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WWW.NYTIMES.COMA Peaceful Mountain Town in Western Canada Is Shaken by Deadly ShootingTumbler Ridge sits at the foothills of the Rocky Mountains in northeastern British Columbia, and is surrounded by expansive mountain ranges and a geological park.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 2 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMAway From Pomp of Olympics, Homeless Shiver on Streets of MilanSix homeless people have died in the Italian city in recent weeks, highlighting the widening inequality as the Games unfold there.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 2 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση -
WWW.ESPN.COMF1 testing LIVE: Latest updates as Mercedes, Ferrari, McLaren, Red Bull battle for superiority in BahrainFormula 1's preseason kicks into overdrive with the first of two tests in Bahrain this week, and you can follow all the action live with ESPN.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 2 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση -
Late Night Mines Trumps Million Mentions in the Epstein FilesA million times? Theres not even that many references to Hamlet in the play Hamlet, Jordan Klepper said on The Daily Show.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 2 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
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APNEWS.COMAs ICE expands, an AP review of crimes committed by agents shows how their powers can be abusedIn this screengrab made from body camera footage provided by the Othello, Wash., Police Department, police officers arrest U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement supervisor Koby Williams in July 2022 during an underage sex sting operation. (Othello Police Department via AP)2026-02-11T05:14:35Z Investigators said one immigration enforcement official got away with physically assaulting his girlfriend for years. Another admitted he repeatedly sexually abused a woman in his custody. A third is charged with taking bribes to remove detention orders on people targeted for deportation.At least two dozen U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement employees and contractors have been charged with crimes since 2020, and their documented wrongdoing includes patterns of physical and sexual abuse, corruption and other abuses of authority, a review by The Associated Press found.While most of the cases happened before Congress voted last year to give ICE $75 billion to hire more agents and detain more people, experts say these kinds of crimes could accelerate given the sheer volume of new employees and their empowerment to use aggressive tactics to arrest and deport people. The Trump administration has emboldened agents by arguing they have absolute immunity for their actions on duty and by weakening oversight. One judge recently suggested that ICE was developing a troubling culture of lawlessness, while experts have questioned whether job applicants are getting enough vetting and training. Once a person is hired, brought on, goes through the training and they are not the right person, it is difficult to get rid of them and there will be a price to be paid later down the road by everyone, said Gil Kerlikowske, who served as commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection from 2014 to 2017. Almost every law enforcement agency contends with bad employees and crimes related to domestic violence and substance abuse are long-standing problems in the field. But ICEs rapid growth and mission to deport millions are unprecedented, and the AP review found that the immense power that officers exercise over vulnerable populations can lead to abuses. Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said that wrongdoing was not widespread in the agency, and that ICE takes allegations of misconduct by its employees extremely seriously. She said that most new hires had already worked for other law enforcement agencies, and that their backgrounds were thoroughly vetted.America can be proud of the professionalism our officers bring to the job day-in and day-out, she said.ICE misconduct could become a countrywide phenomenonICE announced last month that it had more than doubled in size to 22,000 employees in less than one year.Kerlikowske said ICE agents are particularly vulnerable to unnecessary use of force issues, given that they often conduct enforcement operations in public while facing protests. With the number of ICE detainees nearly doubling since last year to 70,000, employees and contractors responsible for overseeing them are also facing challenging conditions that can provide more opportunities for misconduct.The Border Patrol doubled in size to more than 20,000 agents from 2004 to 2011 six years longer than ICE took. It was embarrassed by a wave of corruption, abuse and other misconduct by some of the new hires. Kerlikowske recalled cases of agents who accepted bribes to let cars carrying drugs enter the U.S. or who became involved in human trafficking. He and others say ICE is poised to see similar problems that will likely be broader in scope, with less oversight and accountability. Have a news tip?Contact APs global investigative team at [emailprotected]. For secure and confidential communications, use the free Signal app +1 (202) 281-8604. The corruption and the abuse and the misconduct was largely confined in the prior instance to along the border and interactions with immigrants and border state residents. With ICE, this is going to be a countrywide phenomenon as they pull in so many people who are attracted to this mission, said David Bier, director of immigration studies at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank.Bier, who has helped publicize some of the recent arrests and other alleged misconduct by ICE agents, said he has been struck by the remarkable array of different offenses and charges that weve seen.APs review examined public records involving cases of ICE employees and contractors who have been arrested since 2020, including at least 17 who have been convicted and six others who are awaiting trial. Nine have been charged in the last year, including an agent cited last month for assaulting a protester near Chicago while off-duty. Some of the most serious crimes were committed by veteran ICE employees and supervisors rather than rookies.While federal officials have justified ICEs aggression, the behavior of agents is drawing scrutiny from cellphone-wielding observers and prosecutors in Democratic-led jurisdictions. Local agencies are looking into last months fatal shootings in Minneapolis of protesters Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents, as well as the killing of Keith Porter by an off-duty ICE agent in Los Angeles on New Years Eve. Arrests have made local headlinesAround the country, the cases have attracted unwelcome headlines for ICE, which has spent millions of dollars publicizing the criminal rap sheets of those they arrest as the worst of the worst. Among them:__ The assistant ICE field office supervisor in Cincinnati, Samuel Saxon, a 20-year ICE veteran, has been jailed since his arrest in December on charges that he attempted to strangle his girlfriend. Saxon had abused the woman for years, fracturing her hip and nose and causing internal bleeding, a judge found in a ruling ordering him detained pending trial. The defendant is a volatile and violent individual, the judge wrote of Saxon, whose attorneys didnt return a message seeking comment. ICE said he is considered absent without leave.__ Im ICE, boys, an ICE employment eligibility auditor told police in Minnesota in November when he was arrested in a sting as he went to meet a person he thought was a 17-year-old prostitute. Alexander Back, 41, has pleaded not guilty to attempted enticement of a minor. ICE said Back is on administrative leave while the agency investigates.When officers in suburban Chicago found a man passed out in a crashed car in October, they were surprised to discover the driver was an ICE officer who had recently completed his shift at a detention center and had his government firearm in the vehicle. They arrested Guillermo Diaz-Torres for driving under the influence. Hes pleaded not guilty and has been put on administrative duty pending an investigation.