A strong earthquake in eastern Afghanistan kills at least 250 people and injures 500New Foto - A strong earthquake in eastern Afghanistan kills at least 250 people and injures 500

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — A strong earthquake in eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistan border has killed at least 250 people and injured at least 500 others, officials said. The quake late Sunday hit a series of towns in the province of Kunar, near the city of Jalalabad in neighboring Nangahar province. The 6.0 magnitude at 11:47 p.m. was centered 27 kilometers (17 miles) east-northeast of the city of Jalalabad in Nangarhar province, the U.S. Geological Survey said. It was just 8 kilometers (5 miles) deep. Shallower quakes tend to cause more damage. The Kunar Disaster Management Authority said in a statement that at least 250 people were killed and 500 others injured in the districts of Nur Gul, Soki, Watpur, Manogi and Chapadare. Jalalabad is a bustling trade city due to its proximity with neighboring Pakistan and a key border crossing between the countries. Although it has a population of about 300,000 according to the municipality, it's metropolitan area is thought to be far larger. Most of its buildings are low-rise constructions, mostly of concrete and brick, and its outlying areas include homes built of mud bricks and wood. Many are of poor construction. Jalalabad also has considerable agriculture and farming, including citrus fruit and rice, with the Kabul River flowing through the city. A magnitude 6.3 earthquake struckAfghanistan on Oct. 7, 2023, followed by strong aftershocks. The Taliban government estimated at least 4,000 people perished. The U.N. gave a far lower death toll of about 1,500. It was the deadliest natural disaster to strike Afghanistan in recent memory.

A strong earthquake in eastern Afghanistan kills at least 250 people and injures 500

A strong earthquake in eastern Afghanistan kills at least 250 people and injures 500 KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — A strong earthquake in easter...
Houthis storm UN buildings in Yemeni capital after Israel killed PM and other ministersNew Foto - Houthis storm UN buildings in Yemeni capital after Israel killed PM and other ministers

Iran-backed Houthi rebels stormed the offices of two United Nations agencies in the Yemeni capital Sanaa on Sunday, a day after Israel said it killed the prime minister of the rebel-controlled government. The offices the World Food Programme (WFP) and the United Nations children's agency (UNICEF) were "entered by local security forces" on Sunday morning, spokespersons for the agencies told CNN in separate statements. A WFP staff member was detained, as were a number of UNICEF staff members, according to the statements. Hans Grundberg, the United Nations special envoy for Yemen, later confirmed that at least 11 UN personnel were detained, adding that he "strongly" condemns the detentions, as well as the forced entry into UN premises. António Guterres, the UN's secretary-general, also strongly condemned the Houthis' actions, calling for "the immediate and unconditional release" of those detained by the rebel group. Guterres noted that others working for the UN, as well as people working with NGOs, civil society and diplomatic missions, have been arbitrarily detained in Yemen since 2021. "The personnel of the UN and its partners must never be targeted, arrested or detained while carrying out their duties for the UN," he said. "The United Nations will continue to work tirelessly to secure the safe and immediate release of all arbitrarily detained individuals." The WFP and UNICEF are "urgently seeking additional information" from local authorities, their spokespersons told CNN, adding: "Our immediate priority is the safety and well-being of our staff." It is unclear whether the raids were related to Israel's attacks. The Houthis have previously targeted the UN and other international organizations. The information minister with the UN-backed government, Moammar al-Eryani, strongly condemned the Houthis' actions, Yemeni state news agency SABA NEWS reported. Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed that the strikes that killed Ahmed al-Rahawi, the prime minister ofYemen'sHouthi rebels, are "only the beginning" of his country's campaign against the group. Al-Rahawi was killed alongside other Houthi officials in a strike on Sanaa on Thursday, the head of the Houthis' Supreme Political Council confirmed, vowing revenge for the attack. The rebel groupregularly launches missilesat Israel, as well as attacks onvessels in the Red Sea, in what it says is revenge for Israel's offensive in Gaza. Netanyahu has pledged that the Houthis will "pay a very heavy price for their aggression against the State of Israel." "We are doing what no one has done before us, and this is only the beginning of the strikes on senior officials in Sanaa - we will get to all of them," the Israeli leader told a government meeting on Sunday. Since 2014, Yemen has been split between a Houthi government which controls Sanaa and much of the north, and a rival but more widely recognized administration in the south. CNN's Eugenia Yosef, Max Saltman and Billy Stockwell contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Houthis storm UN buildings in Yemeni capital after Israel killed PM and other ministers

Houthis storm UN buildings in Yemeni capital after Israel killed PM and other ministers Iran-backed Houthi rebels stormed the offices of two...
Charles Bierbauer, former CNN correspondent, dies at 83New Foto - Charles Bierbauer, former CNN correspondent, dies at 83

Former CNN correspondent Charles Bierbauer has died, his family announced on Sunday. He was 83 years old. Bierbauer retired from CNN in 2001 after two decades covering news in Washington, DC, and around the world. He joined CNN in 1981 to cover the Pentagon as a defense correspondent. He was then the network's senior White House correspondent for nine years, covering the administrations of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush. He also served as the network's senior Washington correspondent, highlighting his deep knowledge of the US presidency, policy and politics. The veteran journalist traveled with presidents to all 50 states and more than 30 nations, and he served as president of the White House Correspondents' Association from 1991 to 1992. He also covered presidential campaigns between 1984 and 2000, as well as the Supreme Court. Bierbauer won an Emmy for his coverage of the 1996 Olympic Park bombing in Atlanta. He also anchored CNN's "Newsmaker Saturday," a weekly show featuring interviews with top newsmakers, for a decade. "Charles Bierbauer was a cherished member of the CNN family, who covered everything from the White House and the Pentagon to the Supreme Court during his two decades with the network," said a CNN spokesperson Sunday. "A tireless reporter and wonderful colleague, Charles will be remembered for his outstanding journalism and his willingness to help others." Longtime CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer said in a statement Sunday Bierbauer had been a mentor to him. "Charles inspired me and helped me throughout my assignments at the Pentagon and the White House. He was a good friend, colleague, and mentor, and I will certainly miss him," Blitzer said. Before joining CNN, Bierbauer had an extensive career spanning more than a decade as an international journalist. He was the ABC News Moscow bureau chief and correspondent beginning in 1978, and he later served as the network's bureau chief in Bonn, Germany. He had previously worked in London, Bonn and Vienna for Westinghouse Broadcasting. Versed in coverage of Eastern Europe during the Cold War, Bierbauer covered all US-Soviet summits, starting in 1975 with President Gerald Ford and the Soviet Union's Leonid Brezhnev through the 1992 meeting between Presidents George H.W. Bush and Boris Yeltsin. He started his career as a radio reporter in his native Allentown, Pennsylvania, and later wrote for the city's local newspaper. Bierbauer graduated in 1966 from Pennsylvania State University, where he earned a bachelor's degree in Russian and bachelor's and master's degrees in journalism. He has been recognized as a distinguished alumnus and alumni fellow by the university. Bierbauer became the first dean of the University of South Carolina's College of Mass Communications and Information Studies in 2002. He stepped down from the role in 2017. Bierbauer is survived by his wife Susanne Schafer, a former journalist at the Associated Press, and his four children. This story has been updated with additional information. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Charles Bierbauer, former CNN correspondent, dies at 83

Charles Bierbauer, former CNN correspondent, dies at 83 Former CNN correspondent Charles Bierbauer has died, his family announced on Sunday....
How America's largest theme park vanished in less than a decadeNew Foto - How America's largest theme park vanished in less than a decade

For more than 100 years,Geauga Lakein Aurora, Ohio, was an amusement park destination. From its earliest days in the late 19th century, when Geauga Lake was just a train stop with picnic tables and boats to rent, the park grew. Its first ride was a steam-powered carousel, added in 1889. Its first roller coaster didn't come until 1925 with the Big Dipper, which entertained thrill-seekers until the park closed down. And in 2001, Geauga Lake absorbed the neighboring Sea World, when the latter closed its Ohio park. That made Geauga Lake the largest theme park in the world by area at the time, covering some 700 acres on both sides of the lake. Less than a decade later, the fun was over. In 2007, the park shut down after rounds of ownership changes and park expansion. Now, what's left of Geauga Lake Park may return to its 19th-century roots. TheCity of Aurora has purchased the former Geauga Lake and Sea World land, with the intent of making it a public park. Here's a look back at the history of Geauga Lake, as reported in previous Beacon Journal articles. Here's a brief history of Geauga Lake: 1887:The northeast side of Geauga Lake is first called Picnic Lake or Giles Pond, a place where visitors camped, went fishing or picnicked. 1889:The park's first ride is added, a steam-powered carousel. 1925:Geauga Lake's first roller coaster is built. The Big Dipper was the largest wooden roller coaster built at the time, at 2,800 feet long and a height of 65 feet. 1939:A dance hall and ballroom are built. 1969:Funtime Inc. purchases the park. 1977:The Double Loop — Ohio's first looping steel coaster — opens. 1978:The Corkscrew steel coaster debuts. 1984:The Wave, the first pool of its kind that creates 6-foot waves, opens. 1988:The park celebrates its 100th year and welcomes the Raging Wolf Bobs wooden roller coaster. 1995:Geauga Lake is purchased by Premier Parks Inc. 1998:Premier Parks purchases Six Flags Theme Parks. 2000:Park changes name to Six Flags Ohio. 2001:Six Flags purchases SeaWorld Cleveland, renamed to Six Flags Worlds of Adventure. 2004:Six Flags sells the park to Cedar Fair, at the time the owner of Cedar Point. The name is changed back to Geauga Lake. 2005:Cedar Fair revamps the old Sea World into a water park called Wildwater Kingdom. 2007:The ride side of Geauga Lake closes. 2016:Wildwater Kingdom closes. SOURCES: Aurora Historical Society and Akron Beacon Journal archives. This article originally appeared on Akron Beacon Journal:The lost American theme park that once outgrew Disney World

How America's largest theme park vanished in less than a decade

How America's largest theme park vanished in less than a decade For more than 100 years,Geauga Lakein Aurora, Ohio, was an amusement par...
Judge blocks removal of Guatemalan children in US custody, some of whom were already on planesNew Foto - Judge blocks removal of Guatemalan children in US custody, some of whom were already on planes

