create them; to reduce differences, not widen them. There should be frank and sincere exchanges,” he said.

He was also asked about Chinese Defence Minister Dong Jun skipping the event this year – the first time since 2019 that China was not represented by its defence minister.

“China attaches great importance to (the event) and has consistently sent delegations to participate over the years,” Hu replied.

It sends delegations of different levels from year to year, and this should be seen as part of normal operational arrangements, Hu said.

“This in no way affects our ability to articulate our national defence policies, engage in communication with various parties, or enhance mutual understanding,” he said.

“Objectively speaking, I was entrusted to come here today to share our views and engage with all of you. I believe everyone has clearly heard and understood our genuine position.”

QUESTIONS ABOUT AIRCRAFT CARRIER

The other officials who spoke at the session were Lieutenant General Le Quang Dao, commander of the Vietnam Coast Guard, Admiral Sir Tony Radakin, UK’s chief of defence staff, Admiral Seguchi Yoshio, commandant of the Japan Coast Guard, and Ricardo Montero Allende, Chile’s undersecretary of defence.

Asked about the UK sending its aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales as part of a naval strike group on a mission – codenamed Operation Highmast – across the Indo-Pacific amid a war in Ukraine, Radakin noted the interconnectedness and global nature of security.

Britain’s engagement with Southeast Asia extends to other areas such as trade pacts and being a dialogue partner of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, he said.

“There are a whole lot of other reasons why we should be here, diplomatically, culturally, but to just see it through the narrow lens of an aircraft carrier, I think is not correct,” he said.

The UK has no plans to use its aircraft carrier in the Russia-Ukraine context, Radakin said, adding that ships can turn back and return if they need to.

Responding to another question on whether UK would strengthen defence cooperation with China in any particular area following his trip there in April, Radakin said it was about establishing military-to-military channels and communication.

“When we operate in this region, we do it in a very transparent way,” Radakin said. “We see ourselves as operating under the rule of law, and we are doing activities that we consider to be entirely routine for a nation like the United Kingdom.”

Asked how he feels about a British aircraft carrier in the Asia-Pacific region, Hu said conducting mobile deployments and training across the oceans is intrinsic to the nature of naval vessels. When used properly, they can safeguard peace and convey goodwill, he said.

But there are inherent dangers of foreign military deployments near contested or sensitive waters, Hu said.

“When warships enter foreign coastal or near-shore waters, the risks are substantial,” He said. “These activities are prone to misunderstanding, miscalculation, or even direct friction and conflict.”

He cautioned that tensions could escalate rapidly even without hostile intent. “When a nation sends warships far from home, especially into another country’s coastal waters – or worse, territorial waters – the potential for serious consequences becomes logically unavoidable.”

The UK-led naval task group departed southern England in April and will make a port call in Singapore next month.

The deployment includes stops in Australia, Japan and India.

While not naming the UK directly, Hu called for efforts to “fundamentally eliminate” maritime and aerial risks, saying the key lies in upholding international law, avoiding provocations, and preventing actions that threaten other countries’ sovereignty or stability.

He also underscored the importance of adhering to protocols such as the Code for Unplanned Encounters at Sea (CUES), which China supports updating to enhance regional safety.

IN THE “SAME ASIA-PACIFIC BOAT”, SAYS HU

Calling for cooperation in the region, Hu added: “We all share the same Asia-Pacific boat. While each country has its own national conditions, our security and prosperity are intertwined. In the 21st century, a civilised era, we should resolve issues through dialogue and consultation.”

Hu observed there were no major maritime military conflicts in recent years, but warned of “serious challenges” stemming from bloc politics and foreign interference under the pretext of “freedom of navigation.”

Hu, the vice-president of the PLA’s National Defense University, called out “certain countries” for expanding their military presence in the region and “frequently infringing upon the sovereignty and maritime rights of others”.

These actions, he said, are often justified under the banner of free navigation but, in fact, “deliberately support separatist forces advocating ‘Taiwan independence,’ gravely undermining peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait”.

Beijing views Taiwan as a breakaway province and has not ruled out the use of force to bring the island under its control.

Source : https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/china-rejects-groundless-accusations-shangri-la-dialogue-says-it-opposes-unilateralism-hegemonic-bullying-5161251

Pregnant Rihanna’s ‘playing hide the baby bump’ in sultry new Savage X Fenty lingerie campaign

Rihanna’s baby bump is “Nobody’s Business” in her latest steamy summer Savage x Fenty campaign.

The pregnant Fenty beauty founder kept her growing stomach a secret in the collection of glam photos she shared from the shoot in her Friday Instagram post.

“It’s me playing ‘hide the baby bump’ whole shoot! boutta be a cheeky summer,” she captioned the photos, announcing her latest Savage x Fenty drop.

She wore a mosaic floral lace lingerie set as she posed in an empty pool for the sizzlin’ pictures.

Pregnant Rihanna kept her baby bump a secret in her latest Savage x Fenty campaign.
badgalriri/Instagram

For bottoms, the singer, 37, sported a pair of matching cheeky panties as she teased a glimpse of her backside in several photos.

She finished off the look with a pair of vibrant orange sandals.

It’s unclear how far along the singer was in her pregnancy at the time of the photo shoot, but the “Pon de Replay” hitmaker — who typically doesn’t shy away from showing off her baby bump — successfully kept it hidden as she playfully eased an ice cube down her body in the pictures.

The “Umbrella” singer revealed she was pregnant with baby No. 3 earlier this month by debuting her growing baby bump before arriving at the Met Gala.

She carried a black umbrella as she was photographed wearing a gray two-piece skirt set, matching knee-high stockings and gray pumps.

Her longtime partner, A$AP Rocky confirmed her pregnancy while speaking to reporters on the blue carpet at fashion’s biggest night, telling them her look for the night would be “whatever just don’t really cover her baby bump.”

Over the years, the singer — who is also mom to two other sons: RZA, 3, and Riot Rose, 1 — has become known as a queen of maternity style for the pregnancy looks she’s delivered. And of course, her outfit for this year’s Met Gala afterparty was no exception.

Source : https://pagesix.com/2025/05/30/style/pregnant-rihannas-playing-hide-the-baby-bump-in-sultry-new-savage-x-fenty-lingerie-campaign/

Trump pulls Musk ally’s NASA nomination, will announce replacement

REUTERS/Tom Brenner Purchase Licensing Rights

The White House withdrew on Saturday its nominee for NASA administrator, Jared Isaacman, abruptly yanking a close ally of Elon Musk from consideration to lead the space agency.
President Donald Trump said he would announce a new candidate soon.

“After a thorough review of prior associations, I am hereby withdrawing the nomination of Jared Isaacman to head NASA,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social site.

“I will soon announce a new nominee who will be mission aligned, and put America First in space.”
Isaacman, a billionaire private astronaut who had been Musk’s pick to lead NASA, was due next week for a much-delayed confirmation vote before the U.S. Senate. His removal from consideration caught many in the space industry by surprise.
Trump and the White House did not explain what led to the decision.
“It may not always be obvious through the discourse and turbulence, but there are many competent, dedicated people who love this country and care deeply about the mission,” Isaacman said in a post on X.

“That was on full display during my hearing, where leaders on both sides of the aisle made clear they’re willing to fight for the world’s most accomplished space agency.
“I am incredibly grateful to President Trump, the Senate and all those who supported me.”
His removal comes days after Musk’s official departure from the White House, where the SpaceX CEO’s role as a “special government employee” leading the Department of Government Efficiency created turbulence for the administration and frustrated some of Trump’s aides.
Semafor reported the news earlier.
Musk did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
According to a person familiar with his reaction, Musk was disappointed by Isaacman’s removal.
“It is rare to find someone so competent and good-hearted,” Musk wrote of Isaacman on X, responding to the news.

It was unclear whom the administration might tap to replace Isaacman.
One name being floated is retired U.S. Air Force Lieutenant General Steven Kwast, an early advocate for the setting-up of the U.S. Space Force and Trump supporter, according to three people familiar with the discussions.
Isaacman, the former CEO of payment processor company Shift4, had broad space industry support but faced concerns from lawmakers over his ties to Musk and SpaceX, where he spent hundreds of millions of dollars as an early private spaceflight customer.
The former nominee had donated to Democrats in prior elections. In his confirmation hearing in April, he sought to balance NASA’s existing moon-aligned space exploration strategy with pressure to shift the agency’s focus on Mars, saying the U.S. can plan for travel to both destinations.

As a potential leader of NASA’s roughly 18,000 employees, Isaacman faced a daunting task of implementing that decision to prioritize Mars, given that NASA has spent years and billions of dollars trying to return its astronauts to the moon.
On Friday, the space agency released new details of the Trump administration’s 2026 budget plan that proposed killing dozens of space science programs and laying off thousands of employees, a controversial overhaul that space advocates and lawmakers described as devastating for the agency.
Montana Republican Tim Sheehy, a member of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation committee, wrote on X that Isaacman “was a strong choice by President Trump to lead NASA” in response to reports of his departure.
“I was proud to introduce Jared at his hearing and strongly oppose efforts to derail his nomination,” Sheehy said.
Some scientists saw the nominee change as further destabilizing to NASA as it faces dramatic budget cuts without a confirmed leader to navigate political turbulence among Congress, the White House and the agency’s workforce.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/world/us/white-house-says-trump-will-soon-announce-new-nominee-nasa-head-2025-05-31/

Gilead’s Trodelvy, with Keytruda, cuts breast cancer risk by 35% in trial

Gilead Sciences pharmaceutical company is seen in Oceanside, California, U.S., April 29, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

Gilead Sciences’ (GILD.O), Trodelvy in combination with Merck’s (MRK.N), opens new tab blockbuster immunotherapy Keytruda lowered the risk of an aggressive type of breast cancer worsening by 35% when used as an initial treatment, according to results of a large trial presented on Saturday.
The data is likely to change how patients are treated following a diagnosis for advanced triple-negative breast cancer, one expert said.

After a median follow-up of 14 months, patients treated with Trodelvy, a so-called antibody-drug conjugate, and Keytruda went 11.2 months without their cancer progressing, a measure known as progress-free survival. That compared with PFS of 7.8 months for those given the standard treatment of chemotherapy and Keytruda, researchers said.
Patients given the Trodelvy/Keytruda combination responded to the treatment for a median of 16.5 months, compared with 9.2 months for the chemo group, according to full results of the study presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology scientific meeting in Chicago. The researchers said patients are still being followed to see if the regimen has an impact on overall survival.

Gilead previously said the Phase 3 study in 443 patients with advanced triple-negative breast cancer whose tumors express PD-L1 – the protein targeted by drugs like Keytruda – had met its goal.
The findings suggest that the combination of Trodelvy and Keytruda “will likely become a new front-line standard of care in this setting,” Dr. Jane Lowe Meisel, co-director of breast oncology at Emory University School of Medicine and a designated ASCO expert said in a statement.
ASCO estimates that about 10% of breast cancers in the United States are triple-negative. That tends to be more difficult to treat than hormone-sensitive subtypes, because it does not have the common biomarkers used to guide treatment, the tumors are often larger, and the recurrence rate is high.
The medical group said that about 40% of triple-negative breast cancers are also PD-L1 positive, making them candidates for Keytruda.

Antibody-drug conjugates like Trodelvy are designed to deliver an anti-cancer drug more precisely to malignant cells, causing less damage to healthy cells than chemotherapy.
Serious side effects for Trodelvy included neutropenia, a condition caused by cancer treatments that lower levels of infection-fighting white blood cells, reported in 43% of patients, and diarrhea in 10%. In the chemotherapy group, the incidence of neutropenia was 45%, while 16% of patients had anemia and 14% had low blood platelet counts.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/gileads-trodelvy-with-keytruda-cuts-breast-cancer-risk-by-35-trial-2025-05-31/

Seven killed after bridge collapse, train derailment in Russia’s Bryansk region bordering Ukraine

A view shows a damaged bus and a train carriage at the scene, after a road bridge collapsed onto railway tracks in the Bryansk region, Russia, in this image released June 1, 2025. Moscow Interregional Transport Prosecutor’s Office/Handout via REUTERS Purchase Licensing Rights

At least seven people were killed and 69 injured when a highway bridge collapsed onto railway tracks, derailing an approaching train in Russia’s Bryansk region that borders Ukraine, Russian authorities said early on Sunday.
Russia’s Railways had initially said on the Telegram messaging app that the bridge collapse was the result of an “illegal interference in the operation of transport,” but it has since removed the post.

Alexander Bogomaz, the governor of the Bryansk region, said on Telegram that 44 people were hospitalised. Three children were among those injured with one in serious condition, he added.
Russia’s ministry of emergency situations said on Telegram that efforts to find and rescue victims continued throughout the night, and that some 180 personnel were involved in the operation.
Among those killed was the locomotive driver, Russia’s state news agencies reported, citing medics.
Social media pictures and videos showed passengers trying to help others climb out of the train’s damaged carriages in the dark and firefighters looking for ways to reach passengers.

Russia’s Baza Telegram channel, which often publishes information from sources in the security services and law enforcement, reported, without providing evidence, that according to preliminary information, the bridge was blown up.
Reuters could not independently verify the Baza report. There was no immediate comment from Ukraine.
Since the start of the war that Russia launched more than three years ago, there have been continued cross-border shelling, drone strikes, and covert raids from Ukraine into the Bryansk, Kursk and Belgorod regions that border Ukraine.
The train was going from the town of Klimovo to Moscow, Russian Railways said. It collided with the collapsed bridge in the area of a federal highway in the Vygonichskyi district of the Bryansk region, Bogomaz said. The district lies some 100 km (62 miles) from the border with Ukraine.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/world/bridge-collapses-russias-bryansk-region-that-borders-ukraine-governor-says-2025-05-31/

US judge blocks Trump from invalidating 5,000 Venezuelans’ legal documents

Venezuelan migrants arrive after being deported from the United States, at Simon Bolivar International Airport, in Maiquetia, Venezuela April 23, 2025. REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

A federal judge prevented the Trump administration from invalidating work permits and other documents granting lawful status to about 5,000 Venezuelans, a subset of the nearly 350,000 whose temporary legal protections the U.S. Supreme Court last week allowed to be terminated.
U.S. District Judge Edward Chen in San Francisco in a Friday night ruling, concluded that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem likely exceeded her authority when she in February invalidated those documents while more broadly ending the temporary protected status granted to the Venezuelans.

The U.S. Supreme Court on May 19 lifted an earlier order Chen issued that prevented the administration as part of President Donald Trump’s hardline immigration agenda from terminating deportation protection conferred to Venezuelans under the Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, program.
But the high court stated specifically it was not preventing any Venezuelans from still challenging Noem’s related decision to invalidate documents they were issued pursuant to that program that allowed them to work and live in the United States.
Such documents were issued after the U.S. Department of Homeland Security during former Democratic President Joe Biden’s final days in office extended the TPS program for the Venezuelans by 18 months to October 2026, an action Noem sought to reverse.

TPS is available to people whose home country has experienced a natural disaster, armed conflict or other extraordinary event.
Lawyers for several Venezuelans and the advocacy group National TPS Alliance asked Chen to recognize the documents’ continuing validity, saying without them migrants could lose their jobs or be deported.
Chen in siding with them said nothing in the statute authorizing the TPS program allowed Noem to invalidate the documents.
Chen, an appointee of Democratic President Barack Obama, noted the administration estimated only about 5,000 of the 350,000 Venezuelans held such documents.
“This smaller number cuts against any contention that the continued presence of these TPS holders who were granted TPS-related documents by the Secretary would be a toll on the national or local economies or a threat to national security,” Chen wrote.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/us-judge-prevents-trump-invalidating-5000-venezuelans-legal-documents-2025-05-31/

Damning IAEA report spells out past secret nuclear activities in Iran

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Grossi visits Iran’s nuclear achievements exhibition, in Tehran, Iran, April 17, 2025. Iranian Atomic Organisation/WANA (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via REUTERS Purchase Licensing Rights

Iran carried out secret nuclear activities with material not declared to the U.N. nuclear watchdog at three locations that have long been under investigation, the watchdog said in a wide-ranging, confidential report to member states seen by Reuters.
The findings in the “comprehensive” International Atomic Energy Agency report requested by the agency’s 35-nation Board of Governors in November pave the way for a push by the United States, Britain, France and Germany for the board to declare Iran in violation of its non-proliferation obligations.

A resolution would infuriate Iran and could further complicate nuclear talks between Tehran and Washington.
Using the IAEA report’s findings, the four Western powers plan to submit a draft resolution for the board to adopt at its next meeting the week of June 9, diplomats say. It would be the first time in almost 20 years Iran has formally been found in non-compliance.
Iran’s foreign ministry and the Iranian nuclear agency rejected the report, calling it “politically motivated” in a joint statement. They said Tehran will take “appropriate measures” in response to any effort to take action against the country at the Board of Governors meeting, state media reported, without elaborating.

Tehran says it wants to master nuclear technology for peaceful purposes and has long denied accusations by Western powers that it is seeking to develop nuclear weapons.
While many of the findings relate to activities dating back decades and have been made before, the IAEA report’s conclusions were more definitive. It summarised developments in recent years and pointed more clearly towards coordinated, secret activities, some of which were relevant to producing nuclear weapons.
It also spelled out that Iran’s cooperation with IAEA continues to be “less than satisfactory” in “a number of respects”. The IAEA is still seeking explanations for uranium traces found years ago at two of four sites it has been investigating. Three hosted secret experiments, it found.
The IAEA has concluded that “these three locations, and other possible related locations, were part of an undeclared structured nuclear programme carried out by Iran until the early 2000s and that some activities used undeclared nuclear material”, the report said.

Nuclear material and/or heavily contaminated equipment from that programme was stored at the fourth site, Turquzabad, between 2009 and 2018, it said.
“The Agency concludes that Iran did not declare nuclear material and nuclear-related activities at three undeclared locations in Iran, specifically, Lavisan-Shian, Varamin, and Turquzabad,” the report said.
At Lavisan-Shian in Tehran, a disc made of uranium metal was “used in the production of explosively-driven neutron sources” at least twice in 2003, a process designed to initiate the explosion in a nuclear weapon, the report said, adding that it was part of “small-scale” tests.
The report is likely to lead to Iran being referred to the U.N. Security Council, though that would probably happen at a later IAEA board meeting, diplomats said.
More immediately, it is likely to lead to Iran again accelerating or expanding its rapidly advancing nuclear programme, as it has done after previous rebukes at the board. It could also further complicate talks with the United States aimed at reining in that programme.

URANIUM ENRICHMENT

A separate IAEA report sent to member states on Saturday said Iran’s stock of uranium enriched to up to 60% purity, close to the roughly 90% of weapons grade, had grown by roughly half to 408.6 kg. That is enough, if enriched further, for nine nuclear weapons, according to an IAEA yardstick.
Both IAEA reports said enrichment to such a high level was “of serious concern” since it is the only country to do so without producing nuclear weapons.
Israel, which has long urged strong action against Iran’s nuclear programme, said the IAEA report showed Tehran was determined to complete its nuclear weapons programme. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said the world should act now to stop Iran from doing this.
U.S. intelligence agencies and the IAEA have long believed Iran had a secret, coordinated nuclear weapons programme that it halted in 2003. Iran denies ever having had one.
Separately on Saturday, Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said his Omani counterpart presented elements of a U.S. proposal for a nuclear deal between Tehran and Washington during a short visit to Tehran.
In Washington, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said later on Saturday that President Donald Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff “has sent a detailed and acceptable proposal to the Iranian regime, and it’s in their best interest to accept it.” She declined to provide further details.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/world/china/iaea-report-says-iran-had-secret-activities-with-undeclared-nuclear-material-2025-05-31/

Kristi Noem said an immigrant threatened to kill Trump. The story quickly fell apart

A claim by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem that an immigrant threatened the life of President Donald Trump has begun to unravel.