__ After an ICE officer in Florida was stopped for driving drunk with his two children in the car in August, he tried to get out of charges by pointing to his law enforcement and military service. When that failed, he demanded to know whether one of the deputies arresting him was Haitian and threatened to check the mans immigration status, body camera video shows.Ill run him once I get out of here and if hes not legit, ooh, hes taking a ride back to Haiti, Scott Deiseroth warned during the arrest.Deiseroth, who was sentenced to probation and community service, is on administrative leave pending the outcome of an internal investigation. He did something stupid. He owned up to it, said his attorney, Michael Catalano. Hes very sorry about the whole thing.Several cases involve force and abuseThe APs review found a pattern of charges involving ICE employees and contractors who mistreated vulnerable people in their care.A former top official at an ICE contract facility in Texas was sentenced to probation on Feb. 4 after acknowledging he grabbed a handcuffed detainee by the neck and slammed him into a wall last year. Prosecutors had downgraded the charge from a felony to a misdemeanor.In December, an ICE contractor pleaded guilty to sexually abusing a detainee at a detention facility in Louisiana. Prosecutors said the man had sexual encounters with a Nicaraguan national over a five-month period in 2025 as he instructed other detainees to act as lookouts.Outside Chicago, an off-duty ICE agent has been charged with misdemeanor battery for throwing to the ground a 68-year-old protester who was filming him at a gas station in December. McLaughlin has said the agent acted in self-defense.Other charges cited corruptionAnother pattern that emerged in APs review involved ICE officials charged with abusing their power for financial gain.An ICE deportation officer in Houston was indicted last summer on charges that he repeatedly accepted cash bribes from bail bondsmen in exchange for removing detainers ICE had placed on their clients targeting them for deportation.ICE said the officer was indefinitely suspended in May 2024, before his arrest one year later. He has pleaded not guilty to seven counts of accepting bribes and was released from custody while awaiting trial.Prosecutors say a former supervisor in ICEs New York City office provided confidential information about peoples immigration statuses to acquaintances and made an arrest in exchange for gifts and other gain. He was arrested in November 2024, has pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial.Two Utah-based ICE investigators were sentenced to prison last year for a scheme in which they made hundreds of thousands of dollars stealing synthetic drugs known as bath salts from government custody and selling them through government informants.ICE officials used badges to try to avoid consequencesThe wrongdoing often included the use of ICE resources and credentials to try to avoid arrest or receive favorable treatment. In 2022, ICE supervisor Koby Williams was arrested in a sting by police in Othello, Washington, while going to a hotel room to meet who he thought was a 13-year-old girl hed arranged to pay for sex.Williams had driven his government vehicle, which was filled with cash, alcohol, pills and Viagra, and was carrying his ICE badge and loaded government firearm. The 22-year ICE veteran offered a rationale that turned out to be a lie: that he was there to rescue the girl as part of a human trafficking investigation. Williams is serving prison time for what prosecutors called a reprehensible abuse of power.With a duty to protect and serve, they wrote, defendant sought to exploit and victimize. RYAN J. FOLEY Foley covers national news for The Associated Press and is based in Iowa City, Iowa. A 21-year AP veteran, he was part of the AP team honored as a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in investigative reporting for the 2024 series, Lethal Restraint. twitter mailto0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 2 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
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WWW.ESPN.COMWemby nets 40 in 26 mins, was keen to be 'greedy'Victor Wembanyama watched the entire fourth quarter of Tuesday's game against the Lakers from the bench, admittedly wishing he could have kept piling up statistics after scoring 40 points in only 26 minutes of what would become a 136-108 Spurs victory.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 2 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMCanada Launched Major Gun Reforms in 2020 After Its Deadliest Mass ShootingCanada Launched Major Gun Reforms in 2020 After Its Deadliest Mass Shooting0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 2 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση -
APNEWS.COMIrans president apologizes over crackdown as nation marks 1979 Islamic Revolution anniversaryA cleric crosses an intersection in downtown Tehran, Iran, Monday, Feb. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)2026-02-11T06:52:00Z DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) Iran marked the 47th anniversary of its 1979 Islamic Revolution on Wednesday as the countrys theocracy remains under pressure, both from U.S. President Donald Trump who suggested sending another aircraft carrier group to the Middle East and a public angrily denouncing Tehrans bloody crackdown on nationwide protests.Iran is in the midst of negotiations with the United States over its nuclear program but it remains unclear if a nuclear deal will be reached. Meanwhile, the United Nations nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, has been unable for months to inspect and verify Irans nuclear stockpile.In a ceremony marking the revolution anniversary, Irans President Masoud Pezeshkian apologized to all those affected by the nationwide protests and bloody crackdown that followed it, even as he denounced unspecified Western propaganda surrounding the protests. Pezeshkian said he knew the great sorrow felt by people in the protests and crackdown, without directly acknowledging the hand Iranian security forces had in the bloodshed.We are ashamed before the people, and we are obligated to assist all those who were harmed in these incidents, Pezeshkian said. We are not seeking confrontation with the people. Pezeshkian also insisted that his nation was not seeking nuclear weapons. ... and are ready for any kind of verification. In escalating pressure, Trump suggested a second carrier in an interview published Tuesday night as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, long an Iran hawk, visited Washington to push the U.S. toward the strictest-possible terms in any agreement reached with Tehran in the fledgling nuclear talks. A top Iranian security official planned to visit Qatar on Wednesday after earlier traveling to Oman, which has mediated this latest round of negotiations. On Iranian state television, authorities broadcast images of tens of thousands of people taking to the streets across the country Wednesday to support the theocracy and its 86-year-old Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. But on Tuesday night, as government-sponsored fireworks lit the darkened sky, witnesses heard shouts from peoples homes in the Iranian capital, Tehran, of Death to the dictator!Commemoration comes under crackdownIn the streets, people waved images of Khamenei and Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic, alongside Iranian and Palestinian flags. Some chanted Death to America! and Death to Israel! Among Irans 85 million people, there is a hard-line element of support for Irans theocracy, including members of its paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, which crucially put down the protests last month in a bloody suppression that killed thousands and saw tens of thousands detained. Others often take part in demonstrations as they are government employees or to enjoy the carnival atmosphere of a government-sponsored holiday. As the commemoration took place, senior Iranian security official Ali Larijani left Oman for Qatar. That Mideast nation hosts a major U.S. military installation that Iran attacked in June after the U.S. bombed Iranian nuclear sites during the 12-day Iran-Israel war. Qatar also has been a key negotiator in the past with Iran, with which it shares a massive offshore natural gas field in the Persian Gulf. Speaking to the Russian state channel RT, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Tehran still does not have full trust for the Americans.Last time we negotiated, last June we were in the middle of negotiation then they decided to attack us and that was a very very bad experience for us, Irans top diplomat said. We need to make sure that that scenario is not repeated and this is mostly up to America.Despite that concern, Araghchi said it could be possible to come to a better deal than Obama, referencing the 2015 nuclear deal with world powers Iran reached when former U.S. President Barack Obama was in office. Trump in his first term unilaterally withdrew America from the accord. Trump suggests sending another carrier to MideastThe United States has moved the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln, ships and warplanes to the Middle East to pressure Iran into an agreement and have the firepower necessary to strike the Islamic Republic should Trump choose to do so. Already, U.S. forces shot down a drone they said got too close to the Lincoln and came to the aid of a U.S.