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WWW.NATURE.COMAll this is in crisis: US universities curtail staff, spending as Trump cuts take holdNature, Published online: 21 March 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00849-yFurloughs and more staff reductions loom as academic institutions contend with the prospect of even deeper cuts to federal funding.0 Comments 0 Shares 226 Views 0 Reviews -
APNEWS.COMIsrael returns to war in Gaza with wider aims and almost no constraintsThe bodies of victims of an Israeli army airstrike are prepared for burial at Indonesia Hospital in Beit Lahia, northern Gaza Strip, Thursday, March 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi)2025-03-21T04:59:31Z Israels renewed military offensive in the Gaza Strip threatens to be even deadlier and more destructive than the last, as it pursues wider aims with far fewer constraints.Israel resumed the war with a surprise bombardment early Tuesday that killed hundreds of Palestinians, ending the ceasefire and vowing even more devastation if Hamas doesnt release its remaining hostages and leave the territory. The bodies of victims of an Israeli army airstrike are prepared for burial at Indonesia Hospital in Beit Lahia, northern Gaza Strip, Thursday, March 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi) The bodies of victims of an Israeli army airstrike are prepared for burial at Indonesia Hospital in Beit Lahia, northern Gaza Strip, Thursday, March 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More President Donald Trump has expressed full support for the renewed offensive and suggested last month that Gazas 2 million Palestinians be resettled in other countries. Iran-backed militant groups allied with Hamas are in disarray.Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus coalition is stronger than ever, and there are fewer hostages inside Gaza than at any point since Hamas ignited the war with its Oct. 7, 2023, attack, which gives Israels military more freedom to act.It all suggests that the wars next phase could be more brutal than the last, in which tens of thousands of Palestinians were killed, the vast majority of the population was displaced and much of Gaza was bombed to rubble.If all the Israeli hostages are not released and Hamas is not expelled from Gaza. Israel will act with an intensity that you have not seen, Defense Minister Israel Katz said Wednesday. Return the hostages and expel Hamas, and other options will open up for you, including going to other places in the world for those who wish. The alternative is complete destruction and devastation. Displaced Palestinians, carrying their belongings, move away from the areas where the Israeli army is operating after Israels renewed offensive in the Gaza Strip, on the outskirts of Beit Lahia, Thursday, March 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi) Displaced Palestinians, carrying their belongings, move away from the areas where the Israeli army is operating after Israels renewed offensive in the Gaza Strip, on the outskirts of Beit Lahia, Thursday, March 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Even less US pressure to spare civiliansThe Biden administration provided crucial military and diplomatic support to Israel throughout the first 15 months of the war.But it also tried to limit civilian casualties. In the early days of the war, Biden persuaded Israel to lift a complete siege on Gaza and repeatedly urged it to allow in more humanitarian aid, with mixed results. He opposed Israels offensive in southern Gaza last May and suspended a weapons shipment in protest, only to see Israel proceed anyway. Biden also worked with Egypt and Qatar to broker the ceasefire through more than a year of negotiations, with Trumps team pushing it over the finish line. Ella Osama Abu Dagga, 25 days old, is held by her great-aunt Suad Abu Dagga, after she was pulled from the rubble earlier following an Israeli army airstrike that killed her parents and brother, in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, Thursday, March 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana ) Ella Osama Abu Dagga, 25 days old, is held by her great-aunt Suad Abu Dagga, after she was pulled from the rubble earlier following an Israeli army airstrike that killed her parents and brother, in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, Thursday, March 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana ) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More The Trump administration appears to have set no restrictions. It hasnt criticized Israels decision to once again seal off Gaza, to unilaterally withdrawal from the ceasefire agreement that Trump took credit for, or to carry out strikes that have killed hundreds of men, women and children.Israel says it only targets fighters and must dismantle Hamas to prevent a repeat of the Oct. 7 attack, when Palestinian militants killed roughly 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took 251 hostages.The Biden administration voiced doubt about those aims, saying months ago that Hamas was no longer able to carry out such an attack.The offensive killed more than 48,000 Palestinians before the January ceasefire, according to Gazas Health Ministry. It does not distinguish between militants and civilians in its count but says more than half of the dead were women and children. Trump has suggested Gaza be depopulatedTrump appeared to lose interest in the ceasefire weeks ago, when he said it should be canceled if Hamas didnt immediately release all the hostages.A short-lived White House attempt to negotiate directly with Hamas was abandoned after it angered Israel. Trumps Mideast envoy, Steve Witkoff, then blamed Hamas for the demise of the truce because it didnt accept proposals to immediately release hostages.Hamas has said it will only release the remaining hostages its only bargaining chip in exchange for more Palestinian prisoners, a lasting ceasefire and an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, as called for in the ceasefire agreement.Trump, meanwhile, has suggested that Gazas entire population be transferred to other countries so that the U.S. can take ownership of the territory and rebuild it for others.Palestinians say they dont want to leave their homeland, and Arab countries roundly rejected the proposal. Human rights experts said it would likely violate international law.Israel has embraced the proposal and said it is drawing up plans to implement it. Netanyahus government is stronger than everNetanyahu came under heavy pressure from families and supporters of the hostages to stick with the truce in order to bring their loved ones home. For months, thousands of protesters have regularly gathered in downtown Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, blocked major highways and scuffled with police.In restarting the war, though, Netanyahu brushed them aside and strengthened his hard-line coalition.Israels far-right national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, who resigned to protest the ceasefire, returned to the government shortly after Tuesdays strikes. He and Bezalel Smotrich, another far-right ally of Netanyahu, want to continue the war, depopulate Gaza through what they refer to as voluntary migration, and rebuild Jewish settlements there that Israel removed two decades ago.Netanyahu has also fired or forced out several top officials who had appeared more open to a hostage deal. Hamas and its allies are in disarrayHamas still rules Gaza, but most of its top leaders have been killed and its military capabilities have been vastly depleted. Israel says it has killed some 20,000 militants without providing evidence.In its first attack since Israel ended the ceasefire, Hamas fired three rockets on Thursday that set off air raid sirens in Tel Aviv, without causing casualties.Lebanons Hezbollah, which traded fire with Israel throughout much of the war, was forced to accept a truce last fall after Israels air and ground war killed most of its top leadership and left much of southern Lebanon in ruins. The overthrow of Syrian President Bashar Assad removed a key ally and further diminished the militant group.Iran, which supports Hamas and Hezbollah, and which directly traded fire with Israel twice last year, appears unlikely to intervene. Israel said it inflicted heavy damage on Irans air defenses in a wave of retaliatory strikes last fall, and Trump has threatened U.S. military action if Iran doesnt negotiate a new agreement on its nuclear program.The Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen have resumed long-range missile fire against Israel, which has rarely caused casualties or serious damage. The U.S., meanwhile, launched a new wave of strikes on the Houthis, which could further limit their capabilities.International criticism could be more mutedThe first phase of the war sparked worldwide protests, some criticism from European leaders and action at the United Nations. Israel was accused of genocide at the International Court of Justice, and the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Netanayahu.This time could be different.The Trump administration has detained foreign-born pro-Palestinian student activists and others, and threatened to pull billions of dollars in federal funding from universities accused of tolerating antisemitism, making a repeat of last years U.S. campus protests unlikely. Europe is already locked in high-stakes disputes with Trump over aid to Ukraine and American tariffs, and appears unlikely to push back on the Middle East.The U.S. and Israel have adamantly rejected the actions by both international courts, accusing them of bias. Trump signed an executive order in early February imposing sanctions on the ICC, of which neither the United States nor Israel are members.___Follow APs war coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war0 Comments 0 Shares 233 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMHeathrow Airport closes for the day after a fire knocks out power, disrupting hundreds of flightsA plane takes off over a road sign near Heathrow Airport in London, June 5, 2018. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth, File)2025-03-21T03:42:34Z LONDON (AP) Britains Heathrow Airport closed for the full day Friday after a fire knocked out its power, disrupting flights for hundreds of thousands of passengers at one of Europes biggest travel hubs.Several flights were diverted to Gatwick Airport, Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris and Irelands Shannon Airport, tracking services showed. At least 1,350 flights to and from Heathrow were affected already, including several from U.S. cities that were canceled, flight tracking service FlightRadar 24 said. To maintain the safety of our passengers and colleagues, we have no choice but to close Heathrow for the full day, the airport said. We expect significant disruption over the coming days, and passengers should not travel to the airport under any circumstances until the airport reopens.Heathrow is one of the worlds busiest airports for international travel. It had its busiest January on record earlier this year, with more than 6.3 million passengers, up more than 5% for the same period last year. January also was the 11th month in a row it averaged over 200,000 passengers a day, with the airport citing transatlantic travel as a key contributor. Seven United Airlines flights returned to their origin or diverted to other airports and its flights Friday to Heathrow were canceled, the airline said. The FlightAware website showed more cancelations including two from John F. Kennedy International in New York, a Delta Airlines flight and an American Airlines flight. Heathrow said in its statement it will provide an update on its operations when it has more information on when power will be restored.National Rail canceled all trains to and from the airport. London Fire Brigade said 10 fire engines and around 70 firefighters were on the scene after a transformer within an electrical substation caught fire in west London late Thursday night. Thousands of homes also lost power and about 150 people were evacuated.Footage posted to social media showed huge flames and large plumes of smoke coming from the facility.The fire has caused a power outage affecting a large number of homes and local businesses, and we are working closely with our partners to minimize disruption, Assistant Commissioner Pat Goulbourne said.Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks said in a post on X the power outage affected more than 16,300 homes.Emergency services were called to the scene at 11.23 p.m. Thursday. The cause of the fire is yet to be determined.Goulbourne urged people to take safety precautions and avoid the area as crews worked to extinguish the blaze.Heathrow normally opens for flights at 6 a.m. due to nighttime flying restrictions. It said the closure would last until 11:59 p.m. Friday.The U.K. government earlier this year approved building a third runway at the airport to boost the economy and connectivity to the world.0 Comments 0 Shares 255 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMHegseth says hell meet with Musk at the Pentagon to discuss efficienciesDefense Secretary Pete Hegseth responds to questions from reporters during a meeting with Britain's Defense Secretary John Healey at the Pentagon, Thursday, March 6, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)2025-03-21T03:55:17Z WASHINGTON (AP) Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said late Thursday that he would be meeting with billionaire Elon Musk at the Pentagon Friday to discuss innovation, efficiencies & smarter production.Musk, a top adviser to President Donald Trump, and his Department of Government Efficiency have played an integral role in the administrations push to dramatically reduce the size of the government. Musk has faced intense blowback from some lawmakers and voters for his chainsaw-wielding approach to laying off workers and slashing programs, although Trumps supporters have hailed it.A senior defense official told reporters Tuesday that roughly 50,000 to 60,000 civilian jobs will be cut in the Defense Department. In a post on Musks X platform, Hegseth emphasized that this is NOT a meeting about top secret China war plans, denying a story published by The New York Times late Thursday.Hegseth is also scheduled to deliver remarks with Trump at the White House Friday morning.0 Comments 0 Shares 247 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMDeportees from the US hop embassy to embassy in Panama in a desperate scramble to seek asylumAfghan migrants deported from the U.S. walk to the UN Refugee Agency office in Panama City, Thursday, March 20, 2025, seeking advice on how and where to seek asylum. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)2025-03-21T05:00:58Z PANAMA CITY (AP) Migrants from Afghanistan, Russia, Iran and China deported from the United States and dropped into limbo in Panama hopped door-to-door at embassies and consulates this week in a desperate attempt to seek asylum in any country that would accept them.The focus of international humanitarian concern just weeks before, the deportees now say theyre increasingly worried that with little legal and humanitarian assistance and no clear pathway forward offered by authorities, they may be forgotten. After this, we dont know what well do, said 29-year-old Hayatullah Omagh, who fled Afghanistan in 2022 after the Taliban takeover.In February, the United States deported nearly 300 people from mostly Asian nations to Panama. The Central American ally was supposed to be a stopover for migrants from countries that were more challenging for the U.S. to deport to as the Trump administration tried to accelerate deportations. Some agreed to voluntarily return to their countries from Panama, but others refused out of fear of persecution and were sent to a remote camp in the Darien jungle for weeks. Earlier this month, Panama released those remaining migrants from the camp, giving them one month to leave Panama. The government said they had declined assistance from international organizations, instead choosing to make their own arrangements. But with limited money, no familiarity with Panama and little to no Spanish, the migrants have struggled. Seeking asylum door-to-doorOn Tuesday, about a dozen migrants began visiting foreign missions in Panamas capital, including the Canadian and British embassies, and the Swiss and Australian consulates with the hope of starting the process to seek refuge in those countries. They were either turned away or told that they would need to call or reach out to embassies by email. Messages were met with no response or a generic response saying embassies couldnt help.In one email, Omagh detailed why he had to flee his country, writing please dont let me be sent back to Afghanistan, a place where there is no way for me to survive.The Embassy of Canada in Panama does not offer visa or immigration services, not either services for refugee. Nor are we allowed to answer any questions in regards to visa or immigration, the response read.At the British Embassy, a security guard handed asylum-seekers a pamphlet reading Emergency Help for British People. The Swiss consulate told the group they would have to reach out to the embassy in Costa Rica, and handed the migrants a piece of paper with general phone lines and emails printed from the embassys website.Canadian, British and Australian diplomats in Panama did not respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press. The Swiss consulate denied that they turned away the asylum-seekers. Panama limboThe migrants had travelled halfway across the globe, reached the U.S. border where they sought asylum and instead found themselves in Panama, a country some had traversed months earlier on their way to the U.S.Many of the deportees said they would be open to seeking asylum in Panama, but had been told both by international aid groups and Panamanian authorities that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to be granted refuge in the Central American nation.lvaro Botero, among those advocating for the migrants at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, said he wasnt surprised that they were turned away from embassies, as such help is often only offered in extreme cases of political persecution, and that other governments may fear tensions with the Trump administration.Its crucial that these people are not forgotten, Botero said. They never asked to be sent to Panama, and now theyre in Panama with no idea what to do, without knowing what their future will be and unable to return to their countries.The Trump administration has simultaneously closed legal pathways to the U.S. at its southern border, ramped up its deportation program, suspended its refugee resettlement program, as well as funding for organizations that could potentially aid the migrants now stuck in Panama.Over the weekend, the Trump administration sent more than 200 Venezuelan migrants to El Salvador to be held in a maximum-security gang prison, alleging that those expelled were part the Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang without providing evidence. Limited options remainOn Thursday, the migrants visited the Panama offices of the U.N. refugee agency. Omagh said they were told that the agency could not help them seek asylum in other countries due to restrictions by the Panamanian government. A U.N. official told them they could help start the asylum process in Panama, but warned that it was very unlikely that Panamas government would accept their claim, Omagh said.The U.N.'s International Organization for Migration and the refugee agency did not immediately respond to requests for comment by the AP. The same day, Filippo Grandi, head of the U.N. refugee agency, warned that aid cuts by the U.S. government would hurt refugee services around the world.We appeal to member States to honor their commitments to displaced people. Now is the time for solidarity, not retreat, Grandi said in a statement.Deportees including Omagh worried that foreign governments and aid organizations were washing their hands of them. Omagh said that as an atheist and member of an ethnic minority group in Afghanistan known as the Hazara, returning home under the rule of the Taliban would mean death. He only went to the U.S. after trying for years to live in Pakistan, Iran and other countries but being denied visas.Russian Aleksandr Surgin, also among the group seeking help at the embassies, said he left his country because he openly opposed the war in Ukraine on social media, and was told by government officials he could either be jailed or fight with Russian troops in Ukraine.When asked Thursday what he would do next, he responded simply: I dont hope for anything anymore.