Noem announced an arrest of a 54-year-old man who was living in the U.S. illegally, saying he had written a letter threatening to kill Trump and would then return to Mexico. The story received a flood of media attention and was highlighted by the White House and Trump’s allies.

But investigators actually believe the man may have been framed so that he would get arrested and be deported from the U.S. before he got a chance to testify in a trial as a victim of assault, a person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press. The person could not publicly discuss details of the investigation and spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity.

Law enforcement officials believe the man, Ramon Morales Reyes, never wrote a letter that Noem and her department shared with a message written in light blue ink expressing anger over Trump’s deportations and threatening to shoot him in the head with a rifle at a rally. Noem also shared the letter on X along with a photo of Morales Reyes, and the White House also shared it on its social media accounts. The letter was mailed to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office along with the FBI and other agencies, the person said.

As part of the investigation, officials had contacted Morales Reyes and asked for a handwriting sample and concluded his handwriting and the threatening letter didn’t match and that the threat was not credible, the person said. It’s not clear why Homeland Security officials still decided to send a release making that claim.

In an emailed statement asking for information about the letter and the new information about Morales Reyes, the Department of Homeland Security said “the investigation into the threat is ongoing. Over the course of the investigation, this individual was determined to be in the country illegally and that he had a criminal record. He will remain in custody.”

His attorneys said he was not facing current charges and they did not have any information about convictions in his record. The revelations were first reported by CNN.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s records show Morales Reyes is being held at a county jail in Juneau, Wisconsin, northwest of Milwaukee. The Milwaukee-based immigrant rights group Voces de la Frontera, which is advocating for his release, said he was arrested May 21. Attorney Cain Oulahan, who was hired to fight against his deportation, said he has a hearing in a Chicago immigration court next week and is hoping he is released on bond.

Morales Reyes had been a victim in a case of another man who is awaiting trial on assault charges in Wisconsin, the person familiar with the matter said. The trial is scheduled for July.

Morales Reyes works as a dishwasher in Milwaukee, where he lives with his wife and three children. He had recently applied for a U visa, which is carved out for people in the country illegally who become victims of serious crimes, said attorney Kime Abduli, who filed that application.

The Milwaukee Police Department said it is investigating an identity theft and victim intimidation incident related to this matter and the county district attorney’s office said the investigation was ongoing. Milwaukee police said no one has been criminally charged at this time.

Source : https://apnews.com/article/ice-letter-threatening-trump-21447adfd14eb1a043f95344f9ccb3d5

Josh Allen and Hailee Steinfeld get married in stunning California wedding

It’s time to celebrate, Bills Mafia!

MVP quarterback Josh Allen married fiancée Hailee Steinfeld on Saturday in a luxurious ceremony in Ventura, California, photos from the couple’s big day show.

The Oscar-nominated actress, 28, stunned in a white, strapless gown with gloves while Allen, 29, looked dapper in a crisp black-and-white tuxedo.

Hailee Steinfeld and NFL quarterback Josh Allen are officially husband and wife.
BACKGRID

The glitzy nuptials come less than a year after the couple got engaged.

Allen, who was first linked to Steinfeld in the spring of 2023 following a breakup with longtime girlfriend Brittany Williams, got down on one knee this past November.

He popped the question in front of a scenic ocean backdrop that featured a stunning flower arch and candles surrounding the space.

“The funniest thing was that we woke up and were getting ready for brunch and you jumped on the bed and said, ‘Can we get married already?!? What are you waiting for??!’” Allen recalled of the proposal as part of a Q&A with Steinfeld’s Beau Society newsletter.

“I replied, ‘Just give me a little more time.’ Little did you know I was about to propose to you…”

Allen, who was named league MVP after the 2024 season, credited Steinfeld for his stellar play in his seventh year with the Bills.

“She’s been a huge part,” Allen told the Associated Press. “The morale, the support. When I get home, she’s my biggest fan, my biggest supporter. She’s just the best.”

Steinfeld accompanied Allen to New Orleans in February when he picked up his MVP hardware at the 2024 NFL Honors.

“That’s MVP Josh Allen to you!” the “Sinners” star exclaimed on Instagram, to which Allen commented, “I love you.”

Allen threw 28 touchdowns and a career-low six interceptions through 17 regular-season games.

He also had 12 touchdowns on the ground in 2024.

The Bills reached the AFC Championship game in January but were bested by the defending champion Chiefs, 32-29.

Source : https://nypost.com/2025/05/31/sports/josh-allen-hailee-steinfeld-get-married-in-stunning-california-wedding/

 

FLYING HIGH ChatGPT can get you the best flight in SECONDS with two-sentence prompt – and book with the click of a button

LOOKING for a flight deal just got a whole lot easier with a simple prompt and the power of artificial intelligence.

With a short message, ChatGPT can now find cheap tickets, filter your preferences, and even help you book a flight, all in seconds.

The tool, called Operator, works with Bing Travel to help users skip hours of browsing and comparing flight prices.

TikTok user Adam Stewart previewed the useful AI agent in a post with over 5,000 likes.

Stewart posts videos about AI and automation on his TikTok account, where he boasts over 105,000 followers.

Earlier this year, the creator shared a video where he tested Operator by looking for a five-passenger flight to Hong Kong.

He tasked Operator with finding a direct, daytime flight from Melbourne on April 7, with checked baggage included.

“I am trying to book a flight to Hong Kong for five people on the 7th of April, try to find me a direct flight,” he said.

“I want it to be a daytime flight as I don’t sleep well on planes and make sure baggage is included.”

The two-sentence prompt simply asked Stewart, “How many passengers?” and “Morning or afternoon?

ChatGPT immediately got to work, showing that it had filtered results to include only morning and afternoon departures.

The user noted, “Now we have got some options. Cathay, very nice.”

It bypassed the login page and pulled up a flight option that matched the user’s request.

“Now it found us a flight, this is perfect, it includes check-in,” the user said.

Once the flight was selected, the system asked if they wanted to go ahead with the booking just by clicking one button.

“One thing is you can turn off the notifications, so you don’t have to see how it works in the background,” Stewart added.

The only step left was to enter passenger details.

Operator is a research preview tool that uses its own browser to complete tasks like searching, filtering, and even booking flights.

It’s currently available to Pro users in the US, giving them early access to hands-off travel planning powered by ChatGPT.

The entire process takes seconds and doesn’t require switching between multiple websites or tabs.

ChatGPT and its rival, Claude, are becoming go-to travel tools for finding affordable routes.

Travelers can ask for flight suggestions by season, date, and price range.

ChatGPT can also find low-cost airline options and hidden flight tricks.

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/travel/14356666/chatgpt-operator-book-flights-tool-prompt/

SINGLED OUT US airlines are ‘quietly punishing some passengers & charging them 70% more for tickets’ – customers beg for it to stop

MAJOR US airlines are reportedly charging certain passengers more when booking tickets, according to a travel expert.

Three of the country’s biggest airlines—American Airlines, United Airlines, and Delta—charge solo travelers more compared to those traveling in a group, site Thrifty Traveler has claimed.

The practice isn’t widespread, but a team of flight deal analysts searched through hundreds of routes daily to confirm that it’s “real and undeniable.”

“Whether it’s been just days, months, or even years, it’s something that few everyday travelers may realize is happening … or how much it might be costing them,” wrote Kyle Potter.

As an example, a price for a one-way United flight from Chicago-O’Hare Airport to Peoria costs approximately $269.

However, if the traveler has about two to four passengers, the price plummets to almost a third of that.

“Just $181 apiece for that exact same standard economy ticket,” wrote Potter.

This dynamic pricing only appears to happen with one-way domestic flights, not round-trip fares or international bookings.

Potter also explained that the phenomena hasn’t been seen on other major US airlines like Alaska, JetBlue, or Southwest.

While it hasn’t been confirmed why solo travelers are being charged more, Potter believes it’s a way for the airlines to keep “segmenting” their customers, such as charging business travelers who pay with a corporate card more while giving a better deal to families or groups on the same flight.

Another example showed a possible solo flier having to shell out at least $422 for a one-way American Airlines flight from Charlotte, North Carolina, to Fort Myers, Florida, on October 13.

However, for two passengers, the ticket cost drops to $266 per person for the same flight.

The last example had a flight from Chicago-O’Hare to Lexington, Kentucky, giving a solo passenger $214 whether they fly from United or American, said Potter.

But two passengers only have to pay $108 each for the flight with a total cost of $215.

PRICE HIKE QUESTIONS

It’s unclear how this alleged pricing strategy began, however, Potter said that it’s a massive change in how airlines set prices, which will leave customers shocked.

Airlines don’t usually charge solo travelers more, and bulk discounts aren’t a common practice, but Potter believes it boils down to how airlines actually sell tickets.

“Carriers aren’t just selling economy, extra legroom, and first class tickets but an alphabet soup of different fare classes, each at a different price,” he wrote.

“If there’s only one fare available at the cheapest $118, searching for two would only yield fares at a higher, $199 price point.”

Potter believes airlines are trying to cater to different customers at once, as they’re more likely to be on business trips with their flights paid off by their employers, meaning they won’t care about paying extra.

“Of course, not all travelers booking solo tickets are charging flights to a corporate card. There are flyers heading out to attend to a family emergency,” said Potter.

“Friends booking flights separately. Spouses going on a trip who leave a day or two after one another. And many, many more.”

CUSTOMERS REACT

The story went viral on social media after travel influencer Brian Kelly shared it on Instagram to his over 416,000 followers.

“I personally think this is greed getting out of control and the airlines are just ASKING for government intervention,” he wrote in the caption.

There were thousands of comments from users, sharing their frustrations with the supposed price hike.

“I’m married, with a spouse in the army who is currently deployed,” wrote one person.

“I travel alone…a LOT. And this upsets me tremendously.”

Another person explained that solo travelers already have to pay more for accommodations and transportation.

“At least let us have the flights!”

A third person wrote: “A seat is a seat. Should cost the same per person regardless of 1 or or 4.”

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/travel/14364306/us-airlines-charging-extra-single-ticket-passengers/

BRUISING EXIT Elon Musk reveals truth behind his mystery black eye during White House farewell & jokes he ‘wasn’t near Macron’s wife’

ELON Musk showed up with a black eye as he said his final goodbyes to President Donald Trump and the Department of Government Efficiency in an Oval Office press conference on Friday.

Trump and the billionaire failed to acknowledge the injury as the president gushed over Musk’s 130 days of slashing federal spending.

Tech billionaire Elon Musk said his final goodbyes to President Donald Trump on FridayCredit: Reuters

At the beginning of their final press conference, Trump played a clip from CNBC where an anchor proclaimed that personal income has skyrocketed and tripled expectations.

The president then looked on Musk with pride as he listed the billionaire’s achievements, which included slashing many offshore projects said to be funded by USAID.

“He’s an incredible patriot,” Trump said after fuming over how the media criticized Musk.

Musk wore a black T-shirt with the words “The Dogefather” in the style of The Godfather emblazoned on the front as he smiled and nodded at Trump’s words.

But despite his sunny disposition, fans started to notice that the billionaire appeared to have a painful-looking black eye.

Viewers shared their concern for the Tesla founder and questioned what had left the painful-looking mark.

“Does Elon Musk have a black eye in the Oval Office right now?” wrote one viewer on X.

“Oh man, I can’t wait for the conspiracy theories.”

“Is no one going to ask why Elon Musk has a black eye,” said another person.

Another person wrote, “What is up with Elon Musk having a black eye at today’s White House Conference with President Trump?”

A reporter eventually asked Musk about his eye, and the billionaire quickly joked that he wasn’t “anywhere near France,” an apparent joke about French President Emmanuel Macron’s wife Brigitte, who was seen slapping her husband before they walked off an airplane.

Musk then revealed that his five-year-old son X had accidentally hit him when the two were playing.

“I was just horsing around with little X and I said, ‘Go ahead punch me in the face,’ and he did,” Musk explained.

Trump, who said he didn’t notice the black eye, smiled at the admission and said, “X could do it. If you knew X he could do it.”

Musk then said, “I didn’t really feel much at the time, and I guess it bruises up, but I was just horsing around with the kid.”

When asked about Musk’s future in the White House, the pair confirmed that he would always be on standby to give the president guidance.

END OF AN ERA

Earlier this week, Musk confirmed that he would soon be stepping down from his position and thanked the White House for having him.

“The DOGE mission will only strengthen over time as it becomes a way of life throughout the government,” he said in the post.

Trump confirmed that Friday would be Musk’s last day, but insisted that the tech billionaire would “always be helping all the way.”

Questions still remain over who will lead the department in Musk’s absence, but White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt suggested it would be a group effort.

Musk made a lofty vow to save the government $1 trillion, and claims that DOGE has already slashed $160 billion in spending.

He’s also had a slew of viral moments since joining Trump’s campaign, like when he held up a massive “chainsaw for bureaucracy” on stage at the Conservative Political Action Conference.

In one presser with Trump, Musk set up a makeshift Tesla dealership outside the White House where the president gushed about the “computer” inside the cars.

And several times he was seen in the Oval Office with his four-year-old son X Æ A-Xii, whom he shares with his estranged ex Grimes.

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/news/14363506/donald-trump-elon-musk-leaving-doge/

What are the real impacts of melting glaciers?

Glaciers in the Alps have lost 50% of their area since 1950Image: Denis Balibouse/REUTERS

The collapse of a glacier in the Swiss Alps this week has underscored the impacts of a warming world on the ice-packed parts of planet Earth.

When the melting Birch Glacier on crumbled on Wednesday, it engulfed the picturesque village of Blatten in the country’s southern Wallis region. A mound of debris has clogged the path of the Lonza River, increasing the risk of flooding.

Glaciers and ice sheets store about 70% of the world’s freshwater reserves. High-altitude regions are often dubbed the world’s “water towers” because they gradually release meltwater in the summer, sustaining towns and farms downstream.

Two billion people globally rely on glacial melt for their day-to-day water needs, researchers say. Yet, as the world gets hotter, the ice is thawing.

Glaciers around the world are now melting at twice the rate measured just two decades ago. Between 2000 and 2023, they lost an ice mass equivalent to 46,000 Great Pyramids of Giza.

And this is affecting communities worldwide. Some regions are left with too little water, while others struggle with too much.

Glaciers are a crucial freshwater resource

The residents of the small western Peruvian town of Huaraz draw almost 20% of their annual water supply from melting ice. But Andean glaciers are thawing even faster than elsewhere.

This poses a risk of flooding. In a decadelong lawsuit, one resident of Huaraz sued a German energy company over the potential risk to his home from a mountain lake that is filling with meltwater at a rapid rate.

Meltwater damages infrastructure, makes mountains unstable

It’s not only in Peru that huge glacial lakes form when glaciers thaw. When they become too full, deadly floods can wash away buildings, bridges and wipe out fertile land, like in Pakistan, where a glacial lake burst in October 2023.

That same month in neighboring India, a lake of melted ice overflowed and killed 179 people. Scientists estimate that globally, at least 15 million people are vulnerable to sudden flooding from thawing ice, most of them living in India and Pakistan. Since 1990, the volume of water in mountain lakes there has increased by around 50%.

The collapse of the Birch Glacier in Switzerland caused a landslide of rock and ice that covered most of the 300-strong village of Blatten in mud. Though residents had been evacuated as a precaution, one man is missing in what scientists call the latest dramatic example of climate change’s impact on the Alps.

Dwindling water supply for agriculture, electricity generation

As glaciers shrink, they eventually reach a threshold — known as peak water — at which runoff declines. As a result, less meltwater flows downstream, with potentially far-reaching consequences.

Reduced water supply has forced local farmers, who traditionally grew corn and wheat, to change both their crops and water management. Some communities in the Andes have now switched to growing a bitter potato variety that is more resilient to drought.

Unstable water supply is also stalling electricity production. In Chile, 27% of power is generated by hydroelectric dams which critically depend on meltwater. In 2021, the Alto Maipo plant was shut down due to dwindling flow.

Melting ice sheets increasing sea levels

It’s not only glaciers in high altitudes that are melting, but also those in the ocean, like Thwaites Glacier in Western Antarctica. This frosty giant is the size of the US state of Florida and has been deemed “very unstable.” Scientists have said it is thawing on all sides.

The melting of sea ice crucially contributes to rising sea levels. Thwaites Glacier has been dubbed “doomsday glacier” for its potential impact on what some researchers call “abrupt” sea level rise.

In the last 25 years alone, melting glaciers have caused global sea levels to rise almost 2 centimeters (0.7 inches). This might not seem like much, but low-lying islands like Fiji and Vanuatu in the Pacific Ocean are at risk of disappearing under the waves.

In addition, more than 1 billion people in megacities like Jakarta, Mumbai, Lagos and Manila live within 10 kilometers (about 6 miles) of the coast. Protective dikes are only a temporary solution, as sea levels continue to rise.

Ice traditions under threat

Glaciers also hold spiritual and cultural significance.

Every year, tens of thousands of pilgrims gather at one of Peru’s most sacred glaciers, the Colquepunco, for a religious festival.

In the past, ice blocks were carved from the glacier and carried down to local communities who believed in their healing properties. But as the glacier vanishes, this ancient tradition has come under threat.

Less snowfall for Alpine ski resorts

The Presena Glacier in Italy, a popular destination for skiers, has reportedly lost a third of its volume since 1990. And natural snow in the European Alps is expected to decline by 42% by the end of the century. Scientists estimate that many ski resorts worldwide won’t be profitable in the future.

Source : https://www.dw.com/en/what-are-the-real-impacts-of-melting-glaciers/a-72701132

US updates: Trump to double steel tariffs to 50%

Trump says domestic steel production is a ‘matter of national security’Image: Patrick Pleul/picture-alliance/dpa

250 million bees escape after truck overturns in US

A commercial truck carrying an estimated 70,000 pounds (31,751 kilograms) of honeybee hives overturned in western United States, authorities said on Friday.

About 250 million bees are estimated to have been set free.

US Defense Secretary Hegseth warns of ‘imminent’ China threat

United States Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth on Saturday cautioned that China was “credibly preparing to potentially use military force” in a bid to reorder the balance of power in the Indo-Pacific.

Hegseth reassured Washington’s allies in the region that they would not be abandoned to tackle the growing military and economic pressures from Beijing.

Appeals court refuses to lift block on Trump’s mass firings at government agencies

The US 9th Circuit Court of Appeals refused to pause a judge’s ruling blocking President Donald Trump from carrying out mass layoffs of federal workers.

The firings were part of the White House’s plans to overhaul government and restructure federal agencies.

The appeals court ruling means that, for now, the Trump administration cannot proceed with plans to shed tens of thousands of federal jobs and shutter many government offices and programs.

US District Judge Susan Illston in San Francisco on May 22 blocked the large-scale layoffs, saying that the president may only restructure agencies when authorized by Congress.

The Trump administration had sought an emergency stay of the injunction.

But the three-judge 9th Circuit panel denied the stay bid pending an appeal, which could take months to resolve.

The administration will likely now ask the US Supreme Court to pause the ruling.

PBS sues Donald Trump and administration officials over funding cuts

US television broadcaster PBS filed suit against President Donald Trump and members of his administration on Friday in an attempt to block what it says is overreach and a First Amendment violation.

Trump signed an executive order stripping Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) of all federal funding on May 1, calling it “radical, woke propaganda disguised as news” and claiming it was biased against him.

“PBS disputes those charged assertions in the strongest possible terms,” said PBS legal representative Z.W. Julius Chen.

“But regardless of any policy disagreements over the role of public television,” the suit charges, “our Constitution and laws forbid the President from serving as the arbiter of the content of PBS’s programming, including by attempting to defund PBS.”

PBS asserts the order “makes no attempt to hide the fact that it is cutting off the flow of funds to PBS because of the content of PBS programming and out of a desire to alter the content of speech. That is blatant viewpoint discrimination.”

Trump has been on a crusade against private and public media outlets, forcing massive payouts for supposed injustices and actively influencing corporate and editorial decision-making at news outlets, such as most recently at CBS.