-flagged ship that Iranian forces tried to stop in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf. Trump told the news website Axios that he was considering sending a second carrier to the region, noting, We have an armada that is heading there and another one might be going. It remains unclear what carrier could go. The USS George H.W. Bush has left Norfolk, Virginia, according to U.S. Navy Institute News. The USS Gerald R. Ford remains in the Caribbean after the U.S. military raid that captured Venezuelan leader Nicols Maduro. JON GAMBRELL Gambrell is the news director for the Gulf and Iran for The Associated Press. He has reported from each of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, Iran and other locations across the world since joining the AP in 2006. twitter instagram mailto0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 1 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMF.A.A. Halts All Flights at El Paso Airport for 10 DaysNo flights would be allowed to or from the airport for 10 days under a flight restriction order that cited unspecified special security reasons.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 1 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση -
APNEWS.COMInvestigators searching a location in Arizona in disappearance of Nancy GuthrieSheriff's officials block the entrance to a road where a home was being searched in Rio Rico, Arizona, on Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026, in connection to the investigation of Nancy Guthrie's disappearance. (AP Photo/Ty ONeil)2026-02-11T09:07:30Z RIO RICO, Ariz. (AP) A person was detained for questioning Tuesday in the kidnapping of Nancy Guthrie, hours after the FBI released surveillance videos of a masked person wearing a handgun holster outside Guthries front door the night she vanished from her Arizona home.Deputies detained the person during a traffic stop south of Tucson, according to the Pima County Sheriffs Department. It did not immediately provide details about the person or the location. The FBI referred questions to the sheriffs office.A Phoenix, Arizona, television station, KNVX-TV, interviewed a delivery man who said he had been detained by police on suspicions of kidnapping Guthrie. He said he was innocent and that police released him after several hours. Local and federal authorities have not confirmed that the person who they had detained was released. The department and the FBI were conducting a court-authorized search Tuesday night at a location in Rio Rico, about an hours drive south of Tucson, the department said in a statement. It was expected to take several hours.Guthrie disappeared on Feb. 1 and since then the case has gripped the nation. Until Tuesday, it seemed authorities were making little headway in determining what happened to the 84-year-old mother of Today show host Savannah Guthrie or finding who was responsible. Savannah Guthrie and her two siblings have released a series of video statements pleading for the return of their mother and indicating a willingness to pay a ransom. Authorities have described Nancy Guthrie as mentally sound but with limited mobility. She takes several medications and there was concern from the start that she could die without them, Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos has said repeatedly. The community of Rio Rico population 20,000 is roughly an hours drive from Guthries home and about 15 miles (24 kilometers) north of the U.S.-Mexico border. The videos released earlier Tuesday show a person wearing a ski mask and a backpack. At one point, they tilt their head down and away from a doorbell camera while approaching Guthries front door. The footage also shows the person holding a flashlight in their mouth and trying to cover the camera with a gloved hand and part of a plant ripped from the yard.The videos less than a combined minute in length gave investigators and the public their first glimpse of who was outside Guthries home in the foothills outside Tucson. But the images did not show what happened to her or help determine whether she is still alive.FBI Director Kash Patel said the armed individual appeared to have tampered with the camera. It was not entirely clear whether there was a gun in the holster.The videos were pulled from data on back-end systems after investigators spent days trying to find lost, corrupted or inaccessible images, Patel said.This will get the phone ringing for lots of potential leads, said former FBI agent Katherine Schweit. Even when you have a person who appears to be completely covered, theyre really not. You can see their girth, the shape of their face, potentially their eyes or mouth. Tuesday afternoon, authorities were back near Guthries neighborhood, using vehicles to block her driveway. A few miles away, law enforcement was going door-to-door in the area where daughter Annie Guthrie lives, talking with neighbors as well as walking through a drainage area and examining the inside of a culvert with a flashlight. Investigators have said for more than a week that they believe Nancy Guthrie was taken against her will. She was last seen at home Jan. 31 and reported missing the next day. DNA tests showed blood on her porch was hers, authorities said. Authorities initially could not pull images from cameraUntil now, authorities have released few details, leaving it unclear if ransom notes demanding money with deadlines already passed were authentic, and whether the Guthrie family has had any contact with whoever took Guthrie.Savannah Guthrie posted the new surveillance images on social media Tuesday, saying the family believes their mother is still alive and offering phone numbers for the FBI and county sheriff. Within minutes, the post had thousands of comments.Investigators had hoped cameras would turn up evidence right away about how Nancy Guthrie disappeared from her home in an secluded neighborhood. But the doorbell camera was disconnected early on Feb. 1. While software recorded movement at the home minutes later, Guthrie did not have an active subscription, so Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos had initially said none of the footage could be recovered. Officials continued working to get the footage. Savannah Guthrie expressed desperation a day agoHeartbreaking messages by Savannah Guthrie and her family shifted from hopeful to bleak as they made pleas for whoever took Nancy Guthrie. In a video just ahead of a purported ransom deadline Monday, Savannah Guthrie appeared alone and spoke directly to the public.We are at an hour of desperation, she said. We need your help.Much of the nation is closely following the case involving the longtime anchor of NBCs morning show.White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said President Donald Trump watched the new surveillance footage and was in pure disgust, encouraging anyone with information to call the FBI.The FBI this week began posting digital billboards about the case in major cities from Texas to California.Connor Hagan, a spokesperson for the FBI, said Monday that the agency was not aware of ongoing communication between Guthries family and any suspected kidnappers. Authorities also had not identified any suspects, he said.Videos from Guthrie siblings appealed directly to whoever took their momThree days after the search began, Savannah Guthrie and her two siblings sent their first public appeal to whoever took their mother, saying, We want to hear from you, and we are ready to listen.In the recorded video, Guthrie said her family was aware of media reports about a ransom letter, but they first wanted proof their mother was alive. Please reach out to us, they said.The next day, Savannah Guthries brother again made a plea, saying, Whoever is out there holding our mother, we want to hear from you. We havent heard anything directly.Then over the past weekend, the family posted another video one that was more cryptic and generated even more speculation about Nancy Guthries fate.We received your message, and we understand. We beg you now to return our mother to us so that we can celebrate with her, said Savannah Guthrie, flanked by her siblings. This is the only way we will have peace. This is very valuable to us, and we will pay.