___Janetsky reported from Mexico City.0 Comments 0 Shares 258 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMThis AP map shows sabotage across Europe that has been blamed on Russia and its proxiesEstonian naval ships sail in the Baltic Sea on Jan. 9, 2025, as part of stepped-up NATO patrols in the region following suspected sabotage of undersea cables. (AP Photo/Hendrik Osula, File)2025-03-21T08:19:04Z Western officials have accused Russia and its proxies of staging dozens of attacks and other incidents across Europe since the invasion of Ukraine three years ago, according to data collected by The Associated Press.They allege the disruption campaign is an extension of Russian President Vladimir Putins war, intended to sow division in European societies and undermine support for Ukraine.The AP documented 59 incidents in which European governments, prosecutors, intelligence services or other Western officials blamed Russia, groups linked to Russia or its ally Belarus for cyberattacks, spreading propaganda, plotting killings or committing acts of vandalism, arson, sabotage or espionage since the Feb. 24, 2022, invasion. The incidents range from stuffing car tailpipes with expanding foam in Germany to a plot to plant explosives on cargo planes. They include setting fire to stores and a museum, hacking that targeted politicians and critical infrastructure, and spying by a ring convicted in the U.K. Richard Moore, the head of Britains foreign intelligence service, called it a staggeringly reckless campaign in November. It is often difficult to prove Russias involvement, and the Kremlin denied carrying out a sabotage campaign against the West. But more and more governments are publicly attributing attacks to Russia.The alleged disruption has a double purpose, James Appathurai, the NATO official responsible for the alliances response to such threats, told the AP. One is to create political disquiet and undermine citizens support for their governments and the other is to undercut support for Ukraine, said Appathurai, deputy assistant secretary-general for Innovation, Hybrid, and Cyber.During the investigation, the AP spoke to 15 current officials, including two prime ministers, and officials from five European intelligence services, three defense ministries and NATO, in addition to experts.The AP plotted the incidents on a map to show the scope of the alleged campaign, which experts say is particularly worrying at a time when U.S. support for Ukraine is wavering and European allies are questioning Washingtons reliability as a security partner and ally. What is happening? Rheinmetall CEO Armin Papperger, from left, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius stand in a hall with Leopard 2A4 main battle tanks in Unterluess, Germany, Feb. 12, 2024. (Philipp Schulze/dpa via AP, File) Rheinmetall CEO Armin Papperger, from left, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius stand in a hall with Leopard 2A4 main battle tanks in Unterluess, Germany, Feb. 12, 2024. (Philipp Schulze/dpa via AP, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More The cases are varied, and the largest concentrations are in countries that are major supporters of Ukraine.Some incidents had the potential for catastrophic consequences, including mass casualties, as when packages exploded at shipping facilities in Germany and the U.K. Western officials said they suspected the packages were part of a broader plot by Russian intelligence to put bombs on cargo planes headed to the U.S. and Canada. In another case, Western intelligence agencies uncovered what they said was a Russian plot to kill the head of a major German arms manufacturer that is a supplier of weapons to Ukraine.European authorities are investigating several cases of damage to infrastructure under the Baltic Sea, including to a power cable linking Estonia and Finland. Finnish authorities detained a ship, suspected of being part of Russias shadow fleet used to avoid sanctions, after that cable and others were damaged.When a fake French Defense Ministry website claimed citizens were being called up to fight in Ukraine, a French minister denounced it as Russian disinformation. German authorities suspect Russia was behind a campaign to block up scores of car tailpipes ahead of national elections, according to a European intelligence official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters.Officials from Estonia, Poland, Latvia and Finland, meanwhile, have accused Russia and Belarus of directing migrants to their borders.Putins spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, told the AP that the Kremlin has never been shown any proofs supporting the accusations and said certainly we definitely reject any allegations.How AP documented the cases A man walks by Stars of David tagged on a wall in Paris, Oct. 31, 2023. (AP Photo/Michel Euler, File) A man walks by Stars of David tagged on a wall in Paris, Oct. 31, 2023. (AP Photo/Michel Euler, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More The AP scoured through hundreds of incidents suspected to be linked to Russia since Moscows invasion that were reported in open sources such as local media and government websites.They were included in APs tally only when officials drew a clear link to Russia, pro-Russian groups or ally Belarus. Most of the accusations were made to or reported by AP, either at the time they occurred or during the course of this investigation. Fourteen cases were reported by other news organizations and attributed to named officials.In about a quarter of the cases, prosecutors have brought charges or courts have convicted people of carrying out the sabotage. But in many more, no specific culprit has been publicly identified or brought to justice.A bolder approach Migrants arrive at the international border crossing between Finland and Russia, in Salla, Finland, Nov. 23, 2023. (Jussi Nukari/Lehtikuva via AP, File) Migrants arrive at the international border crossing between Finland and Russia, in Salla, Finland, Nov. 23, 2023. (Jussi Nukari/Lehtikuva via AP, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Countries have always spied on their enemies and long waged propaganda campaigns to further their interests abroad. But since the invasion of Ukraine, Moscow has become bolder, hitting the West with sabotage, vandalism and arson in addition to the tactics it previously used, including killings and cyberattacks, said Elisabeth Braw, an expert on the attacks at the Atlantic Council in Washington.The way you can weaken a country today is not by invading it, she said.China has also been accused of espionage and cyber operations in Europe, and The Wall Street Journal reported that Ukrainian authorities were responsible for blowing up the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines in 2022. Kyiv has denied this.Multiple countries engage in hybrid operations, said David Salvo, managing director of the Alliance for Securing Democracy at the German Marshall Fund. Russia is the overwhelming culprit in Europe.How to respond even as US support wavers The Cook Islands-registered oil tanker Eagle S is anchored near the Kilpilahti port in Porvoo on the Gulf of Finland, Dec. 30, 2024. (Jussi Nukari/Lehtikuva via AP, File) The Cook Islands-registered oil tanker Eagle S is anchored near the Kilpilahti port in Porvoo on the Gulf of Finland, Dec. 30, 2024. (Jussi Nukari/Lehtikuva via AP, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More A coordinated approach especially sharing intelligence is critical to tracking and countering the threats, Appathurai said.That cooperation never easy since intelligence is not shared collectively across NATO members faces new challenges now, as the Trump administration increasingly questions the role of the alliance, embraces Russia and spars with its European partners.Still, as the scale of the campaign becomes clearer, some nations are becoming more assertive.Appathurai pointed to the approach to suspected sabotage in the Baltic Sea, where NATO has launched a mission to protect critical infrastructure.If we are to have a chance of stemming the threat, Braw said, then we have to work together.___Associated Press reporters John Leicester in Paris; Vanessa Gera and Monika Scislowska in Warsaw, Poland; Jill Lawless in London; Kirsten Grieshaber and Geir Moulson in Berlin; Suman Naishadham in Madrid; Justin Spike in Budapest, Hungary; and Karel Janicek in Prague, Czech Republic, contributed. ___Follow the APs coverage of the war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine EMMA BURROWS Burrows is an Associated Press reporter covering Russia, Belarus, Central Asia and the Caucasus. She is based in London. twitter RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Comments 0 Shares 232 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMSudans military says it has retaken Khartoums Republican Palace, seat of countrys governmentThis satellite picture from Planet Labs PBC shows the Republican Palace, center, in Khartoum, Sudan, March 15, 2025 (Planet Labs PBC via AP)2025-03-21T06:30:50Z CAIRO (AP) Sudans military said Friday it retook the Republican Palace in Khartoum, the last heavily guarded bastion of rival paramilitary forces in the capital, after nearly two years of fighting.Social media videos showed its soldiers inside giving the date as the 21st day of Ramadan, the holy Muslim fasting month, which corresponds to Friday. A Sudanese military officer wearing a captains epaulettes made the announcement in the video, and confirmed the troops were inside the compound.The palace appeared to be partly in ruins, with soldiers steps crunching broken tiles underneath their boots. Soldiers carrying assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenade launchers chanted: God is the greatest! Khaled al-Aiser, Sudans information minister, said the military had retaken the palace in a post on the social platform X.Today the flag is raised, the palace is back and the journey continues until victory is complete, he wrote. Palaces fall a symbolic and strategic momentThe fall of the Republican Palace, a compound along the Nile River that was the seat of government before the war erupted and is immortalized on Sudanese banknotes and postage stamps, marks another battlefield gain for Sudans military. It has made steady advances in recent months under army chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan.It means the rival Rapid Support Forces, under Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, have been mostly expelled from the capital of Khartoum after Sudans war began in April 2023. Sporadic gunfire could be heard throughout the capital Friday, though it wasnt clear if it involved fighting or was celebratory. The group did not immediately acknowledge the loss, which likely wont stop the fighting as the RSF and its allies still hold territory elsewhere in Sudan. Late Thursday, the RSF claimed it seized control of the Sudanese city of al-Maliha, a strategic desert city in North Darfur near the borders of Chad and Libya. Sudans military has acknowledged fighting around al-Maliha, but has not said it lost the city. Al-Maliha is around 200 kilometers (125 miles) north of the city of El Fasher, which remains held by the Sudanese military despite near-daily strikes by the surrounding RSF.The head of the U.N. childrens agency has said the conflict created the worlds largest and humanitarian crisis.The war has killed more than 28,000 people, forced millions to flee their homes and left some families eating grass in a desperate attempt to survive as famine sweeps parts of the country. Other estimates suggest a far higher death toll.The Republican Palace had been the seat of power during the British colonization of Sudan. It also saw some of the first independent Sudanese flags raised over the country in 1956. It also had been the main office of Sudans president and other top officials.The Sudanese military have long targeted the palace and its grounds, shelling and firing on the compound. Sudan has faced years of chaos and warSudan, a nation in northeastern Africa, has been unstable since a popular uprising forced the removal of longtime autocratic President Omar al-Bashir in 2019. A short-lived transition to democracy was derailed when Burhan and Dagalo led a military coup in 2021.The RSF and Sudans military then began fighting each other in 2023.Burhans forces, including Sudans military and allied militias, have advanced against the RSF since the start of this year. They retook a key refinery north of Khartoum. They then pushed in on RSF positions around the capital itself. The fighting has led to an increase in civilian casualties.Al-Bashir faces charges at the International Criminal Court over carrying out a genocidal campaign in the early 2000s in the western Darfur region with the Janjaweed, the precursor to the RSF. Rights groups and the U.N. accuse the RSF and allied Arab militias of again attacking ethnic African groups in this war.Since the war began, both the Sudanese military and the RSF have faced allegations of human rights abuses. Before U.S. President Joe Biden left office, the State Department declared the RSF are committing genocide. The military and the RSF have denied committing abuses.___Gambrell reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. SAMY MAGDY Magdy is a Middle East reporter for The Associated Press, based in Cairo. He focuses on conflict, migration and human rights abuses. twitter facebook mailto 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 mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Comments 0 Shares 252 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMDetentions of European tourists at US borders spark fears of traveling to AmericaVehicles wait in line to cross the border into the United States at the San Ysidro Port of Entry, Tuesday, March 18, 2025, in Tijuana, Mexico. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File)2025-03-21T04:01:16Z SAN DIEGO (AP) Lennon Tyler and her German fianc often took road trips to Mexico when he vacationed in the United States since it was only a days drive from her home in Las Vegas, one of the perks of their long-distance relationship.But things went terribly wrong when they drove back from Tijuana last month. U.S. border agents handcuffed Tyler, a U.S. citizen, and chained her to a bench, while her fianc, Lucas Sielaff, was accused of violating the rules of his 90-day U.S. tourist permit, the couple said. Authorities later handcuffed and shackled Sielaff and sent him to a crowded U.S. immigration detention center. He spent 16 days locked up before being allowed to fly home to Germany. Since President Donald Trump took office, there have been other high-profile incidents of tourists like Sielaff being stopped at U.S. border crossings and held for weeks at U.S. immigration detention facilities before being allowed to fly home at their own expense. They include another German tourist who was stopped at the Tijuana crossing on Jan. 25. Jessica Brsche spent over six weeks locked up, including over a week in solitary confinement, a friend said. On the Canadian border, a backpacker from Wales spent nearly three weeks at a detention center before flying home this week. And a Canadian woman on a work visa detained at the Tijuana border spent 12 days in detention before returning home last weekend. Sielaff, 25, and the others say it was never made clear why they were taken into custody even after they offered to go home voluntarily. Pedro Rios, director of the American Friends Service Committee, a nonprofit that aids migrants, said in the 22 years he has worked on the border he has never seen travelers from Western Europe and Canada, longtime U.S. allies, locked up like this. Its definitely unusual with these cases so close together, and the rationale for detaining these people doesnt make sense, he said. It doesnt justify the abhorrent treatment and conditions they endured. The only reason I see is there is a much more fervent anti-immigrant atmosphere, Rios said.U.S. authorities did not respond to a request from The Associated Press for figures on how many tourists have been held at detention facilities or explain why they werent simply denied entry.The incidents are fueling anxiety as the Trump administration prepares for a ban on travelers from some countries. Noting the evolving federal travel policies, the University of California, Los Angeles sent a notice this week urging its foreign-born students and staff to consider the risks of non-essential travel for spring break, warning re-entry requirements may change while you are away, impacting your return.Immigration and Customs Enforcement said in an email to the AP that Sielaff and Brsche, who was held for 45 days, were deemed inadmissible by Customs and Border Protection. That agency said it cannot discuss specifics but if statutes or visa terms are violated, travelers may be subject to detention and removal. The agencies did not comment on the other cases. Both German tourists were allowed into the United States under a waiver program offered to a select group of countries, mostly in Europe and Asia, whose citizens are allowed to travel to the U.S. for business or leisure for up to 90 days without getting a visa in advance. Applicants register online with the Electronic System for Travel Authorization. But even if they are authorized to travel under that system, they can still be barred from entering the country.Sielaff arrived in the U.S. on Jan. 27. He and Tyler decided to go to Tijuana for four days in mid-February because Tylers dog needed surgery and veterinary services are cheaper there. They figured they would enjoy some tacos and make a fun trip out of it. Mexico is a wonderful and beautiful country that Lucas and I love to visit, Tyler said.They returned Feb. 18, just 22 days into Sielaffs 90-day tourist permit.When they pulled up to the crossing, the U.S. border agent asked Sielaff aggressively, Where are you going? Where do you live? Tyler said. English is not Lucas first language and so he said, Were going to Las Vegas, and the agent says, Oh, we caught you. You live in Las Vegas. You cant do that, Tyler said, recounting what happened. Sielaff was taken away for more questioning. Tyler said she asked to go with him or if he could get a translator and was told to be quiet, then taken out of her car and handcuffed and chained to a bench. Her dog, recovering from surgery, was left in the car.After four hours, Tyler was allowed to leave but said she was given no information about her fiancs whereabouts.During questioning, Sielaff said he told authorities he never lived in the U.S. and had no criminal history. He said he was given a full-body search and ordered to hand over his cellphone and belongings. He was put in a holding cell where he slept on a bench for two days before being transferred to the Otay Mesa Detention Center in San Diego. There, he said, he shared a cell with eight others. You are angry, you are sad, you dont know when you can get out, Sielaff said. You just dont get any answers from anybody.He was finally told to get a direct flight to Germany and submit a confirmation number. In a frantic call from Sielaff, Tyler bought it for $2,744. He flew back March 5. What happened at the border was just blatant abuse of the Border Patrols power, Tyler said. Ashley Paschen agrees. She said she learned about Brsche from a TikTok video asking anyone in the San Diego area for help after her family learned she was being held at the Otay Mesa Detention Center. Paschen visited her several times and told her people were working to get her out. Brosche flew home March 11. Shes happy to be home, Paschen said. She seems very relieved if anything but shes not coming back here anytime soon.On Feb. 26, a tourist from Wales, Becky Burke, a backpacker on a trip across North America, was stopped at the U.S.-Canada border and held for nearly three weeks at a detention facility in Washington state, her father, Paul Burke, posted on Facebook. She returned home Tuesday. On March 3, Canadian Jasmine Mooney, an actress and entrepreneur who had a visa to work in the U.S., was detained at the Tijuana crossing. She was released Saturday, her friend Brittany Kors said. Before Mooneys release, British Columbia Premier David Eby expressed concern, saying, It certainly reinforces anxiety that many British Columbians have, and many Canadians have, about our relationship with the U.S. right now, and the unpredictability of this administration and its actions.The detentions come amid legal fights over the Trump administrations arrests and deportations of other foreigners with valid visas and green card holders, including a Palestinian activist who helped organize campus protests of the war in Gaza.Tyler plans to sue the U.S. government. Sielaff said he and Tyler are now rethinking plans to hold their wedding in Las Vegas. He suffers nightmares and is considering therapy to cope with the trauma.Nobody is safe there anymore to come to America as a tourist, he said. ___Associated Press writer Rob Gillies reported from Toronto. 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APNEWS.COMIndonesias Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki volcano erupts, prompting alert level to be raisedMount Lewotobi Laki-Laki spews volcanic materials into the air in East Flores, Indonesia Friday, March 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Ester Narek)2025-03-21T03:06:46Z JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) The Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki volcano in south-central Indonesia erupted three times into Friday, sending an ash column 8,000 meters (26,200 feet) high and prompting authorities to expand the danger zone around the volcano. The volcano on the remote island of Flores in East Nusa Tenggara province has had hundreds of earthquakes and visible volcanic activity has significantly increased in the last seven days.After the three eruptions late Thursday and early Friday, the volcano was quiet during the day. Seismic activity monitored from the observation post in Wulangitang showed a decline.Authorities raised the eruption alert to the highest level and expanded the danger zone from 7 kilometers (4.5 miles) to 8 kilometers (5 miles) from the crater. No new evacuations were immediately reported. Several airlines canceled flights between Australia and Indonesias tourist island of Bali due to the eruption, while other international and domestic flights to the island have been delayed. Residents were warned to be vigilant about heavy rainfall triggering lava flows in rivers originating from the volcano, Indonesias geology agency said in a statement. An eruption of Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki in November killed nine people and injured dozens.The 1,584-meter (5,197 foot) mountain is a twin volcano with Mount Lewotobi Perempuan in the Flores Timur district.Indonesia is an archipelago of 270 million people with frequent seismic activity. It has 120 active volcanos and sits along the Ring of Fire, a horseshoe-shaped series of seismic fault lines encircling the Pacific Basin.0 Comments 0 Shares 252 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMRussian drones strike Ukrainian city of Odesa, underlining challenges for even limited truceIn this photo provided by the Ukrainian Emergency Service, firefighters put out the fire at a storehouse following a Russian attack in Odesa, Ukraine, Friday, March 21, 2025. (Ukrainian Emergency Service via AP)2025-03-21T10:28:55Z KYIV, Ukraine (AP) Russian drones pummeled the Ukrainian Black Sea port city of Odesa, injuring three people and sparking massive fires, officials said Friday, an attack that underlined Moscows intention to pursue aerial attacks even as it agreed to temporarily halt strikes on energy facilities.The strike came shortly before Czech Republic President Peter Pavel visited Odesa early Friday morning and held meetings with the citys leaders and officials from other southern regions.This is another reminder to the whole world: the war continues and Ukraine continues to fight, the head of the Odesa region, Oleh Kiper, said in a statement.He reported blazes at at least three locations after the attack late Thursday. Civilian infrastructure, commercial facilities are on fire, cars damaged, Kiper said.Over 70 people and 20 fire engines were involved in extinguishing what the emergency services called massive fires. In another attack, Russian glide bombs injured at least six people, including a child, in the Zaporizhzhia region overnight Thursday to Friday. Regional head Ivan Fedorov published photos showing fire fighters extinguishing flames at multiple damaged residential buildings. The Ukrainian air force reported that Russia fired 214 exploding drones and decoys in the latest wave of attacks. It said 114 of them were intercepted and another 81 were jammed. Russias Defense Ministry said air defenses shot down 43 Ukrainian drones, 34 of them over the Volgograd region and others over Rostov, Kursk and Belgorod regions. The authorities didnt report any casualties or significant damage.Meanwhile, a massive blaze at an oil depot in the Krasnodar region has continued to rage since it was hit by a Ukrainian drone attack late Wednesday.Ukraine and Russia agreed in principle Wednesday to a limited ceasefire after U.S. President Donald Trump spoke with the countries leaders this week, though it remained to be seen what possible targets would be off limits to attack. After a roughly hourlong call with Trump on Wednesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told reporters that technical talks in Saudi Arabia this weekend would seek to resolve what types of infrastructure would be protected from attack under the agreement.The three sides appeared to hold starkly different views about what the deal covered. While the White House said energy and infrastructure would be covered, the Kremlin declared that the agreement referred more narrowly to energy infrastructure. Zelenskyy said he would also like railways and ports to be protected.Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov emphasized Friday that the agreement reached between Trump and Putin referred only to energy facilities, adding that the Russian military is fulfilling Putins order to halt such attacks for 30 days.The Russian military are currently refraining from strikes on Ukraines energy infrastructure in accordance with the agreement reached between Russia and the United States, Peskov said in a conference call with reporters.0 Comments 0 Shares 283 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMDemocrats new internet strategy tops trending charts but also draws mockery from allies and foesSen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., speaks during a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, May 21, 2024. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)2025-03-21T10:28:40Z WASHINGTON (AP) For weeks, Democratic lawmakers have met with and mimicked figures they believe may offer them a path back to power in Washington: online influencers and content creators.Hours before President Donald Trumps joint address to Congress this month, Senate Democrats huddled with a dozen online progressive personalities who have millions of followers. House Democrats were introduced, without staff, to 40 content creators who Democratic leaders said could help them grow their audience online.An earlier tutorial session in February featured online personalities like the YouTube commentator Brian Tyler Cohen. The result has been a burst of Democratic online content, including direct-to-camera explainers in parked cars, scripted vertical videos, podcast appearances and livestreams some topping trending charts online, others drawing mockery from liberal allies and Republicans in Congress.But while the Democratic Party is largely divided over the path forward after last years election losses, party leaders agree that, no matter the message, how they connect with voters in the digital media landscape will be key to a political comeback. Democrats are aiming to double engagement with digital contentMore than a dozen Democratic senators, asked about the partys digital strategy, pointed to Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey as the architect of their new push.Weve seen tremendous growth of Democratic senators now. Theyre engaging in the tools and strategies necessary to elevate their voice in a new, changing media market, where legacy media is not the place that people get their news now, Booker said. Were just weeks into this, but just by making key changes ... were seeing a massive growth in engagement with the content that our senators are creating, and weve only just begun. Booker said hes aiming for Democratic senators to double online engagement with their content over the next year and early metrics have been noticeable. Democratic senators racked up more than 87 million views on content they published in response to Trumps joint address to Congress, according to Bookers office. But the Democrats digital efforts also draw Republican mockeryNot all of that online engagement is positive. After more than two dozen Democratic senators posted identical scripted videos knocking Trumps speech, saying he should have addressed the cost of living and his support for billionaire adviser Elon Musk, conservatives mocked them as inauthentic and out of touch. They are all actors reading a script, Musk wrote on X, the social media platform he owns. Theres no doubt that Democrats are playing catch-up. Trump and his fellow Republicans built a digital operation that fed on bombast and celebrity, and its a strategy theyve taken with them to the White House. Official government accounts are new filled with right-wing memes, cinematic videos and pugnacious statements.The Democratic embrace of influencers has also yielded mixed early results. Democrats were ridiculed online after a food and wellness influencer who attended the House Democrats creators event created a Choose Your Fighter video collage of Democratic congresswomen for Womens History Month. The White House posted a video in response that read America chose its fighters last November, and the Pentagon, normally known for being studiously non-partisan, posted a video stating We chose our fighters a long time ago.But Booker and other Democratic leaders dont consider the sneers to be a downside. Missteps are to be expected, they say, but the path to Americans attention will require some discomfort from lawmakers. I do think that the caucus as a whole is trying to figure out how we show people that we are real people, said Rep. Jasmine Crockett of Texas, one of the congresswomen featured in the viral Fighter video. Crockett, whose posts regularly garner millions of views online, said she was used to criticism for her often frank statements and was more interested in combating perceptions that Democrats are elitist or robotic. I didnt like the jumping, Im going to be honest, though, Crockett added about the viral Choose Your Fighter video. Trump prompts a more aggressive digital postureDemocrats adopted a more combative stance online in recent weeks as Trumps moves to slash the federal workforce drew protests from liberals and pushback at GOP town halls. Top Democratic digital operatives who worked for the 2024 presidential campaign of then-Vice President Kamala Harris have been in high demand, with many Democrats anticipating close 2026 races in which digital strategies may be key. Some of the most prominent Democrats across the country have been engaging more in new media since the election. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York has touted the partys message on progressive podcasts over the last month, including from the comedian Jon Stewart and the progressive outlet MeidasTouch. Clips of those videos were also lampooned online but garnered millions of views. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a potential Democratic presidential contender in 2028, has launched a podcast of his own on which he has welcomed close Trump allies like the right-wing activist Charlie Kirk and former Trump aide Steve Bannon to discuss hot-button political topics.We want to make sure we hit the podcasters that normally dont have Democrats on there, said Rep. Derek Tran, a Democrat from a competitive California House district. The ones that are more right-leaning or independent, and be able to address a crowd and an audience thats not typical for the Democratic base.Democrats divide on message vs. messagingSome House Democrats have expressed frustration that the guidance from Democratic leaders about social media is too vague, while others grumble that leaders are too prescriptive in their approach to messaging on platforms they dont intuitively understand. Meanwhile, Democratic strategists have cautioned lawmakers that garnering attention online is secondary to the goal of using social media as a tool in specific policy fights and campaigns.I think theres a fine line before were being cringe and trying too hard and seeming too thirsty. I think the most important thing in any of this is being as authentic and genuine as we can be, said Rep. Sara Jacobs, D-Calif.When it comes to authenticity, it also means leaning into what makes each of us unique. Like many of my colleagues probably should not be doing get ready with me videos. It would look super cringe. But Im a 36-year-old woman, and I do my makeup all the time, and I watch a lot of makeup tutorial videos, so it makes sense for me to do it, said Jacobs.Some Democrats think that the partys messaging strategy hinges as much on the messengers as the medium its communicated on.If you know how to talk to people, it doesnt matter what medium is going to exist, said Sen. Ruben Gallego, a freshman Democratic senator from Arizona. You could be the best freaking spokesperson in the world, but if you dont know how to talk to working-class people, it doesnt matter if you have the best TikTok following, its just not going to translate. MATT BROWN Brown is a reporter covering national politics, race and democracy issues. twitter instagram mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Comments 0 Shares 255 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMTop Russian official visits North Korea to meet KimThis photo provided by the North Korean government shows Russia's Security Council secretary, Sergey Shoigu, center left, who arrived at Pyongyang Airport being received by Party Secretary Park Chung-cheon, center right on Friday, March 21, 2025. Independent journalists were not given access to cover the event depicted in this image distributed by the North Korean government. The content of this image is as provided and cannot be independently verified. Korean language watermark on image as provided by source reads: "KCNA" which is the abbreviation for Korean Central News Agency. (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP)2025-03-21T00:20:20Z SEOUL, South Korea (AP) A top Russian security official traveled to North Korea on Friday to meet leader Kim Jong Un, after North Korea recently reportedly sent additional troops to Russia to support its war against Ukraine.A brief dispatch by Russias state-run news agency Tass reported that Sergey Shoigu, Russias Security Council secretary, had arrived in Pyongyang, the North Korean capital, and plans to meet top North Korean officials including Kim. It gave no further details including what Shoigu would discuss with Kim.North Koreas official Korean Central News Agency confirmed the arrival of a Russian delegation led by Shoigu but didnt provide details on the purpose of their visit.Shoigus visit comes after Ukraine and Russia agreed in principle Wednesday to a limited ceasefire after President Donald Trump spoke with the countries leaders, though it remained to be seen when it might take effect and what possible targets would be off limits to attack. North Korea has been supplying a vast amount of conventional weapons to Russia, and last fall it sent about 10,000 to 12,000 troops to Russia as well, according to U.S., South Korean and Ukraine intelligence officials. In late February, South Koreas spy agency said North Korea appeared to have sent additional troops to Russia. South Korean media put the number of newly sent North Korean soldiers at about 1,000 to 3,000. South Korea, the U.S. and others suspect North Korea is receiving economic and military assistance from Russia in return for providing weapons and troops. Many experts say North Korea will likely ramp up its support of Russia to win as much benefits as possible from Russia before the war ends. Shoigus trip could be related to Kims possible trip to Russia, some observers say. In June 2024, Russian President Vladimir Putin visited Pyongyang and signed a major mutual defense treaty with Kim. At the time, Putin invited Kim to visit Moscow. In 2023, when Shoigu, then a defense minister, traveled to North Korea, Kim gave him a personal tour of a North Korean arms exhibition in what outside critics likened to a sales pitch. In September 2024, Shoigu, then with the new security council post, went to North Korea again for a meeting with Kim, and the two discussed expanding cooperation, according to North Koreas state media.Earlier Friday, KCNA said Kim oversaw the test-launches of new anti-aircraft missiles the previous day. It cited Kim as calling the missiles another major defense weapons system for North Korea.The missile launches, North Koreas sixth weapons testing activity this year, occurred on the same day that the U.S. and South Korean militaries concluded their annual training that North Korea views as an invasion rehearsal. The 11-day Freedom Shield command post exercise was the allies first major joint military exercises since the inauguration of President Donald Trump in January, and the two countries held diverse field training exercises alongside the Freedom Shield drills. North Koreas Defense Ministry alleged Friday the recent U.S.-South Korean drills involved simulations to destroy underground tunnels in the North to remove its nuclear weapons. An unidentified ministry spokesperson said the U.S. and South Korea would face the gravest consequences they do not want, if they perform similar provocative actions again.North Korea often churns out warlike rhetoric and threats of attacks when the U.S. and South Korea militaries conduct big drills. South Koreas Unification Ministry on Friday warned North Korea not to use its defensive drills with the U.S. as a pretext to launch provocations. Trump has said hes willing to reach out to Kim to revive their nuclear diplomacy, but North Korea hasnt made any public responses to Trumps overture. Many experts say Kim, now preoccupied with his support of Russias war efforts against Ukraine, wont likely embrace Trumps outreach anytime soon, but could seriously consider it when the war ends. Kim and Trump met three times in 2018-19 to discuss North Koreas possible nuclear disarmament, but their diplomacy eventually fell apart due to disputes over U.S.-led economic sanctions on North Korea. HYUNG-JIN KIM Hyung-jin is an Associated Press reporter in Seoul, South Korea. He reports on security, political and other general news on the Korean Peninsula. twitter mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 251 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMOcean dumping or a climate solution? A growing industry bets on the ocean to capture carbonIn this photo provided by the Ocean Alk-Align project, pink dye is released into Tufts Cove along Halifax Harbour in Nova Scotia, Canada, as part of a project by the company Planetary Technologies to test whether adding alkaline minerals to the ocean can help slow climate change, Thursday, Aug. 10, 2023. (Ocean Alk-Align project via AP)2025-03-21T11:05:26Z HALIFAX, Nova Scotia (AP) From the grounds of a gas-fired power plant on the eastern shores of Canada, a little-known company is pumping a slurry of minerals into the ocean in the name of stopping climate change.Whether its pollution or a silver bullet that will save the planet may depend on whom you ask.From shore, a pipe releases a mixture of water and magnesium oxide a powdery white mineral used in everything from construction to heartburn pills that Planetary Technologies, based in Nova Scotia, is betting will absorb more planet-warming gases into the sea.Restore the climate. Heal the ocean, reads the motto stamped on a shipping container nearby.Planetary is part of a growing industry racing to engineer a solution to global warming using the absorbent power of the oceans. It is backed by $1 million from Elon Musks foundation and competing for a prize of $50 million more. Dozens of other companies and academic groups are pitching the same theory: that sinking rocks, nutrients, crop waste or seaweed in the ocean could lock away climate-warming carbon dioxide for centuries or more. Nearly 50 field trials have taken place in the past four years, with startups raising hundreds of millions in early funds. But the field remains rife with debate over the consequences for the oceans if the strategies are deployed at large scale, and over the exact benefits for the climate. Critics say the efforts are moving too quickly and with too few guardrails. Its like the Wild West. Everybody is on the bandwagon, everybody wants to do something, said Adina Paytan, who teaches earth and ocean science at the University of California, Santa Cruz.Planetary, like most of the ocean startups, is financing its work by selling carbon credits or tokens representing one metric ton of carbon dioxide removed from the air. Largely unregulated and widely debated, carbon credits have become popular this century as a way for companies to purchase offsets rather than reduce emissions themselves. Most credits are priced at several hundred dollars apiece. The industry sold more than 340,000 marine carbon credits last year, up from just 2,000 credits four years ago, according to the tracking site CDR.fyi. But that amount of carbon removal is a tiny fraction of what scientists say will be required to keep the planet livable for centuries to come.Those leading the efforts, including Will Burt, Planetarys chief ocean scientist, acknowledge theyre entering uncharted territory but say the bigger danger for the planet and the oceans is not moving quickly enough.We need to understand if its going to work or not. The faster we do, the better. Vacuuming carbon into the seaEfforts to capture carbon dioxide have exploded in recent years.Most climate models now show that cutting emissions wont be enough to curb global warming, according to the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The world needs to actively remove heat-trapping gases, as well and the ocean could be a logical place to capture them.Money has already poured into different strategies on land among them, pumping carbon dioxide from the air, developing sites to store carbon underground and replanting forests, which naturally store CO2. But many of those projects are limited by space and could impact nearby communities. The ocean already regulates Earths climate by absorbing heat and carbon, and by comparison, it seems limitless.Is that huge surface area an option to help us deal with and mitigate the worst effects of climate change? asked Adam Subhas, who is leading a carbon removal project with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, based on Cape Cod, Massachusetts.On a Tuesday afternoon along the edge of Halifax Harbour, Burt stashed his bike helmet and donned a hard hat to give two engineering students a tour of Planetarys site.A detached truck trailer sat in a clearing, storing massive bags of magnesium oxide mined in Spain and shipped across the Atlantic to Canada.Most companies looking offshore for climate solutions are trying to reduce or transform the carbon dioxide stored in the ocean. If they can achieve that, Burt said, the oceans will act like a vacuum to absorb more gases from the air. Planetary is using magnesium oxide to create that vacuum. When dissolved into seawater, it transforms carbon dioxide from a gas to stable molecules that wont interact with the atmosphere for thousands of years. Limestone, olivine and other alkaline rocks have the same effect.Other companies are focused on growing seaweed and algae to capture the gas. These marine organisms act like plants on land, absorbing carbon dioxide from the ocean just as trees do from the air. The company Gigablue, for instance, has begun pouring nutrients in New Zealand waters to grow tiny organisms known as phytoplankton where they otherwise couldnt survive. Still others view the deepest parts of the ocean as a place to store organic material that would emit greenhouse gases if left on land.Companies have sunk wood chips off the coast of Iceland and are planning to sink Sargassum, a yellowish-brown seaweed, to extreme depths. The startup Carboniferous is preparing a federal permit to place sugarcane pulp at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, also referred to as the Gulf of America as declared by President Donald Trump. 