National Public Radio (NPR) filed a similar suit on Tuesday.

Both PBS and NPR are non-profits that rely on partial public funding. The remainder of their revenue comes from corporate and individual sponsors as well as viewer donations.

Beyond news, PBS produces educational content for children and adults — the most famous examples of which are perhaps Sesame Street and Ken Burns.

PBS operates a 330-station system that often serves remote communities otherwise cut off from the rest of the country. They are also often the only source of critical information viewers have during emergencies.

Source : https://www.dw.com/en/us-updates-trump-to-double-steel-tariffs-to-50/live-72733159

 

Trump, Musk offer show of unity as Tesla CEO departs government

Elon Musk listens to US President Donald Trump speak in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, US on Feb 11, 2025. (File photo: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque)

US President Donald Trump said on Friday (May 30) that billionaire Elon Musk will remain a close adviser, even after the Tesla CEO departs the administration following a chaotic four-month tenure that saw him disrupt dozens of foreign agencies in his effort to slash government spending.

During a joint press conference in the Oval Office, Trump lauded Musk and defended his cost-cutting campaign as the head of the Department of Governmental Efficiency. The group has eliminated thousands of jobs and canceled billions of dollars in spending, including the majority of US foreign aid, but has thus far fallen far short of Musk’s lofty initial promises.

“Elon is really not leaving. He’s going to be back and forth,” Trump said from behind the Resolute Desk, as Musk stood to his right, wearing a black DOGE hat and a T-shirt that read “The Dogefather” in the style of the movie “The Godfather.”

The press conference appeared aimed at showing unity after Musk prompted frustration among White House officials this week by criticizing Trump’s sweeping tax and spending bill as too expensive. Some senior aides, including Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller and Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, saw Musk’s remarks on the tax bill as an open break from the administration, with Miller particularly irked by the comments, a source familiar with the matter said.

Trump gave Musk a large golden key inside a wooden box bearing his signature, a gift he said he reserved only for “very special people.” Musk, in turn, admired the gold finishings that Trump has installed around the Oval Office.

The White House and senior aides had insisted earlier in Trump’s term that Musk, the world’s richest man, was a key figure who wasn’t going anywhere.

But more recently, they began pointing to the expiration of his 130-day mandate as a special government employee, which was set to end around May 30, as a natural endpoint.

Musk, meanwhile, has said he intends to devote most of his energy to his business empire, including Tesla and SpaceX, after some investors expressed concern that DOGE was occupying too much of his time.

He has also said he plans to ratchet back his political donations, after he spent nearly US$300 million backing Trump’s presidential campaign and those of other Republicans in 2024.

But he told reporters on Friday that he would continue to be part of Trump’s circle of advisers.

“I expect to remain a friend and an adviser, and certainly, if there’s anything the president wants me to do, I’m at the president’s service,” he said.

CUTS FALL SHORT

Musk initially claimed DOGE would slash at least US$2 trillion in federal spending. Four months into its efforts, DOGE now estimates it has saved US$175 billion.

But the details it has posted on its website, where it gives the only public accounting of those changes, add up to less than half of that figure.

US Treasury summaries reviewed by Reuters show that the agencies targeted by DOGE have cut about US$19 billion in combined spending compared to the same period last year, far below Musk’s original target and amounting to just about 0.5% of total federal expenditures.

Trump and DOGE have managed to cut nearly 12%, or 260,000, of the 2.3 million-strong federal civilian workforce largely through threats of firings, buyouts and early retirement offers, a Reuters review of agency departures found.

Source : https://www.channelnewsasia.com/world/trump-musk-offer-show-unity-tesla-ceo-departs-government-5160861

Israel may be breaching international law by restricting humanitarian aid to Gaza: PM Wong

Singapore’s Prime Minister Lawrence Wong speaks during a press briefing with France’s President Emmanuel Macron in Singapore on May 30, 2025. (Photo: AFP/Ludovic Marin)

Israel may be breaching international law by restricting humanitarian aid to Gaza, Singapore Prime Minister Lawrence Wong said on Friday (May 30).

Speaking in a joint press conference with French President Emmanuel Macron as part of the latter’s state visit to Singapore, Mr Wong said: “We have always said that Israel had a right to defend itself. Unfortunately, Israel’s response has gone too far and its actions have caused terrible humanitarian disaster; and the restrictions imposed on the delivery of humanitarian supplies are completely unacceptable.

“In our opinion, it may even be a likely breach of international humanitarian law. So it cannot be justified,” he added.

Earlier in May, Israel partially ended an 11-week long aid blockade on Gaza. Limited amount of relief has entered via the United Nations or the United States-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.

“We join countries around the world to call for an immediate ceasefire; for the unhindered delivery of humanitarian aid; for the protection of civilians; and also for the return of hostages,” said Mr Wong on Friday.

“Beyond the current crisis itself, Singapore also supports the right of the Palestinian people to their own homeland. This has to be done as part of a negotiated two-state solution, because that is the only way for a comprehensive, just and durable solution to this long-standing Israel-Palestine conflict.”

The prime minister noted international efforts on these fronts, including a United Nations conference which France and Saudi Arabia are co-hosting from Jun 17 to 20. It aims to lay out the parameters for a roadmap to a Palestinian state, while ensuring Israel’s security.

Singapore will participate in this conference and join the international community to work towards a durable solution, Mr Wong added.

Mr Macron meanwhile said during the presser that France could harden its position on Israel if it continues to block humanitarian aid to Gaza, according to Reuters.

“If there is no response that meets the humanitarian situation in the coming hours and days, obviously, we will have to toughen our collective position,” he said, speaking in French.

Reuters also reported Mr Macron saying the existence of a Palestinian state “is not just simply a moral duty but also a political necessity”.

On May 19, a joint statement by leaders of the United Kingdom, France and Canada also highlighted that Israel’s denial of humanitarian assistance risked breaching international humanitarian law.

Source : https://www.channelnewsasia.com/singapore/israel-may-be-breaching-international-law-restricting-humanitarian-aid-gaza-pm-wong-5160066

Astronauts in space for nine months didn’t know if they would ‘be able to make it back’

When astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore approached the International Space Station (ISS) last year with failing thrusters on their Boeing Starliner capsule, they were unable to fly forward to dock.

And if they couldn’t dock, they didn’t know if they could make it back home again.

“Docking was imperative,” Mr Wilmore told BBC News, two months after he and Ms Williams finally made a successful return to Earth. “If we weren’t able to dock, would we be able to make it back? We didn’t know.”

The astronauts had been travelling on a test flight that was meant to last eight days. Instead, they ended up staying in space for nearly 10 months.

The first challenge was to dock safely and successfully at the ISS, which they managed to do within several minutes after Mission Control on the ground helped them restart the craft’s thrusters.

Mr Wilmore said that the possibility they might never see Earth again “definitely went through our minds”.

But both astronauts said they didn’t communicate the worst-case scenarios out loud in those moments, because they were trained to move on with solving problems.

“You sort of read each other’s mind and know where we’re going with all the failures,” Ms Williams told the BBC.

“These were not expected,” she admitted. But thoughts quickly turned to solutions: “At the same time, you know, we’re like, what do we have? What can we do?”

The pair’s saga began in June 2024. They were taking part in the first crewed test flight of the Starliner spacecraft, which was developed by aerospace company Boeing.

But after a number of technical problems during their flight, the option of Starliner carrying the astronauts home as planned was deemed to be a risk not worth taking – given that the pair could instead be brought back by another company, SpaceX.

For that reason, they stayed in space until they hitched a ride back on a SpaceX capsule. For its part, Boeing maintained that its own capsule was safe to use – and was proven right when the craft returned, uncrewed, in September 2024.

After months of experiments aboard the space station, Ms Williams and Mr Wilmore eventually returned to Earth on 18 March.

During this phase of their mission, the pair were repeatedly described as stranded, implying there was no means for them to get off the ISS.

But that was not the case, as the space station always has spacecraft attached to it – which could have acted in an emergency as a lifeboat to carry the astronauts back to Earth.

Nonetheless, the pair’s stay was longer than expected – though the Nasa pair embraced this.

“We knew nobody was going to just let us down… we knew everybody had our back and was looking out for us,” Ms Williams said.

While in limbo, the pair even found themselves in the middle of a political row, after US President Donald Trump blamed his predecessor Joe Biden for abandoning them in space.

But the astronauts said they ignored the politics and didn’t feel abandoned. “We can’t speak to that at all,” said Mr Wilmore. “We understand space flight is hard, human space flight is even harder.”

After two months back on the ground, both astronauts say they are feeling fit and well, because the workouts that they undertook while in their zero-gravity environment paid off.

Exercising in zero gravity means your body doesn’t need much time to recover from the daily squats and deadlifts, Mr Wilmore explained.

He said he performed squats and deadlifts “every single day for almost 10 months”, meaning that he returned to Earth “literally stronger than I’ve ever been in my life”.

Ms Williams agreed – she went running days after landing back on Earth and once ran a full marathon in space strapped to a treadmill – but said it’s not always easy to readjust to the weight of the world.

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/clygd1vl9yeo

Students or spies? The young Chinese caught in Trump’s crosshairs

The US is becoming a difficult choice for Chinese students who want to study abroad

Xiao Chen turned up at the US Consulate in Shanghai on Thursday morning, hours after Washington announced that it would “aggressively” revoke the visas of Chinese students.

The 22-year-old had a visa appointment: she was headed to Michigan in the autumn to study communications.

After a “pleasant” conversation, she was told her application had been rejected. She was not given a reason.

“I feel like a drifting duckweed tossed in wind and storm,” she said, using a common Chinese expression to describe feeling both uncertain and helpless.

She had been hopeful because she already had the acceptance letter. And she thought she had narrowly escaped the bombshells in recent days.

First, Donald Trump’s administration moved to end Harvard University’s ability to enrol international students, a move that has since been blocked in court. And then it said it had stopped visa appointments for all foreign students.

But now, Chen is ready for plan B. “If I can’t get the visa eventually, I’ll probably take a gap year. Then I’ll wait to see if things will get better next year.”

A valid visa may still not be enough, she adds, because students with visas could be “stopped at the airport and deported”.

“It’s bad for every Chinese student. The only difference is how bad.”

It has been a bleak week for international students in the US – and perhaps even harder for the 280,000 or so Chinese students who would have noticed that their country has been singled out.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem accused Harvard of “co-ordinating with the Chinese Communist Party”.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that the move against Chinese students in the US would include “those with connections to the Chinese Communist Party or studying in critical fields”.

That could hit a wide swathe of them given membership of the Communist Party is common among officials, entrepreneurs, business people and even artists and celebrities in China.

Beijing has called it a “politically motivated and discriminatory action”, and its foreign ministry has lodged a formal protest.

There was a time when China sent the highest number of foreign students to American campuses. But those numbers slipped as the relationship between the two countries soured.

A more powerful and increasingly assertive Beijing is now clashing with Washington for supremacy in just about everything, from trade to tech.

Trump’s first term had already spelled trouble for Chinese students. He signed an order in 2020 barring Chinese students and researchers with ties to Beijing’s military from obtaining US visas.

That order remained in place during President Joe Biden’s term. Washington never clarified what constitutes “ties” to the military, so many students had their visas revoked or were turned away at US borders, sometimes without a proper explanation.

One of them, who did not wish to be named, said his visa was cancelled by Customs and Border Protection (CBP) when he landed in Boston in August 2023.

He had been accepted into a post-doctoral program at Harvard University. He was going to study regenerative medicine with a focus on breast cancer, and had done his master’s degree from a military-affiliated research institution in China.

He said he was not a member of the Communist Party and his research had nothing to do with the military.

“They asked me what the relationship was between my research and China’s defence affairs,” he told the BBC then. “I said, how could breast cancer have anything to do with national defence? If you know, please tell me.”

He believes he never stood a chance because the officials had already made up their minds. He recalled one of them asking: “Did Xi Jinping buy your suitcase for you?”

What was surprising, or even shocking then, slowly turned normal as more and more Chinese students struggled to secure visas or admissions to study science and technology in US universities.

Mr Cao, a psychology major whose research involves neuroscience, has spent the past school year applying for PhD programs in the US.

He had graduated from top-tier universities – credentials that could send him to an Ivy League school. But of the more than 10 universities he applied to, only one extended an offer.

Trump’s cuts to biomedical research didn’t help, but the mistrust surrounding Chinese researchers was also a factor. Allegations and rumours of espionage, especially in sensitive subjects, have loomed over Chinese nationals at US universities in recent years, even derailing some careers.

“One of the professors even told me, ‘We rarely give offers to Chinese students these days, so I cannot give you an interview,” Mr Cao told the BBC in February.

“I feel like I am just a grain of sand under the wheel of time. There is nothing I can do.”

For those who did graduate from US colleges, returning home to China has not been easy either.

They used to be lauded as a bridge to the rest of the world. Now, they find that their once-coveted degrees don’t draw the same reaction.

Chen Jian, who did not want to use his real name, said he quickly realised that his undergraduate degree from a US college had become an obstacle.

When he first came back in 2020, he interned at a state-owned bank and asked a supervisor if there was a chance to stay on.

The supervisor didn’t say it outright, but Chen got the message: “Employees should have local degrees. People like me (with overseas degrees) won’t even get a response.”

He later realised that “there really weren’t any colleagues with overseas undergraduate background in the department”.

He went back to the US and did his master’s at Johns Hopkins University, and now works at Chinese tech giant Baidu.

But despite the degree from a prestigious American university, Mr Chen does not feel he has an edge because of the stiff competition from graduates in China.

What also has not helped is the suspicion around foreign graduates. Beijing has ramped up warnings of foreign spies, telling civilians to be on the lookout for suspicious figures.

In April, prominent Chinese businesswoman Dong Mingzhu told shareholders in a closed-door meeting that her company, home appliance maker Gree Electric, will “never” recruit Chinese people educated overseas “because among them are spies”.

“I don’t know who is and who isn’t,” Ms Dong said, in comments that were leaked and went viral online.

Days later, the CIA released promotional videos encouraging Chinese officials dissatisfied with the government to become spies and provide classified information. “Your destiny is in your own hands,” the video said.

The suspicion of foreigners as the US and China pull further away from each other is a surprising turn for many Chinese people who remember growing up in a very different country.

Zhang Ni, who also did not want to use her real name, says she was “very shocked” by Ms Dong’s remarks.

The 24-year-old is a recent journalism graduate from Columbia University in New York. She says she “doesn’t care about working at Gree”, but what surprised her was the shift in attitudes.

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1dezrrl3z3o

Taylor Swift buys back her master recordings

Taylor Swift has bought back the rights to her first six albums, ending a long-running battle over the ownership of her music.

“All of the music I’ve ever made now belongs to me,” said the star, announcing the news on her official website. “I’ve been bursting into tears of joy… ever since I found out this is really happening.”

The saga began in June 2019, when music manager Scooter Braun bought Swift’s former record label Big Machine and, with it, all of the songs from Taylor Swift, Fearless, Speak Now, Red, 1989 and Reputation.

Swift had personal objections to the deal, blaming Braun for complicity in the “incessant, manipulative bullying” against her by Kanye West, one of his clients.

On her website, Swift said that reclaiming the rights to her music had, for a long time, seemed unimaginable.

“To say this is my greatest dream come true is actually being pretty reserved about it,” she added, thanking fans for their support as the drama played out.

“I can’t thank you enough for helping to reunite me with this art that I have dedicated my life to, but have never owned until now.

“I almost stopped thinking it could ever happen, after 20 years of having the carrot dangled and then yanked away,” she wrote.

“But that’s all in the past now.”

In the music industry, the owner of a master recording controls the way it is distributed and licenced. The artist still earns royalties, but controlling the masters offers protection over how the work is used in future.

Reputation (Taylor’s Version) delayed?

Swift responded to the original sale of her masters by vowing to re-record those records, effectively diminishing the value of those master tapes, and putting ownership back in her hands.

To date, she has released four re-recorded albums – known as “Taylor’s Versions” – with dozens of bonus tracks and supplementary material.

In her letter, the star told fans she had yet to complete the project, after “hitting a stopping point” while trying to remake 2017’s Reputation album – which dealt with public scrutiny of her private life, and the fall-out of her feud with Kanye West.

“The Reputation album was so specific to that time in my life,” she explained. “All that defiance, that longing to be understood while feeling purposefully misunderstood…

“To be perfectly honest, it’s the one album in those first six that I thought couldn’t be improved by re-doing it… so I kept putting it off.”

Last week, the star previewed the new version of Reputation’s first single, Look What You Made Me Do, in an episode of The Handmaid’s Tale – but her letter suggested that a full re-recording would be delayed or even scrapped.

However, she promised that vault tracks from the record would be released at a future date, if fans were “into the idea”.

She also confirmed that she had re-recorded her self-titled debut, adding: “I really love how it sounds now”.

“Those two albums can still have their moments to re-emerge when the time is right,” she added.

“But if it happens, it won’t be from a place of sadness and longing for what I wish I could have. It will just be a celebration now.”

What is a master recording?

As the name suggests, a master recording is the original recorded performance of a song. Whoever owns it controls all the rights to exploit the music.

That includes distributing it to streaming services, pressing new physical CDs and vinyl, creating box sets, or licensing songs to movies or video games.

Swift, as the writer or co-writer of her music, always maintained her publishing rights, which meant she was able to veto attempts to license songs like Shake It Off and Love Story to other companies.

“I do want my music to live on. I do want it to be in movies. I do want it to be in commercials. But I only want that if I own it,” she told Billboard in 2019.

It is not known how much it cost Swift to acquire her masters, but the catalogue previously sold for $300m (£222m) in 2020.

The BBC understands that rumours she paid between $600m to $1bn are inaccurately high.

How did the sale of Taylor Swift’s masters happen?

When 14-year-old Taylor Swift moved to Nashville in 2004 to chase her dream of becoming a country pop star, she signed a record deal with Big Machine.

Label boss Scott Borchetta gave the unproven singer a big cash advance in exchange for having ownership of the master recordings to her first six albums “in perpetuity”.

This was fairly common practice in the era before streaming, when artists needed record label backing to get played on the radio, and for the manufacture and distribution of CDs.

Swift’s deal with Big Machine expired in 2018, at which point she left and signed with Republic Records and Universal Music Group (UMG).

A year later, Borchetta sold his label to Scooter Braun’s Ithaca Holdings.

Swift said she only learned about the deal when it was announced; characterising it as an act of aggression that “stripped me of my life’s work”.

She labelled Braun – who rose to prominence as the manager of Justin Bieber and Ariana Grande – as “the definition of toxic male privilege in our industry”.

She also expressed frustration that she had been unable to make a counter offer for her music.

“I spent 10 years of my life trying rigorously to purchase my masters outright and was then denied that opportunity,” she told Billboard, adding that: “Artists should maybe have the first right of refusal to buy.”

Braun later told Variety that the dispute had “gotten out of hand” after he and his family received death threats.

The music mogul later sold his stake in Swift’s back catalogue to Shamrock Holdings, a Los Angeles investment fund founded by the Disney family in 1978, in November 2020.

The multi-million dollar deal left Swift feeling betrayed again.

“This is the second time my music had been sold without my knowledge,” she said in a social media post.

While she was “open to the possibility of a partnership with Shamrock”, she subsequently learnt that, under the terms of the sale, Braun would “continue to profit off my old music” for years.

“I simply cannot in good conscience bring myself to be involved in benefiting Scooter Braun’s interests,” she wrote in a letter to the company, which she posted on X.

She began releasing her re-recorded albums in 2021, starting with her breakthrough, coming-of-age album Fearless.

Produced with forensic attention to detail, they were often indistinguishable from the originals – albeit with slightly cleaner mixes, and greater separation between the instruments.

But the big attraction was the bonus tracks, including the unabridged, 10-minute version of her break-up ballad All Too Well – described by Variety magazine as the “holy grail” of the star’s back catalogue.

The song went on to top the US charts, and made number three in the UK – where it is the longest song ever to reach the top five.