___Golden reported from Seattle and Seewer from Toledo, Ohio. Associated Press reporters Darlene Superville in Washington, Ed White in Detroit, and Mike Balsamo, Eric Tucker and Alanna Durkin Richer in Washington contributed to this report. TY ONEIL ONeil is a video journalist at The Associated Press and is based in Las Vegas. mailto JOHN SEEWER Seewer covers state and national news for The Associated Press and is based in Toledo, Ohio. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 1 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
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APNEWS.COMNetanyahu to urge expanded Iran talks during White House meeting as Trump says Tehran wants a dealPresident Donald Trump shakes hands with Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the end of a news conference at Mar-a-Lago, Dec. 29, 2025, in Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)2026-02-11T05:02:10Z WASHINGTON (AP) With President Donald Trump saying he believes Iran wants to make a deal on its nuclear program, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to arrive at the White House on Wednesday with his own urgent message: Expand the talks further. The visit from Netanyahu their seventh meeting in Trumps second term comes as both Tehran and Washington are projecting cautious optimism after holding indirect talks in Oman on Friday about how once again to approach negotiations over Irans nuclear program.Well see what happens. I think they want to make a deal, Trump said in an interview Tuesday with Fox Business Networks Larry Kudlow. I think theyd be foolish if they didnt. We took out their nuclear power last time, and well have to see if we take out more this time.He added, Its got to be a good deal. No nuclear weapons, no missiles. Netanyahu pushes for more in Iran talksNetanyahus office has said he wants those talks to include limits on Irans ballistic missile program and support for militant groups like the Palestinian Hamas and Lebanons Hezbollah.I will present to the president our outlook regarding the principles of these negotiations the essential principles which, in my opinion, are important not only to Israel, but to everyone around the world who wants peace and security in the Middle East, Netanyahu said Tuesday before departing Israel. It remains unclear how much influence Netanyahu will have over Trumps approach toward Iran. Trump initially threatened to take military action over Irans bloody crackdown on nationwide protests in January, then shifted to a pressure campaign in recent weeks to try to get Tehran to make a deal over its nuclear program. Irans is still reeling from the 12-day war with Israel this past June. The devastating series of airstrikes, including the U.S. bombing several Iranian nuclear sites, killed nearly 1,000 people in Iran and almost 40 in Israel. Trump, at the time, said the U.S. action had obliterated Irans nuclear capabilities, though the amount of damage remains unclear. Satellite photos of nuclear sites have recently captured activity, prompting concern Iran could be attempting to salvage or assess damage at the sites. Israel has long called for Iran to cease all uranium enrichment, dial back its ballistic missile program and cut ties to militant groups across the region. Iran has always rejected those demands, saying it would only accept some limits on its nuclear program in return for sanctions relief. Theres probably a degree of concern (for the Israelis) over the Iranians using any negotiation process to deflect some of the pressure, said Naysan Rafati, senior Iran analyst at the Washington-based International Crisis Group. He added that Netanyahu will likely stress to Trump that there shouldnt be an open-ended negotiation for the sake of negotiation, but to have the kind of parameters where the West should be willing to walk away from the table. To that end, the U.S. has built up military forces in the region, sending an aircraft carrier, guided-missile destroyers, air defense assets and more to supplement its presence. Arab and Islamic countries, including Turkey and Qatar, have been urging both sides to show restraint, warning that any strike or retaliation could have destabilizing consequences for a region already strained by the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. Gaza is likely to come upThat conflict is sure to come up on Wednesday as Trump plans to hold the first meeting next week of the Board of Peace, which was initially framed to oversee future steps of the U.S.-brokered Gaza ceasefire plan but has taken shape with Trumps ambitions of resolving other global crises.On Iran, Trump said Friday that his special envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner had very good talks on Iran and more were planned for this week. But the Republican president kept up the pressure, warning that if the country didnt make a deal over its nuclear program, the consequences are very steep.Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi made similar comments, saying there will be consultations on next steps but cautioning that the level of mistrust between the two longtime adversaries remains a serious challenge facing the negotiations. He also signaled that Iran would stick to its position that it must be able to enrich uranium a major point of contention with Trump.The readouts from both President Trump and from the Iranians has been cautiously optimistic, not so much as theres light at the end of the tunnel, but they may be able to build a tunnel, Rafati said. Netanyahu met with Witkoff and Kushner shortly after arriving in Washington on Tuesday evening and they gave him an update on the talks held with Iran in Oman, the prime ministers office said. He was to meet with Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Wednesday morning, the State Department said. Araghchi said in November that Iran was no longer enriching uranium due to the damage from last years war. Before the June war, Iran had been enriching uranium up to 60% purity, a short, technical step away from weapons-grade levels. The U.N. nuclear watchdog the International Atomic Energy Agency had said Iran was the only country in the world to enrich to that level that wasnt armed with the bomb.Iran has been refusing requests by the IAEA to inspect the sites bombed in the June war. Even before that, Iran has restricted IAEA inspections since Trumps decision in 2018 to unilaterally withdraw the U.S. from Irans 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.___Amiri reported from New York. FARNOUSH AMIRI Amiri covers foreign policy and the United Nations as a correspondent for The Associated Press, based in New York. twitter mailto MELANIE LIDMAN Lidman is an Associated Press reporter based in Tel Aviv, Israel.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 1 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