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. Though Planetarys work can sound like some scary science experiment, Burt said, the companys testing so far suggests that magnesium oxide poses minimal risks to marine ecosystems, plankton or fish. The mineral has long been used at water treatment plants and industrial facilities to de-acidify water.Halifax Harbour is just one location where Planetary hopes to operate. The company has set up another site at a wastewater treatment plant in coastal Virginia and plans to begin testing in Vancouver later this year.According to the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, the industry needs to remove billions of tons of carbon dioxide per year by mid-century to meet climate goals set nearly a decade ago during the Paris climate agreement.The whole point here is to mitigate against a rapidly accelerating climate crisis, Burt said. We have to act with safety and integrity, but we also have to act fast.Twisted in knotsWhile theres broad enthusiasm in the industry, coastal communities arent always quick to jump on board.In North Carolina, a request to dump shiploads of olivine near the beachside town of Duck prompted questions that downsized the project by more than half.The company Vesta, formed in 2021, promotes the greenish-hued mineral as a tool to draw down carbon into the ocean and create mounds that buffer coastal towns from storm surges and waves.During the permitting process, officials at the state Wildlife Resources Commission, Division of Marine Fisheries and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service raised a long list of concerns. As proposed, the project is a short term study with the potential for long term impacts and no remediation plans, a field supervisor for the Fish and Wildlife Service wrote. The agencies said olivine could smother the seafloor ecosystem and threaten a hotspot for sea turtles and Atlantic sturgeon.Vesta CEO Tom Green said the company never expected its original application to be approved as written. Its more the start of a dialogue with regulators and the community, he said.The project went forward last summer with a much smaller scope, a restoration plan, and more detailed requirements to monitor deep-water species. Eight thousand metric tons of olivine shipped from Norway are now submerged beneath North Carolinas waves.Green said he understands why people are skeptical, and that he tries to remind them Vestas goal is to save the environment, not to harm it. Its the companys job, he says, to show up in local communities, physically show up, and listen and share our data and build trust that way.Fishing communities have opposed another climate project led by Subhas of the Woods Hole research center that has generated 10 months of conversation and debate.The project as proposed last spring would have poured 66,000 gallons of sodium hydroxide solution into ocean waters near Cape Cod. Woods Hole later proposed downsizing the project to use less than 17,000 gallons of the chemical, with federal approval still pending.In two separate reviews, the Environmental Protection Agency said it believes the projects scientific merit outweighs the environmental risks, and noted it doesnt foresee unacceptable impacts on water quality or fishing.But fifth-generation fisherman Jerry Leeman III wants to know what will happen to the lobster, pollock and flounder eggs that float in the water column and on the ocean surface if they are suddenly doused with the harsh chemical.Are you telling all the fishermen not to fish in this area while youre doing this project? And who compensates these individuals for displacing everybody? he said.Subhas team expects the chemicals most potent concentrations to last for less than two minutes in the ocean before its diluted. Theyve also agreed to delay or relocate the project if schools of fish or patches of fish eggs are visible in the surrounding waters.Sarah Schumann, who fishes commercially for bluefish in Rhode Island and leads a campaign for fishery friendly climate action, said after attending four listening sessions shes still unsure how to balance her support for the research with the apprehension she hears in the fishing community.If I was actually trying to decide where I land on this issue, Id be twisted in knots, she said.And Planetary, which has seen little pushback from locals along Halifax Harbour, faced a series of protests against a climate project it proposed in Cornwall, England.In April last year, more than a hundred people marched along a beach carrying signs that read Keep our sea chemical free.Sue Sayer, who runs a research group studying seals, said she realized in discussions with Planetary that they had no idea about what animals or plants or species live in St. Ives Bay. The companys initial release of magnesium hydroxide into the bay, she said, fired up a community that is massively, scientifically passionate about the sea.David Santillo, a senior scientist with Greenpeace Research Laboratories at the University of Exeter, took issue with how Planetary proposed tracking the impact of its work. According to a recorded presentation viewed by AP, the companys baseline measurements in Cornwall were drawn from just a few days.If you dont have a baseline over a number of years and seasons, Santillo said, you dont know whether you would even be able to detect any of your effects.An audit commissioned by the United Kingdoms Environment Agency found that Planetarys experiments posed a very low risk to marine life, and a potential for significant carbon removal.Still, the company put its proposal to pump another 200 metric tons of minerals on pause. Following a government recommendation, Planetary said it would search for a source of magnesium hydroxide closer to the Cornwall site, rather than shipping it from China. It also assured locals that it wouldnt sell carbon credits from its past chemical release.Sara Nawaz, research director at American Universitys Institute for Responsible Carbon Removal, said she understood why scientists sometimes struggle to connect with communities and gain their support. Early research shows the public is reluctant to the idea of engineering the climate.Many people have a strong emotional connection to the ocean, she added. Theres a fear that once you put something in the ocean, you cant take it back.The great unknownsIts not just locals who have questions about whether these technologies will work. Scientists, too, have acknowledged major unknowns. But some of the principles behind the technologies have been studied for decades by now, and the laboratory can only simulate so much.During a recent EPA listening session about the Woods Hole project, a chorus of oceanographers and industry supporters said its time for ocean-scale tests.Theres an urgency to move ahead and conduct this work, said Ken Buesseler, another Woods Hole scientist who studies the carbon captured by algae.Even so, the ocean is a dynamic, challenging landscape to work in. Scientists are still uncovering new details about how it absorbs and recycles carbon, and any materials they add to seawater are liable to sink, become diluted or wash away to other locations, challenging efforts to track how the ocean responds.Its so hard to get the ocean to do what you want it to, said Sarah Cooley, a carbon cycle scientist who has worked for the nonprofit Ocean Conservancy and the federal government.Katja Fennel, chair of the oceanography department at Dalhousie University, works on modeling how much carbon Planetary has captured in Halifax Harbour a number that comes with some uncertainty.She co-leads a group of academics that monitors the companys project using water samples, sensors and sediment cores taken from locations around the bay. Some days, her team adds a red dye to the pipes to watch how the minerals dissolve and flow out to sea.The models are necessary to simulate what would happen if Planetary did nothing, Fennel said. Theyre also necessary because the ocean is so large and deep its impossible to collect enough data to give a complete picture of it.We cant measure everywhere all the time, she said.Questions also linger about how long the carbon capture will last.Its a point especially important to companies working with algae, wood chips, or other organic materials, because depending on where they decompose, they could release carbon dioxide back into the atmosphere.The deeper the plants and algae sink, the longer the carbon stays locked away. But thats no easy feat to ensure. Running Tide, a now-shuttered company that sank nearly 20,000 metric tons of wood chips in Icelandic waters, said carbon could be sequestered for as long as three millennia or as little as 50 years.Even if these solutions do work long term, most companies are operating on too small of a scale to influence the climate. Expanding to meet current climate goals will take massive amounts of resources, energy and money.The question is, what happens when you scale it up to billions of tons every year? said David Ho, co-founder and chief science officer of the nonprofit (C)Worthy, which works on verifying the impact of ocean-based carbon removal. And thats still to be determined.Planetarys Burt imagines a future in which minerals are pumped out through power plants and water treatment facilities on every major coastline in the world. But that would require a large, steady volume of magnesium oxide or similar minerals, along with the energy to mine and transport them.Seaweed and algae growth would need to expand exponentially. The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine has estimated that nearly two-thirds of the worlds coastline would need to be encircled by kelp to even begin to make a dent in global warming. The company Seafields, which is running tests in the Caribbean, says it envisions building a Sargassum farm between Brazil and West Africa more than 200 miles wide.Theres the risk that these expansions exacerbate environmental harm that isnt detectable in small trials, and because of global water circulation, could be felt around the world.But the alternative to never trying, Ho said, is unabated climate change.Running out of timeLate last year, Planetary announced that its Nova Scotia project successfully captured 138 metric tons of carbon allowing it to deliver exactly 138 carbon credits to two of the companys early investors, Shopify and Stripe.Monetizing the work is uncomfortable for many who study the ocean.On one hand, its encouraging more research and more science, which is good. On the other hand, its opening doors for abuse of the system, said Paytan, the Santa Cruz professor, who has been contacted by several startups asking to collaborate.She pointed to companies that are accused of drastically overestimating the carbon they sequestered, though they bragged of restoring rainforests in Peru and replacing smoke-producing stoves in Africa.But absent more government-funded research, several companies told AP theres little way for the field to advance without selling credits.Unfortunately, thats the way weve set things up now, is that we put it in the hands of these startups to develop the techniques, said Ho.Back in his shipping container office along Halifax Harbour, Burt said he understood the unease around selling credits, and said Planetary takes seriously the need to operate openly, responsibly and cautiously. But he also says theres a need for startups that can move at a faster pace than academia.We cannot study this solution at the same rate that weve been studying the problems, he said. He says theres not enough time.Last year marked the hottest year in Earths history, even as global carbon emissions are projected to reach another all-time high.We need to reduce emissions urgently, drastically, said Fennel, the researcher studying Planetarys project. Any removal of CO2 from the atmosphere is much more difficult and costly than avoiding CO2 emissions to begin with.The industry continues to push forward. Planetary said in February that it had sequestered a total of 1,000 metric tons of carbon in the ocean, and Carboniferous completed its first test of sinking sugarcane to the seafloor. Early this year, Gigablue signed a deal for 200,000 carbon credits for dispersing nutrient-filled particles in the ocean.A growing number of companies are also using electricity to alter seawater molecules, with the same goal of prompting the ocean to absorb more carbon dioxide. The startup Ebb Carbon recently struck a deal with Microsoft to provide up to 350,000 carbon credits, and Captura, which is funded in part by investors affiliated with oil and gas production, expanded its operations from California to Hawaii.Its unclear whether the U.S. government will stall or support ocean climate work going forward. The policy landscape continues to shift as the Trump administration seeks to roll back a wide range of environmental regulations and reconsider the scientific finding that greenhouse gases endanger public health.Though White House adviser Musk has downplayed some of his past statements about global warming, four years ago his foundation committed $100 million to fund a competition for the best solution for carbon capture, of which Planetary is in the running for the top prize.The winner will be announced April 23 the day after Earth Day.This story was supported by funding from the Walton Family Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.__Contact APs global investigative team at [emailprotected] or https://www.ap.org/tips/ HELEN WIEFFERING Wieffering is a reporter on the Global Investigations team. She is based in Washington, D.C. twitter mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 254 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.NATURE.COMDaily briefing: The mysterious force pushing galaxies apart might be getting weakerNature, Published online: 20 March 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00857-yMysterious dark energy thought to be a cosmological constant might have weakened over billions of years. Plus, skin immune cells form their own bandage around wounds and how astronomers are tackling the growing problem of satellite pollution.0 Comments 0 Shares 266 Views 0 Reviews -
APNEWS.COMIsrael vows to take more land in Gaza to pressure Hamas into releasing hostagesAli Marouf and his mother Aisha cook on a fire on the roof of their house, which was destroyed by the Israeli army's air and ground offensive, in Jabaliya, Gaza Strip, on Monday, March 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi)2025-03-21T11:38:06Z JERUSALEM (AP) Israels defense minister said Friday he has ordered ground forces to advance deeper into the Gaza Strip, and vowed to hold more land until Hamas releases the remaining hostages it holds. The more Hamas continues its refusal to release the kidnapped, the more territory it will lose to Israel, Defense Minister Israel Katz said in a statement.After retaking part of the strategic Netzarim corridor that divides Gazas north from south, Israeli troops moved Thursday toward the northern town of Beit Lahiya and the southern border city of Rafah. The military said it had resumed enforcing a blockade on northern Gaza, including Gaza City. Earlier on Friday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus Cabinet unanimously approved his request to fire the head of the countrys Shin Bet internal security service. The decision to sack Ronen Bar deepens a power struggle focused largely over who bears responsibility for the 2023 Hamas attack that sparked the war in Gaza. It also could set the stage for a crisis over the countrys division of powers. Israels attorney general has ruled that the Cabinet has no legal basis to dismiss Bar. Critics say the move is a power grab by the prime minister against an independent-minded civil servant, and tens of thousands of Israelis have demonstrated in support of Bar, including outside Netanyahus residence on Friday. A Shin Bet report into Hamas Oct. 7, 2023, attack that prompted the war acknowledged failures by the security agency. But it also said that policies by Netanyahus government created the conditions for the attack.Netanyahu is also upset that the Shin Bet has launched an investigation into connections between some of his close aides and the Gulf state of Qatar. His office said Bars dismissal would take effect on April 10 or before then if a replacement is found.Nearly 600 Palestinians have been killed since Israel on Tuesday shattered a truce that had facilitated the release of more than two dozen hostages and brought relative calm since late January. Israel had already cut off the supply of food, fuel and humanitarian aid to Gazas roughly 2 million Palestinians, has said it would escalate military operations until Hamas releases the 59 hostages it holds 24 of whom are believed alive and gives up control of the territory. The ceasefire agreed to in mid-January was a three-phase plan meant to lead to a long-term cessation of hostilities, a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, and the return of all hostages taken by Hamas in its surprise attack on Israel. In the first phase of the ceasefire, Hamas returned 25 living hostages and the remains of eight others in exchange for the release of nearly 1,800 Palestinian prisoners. Israeli forces also withdrew to buffer zones inside Gaza, and hundreds of thousands of displaced Palestinians returned to northern Gaza. The ceasefire was supposed to continue as long as talks on the second phase continued but Netanyahu balked at entering substantive negotiations. Instead, he tried to force Hamas to accept a new ceasefire plan put forth by U.S. Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff. That plan would have required Hamas to release half its remaining hostages the militant groups main bargaining chip in exchange for a ceasefire extension and a promise to negotiate a lasting truce. Israel made no mention of releasing more Palestinian prisoners a key component of the first phase.Hamas says it will only release the remaining hostages in exchange for a lasting ceasefire and a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, as called for in the original ceasefire agreement mediated by the United States, Egypt and Qatar.The militant group has said it is willing to hand over power to the Western-backed Palestinian Authority or a committee of political independents but will not lay down its arms until Israel ends its decades-long occupation of lands the Palestinians want for a future state.Hamas said in a statement Friday that the firing of Shin Bets head shows a deepening crisis of distrust within Israels leadership, and claimed that Netanyahu engineered sham negotiations to stall and buy time without any genuine intention of reaching tangible outcomes. Netanyahu said he had ordered the resumed strikes on Gaza because of Hamas rejection of the new proposal.U.S. President Donald Trumps administration reiterated its support for Israel this week, with White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt saying, The president made it very clear to Hamas that if they did not release all of the hostages there would be all hell to pay. The war began when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people and taking 251 hostage. Most of the hostages have been freed in ceasefire agreements or other deals. Israeli forces have rescued eight living hostages and recovered the bodies of dozens more. Israels retaliatory offensive has killed more than 49,000 Palestinians, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. It does not say how many were militants, but says more than half of those killed were women and children. Israel says it has killed around 20,000 militants, without providing evidence.The war at its height displaced around 90% of Gazas population and has caused vast destruction across the territory. ___Rising reported from Bangkok.___Follow APs war coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war DAVID RISING Rising covers regional Asia-Pacific stories for The Associated Press. He has worked around the world, including covering the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Ukraine, and was based for nearly 20 years in Berlin before moving to Bangkok. twitter mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 263 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMArkansas holds off Kansas 79-72 in March Madness matchup of coaches Calipari and SelfArkansas forward Jonas Aidoo (9) celebrates with Trevon Brazile (4) after defeating Kansas after their game in the first round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Thursday, March 20, 2025, in Providence, R.I. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)2025-03-21T01:45:50Z Follow APs full coverage of March Madness.Get the AP Top 25 mens college basketball poll delivered straight to your inbox with AP Top 25 Poll Alerts. Sign up here. PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) John Calipari got past a familiar foe to put himself and the coachs new school back on the winning side in March.Jonas Aidoo scored 22 points to help 10th-seeded Arkansas to a 79-72 opening-round NCAA Tournament victory over No. 7 seed Kansas on Thursday night in the latest meeting between two of college basketballs winningest coaches.Johnell Davis added 18 points, including some crucial late free throws, to help Calipari to his first tournament victory with the Razorbacks. Freshman standout Boogie Fland played for the first time since having right thumb surgery in January and scored six points in 24 minutes.We have to rely on everyone. When youre down in numbers, everyones got to help you, Calipari said. Thats where we are. The second half, we didnt shoot it well. We didnt make 3s, but we made the ones that mattered and we made free throws. Arkansas will face No. 2 seed St. Johns led by another national title-winning coach, Rick Pitino in the second round of the West Region on Saturday.Zeke Mayo had 18 points for Kansas (21-13), which has made 35 straight NCAA Tournaments and hadnt lost in the first round since 2006 coach Bill Selfs third season at the school. AJ Storr finished with 15 points and Hunter Dickinson added 11 points and nine rebounds. Thursdays matchup was the third March Madness meeting between two of the four active win leaders in mens college basketball. Calipari is second (876), with Self fourth (831) on the list. Both previous meetings were in the national championship game, with each winning once. Despite having a third consecutive tournament appearance end before the Sweet 16 since Kansas last national title in 2022, Self doesnt believe the Jayhawks are in decline. Weve got to reevaluate on how we do things and you cant afford misses, Self said. In todays time, theres going to be schools that do a great job, but still theres an element of luck involved, I think more now than there was even before. Kansas erased an 11-point second-half deficit and nudged ahead 65-64 on a follow shot by Storr with less than six minutes remaining.The Jayhawks kept the lead until Aidoo connected on a pair of free throws to put the Razorbacks back in front. Arkansas got a stop on the other end and then got a 3-pointer by Davis that gave it a 71-67 cushion with less than two minutes on the clock.Arkansas edge was down to 71-69 before Davis dropped in a pair of free throws. Dickinson missed a 3 on Kansas next trip and Arkansas added two more free throws. The Jayhawks got it back down to 75-72 on a 3-pointer by Rylan Griffen with 13 seconds left. The Razorbacks called back-to-back timeouts trying to get the ball inbounds. They finally did and Davis calmly sank two free throws to help close it out.We believed in the moment, Davis said. Coach always stayed on us, pushed us, even when we were down and he helped us get through everything.TakeawaysArkansas: Posted its first tournament victory since reaching the Sweet 16 in 2023 under then-coach Eric Musselman.Kansas: Kansas fell to 47-6 in first-round games. Adams injuredKansas forward KJ Adams limped off the court with 3:10 to play with what Self said is an apparent Achilles tendon injury. Adams had 13 points and four rebounds.Were hoping for the best tomorrow. Im not sure its going to be great news, though, Self said. Its one thing to lose the game but to see him potentially lose a year on top of the game, you know, thats a pretty big blow.Up nextThe Razorbacks face Pitino, the active coach with the most wins. He was also Caliparis longtime rival when he was with Louisville and Calipari coached at Kentucky.___AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness. Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. KYLE HIGHTOWER Hightower covers Boston sports for The Associated Press and also contributes on coverage of sports gambling and Olympic basketball. twitter mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 243 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMA look at some of historys worst air travel disruptions after a fire shut HeathrowPassengers waiting for a flight to Helsinki rest at Lisbon's international Portela Airport on May 10, 2010, as flights were disrupted due to an ash cloud drifting over from a volcano in Iceland that caused major air travel chaos. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco, File)2025-03-21T13:28:39Z LONDON (AP) A fire that closed Londons Heathrow Airport has sparked one of the most serious disruptions to air travel in years. More than 1,300 flights were canceled and hundreds of thousands of journeys were disrupted following the blaze at an electrical substation, whose cause is under investigation. Here is a look at some past incidents:July 2024: Faulty software causes chaosA faulty software update sent to millions of Microsoft customers by cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike caused technological havoc worldwide. Airlines lost access to their booking systems, thousands of flights were canceled and tens of thousands were delayed, leading to long lines at airports in the U.S., Europe, Asia and Latin America.August 2023: UK air traffic control problemsA glitch at Britains National Air Traffic Services in August 2023 meant flight plans had to be processed manually, rather than automatically. Hundreds of flights were delayed or canceled at the height of the summer holidays. The NATS system had already suffered several software-related failures in the years after it opened in 2002. March 2020: COVID-19 pandemicAs a new coronavirus spread around the globe in early 2020, the worlds airports shut down. Many governments closed national borders and imposed travel restrictions. By April, the number of flights around the world had fallen by 80%. When air travel resumed, it was with masks, mandatory coronavirus tests and other measures that made flying more onerous and expensive. It wasnt until 2024 that global passenger numbers reached 2019 levels again. December 2018: Gatwick drone sightingsMore than 140,000 travelers were stranded or delayed after dozens of drone sightings shut down London Gatwick, south of the U.K. capital and Britains second-busiest airport, for parts of three consecutive days before Christmas. A monthslong police investigation failed to identify the culprits or determine how many of the sightings were real. May 2017: British Airways IT glitchA computer failure at a British Airways data center forced the airline to cancel all flights from Heathrow and Gatwick on a holiday weekend. The airline blamed a power-supply issue for the incident which affected some 75,000 travelers. August 2016: Delta outageDelta Air Lines planes around the world were grounded when an electrical component failed and led to a shutdown of the transformer that provides power to the carriers data center. Delta said that it canceled more than 2,000 flights and lost $100 million in revenue as a result of the outage.April 2010: Icelands volcanoPeople around the world learned how to pronounce the name of Icelands tongue-twisting Eyjafjallajkull volcano (ay-yah-FYAH-lah-yer-kuhl) after it roared to life, sending plumes of ash and dust into the atmosphere. Airspace over northern Europe was shut for several days and airlines canceled flights between Europe and North America because of concerns the ash could damage jet engines. More than 100,000 flights were canceled, stranding millions of passengers, at an estimated cost of $3 billion.September 2001: 9/11U.S. airspace was closed to commercial flights on Sept. 11, 2011 after hijackers crashed planes into the World Trade Center towers, the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania. Thousands of planes were grounded and flights in the air heading for the U.S. were diverted to Canada and Mexico. Flights began to resume two days later, but air travel was forever altered, with passengers facing more rigorous security, more intrusive scrutiny and longer lines. JILL LAWLESS Lawless is an Associated Press reporter covering U.K. politics and more. She is based in London. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Comments 0 Shares 259 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMFacing anti-DEI investigations, colleges cut ties with nonprofit targeted by conservativesStudents and faculty rally at the University of California, Berkeley campus to protest the Trump administration Wednesday, March 19, 2025, in Berkeley, Calif. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vsquez)2025-03-21T04:01:09Z Until recently, it was a little-known program to help Black and Latino students pursue business degrees.But in January, conservative strategist Christopher Rufo flagged the program known as The PhD Project in social media posts that caught the attention of Republican politicians. The program is now at the center of a Trump administration campaign to root out diversity, equity and inclusion programs in higher education.The U.S. Education Department last week said it was investigating dozens of universities for alleged racial discrimination, citing ties to the nonprofit organization. That followed a warning a month earlier that schools could lose federal money over race-based preferences in admissions, scholarships or any aspect of student life. The investigations left some school leaders startled and confused, wondering what prompted the inquiries. Many scrambled to distance themselves from The PhD Project, which has aimed to help diversify the business world and higher education faculty.The rollout of the investigations highlights the climate of fear and uncertainty in higher education, which President Donald Trumps administration has begun policing for policies that run afoul of his agenda even as he moves to dismantle the Education Department. The Trump administration asked colleges to explain ties to The PhD Project There is a range of nonprofits that work to help minority groups advance in higher education but The PhD Project was not well known before Rufo began posting on X about its work with colleges, said Jonathan Fansmith, senior vice president of government relations at the American Council on Education, an association of college presidents.Its not hard to draw some lines between that incident and why 45 institutions that were partners with The PhD Project are getting this investigation announced, he said. The 45 colleges under investigation for ties to the organization include public universities such as Arizona State, Ohio State and the University of California, Berkeley, along with private schools like Yale, Cornell, Duke and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The Education Department sent letters to the universities informing them its Office for Civil Rights had received a complaint and they were under investigation for allegedly discriminating against students on the basis of race or ethnicity because of a past affiliation with The PhD Project. The letters set a March 31 deadline for information about their relationship with the nonprofit. In a statement, the PhD Project said it aims to create a broader talent pipeline of business leaders. This year, we have opened our membership application to anyone who shares that vision, it said.Colleges tread carefully on inquiries that threaten federal fundingPublic reaction from the universities leadership has been minimal and cautious, with most issuing brief statements saying they will cooperate with investigators and refusing further comment.Colleges may see reason not to push back. The Trump administration has shown willingness to withhold federal funding over issues involving antisemitism allegations, diversity programs and transgender athletes. At Columbia University, under fire for its handling of pro-Palestinian protests, the administration pulled $400 million in federal money and threatened billions more if it does not comply with its demands. There is a concern that if one university steps up and fights this then that university will have all of their funding cut, said Veena Dubal, general counsel for the American Association of University Professors. They are being hindered not just by fear but a real collective action problem. None of these universities wants to be the next example.Some colleges moved swiftly to stop working with The PhD Project.The University of Kentucky said it severed ties with the nonprofit on Monday. The University of Wyoming said in a statement that its college of business was affiliated with the group to develop its graduate student pipeline, but it plans to discontinue its membership.The University of Nevada, Las Vegas issued a statement saying three professors participated in the program, but two no longer work at the university and a third was killed in a shooting on campus in 2023. Arizona State said its business school is not financially supporting The PhD Project this year and it told faculty in February the school would not support travel to the nonprofits conference. A campaign against the nonprofits work began on social mediaSimilar fallout came in Texas earlier this year, when Rufo began posting on X about the PhD Project.Texas A&M is sponsoring a trip to a DEI conference, Rufo posted on Jan. 13. Rufo, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank, accused the university of supporting racial segregation and breaking the law.The next day Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbot posted on X that the university president will soon be gone unless he immediately fixed the matter. Texas A&M responded by withdrawing from the conference, and soon after at least eight other Texas public universities that had participated previously in The PhD Projects conference also withdrew, the Texas Tribune reported. Rufo has not responded to a request for comment.Some of the schools under investigation raised questions about where the complaints against them originated.Montana State University said it follows all state and federal laws and was surprised by the notice it received and unaware of any complaint made internally with regards to The PhD Project.Six other colleges are being investigated for awarding impermissible race-based scholarships, the Education Department said. Additionally, the University of Minnesota is being investigated for allegedly operating a program that segregates students on the basis of race.At the University of California, Berkeley, hundreds gathered Wednesday on the campus known for student protests. But this one was organized by faculty, who stood on the steps of Sproul Hall, known as the birthplace of the free speech movement in the 1960s.This is a fight that can be summed up in five words: Academic freedom is under assault, Ula Taylor, a professor of African American studies, said to the crowd. In a campus email Monday, Berkeley Chancellor Rich Lyons did not specifically mention the investigation targeting his school. But he described the federal governments actions against higher education as a threat to the schools core values.A Berkeley without academic freedom, without freedom of inquiry, without freedom of expression is simply not Berkeley, Lyons said. We will stand up for Berkeleys values and defend them to the very best of our ability.___Associated Press writer Collin Binkley contributed to this report.___The Associated Press education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find APs standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org. CHEYANNE MUMPHREY Mumphrey is a national writer who covers higher education. twitter mailto JOCELYN GECKER Gecker is an Associated Press reporter covering education with a focus on social media and youth mental health. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Comments 0 Shares 246 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.404MEDIA.COBehind the Blog: Vile Media and Fine SciencesThis is Behind the Blog, where we share our behind-the-scenes thoughts about how a few of our top stories of the week came together. This week, we discuss doxed Teslas, the concept of "amplification," and how we'd much rather be looking at cooking videos than all this mess.EMANUEL: This week I published one of the more uncomfortable stories Ive worked on since we started 404 Media. A lot of what we do here is look at and report on the nastier parts of the internet, and Ive definitely seen more criminal and/or graphic media in the last year and a half, but I dont think Ive seen anything asI dont knowthe word weve landed on in most cases is exploitative, but I honestly Im grasping for the right way to describe people who are using AI to create influencers with Down syndrome, which they then monetize by selling their deepfaked nudes.0 Comments 0 Shares 249 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NATURE.COMBoggles the mind: US defence department slashes research on emerging threatsNature, Published online: 21 March 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00840-7Terminated projects include studies on the implications of AI in combat and how extremism spreads online.0 Comments 0 Shares 234 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NATURE.COMAuthor Correction: AI models collapse when trained on recursively generated dataNature, Published online: 21 March 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-08905-3Author Correction: AI models collapse when trained on recursively generated data0 Comments 0 Shares 261 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMWhat we know about the fire that brought Londons Heathrow Airport to a standstillThis image taken from video shows firefighters working to secure the area of a fire at the North Hyde electrical substation, which caught fire Thursday night and lead to a closure of Heathrow Airport in London, Friday, March 21, 2025. (Sky News via AP)2025-03-21T12:07:08Z Follow the latest updates on Heathrow Airport. LONDON (AP) Flights to and from Londons Heathrow Airport were canceled Friday after a fire at a nearby substation knocked out power to Europes busiest airport, disrupting travel plans for hundreds of thousands of people around the world.Heres a look at whats happening and its impact on air travel.What happened?A fire at an electrical substation in west London, about 2 miles (3 kilometers) from the airport, knocked out power to Heathrow Airport just late Thursday.The significant power outage forced officials to shut the airport until 11:59 p.m. on Friday to maintain the safety of our passengers and colleagues.The London Fire Brigade said that 10 fire engines and 70 firefighters responded to a fire at the substation that was reported at 11:23 p.m. on Thursday. The blaze has been contained but firefighters will remain at the scene throughout Friday, the fire department said. U.K. Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said that the catastrophic fire appeared to have knocked out a backup generator as well as the electrical substation that supplies power to Heathrow Airport.National Grid, which maintains energy infrastructure in Britain, said that the blaze damaged equipment at the substation and crews are working to restore power supplies as quickly as possible. Power had been restored to the local community by early afternoon. What caused the fire?The cause is still under investigation, and officials said that there was no suggestion of foul play.But the Metropolitan Police said that counterterrorism detectives were leading the investigation into its cause because of the fires impact on critical national infrastructure.We dont know the cause of this fire. Its obviously an unprecedented event, Miliband said, adding that the fire and subsequent shutdown of Heathrow raises questions about the resilience of the countrys key infrastructure. How was Heathrow affected?The disruption impacted travel plans of around 200,000 people who were expected to travel through Heathrow on Friday. Heathrow advised passengers not to travel to the airport and to contact their airlines to rebook flights.With all takeoffs and landings canceled, the first impact was on dozens of long-haul flights from North America and Asia that were in the air when the airport was shut down. Some were forced to turn around, while others were diverted to airports around the U.K. and Europe. Heathrow-bound aircraft have landed at Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam; Shannon Airport in western Ireland; Glasgow, Scotland; Manchester, England; Charles de Gaulle in Paris; Lyon, France; and Frankfurt, Germany, among others.The impact on short-haul flights was delayed until Friday morning because flight operations at Heathrow are severely limited between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. every day to minimize overnight noise in surrounding communities. Even so, thousands of people will be unable to travel to and from airports around Europe and the U.K. on Friday.About 4,000 tons of cargo have also been stranded by the closure, according to Anita Mendiratta, an aviation consultant. How long will the disruptions last?Even if the airport reopens on Saturday, the disruptions are expected to last for days as airlines move stranded aircraft and flight crews back into position and work to accommodate passengers whose flights were canceled.Mendiratta estimated that it would take two to four days to clear all the backlogs.This is an extreme situation where the entire aviation ecosystem is impacted, Mendiratta said.There will be two things that will be happening as a priority No. 1. First is airport operations and understanding, from an electrical system point of view, what has been impacted, if anything, she said. Did anything short out, for instance? What needs to be reactivated? And then how do you literally turn the airport back on again? Passenger and cargo.In addition, she noted, theres the issue of actually managing the human component of it. You have passengers that are impacted, crew are impacted and operations, so being able to remobilize everything.Whats the bigger picture here? The fire raises concerns about the U.K.s ability to withstand attacks or natural disasters that damage critical infrastructure such as communications and power networks, analysts said, even though the cause of the blaze is still unclear.The incident is particularly worrisome given recent comments by Britains security services that Russia is conducting a reckless campaign of sabotage across Europe, said Alan Mendoza, the executive director of the Henry Jackson Society, a London-based think tank focused on security and democracy in Europe.The U.K.s critical national infrastructure is not sufficiently hardened for anywhere near the level it would need to be at to give us confidence this wont happen again, he said. I mean, if one fire can shut down Heathrows primary systems ... it tells you somethings badly wrong with our system of management of such disasters. Robin Potter, an expert on resilience at London-based think tank Chatham House, said that successive governments have been slow to respond to repeated recommendations from the National Infrastructure Commission to strengthen the resilience of U.K. power, communications, transport and water systems.We still have yet to see a kind of clear response from the government to those recommendations, he said. And we hope that maybe in the governments upcoming resilience review, which we expect will be published at some point this year, it might seek to address some of those questions.Mendoza said that the goal should be to have backup systems that can be put in place quickly to mitigate the disruption caused by any so-called black swan or unpredictable events.The reality is there are always going to be issues that surprise you black swans, as it were, he said. The key to it is not necessarily to have to predict black swans, because in many cases they are unpredictable, but its about having the fortitude and the sort of bend in the system to be able to get back up to working speed very quickly.'How big is Heathrow?Heathrow was Europes busiest airport last year, with 83.6 million passengers traveling through it. Its closure will have far-reaching impacts because its a major hub for connecting flights to cities throughout the United Kingdom and around the world, as well as for travel to London.Does London have other airports?Yes. Five other air hubs in southeastern England identify themselves as London airports, but they are much smaller than Heathrow. London Gatwick, Britains second-biggest airport, handled 43.2 million passengers last year. Its located in the town of Crawley, 28 miles (45 kilometers) south of London.0 Comments 0 Shares 243 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMTrump administration debates invoking state secrets privilege around deportation flightsRepublican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump speaks along the southern border with Mexico, on Aug. 22, 2024, in Sierra Vista, Ariz. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)2025-03-21T15:19:57Z WASHINGTON (AP) Top leaders of President Donald Trumps administration are debating whether to invoke a state secrets privilege in response to a judges questions about deportation flights carrying Venezuelan immigrants to El Salvador, a Justice Department official informed the judge on Friday ahead of a hearing.Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a court filing that there are ongoing Cabinet-level discussions about Chief Judge James Boasbergs demand for more information. The district judge ordered the Trump administration to either provide more details about the flights or assert a claim that disclosing the information would harm state secrets.The Republican administration has largely resisted the judges request, calling it an unnecessary judicial fishing expedition. Boasberg dismissed its response as woefully insufficient, increasing the possibility that he may hold administration officials in contempt of court. Government lawyers filed Blanches sworn statement hours before the judge was scheduled to hold a hearing for the case on Friday in Washington.The Trump administration has transferred hundreds of Venezuelan immigrants to El Salvador under an 18th century wartime law. Flights were in the air on March 15 when Boasberg issued an order temporarily barring the deportations and ordered planes to return to the U.S. The Justice Department has said that the judges oral directions did not count, that only his written order needed to be followed and that it couldnt apply to flights that had already left the U.S. Trump and many Republican allies have called for impeaching Boasberg, who was nominated by President Barack Obama, a Democrat. In a rare statement earlier this week, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts said impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a judicial decision.0 Comments 0 Shares 261 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.NATURE.COMNIH has cut one mRNA-vaccine grant. Will more follow?Nature, Published online: 21 March 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00828-3Concern rises among researchers after agency officials ask for a list of projects funded to study the jabs.0 Comments 0 Shares 263 Views 0 Reviews -