A federal judge on Sunday afternoon temporarily blocked the removals of unaccompanied Guatemalan minors in US custody as the government was in the process of repatriating some of them in the early morning hours. A notice sent to attorneys about the removals prompted an early Sunday morning scramble among lawyers who say kids were woken up in the middle of the night and would be at risk if returned to their home country. CNN firstreportedthat the Trump administration was moving to repatriate hundreds of Guatemalan children who arrived in the US unaccompanied, in coordination with the Guatemalan government. During a Sunday hearing, Judge Sparkle L. Sooknanan, a Biden appointee, said she received a call around 2:36 a.m. notifying her that the children were being processed for repatriation to Guatemala. "I have the government attempting to remove unaccompanied minors from the country in the wee hours of the morning on a holiday weekend, which is surprising, but here we are," she said. Sooknanan asked the Department of Justice to provide evidence supporting its claim that the children had been requested to return by their parents or legal guardians. DOJ attorney Drew Ensign told the court, "That's what I've been told," while attorneys challenging the removals argued that was false. The judge gave the government until Friday to file a formal response to that question. The plaintiffs agreed to file an expedited motion for a preliminary injunction by Tuesday, with DOJ's reply due Friday. Sooknanan reiterated her order that the US government not remove any of the individual plaintiffs or other unaccompanied Guatemalan minors in US custody, who she ruled were part of the class protected under the order, for two weeks. During the hearing, Sooknanan asked the Department of Justice's lawyer to clarify the children's whereabouts, some of whom had already been placed on planes. They are expected to be returned to US custody, according to DOJ. At least one plane in Texas carrying Guatemalan children was turned around, according to Neha Desai, managing director of Children's Human Rights & Dignity at the National Center for Youth Law. Legal service providers who work with children were notified by the Office of Refugee Resettlement, which is charged with the care of migrant kids, that Guatemala had "requested the return of certain unaccompanied alien children in federal custody for the purposes of reunifying the UAC with suitable family members," according to a notice obtained by CNN. The children, ranging in age, are believed to not have a parent in the US, though they may have a relative, and have a parent or legal guardian in Guatemala. The criteria also includes children who do not have a pending asylum case and won't be trafficked upon their return, according to the notice. But attorneys who represent some of the children say that those who have been identified are at risk if returned to Guatemala and are in ongoing immigration proceedings. In a lawsuit filed early Sunday to block the effort, attorneys argued that the Trump administration is violating US law, which affords unaccompanied migrants special protections and ensures kids aren't removed without due process or the opportunity to seek relief from deportation. CNN reached out to the White House, as well as the departments of Health and Human Services and Homeland Security for comment. The plaintiffs in the case, which was filed in the US District Court for the District of Columbia, are 10 unaccompanied minors from Guatemala, ranging from ages 10 to 17, who have been identified for removal, and the majority of whom are in ongoing immigration proceedings. One of those children, a 10-year-old indigenous child, "suffered abuse and neglect from other caregivers" in Guatemala. Her mother is deceased. The immigration attorney who represents multiple Guatemalan kids told CNN that the children were "terrified and confused." "The reaction when you explain what's happening is disbelief. They're very scared. They all say they're afraid to return to Guatemala for different reasons," the attorney said. "They were literally taken out of their beds in the middle of the night, on a holiday weekend." Late Saturday, the Office of Refugee Resettlement also notified shelter providers who care for unaccompanied migrant children that kids had been identified "for reunification with their parents and or legal guardians" in country of origin and must be prepared to be discharged within two hours, or four hours if the child is in a foster care program, upon receiving notification, according to a notice obtained by CNN. The children, the notice states, must be travel ready, including proper documentation, medication, personal belongings, and two prepared sack lunches. This story and headline have been updated with additional details. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Judge blocks removal of Guatemalan children in US custody, some of whom were already on planes

Judge blocks removal of Guatemalan children in US custody, some of whom were already on planes A federal judge on Sunday afternoon temporari...
Tropical Storm Kiko forms in eastern Pacific, expected to become a hurricaneNew Foto - Tropical Storm Kiko forms in eastern Pacific, expected to become a hurricane

A new tropical storm has formed in the eastern Pacific Ocean, more than 1,000 miles off the coast of Mexico. There was no immediate threat to land. Tropical Storm Kiko developed early Sunday and is expected to become a hurricane later this week, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami. The hurricane center did not issue any coastal watches or warnings. "Strengthening is expected during the next couple of days, and the system is forecast to become a hurricane by Tuesday," the hurricane center said. The storm's center was located about 1,045 miles west-southwest of the southern tip of Baja California. Its maximum sustained winds were clocked at 40 mph. It is moving west at a speed of 9 mph. Tropical storms have wind speeds of between 39 mph and 73 mph. It becomes a hurricane when the wind speed reaches 74 mph. A storm is considered a major hurricane if the wind speed goes over 110 mph, according to the NHC. Kiko is the 11th named storm in theEastern North Pacificthis year. So far this year, Tropical Storm Chantal is the only one to have made landfall in the U.S., bringingdeadly floodingto North Carolina in early July. In June, Barry made landfall as a tropical depression on Mexico's eastern coast. "Portrait of a person who's not there": Documenting the bedrooms of school shooting victims The Long Island home renovation that uncovered a hidden story Passage: In memoriam

Tropical Storm Kiko forms in eastern Pacific, expected to become a hurricane

Tropical Storm Kiko forms in eastern Pacific, expected to become a hurricane A new tropical storm has formed in the eastern Pacific Ocean, m...
US expands visa restrictions for Palestinians, NY Times reportsNew Foto - US expands visa restrictions for Palestinians, NY Times reports

(Reuters) -The United States has suspended visa approvals for nearly everyone who holds a Palestinian passport, The New York Times reported on Sunday. The restrictions go beyond those President Donald Trump's administration had previously announced on visitors from Gaza. They would prevent Palestinians from traveling to the United States for medical treatment, attending college and business travel, the newspaper reported, citing unidentified officials. The State Department said two weeks ago that it was halting all visitor visas for individuals from Gaza while it conducts "a full and thorough" review, a move that has been condemned by pro-Palestine groups. (Reporting by Brad HeathEditing by Bill Berkrot)

US expands visa restrictions for Palestinians, NY Times reports

US expands visa restrictions for Palestinians, NY Times reports (Reuters) -The United States has suspended visa approvals for nearly everyon...
Aid ship carrying Greta Thunberg, other activists, sets sail to GazaNew Foto - Aid ship carrying Greta Thunberg, other activists, sets sail to Gaza

A flotilla carrying activist Greta Thunberg and others departed from Barcelona for the Gaza Strip on Sunday with humanitarian aid on board. The Global Sumud Flotilla will try to break the Israeli blockade of the Palestinian territory and bring humanitarian aid, food, water and medicine to Gaza asIsrael steps up its offensive in Gaza City. "The story here is about Palestine," Thunberg said at a press conference in Barcelona. "The story here is how people are being deliberately deprived of the very basic means to survive." Food experts warned earlier this month that Gaza City was in famine and that half a million people across the strip were facing catastrophic levels of hunger. The nearly 23-month war has killed more than 63,000 people, with at least 332 Palestinians dying of malnutrition, including 124 children, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry. The maritime convoy, comprising approximately 20 boats and delegations from 44 countries, will be joined by additional ships from ports in Italy, Greece, and Tunisia in the coming days as it navigates its route from the western Mediterranean to the Gaza Strip, organizers said. Thunberg and "Game of Thrones" actor Liam Cunningham are some of the most recognizable figures on the expedition, as well as activists, politicians like former mayor of Barcelona, Ada Colau, and journalists. "It has been very clear that Israel has been continuously violating international law by either attacking, unlawfully intercepting the boats in international waters, and continuously preventing the humanitarian aid from coming in", said Thunberg in an interview with The Associated Press on Saturday. It is not the first time Thunberg and Cunninham will attempt to reachGaza waters this year. She wasdeported in Junewhen the ship she was traveling on with 11 other people, the Madleen, was stopped by the Israeli military. Cunningham, who will join the flotilla, played a video showing a girl singing while planning her own funeral. The girl, Fatima, died four days ago, he said. "What sort of world have we slid into where children are making their own funeral arrangements?" Cunningham told reporters. In late July, theIsraeli military stopped another aid ship, detained 21 international activists and reporters, and seized its cargo, including baby formula, food and medicine, according to Freedom Flotilla Coalition. An Israeli official said Saturday that the country will soon halt or slow humanitarian aid into parts of northernGaza, as it expands its military offensive against Hamas, a day after the city was declared a combat zone. The war began on Oct. 7, 2023, when an attack by Hamas terrorists inside Israel claimed the lives of 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and took 251 people hostage. Editor's Note: This article has been corrected. A representative for Susan Sarandon tells CBS News that while the actress is supportive of the cause, she was not on the flotilla, as was previously reported by the Associated Press. "Portrait of a person who's not there": Documenting the bedrooms of school shooting victims The Long Island home renovation that uncovered a hidden story Passage: In memoriam

Aid ship carrying Greta Thunberg, other activists, sets sail to Gaza

Aid ship carrying Greta Thunberg, other activists, sets sail to Gaza A flotilla carrying activist Greta Thunberg and others departed from Ba...
Bullet fragment found in neck of boy who went viral for saying his friend shielded him from school shootingNew Foto - Bullet fragment found in neck of boy who went viral for saying his friend shielded him from school shooting

Doctors discovered a bullet fragment in the neck of a 10-year-old boy who went viral for recounting how his friend jumped on top of him to shield him during a mass shooting at Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis that killed two children and injured others. Weston Halsne, a fifth-grade student at Annunciation Catholic School, was attending Mass on Wednesday when the shooting occurred. He recounted running under a pew and covering his head while shots came through the stained-glass windows, and said his friend Victor was shot while shielding him. "I think I got, like, gunpowder on my neck," he said after the shooting. But doctors later discovered it was not just gunpowder that hit the 10-year-old's neck, but a bullet fragment as well. Weston's father, Grant Halsne, told NBC News that the fragment came close to — but didn't hit — the 10-year-old's carotid artery, which a doctor described the as a "miracle." "If it [the bullet fragment] went any further, he would've died," Grant Halsne said. The Halsne family is waiting to confirm when the surgery to remove the fragment will be scheduled, but hope it will be sometime early next week. The fragment is in a very sensitive area, but Weston is expected to make a full recovery, his father said. Grant Halsne said the shooting has left his son scared and not wanting to be alone. "He's scared of loud noises," the father said. "The kid to his left was killed." On Wednesday just before 8:30 a.m., 23-year-old Robin Westman fired a rifle through the side windows of Annunciation Catholic School's church, aiming at children sitting in the pews. Weston remembered thinking, "What is that?" when he heard the first gunshot. When he heard it again, he ran under the pew. The student had practiced what to do during an active shooter situation, but never at the church, he said. "I was like two seats away from the stained glass windows," Weston said. "So, they were like, the shots were like right next to me." Westman was found dead at the rear of the church with an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to search warrants. She was found dressed in black "tactical" gear and officials found approximately 120 shell casings from three different guns that she used, according to Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hara. The investigation into the shooting is ongoing.