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APNEWS.COMRussian drone kills a father and 3 children in Ukraine, pregnant mother badly injuredPresident Donald Trump shakes hands with Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the end of a news conference at Mar-a-Lago, Dec. 29, 2025, in Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)2026-02-11T08:41:40Z KYIV, Ukraine (AP) A Russian drone smashed into a home in Ukraines northeastern Kharkiv region overnight, killing a father and his three small children and seriously wounding their mother who is 35 weeks pregnant, officials said Wednesday.The strike completely destroyed the house and set it on fire, with the family trapped under the rubble, according to the Kharkiv regional prosecutors office.The 34-year-old father and his three children twin boys aged 2 and their 1-year-old sister were killed, while rescue workers pulled the mother alive from the rubble, prosecutors said. She sustained blast injuries, a traumatic brain injury, burns and hearing loss, they said.During the almost four years since Russia invaded its neighbor, and despite a new push over the past year in U.S.-led peace efforts, Ukrainian civilians have endured constant aerial attacks. Last year was the deadliest for civilians in Ukraine since 2022 as Russia intensified its aerial barrages behind the front line, according to the U.N. Human Rights Monitoring Mission in the country.The war killed 2,514 civilians and injured 12,142 in Ukraine in 2025 31% higher than in 2024, it said. The drone that struck the Kharkiv town of Bohodukhiv was identified as a Geran-2, a Russian-made version of an Iranian Shahed drone.We lost what is most precious our future, Bohodukhiv mayor Volodymyr Bielyi wrote on his Facebook page. There are no words to console the family; there is no prayer that could heal the heart of a mother who has lost her children. Bielyi said the mother is fighting for her life in hospital and announced three days of mourning, when national flags will be lowered and all entertainment and organized public events will be cancelled.We will endure. We will remember. We will never forgive this horror on our land, Bielyi wrote.Bohodukhiv has a pre-war population of 15,000. It is located some 22 kilometers (13 miles) from the Russian border. Each such Russian strike undermines trust in everything being done through diplomacy to end this war, and again and again proves that only strong pressure on Russia and clear security guarantees for Ukraine are the real key to stopping the killings, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on social media.Ukraines Air Force says Russia launched 129 long-range drones at Ukraine last night. Meanwhile, a Ukrainian drone attack caused a fire at an industrial plant in the city of Volgograd, authorities said.Volgograd regions Gov. Andrei Bocharov said that drone fragments also damaged an apartment building.Eight Russian airports briefly suspended flights overnight because of drone attacks, officials said.___Follow APs coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine ILLIA NOVIKOV Novikov is an Associated Press reporter covering news in Ukraine since 2022. He is based in Kyiv. instagram mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 1 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
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WWW.ESPN.COMTransfer rumors, news: Salah's agent in Al Ittihad talks as star open to Liverpool exitLiverpool star Mohamed Salah has given his agent the green light to open talks with Saudi Pro League club Al Ittihad, Transfer Talk has the latest.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 1 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση -
WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGAs Helene Survivors Wait for State Help, Some Victims of Earlier Hurricanes Are Still Out of Their HomesIn the 459 days that Willa Mae James spent living in a Fairfield Inn in Eastern North Carolina, her footsteps wore down paths in the carpet: from the door to the desk, from the bed to the wooden armchair by the window, her favorite place to read the Bible.The 69-year-old retired dietitian had been sent there in July 2024 by North Carolinas rebuilding program after Hurricane Florence ravaged her home and many others in 2018. The state had promised to help thousands of people like her rebuild or repair. But it had taken the program years to begin work. James spent nearly six years living in her damaged house in Lumberton, where floodwaters had turned the floorboards to pulp, causing her floors to sink and nearly cave in.Of the more than 10,000 families who applied, 3,100 were still waiting for construction five years after the storm. Thousands of others had withdrawn or been dropped by the program. As of November, more than 300 families were still waiting to return home.And James was the last of more than 100 displaced homeowners staying at the hotel.Its like being in jail, James said. Everybody else done moved back home in their houses, enjoying it, except me.On the other side of North Carolina, nearly 5,000 homeowners find themselves waiting for the state government to help them rebuild after 2024s Hurricane Helene. Gov. Josh Stein created a new program, Renew NC, promising to learn from the problems of the previous program that left James and thousands of others hanging for years.Renew NC is just getting off the ground; the program began accepting applications in June and has completed work on 16 of the 2,700 homes it plans to repair and rebuild. But through public records and interviews with homeowners, The Assembly and ProPublica have found that some of the same problems that plagued the earlier program are surfacing in the Helene recovery.Video by Nadia Sussman/ProPublicaThat earlier program, which has the similar name ReBuild NC, was set up after Florence decimated a region that had been hit by Hurricane Matthew two years earlier. ReBuild NC was designed to help low- and moderate-income homeowners restore their homes by hiring and paying contractors to complete the work.But the North Carolina Office of Recovery & Resiliency, which runs the program, failed at nearly every step, according to reports by outside consultants, journalists and auditors. It struggled to manage its $779 million budget and couldnt keep track of expenses. It rarely held contractors accountable for delays that dragged out projects and drove up costs for temporary housing and storage. ReBuild NC provided only limited resources to understaffed local governments that couldnt handle the volume of permit and inspection requests.At the same time, the agency was laden with administrative steps, paperwork, and procedures to comply with federal regulations, according to a state auditor report. And rigid rules meant the agency spent money rebuilding homes that needed less expensive repairs, some homeowners said.The response from North Carolina to hurricanes Matthew and Florence was a disaster, State Auditor Dave Boliek said in a statement after releasing a report on ReBuild NC in November.The auditors office consulted with the former administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency under the Obama administration, Craig Fugate, who noted that ReBuild NC officials spent a tremendous amount of time on process, when their job was swinging hammers.Bridget Munger, a spokesperson for the North Carolina Office of Recovery & Resiliency, said the office welcomed the report. NCORR remains committed to serving those affected by hurricanes Matthew and Florence and any insight that supports that mission is valuable, Munger said in a statement.Get InvolvedHave you applied to Renew NC or other assistance programs, such as a hazard mitigation buyout, following Hurricane Helene? We want to hear from you to better understand how recovery efforts are working in North Carolina. Share Your ExperienceState leaders set out to manage Helene recovery differently. Among Steins orders on his first day in office in 2025 was to lay the groundwork for a new home rebuilding program with fresh leadership in a different department. The state would again pick and pay contractors to repair and rebuild homes of people who applied, but this time, it would scrutinize contractors more to ensure quality. Stephanie McGarrah, who oversees Renew NC, pledged robust financial oversight and a willingness to work with stakeholders who identify challenges and gaps in funding.But again, homeowners are encountering rules that steer them toward demolition and reconstruction when less expensive repairs would do. Some counties are struggling to get the staff and inspectors to handle all the required permits. Many residents will be out of their homes without a plan from the state to pay for temporary housing or storage during construction.McGarrah, a deputy state commerce secretary, said that every disaster is different and that the agency is learning as it goes and has already revised policies to allow more homes to be eligible for repairs. Theres this perception that you can figure out what all the problems are going to be, and you can figure them out at the beginning, she said.The Helene