APNEWS.COMJonathan Majors is on a redemption tour. For what, he wont sayJonathan Majors poses for a portrait on Wednesday, March 19, 2025, in New York. (Photo by Andy Kropa/Invision/AP)2025-03-21T15:50:15Z NEW YORK (AP) Throughout the implosion of his once-skyrocketing Hollywood career, from his arrest almost exactly two years ago to his harassment and assault conviction, Jonathan Majors has maintained that he has never struck a woman.But on Monday, as Majors was in the midst of a comeback attempt and a PR push that returned him to magazine covers, Rolling Stone published an audio recording of a conversation between Majors and Grace Jabbari. Majors was found guilty of one misdemeanor assault charge and one harassment violation for striking Jabbari in the head with an open hand and breaking her middle finger by squeezing it.I aggressed you, Majors acknowledges in the recording, confirming her description of him strangling her and pushing her against a car. The recording appeared to contradict Majors previous claims and upend his redemption tour just as his film Magazine Dreams opens in theaters Friday. In an interview with The Associated Press on Wednesday, Majors declined to address the recording, and whether he has assaulted women.I cant answer that, Majors responded. I cant speak to that. Majors says hes changed, but not everyone is convincedMajors, who was sentenced to probation and settled a lawsuit with Jabbari in November, is striving for an unusually swift rebound following a precipitous downfall. Before his March 2023 arrest, Majors was steering toward years of Marvel stardom and a possible Oscar nomination for Elijah Bynums Magazine Dreams, in which he plays a disturbed aspiring bodybuilder prone to violent outbursts. Jonathan Majors in a scene from Magazine Dreams. (Briarcliff Entertainment via AP) Jonathan Majors in a scene from Magazine Dreams. (Briarcliff Entertainment via AP) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Two years later, Majors returns to the public eye with a pledge that hes changed just months after completing a year of court-ordered domestic violence counseling. At the same time, hes not directly addressing any of the allegations against him including those from two previous partners, Emma Duncan and Maura Hooper, who in statements submitted pretrial, detailed physically violent and emotionally abusive incidents that bear some similarities to the Jabbari case. Its not something I can talk about legally, Majors says. I said to my wife the other day, Ive changed. I dont recognize myself. I dont recognize that guy. Im in a completely different place. Theres no doubt that I was in turmoil. That guy then didnt have any tools to deal with things. I dont know if I liked the guy then. He was accomplished, he was doing great things in certain ways. But I dont know if I would have hung out with him.Majors, who sat for an interview at a Manhattan hotel without a publicist present, spoke reflectively about his experience of the past two years with the exception of anything specifically related to the conviction, the additional abuse allegations or the women who say he harmed them. Despite never naming a misdeed, Majors says he is reformed.Id say to anyone who cares to listen: Ive had two years of deep thought and mediation and rumination on myself and my actions, my community, my industry, he said. Im stronger now. Im wiser now. Im better now.Not everyone is convinced. Hooper, who met Majors at Yale Drama School and dated him from 2013 to 2015, described a traumatizing and controlling relationship. A year after their relationship ended, Majors learned of her having a relationship with someone he knew, she said. According to Hoopers statement, Majors called her and shamed her for having an abortion, which he had encouraged, and told her to kill herself. The level of anger that I experienced from this man, I dont know you exorcise that from your life or your behavior in only 52 weeks, Hooper told the AP. People go to therapy for years. I went to therapy for years after Jonathan Majors just to get my mind back.Hooper and Duncans statements were ultimately not allowed as evidence during the trial, but they remain public record. Attorneys for Majors have denied some of their claims, describing both relationships as toxic. Duncan, who dated and was engaged to Majors from 2015 to 2019, described at least eight physical or threatening encounters in her statement. During an argument in 2016 while driving in Chautauqua, New York, he threatened to strangle and kill her, she said. At a spa in Santa Fe, New Mexico, she discovered text messages between Majors and another woman and began packing to leave. He pushed her into couch and began choking her while saying he was going to kill her, Duncan said. (She didnt respond to an email from the AP seeking comment. Attorneys for Jabbari also didnt respond to emails.) There is a documented history of 10 years of abuse of women where he calls women sluts, he calls us fat whores, he tells us to kill ourselves, Hooper says. When I hear people say, Come on, how come he cant come back into the fold? I dont know that those people have read this or understand that were talking about a pattern. Another test of #MeToo in HollywoodA changed political climate and several recent cases, including the overturning of Harvey Weinsteins New York sexual assault conviction, have suggested Hollywood has entered a new chapter in the #MeToo movement. Majors attempted comeback is one of the most conspicuous tests to the fraying curbs of cancellation and #MeToo vindication.Were suffering a period of tremendous political retrenchment and backlash in this movement, says Debra Katz, the civil rights attorney who represented Christine Blasey Ford, accuser of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, along with Weinstein accusers. Much of what weve fought for seems to be on the line. Jonathan Majors appears in court during a hearing in his domestic violence case on June 20, 2023 in New York. (AP Photo/Steven Hirsch, Pool) Jonathan Majors appears in court during a hearing in his domestic violence case on June 20, 2023 in New York. (AP Photo/Steven Hirsch, Pool) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More But women are still coming forward, and Katz believes companies and industries will hold the accused accountable. For his part, Majors, who was dropped from all projects following his conviction, has no new films announced. Magazine Dreams, which debuted at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival before his arrest and was subsequently dropped by Searchlight Pictures, is being released by Briarcliff Entertainment, the indie distributor of The Apprentice.Jonathan made a mistake. There was due process. Justice was served. And then we move on, which I think is generally how we like to think this country operates, Tom Ortenberg, chief executive of Briarcliff, said Thursday. Were faced with two choices: Should Magazine Dreams be allowed to be seen? Or should we burn the negative?Numerous A-listers, including Michael B. Jordan and Matthew McConaughey, have advocated for Majors return to Hollywood. Still, Katz believes Majors comeback will ultimately sputter because it hasnt gone beyond the strategy of what she describes as get a good PR firm and show my soft side.I think hes going to suffer a significant comeuppance, says Katz. He hasnt owned up to the behavior. He hasnt apologized. The only thing he appears to be sorry about is that he got caught.Majors past, and where he goes nextFor Majors, his self-examination has focused more on an earlier experience he suggests was at the root of what he calls his turmoil. There was a lot of trauma that was piled up and ignored. The best way to describe it is it as an energy that unfortunately was there, says Majors. I was feeding the wrong wolf. And that wolf became unignorable. And I was really good at moving fast and outrunning the rabid wolf of trauma. The best thing that could have happened to me not to my career but to me was to have to face it.Majors, who was raised by his pastor mother in Texas after his father left, says from the age of 9 to about 13, he was the victim of multiple incidents of sexual abuse, from, he says, two male family members and my sisters friends who were older than me they were older than her.It felt like kids being kids and then it became something different very quickly, Majors says. And then it became a pattern.Majors only recently began wrestling with this past, he says, working through it in therapy and in conversations with his family. A phone call with his sister, he says, reawakened memories.It was an experience that I just killed in my head, Majors says, tearing up.Its not a boo-hoo-bro, so-sad-for-you situation, he says, wiping away tears. Its life. Its the hand youre dealt, and I didnt know how to play those cards. Im learning how to play those cards. Jonathan Majors, left, and Meagan Good pose together at the premiere of the documentary film Number One on the Call Sheet at the TCL Chinese Theatre on Wednesday, March 12, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello) Jonathan Majors, left, and Meagan Good pose together at the premiere of the documentary film Number One on the Call Sheet at the TCL Chinese Theatre on Wednesday, March 12, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Now, Majors says, hes never been happier. On Tuesday, he and Meagan Good were wed in a small, impromptu ceremony in Los Angeles officiated by his mother. We called the family and said, Hey, jump on FaceTime, he says, calling it the best day of his life.Magazine Dreams, he thought, would never see the light of day. Now, though, hes hopeful he can act again.I now understand that acting is in many ways my ministry. Its in many ways my calling, Majors says. If its not, Im waiting for someone to tell me its not. Im waiting for God to tell me its not. Hes not said that. JAKE COYLE Coyle has been a film critic and covered the movie industry for The Associated Press since 2013. He is based in New York City. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Comments 0 Shares 261 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMFewer than 1% of March Madness brackets remain perfect after first day of gamesClemson guard Jaeden Zackery, left, react after a loss to McNeese State in the first round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Thursday, March 20, 2025, in Providence, R.I. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)2025-03-20T22:07:54Z Follow APs full coverage of March Madness.Get the AP Top 25 mens college basketball poll delivered straight to your inbox with AP Top 25 Poll Alerts. Sign up here. Fewer than 1% of NCAA Tournament brackets were still perfect after Thursdays 16-game slate, according to several services where fans attempt the all-but impossible task of predicting every March Madness game correctly or, barring that, win their office pools.ESPNs tracker listed 25,802 perfect brackets remaining out of more than 24 million filled out on its site following the final game of the day, Texas Techs win over UNC-Wilmington.The NCAA said 0.0938% of more than 34 million brackets were still perfect.The numbers were similar at CBS Sports, where 0.09% of brackets were unblemished following the first day of action.Yahoo Sports said 99.9% of its brackets had fallen short of perfection after 11th-seeded Drake beat No. 6 seed Missouri.Earlier Thursday, about 6.6 million brackets were busted on ESPN when No. 12 seed McNeese beat No. 5 seed Clemson 69-67. Creighton which saw a boost in this category because it played the first game of the day was listed as ESPNs top bracket buster after its 89-75 win over Louisville. There were 13,339,089 ESPN brackets busted by that game.On the other end of the spectrum, ESPN reported that every pick was wrong on 30 of its brackets a nearly impossible feat in its own right even if a contestant were trying to pick all losers.___AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness. Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here.0 Comments 0 Shares 243 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMTexas measles outbreak expected to last for months, though vaccinations are up from last yearRenee Barbian gives an insulin shot to her immunocompromised son Ezekiel Barbian in the parking lot of a grocery store, Monday, Feb. 24, 2025, in Hobbs, N.M. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)2025-03-21T16:50:34Z As measles cases in West Texas are still on the rise two months after the outbreak began, local public health officials say they expect the virus to keep spreading for at least several more months and that the official case number is likely an undercount. But theres a silver lining, officials say: More people have received a measles, mumps and rubella vaccination this year in Texas and New Mexico, which also has an outbreak, compared to last year even if its not as high as they would like. And pharmacies across the U.S., especially in Texas, are seeing more demand for MMR shots.As of Friday, the outbreak in Texas was up to 309 cases and one measles-related death, while New Mexicos case count was up to 42 and also one measles-related death. Forty-two people have been hospitalized across the two states.Texas outbreak, which has largely spread in undervaccinated Mennonite communities, could last a year based on studies of how measles previously spread in Amish communities in the U.S. Those studies showed outbreaks lasted six to seven months, said Katherine Wells, director of the public health department in Lubbock, Texas. Lubbocks hospitals have treated most of the outbreaks patients and the public health department is closely assisting with the response. It being so rural, now multistate, its just going to take a lot more boots on the ground, a lot more work, to get things under control, Wells said during a media briefing this week. Its not an isolated population. The outbreak includes 14 Texas counties, two New Mexico counties and four probable cases in Oklahoma, where health officials said the first two were associated with the West Texas and New Mexico outbreaks. Measles is one of the worlds most contagious diseases. Its slow way of spreading makes it especially hard to contain and outbreaks can have multiple peaks, said Justin Lessler, an epidemiologist at the University of North Carolinas Gillings School of Global Public Health. Many people spread the measles virus unknowingly for days before the telltale rash appears. The virus also can hang in the air for up to two hours after a sick person has left a room.Within this community, itd be perfectly reasonable to think probably another couple months before things die out, Lessler said. But if it gets into another community, you just potentially start that clock over again.If the outbreak goes on until next January, it would end the United States status of having eliminated measles, which is defined as 12 months without local virus transmission, said Dr. William Moss, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at Johns Hopkins University and executive director of the International Vaccine Access Center.Were only three months in. I think if we had a strong response where the messaging was clear that measles vaccination is the way to stop this outbreak, I would be surprised if it went for 12 months or more, said Moss, who has worked on measles for 25 years, mostly in Africa. But were not seeing that type of response, at least from the federal government. U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. instead has sown doubt about the measles vaccine, which has been safely used for more than 60 years and is 97% effective after two doses. In an interview with Fox News last week, Kennedy said MMR shots cause deaths every year, although he later added that vaccinations should be encouraged.Vaccinations are up in Texas and New MexicoStill, there are signs the outbreak has had an effect on vaccinations, especially locally.Between Feb. 1 and March 18 last year, New Mexico Department of Health registered 6,500 measles vaccines. During that timeframe this year, more than 11,600 measles vaccines were administered in New Mexico about half given to adults and half to children. Southeast New Mexico, where the outbreak is located, represents a large portion of the count, with 2,369 doses administered.In Texas, at least 173,000 measles doses were given from Jan. 1 to March 16, compared to at least 158,000 over the same timeframe last year, according to the state health department. That includes more than 340 doses in given by public health in the West Texas outbreak area as of March 11. Texans must opt-in to the states immunization registry, so most peoples vaccinations are not captured in the Texas Department of State Health Services numbers, department spokeswoman Lara Anton said. We dont know if more people are opting in or if this is a true reflection of an increase in vaccinations, Anton wrote in an email. It may be both. Pharmacy chains Walgreens and CVS told The Associated Press that theyre seeing higher demand for MMR vaccines across the U.S., especially in the outbreak areas. Texas health officials say theyd like to see more uptake in the communities at the epicenter of the outbreak, especially in Gaines County where the childhood vaccination rate against measles is 82%. Thats far below the 95% level needed to prevent community spread, and likely lower in the small religious schools and homeschooling groups where the early cases were identified. Prasad Ganji is a pharmacist in Seminole, the biggest town in Gaines County. He said he ordered a 10-dose box of the MMR vaccine as cases started to spread. He can give vaccines to people older than 14. But he still has doses left. The uptake for vaccines been definitely been a struggle, Wells said of Gaines County, I want to be honest with that.___The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. DEVI SHASTRI Shastri is a public health reporter for The Associated Press, based in Milwaukee. She covers housing access, the social safety net, medical misinformation and other topics that influence the health of communities broadly. twitter mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 265 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMEyeing China threat, Trump announces Boeing wins contract for secretive future fighter jetThe Boeing logo is displayed at the company's factory, Sept. 24, 2024, in Renton, Wash. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson, File)2025-03-21T15:44:27Z WASHINGTON (AP) President Donald Trump announced Friday that Boeing will build the Air Forces future fighter jet, which the Pentagon says will have stealth and penetration capabilities that far exceed those of its current fleet and is essential in a potential conflict with China.Known as Next Generation Air Dominance, or NGAD, the manned jet will serve as quarterback to a fleet of future drone aircraft designed to be able to penetrate the air defenses of China and any other potential foes. The initial contract to proceed with production on a version for the Air Force version is worth an estimated $20 billion. Trump, who announced the award at the White House with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Air Force leadership, said the new fighter would be named the F-47. Gen. David Allvin, chief of staff of the Air Force, said, Were going to write the next generation of modern aerial warfare with this. Hegseth said the future fleet sends a very clear, direct message to our allies that were not going anywhere.Critics have questioned the cost and the necessity of the program as the Pentagon is still struggling to fully produce its current most advanced jet, the F-35, which is expected to cost taxpayers more than $1.7 trillion over its lifespan. In addition, the Pentagons future stealth bomber, the B-21 Raider, will have many of the same cutting edge technologies in advanced materials, AI, propulsion and stealth. More than 1,100 F-35s have already been built for the U.S. and multiple international partners. A fleet of about 100 future B-21 stealth bombers at an estimated total cost of at least $130 billion is also planned. The first B-21 aircraft are now in test flights. With evolving drone and space warfare likely to be the center of any fight with China, Dan Grazier, a military procurement analyst, questions whether another exquisite manned fighter jet really is the right platform going forward. Grazier, director of the national security reform program at the Stimson Center, said $20 billion is just seed money. The total costs coming down the road will be hundreds of billions of dollars. Few details of what the new NGAD fighter would look like have been public, although Trump said early versions have been conducting test flights for the last five years. Renderings by both Lockheed Martin and Boeing have highlighted a flat, tail-less aircraft with a sharp nose. A separate Navy contract for its version of the NGAD fighter is still under competition between Northrop Grumman and Boeing. Last year, the Biden administrations Air Force secretary, Frank Kendall, ordered a pause on the NGAD program to review if the aircraft was still needed or if the program, which was first designed in 2018, needed to be modified to reflect the past few years of warfighting advances. That review by think tanks and academia examined what conflict with China would look like with NGAD and then without it and determined that NGAD was still needed. Kendall then left the decision on which firm would build the fighter jet to the incoming Trump administration, a defense official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to provide details on the decision-making. NGAD will bring an entirely different level of low observability, the official said. It will also have a much longer range than the F-35 or other current fighter jets, so it will require less refueling. A future unmanned version of NGAD also is planned as the Pentagon improves the AI for the aircraft, the official said. TARA COPP Copp covers the Pentagon and national security for the Associated Press. She has reported from Afghanistan, Iraq, throughout the Middle East, Europe and Asia. twitter mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 264 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.NATURE.COMAuthor Correction: Heritable polygenic editing: the next frontier in genomic medicine?Nature, Published online: 21 March 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-08904-4Author Correction: Heritable polygenic editing: the next frontier in genomic