In the meantime, the singer continued to release original material, including the Grammy Award-winning albums Folklore and Midnights.

In 2023, Forbes magazine reported that Swift had become the first musician to make $1 billion (£740 million) solely from songwriting and performing.

Half of her fortune came from music royalties and touring, while the rest came from the increasing value of her music catalogue, including her re-recordings.

Revisiting the old material also inspired Swift’s career-spanning Eras tour, which made more than $2 billion (£1.48 billion) in ticket sales across 2023 and 2024.

In her letter, Swift said the success of the Eras tour “is why I was able to buy back my music”.

She added that she was heartened to see her struggle inspiring other artists.

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cp3n799d0v5o

DJ Daniel, teen cancer survivor sworn in as honorary Secret Service agent by Trump, has heartbreaking new diagnosis

The family of Devarjaye “DJ” Daniel recently revealed a heartbreaking diagnosis just months after the teen brain cancer survivor captured America’s hearts when he was sworn in as an honorary member of the Secret Service by President Trump.

DJ, who was given five months to live after being diagnosed with incurable brain and spine cancer in 2018, has “three new tumors,” his father, Theodis Daniel, told Fox 7 Austin last week.

“It’s rough, there isn’t a class that can teach you how to deal with it. You’re hearing that your child has a nasty disease,” the heartbroken dad said.

Devarjaye “DJ” Daniel after being sworn in as an honorary Secret Service agent during Trump’s address to Congress.
REUTERS

“We’re just going around showing people, hey, you do care for one another. Let’s give compassion and let’s try to join and help each other get through things,” he added.

DJ, who dreams of becoming a police officer, was thrust into the national spotlight when he was sworn in as an honorary protector of Trump during the president’s address to a joint session of Congress on March 4.

The teen has nearly completed his quest to be sworn in by 1,000 law enforcement agencies across the country — which would be a Guinness World Record.

He already holds multiple records, including “the most keys to the city” and “most proclamation days.”

After his Secret Service honor, DJ got calls from law enforcement agencies throughout the country, including from Deputy Jeffrey Combs of the Williams County Sheriff’s Office in Texas.

“I saw Theodis pick his son up. I felt that unconditional love, and I just knew I had to find DJ, so it all worked out,” he told FOX 7 last week.

The teen has been keeping in good spirits: During the Williams County ceremony, DJ rubbed deputies’ bald heads for luck, the outlet reported.

And the youngster was just as upbeat at another recent swearing-in, this one in Polk County, Florida.

Source : https://nypost.com/2025/05/30/us-news/dj-daniel-trumps-honorary-secret-service-agent-has-heartbreaking-health-update/

Ukraine keeps Russia guessing over talks, US senator warns Moscow of sanctions

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy meets with U.S. Senators Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine May 30, 2025. Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Handout via REUTERS Purchase Licensing Rights

Ukraine resisted U.S. and Russian pressure to commit to attending another round of peace talks on Monday, saying it first needed to see Russian proposals, while a leading U.S. senator warned Moscow it would be “hit hard” by new U.S. sanctions.
U.S. President Donald Trump has urged Moscow and Kyiv to work together on a deal to end their three-year-old war, and Russia has proposed a second round of face-to-face talks with Ukrainian officials next week in Istanbul.

Kyiv has said it is committed to the search for peace, but that it was waiting for a memorandum from the Russian side setting out their proposals.
“For a meeting to be meaningful, its agenda must be clear, and the negotiations must be properly prepared,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy wrote on X on Friday after hosting Turkey’s foreign minister for talks in Kyiv.
“Unfortunately, Russia is doing everything it can to ensure that the next potential meeting brings no results,” he said, citing the lack of a document from Russia.
Delegations from the two countries met in Istanbul on May 16 but the session yielded little other than an agreement for a prisoner exchange.

Zelenskiy said he and Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan on Friday discussed in a phone call the conditions under which Ukraine would participate in the Monday meeting proposed by Russia.
“There must be a ceasefire to move further toward peace. The killing of people must stop,” Zelenskiy wrote on Telegram.
“We share the view that this meeting cannot and should not be empty,” Zelenskiy said.
He did not commit Ukraine to attending on Monday, although he said he and Erdogan did discuss the possibility of organising a four-way meeting with the leaders of Ukraine, Russia, Turkey and the United States.
Erdogan said it was important that Russia and Ukraine send strong delegations to Istanbul and added that a leaders’ meeting could contribute to the peace process, the Turkish presidency said.
Some Republicans in the U.S. Congress and White House advisers have urged Trump to finally embrace new sanctions on Russia to put pressure on Moscow.

Influential Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said on a visit to Kyiv the Republican-led U.S. Senate is expected to move ahead with a bill on sanctions against Russia next week.
Graham, who met Zelenskiy in Kyiv, told a news briefing he had talked with Trump before his trip and the U.S. president expects concrete actions now from Moscow.
Graham accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of trying to drag out the peace process and said he doubts the Istanbul meeting will amount to more than a “Russian charade.”
“The game that Putin has been playing is about to change. He is going to be hit, and hit hard by the United States, when it comes to sanctions,” Graham said.
Trump told reporters on Friday that both Putin and Zelenskiy were stubborn and that he had been surprised and disappointed by Russian bombing in Ukraine while he was trying to arrange a ceasefire. Trump made no mention of sanctions.

The war, the biggest in Europe since World War Two, began with a full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
Expectations for the talks are modest because the positions staked out so far by the two sides are far apart and work between them has yet to begin in earnest on narrowing the gap.
Nevertheless, both Kyiv and Moscow are keen to demonstrate to Trump they support his peace efforts. Kyiv wants more U.S. military aid, while Moscow hopes Trump will ease existing economic sanctions on Russia.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the Russian delegation would be travelling to Istanbul and ready for talks with Ukraine on Monday morning.
“Everyone is focused on the direct Russia-Ukraine negotiations. A list of conditions for a temporary truce is being developed,” Peskov said.
Moscow has said its delegation for Istanbul would be led by Vladimir Medinsky, a Kremlin aide who led the previous round on May 16.

NO MORE NATO ENLARGEMENT?

Reuters reported this week that Putin’s conditions for ending the war include a demand that Western leaders pledge in writing to stop enlarging NATO eastwards.
Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine, Keith Kellogg, said on Friday that Russia’s concern over the eastward enlargement of NATO was fair and Washington did not want to see Ukraine in the U.S.-led military alliance.
Commenting on Kellogg’s statement, Peskov said: “We are pleased that these explanations by the president are understood, including in Washington.”
Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan told reporters in Kyiv that the next step after talks in Istanbul would be to try to host a meeting between Trump, Putin, and Zelenskiy.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said Kyiv needed to see the Russian proposals in advance for the talks to be “substantive and meaningful,” without spelling out what Kyiv would do if it did not receive the Russian document or a deadline for receiving it.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/ukraine-keeps-russia-guessing-over-participation-june-2-peace-talks-2025-05-30/

US proposes 60-day ceasefire for Gaza; hostage-prisoner swap, plan shows

The U.S. plan for Gaza, seen by Reuters on Friday, proposes a 60-day ceasefire and the release of 28 Israeli hostages – alive and dead – in the first week, in exchange for the release of 1,236 Palestinian prisoners and the remains of 180 dead Palestinians.
The document, which says the plan is guaranteed by U.S. President Donald Trump and mediators Egypt and Qatar, includes sending humanitarian aid to Gaza as soon as Hamas signs off on the ceasefire agreement.

The aid will be delivered by the United Nations, the Red Crescent and other agreed channels.
The White House said on Thursday that Israel had agreed to the U.S. ceasefire proposal.
Israeli media said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the families of hostages held in Gaza that Israel had accepted the deal presented by Trump’s Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff. The prime minister’s office declined to comment.
The Palestinian militant group Hamas said it had received the Israeli response to the proposal, which it said “fails to meet any of the just and legitimate demands of our people” including an immediate cessation of hostilities and an end to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

Hamas official Basem Naim said the Israeli response “fundamentally seeks to entrench the occupation and perpetuate policies of killing and starvation, even during what is supposed to be a period of temporary de-escalation”.
However, he said Hamas’ leadership was carrying out a “thorough and responsible review of the new proposal”.
The U.S. plan provides for Hamas to release the last 30 of the 58 remaining Israeli hostages once a permanent ceasefire is in place. Israel will also cease all military operations in Gaza as soon as the truce takes effect, it shows.
The Israeli army will also redeploy its troops in stages.
Deep differences between Hamas and Israel have stymied previous attempts to restore a ceasefire that broke down in March.
Israel has insisted that Hamas disarm completely, be dismantled as a military and governing force and return all 58 hostages still held in Gaza before it will agree to end the war.

Hamas has rejected the demand to give up its weapons and says Israel must pull its troops out of Gaza and commit to ending the war.
Israel launched its campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas attack in its south on October 7, 2023, that killed some 1,200 people and saw 251 Israelis taken hostage into Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.

A Palestinian woman reacts in the aftermath of an Israeli strike on a house, in Gaza City, May 30, 2025. REUTERS/Ebrahim Hajjaj TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY Purchase Licensing Rights

The subsequent Israeli military campaign has killed more than 54,000 Palestinians, Gaza health officials say, and has left the enclave in ruins.

MOUNTING PRESSURE

Israel has come under increasing international pressure, with many European countries that are usually reluctant to criticise it openly demanding an end to the war and a major relief effort.
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said on Friday that Israel is blocking all but a trickle of humanitarian aid from entering Gaza, with almost no ready-to-eat food entering what its spokesperson described as “the hungriest place on earth”.
Witkoff told reporters on Wednesday that Washington was close to “sending out a new term sheet” about a ceasefire by the two sides in the conflict.
“I have some very good feelings about getting to a long-term resolution, temporary ceasefire and a long-term resolution, a peaceful resolution, of that conflict,” Witkoff said then.
The 60-day ceasefire, according to the plan, may be extended if negotiations for a permanent ceasefire are not concluded within the set period.
Senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri said on Thursday the terms of the proposal echoed Israel’s position and did not contain commitments to end the war, withdraw Israeli troops or admit aid as Hamas has demanded.

AID DISTRIBUTION

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a private group backed by the United States and endorsed by Israel, said it had distributed a total of more than 1.8 million meals this week and it expanded its aid distribution to a third site in Gaza on Thursday. GHF plans to open more sites in coming weeks.
The group, heavily criticised by the United Nations and other aid groups as inadequate and flawed, began its operation this week in Gaza, where the U.N. has said 2 million people are at risk of famine after an 11-week blockade by Israel on aid entering the enclave.
There were tumultuous scenes on Tuesday as thousands of Palestinians rushed to distribution points and forced private security contractors to retreat.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/us-proposes-60-day-ceasefire-gaza-plan-shows-2025-05-30/

Kylie Jenner responds to claims Timothée Chalamet changed her ‘baddie’ style

Kylie Jenner opened up to Dazed about her style evolution.
Dazed

Once a baddie, always a baddie.

Kylie Jenner may be keeping mum about her relationship with Timothée Chalamet, but she’s not afraid to hit back at theories that she’s dressing more demure since snagging an Oscar-nominated boyfriend.

In her new Dazed cover story, the reality star, 27, denied switching up her style for Chalamet’s sake. When asked if fans should be “mourning a baddie,” she answered, “That’s so funny, I’ve seen that before too, and I’m always like, first of all, the baddie never left.”

“I wear a latex dress at least once a week. Like, where do you guys think the baddie went?” she asked. “People saw me in a flowy dress once in my life, and they were like, ‘She’s gone!’ I wore a sundress once in Palm Springs, you know – like, can a girl wear a sundress once?”

The Kylie Cosmetics founder joked she was “taking a break from slaying” in 2023 after fans noticed she was dialing back her glam.

Paige DeSorbo even took a swing during a “Giggly Squad” podcast episode, saying, “I do want to say about the Kardashians, every boyfriend they get, they take — they start to look like them. It’s like one of the weirdest things.”

The “Summer House” star likened the phenomenon to “when dogs start to look like their owners.”

That same year, Jenner was also compared to Sofia Richie and her “quiet luxury” sensibility after the makeup mogul wore a parade of ladylike outfits while on a European vacation.

In a 2024 New York Times interview, Jenner acknowledged she was “stripping down a little bit” when it came to her style.

“I don’t have this thick mane down to my butt, I don’t have lash extensions, I don’t have these long claws,” she said.

But when asked if it had to do directly with Chalamet, she responded cagily, “I don’t know how I feel about that. I just don’t want to talk about personal things.”

In another interview, Jenner said she’s simply grown out of the “King Kylie” aesthetic of her teen years as she’s come into her own as a mother of two.

“That era will always be a part of who I am, but it’ll never be what it was when I was younger. I probably would never wear lash extensions and thick eyebrows [now]. There are just certain trends that I’ve grown out of,” she told Elle last year.

“I’ve definitely had some moments of quiet luxury, as they would say, but I’m always experimenting. At the root of my authentic style, I think I’m more dark feminine.”

Source : https://pagesix.com/2025/05/30/style/kylie-jenner-responds-to-claims-timothee-chalamet-changed-her-baddie-style/

Elon Musk allegedly told ex he fathered a child with Japanese pop star, would give sperm to anyone who wanted it

Elon Musk allegedly fathered a child with a Japanese pop star — and told an ex that he would offer his sperm to “anyone.”

Ashley St. Clair, who allegedly shares son Romulus with the Tesla CEO, made the bombshell claims in a new article published by the New York Times Friday.

“Ms. St. Clair said that Mr. Musk told her he had fathered children around the world, including one with a Japanese pop star,” the article alleges. “He said he would be willing to give his sperm to anyone who wanted to have a child.”

Elon Musk allegedly fathered a child with a Japanese pop star, his ex claimed in a new article from the New York Times.
Getty Images

St. Clair further claimed that Musk had a deep concern for the declining birth rate, which he has been vocal about on his social media platform, X.

“He made it seem like it was just his altruism,” she alleged to the outlet. “He generally believed these people should just have children.”

St. Clair also claimed that while she was giving birth to Musk’s alleged child back in September, he allegedly told her “over disappearing Signal messages” that he wanted to keep his paternity, as well as their relationship, under wraps.

The right-leaning writer even claimed that she had to pretend she didn’t know Musk when they both went to Mar-a-Lago to celebrate President Trump’s election victory.

Musk, 53, allegedly offered her $15 million — and an additional $100,000 a month until their son turned 21 — if she kept her mouth shut, according to documents obtained by the newspaper.

St. Clair refused to let the tech billionaire buy her silence, however, and she went public with the news of his alleged paternity in February. She also sued him for child support and sole custody, later accusing him of “substantially” reducing his child support after she filed the lawsuit.

Back in March, Musk shared on X that although he had questions about the infant’s paternity, he was still sending St. Clair millions of dollars and payments of over “$500k/year.”

WSJ previously reported that test results from Labcorp showed that there is a “99.9999%” certainty Musk is Romulus’ father.

Source : https://pagesix.com/2025/05/30/celebrity-news/elon-musk-allegedly-told-ex-he-fathered-a-child-with-japanese-pop-star-would-give-sperm-to-anyone-who-wanted-it/

Indian-American Faizan Zaki wins 2025 Scripps National Spelling Bee

Faizan Zaki wins 2025 Scripps National Spelling Bee (@BeenThereCap/X)

13-year-old Faizan Zaki of Dallas, Texas, won the 2025 Scripps National Spelling Bee by accurately spelling the difficult French word “claircissement” in an exciting climax that had the audience on the edge of their seats. His significant victory included the coveted Scripps Cup trophy, a commemorative medal, and a $50,000 cash reward.

Faizan, a seventh-grader at C.M. Rice Middle School, started his spelling journey at the age of 7. What began as a fun family activity quickly turned into a serious passion. “He just enjoys learning new words,” said his mother, Arshia Quadri. “It’s something that came naturally to him.”

His father, Zaki Anwar, recalled, “We just wanted him to enjoy the experience of competing at the bee. If he could spell a few words and achieve a few rounds, that would be great. But this is amazing!”

This year’s spelling bee was especially significant, marking its 100th anniversary. The competition saw 243 participants aged 8 to 14 from around the world gather at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland, from May 27 to 30. Only nine made it to the final round.

Faizan spelled his winning word in the 21st round. As confetti rained down, he dropped to the floor in disbelief, living the moment. “I’m going to be having nightmares about that tonight,” he said, still overwhelmed by the victory.

Fourth Time’s The Charm

This was Faizan’s fourth time participating in the national bee. Last year, he was narrowly defeated in a tiebreaker round by his friend, Bruhat Soma, who jokingly said, “I think he cared too much about his aura.”

Source : https://www.indiatoday.in/world/us-news/story/indian-american-faizan-zaki-wins-2025-scripps-national-spelling-bee-glbs-2733436-2025-05-31

Hundreds scale Mount Everest in a weather-hit climbing season

Nepal’s government said on Tuesday it has a “duty to protect” the Himalayas from the risks presented by climate change and the growing numbers of climbers attempting to scale the region’s summits, especially Everest. Associated Press video shot by Pasang Rinjzee Sherpa, Jenjen Lama, Kunga Sherpa and Vinayak Jaya Malla

Hundreds of climbers and their Sherpa guides scaled Mount Everest this month in Nepal, struggling against harsh weather to make it to the summit of the world’s highest mountain before the climbing season finishes at the end of May.

Though several climbers did manage to reach the summit in mid-May, weather conditions deteriorated for days, forcing a retreat to base camp for many, including Kami Rita Sherpa, who was attempting to break his own record by scaling the peak for a 31st time.

He did manage to scale the 8,849-meter (29,032-foot) peak on May 27, but several climbers were not so lucky.

Kami Rita Sherpa, third left, who holds the record for most ascents to Mount Everest, prays with other mountaineers at Everest Base Camp before beginning his ascent to the summit of Mount Everest in Nepal, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Pasang Rinzee Sherpa)

The route to the summit is equipped with ladders and ropes but these are removed at the end of May, marking an end to the climbing season before the monsoon brings heavy rainfall and bad weather.

According to Nepal’s Department of Mountaineering, 468 foreign climbers from 57 countries were given permits to climb Everest by the end of May, along with a roughly equal number of Nepalese mountain guides.

Mount Everest, right, is seen from the Khumbu region which lies on the way to the summit, in Nepal, May 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Pasang Rinzee Sherpa)
An aerial view shows Camp 1 on the way to the summit of Mount Everest in Nepal, Thursday, May 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Pasang Rinzee Sherpa)
A climber rests early morning inside a tent at the Everest Base Camp in Nepal, Friday, May 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Pasang Rinzee Sherpa)
A member of the kitchen crew of an expedition to the summit of Mount Everest collects ice for drinking water at Camp 1, Nepal, May 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Pasang Rinzee Sherpa)
A sherpa hands vodka, that was earlier offered to the Gods, to a climber after a ritual for a safe climb at Everest Base Camp before beginning his ascent to the summit of Mount Everest in Nepal, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Pasang Rinzee Sherpa)

Because of the limited windows of good weather near the summit, large numbers of climbers lined up, attached to the single safety rope, which is known as the “Everest traffic jam.”

“Overall on Everest, weather is the key and it was not same as the forecast. And secondly, it was crowded because both professionals and beginners were there at the same time,” said Pasang Rinji Sherpa, a guide, adding that because of some of the novice climbers, movement was slow.

Mountaineers ascend to Camp 2 on their way to the summit of Mount Everest in Nepal, May 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Pasang Rinzee Sherpa)

Pasang Rinji has already climbed the peak twice but was forced to retreat this time because he got sick on the mountain.

He said there were many cases of flu and the “Khumbu cough,” named after a region on Everest, that affects climbers at high altitudes. Some climbers and guides abandoned or postponed their ascent, he said.