Bullet fragment found in neck of boy who went viral for saying his friend shielded him from school shooting

Bullet fragment found in neck of boy who went viral for saying his friend shielded him from school shooting Doctors discovered a bullet frag...
3 Dead, Over 100 Injured After Several Train Cars Flip and Derail — and a Cause of the Crash Remains UnknownNew Foto - 3 Dead, Over 100 Injured After Several Train Cars Flip and Derail — and a Cause of the Crash Remains Unknown

Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population Three people are dead and 103 are injured after a train accident on Saturday, Aug. 30 Some of the injured passengers are receiving "intensive care," according to health officials The cause of the accident, which saw two train cars overturn and seven derail, is under investigation Three people are dead and over a hundred more are injured following a train accident, in which at least two cars were completely overturned. The train was traveling from Marsa Matruh, a port city in northwestern Egypt, to Cairo on Saturday, Aug. 30, when the accident occurred, according to a statement the Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population (MOHP) shared onFacebook. Two train cars were overturned, while seven more were derailed. The accident resulted in the deaths of three people, the MOHP said in its initial post, which was originally penned in Arabic. The number of travelers injured in the accident, meanwhile, kept climbing. Thirty-seven ambulances were sent to the scene, according to the MOHP. Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population Hours after the accident, the government ministry reported in anotherFacebookupdate that the number of injured passengers had increased from 54 to 94. That number later climbed to 103, with three individuals receiving what MOHP spokesperson Dr. Hossam Abdel-Ghafar described inanother statementas "intensive care." According to Abdel-Ghafar, 87 of the injured travelers have already left the hospital after receiving medical care, and 16 more remain stable but under observation. Injuries varied from fractures to cuts and bruises, the spokesperson said. Several officials, including Health Minister Dr Khaled Abdul Ghaffar, visited the Hyena and Ras Al-Hakma hospitals, where the accident victims were transported, following the crash, officials said. The MOHP head also offered his condolences and prayers to the families of the victims. "Medical teams continue to assess the health status of patients, ensuring that all blood needs and derivatives are provided to provide the necessary medical care," the MOHP said in a statement translated from Arabic. Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human-interest stories. In the aftermath of the Aug. 30 accident, dozens of people surrounded the scene, and two cranes were positioned to lift one of the overturned train cars, as seen in photos shared by the MOHP and in footage obtained byExtra News. The cause of the crash is not yet known. The transport ministry and the Egyptian National Railways Authority are currently investigating, according to theBBC. Accidents such as this are not uncommon on Egypt's railway network, the British outlet reported, due in part to "poor maintenance and a lack of investment." Read the original article onPeople

3 Dead, Over 100 Injured After Several Train Cars Flip and Derail — and a Cause of the Crash Remains Unknown

3 Dead, Over 100 Injured After Several Train Cars Flip and Derail — and a Cause of the Crash Remains Unknown Egyptian Ministry of Health and...
Powerball jackpot jumps to $1.1 billion after no winning tickets SaturdayNew Foto - Powerball jackpot jumps to $1.1 billion after no winning tickets Saturday

ThePowerballjackpot has risen to an estimated $1.1 billion, the fifth-largest ever in the game's history, after there were no winning tickets for Saturday night's $1 billion grand prize. Saturday's winning numbers were 3, 18, 22, 27 and 33, with a Powerball of 17. Nine tickets matched all five white balls to win $1 million, but no ticket matched all six. Four of those tickets were sold in California, and one each was sold in Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania, according to Powerball. Lottery officials also said three tickets that matched all five white balls were sold with the game's "power play" option, which costs an extra $1 per ticket and doubles the value of any prizes. In the latest drawing, those tickets were worth $2 million each and sold to Powerball players in Colorado, Indiana and New Hampshire. The $1.1 billion jackpot for Monday night's drawing has an estimated cash value of $498.4 million. Based on the jackpot estimate, a single jackpot winner on Monday would have the choice of taking a lump sum payment of $498.4 million before taxes, or going with the annuity option, which would consist of one immediate payment followed by 29 annual payments that increase by 5% each year, each payment also before taxes. Saturday's drawing marked the sixth time in the game's 33-year history that the top prize has climbed to the billion-dollar mark. No one has won Powerball's jackpot since May 31, when a single ticketin Californiawon a $204.5 million jackpot with a cash value of $91.6 million. Four of the five previous billion-plus-jackpot-winning tickets were sold in California, including a single ticket sold in Altadena in 2022 that claimed a $2.04 billion jackpot, thelargest in both Powerball and lottery history. The next drawing, which takes place from the Florida Lottery live draw studio in Tallahassee, is on Monday at 11 p.m. ET. Tickets are $2 and are sold in 45 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The Long Island home renovation that uncovered a hidden story Passage: In memoriam Dr. Sanjay Gupta on the mysteries of chronic pain

Powerball jackpot jumps to $1.1 billion after no winning tickets Saturday

Powerball jackpot jumps to $1.1 billion after no winning tickets Saturday ThePowerballjackpot has risen to an estimated $1.1 billion, the fi...
Boy rescued by bystanders from Hersheypark elevated monorailNew Foto - Boy rescued by bystanders from Hersheypark elevated monorail

A young boy was rescued as he walked along an elevated monorail track at the Hersheypark theme park in Hershey, Pa., Saturday in a momentcaught on video. According to a statement from park officials, the boy was reported missing just after 5 p.m. ET Saturday after becoming separated from his parents. "While our team was actively searching, the child entered a secured area for the Monorail, which was not in operation," the park statement said, adding that the ride was closed and barricaded at the time. "The child remained at the closed station for about 20 minutes before briefly walking along the track," the park statement continued. "A guest quickly noticed and helped guide the child to safety." MORE: Death of 9-year-old girl at Hersheypark ruled accidental, no criminal activity found: Police The video, captured by a park attendee, shows the boy walking back and forth along the elevated monorail track. A bystander then climbs atop a nearby building and then onto the track, where he takes the boy into his arms and lowers him to safety with the assitance of another bystander. "Our team members immediately responded after he was spotted on the tracks, and at approximately 5:28 p.m. the child was safely reunited with his family. He was unharmed," the Hersheypark statement said. "We are grateful for the vigilance of our guests and the swift response of our team, and we remain committed to maintaining the highest levels of guest safety throughout Hersheypark," the park statement concluded. Just over one month ago, a 9-year-old girldrownedin the wave pool at Hersheypark in a death that was ultimately ruled accidental. A review by police concluded that the park upheld safety standards and that the number of people in the wave pool at the time was "significantly less than its designed maximum capacity," according to a Derry Township Police statement released on Aug. 1.

Boy rescued by bystanders from Hersheypark elevated monorail

Boy rescued by bystanders from Hersheypark elevated monorail A young boy was rescued as he walked along an elevated monorail track at the He...
After being hidden away from public view, the gun used to kill Emmett Till is now on displayNew Foto - After being hidden away from public view, the gun used to kill Emmett Till is now on display