recovery program set an ambitious goal to finish all homes before June 2028, but the long waits of James and others in Eastern North Carolina serve as a warning for what might happen next.Behind the Scenes of the DisasterIn 2016, record flooding from Hurricane Matthew hit James hometown of Lumberton, North Carolina. Two years later, Hurricane Florence again caused flooding. Chuck Burton/APNorth Carolina had just begun rebuilding homes Matthew destroyed in 2016 when Florence hit two years later, bringing up to 2 feet of rain in some inland counties.Damage from the two storms totaled an estimated $22 billion spread across half of North Carolinas 100 counties, among the costliest storms in U.S. history. After FEMAs short-term disaster assistance ended, the state received applications from more than 10,000 homeowners still in need of repairs.But progress was slow. The states homebuilding program trailed others after 2018 hurricanes, according to a 2022 Government Accountability Office report. North Carolina had completed 0.4% of the homes it set out to repair and rebuild after Florence while South Carolina had completed 22%.ReBuild NCs management problems are most apparent in the time people like James spent in hotels waiting for construction. One of the reasons it took so long is that ReBuild NC hired two administrative contractors, one to manage construction and another to handle temporary relocation.Although the agency denied it, contractors told the legislature that ReBuild NC discouraged its relocation vendor from speaking directly with the construction vendor, requiring them to communicate via a spreadsheet that was supposed to track construction. The approach delayed repairs as the vendors were unable to line up move-out dates with construction start dates. Among the 766 families who spent at least a year out of their homes during construction, more than 500 didnt have damage that required them to move out early.Such problems contributed to the roughly $100 million ReBuild NC spent on temporary relocation services, like hotels and portable storage pods, for 3,800 families.The program required families to move out before construction was ready to begin. James was moved into the Fairfield Inn nine months before her assigned construction company filed for demolition and construction permits. A large part of the delay was caused by ReBuild NC pausing notices to proceed for four months as it ran low on funds and sought more money from the legislature. While the local government OKd the permit applications within days, it took another two months for the contractor to pay for the permits and begin reconstruction. P.H. Lowery, the general contractor for James home, did not respond to calls or text messages seeking comment about the delays. The nonprofit news organization NC Newsline found that ReBuild NC never fined contractors for missing deadlines during the programs first years.Other families faced delays because ReBuild NC failed to coordinate rebuilding efforts with local governments or because the homeowners came up against the programs rules. The state had a set number of home designs that homeowners could choose from. Sometimes, the states plans proposed homes that were too big for properties or didnt account for septic systems.Kath Durand encountered such problems when she sought ReBuild NCs help after Florences deluge seeped through the roof, saturated the walls and collapsed part of the ceiling of her home in Atlantic Beach. She applied to ReBuild NC in 2020, hoping to finish an estimated $20,000 in repairs after she ran out of money to fix the home herself.Hurricane Florence damaged Kath Durands home, causing mold to spread in the ceiling and walls. ReBuild NC took four years to offer Durand a floor plan, only to later tell her none of the designs would fit her lot and drop her from the program. Madeline Gray for ProPublica and The AssemblyBut under ReBuild NCs rules, wood-frame homes like hers had to be above a certain level to avoid flooding before the program would pay for repairs, and the program wouldnt pay to elevate houses. The home was just shy. So ReBuild NC would only pay to demolish the home and build a new one a more expensive undertaking.It took four years for the agency to offer Durand a floor plan, but none of the designs fit her 1/6-acre lot. One plan placed part of the home in the street easement, which utility companies need to access. A second placed the home in the tidal zone, effectively putting her home in a canal. A third covered the septic field, which could have destroyed the system that breaks down sewage. All those things would have been cause for rejected permits, she said, making her question ReBuild NC.I would like to get in a room and talk to them about what were you thinking? she said. Durand said she settled for a smaller home, but at the end of December, ReBuild NC withdrew her from the program, saying it didnt have houses available for the size of her lot.Munger, ReBuild NCs spokesperson, said the program has the ability to develop custom building plans to fit challenging lots, but doing so in every case would have exponentially increased project costs and greatly reduced the number of families helped by the program.After ReBuild NC said it would rebuild her house and sent storage pods, Durand rented a room from a member of her church. But after more than a year with no construction, she had to move back. Many of her belongings remain in boxes. Madeline Gray for ProPublica and The AssemblyFamily photos of Durand, center, and her brothers hang in her home. Madeline Gray for ProPublica and The AssemblySuch delays and complaints from homeowners led to years of legislative scrutiny, after which ReBuild NCs two top leaders left the agency.In 2022, the agencys chief program delivery officer, Ivan Duncan, resigned after he was accused of giving preferential treatment to a construction vendor, NC Newsline reported. Then, after several legislative meetings questioned oversight of the program, his boss, ReBuild NC director Laura Hogshead, abruptly left the agency in 2024.Duncan said in an interview that the allegations were unfounded. He said he cooperated with the investigations, was not asked to resign and left for a higher-paying job.Hogshead did not respond to requests for comment. At a 2024 legislative hearing, she listed several things the program would do differently if it were put in charge of the Helene recovery but noted that rebuilding thousands of older homes across a wide area came with challenges.Behind the scenes, ReBuild NC struggled to hold contractors accountable to timelines, paid invoices without verifying work and spent money on things auditors couldnt track, according to reports by disaster recovery consultant SBP and the state auditor and an internal audit.For James, the wait was especially hard as her husband, Christopher, was in treatment for bone cancer. She remembers Christopher questioning whether the home would ever be done. Baby, them people might never get to you, hed told her. When he died in 2021, she was left to fight alone for the home to be rebuilt.James said a neighbor who applied for ReBuild NC died days after moving into the hotel. She knows others who are still staying with friends or family as they wait on ReBuild NC to finish their homes.She hopes Western North Carolina residents have better experiences.I pray that they dont go through what we did, I sure do, James said.Seven years after Hurricane Florence, ReBuild NC finished reconstruction of James Lumberton home. Madeline Gray for ProPublica and The AssemblyAt the EdgeUnder pressure from the legislature and homeowners to not repeat these problems with the Helene recovery, the new state program, Renew NC, made a number of reforms.ReBuild NC had been criticized for locating its office almost 100 miles from the epicenters of the disaster zones. Renew NCs office is in Asheville, in one of Helenes hardest-hit counties. A bipartisan group of legislators, business leaders, activists and government officials meets across Western North Carolina to publicly advise on challenges and assist with recovery.To avoid the problem of having different vendors administer the construction and relocation, Renew NC has hired one vendor to manage the housing recovery program.Despite the reforms, the Stein administration has already faced questions from lawmakers over potential conflicts of interest. His first Helene recovery