A mountaineer is silhouetted against Mount Ama Dablam on his way to the summit of Mount Everest in Nepal, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Pasang Rinzee Sherpa)
A mountain guide uses a radio at Camp 2 on the way to the summit of Mount Everest in Nepal, May 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Pasang Rinzee Sherpa)

He said that only selected or qualified climbers should be allowed to climb the peak to make the experience safer and easier.

“Right now there are beginners with no experience or knowledge and professional at the same time and this is causing the problem,” he said. “There should be basic knowledge for the climbers to use gear properly and be safe while climbing Everest.”

Indian Army personnel take part in a training session at Everest Base Camp before beginning their ascent to Mount Everest in Nepal, April 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Pasang Rinzee Sherpa)

Source : https://apnews.com/article/mount-everest-climbers-weather-sherpas-photos-4a65733a741abee0cfce23070bf36efe

 

Trump posts meme saying he’s ‘on a mission from God’ featuring alt-right symbol Pepe the Frog

Donald Trump recently posted a meme thart declares he is on a “mission from God” that includes an alt-right symbol. (AP)

Co-opting a famous phrase from the 1980 John Belushi-Dan Aykroyd classic The Blues Brothers, Donald Trump posted a cryptic meme on Wednesday night declaring that he is “on a mission from God” which also features an alt-right symbol in the background.

Showing the president walking down a dark city street, the image includes the caption “nothing can stop what is coming.” While the meme itself could be interpreted as the president’s response to the U.S. Court of International Trade striking down the majority of his “Liberation Day” tariffs, it was the image’s inclusion of Pepe the Frog – and the fact that it originated from a “groyper” account – that has drawn the most attention.

Additionally, this latest meme from the president may have boosted a meme coin associated with the far-right movement.

With members of his administration likening the court ruling that Trump “exceeded his authority” on tariffs to a “judicial coup,” the president seemingly fired back at the three-judge panel with memes on his Truth Social account. One image the president posted featured a billboard emblazoned with the slogan, “Trump was right about everything.”

And then there was the Blues Brothers-themed post, which piggybacks on an overarching MAGA theme that God has anointed the president to save the country, a belief among Christian conservatives that ramped up after last July’s assassination attempt and has only increased since Trump’s election. In fact, the president himself has repeatedly suggested he was “saved” by Christ because he is the chosen one.

At the same time, the “mission from God” meme parrots the long-running belief among QAnon adherents that Trump has been given a calling to secretly root out a cabal of cannibalistic pedophiles from within the government and liberal ruling class, and that soon the “storm will be coming” that will see the mass arrests of prominent Democrats and celebrities.

Trump, who has regularly posted memes and video clips that were created by QAnon conspiracists and far-right extremists, appears to have done the same thing with this particular post.

The far-right corner of the meme tags the Truth Social account @FruitSnacks, who appears to be a “groyper,” otherwise known as a supporter of notorious white supremacist Nick Fuentes. The person, who also has an account on X with the same FruitSnacks handle, has regularly reshared posts from Fuentes and a news account associated with the virulent antisemite. Of course, Trump infamously dined with Fuentes and Hitler-boosting rapper Kanye West at Mar-a-Lago in 2022.

At the same time, in recent months, it appears that FruitSnacks has grown increasingly jaded with the president following Trump’s return to the White House, echoing Fuentes and other far-right MAGA supporters who have sounded off over the administration’s perceived lack of action on their pet conspiracy theories.

“There will be no arrests or tribunals. It would have happened by now. Trump is in office, so… what is he waiting for?” FruitSnacks wrote on Truth Social earlier this month, adding in another post about the FBI files on deceased sexual predator Jeffrey Epstein: “Soooo… how about that Epstein client list?”

Meanwhile, the inclusion of Pepe the Frog, a cartoon figure that has been appropriated by “groypers” and the alt-right in recent years, sparked excitement in the fever swamps of the internet – and also may have contributed to a slight spike in the crypto market.

$PEPE, a meme coin named for the alt-right symbol, surged 8.5 percent overnight following the president’s Truth Social post. While it dropped 5 percent after the spike, the frog-themed token still showed an increase of nearly six percent over a 24 hour period and now has a market cap over $6 billion.

Trump posting a Pepe meme and potentially sparking a crypto rush created quite a bit of chatter on X among the far-right crowd, many of whom have the frog as their avatars. “Vision of PEPE OF THE UNITED STATES X is here to restore memerican greatness,” one account, which goes by the handle PEPE OF THE UNITED STATES, reacted. “Trump vibes. Pepe power. Full degen energy.”

Earlier this month, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington reported that as many as fifty of the invitees to Trump’s controversial meme coin gala – which featured 220 guests who had spent the most on the president’s $TRUMP cryptocurrency – were also holders of the Pepe the Frog coin and other assets linked to far-right extremism.

“The most wallets on the list, 45 in all, held assets named for Pepe the Frog as of May 12—the day winners were finalized—but holdings may have changed since they were analyzed,” CREW noted.

Source : https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-meme-pepe-the-frog-b2760163.html

How ‘kidnapper’ crypto bros allegedly attacked NYC’s club scene: Private security and a freezer bag full of cocaine

Before they allegedly kidnapped and tortured an Italian tourist at a swanky Soho townhouse, high-rolling crypto bros John Woeltz and William Duplessie were rolling up to Manhattan’s trendiest nightclubs with their own security detail — and looking for “Instagram baddies” flaunting Brazilian butt lifts, according to two women who partied with them.

A nightlife source claimed that the pair — who have been arrested on charges including the kidnapping and assault of Michael Valentino Teofrasto Carturan — were using Charlie Zakkour, a club kid turned crypto trader who is one of the stars of the upcoming Bravo reality show “Next Gen NYC,” as a connection to set them up at exclusive clubs.

The source alleged that Zakkour reached out to her in early March to say he knew “big” crypto guys who were staying at the Mercer Hotel and wanted to spend around $30K at Paul’s Baby Grand, the lounge opened by actress Chloë Sevingy’s brother, Paul Sevigny.

Before they allegedly kidnapped and tortured an Italian tourist at a swanky Soho townhouse, high-rolling crypto bros William Duplessie (left) and John Woeltz (right) were rolling up to Manhattan’s trendiest nightclubs with their own security detail.
TMZ / BACKGRID

But Woeltz, 37, and Duplessie, 33, “ended up changing their mind and picked a sh–ty commercial club, Nebula, because they just wanted to be seen — to just be flashy. Nebula is extravagant.”

At Nebula, the source claimed, the duo spent “$100K on bottles. They had the front table.”

Duplessie immediately got comfortable at the nightclub, the source alleged: “The first time I met Will at Nebula, he was shirtless with sunglasses and smoking a cigar.”

And the duo “had four security guards with them at all times. I met Kate Moss and even she doesn’t do that,” the source sniffed. “You could tell they were trying to prove something.You can tell they’re posers.”

An attorney for Duplessie had no comment. Woeltz’s lawyer did not respond to a request for comment, and The Post has attempted to reach Zakkour.

The source claimed that, while with Duplessie and Woeltz — who reportedly calls himself the “Crypto King of Kentucky” and has boasted of holding $100 million in digital currency — she “saw a lot of blow … Tusi, ketamine.”

The source was also asked to wrangle other girls to hang out with the duo.

“They wanted Instagram baddies with tons of followers and BBLs [Brazilian butt lifts]. They wanted girls who were not drinking age, like 19,” the source alleged, adding that she roped in six female friends to hang out with Woeltz and Duplessie.

But things “got weird,” the source said, when “Charlie just started being so rude — saying [the girls] were not hot enough. This was Charlie on [Woeltz and Duplessie’s] behalf. This was around the time I started questioning my friendship with him.

“Will and John always had other people doing the talking for them. Will didn’t really talk to a girl unless he wanted to hook up with her. John was always giving me a creepy vibe. He didn’t seem really happy to be there.”

When the two did speak, the source said, “Pretty much all they talked about was how much money they have.”

Another party girl who hung out with Woeltz and Duplessie told The Post that she met them when a promoter from The Box invited her and some other young women to an April after-party at the Soho townhouse Woeltz was renting.

It’s also where Carturan claims he was held against his will for 17 days, from May 6 to 23, and allegedly tortured for the password to his $30 million Bitcoin wallet.

“The promoters put us all in this Sprinter van. When we got to the apartment, there was security everywhere. There was a girl doing coat check. I’ve never seen anything like that. Workers serving the food and drinks — Don Julio 1942, Grey Goose,” the party girl claimed.

There were even velvet ropes keeping guests from parts of the townhouse: “The kitchen was roped off, the dining room was roped off, the stairs were roped off.”

Duplessie — who was shirtless — was DJing, the party girl said, when “a girl I was with took a selfie. I don’t know if it was Will or a security guard, but someone immediately jumped at her and said, ‘You can’t take any pictures.’ It was a big deal.”

But there was plenty of illicit behavior to photograph, she claimed. “There was a big metal platter on a table in the basement. Will brought a freezer bag full of cocaine and poured it all on as if it was nothing and walked away. It was actually insane. It was a freezer bag of cocaine worth my tuition in college or more.”

Source : https://nypost.com/2025/05/29/us-news/what-it-was-allegedly-like-to-party-with-kidnapper-crypto-bros/

North Korea shipped minions, munitions to Russia — here’s what the hermit state got in return

North Korea helped Russia to ramp up its missile attacks on key Ukrainian civilian infrastructure through the shipment of thousands of soldiers and artillery shells — with Pyongyang getting sanctions-busting air defense weapons and military equipment in return, officials revealed Thursday.

The Multilateral Sanctions Monitoring Team, a group comprising 11 United Nation members observing the sanctions against Pyongyang, found that Russia and North Korea had violated UN sanctions to bolster their military ambitions.

Moscow received more than 12,000 North Korean troops to help retake the Russian region of Kursk from Ukraine earlier this year. The Kremlin also got as many as nine million rounds of artillery and rocket launcher ammunition from North Korea, the MSMT confirmed in its first report.

Russia made use of North Korean munitions to ramp up its attacks against Ukraine, the Multilateral Sanctions Monitoring Team found.
Ukrainian State Emergency Service/AFP via Getty Images

Even before Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un formally signed a new military alliance last year, Pyongyang had shipped ballistic missiles, self-propelled artillery, long-range multiple rocket launchers to the Kremlin, the MSMT added.

“Pyongyang contributed to Moscow’s ability to increase its missile attacks against Ukrainian cities, including targeted strikes against critical civilian infrastructure,” the report said.

In return for the men and weapons, Russia gifted Kim at least one Pantsir mobile air defense system, a medium-range surface-to-air interceptor and anti-aircraft weapon, officials said.

North Korea also received a Pantsir-class combat vehicle, electronic warfare jamming devices and other military equipment to bolster Kim’s defense systems, according to the report.

MSMT found that Moscow also “supported North Korea’s ballistic missile programs by providing data feedback… leading to improvements in missile guidance performance.”

Along with the military trades, the MSMT found that Pyongyang and Moscow were engaging in financial transactions through North Korea-owned bank accounts in South Ossetia, a city in the nation of Georgia.

Neither North Korea nor Russia have publicly confirmed the exchange of military equipment or technology under their mutual defense pact, which Putin and Kim signed last year.

Source : https://nypost.com/2025/05/29/world-news/north-korea-shipped-minions-munitions-to-russia-heres-what-the-hermit-state-got-in-return/

Elon Musk came to Washington wielding a chain saw. He leaves behind upheaval and unmet expectations

Elon Musk arrived in the nation’s capital with the chain saw-wielding swagger of a tech titan who had never met a problem he couldn’t solve with lots of money, long hours or a well-calibrated algorithm.

President Donald Trump was delighted to have the world’s richest person — and a top campaign donor — working in his administration, talking about how he was “a smart guy” who “really cares for our country.”

Musk was suddenly everywhere — holding forth in Cabinet meetings while wearing a “tech support” shirt and black MAGA hat, hoisting his young son on his shoulders in the Oval Office, flying aboard Air Force One, sleeping in the White House. Democrats described the billionaire entrepreneur as Trump’s “co-president,” and senior officials bristled at his imperial approach to overhauling the federal government.

After establishing Tesla as a premier electric automaker, building rockets at SpaceX and reshaping the social media landscape by buying Twitter, Musk was confident that he could bend Washington to his vision.

Now that’s over. Musk said this week that he’s leaving his job as a senior adviser, an announcement that came after he revealed his plan to curtail political donations and he criticized the centerpiece of Trump’s legislative agenda.

It’s a quiet exit after a turbulent entrance, and he’s trailed by upheaval and unmet expectations. Thousands of people were indiscriminately laid off or pushed out — hundreds of whom had to be rehired — and some federal agencies were eviscerated.

But no one has been prosecuted for the fraud that Musk and Trump said was widespread within the government. Musk reduced his target for cutting spending from $2 trillion to $1 trillion to $150 billion, and even that goal may not be reached.

In Silicon Valley, where Musk got his start as a founder of PayPal, his kind of promises are known as vaporware — a product that sounds extraordinary yet never gets shipped to market.

Trump said Thursday on his Truth Social platform that he would hold a press conference Friday with Musk. “This will be his last day, but not really, because he will, always, be with us, helping all the way,” Trump added. “Elon is terrific!”

Musk’s position was always designed to be temporary, and he had previously announced his intention to dedicate more of his time to his companies. But he also told reporters last month that he was willing to work part-time for Trump “indefinitely, as long as the president wants me to do it.”

Musk got a seat at Trump’s table and put $250 million behind his campaign

It was clear that Musk wouldn’t be the typical kind of presidential adviser around the time that he showed the world his belly button.

Racing on stage at a campaign rally one month before the election, he jumped for joy next to Trump, his T-shirt rising to expose his midriff. Musk had already sold Trump on his idea for a Department of Government Efficiency while also putting at least $250 million behind his candidacy.

The plan called for a task force to hunt for waste, fraud and abuse, a timeworn idea with a new twist. Instead of putting together a blue-ribbon panel of government experts, Trump would give his top donor a desk in the White House and what appeared to be carte blanche to make changes.

Musk deployed software engineers who burrowed into sensitive databases, troubling career officials who sometimes chose to resign rather than go along. Trump brushed off concerns about Musk’s lack of experience in public service or conflicts of interest from his billions of dollars in federal contracts.

Their unlikely partnership had the potential for a generational impact on American politics and government. While Musk dictated orders for government departments from his perch in the White House, he was poised to use his wealth to enforce loyalty to the president.

His language was that of catastrophism. Excessive spending was a crisis that could only be solved by drastic measures, Musk claimed, and “if we don’t do this, America will go bankrupt.”

But even though he talked about his work in existential terms, he treated the White House like a playground. He brought his children to a meeting with the Indian prime minister. He let the president turn the driveway into a makeshift Tesla showroom to help boost sales. He installed an oversized screen in his office that he occasionally used to play video games.

Sometimes, Trump invited Musk to sleep over in the Lincoln Bedroom.

“We’ll be on Air Force One, Marine One, and he’ll be like, ‘do you want to stay over?’” Musk told reporters. The president made sure he got some caramel ice cream from the kitchen. “This stuff’s amazing,” Musk said. “I ate a whole tub of it.”

Looking back on his experience in government, he described it as a lark.

“It is funny that we’ve got DOGE,” an acronym that references an online meme featuring a surprised-looking dog from Japan. “How did we get here?”

Musk did not give federal workers the benefit of the doubt

From the beginning, Musk treated federal workers with contempt. At best, they were inefficient; at worst, they were committing fraud.

His team offered them a “fork in the road,” meaning they could get paid to quit. Probationary employees, generally people new on the job without full civil service protection, were shown the door.

Anyone who stayed faced escalating demands, such as what became known as the “five things” emails. Musk wanted every government employee to submit a list of five things they accomplished in the previous week, and he claimed that “failure to respond will be taken as a resignation.”

Some administration officials curtailed the plan, concerned that it could jeopardize security in more sensitive areas of the government, and it eventually faded, an early sign of Musk’s struggle to get traction.

But in the meantime, he continued issuing orders like thunderbolts.

One day in February, Musk posted “CFPB RIP,” plus an emoji of a tombstone. The headquarters of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, created after the Great Recession to protect Americans from fraud and deceptive practices, was shut down and employees were ordered to stop working.

Musk had already started gutting the U.S. Agency for International Development, a pillar of the country’s foreign policy establishment and the world’s largest provider of humanitarian assistance.

“Spent the weekend feeding USAID into a wood chipper,” he bragged.

Thousands of contacts were cut off, pleasing conservatives who disliked the agency’s progressive initiatives on climate change and gay rights.

Musk rejected concerns about the loss of a crucial lifeline for impoverished people around the globe, saying, “no one has died.” However, children who once relied on American assistance perished from malnutrition, and the death toll is expected to increase.

The lawsuits began piling up. Sometimes workers got their jobs back, only to lose them again.

The Food and Drug Administration, which is responsible for ensuring the safety of everything from baby formula to biotech drugs, planned to lay off 3,500 employees. But again and again, the agency was forced to rehire people who were initially deemed expendable, including laboratory scientists, travel bookers and document specialists.

Commissioner Marty Makary, who started his job after many of the cuts took place, told attendees at a recent conference that “it was hard and my job is to make sure we can heal from that.”

Only 1,900 layoffs took place, but another 1,200 staffers took buyouts or early retirement. Experts fear the agency has lost much of its institutional knowledge and expertise in areas like vaccines, tobacco and food.

There are also concerns about safety on public lands. The National Park Service has been bleeding staff, leaving fewer people to maintain trails, clean restrooms and guide visitors. More cuts at the Forest Service could undermine efforts to prevent and fight wildfires.

The Environmental Protection Agency faces a broad overhaul, such as gutting the Office of Research and Development, which was responsible for improving air pollution monitoring and discovering harmful chemicals in drinking water.

Not even low-profile organizations were exempt. Trump ordered the downsizing of the U.S. Institute of Peace, a nonprofit think tank created by Congress, and Musk’s team showed up to carry out his plan. The organizations’ leaders were deposed, then reinstated after a court battle.

Musk made little headway at the top sources of federal spending

The bulk of federal spending goes to health care programs like Medicaid and Medicare, plus Social Security and the military.

Unfortunately for Musk, all of those areas are politically sensitive and generally require congressional approval to make changes.

Thousands of civilian workers were pushed out at the Pentagon, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is reducing the ranks of top generals and looking to consolidate various commands. A plan to downsize an office for testing and evaluating new weapons systems could save $300 million per year. Hegseth recently asked employees to submit one idea per week for cutting waste.

However, the Pentagon budget would increase by $150 billion, for a total of more than $900 billion, under Trump’s spending proposal working its way through Congress. The money includes $25 billion to lay the groundwork for Trump’s “golden dome” missile defense program and $34 billion to expand the naval fleet with more shipbuilding.

Another $45 million is expected to be spent on a military parade on June 14, which is the 250th anniversary of the Army’s founding and Trump’s 79th birthday.

Musk also faced blowback for targeting Social Security, which provides monthly benefits to retirees and some children. He suggested that the popular program was “a Ponzi scheme” and the government could save between $500 billion and $700 billion by tackling waste and fraud.

However, his estimates were inflated. Social Security’s inspector general said there was only $71.8 billion in improper payments over eight years. Nor was there any evidence that millions of dead people were receiving benefits.

Changes to Social Security phone services, pitched as a way to eliminate opportunities for fraud, were walked back after an outcry from lawmakers and beneficiaries. But the agency could still shed 7,000 workers while closing some of its offices.

Musk’s popularity cratered even though Americans often agreed with his premise that the federal government is bloated and wasteful, according to polling from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

Just 33% of U.S. adults had a favorable view of Musk in April, down from 41% in December. In addition, 65% said Musk had too much influence over the federal government.