The weapon used to kill Black teenagerEmmett Tillin one of the most notorious lynchings that helped ignite the civil rights movement is nowon displayat a museum in the Deep South. Emmett was just 14 when he was kidnapped from his great-uncle's house by two White men who later admitted to beating and torturing the teen before shooting him in the head and throwing his body into the Tallahatchie River, weighed down by a 75-pound cotton gin fan. The .45-caliber pistol and worn saddle-brown holster, marked with the initials J.M., are part of an exhibit at the state's Two Mississippi Museums – the interconnected Museum of Mississippi History and Mississippi Civil Rights Museum – that aims to tell"the whole story"70 years after Emmett's murder. Emmett's murder in the Jim Crow South, and his mother's decision to hold a public open-casket funeral where thousands saw Emmett's mangled body, sparked global outrage and accelerated the civil rights movement in America. Writer Wright Thompson, who wrote an account of Emmett's death in his book "The Barn: The Secret History of a Murder in Mississippi," said inan article in The Atlantiche was tipped off about the gun and found it "sitting in a safe-deposit box" in a Mississippi bank. CNN reached out to Thompson for comment but did not immediately hear back. A spokesperson for the Mississippi Department of Archives and History confirmed Thompson's account of the events. The gun and its holster had been in the private ownership of a Mississippi family "that is not connected to the case," the state's Department of Archives and History said. TheFoundation for Mississippi Historynegotiated with the family and was able to acquire the weapon and holster under the condition that the family remain anonymous, Two Mississippi Museums Director Michael Morris said. "It wasn't until earlier this year that I fully understood that he (Emmettl) was shot," Morris said at a news conference about the artifacts on Thursday. "Most people know about the fact that he was brutally beaten and tortured, but it's important to know that he was shot as well, and so that gun being on display is going to help us tell that story." The weapon was authenticated through its serial number, which matches information from FBI records, according to Morris. The FBI and the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division closed their investigations into the infamous killing without filing federal charges, due to thestatute of limitationsand because they could not prove a key witnesslied to federal investigatorsabout her story. Deborah Watts, Emmett's cousin and the co-founder of theEmmett Till Legacy Foundation, said the family is "wrestling with an intellectual and spiritual conundrum" over the recovery and display of the gun. "The gun that was used in Emmett's heinous murder is in fact evidence in a case that, while closed, is one in which we still seek justice," Watts said in a statement to CNN. But in the absence of charges and with most people involved in the case now dead, the family said the exhibit honoring Emmett has special bearing. "We also understand the importance of the gun as an artifact for education so that current and future generations are able to reflect and grasp the importance in resisting erasure or the changing of historical facts," Watts said. TheChicago teenwas visiting family in Money, Mississippi, in thesummer of 1955when he had his fateful encounter withCarolyn Bryant Donham, who was 21 at the time. Accounts from that day differbut witnesses alleged Emmettwhistledat Bryant Donham after purchasing somebubble gumfrom the store she owned with her then-husband. Emmett wasfalsely accusedof flirting and making advances at Bryant Donham. Four days later, Bryant Donham's husband at the time, Roy Bryant, and his half-brother, J.W. Milam, rousted Emmett from his bed in the middle of the night, ordered him into the bed of a pickup and eventually beat him viciously before shooting him in the head. Both the gun and the holster originally belonged to Milam, who along with Bryant, admitted to the killing in a 1956 interview withLook Magazine, about four months after an all-White jurydeliberated for underan hour before acquitting the two, despiteeyewitnesses identifying the defendantsand the men confessing to kidnapping the teen. Morris said the Mississippi Department of Archives and History told Emmett's family that the artifacts would be on permanent display in a theater where a narrative film describes what happened "from the teen's entry into Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market to his murder." Rev. Wheeler Parker, whowitnessed his cousin Emmett's abduction, said displaying the murder weapon and holster is "good because it brings closure," according to theMississippi Department of Archives and History. "This weapon has affected me more so than any other artifact that I've encountered in my 30-year museum career," said Nan Prince, the director of collections for Mississippi's Department of Archives and History. "The emotions that are centered around it are hard. It's a hard thing to see and a hard thing to convey." To mark the 70th anniversary of Emmett's kidnapping and murder, the Emmett Till Interpretative Center this past week held a multi-daycommemoration programwhere national and civil rights leaders met to reflect on "the life and legacy of Emmett Till and advance the ongoing movement for racial justice." Commemorative events included a train ride from Chicago to Mississippi that echoed the one Emmett and his family took 70 years ago, "linking together sites that are important to the Emmett Till tragedy." The new exhibit comes as museums across the country face increased federal scrutiny, afterPresident Donald Trump allegedmuseums were too focused on highlighting negative aspects of American history, including "how bad slavery was." That announcement prompted the American Alliance of Museums, which represents 35,000 professionals in the sector, tospeak out against"growing threats of censorship against US museums." "These pressures can create a chilling effect across the entire museum sector," the group said. When asked about the current national debates about how to teach difficult history, Morris said his museum will continue doing public history work. "One of the reasons why the Civil Rights Museum was created is to tell the unvarnished truth about what happened in terms of the civil rights movement here in Mississippi, and that's our mission," he said. "And I think the acquisition of this artifact is a part of our mission, and so we're just going to continue doing public history work. And for us, you know, we're just doing our jobs." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

After being hidden away from public view, the gun used to kill Emmett Till is now on display

After being hidden away from public view, the gun used to kill Emmett Till is now on display The weapon used to kill Black teenagerEmmett Ti...
As U.S. fleet steams toward coast, Venezuelans face uncertainty, fear and, for some, hopeNew Foto - As U.S. fleet steams toward coast, Venezuelans face uncertainty, fear and, for some, hope

U.S. warships steam toward the southern Caribbean. The Trump administration denounces embattled "narco-president" Nicolás Maduro and doubles a bounty on his head to $50 million. Rumors of an invasion, coup or other form of U.S. intervention flood social media. For the beleaguered people of Venezuela, mired in more than a decade of crisis — hyperinflation, food shortages, authoritarian rule and rigged elections — a new phase of anxiety is once again rattling nerves. Even so, Venezuelans are trying to soldier on. "We try to keep up our activities, our schedules despite the uncertainty," said Leisy Torcatt, 44, a mother of three who heads a baseball school in a nation where a passion for sports helps fend off despair. "Our daily problems continue, but we cannot become paralyzed. ... We keep on going forward trying to work out our differences," she said. There is an inescapable sense here that matters are largely out of people's control. The massive anti-Maduro street protests of past years did little to dislodge, or undermine, Maduro, and the opposition has long been deeply divided. Authorities have jailed dissenters and broken up coup attempts. And now, once again, Venezuela appears to be in Washington's crosshairs. "We have already seen it all," said Mauricio Castillo, 28, a journalist. "It's not that we have lost faith in the possibility of real change. But we are fed up. We cannot just stop our lives, put them on hold waiting for 'something' to happen." Here in the capital, Venezuelans are accustomed to the enhanced martial ritual: more blockaded avenues, more troops on the streets, more barricades shielding the presidential palace of Miraflores, where Maduro launches diatribes against the "imperialist" would-be invaders. Yet, despite the current naval buildup in the Caribbean, the Trump administration has given very mixed signals on Venezuela. During Trump's first presidency, his administration recognized a shadow opposition president, indicted Maduro on drug-trafficking charges and imposed draconian sanctions on the oil and financial sectors. The sanctions effectively collapsed an already shaky economy in what was once South America's wealthiest nation. The economic meltdown led to an exodus of some 8 million Venezuelans, almost a third of the population. Most ended up elsewhere in South America, but hundreds of thousands made it to the United States. Trump has signaled emphatically that they are not welcome, ending Biden administration-era protections and stepping up deportations. During the presidential campaign — and since returning to the White House — Trump has repeatedly said, without evidence, that Venezuela had emptied its prisons and sent the worst offenders to the U.S. But shortly after taking office for his current term, Trump dispatched a special envoy, Richard Grenell, to meet with Maduro, generating hopes of improved relations. Washington later granted Chevron, the U.S. oil giant, a license to continue operating in Venezuela — home to the globe's largest oil reserves — in a move that provided much-needed hard cash for Caracas, and oil for the U.S. market. Then, in July, the Trump administrationhailed the releaseof 10 U.S. citizens and permanent residents being held in Venezuela in exchange for the return of hundreds of Venezuelan nationals who had beendeported to El Salvador. Meantime, the United States has regularly been sending other deportees back to Venezuela in another sign of bilateral cooperation. "So far we've seen President Trump very clearly endorse a policy of engagement with Venezuela," said Geoff Ramsey, senior fellow with the Atlantic Council, a Washington-based research group. "The U.S. is not going to invade Venezuela anytime soon." Others say they're not so sure, despite Trump's stated aversion to getting involved in more wars — and the likely negative blowback in much of Latin America, where the prospect of U.S. intervention inevitably revives memories of past invasions, land grabs and support for right-wing dictators. In the view of U.S. officials, Maduro and drug trafficking are inextricably entwined. The White House labels Maduro the head of the "Cartel of the Suns," a smuggling network allegedly tied to the Venezuelan government and military. And Trump has reportedlydirected the Pentagonto plan possible military action against Latin America cartels. (Maduro denies the drug charges, dismissing them as a U.S. disinformation campaign.) The massive scope of the U.S. naval employment seems to reflect the policy viewpoint of hawks such as Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who has long championed a hard-line stance against Venezuela. The buildup reportedly includes more than ahalf-dozen warships, including at least one submarine, and thousands of Marines and sailors. The White House says it's meant to deter maritime narcotics trafficking, not topple Maduro. "This is a lot of effort to put into something that's performance, no?" said Laura Cristina Dib, who heads Venezuelan research at the Washington Office on Latin America, a research group. In response, Maduro has bolstered militia sign-ups, deployed 15,000 troops to the border with Colombia and insisted there's "no way" U.S. forces can enter Venezuela. He scoffs at the U.S. contention that the naval buildup is an anti-smuggling effort, noting — correctly — that most cocaine is produced in neighboring Colombia and enters the United States via Mexico. "It's ridiculous to say they are fighting drug trafficking with nuclear submarines," Samuel Moncada, Venezuela's U.N. ambassador, told reporters Thursday. By most independent accounts, Maduro likely lost last year's election — monitors disputed his claimed victory — but his many backers are making a high-profile show of support given the U.S. saber-rattling. The government has orchestrated public sign-ups of militia members demonstrating their eagerness to fight for the socialist legacy of the late Hugo Chávez, Maduro's mentor and predecessor in Miraflores Palace. "None of us will be afraid when the moment comes to defend our country from foreign aggression," said Orlando López, 54, a grandfather and proud militiaman. "It's not justified that the president of some other country wants to impose his will." He rejected the notion of a pervasive sense of nervousness. "The climate in the city is one of tranquility, of peace," said López, who is part of a more-than-1-million civilian militia force backing Maduro. On a recent Sunday at Santo Domingo de Guzmán Roman Catholic Church in the capital's Baruta district, Father Leonardo Marius urged parishioners to ignore the drumbeat of war pounding the airwaves and internet. Venezuelans, he said, should focus on more basic concerns. "In Venezuela, a half a million children don't have enough to eat — no one talks about that," Marius told parishioners in his sermon. "But we love the Hollywood stories of boats and aircraft carriers, the show. ... 'They are coming! They are are disembarking!' Please! Hollywood has done a lot of damage. Let the stories be." Across town, at an upscale sports club, Javier Martín, a businessman, said the noise was hard to ignore. "The atmosphere across the country, but especially here in Caracas, is one of fear, distress, uncertainty," said Martín. "You see hooded officials on the streets and it makes you feel fear, like you are in a war." Venezuelans, he explained, live a kind of "surreal" existence, struggling to maintain their lives and families while always anticipating improvements, and changes, that never seem to come. "We live cornered every day," he said. "It's not sustainable." What's next? "Everyone expects something to happen," Martín said. "I just hope it's positive." Special correspondent Mogollón reported from Caracas and Times staff writer McDonnell from Mexico City. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

As U.S. fleet steams toward coast, Venezuelans face uncertainty, fear and, for some, hope

As U.S. fleet steams toward coast, Venezuelans face uncertainty, fear and, for some, hope U.S. warships steam toward the southern Caribbean....
Kremlin says Europe is hindering Trump's peace efforts on UkraineNew Foto - Kremlin says Europe is hindering Trump's peace efforts on Ukraine