adviser, Jonathan Krebs, had been a partner at the company administering the housing program and contributed heavily to Steins campaign and a Democratic political committee in the year before receiving his job.Kate Schmidt, a spokesperson for the governor, said Krebs was hired because of his decades of experience working on nearly every major disaster recovery since Katrina and noted that the State Ethics Commission found no conflict of interest. Krebs said at a legislative meeting last year that while he helped draft the request for proposal and scoring criteria for an $81 million contract that was awarded to Horne, his former employer, he viewed his past employment not as a conflict but as an asset.Theyve got to have somebody in the room that knows whats going on and what has to happen to get houses built. I was that person, said Krebs, whose temporary role has ended. Krebs echoed those sentiments in an interview, noting that he supported Stein as a candidate who was trying to be practical and help people.The state did not renew Hornes Florence and Matthew recovery contract amid complaints over slow application processing. BDO, an accounting and consulting firm that has since acquired Horne, referred questions to the state. A state official said in contracting documents that the decision to not renew was mutual and acknowledged that problems continued after the state took over case management.As South Carolina did after Florence, Renew NC has avoided the high costs of temporary housing and storage simply by not paying for them, except under extreme circumstances, though it is common for disaster recovery programs to pay for such costs. That has left homeowners to cover the costs themselves.Read MoreArduous and Unequal: The Fight to Get FEMA Housing Assistance After HeleneThe lack of coverage for temporary housing concerns Vicki Meath, a local housing advocate working on the recovery.When I think about survivors that have been impacted and would apply to this program that are below 60% of the area median income, they dont have a lot of resources, she said. They dont have another place to live.In an interview, McGarrah noted that her agency is discussing policy changes to help make temporary housing more affordable but will need local partners to identify places families can live.Were seeing some slowdowns in our pipeline because people dont have places to go, she said.Local governments in Western North Carolina, like those on the other side of the state, are struggling with a lack of staff and resources. Dennis Aldridge, a commissioner in Avery County, northeast of Asheville, said the countys 18,000 residents face a shortage of environmental inspectors who certify well and septic systems, on which homes in rural counties overwhelmingly rely. Aldridge said he reached out to the state for assistance, but there arent enough inspectors in North Carolina an issue thats been known for years.Its taking right now about six to nine months to get a well and septic permit because we dont have the people, Aldridge said in September.Danny Allen, inspections director in Madison County, north of Asheville, said hes worried his department will face backlogs on building permits with about 75 local homeowners actively applying for the state program.After Helene, Chuck Brodskys home sits on a cliff with a 150-foot drop. Renew NC says it cant repair the land without tearing down his house. Ren Larson/The AssemblyTheyre feeling it now, but its really going to be six months from now that the pressure is going to build, said Aimee Wall, dean of the University of North Carolinas School of Government.The number of people waiting for inspections could increase if homeowners who applied for repairs learn they need to have their homes rebuilt because damages exceed the states threshold of $100,000 for wood-frame homes. The amount is intended to avoid costly repairs, as homes could have additional issues like termite damage that arent immediately visible. But it doesnt cover all scenarios.Thats what Chuck Brodsky, a folk musician and songwriter, encountered after two landslides wiped out much of the Asheville mountainside that supported his home. His two-story house survived Helene unscathed, but its now perched on a cliff that drops to a road 150 feet below.Two construction companies quoted him about $200,000 to stabilize the mountainside and keep his home from falling over the edge. He couldnt afford it, so he began the application for help from Renew NC to repair his storm-impacted property in September.But the agency told him under the programs rules, to fix the mountainside, it would have to tear down his home and rebuild. It cant just repair the land.The agency told him he could appeal, but he worries hell receive the same answer. McGarrah noted that the region had over 3,000 landslides, and the agency will evaluate properties affected by them case by case.It would cost them way more to demolish the house and rebuild the house than repair the landslide, Brodsky said. The whole thing is just preposterous.The post As Helene Survivors Wait for State Help, Some Victims of Earlier Hurricanes Are Still Out of Their Homes appeared first on ProPublica.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 1 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση -
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APNEWS.COMFAA closes airspace around El Paso, Texas, for 10 days, grounding all flightsA Federal Aviation Administration sign hangs in the tower at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, March 16, 2017. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)2026-02-11T10:51:06Z EL PASO, Texas (AP) The Federal Aviation Administration is closing the airspace around El Paso International Airport in Texas for 10 days, grounding all flights to and from the airport.A notice posted on the FAAs website said the temporary flight restrictions were for special security reasons, but did not provide additional details. The closure does not include Mexican airspace.The airport said in an Instagram post that all flights to and from the airport would be grounded from late Tuesday through late on Feb. 20, including commercial, cargo and general aviation flights. It suggested travelers contact their airlines to get up-to-date flight information.The shutdown is likely to create significant disruptions given the duration and the size of the metropolitan area. El Paso, a border city with a population of nearly 700,000 and larger when you include the surrounding metro area, is hub of cross-border commerce alongside neighboring Ciudad Juarez in Mexico.The airport describes itself as the gateway to west Texas, southern New Mexico and northern Mexico. Southwest, United, American and Delta all operate flights there, among others.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 1 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
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APNEWS.COMAttorney General Bondi will face questions from lawmakers as fallout over Epstein files continuesAttorney General Pam Bondi listens as President Donald Trump speaks at an event on addiction recovery in the Oval Office of the White House, Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Allison Robbert)2026-02-11T05:05:39Z WASHINGTON (AP) Attorney General Pam Bondi will face questions from lawmakers Wednesday over the Justice Departments handling of files related to Jeffrey Epstein that have exposed sensitive private information about victims despite redaction efforts.Bondi is confronting a new wave of criticism stemming from the political saga that has dogged her term after the release of millions of additional Epstein disclosures that victims have slammed as sloppy and incomplete. It will be the first time the attorney general appears before Congress since a tumultuous hearing in October in which she repeatedly deflected questions and countered Democrats criticism of her actions with her own political attacks. Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee are expected to grill Bondi on how the Justice Department decided what should and should not be made public under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which was passed by Congress after the department abruptly announced in July that no more files would be released even though it had raised the hopes of conservative influencers and conspiracy theorists. Bondi has continuously struggled to move past the backlash over her handling of the Epstein files since distributing binders to a group of social media influencers at the White House last February. The binders included no new revelations about Epstein, leading to even more calls from President Donald Trumps base for the files to be released. The hearing comes days after some lawmakers visited a Justice Department office to look through unredacted versions of the files. As part of an arrangement with the Justice Department, lawmakers were given access to the over 3 million released files in a reading room with four computers and were allowed to take handwritten notes. Democrats have accused the Justice Department of redacting information that should have been made public, including information that could lead to scrutiny of Epsteins associates. Meanwhile, victims have slammed the department for inconsistent or nonexistent redactions that allowed for the inadvertent release of nude photos and other private information about victims. The department has defended the latest rollout of more than 3 million pages of documents along with more than 2,000 videos and 180,000 images. The Associated Press and other media organizations are still reviewing millions of pages of documents, many of them previously confidential. An AP review of records shows that while investigators collected ample proof that Epstein sexually abused underage girls, they found scant evidence the well-connected financier led a sex trafficking ring serving powerful men. Videos and photos seized from Epsteins homes in New York, Florida and the Virgin Islands didnt depict victims being abused or implicate anyone else in his crimes, a prosecutor wrote in one 2025 memo. ALANNA DURKIN RICHER Richer covers the Justice Department and federal courts. She joined The AP in 2013 and is based in Washington. twitter ERIC TUCKER Tucker covers national security in Washington for The Associated Press, with a focus on the FBI and Justice Department. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 1 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
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APNEWS.COMUS employers add surprising 130,000 jobs last month, but revisions cut thousands of 2024-2025 jobsHiring sign is displayed in front of a restaurant in Chicago, Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)2026-02-11T05:01:36Z WASHINGTON (AP) U.S. employers added a surprisingly strong 130,000 jobs last month, but government revisions cut 2024-2025 U.S. payrolls by hundreds of thousands. The unemployment rate fell to 4.3%, the Labor Department said Wednesday.The report included major revisions that reduced the number of jobs created last year to just 181,000, weakest since the pandemic year of 2020, and less than half the previously reported 584,000.The job market has been sluggish for months even though the economy is registering solid growth.Weak hiring reflects the lingering impact of high interest rates, billionaire Elon Musks purge last year of the federal workforce and uncertainty arising from President Donald Trumps erratic trade policies, which have left businesses unsure about hiring.THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. APs earlier story follows below. WASHINGTON (AP) The U.S. economy is on a tear. So why is the American job market limping behind?The Labor Department is expected to report Wednesday that companies, government agencies and nonprofits added 75,000 jobs last month, according to a survey of forecasters by the data firm FactSet. That would be an improvement over Decembers 50,000 but its inconsistent with strong economic growth and well short of the hiring boom of just a couple of years ago. Moreover, the January numbers are likely to be overshadowed by Labor Department revisions that will sharply reduce 2025 job creation and might even wipe it out altogether. The job markets weakness reflects the lingering impact of high interest rates, billionaire Elon Musks purge last year of the federal workforce and uncertainty arising from President Donald Trumps erratic trade policies, which have left businesses unsure about the economic outlook. Dreary numbers have been coming in ahead of Wednesdays report. Employers posted just 6.5 million job openings in December, fewest in more than five years. Payroll processor ADP reported last week that private employers added 22,000 jobs in January, far fewer than economists had forecast. And the outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas reported that companies slashed more than 108,000 jobs last month, the most since October and the worst January for job cuts since 2009. Several well-known companies announced layoffs last month. UPS is cutting 30,000 jobs. Chemicals giant Dow, shifting to more automation and artificial intelligence, is cutting 4,500 jobs. And Amazon is ending 16,000 corporate jobs, its second round of mass layoffs in three months.The sluggish job market doesnt match the economys performance.From July to September, Americas gross domestic product its output of goods and services galloped ahead at a 4.4% annual pace, fastest in two years. Consumer spending was strong, and growth got a boost from rising exports and tumbling imports. And that came on top of solid 3.8% growth from April through June.Economists are puzzling out whether job creation will eventually accelerate to catch up to strong growth, perhaps as President Donald Trumps tax cuts translate into big tax refunds that consumers start spending this year. But there are other possibilities. GDP growth could slow and fall into line with a weak labor market or advances in AI and automation could mean that the economy can roar ahead without creating many jobs. Labor Department numbers currently show that U.S. employers added an unimpressive 49,000 jobs a month in 2025. (In the hiring boom of 2021-2023, by contrast, they were creating 400,000 jobs a month.)But last years already lackluster numbers are sure to be marked down sharply on Wednesday when the government releases annual benchmark revisions, meant to take into account the more-accurate jobs numbers that employers report to state unemployment agencies. A preliminary estimate of that revision, released last September, showed it could erase 911,000 jobs in the year that ended in March 2025. Economists expect that Wednesdays final benchmark revision will be somewhat smaller than that. Adding to the muddle: The Labor Department is also revising more-recent payroll numbers to reflect better information about how many businesses have opened or shut down. Shruti Mishra, U.S. economist at Bank of America, believes those revisions likely reduced job creation by 20,000 to 30,000 a month from April 2025 onward. Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell has said the current numbers may overstate job creation by 60,000 a month.Altogether, Stephen Brown of Capital Economics wrote in a commentary, the revisions could mean that the American economy actually lost jobs in 2025, the first annual drop since the pandemic and lockdown year of 2020.As revisions muddy the hiring numbers, Bank of Americas Mishra wrote in a commentary last week, the unemployment rate is providing a better gauge of how the job market is doing. She expects that it stayed low at 4.4% in January. Despite recent high-profile layoffs, the unemployment rate hasnt looked as dismal as the hiring numbers.That is partly because President Donald Trumps immigration crackdown has reduced the number of foreign-born people competing for work. As a result, the number of new jobs that the economy needs to create to keep the unemployment rate from rising the break-even point -- has tumbled. In 2023, when immigrants were pouring into the United States, it reached a high of 250,000, according to economist Anton Cheremukhin of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. By mid-2025, Cheremukhin found, it was down to 30,000. Researchers at the Brookings Institution believe it could now be as low as 20,000 and headed lower.The combination of weak hiring but low unemployment means that most American workers are enjoying job security. But those who are looking for jobs especially young people who can be competing at the entry level with AI and automation often struggle to land one. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 1 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
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