Source : https://apnews.com/article/musk-leaves-white-house-doge-savings-trump-666f0c3f890354fe836230826d9faa85

Trump’s tariff tally: $34 billion and counting, global companies say

People on a hill overlooking Yantian port in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China May 9, 2025. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

President Donald Trump’s trade war has cost companies more than $34 billion in lost sales and higher costs, according to a Reuters analysis of corporate disclosures, a toll that is expected to rise as ongoing uncertainty over tariffs paralyzes decision making at some of the world’s largest companies.
Across the United States, Asia and Europe, companies including Apple (AAPL.O), Ford (F.N), Porsche and Sony (6758.T), have pulled or slashed their profit forecasts, and an overwhelming majority say the erratic nature of Trump’s trade policies has made it impossible to accurately estimate costs. Reuters reviewed company statements, regulatory filings, conference and media call transcripts to pull together for the first time a snapshot of the tariff cost so far for global businesses.

The $33 billion is a sum of estimates from 32 companies in the S&P 500, three companies from Europe’s STOXX 600 (.STOXX), and 21 companies in Japan’s Nikkei 225 (.N225), indices. Economists say the cost to businesses will likely be multiple times what companies have so far disclosed.
“You can double or triple your tally and we’d still say … the magnitude is bound to be far greater than most people realize,” said Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, professor at the Yale School of Management.
The ripple effects could be worse, he added, citing the potential for lower spending from consumers and businesses, higher inflation expectations.

While a recent pause in Sino-US trade hostilities has offered some relief and Trump has backed down from tariff threats against Europe, it is still not clear what the final trade deals will look like. A U.S. trade court on Wednesday blocked Trump’s tariffs from going into effect. In this environment, strategists say companies will look to strengthen supply chains, boost near-shoring efforts, and prioritize new markets – all of which will push up costs.
Companies themselves are uncertain about the final cost. As the corporate earnings season draws to a close, Reuters found at least 42 companies have cut their forecasts and 16 have withdrawn or suspended their guidance. For instance, earlier this month, Walmart (WMT.N),  declined to provide a quarterly profit forecast and said it would raise prices, drawing a rebuke from Trump. Volvo Cars (VOLCARb.ST), one of the European automakers most exposed to U.S. tariffs, withdrew its earnings forecast for the next two years and United Airlines (UAL.O), gave two different forecasts, saying it was impossible to predict the macro environment this year.

Trump has argued that tariffs will cut America’s trade deficit and prompt companies to move operations to the country, bringing jobs back home. Tariffs will also force countries including Mexico to stop the flow of illegal immigrants and drugs into the United States, Trump has said.
“The Administration has consistently maintained that the United States … has the leverage to make our trading partners ultimately bear the cost of tariffs,” said White House spokesperson Kush Desai.

TARIFF TALK

On earnings conference calls for the January to March quarter, 360 companies, or 72%, in the S&P 500 index mentioned tariffs, up from 150 companies, or 30%, in the previous quarter. Executives at 219 companies listed on the STOXX 600 mentioned tariffs, compared with 161 in the prior quarter. Of the Nikkei 225 companies in Japan, that number was 58, up from 12 earlier.

“I don’t think corporations have an awful lot of visibility about anything in the future,” said Rich Bernstein, CEO of Richard Bernstein Advisors in New York. Referring to withdrawn forecasts, he said, “If you take into account this uncertain world and you can’t guide anybody to a number, it’s safer not to guide.”
Wall Street is expecting net profit for companies in the S&P 500 index to grow at an average 5.1% per quarter through April through December, versus a growth rate of 11.7% a year earlier, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Automakers, airlines and consumer goods importers have been among the worst hit. Levies on raw material costs and parts including aluminum and electronics have risen, and tariffs on multiple countries are making assembling cars more expensive because of far-flung supply chains. Moving any production to the United States will also raise labor costs.

Kleenex tissue maker Kimberly Clark (KMB.N), slashed its annual profit forecast last month and said it would incur about $300 million in costs this year as tariffs push up its supply-chain costs. A few days later the company said it would invest $2 billion over five years to expand its manufacturing capacity in the U.S., a number not included in the Reuters tally. Companies including Apple and Eli Lilly have this year announced investments in the United States.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/business/trumps-tariff-tally-34-billion-counting-global-companies-say-2025-05-29/

New Banksy revealed but location remains a mystery

Online speculation suggests the new artwork may be in Marseille, France

Banksy’s latest piece of grafitti art has been revealed to the world – but where it was painted remains a mystery for now.

Images posted on the elusive artist’s Instagram depict a lighthouse stencilled on a drab, beige wall, along with the words: “I want to be what you saw in me”.

A false shadow appears to have been drawn on the pavement from a nearby bollard, giving the illusion that the lighthouse is itself a silhouette of the mundane street furniture.

But unlike a lighthouse, the post gives little away as to the artwork’s location. A second, wider shot showing two people walking their dogs offers little more.

Geoguessers on social media have speculated that the street art may lurk in Marseille, in the south of France, while others debate how to interpret the work’s meaning.

Another image of the art circulating online shows a blurred person riding a scooter in front of the piece, with a graffiti tag seemingly reading “Yaze” further along the wall.

The tag matches that used by a Canadian graffiti artist Marco The Polo, whose Instagram account features photos of his own work but who has called Banksy an inspiration.

Banksy has kept his true identity a secret throughout his career, and it is only through the Instagram account that works are identified as genuine.

Often imbuing his works with a political message, his previous pieces have alluded to immigration, the war in Ukraine and homelessness, among other things.

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c331m8prmd1o

 

Hamas official says it rejects new US Gaza ceasefire plan backed by Israel

Israel resumed its military offensive against Hamas in Gaza in mid-March following the collapse of a two-month ceasefire

A senior Hamas official has told the BBC the Palestinian armed group will reject the latest US proposal for a new Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal.

The White House said on Thursday that Israel had “signed off” on US envoy Steve Witkoff’s plan and that it was waiting for a formal response from Hamas.

Israeli media cited Israeli officials as saying it would see Hamas hand over 10 living hostages and the bodies of 18 dead hostages in two phases in exchange for a 60-day ceasefire and the release of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

The Hamas official said the proposal did not satisfy core demands, including an end to the war, and that it would respond in due course.

The Israeli government has not commented, but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly told hostages’ families on Thursday that he accepted Witkoff’s plan.

Israel imposed a total blockade on Gaza and resumed its military offensive against Hamas on 18 March following the collapse of a two-month ceasefire brokered by the US, Qatar and Egypt.

It said it wanted to put pressure on Hamas to release the 58 hostages it is still holding, at least 20 of whom are believed to be alive.

On 19 May, the Israeli military launched an expanded offensive that Netanyahu said would see troops “take control of all areas” of Gaza. The next day, he said Israel would also ease the blockade and allow a “basic” amount of food into Gaza to prevent a famine.

Almost 4,000 people have been killed in Gaza over the past 10 weeks, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.

The UN says another 600,000 people have been displaced again by Israeli ground operations and evacuation orders, and a report by the UN-backed IPC warns that about 500,000 people face catastrophic levels of hunger in the coming months.

At a news conference in Washington DC on Thursday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was asked whether she could confirm a report by Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya TV that Israel and Hamas had agreed a new ceasefire deal.

“I can confirm that Special Envoy Witkoff and the president submitted a ceasefire proposal to Hamas that Israel backed and supported. Israel signed off on this proposal before it was sent to Hamas,” she said.

“I can also confirm that those discussions are continuing, and we hope that a ceasefire in Gaza will take place so we can return all of the hostages home,” she added.

However, a senior Hamas official later said the deal contradicted previous discussions between the group’s negotiators and Witkoff.

The official told the BBC that the offer did not include guarantees the temporary truce would lead to a permanent ceasefire, nor a return to the humanitarian protocol that allowed hundreds of trucks of aid into Gaza daily during the last ceasefire.

Nevertheless, he said Hamas remained in contact with the mediators and would submit its written response in due course.

Earlier, Israel’s Channel 12 TV reported the Netanyahu told hostages’ families at a meeting: “We agree to accept the latest Witkoff plan that was conveyed to us tonight. Hamas has not yet responded. We do not believe Hamas will release the last hostage, and we will not leave the Strip until all the hostages are in our hands.”

His office later issued a statement accusing one of the channel’s reporters of trying to “smuggle” a recording device into the room where the meeting took place. But it did not deny that he had agreed to the US proposal.

Netanyahu has previously said that Israel will end the war only when all the hostages are released, Hamas is either destroyed or disarmed, and its leaders have been sent into exile.

Hamas has said it is ready to return all of those held captive, in exchange for a complete end to hostilities and full Israeli pull-out from Gaza.

Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response Hamas’ cross-border attack on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

Another four people, two of them dead, were already being held captive in Gaza before the conflict.

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0qg5yzqle9o

Liverpool man charged after car drove into parade crowd

The suspect could face life in prisonImage: Peter Powell/PA Wire/empics/picture alliance

UK authorities on Thursday charged a 53-year-old man with ramming a car into a crowd celebrating Liverpool’s Premier League title earlier in the week.

The suspect, from the West Derby area of Liverpool, was charged with intentionally causing grievous bodily harm, dangerous driving and five other counts covering variations of causing grievous bodily harm.

He was arrested on Monday and has been remanded into custody to appear before the Liverpool Magistrates’ Court on Friday.

Seventy-nine people aged 9 to 78 were injured when the Ford Galaxy plowed into supporters as they celebrated their club’s record-equaling 20th English top-flight title. There were no fatalities.

Suspect facing life sentence

Prosecutor Sarah Hammond said the suspect would face a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted.

Hammond said the agency had authorized police to charge the man following a “complex and ongoing investigation.”

“Prosecutors and police are continuing to work at pace to review a huge volume of evidence,” Hammond said.

“This includes multiple pieces of video footage and numerous witness statements. It is important to ensure every victim gets the justice they deserve.”

Car allegedly followed ambulance

Police previously said they believed that the suspect had dodged a roadblock by tailing an ambulance responding to a report of a person in cardiac arrest.

Although the suspect was also arrested on suspicion of attempted murder and driving under the influence of drugs, neither of those offenses were listed as charges.

The charges also did not indicate how many victims the counts were tied to, as Hammond said all charges “will be kept under review as the investigation progresses.”

With the investigation still at an early stage, police are continuing to review a large volume of evidence, including video evidence from the suspect’s car, body-worn camera footage from several police officers and eyewitness statements.

In France, survivors of pediatric sexual abuse seek change

A doctor was sentenced to 20 years in prison for assaulting nearly 300 patients. DW spoke with survivors and family members who want action to address “institutional failures” — and better protection for children.

Many survivors say they’re disappointed by the sentence handed down to Joel Le Scouarnec, which is the maximum allowed under French lawImage: Damien Meyer/AFP

Joel Le Scouarnec is not the name on everyone’s lips in the western French seaside town of Vannes, where this week the former surgeon was sentenced to 20 years in prison for raping and sexually abusing nearly 300 of his patients — most of them children — over more than three decades.

His face was not on the front page of the local newspaper the morning after his conviction, and, as the weather oscillated between grey rainy skies and bright May sunshine, people mulling around the boat festival at Vannes harbor — a 10-minute walk from the courtroom — preferred not to talk about one of France’s most prolific abusers.

“It’s the shame of the Brittany region,” 83-year-old pensioner Joelle Leboru said. “He started everything here.”

“How could he get away with it for so long?”

Anatomy of a web of abuse

That’s the question that’s been keeping people in Vannes up at night: Under the authorities’ noses, dressed in a white medical coat of respectability, and in the heart of middle-class society, Le Scouarnec sexually abused hundreds of children. The crimes in the latest case against him spanned from 1989 to 2014 and were committed in a dozen hospitals in western France.

Le Scouarnec often violated victims while they were under anesthesia or waking up from surgery. He wrote graphic descriptions of hundreds of these instances of rape or sexual assault against children — and animals — in his journals, which police discovered when they raided his apartment in 2017 after he was accused of sexual abuse against a child who lived next door.

“I’m a major pervert. I’m at once an exhibitionist, voyeur, sadist, masochist. I’m scatological, a fetishist, a pedophile. And I’m very happy about it,” he wrote in one 2004 entry quoted in Le Monde. Police also found a collection of dolls, some the size of a baby, some the size of toddlers, around the apartment — according to the French newspaper.

Missed opportunities?

The 2017 knock on Le Scouarnec’s door came over a decade after his first brush with the law. The surgeon was charged and convicted in 2005 of possessing child sexual abuse material. He received a four-month suspended sentence, but was able to continue practicing medicine — including working with children — until he retired years later.

During the recent trial, hospital administrators who kept him on staff and later hired him elsewhere after his 2005 conviction denied direct responsibility. Since the court had not issued a professional ban or a prohibition on working with minors, they argued they were not obligated to impose additional restrictions.

Le Scouarnec worked primarily in rural, relatively resource-strapped hospitals, where the loss of a surgeon could have spelled closure for a whole department.

Questions were also raised during the trial about whether anyone else — in particular his ex-wife — knew about the abuse and failed to act. She denied any knowledge. Further legal proceedings are expected, as survivors push for accountability beyond Le Scouarnec himself.

‘Major institutional failures’

Unlike in most criminal cases, in which police identify suspects based on victims’ reports, this case unfolded in reverse: Investigators uncovered reams of evidence and then sought out victims — many of whom had no memory of the abuse and learned only from a call or visit from the police.

Among them was 35-year-old Louis-Marie, who stood outside the Vannes courthouse on sentencing day with other survivors. Together, they unfurled a banner adorned with hundreds of sheets of paper, each printed with a silhouette representing one of Le Scouarnec’s victims. Some of the figures were accompanied by names and ages — some of them under five. Many were labeled “anonymous.”

“We’ve realized there were major institutional failures, which to this day haven’t been recognized,” Louis-Marie told DW as he rallied with other survivors.

Le Scouarnec admitted guilt on all counts and asked for “no leniency” in his sentencing. He apologized to most of his victims, asking for forgiveness, in a way some of them described as merely mechanical. Le Scouarnec does not plan to appeal.

In a statement after Wednesday’s verdict, the French National Medical Council (CNOM) vowed to “conduct all reforms needed to ensure that such a tragedy never arises again.” France’s health minister also promised to work with the Justice Ministry to better protect children and other patients from being exposed to predators.

Maximum jail time

The guilty verdict was not a surprise. Regine, the mother of one abuse survivor, told DW before the reading that she was simply “exhausted.”

“As parents, we’re considered secondary victims. But it’s hard, knowing we left our children in the hands of this monster,” she said. “That’s something I’ll regret forever. It won’t disappear. For us, it’s for life.”

But not for Le Scouarnec. Under French law, the maximum sentence for aggravated rape — whether it involves one victim or hundreds — is 20 years. And that’s exactly what judges handed down to the 74-year-old former doctor in Vannes on Wednesday — with presiding judge Aude Buresi taking time to point out she was bound by her country’s legal limits. Now, advocacy groups are calling for legislative reform, pushing for tougher sentences for serial rapists.

Calls for reform

The court also imposed additional restrictions on Le Scouarnec, including measures to keep him away from children and animals and a ban on medical pracitce, should he ever be released.

And that’s a real possibility. Le Scouarnec has already spent several years in jail on pre-trial detention for separate convictions — including raping four children, two of whom were his nieces.

Unlike in the United States, French jail sentences are not cumulative — meaning that some of his 20-year term is already considered served and he could be eligible for early release in the 2030s, subject to judicial approval.

Judges on Wednesday decided against taking the exceptional step of confining Le Scouarnec to a secure psychiatric facility after his release, citing his age and stated willingness “to make amends.”

And that has left some survivors and family members shocked and bitterly disappointed. Xavier Vinet, whose son was abused by Le Scouarnec as a child, shook with anger as he spoke to DW outside the court.

“We should have lifelong jail time, given that we don’t have the death penalty here. We should bring it back — that’s what’s needed for men like him,” he said.

Lost before justice was served

Vinet’s son Mathis will never see justice served. He died in 2021 of an overdose which his family says was suicide.

“He was a joyful kid before all of this,” Vinet said. “He got on so well with his grandfather and with me.”

In 2018, like so many others, Mathis and his family heard from police that Le Scouarnec had written about abusing him during a hospital stay when he was 10.

“Then everything changed. Then he destroyed himself. That’s what I can say about him,” Vinet added.

Le Scouarnec admitted in court that he bore “responsibility” for the deaths of Mathis and another of his young victims who died in 2020.

China launches spacecraft it says will return samples and yield ’groundbreaking discoveries’

A Long March-3B Y110 rocket carrying Tianwen-2 probe takes off from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan province, China on May 29, 2025. Photo: China Daily via Reuters

China launched a spacecraft that promises to return samples from an asteroid near Mars and yield “groundbreaking discoveries and expand humanity’s knowledge of the cosmos,” the country’s space agency said.

The Tianwen-2 probe launched early Thursday (May 29, 2025) from southern China aboard the workhorse Long March 3-B rocket. The probe will collect samples from the asteroid 2016HO3 and explore the main-belt comet 311P, which lies even further from the Earth than Mars, according to the China National Space Administration.

Shan Zhongde, head of the CNSA, was quoted as saying the Tianwen-2 mission represents a ”significant step in China’s new journey of interplanetary exploration” and over its decade-long mission will “yield groundbreaking discoveries and expand humanity’s knowledge of the cosmos.”

Samples from 2016HO3 are due to be returned in about two years. The asteroids, chosen for their relatively stable orbits, hopefully will offer clues into the formation of earth, such as the origins of water.

China earlier returned rock samples from the moon’s far side back to Earth in a historic mission and has welcomed international cooperation. However, any cooperation with the U.S. hinges on removing an American law banning direct bilateral cooperation with NASA.

The near side of the moon is seen from Earth and the far side faces outer space. The far side also is known to have mountains and impact craters and is much more difficult to reach.

China also operates the three person-crewed Tiangong, or “Heavenly Palace,” space station, making the country a major player in a new era of space exploration and the use of permanent stations to conduct experiments in space, especially since the station was entirely Chinese-built after the country was excluded from the International Space Station over U.S. national security concerns.

China’s space program is controlled by the People’s Liberation Army, the military branch of the ruling Communist Party.

Source : https://www.thehindu.com/news/international/china-launches-spacecraft-it-says-will-return-samples-and-yield-groundbreaking-discoveries/article69633875.ece

Crypto king who allegedly kidnapped bitcoin millionaire left trail of debts before landing in NYC, becoming big-spending club fixture

The crypto bigwig accused of sadistically torturing an Italian businessman for his Bitcoin password left a trail of debt in his wake before landing in the Big Apple – where he became known in the club scene as a hard-partying big spender, The Post has learned.

William Duplessie, 33, owed hundreds of thousands of dollars on luxury homes and cars in Florida and wracked up criminal trouble in Switzerland for allegedly beating his fiancée, according to public records and law-enforcement sources.

But those legal woes apparently didn’t slow down Duplessie’s hedonistic lifestyle once he started shacking up in a posh SoHo townhouse with fellow crypto trader John Woeltz, 37, sometime after arriving in New York City in February, the sources said.

The duo’s extravagant lifestyle has come under scrutiny as details emerge about the harrowing ordeal Carturan endured in a SoHo townhouse.
TMZ / BACKGRID

The hulking Duplessie became a regular at chic hot spots such as the The Box — an exclusive erotic nightclub where photos obtained by The Post showed him partying shirtless — and often roped socialites and fellow clubbers to his pad for parties.

The glitzy façade came crashing down May 23, when a barefoot Michael Valentino Teofrasto Carturan — a 27-year-old crypto millionaire from Italy — ran from the Prince Street townhouse and told a traffic cop that he had been held captive inside.

Carturan had been subjected to horrific tortures — including being Tased while standing in water and cut by a chainsaw — over nearly three weeks in a bid to gain his Bitcoin password, prosecutors said.

Woeltz, a seemingly mild-mannered Kentucky crypto king worth $100 million, was quickly arrested and ordered held without bail.

But Duplessie remained on the loose, allegedly partying it up in the Hamptons over the Memorial Day holiday weekend before he surrendered to cops Tuesday, according to sources. He, too, is being held without bail on charges that include kidnapping and assault.

Many details about the depraved scheme remain unclear, as do certain specifics about the alleged sick suspects’ backgrounds.