MOSCOW (Reuters) -The Kremlin said that European powers were hindering U.S. President Donald Trump's efforts to achieve peace in Ukraine and that Russia would continue its operation in Ukraine until Moscow saw real signs that Kyiv was ready for peace. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Russian state media reporters that the "European party of war" was continuing to hinder U.S. and Russian efforts on Ukraine. "We are ready to resolve the problem by political and diplomatic means," Peskov said. "But so far we do not see reciprocity from Kyiv in this. So we shall continue the special military operation." Russian President Vladimir 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. Russia currently controls a little under one fifth of Ukraine. European powers say that they do not believe Putin wants peace in Ukraine. Putin has repeatedly said he is ready to discuss peace but that Russia will not give up any of the land that it has taken in Ukraine. Russian Defence Minister Andrei Belousov said on Friday that the Russian army had sped up its rate of advance in Ukraine and was taking control of 600-700 square km (502 square miles) a month compared to 300-400 square km at the start of the year. (Reporting by Reuters; editing by Guy Faulconbridge)

Kremlin says Europe is hindering Trump's peace efforts on Ukraine

Kremlin says Europe is hindering Trump's peace efforts on Ukraine MOSCOW (Reuters) -The Kremlin said that European powers were hindering...
Israel to halt airdrops ahead of Gaza City offensive as hostage families lash out at NetanyahuNew Foto - Israel to halt airdrops ahead of Gaza City offensive as hostage families lash out at Netanyahu

Israel is set to halt airdrops over Gaza City and reduce the entry of relief trucks ahead of a major offensive, a source told CNN, as the Red Cross warned that Israeli plans for mass evacuation were "impossible." The Israeli military is preparing to fully capture Gaza's biggest city after nearly two years of war, despite growing opposition at home and warnings that the campaign will have disastrous and unbearable consequencesfor Palestiniansin the besieged region. In Tel Aviv, crowds of protesters demanded that the government pursue a ceasefire rather than escalate its offensive. Families of hostages being held in Gaza blasted the Israeli government for its failure to consider the latest ceasefire proposal, which Hamas accepted nearly two weeks ago. The Israeli military has carried out heavy bombing and ground attacks on Gaza City in recent days, eyewitnesses and Palestinian authorities say, choking vital services and leaving hundreds of thousands of people crammed into an ever-shrinking area. At least 47 people were killed in Gaza City on Saturday, according to Gaza hospital figures. An Israeli strike on Al-Nasr Street in the west of the city killed at least 15 Palestinians, including six children, local health officials said. CNN footage from the courtyard of a hospital showed a row of dead children shrouded in floral blankets. Family members mourn over their small, lifeless bodies, including a toddler wearing a grey onesie with a dinosaur print. "I don't know what happened," one man told CNN. "These children are the beloved of God. What was their sin?" CNN has reached out to the Israeli military for comment. Another Israeli attack on a building housing displaced Palestinians in the Al-Rimal neighborhood of Gaza City killed at least seven people, according to Gaza Civil Defense on Saturday. Video from the scene soon after the attack showed numerous children wandering dazed, covered in blood and dust. One person lies in the street, his head cracked open in a pool of blood, while a boy is carried away on an improvised stretcher. The Israeli military told CNN in a statement that the attack targeted a "key Hamas terrorist" and claimed that numerous mitigation techniques were employed to reduce harm to civilians. On Friday, the military declared Gaza City a "dangerous combat zone" ahead of the planned assault, which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says will target what he calls one of Hamas'"remaining strongholds." This week Israeli drones circled over several areas in and around the city to drop leaflets, according to Gaza City residents, telling people to evacuate to south of Wadi Gaza, which bisects the Strip. But the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has denounced the move. "It is impossible that a mass evacuation of Gaza City could ever be done in a way that is safe and dignified under the current conditions," ICRC President Mirjana Spoljaric said ina statement, warning that starving, disabled and injured Palestinians were incapable of moving. "Such an evacuation would trigger a massive population movement that no area in the Gaza Strip can absorb, given the widespread destruction of civilian infrastructure and the extreme shortages of food, water, shelter and medical care," added Spoljaric. Hamas accepted a proposal for a 60-day ceasefire two weeks ago, but Netanyahu has refused to consider it. The proposal calls for a 60-day ceasefire and the release of 10 living hostages, as well as 18 deceased hostages. In exchange, Israel would release a number of Palestinian prisoners. According to a source familiar with the planning, the security cabinet will not discuss the proposal at the meeting on Sunday. The security cabinet also failed to discuss the proposal at its meeting last week. "If it looks like sabotage, if it sounds like sabotage - it's probably deliberate sabotage of the hostage deal," the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said in a statement. One hostage's mother warned that if Netanyahu decides to conquer Gaza City and ignore the current ceasefire proposal on the table, he will be "spilling the blood of Israeli citizens." Speaking at the weekly anti-war protest, Einav Zangkauer vowed to ensure that Netanyahu is "charged with premeditated murder" if her son, Matan, is not returned alive from Gaza. "Netanyahu, if Matan comes back in a bag, not only will Matan and I pay the price, but I will personally make sure you are charged with premeditated murder," Einav Zangkauer said on Saturday. Zangauker has become one of Netanyahu's fiercest and most vocal critics, lambasting him publicly for not accepting ceasefire deals that she says could have brought about Matan's release from Hamas captivity. More than one million people are displaced in the central and western parts of Gaza City alone, a municipality spokesperson said on Saturday, warning that conditions are already "dire." "We expect a sharp increase in the number of casualties if the occupation expands its military operation," said Asem Alnabih. "We are facing a total collapse of service, as the occupation continues to prevent the entry of fuel and the machinery we need." A senior UN official warned this week that residents inside Gaza City – who face physical exhaustion, hunger, malnourishment and fatigue – are also under the constant shadow of bombing, weakening their ability to make life or death decisions. "These people are facing death. Yet, they are now facing the threat of an invasion," Sam Rose, the acting director of affairs for the UN's agency for Palestine refugees (UNRWA) in Gaza told CNN. "They're being terrorized 24 hours a day." The Israeli military has announced plans to stop 10-hour "tactical pauses" in hostilities, which began a month ago after severe aid restrictions, siege and bombing wrought deadly starvation in the enclave. Further aid restrictions will likely only worsen Palestinians' plight. Nearly 700 days of war have brought"man-made" famineto parts of Gaza, the Integrated Food Security and Nutrition Phase Classification reported last week. Israel has rejected the IPC's findings and called on the body to retract its report. One young woman displaced with her family in Tal al-Hawa, western Gaza City – including six siblings aged three to 18 – told CNN she has lost 16 kilograms (35 pounds) since the hostilities began. "The international community watches this genocide and famine, and does nothing," Raghad Ezzat Hamouda, a Palestinian student, said. "We are human beings. Our children are dying of hunger in front of the cameras," added Hamouda. "Your silence is killing us. We need action, not just words." In the past 24 hours, a further 10 people died of starvation and malnutrition in Gaza bringing the total to at least 332 Palestinians since October 7, 2023, the health ministry reported on Saturday. Of those who died, 124 were children, the ministry added. Israeli strikes in Gaza following the Hamas-led October 7, 2023, attacks have killed 63,371 Palestinians and injured another 159,835 people, according to the Ministry of Health in the enclave. CNN's Nadeen Ebrahim, Oren Liebermann and Kareem Khadder contributed reporting. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Israel to halt airdrops ahead of Gaza City offensive as hostage families lash out at Netanyahu

Israel to halt airdrops ahead of Gaza City offensive as hostage families lash out at Netanyahu Israel is set to halt airdrops over Gaza City...
Australian government signs deal to deport former detainees to the tiny island country of NauruNew Foto - Australian government signs deal to deport former detainees to the tiny island country of Nauru

Australia and Nauru signed an agreement on Friday to allow the Australian government to deport formerly detained people without valid visas to the tiny island nation, the Australian Associated Press reported. Under the memorandum of understanding, Australia will pay Nauru 408 million Australian dollars ($267 million) up front once the first people arrive, followed by 70 million Australian dollars ($46 million) annually for the resettlement. The move is being slammed by refugee advocates, some of whom say the deal could open the door to mass deportations without notice. Human rights organizations have protested deportations to Nauru since a report by the United Nations found "systematic violations" of the International Convention Against Torture. Tony Burke, Australia's home affairs minister, said in a statement that the memorandum "contains undertakings for the proper treatment and long-term residence of people who have no legal right to stay in Australia, to be received in Nauru." The two countries struck a deal inFebruaryto allow Australia to deport three violent criminals to Nauru. They were granted 30-year visas. AnAustralian High Court decisionin 2023 overturned the government's policy of indefinite detention forimmigrantswho could neither get a visa, in some cases because of criminal conduct, nor be deported because they would face persecution or harm in their home countries. More than 200 immigrants have been released from detention as a result of the case. Some were charged with further offenses after their release. Burke said the Nauru deal would target this group. "Anyone who doesn't have a valid visa should leave the country," he said. "This is a fundamental element of a functioning visa system." In astatement posted online, Jana Favero, deputy CEO of the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre, criticized the agreement. "This deal is discriminatory, disgraceful and dangerous," she said. "At a time when the entire country has just voted for unity and rejected fear, rather than embrace this and show leadership, the Albanese Government has launched yet another attack on migrants and refugees."

Australian government signs deal to deport former detainees to the tiny island country of Nauru

Australian government signs deal to deport former detainees to the tiny island country of Nauru Australia and Nauru signed an agreement on F...
CDC workers told to return to office on September 15, weeks after gunman attacked headquartersNew Foto - CDC workers told to return to office on September 15, weeks after gunman attacked headquarters

Workers at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have been told to return to the office September 15 – a little over a month after a gunman attacked the agency's Atlanta campus,firing almost 500 shotsand killing a police officer before dying of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The push for workers to return to the office was shared in an email to staff, a Health and Human Services spokesperson confirmed. The announcement comes just weeks after the August 8 attack left CDC staff reeling, with one staffersaying employees felt like "sitting ducks"as the shooter unloaded hundreds of bullets, around 200 of which struck six CDC buildings, leaving bullet holes in windows. Employees, who were preparing to leave for the weekend, say they took cover under their desks as bullets flew over their heads. Many workers have been working remotely since. CDC staffers whose workspaces remain impacted by the shooting will be assigned alternate spaces, according to the HHS spokesperson. The agency's return-to-office plan was first reported by CNBC. The shooting unfolded duringa tumultuous timefor the CDC: The agency, which is tasked with protecting Americans' health, lost about a quarter of its staff during widespreadreduction-in-force layoffs of federal employeesled by the Trump administration earlier this year. And just earlier this week, at least 600 CDC employeesreceived permanent termination notices, according to the American Federation of Government Employees. This week, CDC DirectorSusan Monarez was oustedfrom her position after clashing with HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy overvaccine policyand her refusal to fire several veteran CDC leaders, according to people familiar with the situation. Her removal was followed by the resignations of several senior leaders. Late this week, Kennedy saidDeputy HHS Secretary Jim O'Neillwill serve as acting director of the CDC. "Our agency is crumbling," a source within the CDC, who is not allowed to speak to the media and did not want to be identified for fear of retribution, told CNN after Monarez's departure. The agency has also been the subject of dogged conspiracy theories surroundingthe Covid-19 vaccine– which may have contributed to the deadly attack. The gunman, 30-year-old Patrick Joseph White, had expressed discontent with the Covid-19 vaccine in writtendocumentsrecovered from his home. He "wanted to make the public aware of his public distrust of the vaccines," Georgia Bureau of Investigation director Chris Hosey previously said. More than 750 HHS employees implored Kennedy – a longtime critic of vaccines, including the Covid-19 vaccine – tostop spreading false informationabout vaccines and denigrating public health workers in a letter last week. The letter tied the deadly August shooting to political attacks on health agencies. "The attack came amid growing mistrust in public institutions, driven by politicized rhetoric that has turned public health professionals from trusted experts into targets of villainization – and now, violence," wrote the staffers, who emphasized they signed the letter "in our own personal capacities." Some signed anonymously "out of fear of retaliation and personal safety." The shooter who attacked the CDC stole five weapons from his father's safe, including a long gun, which was used for most of the shots, according to state investigators. White, wearing what appeared to be a surgical mask and armed with two handguns, a rifle, a shotgun and two backpacks filled with ammo, began shooting at the CDC campus and triggered a lockdown at the agency as well as nearby Emory University. Almost 100 children at a daycare on the campus were locked down, too. One unidentified witness described seeing the gunman shoot at a police officer on a 911 call, according toaudio released this weekby the Atlanta Police Department. "He's still shooting," the caller said. "He's shooting at the officer." The sound of gunfire is audible during the call. "Officer's hit, officer's down," the caller said. David Rose, a DeKalb County Police officer who arrived during the attack, was fatally shot. He left behind a pregnant wife and two children. No one at the CDC was injured in the shooting. White had no known criminal history. He was found dead on the second floor of the CVS store, directly across from the CDC's main entrance. Aliki Pappas Weakland, who works at the CDC, recalled in a social media post earlier this month the terror she felt during the attack. "I dropped to the floor when the shooting started. The fear that gripped me as the gunfire continued in a steady stream for an endless 15 minutes," she wrote after the attack. "My knees are chafed and hurting from crawling on the floor with my colleagues as we scrambled to seek shelter." CNN's Meg Tirrell, Chris Youd, Brenda Goodman, Ryan Young, Jason Morris, Dakin Andone, Dalia Faheid, and Sarah Dewberry contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

CDC workers told to return to office on September 15, weeks after gunman attacked headquarters

CDC workers told to return to office on September 15, weeks after gunman attacked headquarters Workers at the US Centers for Disease Control...
Humans are being hired to make AI slop look less sloppyNew Foto - Humans are being hired to make AI slop look less sloppy

The same technology that was supposed to put graphic designer Lisa Carstens out of business is now keeping her busier than ever. Carstens, a longtime freelancer based in Spain, spends a good portion of her day working with startups and individual clients looking to fix their botched attempts at AI-generated logos. The illustrations clients bring to her are commonly littered with unclean lines and nonsensical text, and they look like a mess of pixels when blown up beyond a certain size. "There's people that are aware AI isn't perfect, and then there's people that come to you angry because they didn't manage to get it done themselves with AI," Carstens said. "And you kind of have to be empathetic. You don't want them to feel like idiots. Then you have to fix it." Such gigs are part of a new category of work spawned by the generative AI boom that threatened to displace creative jobs across the board: Anyone can now write blog posts, produce a graphic or code an app with a few text prompts, but AI-generated content rarely makes for a satisfactory final product on its own. The issue has transformed the job market for many gig workers. Despite widespread concern that AI is replacing workers across industries, some are saying they've found new work as a result of AI's incompetencies: Writers are asked to spruce up ChatGPT's writing. Artists are being hired to patch up wonky AI images. Even software developers are tasked with fixing buggy apps coded by AI assistants. Arecent MIT reportfound that AI has displaced outsourced workers more than permanent employees. But it also found that 95% of businesses' generative AI pilots are getting zero return on investment. "The core barrier to scaling is not infrastructure, regulation, or talent," the report states. "It is learning. Most GenAI systems do not retain feedback, adapt to context, or improve over time." For Carstens, the AI-generated logos clients send her are sometimes well-designed enough that they require only a few fixes on her end. But other times, delivering a quality result requires Carstens to redraw the entire logo from scratch while remaining true to the AI-generated design, which often takes longer than if she were to have come up with a design herself. Fixing AI's mistakes is not their ideal line of work, many freelancers say, as it tends to pay less than traditional gigs in their area of expertise. But some say it's what helps pay the bills. "That's all you can do, is learn and adapt," said freelance writer Kiesha Richardson. "And I have some colleagues who are adamant about not working with AI. But I'm like, 'I need money. I'm taking it.'" Richardson, who is based in Georgia, said half of her jobs nowadays come from clients who hire her to tweak or rewrite their AI-generated articles that "don't look remotely human at all." Some of the flaws are easier to correct: AI's overuse of em dashes, even in places where other punctuation would make more sense, or its clear bias toward words like "embark," "deep dive" and "delve." Beyond those quirks, however, Richardson said AI tends to give generic responses that don't answer questions as thoroughly as a human would, so rewriting an article also requires doing her own research on the topic at hand. But many clients don't appreciate the work that goes into revamping a poorly written AI article, she said, noting that companies often offer less pay for these gigs based on the assumption that they're less demanding. But making AI sound more human can require just as much thinking and creativity as writing the entire article herself, she said. "I am a bit concerned because people are using AI to cut costs, and one of those costs is my pay," Richardson said. "But at the same time, they find out that they can't really do it without humans. They're not getting the content that they want from AI, so hopefully we'll stick around a little longer." As companies struggle to figure out their approach to AI, recent data provided to NBC News from freelance job platforms Upwork, Freelancer and Fiverr also suggest that demand for various types of creative work surged this year, and that clients are increasingly looking for humans who can work alongside AI technologies without relying on or rejecting them entirely. Data from Upwork found that although AI is already automating lower-skilled and repetitive tasks, the platform is seeing growing demand for more complex work such as content strategy or creative art direction. And over the past six months, Fiverr said it has seen a 250% boost in demand for niche tasks across web design and book illustration, from "watercolor children story book illustration" to "Shopify website design." Similarly, Freelancer saw a surge in demand this year for humans in writing, branding, design and video production, including requests for emotionally engaging content like "heartfelt speeches." "I mean, the fastest way to get dumped is to send a love letter to your girlfriend or boyfriend and use ChatGPT to write it," Matt Barrie, CEO of Freelancer, said of the phenomenon. "And it's the same thing for brands. The market knows when something has been fully produced by AI, and there's an immediate visceral reaction to it." Brands caught using AI have continued to face backlash from consumers. Last month, Guess sparked outcry online when itfeatured an AI-generated modelin an advertisement that appeared in Vogue. So even outside of any obvious mistakes made by AI tools, some artists say their clients simply want a human touch to distinguish themselves from the growing pool of AI-generated content online. To Todd Van Linda, an illustrator and comic artist in Florida, AI art is easily discernible, if not by certain telltale inconsistencies in the details, then by the plasticine effect that defines AI-generated images across a range of styles. "I can look at a piece and not only tell that it's AI, I can tell you what descriptor they used to generate it," Van Linda said. "When it comes to, especially, independent authors, they don't want anything to do with that because it's so formulaic, it's obvious. It's like they stopped off at Walmart to get a bargain cover for their book." Authors come to him, he said, because they know that AI-generated art fails to capture the hyperspecific "vibe" of their individual story. Often, his clients can only give him a rough idea of what they want. It's then Van Linda's job to decipher their preferences and create something that draws out the exact feeling each client seeks to evoke from their art. Van Linda said he also gets approached by people who want him to "fix" their AI-generated art, but he avoids those jobs now because he has realized those clients are typically less willing to pay him what he believes his labor is worth. "There would be more work involved in fixing those images than there would be in starting from a clean sheet of paper and doing it right, because what they have is a mismatched collection of generalities that really don't follow what they're trying to do," he said. "But they're trying to wedge the square peg into the round hole because they don't want to spend any more money." The low pay from clients who have already cheaped out on AI tools has affected gig workers across industries, including more technical ones like coding. For India-based web and app developer Harsh Kumar, many of his clients say they had already invested much of their budget in "vibe coding" tools that couldn't deliver the results they wanted. But others, he said, are realizing that shelling out for a human developer is worth the headaches saved from trying to get an AI assistant to fix its own "crappy code." Kumar said his clients often bring him vibe-coded websites or apps that resulted in unstable or wholly unusable systems. His projects have included fixing an AI-powered support chatbot that gave customers inaccurate answers — and sometimes leaked sensitive system details due to poor safety measures — and rebuilding an AI content recommendation system that frequently crashed, gave irrelevant recommendations and exposed sensitive data. "AI may increase productivity, but it can't fully replace humans," Kumar said. "I'm still confident that humans will be required for long-term projects. At the end of the day, humans were the ones who developed AI."