But court records from Miami, Florida, where Duplessie hails from, outline a spate of eye-watering debts he had allegedly racked up over extravagant purchases.

His former landlord sued him in 2023 for failing to pay $234,000 in rent and a security deposit on a swanky, palm-shaded home in Miami’s Brickell neighborhood, a hub of crypto investors where peacocks walk the streets.

The home was left in “much physical disrepair,” the lawsuit noted.

Neighbor Sylvia Rayneri said her daughter used to own the home before selling it to the landlord who rented it to Duplessie.

She was shocked to hear about its connection to the alleged torture case.

“I don’t remember this guy,” she said Wednesday. “That’s so crazy. Mostly it’s families who rent this place. I remember in that year sometimes hearing music, but nothing crazy.”

Duplessie faced another 2023 lawsuit for allegedly failing to make his $3,700-a-month lease payments on a 2018 Lamborghini Huracan — a flashy sports car with a price tag starting at $210,000.

The lawsuit was voluntarily dismissed within days of filing, records show.

A source in Palm Beach’s society scene said Duplessie hung out in the wealthy enclave during its peak winter season during February or March, “with the pretty young set going to places like Mary Lou’s and trying to make business contacts.”

Another source said they spotted both Duplessie and Woeltz at Mary Lou’s, a hip nightclub in West Palm Beach.

“William (Duplessie) was wilder and the other guy was quieter,” the source said.

Duplessie’s ambitions — and legal troubles — apparently extended far outside sunny Florida.

He has a potential criminal conviction in Switzerland, where he had founded the Pangea Digital Asset Group and Pangea Blockchain Fund, prosecutors revealed during his arraignment.

Sources said Duplessie had been accused of beating up his fiancée there.

A final Miami-Dade County lawsuit against Duplessie was filed in December by a motorist who contends the crypto big crashed a Porsche into his car, injuring him.

The summons for Duplessie, however, couldn’t be served because the court didn’t have his latest address: 38 Prince Street.

Duplessie and Woeltz started showing up in New York City’s wild club scene in February, sources said.

A passerby outside the Prince Street home — which law-enforcement sources said was being rented out for between $30,000 and $40,000 a month — said Duplessie was a regular at Gospël, a SoHo house music bastion.

“I’ve seen him drop $160,000,” the passerby said.

Another source said Duplessie would spent $100,000 on tables at The Box and Hearsay, an exclusive Meatpacking District club.

During bleary late nights partying, Duplessie spun tales about working for the CIA, sources said.

One party photo depicting three bottles of Ace of Spades champagne — a brand owned by Jay-Z — was taken in Nebula, a cavernous Midtown mega-club.

“They were spending lots and lots of money on Ace of Spades,” one source said. “We kept watching more and more bottles coming in such a short time. William was in pajamas.”

The signs of decadent boozing could be seen — and heard — outside the Prince Street townhouse.

Neighbors called in three separate noise complaints about partying early April 5, 311 data shows.

A SoHo street vendor who called himself “Dutch” said he regularly spotted Woeltz cart plastic bags full of empty liquor bottles to the sidewalk.

“I am talking maybe 50, 60 bottles — wine, vodka,” Dutch said. “Big bottles in plastic bags on the sidewalk.

Source : https://nypost.com/2025/05/28/us-news/crypto-king-who-allegedly-kidnapped-bitcoin-millionaire-left-trail-of-debts-before-landing-in-nyc-becoming-big-spending-club-fixture/

Federal court blocks Trump from imposing sweeping tariffs under emergency powers law

A federal court on Wednesday blocked President Donald Trump from imposing sweeping tariffs on imports under an emergency-powers law, swiftly throwing into doubt Trump’s signature set of economic policies that have rattled global financial markets, frustrated trade partners and raised broader fears about inflation intensifying and the economy slumping.

The ruling from a three-judge panel at the New York-based U.S. Court of International Trade came after several lawsuits arguing Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs exceeded his authority and left the country’s trade policy dependent on his whims.

Trump has repeatedly said the tariffs would force manufacturers to bring back factory jobs to the U.S. and generate enough revenue to reduce federal budget deficits. He used the tariffs as a negotiating cudgel in hopes of forcing other nations to negotiate agreements that favored the U.S., suggesting he would simply set the rates himself if the terms were unsatisfactory.

White House spokesperson Kush Desai said that trade deficits amount to a national emergency “that has decimated American communities, left our workers behind, and weakened our defense industrial base — facts that the court did not dispute.”

The administration, he said, remains “committed to using every lever of executive power to address this crisis and restore American Greatness.”

But for now, Trump might not have the threat of import taxes to exact his will on the world economy as he had intended, since doing so would require congressional approval. What remains unclear is whether the White House will respond to the ruling by pausing all of its emergency power tariffs in the interim.

Trump might still be able to temporarily launch import taxes of 15% for 150 days on nations with which the U.S. runs a substantial trade deficit. The ruling notes that a president has this authority under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974.

The ruling amounted to a categorical rejection of the legal underpinnings of some of Trump’s signature and most controversial actions of his four-month-old second term. The administration swiftly filed notice of appeal — and the Supreme Court will almost certainly be called upon to lend a final answer — but it casts a sharp blow.

The case was heard by three judges: Timothy Reif, who was appointed by Trump, Jane Restani, named to the bench by President Ronald Reagan and Gary Katzman, an appointee of President Barack Obama.

“The Worldwide and Retaliatory Tariff Orders exceed any authority granted to the President by IEEPA to regulate importation by means of tariffs,” the court wrote, referring to the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

The ruling left in place any tariffs that Trump put in place using his Section 232 powers from the Trade Expansion Act of 1962. He put a 25% tax on most imported autos and parts, as well as on all foreign-made steel and aluminum. Those tariffs depend on a Commerce Department investigation that reveals national security risks from imported products.

It was filed in the U.S. Court of International Trade, a federal court that deals specifically with civil lawsuits involving international trade law.

While tariffs must typically be approved by Congress, Trump has said he has the power to act to address the trade deficits he calls a national emergency.

He is facing at least seven lawsuits challenging the levies. The plaintiffs argued that the emergency powers law does not authorize the use of tariffs, and even if it did, the trade deficit is not an emergency because the U.S. has run a trade deficit with the rest of the world for 49 consecutive years.

Trump imposed tariffs on most of the countries in the world in an effort to reverse America’s massive and long-standing trade deficits. He earlier plastered levies on imports from Canada, China and Mexico to combat the illegal flow of immigrants and the synthetic opioids across the U.S. border.

His administration argues that courts approved then-President Richard Nixon’s emergency use of tariffs in 1971, and that only Congress, and not the courts, can determine the “political” question of whether the president’s rationale for declaring an emergency complies with the law.

Source : https://apnews.com/article/trump-tariffs-trade-court-0392dbd59f548e49ad4f64254ae3f94a

China’s most advanced bombers seen on disputed South China Sea island

A KJ-500 early warning plane along with Y-20 transport aircraft are parked on the tarmac of an airfield on Woody Island, in the disputed Paracel archipelago, which is known in China as Xisha Islands, South China Sea, May 19, 2025. MAXAR TECHNOLOGIES/Handout via REUTERS Purchase Licensing Rights

Satellite imagery shows China landed two of its most advanced bombers in the disputed Paracel islands in the South China Sea this month – a gesture that some analysts described as Beijing’s latest signalling of its growing military capabilities to rivals.
The deployment marks the first time the long-range H-6 bombers have landed on Woody Island in the Paracels since 2020, and the movement of the now upgraded aircraft comes amid tensions with the Philippines, operations near Taiwan and ahead of the region’s biggest defence forum this weekend.

“China’s long-range bombers don’t need to be on the Paracels so it does appear to be omni-directional signalling by Beijing – against the Philippines and against the U.S. and other things that are going on,” said Collin Koh, a defence scholar at Singapore’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.
French President Emmanuel Macron is due to open the three-day Shangri-La Dialogue forum in Singapore with a speech on Friday while U.S. Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth will outline the Trump administration’s approach to the region on Saturday.
A British aircraft carrier is expected in the South China Sea on a rare deployment next month, diplomats say. Satellites captured two H-6 planes flying over the hotly disputed Scarborough Shoal, also in the South China Sea, just ahead of Hegseth’s visit to the Philippines in late March, when he reaffirmed the United States’ “ironclad commitment” to its treaty ally.

Regional diplomats and analysts say deployments of the jet-powered H-6 are closely scrutinised, given the way its Cold War-era airframe has been modernised to carry anti-ship and land attack cruise missiles, while some of the planes are capable of launching nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles.
A potential threat to U.S. bases in the region, H-6 bombers were deployed in wargames around Taiwan in October, and in July flew close to the U.S. mainland for the first time.
Neither China’s defence ministry nor the Philippines’ maritime and national security council immediately responded to Reuters’ requests for comment.
China’s occupation of the Paracels is disputed by Vietnam, whose foreign ministry also did not immediately respond for comment.

SOVIET DESIGN

Echoing the development of the U.S. B-52, the basic H-6 dates back to 1950s Soviet designs but it remains China’s most advanced long-range bomber having been re-fitted with improved engines and modern flight systems along with its state-of-the-art weaponry.

Images provided to Reuters by Maxar Technologies show two H-6 bombers on a runway on Woody Island on May 19.
Another Maxar image on the same date show two Y-20 transport aircraft and an KJ-500 early warning plane – an aircraft that is seen as vital to China being able to control and secure increasingly complex air and sea operations.
Some analysts said the planes may have first arrived on May 17 and been present until May 23.
Ben Lewis, founder of open source data platform PLATracker, said they thought it was unlikely that the H-6s would be deployed long-term on Woody Island or be permanently based there.
“The ability to cycle forces through the bases, especially higher level assets like the H-6, provides the PLA with a force protection mechanism,” he said, referring to China’s People’s Liberation Army.

China’s Southern Theatre Command, which covers the South China Sea, maintains two regiments of the bombers, according to the London-based International Institute of Strategic Studies.
The bombers are generally kept at heavily fortified bases on the Chinese mainland, where they would have more protection in a conflict from U.S. attacks in conflict scenarios.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/business/aerospace-defense/chinas-most-advanced-bombers-seen-disputed-south-china-sea-island-2025-05-28/

Putin’s demands for peace include an end to NATO enlargement, sources say

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy walk to attend a press conference, following their talks at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany, May 28, 2025.REUTERS/Annegret Hilse Purchase Licensing Rights

President Vladimir Putin’s conditions for ending the war in Ukraine include a demand that Western leaders pledge in writing to stop enlarging NATO eastwards and lift a chunk of sanctions on Russia, according to three Russian sources with knowledge of the negotiations.
U.S. President Donald Trump has repeatedly said he wants to end the deadliest European conflict since World War Two and has shown increasing frustration with Putin in recent days, warning on Tuesday the Russian leader was “playing with fire” by refusing to engage in ceasefire talks with Kyiv as his forces made gains on the battlefield.

After speaking to Trump for more than two hours last week, Putin said that he had agreed to work with Ukraine on a memorandum that would establish the contours of a peace accord, including the timing of a ceasefire. Russia says it is currently drafting its version of the memorandum and cannot estimate how long that will take.
Kyiv and European governments have accused Moscow of stalling while its troops advance in eastern Ukraine.
“Putin is ready to make peace but not at any price,” said one senior Russian source with knowledge of top-level Kremlin thinking, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The three Russian sources said Putin wants a “written” pledge by major Western powers not to enlarge the U.S.-led NATO alliance eastwards – shorthand for formally ruling out membership to Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova and other former Soviet republics.

Russia also wants Ukraine to be neutral, some Western sanctions lifted, a resolution of the issue of frozen Russian sovereign assets in the West, and protection for Russian speakers in Ukraine, the three sources said.
The first source said that, if Putin realizes he is unable to reach a peace deal on his own terms, he will seek to show the Ukrainians and the Europeans by military victories that “peace tomorrow will be even more painful”.
The Kremlin did not respond to a request for comment on Reuters’ reporting. Putin and Russian officials have repeatedly said any peace deal must address the “root causes” of the conflict – Russian shorthand for the issue of NATO enlargement and Western support for Ukraine.
Kyiv has repeatedly said that Russia should not be granted veto power over its aspirations to join the NATO alliance. Ukraine says it needs the West to give it a strong security guarantee with teeth to deter any future Russian attack.

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s administration did not respond to a request for comment.
NATO has also in the past said that it will not change its “open door” policy just because Moscow demands it. A spokesperson for the 32-member alliance did not respond to Reuters’ questions.
Putin ordered tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine in February 2022 after eight years of fighting in eastern Ukraine between Russian-backed separatists and Ukrainian troops.
Russia currently controls just under one fifth of the country. Though Russian advances have accelerated over the past year, the war is costing both Russia and Ukraine dearly in terms of casualties and military spending.
Reuters reported in January that Putin was growing concerned by the economic distortions in Russia’s wartime economy, amid labour shortages and high interest rates imposed to curb inflation. The price of oil, the bedrock of Russia’s economy, has declined steadily this year.

Trump, who prides himself on having friendly relations with Putin and has expressed his belief the Russian leader wants peace, has warned that Washington could impose further sanctions if Moscow delays efforts to find a settlement. Trump suggesting on social media on Sunday that Putin had “gone absolutely CRAZY” by unleashing a massive aerial attack on Ukraine last week.
The first source said that if Putin saw a tactical opportunity on the battlefield, he would push further into Ukraine – and that the Kremlin believed Russia could fight on for years no matter what sanctions and economic pain were imposed by the West.
A second source said that Putin was now less inclined to compromise on territory and was sticking to his public stance that he wanted the entirety of four regions in eastern Ukraine claimed by Russia.
“Putin has toughened his position,” the second source said of the question of territory.

NATO ENLARGEMENT

As Trump and Putin joust in public over the outlook for peace in Ukraine, Reuters could not determine whether the intensification of the war and the toughening of positions heralds determination to reach a deal or the collapse of talks.
In June last year, Putin set out his opening terms for an immediate end to the war: Ukraine must drop its NATO ambitions and withdraw all of its troops from the entirety of the territory of four Ukrainian regions claimed and mostly controlled by Russia.
In addition to Crimea, which it annexed in 2014, Russia currently controls almost all of Luhansk, more than 70% of Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions. It also occupies a sliver of the Kharkiv and Sumy regions, and is threatening Dnipropetrovsk.
Former U.S. President Joe Biden, Western European leaders and Ukraine cast the invasion as an imperial-style land grab and have repeatedly vowed to defeat Russian forces.
Putin casts the war as a watershed moment in Moscow’s relations with the West which he says humiliated Russia after the Soviet Union fell in 1991 by enlarging NATO and encroaching on what he considers Moscow’s sphere of influence.
At the 2008 Bucharest summit, NATO leaders agreed that Ukraine and Georgia would one day become members. Ukraine in 2019 amended its constitution committing to the path of full membership of NATO and the European Union.
Trump has said that previous U.S. support for Ukraine’s NATO membership bid was a cause of the war, and has indicated that Ukraine will not get membership. The U.S. State Department did not respond to a request for comment for this story.
Putin, who rose to the top Kremlin job in 1999, has repeatedly returned to the issue of NATO enlargement, including in his most detailed remarks about a possible peace in 2024.
In 2021, just two months before the Russian invasion, Moscow proposed a draft agreement, opens new tab with NATO members that, under Article 6, would bind NATO to “refrain from any further enlargement of NATO, including the accession of Ukraine as well as other States.” U.S. and NATO diplomats said at the time that Russia could not have a veto on expansion of the alliance.
Russia wants a pledge on NATO in writing because Putin thinks Moscow was misled by the United States after the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall when U.S. Secretary of State James Baker assured Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in 1990 that NATO would not expand eastwards, two of the sources said.
There was such a verbal promise, former Central Intelligence Agency Director Director William J. Burns said in his memoires, but it was never formalised – and it was made at a time when the collapse of the Soviet Union had not occurred.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/putin-ukraine-peace-wants-pledge-halt-nato-enlargement-sources-say-2025-05-28/

Netanyahu says Hamas Gaza chief Mohammad Sinwar has been killed

A screengrab shows according to the Israeli Army, Hamas Gaza chief Mohammed Sinwar, taken from a handout video, released December 17, 2023. Israeli Army/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday that Mohammad Sinwar, Hamas’ Gaza chief and the younger brother of the Palestinian militant group’s deceased leader and mastermind of the October 2023 attack, Yahya Sinwar, had been killed.
Mohammad Sinwar had been the target of an Israeli strike on a hospital in southern Gaza earlier this month and Netanyahu said on May 21 that it was likely he was dead.

The Israeli leader announced that Sinwar had been “eliminated” in an address to the Israeli parliament as he listed off names of other Hamas officials that Israel had killed over the past 20 months, including Sinwar’s brother Yahya.
“In the last two days we have been in a dramatic turn towards a complete defeat of Hamas,” he said, adding that Israel was also “taking control of food distribution”, a reference to a new aid distribution system in Gaza managed by a U.S.-backed group.
Hamas has yet to confirm Sinwar’s death.
Netanyahu’s announcement comes as the Israeli military has intensified its war campaign in Gaza after breaking a fragile ceasefire with Hamas in March. Israel has said it aims to dismantle Hamas’ governing and military capabilities and secure the release of hostages that are still held in Gaza.

The war erupted on October 7, 2023 when Hamas-led militants stormed out of Gaza, rampaging through southern Israeli communities and killing around 1,200 people, mostly civilians.
More than 250 were captured and taken as hostages into Gaza.
Israel’s retaliatory assault on Gaza has decimated the coastal territory, killing more than 53,000, according to health officials in Gaza, and displaced over 2 million Palestinians.
Gazan health officials have said most of those killed have been civilians but have not said how many militants have died. Israel believes it has killed tens of thousands of militants but has not provided any evidence to support those claims.
Israeli military chief Eyal Zamir on May 26 said Hamas had lost many assets, including its command and control centre.
Sinwar was elevated to the top ranks of the Palestinian militant group last year after Israel killed his brother Yahya in combat.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/netanyahu-says-hamas-gaza-chief-mohammed-sinwar-has-been-eliminated-2025-05-28/

Elon Musk leaving Trump administration, capping turbulent tenure

Billionaire Tesla (TSLA.O), CEO Elon Musk is leaving the Trump administration after leading a tumultuous efficiency drive, during which he upended several federal agencies but ultimately failed to deliver the generational savings he had sought.
His “off-boarding will begin tonight,” a White House official told Reuters late Wednesday, confirming Musk’s departure from government. Musk earlier on Wednesday took to his social media platform X to thank President Donald Trump as his time as a special government employee with the Department of Government Efficiency draws to an end.

His departure was quick and unceremonious. He did not have a formal conversation with Trump before announcing his exit, according to a source with knowledge of the matter, who added that his departure was decided “at a senior staff level.”
While the precise circumstances of his exit were not immediately clear, he leaves a day after criticizing Trump’s marquee tax bill, calling it too expensive and a measure that would undermine his work with the U.S. DOGE Service.
Some senior White House officials, including Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, were particularly irked by those comments, and the White House was forced to call Republican senators to reiterate Trump’s support for the package, a source familiar with the matter said.

While Musk remains close to the president, his exit comes after a gradual, but steady slide in standing.
After Trump’s inauguration, the billionaire quickly emerged as a powerful force in Trump’s orbit: hyper-visible, unapologetically brash and unfettered by traditional norms. At the Conservative Political Action Conference in February, he brandished a red metallic chainsaw to wild cheers. “This is the chainsaw for bureaucracy,” he declared.
On the campaign trail, Musk had said DOGE would be able to cut at least $2 trillion in federal spending. DOGE currently estimates its efforts have saved $175 billion so far, a number Reuters was not able to independently verify.
Musk did not hide his animus for the federal workforce, and he predicted that revoking “the COVID-era privilege” of telework would trigger “a wave of voluntary terminations that we welcome.”

But some cabinet members who initially embraced Musk’s outsider energy grew wary of his tactics, sources said. Over time, they grew more confident pushing back against his job cuts, encouraged by Trump’s reminder in early March that staffing decisions rested with department secretaries, not with Musk.
Musk clashed with three of Trump’s most senior cabinet members – Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. He called Trump’s trade adviser Peter Navarro a “moron” and “dumber than a sack of bricks.” Navarro dismissed the insults, saying, “I’ve been called worse.”
At the same time, Musk began to hint that his time in government would come to a close, while expressing frustration at times that he could not more aggressively cut spending.
In an April 22 Tesla conference call, he signaled he would be significantly scaling back his government work to focus on his businesses.

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/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

“The federal bureaucracy situation is much worse than I realized,” Musk told The Washington Post this week. “I thought there were problems, but it sure is an uphill battle trying to improve things in D.C., to say the least.”

DOGE GOES ON

Musk’s 130-day mandate as a special government employee in the Trump administration was set to expire around May 30. The administration has said DOGE’s efforts to restructure and shrink the federal government will continue.
Several cabinet secretaries are already discussing with the White House how to proceed without further alienating Congressional Republicans. But even as department heads will keep some DOGE infrastructure in place, they will likely move to reassert control over budgets and staffing, sources have told Reuters.
“The DOGE mission will only strengthen over time as it becomes a way of life throughout the government,” Musk said.
Trump and DOGE have managed to cut nearly 12%, or 260,000, of the 2.3 million-strong federal civilian workforce largely through threats of firings, buyouts and early retirement offers, a Reuters review of agency departures found.
At the same time, DOGE has hit a number of roadblocks, with federal courts at times propping back up agencies shortly after DOGE had moved to eliminate them. In some cases, staff and funding cuts have led to purchasing bottlenecks, increased costs and a brain drain of scientific and technological talent.
The most recent source of friction came on Tuesday when Musk criticized the price tag of Republicans’ tax and budget legislation making its way through Congress.
“I was disappointed to see the massive spending bill, frankly, which increases the budget deficit, not just decreases it, and undermines the work that the DOGE team is doing,” Musk told CBS News.
One source said the billionaire’s decision to trash Trump’s bill on television deeply upset senior White House aides.
His political activities have drawn protests and some investors have called for him to leave his work as Trump’s adviser and more closely manage Tesla, which has seen falls in sales and its stock price.
Musk, the world’s richest person, has defended his role as an unelected official who was granted unprecedented authority by Trump to dismantle parts of the U.S. government.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/world/us/elon-musk-leaving-trump-administration-white-house-official-confirms-2025-05-29/

Glacier collapse buries most of Swiss village

The Swiss village of Blatten has been partially destroyed after a huge chunk of glacier crashed down into the valley.

Although the village had been evacuated some days ago because of fears the Birch glacier was disintegrating, one person has been reported missing, and many homes have been completely flattened.

Blatten’s mayor, Matthias Bellwald, said “the unimaginable has happened” but promised the village still had a future.

Local authorities have requested support from the Swiss army’s disaster relief unit and members of the Swiss government are on their way to the scene.

The disaster that has befallen Blatten is the worst nightmare for communities across the Alps.

The village’s 300 inhabitants had to leave their homes on 19 May after geologists monitoring the area warned that the glacier appeared unstable. Now many of them may never be able to return.

Appearing to fight back tears, Bellwald said: “We have lost our village, but not our heart. We will support each other and console each other. After a long night, it will be morning again.”

The Swiss government has already promised funding to make sure residents can stay, if not in the village itself, at least in the locality.

However, Raphaël Mayoraz, head of the regional office for Natural Hazards, warned that further evacuations in the areas close to Blatten might be necessary.

Climate change is causing the glaciers – frozen rivers of ice – to melt faster and faster, and the permafrost, often described as the glue that holds the high mountains together, is also thawing.

Drone footage showed a large section of the Birch glacier collapsing at about 15:30 (14:30 BST) on Wednesday. The avalanche of mud that swept over Blatten sounded like a deafening roar, as it swept down into the valley leaving an enormous cloud of dust.

Glaciologists monitoring the thaw have warned for years that some alpine towns and villages could be at risk, and Blatten is not even the first to be evacuated.

In eastern Switzerland, residents of the village of Brienz were evacuated two years ago because the mountainside above them was crumbling.

Since then, they have only been permitted to return for short periods.

In 2017, eight hikers were killed, and many homes destroyed, when the biggest landslide in over a century came down close to the village of Bondo.

Source : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cnv1evn2p2vo

Around 47 injured in chaos, shooting at Gaza aid centre: UN

Men look around on alert in the wake of gunfire shots as displaced Palestinians receive food packages from a US-backed foundation pledging to distribute humanitarian aid in western Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on May 27, 2025. (Photo: AFP)

Around 47 people were injured, largely due to gunshots fired by the Israeli military, during chaotic scenes at a new aid distribution centre in Gaza, a senior UN official said on Wednesday (May 28).

The Israeli military said afterwards that its soldiers did not fire at civilians at the aid distribution point.

Thousands of Palestinians rushed into the centre run by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) on Tuesday, AFP journalists reported, as Israel implemented a new distribution system that bypasses the United Nations.

The incident in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip came days after the partial easing of a total aid blockade on the Palestinian territory that Israel imposed on Mar 2, leading to severe shortages of food and medicine.

“From the information we have, there are about 47 people who have been injured” in Tuesday’s incident, Ajith Sunghay, the head of the UN Human Rights Office in the Palestinian territories, told the UN correspondents’ association in Geneva.

He added that “most of those injured are due to gunshots” and based on the information he has, “it was shooting from the IDF” – the Israel Defence Forces.

Sunghay stressed that his office was still assessing and gathering information on the full picture of events.

“The numbers could go up. We are trying to confirm what has happened to them”, in terms of how seriously people were injured, Sunghay added.

“We are checking information from the UN. At the time we are speaking, we have no information on this matter,” Israeli military spokesman Colonel Olivier Rafowicz told AFP, referring to the wounded civilians.

Israeli soldiers “fired warning shots into the air, in the area outside” the centre managed by the GHF, he said, adding that “in no case (did they fire) towards the people”.

Rafowicz added that “Hamas is doing everything to prevent humanitarian aid”.

Sunghay also expressed concern about the possible medical aid injured people would be able to access.

“Getting medical aid has never been easy in Gaza or in the West Bank because hospitals have been attacked, ambulances have been attacked, health workers have been attacked,” he said.

The Israeli military said its troops “fired warning shots in the area outside” the distribution compound on Tuesday, and that it had re-established “control over the situation”. A senior military official said the distribution was nonetheless “a success”.

GHF NOT “VIABLE SOLUTION”

Little is known about the GHF, which surfaced in early May.

The foundation has faced accusations of helping Israel fulfil its military objectives while excluding Palestinians, bypassing the UN system, and failing to adhere to humanitarian principles of neutrality, impartiality and independence.

“We have raised numerous concerns with this mechanism,” Sunghay said.

He said large parts of the Gazan population would not travel all the way to the far south to collect food – while the elderly, sick, disabled and those looking after children would not be able to do so in any case.

There were also concerns within the population that they would be detained, or not allowed to return to northern Gaza.

Source : https://www.channelnewsasia.com/world/gaza-aid-centre-shooting-47-injured-us-humanitarian-foundation-5156941

Violent clashes between Indonesian youths turn deadly, sparking calls to tackle root of problem

Youth brawls, including one involving primary school children in Depok (centre), captured on social media. (Images: Instagram/hisnu_tangsel, Instagram/Seputar_Purwakasi, Instagram/fron17jakarta)

A video that went viral in Indonesia this month showed about 20 students of primary school age, some wielding iron rulers, chasing one another in Depok city on the outskirts of Jakarta.

They were later found to be from two different primary schools located nearby.

The students were fishing at a river near their schools and one group began to mock the other, according to Masrokan, a sports teacher at one of the schools.

They decided to resolve their conflict after school on May 10.

“They chased each other, and people living nearby saw it,” said Masrokan, who goes by one name.

“So the adults chased the students and told them to stop the brawl.”

The incident sent shockwaves across Indonesia due to the age of the children – ranging from 10 to 12 – involved.

It also came on the back of several deadly brawls involving older students in recent months.

In Pati regency in Central Java, a 17-year-old died after a brawl involving students from two high schools broke out on May 9.

In Southeast Maluku in March, two people died and over a dozen were injured in a clash between two youth groups wielding air rifles, arrows and machetes.

While not a new phenomenon in Indonesia, these and other recent cases have prompted the authorities to vow a crackdown on trouble-makers and find alternative outlets for them to channel their energy.

CNA takes a look at the root causes of such brawls in Indonesia and what can be done to prevent them.

MARGINALISED COMMUNITIES = MORE BRAWLS, SAY EXPERTS

Youth brawls and hooliganism are hardly unique to Indonesia and are complex problems that have persisted for generations, experts told CNA.

Ichsan Malik, a lecturer on peace and conflict resolution from the Indonesia Defense University in Bogor, West Java, said the first brawl reported by a national newspaper was one involving high school students in Jakarta in 1968.

He said a brawl in Indonesia is commonly understood to involve the use of weapons. If no weapon is used, in Indonesia, it is usually labelled a fight.

Brawls are more common among high school students because it is during adolescence when one is forming one’s identity, which may manifest in the teenagers being “more easily frustrated and aggressive”, said Ichsan.

The brawl in Depok involving primary school students could have happened because children nowadays are exposed to many things from an early age with the rise of social media, said Ichsan.

Educational expert Doni Koesoema from Multimedia Nusantara University in Tangerang, Banten, said that brawls also took place when he was in junior high school in Surabaya in 1986.

However, the brawls in those days were not so violent, he said.

In the past, brawls tended to happen between students from different schools in Indonesia but, these days, they also happen between groups of young adults from different neighbourhoods, said sociologist Bagong Suyanto from Surabaya’s Airlangga University.

He shared Ichsan’s view that brawls tend to happen more in marginalised or poor, homogeneous neighbourhoods with unemployment or poor employment prospects.

Parts of Manggarai sub-district in Jakarta, for instance, are notorious for brawls between residents from different neighbourhoods, which have taken place for decades.

According to informal parking attendant Muhammad Lutfi, 24, who is a resident there, the brawls have become more frequent since the area became busier with the revamp of Manggarai train station in recent years.

Fights these days are usually due to tussles over who gets to work informally at a particular commercial space or the quest for domination in a certain area, he said.

The rise of online shopping has also made weapons such as machetes and knives more accessible, said Lutfi.

Lutfi himself became caught in a tussle earlier this month.

He was taking a nap at a parking lot on the evening of May 4 when more than a dozen young people came storming towards him and hit his head with a sickle.

“I think the brawl here happened because they want to work as a parking attendant or earn money,” said Lutfi, who was rescued by others at the parking lot who intervened and took him to the hospital.

He was left with a scar on his head from the attack.

POLICE PATROLS AND OTHER MEASURES

Brawls among youths or students escalate when enforcement is lax, said Ichsan.

For years, no real solution has been introduced to eradicate the violence, but several authorities have recently vowed to tackle the problem.

Minister of Women’s Empowerment and Child Protection Arifah Fauzi said the brawling children in Depok were victims of an inadequate system, and her ministry would ensure they undergo mentoring.

“All Indonesian children are our children who should be in a safe environment … We all certainly agree that brawls involving elementary school-aged children are a violation of the basic principles of child protection,” said Arifah on May 12.

Following the incident, the students, their parents, teachers and the police met at one of the schools on May 15.

The students signed a statement saying they would not take part in brawls again.

The police will also regularly patrol the area around schools, especially after school hours.

“This will not just happen at the two schools but everywhere in this area (in) Cimanggis, Depok,” police chief Jupriono, who oversees the subdistrict, told CNA.

At the provincial level, West Java Governor Dedi Mulyadi wants to send students involved in brawls to military barracks.

Taking a religious and cultural approach is Jakarta Governor Pramono Anung, who wants to introduce a programme called Manggarai Bershalawat, which means “Manggarai praying for blessings”.

“People who are fighting, having disagreements, must have a reason. What is the main cause? The main cause must be sought,” said Pramono last Friday (May 23) during a prayer session where he also launched the programme in Manggarai.

“One of them is that the youth’s energy here is not being channelled properly. There are no sports facilities,” he said, handing out badminton and futsal equipment for the sub-district’s residents’ use.

Source : https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/indonesia-student-youth-brawls-policies-5154071

What French President Macron and wife Brigitte said to each other after she shoved him: lip reader

French President Emmanuel Macron was scolded by wife Brigitte Macron after she aggressively shoved his face in a shocking moment that has since gone viral.

Brigitte allegedly called the politician a “loser” after their uncomfortable squabble that unfolded on an airplane during their state visit to Vietnam Sunday, a lip reader told The Express in an article published Wednesday.

“As the aircraft door opens, President Macron is seen turning toward Brigitte,” the expert explained. “In an unexpected moment, she pushes him in the face. Realizing the door is already open and staff are witnessing the interaction, Emmanuel appears uncomfortable and quickly raises his hand with a forced ‘Hi.’

Emmanuel Macron was called a “loser” by wife Brigitte Macron after she shoved his face this weekend, according to a professional lip reader.
AFP via Getty Images

The analyst claimed that Emmanuel, 47, attempted to compose himself and stepped closer to his spouse, 72, before crossing to the other side of the plane. He then signaled his wife to follow him by telling her, ‘Let’s go.’

“He thanks the pilot and waves at the cameras, trying to recover the public-facing image,” the analyst explained.

While Emmanuel was momentarily calm, the analyst claimed “things turn[ed] icy again” when the couple was seen descending the stairs to the tarmac.

“He offers his arm; she ignores it, clinging to the railing instead,” the analyst shared. “As she passes, she appears to mutter … ‘Dégage, espèce de loser,’ translated in English, ‘Stay away, you loser.’”

Emmanuel apparently replied to her name-calling by saying, “Essayons, s’il te plaît,” which translates in English to “Let’s try, please?” to which she allegedly answered in her native tongue, “No.”

“His closing expression, and the phrase lipread as ‘Je vois,’ translated in English [to] ‘I see,’ says it all,” the analyst added.

The expert completed the analysis by offering a “hot take.”

“A rare unguarded exchange that hints at deeper tensions between the couple. One to watch, especially with a packed diplomatic schedule ahead.” the lipreader said.

Brigitte and Emmanuel’s volatile exchange was captured on camera over the weekend after they touched down in the Vietnamese capital, Hanoi, Sunday.

Emmanuel was seen standing close to the plane’s exit door when Brigitte lunged at his head with both her hands and pushed him with full force.

The president appeared shocked before attempting to shake it off by waving at the media filming the interaction.

Shortly after, they exited the aircraft side-by-side but notably did not touch or hold hands.

Emmanuel released a statement shutting down the allegation that they were “squabbling” and chalked it up to a moment of “joking

“Everyone needs to calm down,” he said, noting that the public was turning the moment into “a sort of geo-planetary catastrophe.”

“People are saying all sorts of nonsense,” he claimed.

A source close to the French leader alleged that Emmanuel was “decompressing” ahead of the trip by “joking around.”

“It’s a moment of togetherness. No more was needed to feed the mills of the conspiracy theorists,” the source said.

Source : https://pagesix.com/2025/05/28/celebrity-news/what-french-president-macron-and-wife-brigitte-said-to-each-other-after-she-shoved-him-lip-reader/

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ vulgar names for Cassie Ventura revealed in stylist’s testimony at sex-trafficking trial

Sean “Diddy” Combs’ former stylist Deonte Nash testified that the disgraced music mogul would consistently hurl degrading insults at Casandra “Cassie” Ventura.

Nash told prosecutors during the ongoing sex-trafficking trial Wednesday that Combs would refer to his now-ex-girlfriend — whom he dated on and off from 2007 to 2018 — as “baby girl, CC, bitch, slut, ho,” per People.

Nash went on to tell the court that Combs called Ventura a bitch “quite a bit.”

“That was his fave,” he claimed.

Sean “Diddy” Combs’ former stylist Deonte Nash testified that the rapper would often call Casandra “Cassie” Ventura “baby girl, CC, bitch, slut, ho.”
FilmMagic

The stylist, who worked for Combs from 2008 to 2018, further claimed, “He would say, ‘She was nothing but a slut anyway.’”

When asked how Ventura responded to the abusive nicknames, Nash testified that the singer would feel “sad” and “go into a depression.”

Nash claimed he heard Combs threaten to “beat [Ventura’s] ass” or “send her sex tapes out.”

“It drove her crazy. She would be super emotional. She might stay in the house for days,” he added.

Nash is one of several witnesses who have testified about the disgraced music mogul’s alleged physical and emotional abuse of Ventura.

Last week, singer Dawn Richard — who is also suing the Bad Boy Records founder for sexual abuse— testified that Combs “owned” Ventura and would often become violent toward her when she “would speak up for herself.”

“He would drag her and kick her and punch her in the mouth,” she told the jury.

Cassie’s mother, Regina Ventura, testified that she and her husband were blackmailed by Combs for $20,000 over the “Me & U” singer’s brief relationship with Kid Cudi. (Cassie previously testified in court that Combs was jealous of their romance).

A pregnant Cassie took the stand earlier this month to testify about her decade-long relationship with Combs and her participation in his infamous “Freak-Off” parties — which at times lasted up to four days and caused her “painful” medical issues.

The “Long Way to Go” hitmaker also answered questions about the 2016 surveillance footage of his physical attack at a hotel and her allegation that Combs raped her in 2018 which was mentioned in her 2023 bombshell lawsuit.

Source : https://pagesix.com/2025/05/28/celebrity-news/sean-diddy-combs-vulgar-names-for-cassie-ventura-revealed-in-testimony-at-trial/

HARD LESSON Teen girl, 15, crashes car off 40ft cliff and kills her dad in the passenger seat who was teaching her to drive

A TEENAGER’S driving lesson ended in horror after a deadly plunge off a cliff.

The crash killed the young girl’s father, who was teaching her how to drive, according to police.

64-year-old James Politoski was killed in a crash during his teenage daughter’s driving lesson

It happened on Memorial Day in Laguna Beach, California, just fifty miles from Los Angeles.

A 15-year-old girl was behind the wheel with her 64-year-old dad, James Politoski, in the passenger seat, according to police.

The lesson took place in an upper parking lot of a closed Gelson’s Market, cops said.

At some point, the teen drove through a fence, and the car careened off a 40-foot embankment.

The vehicle flipped and landed upside down on the sidewalk below Coast Highway, authorities said.

“It appeared to be on a permitted driver, a 15-year-old female driver with her father out, essentially, in a driving lesson sort of situation,” Lieutenant Jesse Schmidt of Laguna Peach told NBC local affiliate WSAZ.

“Gas pedal, brake pedal confusion, and tumbled over a 40-foot cliff on the Coast Highway,” Schmidt said.

Cops were able to confirm the teen had a valid driver’s permit.

Her father died at the scene, according to first responders.

Paramedics rushed the girl to the hospital with major injuries.

She was in stable condition as of Wednesday, May 28, police said, and is expected to survive her injuries.

“It is always difficult when an accident leads to the loss of life, especially under circumstances where a parent was simply trying to do the right thing by teaching their child a valuable life skill,” Schmidt said in a statement to The U.S. Sun.

“What began as an act of care and guidance ended in unimaginable sorrow.”

Aerial footage from CBS local affiliate KCAL showed the mangled car upside down near the highway.

Police believe the teen may have accidentally hit the gas pedal instead of the brake.

The car tore through a fence before it went airborne, landing hard below.

“It’s a tragic incident,” Schmidt said.

“The community is shaken by this because someone lost their life by being a good parent.”

Authorities said the investigation into the crash is still ongoing.

“Tragically, an adult male passenger in the vehicle was pronounced deceased at the scene,” the department said in a statement.

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/news/14346466/teen-daughter-car-crash-kills-dad-tragedy-accident-driving/

Exit mobile version