Humans are being hired to make AI slop look less sloppy

Humans are being hired to make AI slop look less sloppy The same technology that was supposed to put graphic designer Lisa Carstens out of b...
Former Colombian rebels and soldiers work together to exhume remains, give families closureNew Foto - Former Colombian rebels and soldiers work together to exhume remains, give families closure

By Julia Symmes Cobb PALMIRA, Colombia (Reuters) -For nearly a year the ex-rebels worked shoulder to shoulder with their former enemies - retired soldiers from the Colombian military - in a place that viscerally expresses the toll of Colombia's six decades of conflict: a cemetery. The former combatants helped exhume unidentified remains believed to belong to conflict victims and then refurbished this corner of the cemetery in Palmira, in western Colombia, building new ossuaries and a tiny chapel. The project - the first of its kind - is a reparation effort taking place under the terms of the 2016 peace deal which led to the demobilization of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebels and set up a transitional justice court to try former guerrillas and military members for war crimes. At least 450,000 people are known to have been killed in Colombia's long civil war. A further 132,877 people are recorded as disappeared - their whereabouts unknown. The vast majority are likely dead. The ex-combatants taking part in this project were largely mid-level commanders, and their work will be taken into consideration by the transitional justice court when eventual reparations sentences are handed out. The process forced the ex-combatants to see their erstwhile adversaries as human beings, they told Reuters, and also to engage with conflict victims. "We're human beings. They took one side and we took the other, theirs an illegal one and ours a legal one. And in the end we all found ourselves on the same path," said retired army sergeant Fabian Durango, who spent 16 years in the military after joining in 1998. "We're here to try and mitigate the evil we did," said Durango, a veteran of special forces and counter-insurgency units who spent months in the deep jungle. Durango, who was 15 when he joined the army, is facing charges in the court's probe into so-called "false positives," when soldiers murdered civilians and reported them as guerrillas killed in combat to receive benefits. "In that moment you thought of yourself more than anything," said Durango, who admits the crimes. "It's a harm that whatever you do or don't do, you'll never repay." "The pain of their mothers has no reparation," he said. A former FARC commander who uses the nom de guerre Leonel Paez and declined to give his real name because he feared threats from former comrades said the Palmira project showed understanding is possible. "We became friends, and we didn't look at each other differently because you were a soldier or a rebel," he said. "Destiny put us against each other." Paez joined the FARC in 1979, when he was 17, and is accused of participating in kidnappings for ransom and of crimes committed in the region around Palmira. He says he may also face charges over child recruitment. 'FORGOTTEN CORNER' The remains of unidentified bodies exhumed from the area of the cemetery known by locals as "the forgotten corner" will have DNA samples taken and compared to a database of families of the disappeared. If identified, their families can choose where to give their loved ones a final, proper burial. Some victims' groups have painted a mural and planted a flower garden around the restored area. Judith Casallas is happy the resting place is now more dignified. Her 19-year-old daughter Mary Johanna Lopez disappeared with boyfriend Jose Didier Duque in 2007 in the nearby town of Pance, where the couple had gone in search of a cabin to rent for his birthday. No trace of them has ever been found. Casallas' participation in the project put her in contact with ex-combatants who were active when her daughter, the youngest of three girls and a voracious reader, vanished. "It was useful to communicate to them where my daughter disappeared. There were a lot of people here from that time, both army and (FARC) signatories," Casallas said, adding that some ex-combatants told her they would ask around about her case. Casallas, who suffers from heart and kidney problems, still buys a Christmas present for Mary Johanna every year. She has 18 saved up. She urged ex-combatants to tell the truth about their crimes to potentially help find the remains of the disappeared. "The day that I get my daughter's remains, I will believe she's gone," said Casallas. Some families are getting answers. On Tuesday, the remains of Wilson Losada Borrero were interred at Palmira. He was 19 when he disappeared in 2002 and was the first to be placed in the new ossuaries constructed during the project. His parents, siblings and other family members offered prayers as a worker cemented a plaque bearing his name and the image of a dove over his ossuary. "Today I thank God that I have him. Even if it's his bones," said his mother Maricela Borrero, who remembered her son as affectionate and a lover of football. Other mothers looking for their disappeared children should not lose hope, she said. "Yes, I feel sadness, but God has given me the tranquility, the courage to confront this." The Search Unit for the Disappeared, or UBPD, created under the peace deal to find the country's missing, led the exhumations at the Palmira cemetery. Records dating back to 1982 show at least 600 unidentified people were buried in the now-refurbished corner, said Marcela Rodriguez, the UBPD's regional investigator for nearby Cali. So far, 72 have been exhumed. Those not initially identified through DNA will be placed in the ossuaries. As many as 60% of Colombia's disappeared may have ended up in cemeteries, which are a major focus for recovery of remains nationwide, UBPD's national director Luz Janeth Forero told Reuters after a ceremony where the restored part of the cemetery was handed over by ex-combatants to the community. "This is a lesson for the country, to insist that peace is possible," said Rodriguez. "That we can do it, with small actions and concrete works." (Reporting by Julia Symmes Cobb, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)

Former Colombian rebels and soldiers work together to exhume remains, give families closure

Former Colombian rebels and soldiers work together to exhume remains, give families closure By Julia Symmes Cobb PALMIRA, Colombia (Reuters...
'Oh, my, gosh, they would never have known:' New warnings about rabies outbreaks as cases riseNew Foto - 'Oh, my, gosh, they would never have known:' New warnings about rabies outbreaks as cases rise

Six deaths from rabies have been reported over the last 12 months in the U.S., the highest number in years, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. From rabid skunks in Kentucky to gray foxes in Arizona and raccoons on Long Island, wild animals in more than a dozen places across the U.S. have experienced a rise in the deadly disease, at least partly driven by shrinking natural habitats and better surveillance. "We are currently tracking 15 different likely outbreaks," said Dr. Ryan Wallace, who leads the rabies team at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Areas with outbreaks include Nassau County, New York, which issued a health threat over rabid animals last month, as well as Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and parts of Alaska, Arizona, California, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, North Carolina, Oregon and Vermont. "There are parts of the United States where it does seem like we're getting more calls and more reports," Wallace said, noting an increase in rabid foxes in the West and rabid bats across the country. "Whether those numbers are truly significant increases, we can only tell at the end of the year. But right now, at peak rabies season, it does seem like activity is higher." Rabies is present in all states except Hawaii. Bats are the most common cause ofrabies infection in peopleand are also the most likely species to beinfected with the virus, according to the CDC. Each year,1.4 million Americansare checked for possible exposure to the rabies virus and 100,000 receive a series of vaccine injections to prevent them from becoming ill, according to the CDC. Last month, Samantha Lang was one of them. Land, 22, was likely bitten by a bat that flew into her apartment from a hole in her ceiling in Greenwood, Indiana. The day after she noticed tiny marks on her arm, she discovered the bat, alive, hanging from her air conditioning vent. After contacting her local health department, she was urged to receive rabies post-exposure prophylaxis. She got it immediately. "I never thought that I would have to worry about it," Lang said. The rabies virus invades the central nervous system and is almost always fatal once symptoms start. Early symptoms, which can begin about a week or up to a year after exposure, may resemble the flu and progress quickly to confusion, paralysis, salivating, hallucinations and difficulty swallowing, followed by death within weeks. The number of human deaths over the last year is concerning, experts say. In comparison, from 2015 to 2024, 17 cases of human rabies were reported, two of which were contracted outside the U.S., according to the CDC. People are most often exposed to the rabies virus through the saliva of an infected wild animal that can get into the mouth, eyes or a wound, which is why bites are so dangerous. Prior to the 1960s, most cases in humans were from infected pets, usually a dog. Thanks to strict pet vaccination laws, the canine strain of rabies has been eliminated from the U.S. One of the more dramatic increases in wildlife infections has been in Franklin County, near the Research Triangle region of central North Carolina, which experienced a doubling of confirmed cases in wild animals over the past year. "For the number of confirmed cases to go up 100%, and we're not even over this year's rabies season, that's a big deal," said Scott LaVigne, the county's health director. LaVigne suspects that the urban growth that's been encroaching on wild animal habitats has been an important factor driving the spread of rabies. "The population of Franklin County since 2010 has increased 35%, and those people have to live somewhere," he said. "And so you're seeing increased land development and housing tracts going in." Animals that might have been isolated before are now crowded together, and if one gets rabies, it's more likely to spread to others in the group, LaVigne said. People may not always know they've been exposed to a rabid animal. There have been reported deaths from people whodidn't realize they had been bittenor scratched by a bat and who had refused the lifesaving vaccines. In December, aCalifornia teacher died a monthafter removing a bat from her classroom. She didn't know she'd been infected. The virus can evolve and manifest in different ways, depending on the animal species and the strain. Most people expect a rabid animal to be aggressive and vicious, but sometimes the infected animal can be quite docile. "There's a strain of rabies where the animals get very, very friendly," LaVigne said. A "family saw a raccoon that kind of showed up on their front step and he was sick and he was so cute and wanted to be petted. And you know when raccoons aren't barring their teeth they are pretty cute." The family petted and fed the animal until it died. They called animal services to pick up the body "and thank God they did, because when they sent the brain out to be tested, it was positive, and so the whole family had to get vaccinated," LaVigne said. "Oh, my gosh, they never would have known if they hadn't called animal services." As rabies seems to be spreading more in wildlife, veterinarians are especially worried about vaccine hesitancy spreading among pet owners, a dangerous trend that could lead to more dogs — and their owners — becoming infected. A 2023 study published in the journalVaccinefound in a nationally representative sample of Americans that nearly 40% believed canine vaccines were unsafe and 37% believed that vaccines could lead their dogs to develop cognitive issues, such as autism. Dr. Gabriella Motta, a veterinarian from Glenolden, Pennsylvania, and a co-author of the study, says she often sees clients who are concerned vaccines might hurt their dog. "It's an issue we're worried about, that could be on the rise in the future," Motta said. "If we continue to see plummeting vaccination rates or increasing vaccine hesitancy, are we going to see [rabies] in more pets, and not just wildlife? We're kind of starting to sound the alarms." Rabies vaccines after exposure have come a long way since the shots were injected into people's abdomens. The current series involves an injected dose of immunoglobulin, which contains rabies antibodies, immediately after exposure, followed by four vaccine injections. All the shots are now given in the arm. The rule of thumb, experts say, is that rabies should be suspected any time a wild animal is behaving in an aberrant way, whether it's too aggressive, too fearless or too friendly.

'Oh, my, gosh, they would never have known:' New warnings about rabies outbreaks as cases rise

'Oh, my, gosh, they would never have known:' New warnings about rabies outbreaks as cases rise Six deaths from rabies have been repo...
India looks to mend ties with China as Trump's tariffs push it away from U.S.New Foto - India looks to mend ties with China as Trump's tariffs push it away from U.S.

HONG KONG —Indiais increasingly important to the United States as a key Asian security partner and a counterweight toChina. But PresidentDonald Trump's tariffs may be pushing it closer to Beijing instead. Indian Prime MinisterNarendra Modiis in China this weekend for the first time in seven years to attend a security forum with other world leaders including Russian PresidentVladimir Putin. On Sunday Modi and Chinese PresidentXi Jinpingmet in Tianjin, where China is hosting a summit of the 10-member Shanghai Cooperation Organisation. Xi told Modi that the world's two most populous countries should be "partners rather than rivals" and that the "dragon" and "elephant" should come together. Modi told Xi that they were "committed to progressing our relations based on mutual respect, trust and sensitivities." Their meeting comes days after the Trump administrationdoubled tariffs on Indian importsto 50% as punishment for buying Russian oil. The stinging levy, one of the highest on any U.S. trading partner in the world, has raised concerns that it could push India closer to China despite years of tensions. "Until about three, four months ago, relations between China and India were not bad, they were very bad. They were not talking to each other," said Kishore Mahbubani, a Singaporean diplomat and former president of the United Nations Security Council. "I have to give credit where it's due: President Donald Trump's decision to impose a 50% tariff on India is one of the biggest shocks that India has ever got in recent times," Mahbubani said Wednesday at an event in Hong Kong organized by the University of Hong Kong's Centre on Contemporary China and the World. India, along with China, is a top purchaser of Russian crude oil, which Trump says is helping to fund Moscow's war on Ukraine. New Delhi says such criticism is "unjustified and unreasonable," and that the U.S. previously encouraged it to buy the oil to keep global prices from soaring as Western countries suspended their purchases. While India and China share a common grievance over Trump's tariffs, which in China's case have reachedas high as 145%, analysts say their relationship still faces major challenges and that Modi's China visit is mainly a symbolic display of resilience. "Xi wants Modi and India to show that they are working with him and with China to the extent that they are not following the Trump or U.S. lead in containing China," said Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at the SOAS University of London. Earlier this month, the Chinese ambassador to New Delhi delivered a rare public defense of India against the tariff increase, calling the U.S. a "bully." It was a major step up from the deep freeze that began in 2020 with a border clash in India's Himalayan region of Ladakh that killed at least 20 Indian and four Chinese soldiers and plunged relations so low that the two countries suspended direct flights. Only seven months ago, India was entering Trump's second presidential term in a relatively strong position, with Modi among the first world leaders to visit his "dear friend" at the White House. But tensions soon arose, with Trump complaining that Apple wasproducing iPhones in Indiainstead of the U.S. India also rejected Trump's claim that hebrokered a ceasefirein its four-day conflict with neighboring Pakistan. New Delhi was further incensed weeks later when Trump hosted Pakistan's powerful army chief at the White House in an unprecedented meeting. "The Indians saw this as a slap in the face for them," Mahbubani said. "So there is now, even as we are speaking, a tremendous amount of re-evaluation going on in Delhi about where India's place in the world is." At the same time, China and India have been moving cautiously to restore their relationship, reaching a deal toresolve their 2020 border standoffand announcing theresumption of direct flights. But not everybody is convinced about China extending a friendly hand, and the two countries still have major differences. One of the biggest is China's ties with Pakistan, India's archrival and a fellow nuclear power. During their conflict in May, Pakistan said it had used Chinese-made J-10C fighter jets to shoot down Indian military aircraft. "There was a huge step up in the kind of assistance that the Chinese were providing Pakistan, not merely in terms of selling them equipment and platforms, but on intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance," Gautam Bambawale, a former Indian ambassador to Beijing, said in an interview. "So we will go by actions on those things." Bambawale said it could take "months, if not years" for the relationship to return to where it was before 2020, let alone reach new heights. Though India and China are strong trading partners, that has not been enough to smooth over other diplomatic issues. Earlier this month, after a meeting in New Delhi between Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and his Indian counterpart, S. Jaishankar, Beijing released a readout suggesting Jaishankar had acknowledged thatTaiwan, a self-governing island democracy, "is a part of China." When asked if Jaishankar made that statement, an Indian government official who was familiar with the discussions between the diplomats but not authorized to speak to the media, told NBC News that there was no change in India's position on Taiwan. "We stressed that like the rest of the world, India has a relationship with Taiwan that focuses on economic, technology and cultural ties," the official said. The clarification, which was also reported by Indian news organizations, prompted Beijing to double down, saying it was a "surprise" and "inconsistent with the facts." "It would seem that some people in India have tried to undermine China's sovereignty on the Taiwan question and impede the improvement of China-India relations," Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said. The two countries also have other border disputes as well as a manufacturing rivalry that may only worsen as companies try to shift production from China. China, which is worried about technology transfer, has imposed curbs on the export of rare earth materials to India and recalled some of its nationals working in specialized roles. "The meeting between Modi and Xi will not remove the structural issues between India and China," Tsang said. "But the big issue for Xi outside of China now is U.S. pressure, and making sure India does not appear to be on the U.S. side is therefore significant." "On this occasion, optics does matter," he added.

India looks to mend ties with China as Trump's tariffs push it away from U.S.

India looks to mend ties with China as Trump's tariffs push it away from U.S. HONG KONG —Indiais increasingly important to the United St...
Filipino priest who fought Duterte's brutal drug crackdown among Magsaysay Award winnersNew Foto - Filipino priest who fought Duterte's brutal drug crackdown among Magsaysay Award winners

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A Filipino priest, who publicly protested against then-President Rodrigo Duterte'sbloody crackdownagainst illegal drugs despite death threats and helped provide proper funerals to slain suspects, is among the winners of this year'sRamon Magsaysay Awards— Asia's version of the Nobel Prize. The other winners announced on Sunday were a non-profit foundation in India that worked to bring poor girls to schools in more than 30,000 villages across the South Asian country's most underserved regions and a local Maldives diver who sparked a movement to save her tropical island nation from plastic pollution with massive cleanups and recycling. Named after a popular Philippine president, who died in a 1957 plane crash, they honor "greatness of spirit" through selfless service to people across Asia. The winners will be presented with their awards at the Metropolitan Theatre in Manila on Nov. 7. Rev. Flaviano Antonio Villanueva The priest is a self-confessed drug user who recovered from addiction and was ordained a Catholic priest in 2006. He uses his transformation "to prove that even the most wayward and destitute can find redemption and renewal." In 2015, Villanueva founded the Arnold Janssen Kalinga Center, which provides food, clothing and shelter to thousands in need in the Philippines, including those who may have engaged in drugs and petty crimes, so they may reclaim self-respect, according to the award foundation. Duterte's police-enforced crackdowns on illegal drugs left thousands of mostly poor suspects killed. The reformed priest led efforts to locate their bodies and raised funds for proper cremation and burial. He also put up a memorial shrine for them to ease the plight of widows and orphans. However, his activism led to accusations of sedition under Duterte, a charge that was dropped in 2023, "although the death threats never stopped," the foundation said. "With deep compassion and quiet defiance, he created spaces to rebuild what were unjustly erased by healing the broken, leading home the abandoned and rekindling hope when it seemed all but lost," the foundation said. Duterte's stormy six-year presidency ended in 2022. In March this year, the former presidentwas arrestedon a warrant issued by the International Criminal Court for an alleged crime against humanity over the widespread killings of drug suspects. He has denied authorizing extra-judicial killings. The Foundation Educate Girls Globally The winning Indian non-profit was established in 2007 by Safeena Husain, who returned home after graduating from the London School of Economics and working in the United States to help provideeducation for girlsin rural India by harnessing government and community resources. "Illiterate girls are forced to marry early, have children, and work — while culturally privileged males go to school," the award body said. "Given their limited horizons, only a lifetime of penury and servitude awaits most of these women." Starting in the largest state of Rajasthan, where girls have the highest illiteracy rate, Educate Girls identified the most vulnerable communities, brought unschooled or out-of-school girls into the classroom until they were able to acquire credentials for higher education and employment. From 50 pilot village schools, more than 30,000 villages across India later benefitted from the program, involving over two million girls with a high retention rate, the foundation said. "Educate Girls entered communities where girls and women were expected to stay in the shadows — and made them visible," the foundation said. "They challenged tradition, shifted mindsets and showed that education is not a privilege but a right that reshapes and rebuilds lives." Shaahina Ali attempts to save her home from plastic The third winner grew up in the Maldives and witnessed how the tropical Asian island country, popular among tourists, was threatened by plastic pollution on land and at sea with rapid urbanization. "As a diver, photojournalist and diving instructor, Ali often came literally face to face with the tides of trash clouding up the once-pristine waters of her islands, leaving behind swaths of dead fish and dying corals," the foundation said. In 2015, Ali linked up with a non-government group to start an anti-pollution project and turn waste plastic into a resource for livelihood. Working with volunteers and businesses, her group, Parley Maldives, has undertaken massive cleanups and information and recycling campaigns "that have not only caught much of the physical waste but just as crucially intervened where it matters— in the minds of Maldivians and tourists who now recognize and avoid the problems plastic poses," it said. Ali, 59, has worked with the government also to address climate change and "sparked a marine movement rooted in community, science and resolve." "I go there to clean up with hope — hope that my grandchildren will see whales in the ocean in their lifetime as I did growing up," the foundation cited Ali as saying.

Filipino priest who fought Duterte's brutal drug crackdown among Magsaysay Award winners

Filipino priest who fought Duterte's brutal drug crackdown among Magsaysay Award winners MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A Filipino priest, w...

 

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