medicine?0 Comments 0 Shares 281 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMTrump has ordered the dismantling of the US Education Department. Heres what that meansPresident Donald Trump holds up a signed executive order at an education event in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday, March 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)2025-03-21T17:48:17Z President Donald Trumps order calling for the dismantling of the U.S. Education Department has complex implications. The Republican president has argued the federal office hasnt improved student outcomes and is unnecessary in a country where states and local districts primarily control education from funding to hiring and curriculum. For decades, right-wing activists have called for eliminating the agency, which was created by Congress in 1979. As Trump remakes the federal government, he has assailed the department as wasteful and responsible for spreading woke ideas such as programs to support diversity, equity and inclusion and protections for transgender students. The department has been largely responsible for oversight, enforcing discrimination laws and distributing aid money for schools with low-income students and students with disabilities. Federal funding makes up a relatively small portion of public school budgets, roughly 14%. What Trumps order means for American children and teachersIn the short term, students, teachers and parents likely wont see much impact. Long term, its harder to predict. It depends how Education Secretary Linda McMahon distributes the mandated functions of the department to other parts of government, including the states.The biggest question is how the states will distribute the federal money the department sends to help educate students who are poor, disabled or still learning English and need extra support. School systems with weak property tax bases, including those in rural areas, depend on that money to pay teachers, pay for buses and buy classroom technology.States such as Mississippi and Alaska depend on this money to fund more than 20% of school districts costs. Advocates worry that without federal oversight, state leaders could spend the money on anything they want, including vouchers to attend private school. What about student loans? Should college hopefuls still fill out the FAFSA?Cuts the Trump administration has made already to the Education Department have eliminated hundreds of staff members and contracts dedicated to maintaining the Free Application for Student Aid, or FAFSA, website and helping users navigate the complicated form. But McMahon has said the federal programs will be maintained. On Friday, Trump said the Small Business Administration would take over the $1.6 trillion federal student loan portfolio. Conservatives, including former Trump Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, have talked about setting up a quasi-private bank to administer loans.Users should expect some hiccups. The StudentAid.gov website was down for several hours last week as the remaining department staff tried to troubleshoot an outage.Will public schools still feed children meals?School meal programs are funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture so they are not affected by Trumps move to eliminate the Education Department. However, the USDA has cut a $1 billion coronavirus pandemic-era measure that helped schools and food banks to buy local farm-fresh food.How soon could the Education Department go away? States and other organizations are vowing to bring lawsuits to halt the dismantling of the department, which could slow things down.Eliminating the department entirely would require an act of Congress. Republicans in Congress are planning legislation to eliminate the agency, but they face heavy opposition from Democrats.In the meantime, Trump still has plans for the department. Even as he ordered its closure, Trump has tasked the department with rooting out and punishing schools that have diversity, equity and inclusion programs. ___The Associated Press education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find the APs standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org. BIANCA VZQUEZ TONESS Vzquez Toness is an Associated Press reporter who writes about the continuing impact of the pandemic on young people and their education. twitter mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 223 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMBest friends Ben McCollum of Drake, Grant McCasland of Texas Tech square off for spot in Sweet 16Texas Tech head coach Grant McCasland, left, talks to forward JT Toppin (15) after he fouled out against Kansas during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in Lawrence, Kan., Saturday, March 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Reed Hoffmann)2025-03-21T14:49:25Z Follow APs full coverage of March Madness.Get the AP Top 25 mens college basketball poll delivered straight to your inbox with AP Top 25 Poll Alerts. Sign up here. WICHITA, Kan. (AP) The coaching fraternity is much closer than most people realize. Friendships are formed and relationships kept through all the hirings and firings, and paths cross and cross again as coaches climb and fall on the professional ladder.Every once in a while, they cross on a stage so big that everybody notices.So it will be on Saturday night, when Grant McCasland leads third-seeded Texas Tech against Ben McCollum and his team full of Division II transfers from No. 11 seed Drake. At stake for the best friends: a spot in the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament.Its just like playing pick-up with your teammates, McCollum said after beating No. 6 seed Missouri in the first round. When youre playing pick-up, sometimes you kind of get after each other a little bit, but afterwards its all love.The 48-year-old McCasland certainly is no stranger to facing familiar faces. The Red Raiders play Big 12 games against his alma mater, Baylor, where he spent five years on the staff of longtime coach Scott Drew. And they regularly play Kansas State, which is coached by Jerome Tang, who was on that staff in Waco, Texas, at the same time. Yet his friendship with the 43-year-old McCollum goes back even farther, way back to their very origins in coaching. It was the early 2000s and McCasland had just been hired for his first real job, as an assistant at Northeastern Junior College in Sterling, Colorado, where the pay was so modest he felt fortunate to live in the dorms. It was there that McCasland came across Jeff Linder, an assistant at Emporia State, a Division II school in Kansas, who was recruiting some of his guys. Linder, by the way, is now an assistant on McCaslands staff at Texas Tech.So fast-forward a couple of years and McCasland gets his first head-coaching job at Midland, a junior college in Texas. One of his first calls was to Linder, who joined his staff, and together they went to the national tournament their first year. The guy that replaced Linder at Emporia State: Ben McCollum, a young man happy to land a first full-time job of his own.The three of them grew close they were all just starting out, after all. Theyd spend hours discussing offensive and defensive strategy, and how to build a winning culture. They leaned on each other when times got hard and applauded every success.We were young, McCasland said, and we didnt make any money, and we all loved ball. We loved being around each other.McCasland eventually got the head job at North Texas, the one he parlayed into his current position at Texas Tech, and McCollum got his shot as a head coach at Northwest Missouri State, which he quickly turned into a Division II juggernaut. But even as their professional paths diverged, their personal relationship only grew closer through the years.Their families get together in offseasons. They call each other up when theyre in a rut. They go trout fishing together.McCasland remembers one year at North Texas that he thought his team had a pretty good offense. It was the nations No. 1 team when it came to scoring out of timeouts. He had installed some creative movements, and McCasland was proud of it. Ben watched film of our team, he recalled, and straight-up told me our offense sucked.You know, thats the kind of relationship we have, continued McCasland, who on at least one occasion tried to hire McCollum to his staff. I love him, but you know, when you play him, its going to be different.McCasland may have missed his chance to hire him, by the way.In McCollums first year leading the Bulldogs, and with a team relying heavily on the four transfers he brought with him from Northwest Missouri State, McCollum has already set a school record with 31 wins. They won Missouri Valley regular- and postseason titles, snapped a four-game losing streak in NCAA Tournament first-round games, and on Saturday, McCollum will be trying to get Drake to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1971.Not surprisingly, his name has been linked to just about every coaching vacancy in the game. One in particular keeps surfacing: Iowa. He was born in Iowa City, in the shadows of the university, and grew up in the small western Iowa town of Storm Lake. He spent a stint playing ball at North Iowa Area Community College. McCollum batted back any talk of other jobs this week. He insisted that his only focus is on what Drake is doing right now.Right now, the Bulldogs are getting ready to play his old friend and his Red Raiders in the NCAA Tournament.Well always be friends, McCasland said, but tomorrow, I guess, it will be on.___AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness. Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. DAVE SKRETTA Skretta is a Kansas City-based sports writer for The Associated Press. He covers the Royals, the Chiefs and college sports along with auto racing, the Olympics and other sports.0 Comments 0 Shares 257 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.NATURE.COMPublisher Correction: A metagenomic dark matter enzyme catalyses oxidative cellulose conversionNature, Published online: 21 March 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-08872-9Publisher Correction: A metagenomic dark matter enzyme catalyses oxidative cellulose conversion0 Comments 0 Shares 290 Views 0 Reviews -
APNEWS.COMInfluencer brothers Andrew and Tristan Tate en route to Romania after weeks in the USAndrew Tate gestures, next to his brother, Tristan, outside the Bucharest Tribunal in Bucharest, Romania, Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda, File)2025-03-21T20:49:50Z BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) Influencer brothers Andrew and Tristan Tate were en route Friday from the U.S. to Romania, where they face charges of human trafficking and forming a criminal gang to sexually exploit women.The Tates, who are dual U.S. and British citizens, were arrested in Romania in late 2022 and formally indicted last year on charges that they participated in a criminal ring that lured women to Romania, where they were allegedly sexually exploited. Andrew Tate was also charged with rape. They deny all of the allegations against them. In a post on his X social media account Friday, Andrew Tate said: Spending 185,000 dollars on a private jet across the Atlantic to sign one single piece of paper in Romania. Innocent men dont run. THEY CLEAR THEIR NAME IN COURT.Their return to Romania comes nearly a month after a travel ban imposed on the brothers was lifted, after which they flew on a private jet to the U.S., landing in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The brothers remain under judicial control, which requires them to appear before judicial authorities in Romania when summoned. Eugen Vidineac, one of the Tate brothers lawyers in Romania, told The Associated Press that the Tates are due to check in with a surveillance officer on Monday. The Tate brothers are expected to issue press statements around 1 a.m. local time (2300 GMT) outside their residence near the capital, Bucharest, according to their spokesperson Mateea Petrescu. Days after the Tates arrived in the U.S., on March 4, Floridas Attorney General James Uthmeier said his office had opened a criminal investigation into Andrew and Tristan Tate. He said in a social media post that he directed his office to work with law enforcement to conduct a preliminary inquiry into the brothers.A day after the investigation was opened, Andrew Tate said in a post on X: I didnt commit any crime and theyre trying to find one because they dont like me. The lifting of their two-year travel ban came after a Bucharest court in December ruled that a case against the brothers could not go to trial because of multiple legal and procedural irregularities on the part of the prosecutors. The case, however, remained open.Last August, Romanias anti-organized crime agency DIICOT also launched a second case against the brothers, investigating allegations of human trafficking, the trafficking of minors, sexual intercourse with a minor, influencing statements and money laundering. They have denied those charges as well.Andrew Tate, 38, a former professional kickboxer and self-described misogynist who has amassed more than 10 million followers on X, has repeatedly claimed that prosecutors in Romania have no evidence against him and that there is a political conspiracy to silence him.The Tate brothers legal battles are not limited to Romania.Four British women who accused Andrew Tate of sexual violence and physical abuse are suing him in the U.K. after the Crown Prosecution Service decided not to prosecute him.In March last year, the Tate brothers appeared at the Bucharest Court of Appeal in a separate case after U.K. authorities issued arrest warrants over allegations of sexual aggression in a case dating back to the period from 2012 to 2015.The appeals court granted the U.K. request to extradite the Tates, but only after legal proceedings in Romania have concluded.0 Comments 0 Shares 272 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMUnder threat from Trump, Columbia University agrees to policy changesStudent protesters gather inside their encampment on the Columbia University campus, April 29, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Stefan Jeremiah, File)2025-03-21T21:35:32Z NEW YORK (AP) Columbia University agreed Friday to put its Middle East studies department under new supervision and overhaul its rules for protests and student discipline, acquiescing to an extraordinary ultimatum by the Trump administration to implement those and other changes or risk losing billions of dollars in federal funding.As part of the sweeping reforms, the university will also adopt a new definition of antisemitism and expand intellectual diversity by staffing up its Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies, according to a letter published Friday by the interim president, Katrina Armstrong.The announcement drew immediate condemnation from some faculty and free speech groups, who accused the university of caving to President Donald Trumps largely unprecedented intrusion upon the schools academic freedom.Columbias capitulation endangers academic freedom and campus expression nationwide, Donna Lieberman, the executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, said in a statement. Earlier this month, the Trump administration pulled $400 million in research grants and other funding over the universitys handling of protests against Israels military campaign in Gaza. As a precondition to restoring those funds along with billions more in future grants federal officials last week demanded the university immediately enact nine separate reforms to its academic and security policies. In her response Friday, Armstrong indicated Columbia would implement nearly all of them. She agreed to reform the colleges long-standing disciplinary process and bar protests inside academic buildings. Students will not be permitted to wear face masks on campus for the purposes of concealing ones identity. An exception would be made for people wearing them for health reasons. The university will also appoint a new senior provost to review the leadership and curriculum of several international studies departments to ensure the educational offerings are comprehensive and balanced. The appointment appeared to be a concession to the Trump administrations most contentious demand: that the university places its Middle Eastern, South Asian and African Studies Department under academic receivership for a minimum of five years.Its an escalation of a kind that is unheard of, Joan Scott, a historian and member of the academic freedom committee of the American Association of University Professors, said of the call for receivership last week. Even during the McCarthy period in the United States, this was not done.The Trump administration has repeatedly accused Columbia University of letting antisemitism go unchecked at protests against Israel that began at the university last spring and quickly spread to other campuses. In her letter, Armstrong wrote that the way Columbia and Columbians have been portrayed is hard to reckon with. We have challenges, yes, but they do not define us.While Trump has made Columbia the most visible target of his crackdown on higher education, he has put other universities on notice that they will face cuts if they do not embrace his agenda. Last week, his administration announced investigations into 52 universities for their diversity, equity and inclusion programs. JAKE OFFENHARTZ Offenhartz is a general assignment reporter in the New York City bureau of The Associated Press. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Comments 0 Shares 243 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMA federal lawsuit says the Trump administration has unlawfully shuttered the Voice of AmericaThe Voice of America building, Monday, June 15, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)2025-03-22T00:38:34Z A lawsuit filed late Friday accuses the Trump administration of unlawfully shutting down the Voice of America and asks a federal court to restore the outlet that for decades has supplied news about the United States to nations around the world including many that lack a free press of their own.The case, filed in U.S. District Court in New York, was brought by Voice of America reporters, Reporters Without Borders and a handful of unions against the U.S. Agency for Global Media and Kari Lake, the failed Arizona candidate who is President Trumps representative there.In many parts of the world, a crucial source of objective news is gone, and only censored state-sponsored news media is left to fill the void, the lawsuit said.Lake has described the broadcast agency as a giant rot that needs to be stripped down and rebuilt.Voice of America dates to World War II as a source of objective news, often beamed into authoritarian countries. Funded by Congress, it is protected by a charter that guarantees its product pass muster for journalistic rigor. Suit accuses the administration of taking a chainsaw approachThe lawsuit charges that the Trump administration has effectively shut it down unlawfully in the past week. Republicans have complained that the news source is infected by left-wing propaganda, a contention its operators say isnt backed up factually.The second Trump administration has taken a chainsaw to the agency as a whole in an attempt to shutter it completely, the lawsuit said. There was no immediate response Friday to a request for comment from the U.S. Agency for Global Media, which oversees Voice of America and a handful of sister networks. In an interview with Newsmax earlier this week, Lake described Voice of America as like having a rotten fish and trying to find a portion that you can eat.In a post on X, she said the Agency for Global Media is a giant rot and burden to the American taxpayer a national security risk for the nation and irretrievably broken. While there are bright spots within the agency with personnel who are talented and dedicated public servants, this is the exception rather than the rule.Clayton Weimers, executive director of Reporters Without Borders in the United States, said his organization was compelled to act to protect Voice of America and the broader press freedom community. There are other media-related actions, tooAt VOAs sister operation, Radio Free Asia, unpaid furloughs took effect on Friday for roughly 240 people in the operations Washington office, or 75% of the staff members, spokesman Rohit Mahajan said. Radio Free Asia has also moved to cancel freelance contracts with people who helped the agency gather news overseas.Radio Free Asia also expects to file a lawsuit to keep congressionally-appropriated funding flowing, Mahajan said.Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty filed suit on Tuesday, asking the U.S. District Court in Washington to compel the U.S. Agency for Global Media to make its next payment. RFE/RL currently broadcasts in 23 countries across Europe and Asia, in 27 different languages.In its lawsuit, the organizations called the denial of funding unprecedented and said it has already forced operations to be significantly scaled back. Without its congressionally appropriated funds, RFE/RL will also be forced to stop the vast majority of its journalistic work and will be at risk of ceasing to exist as an organization, they argued.___David Bauder writes about media for the AP. Follow him at http://x.com/dbauder and https://bsky.app/profile/dbauder.bsky.social DAVID BAUDER Bauder is the APs national media writer, covering the intersection of news, politics and entertainment. He is based in New York. twitter mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 239 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMHomeland Security revokes temporary status for 532,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and VenezuelansHomeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem speaks at U.S. Coast Guard Air Station Kodiak during a tour, Monday, March 17, 2025, in Kodiak, Alaska. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)2025-03-21T23:45:45Z MIAMI (AP) The Department of Homeland Security said Friday that it will revoke legal protections for hundreds of thousands of Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans, setting them up for potential deportation in about a month. The order applies to about 532,000 people from the four countries who came to the United States since October 2022. They arrived with financial sponsors and were given two-year permits to live and work in the U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said they will lose their legal status on April 24, or 30 days after the publication of the notice in the Federal Register.The new policy impacts people who are already in the U.S. and who came under the humanitarian parole program. It follows an earlier Trump administration decision to end what it called the broad abuse of the humanitarian parole, a long-standing legal tool presidents have used to allow people from countries where theres war or political instability to enter and temporarily live in the U.S. During his campaign President Donald Trump promised to deport millions of people who are in the U.S. illegally, and as president he has been also ending legal pathways for immigrants to come to the U.S. and to stay. DHS said parolees without a lawful basis to stay in the U.S. must depart before their parole termination date.Parole is inherently temporary, and parole alone is not an underlying basis for obtaining any immigration status, DHS said. Before the new order, the beneficiaries of the program could stay in the U.S. until their parole expires, although the administration had stopped processing their applications for asylum, visas and other requests that might allow them to remain longer. The administration decision has already been challenged in federal courts.A group of American citizens and immigrants sued the Trump administration for ending humanitarian parole and are seeking to reinstate the programs for the four nationalities. Lawyers and activists raised their voices to denounce the governments decision.Fridays action is going to cause needless chaos and heartbreak for families and communities across the country, said Karen Tumlin, founder and director of Justice Action Center, one of the organizations that filed the lawsuit at the end of February. She called it reckless, cruel and counterproductive. The Biden administration allowed up to 30,000 people a month from the four countries to come to the United States for two years with eligibility to work. It persuaded Mexico to take back the same number from those countries because the U.S. could deport few, if any, to their homes.Cuba generally accepted about one deportation flight a month, while Venezuela and Nicaragua refused to take any. All three are U.S. adversaries.Haiti accepted many deportation flights, especially after a surge of migrants from the Caribbean country in the small border town of Del Rio, Texas, in 2021. But Haiti has been in constant turmoil, hampering U.S. efforts.Since late 2022, more than half a million people have come to the U.S. under the policy, also known as CHNV. It was a part of the Biden administrations approach to encourage people to come through new legal channels while cracking down on those who crossed the border illegally.- AP editor Elliot Spagat and writer Tim Sullivan contributed to this report. GISELA SALOMON Salomon is a Miami-based reporter who covers Latin America and immigration affairs for The Associated Press.Salomon es una periodista que desde Miami cubre asuntos latinoamericanos y de inmigracion. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Comments 0 Shares 230 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMAs Israeli bombs fell, wounded children overwhelmed this Gaza hospital. Dozens diedEDS NOTE: GRAPHIC CONTENT - FILE - Eyad Abu Jazar holds the body of a child he believes to be his nephew, who was killed in Israeli army airstrikes, at Nasser Hospital morgue in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, March 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Mohammad Jahjouh, File)2025-03-22T04:30:57Z CAIRO (AP) When the first explosions in Gaza this week started around 1:30 a.m., a visiting British doctor went to the balcony of a hospital in Khan Younis and watched the streaks of missiles light up the night before pounding the city. A Palestinian surgeon next to him gasped, Oh no. Oh no.After two months of ceasefire, the horror of Israeli bombardment was back. The veteran surgeon told the visiting doctor, Sakib Rokafiya, theyd better head to the emergency ward.Torn bodies soon streamed in, carried by ambulances, donkey carts or in the arms of terrified relatives. What stunned doctors was the number of children.Just child after child, young patient after young patient, Rokafiya said. The vast, vast majority were women, children, the elderly.This was the start of a chaotic 24 hours at Nasser Hospital, the largest hospital in southern Gaza. Israel shattered the ceasefire in place since mid-January with a surprise barrage that began early Tuesday and was meant to pressure Hamas into releasing more hostages and accepting changes in the truces terms. It turned into one of the deadliest days in the 17-month war. The aerial attacks killed 409 people across Gaza, including 173 children and 88 women, and hundreds more were wounded, according to the territorys Health Ministry, whose count does not differentiate between militants and civilians. More than 300 casualties flooded into Nasser Hospital. Like other medical facilities around Gaza, it had been damaged by Israeli raids and strikes throughout the war, leaving it without key equipment. It was also running short on antibiotics and other essentials. On March 2, when the first, six-week phase of the ceasefire technically expired, Israel blocked entry of medicine, food and other supplies to Gaza. TriageNasser Hospitals emergency ward filled with wounded, in a scene described to The Associated Press by Rokafiya and Tanya Haj-Hassan, an American pediatrician both volunteers with the charity Medical Aid for Palestinians. Wounded came from a tent camp sheltering displaced that missiles set ablaze and from homes struck in Khan Younis and Rafah, further south. One nurse was trying to resuscitate a boy sprawled on the floor with shrapnel in his heart. A young man with most of his arm gone sat nearby, shivering. A barefoot boy carried in his younger brother, around 4 years old, whose foot had been blown off. Blood was everywhere on the floor, with bits of bone and tissue.I was overwhelmed, running from corner to corner, trying to find out who to prioritize, who to send to the operating room, who to declare a case thats not salvageable, said Haj-Hassan.Its a very difficult decision, and we had to make it multiple times, she said in a voice message.Wounds could be easy to miss. One little girl seemed OK it just hurt a bit when she breathed, she told Haj-Hassan -- but when they undressed her they determined she was bleeding into her lungs. Looking through the curly hair of another girl, Haj-Hassan discovered she had shrapnel in her brain. Two or three wounded at a time were squeezed onto gurneys and sped off to surgery, Rokafiya said.He scrawled notes on slips of paper or directly on the patients skin this one to surgery, this one for a scan. He wrote names when he could, but many kids were brought in by strangers, their parents dead, wounded or lost in the mayhem. So he often wrote, UNKNOWN.In the operating roomDr. Feroze Sidhwa, an American trauma surgeon from California with the medical charity MedGlobal, rushed immediately to the area where the hospital put the worst-off patients still deemed possible to save.But the very first little girl he saw -- 3 or 4 years old -- was too far gone. Her face was mangled by shrapnel. She was technically still alive, Sidhwa said, but with so many other casualties there was nothing we could do.He told the girls father she was going to die. Sidhwa went on to do some 15 operations, one after another.Khaled Alserr, a Palestinian surgeon, and an Irish volunteer surgeon were doing the same. There was a 29-year-old woman whose pelvis was smashed, the webbing of veins around the bones was bleeding heavily. They did what they could in surgery, but she died 10 hours later in the intensive care unit. There was a 6-year-old boy with two holes in his heart, two in his colon and three more in his stomach, Sidhwa said. They repaired the holes and restarted his heart after he went into cardiac arrest.He, too, died hours later.They died because the ICU simply does not have the capacity to care for them, Sidhwa said.Ahmed al-Farra, head of the pediatric and obstetrics department, said that was in part because the ICU lacks strong antibiotics. Sidhwa recalled how he was at Boston Medical Center when the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing happened, killing three people and sending some 260 wounded to area hospitals.Boston Medical couldnt handle this influx of cases seen at Nasser Hospital, he said. The staffRokafiya marveled at how the hospital staff took care of each other under duress. Workers circulated with water to give sips to doctors and nurses. Cleaners whisked away the bloody clothes, blankets, tissues and medical debris accumulating on the floors.At the same time, some staff had their own family members killed in the strikes. Alserr, the Palestinian surgeon, had to go to the morgue to identify the bodies of his wifes father and brother.The only thing I saw was like a packet of meat and bones, melted and fractured, he said in a voice message, without giving details on the circumstances their deaths. Another staffer lost his wife and kids. An anesthesiologist -- whose mother and 21 other relatives were killed earlier in the war -- later learned his father, his brother and a cousin were killed, Haj-Hassan said.AftermathAround 85 people died at Nasser Hospital on Tuesday, including around 40 children from ages 1 to 17, al-Farra said.Strikes continued throughout the week, killing several dozen more people. At least six prominent Hamas figures were among those killed Tuesday. Israel says it will keep targeting Hamas, demanding it release more hostages, even though Israel has ignored ceasefire requirements for it to first negotiate a long-term end to the war. Israel says it does not target civilians and blames Hamas for their deaths because it operates among the population.With Tuesdays bombardment, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also secured the return to his government of a right-wing party that had demanded a resumption of the war, solidifying his coalition ahead of a crucial budget vote that could have brought him down.Haj-Hassan keeps checking in on children in Nassers ICU. The girl with shrapnel in her brain still cant move her right side. Her mother came to see her, limping from her own wounds, and told Haj-Hassan that the little girls sisters had been killed.I cannot process or comprehend the scale of mass killing and massacre of families in their sleep that we are seeing here, Haj-Hassan said. This cant be the world were living in.___AP correspondents Julia Frankel in Jerusalem, Fatma Khaled in Cairo, and Sarah El Deeb in Beirut contributed to this report. SAMY MAGDY Magdy is a Middle East reporter for The Associated Press, based in Cairo. He focuses on conflict, migration and human rights abuses. twitter facebook mailto LEE KEATH Keath is the chief editor for feature stories in the Middle East for The Associated Press. He has reported from Cairo since 2005. twitter mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 220 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMLegal experts say Trump official broke law by saying Buy Tesla stock but dont expect a crackdownPresident Donald Trump listens as Elon Musk speaks in the Oval Office at the White House, Feb. 11, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)2025-03-21T21:12:29Z NEW YORK (AP) When a White House adviser in the first Trump administration told TV viewers to Go buy Ivanka stuff, top government lawyers sprang into action, telling her she had violated ethics rules and warning her not to do it again.Government ethics experts have varying opinions on whether the 2017 criticism of Kellyanne Conway went far enough, but many agree such violations now might not even draw an official rebuke.A week after President Donald Trump turned the White House lawn into a Tesla infomercial for Elon Musks cars, a second sales pitch by a U.S. official occurred, this time for Tesla stock.It will never be this cheap, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said Wednesday. Buy Tesla. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick speaks with reporters at the White House, Thursday, March 13, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick speaks with reporters at the White House, Thursday, March 13, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Government ethics experts say Lutnick broke a 1989 law prohibiting federal employees from using public office for private gain, later detailed to include a ban on endorsements. Although presidents are generally exempt from government ethics rules, most federal employees are not and are often punished for violations, including rebukes like the one Conway got.As of Friday, no public action had been taken against Lutnick and it was unclear whether he would suffer a similar fate. Theyre not even thinking of ethics, said Trump critic and former Republican White House ethics czar Richard Painter of administration officials. Painter has equally low expectations of that other possible brake to future violations public opinion: I dont know if people care. In his first term, Trump opened his hotel near the Oval Office to foreign ambassadors and lobbyists in what many legal scholars argued was a violation of a constitutional ban against presidents receiving payments or gifts that could distort public policy for private gain. His company launched a new hotel chain called America Idea in hopes of cashing in on his celebrity. Trump even once proposed holding a G-7 meeting of world leaders at his then-struggling Doral golf resort. A Tesla vechile is seen near a charging station, Wednesday, March 19, 2025, in Woodstock, Ga. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart) A Tesla vechile is seen near a charging station, Wednesday, March 19, 2025, in Woodstock, Ga. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More The Buy Ivanka rebukeBut the reaction to Conways Ivanka stuff comment suggested certain lines couldnt be crossed.Within days of Conways TV comments, the head of the federal ethics agency, the Office of Government Ethics, wrote a letter to the White House saying Trumps adviser may have broken the law and urging a probe. A White House lawyer then met with Conway to remind her of the law and reported to the ethics office that she had assured him she would abide by it in future. But this time, there is no head of the Office of Government Ethics. He was fired by Trump. Ditto for the inspector generals of various agencies who would head any investigation.What is likely to happen now? I really dont know, said Kedric Payne, chief lawyer at the Campaign Legal Center, a non-profit watchdog that sent a letter to the government ethics office on Friday calling for an investigation. We no longer have the head of the Office of Government Ethics to push the Commerce Department to make sure the secretary acknowledges the law.Payne said Lutnicks comment on TV may seem like a small transgression but it could snowball into a bigger problem if not punished. It starts with one TV appearance, but can develop into multiple officials asking people to support companies and products, Payne said. If there are no consequences, you get into a danger zone of a corruption.Trump critics point to other signs that Trump is careless with the law and ethical norms, citing his pardons for Jan. 6 Capitol rioters, a decision to allow his Trump Organization to strike business deals abroad and his attack on the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act banning U.S. company bribes abroad to win business. Protesters outside a Tesla Service Center on Tchoupitoulas Street in New Orleans express their issues with Elon Musk and President Donald Trump on Friday, March 14, 2025. (Chris Granger/The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate via AP) Protesters outside a Tesla Service Center on Tchoupitoulas Street in New Orleans express their issues with Elon Musk and President Donald Trump on Friday, March 14, 2025. (Chris Granger/The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate via AP) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Jelly beans and airlinesWhen it comes endorsing products, presidents used to be far more circumspect. Their comments were mostly quick asides expressing opinions of taste, such as when Harry Truman called Pillsbury flour the finest or John F. Kennedy said United Airlines was reliable. Ronald Reagan famously enthused about his jelly beans habit, remarking that they were the perfect snack.Trump had five Teslas lined up in the White House driveway last week as he praised Musks company. Then he slipped into a red Model S he had targeted for personal purchase, exclaiming, Wow. Thats beautiful.Presidents are allowed to have personal opinions on products they like and dislike, said ethics lawyer Kathleen Clark, referring to the Truman through Reagan examples. But what Trump did was transform the White House into a set for advertising the products of a private company.Its the difference between holding an extravaganza and holding an opinion. Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk listens as Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event at the Butler Farm Show, Oct. 5, 2024, in Butler, Pa. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File) Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk listens as Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event at the Butler Farm Show, Oct. 5, 2024, in Butler, Pa. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Calls for Musk investigationIn the aftermath of the Tesla White House event, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren and three other senators wrote a letter to the Office of Government Ethics saying that, while presidents are exempt from ethics law banning endorsements, Elon Musk isnt and calling for an investigation.A spokeswoman from Warrens office said the government ethics office had not yet responded about what it planned to do about the White House Tesla endorsement. The Office of Government Ethics itself said it would not comment on either the Warren letter or Lutnicks TV appearance.The Commerce Department did not respond to Associated Press requests for comment. Asked whether Lutnick would be reprimanded or an investigation opened, White House spokesman Kush Desai defended Lutnick, lauding his immensely successful private sector career and his critical role on President Trumps trade and economic team.Former White House ethics chief Painter says Democrats have also played loose with the ethics law. He is harshly critical of the Clinton charity, the Clinton Foundation, which was taking donations from foreign governments when Hillary Clinton was the countrys chief diplomat as secretary of state. Painter also blasts former President Joe Biden for not removing his name from a University of Pennsylvania research institute when he was in office even though it appeared to be helping draw donations overseas. But Painter says the slide from caring about ethics laws and norms to defiance has hit a new low.Theres been a deterioration in ethics, he said. What Biden did wasnt good, but this is worse. BERNARD CONDON Condon is an Associated Press investigative reporter covering breaking news. He has written about the Maui fire, the Afghanistan withdrawal, gun laws, Chinese loans in Africa and Trumps business. twitter facebook mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 240 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMA weak Pope Francis is wielding power and rewriting the narrative of how popes exercise authorityIn this May 12, 2017 file photo, Pope Francis holds his bag and waves as he embarks his flight to Monte Real, Portugal, from Rome's International airport of Leonardo Da Vinci, in Fiumicino, Italy. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia, file)2025-03-22T04:33:30Z VATICAN CITY (AP) During his first foreign trip in 2013, Pope Francis made headlines when he carried his own black leather briefcase as he boarded the Alitalia charter bound for Brazil, since popes never carry bags and until the 1970s were themselves carried on thrones. Asked what was in the bag, Francis joked that it wasnt the nuclear codes. But he seemed baffled that something as normal as an airplane passenger carrying a briefcase could create such a fuss.I have always taken a bag with me when travelling its normal, he told his first news conference as pope. We must get used to being normal. The normality of life.Over 12 years, Francis has sought that kind of normality for the papacy with his informal style and disdain for pomp while ensuring that he still wields the awesome power held by Christs vicar on Earth and Europes last absolute monarch. The way Francis has managed his five-week hospitalization for pneumonia has followed that same playbook: He has allowed the public to follow the very normal ups and downs of an 88-year-old man battling a complex lung infection through spare but regular medical bulletins, while also continuing to run the 1.3-billion strong Catholic Church. Francis has stayed in control, remotelyIn between respiratory crises, prayer and physiotherapy, Francis has appointed over a dozen bishops, approved a handful of new saints, authorized a three-year extension of his signature reform process and sent off messages public and private. Vatican cardinals have stood in for him at events requiring his presence.Thats not as easy a balancing act as it sounds, since there are few positions of power that are both as absolute as the papacy and, during times of illness, as seemingly fragile: According to the churchs canon law, the pope possesses supreme, full, immediate, and universal ordinary power in the church. He answers to no one but God, and there is no appeal of his decisions. And while popes arent subject to re-election campaigns or no-confidence votes, they essentially owe their jobs to the 120 men who elected them. While those same cardinals swear obedience to the pope, they will ultimately choose his successor from within their own ranks. Its no surprise then that talk of conclaves, papal contenders and challenges facing a future pope has been a constant buzz in Rome ever since Francis was admitted to Gemelli hospital Feb. 14.Francis is well aware that anytime he has gone into the hospital, the plotting has begun for electing the next pope, contributing to a certain lame duck status. Some wanted me dead, he said after his 2021 hospitalization, when he learned that secret meetings had already been held to plan the conclave. He knows as well that even before his current hospitalization, an anonymous cardinal had circulated a seven-point memo listing priorities for the next pope to correct the confusion, division and conflict sowed by Francis. But hes not shy about showing weaknessAnd yet Francis has never been shy about showing his weaknesses, age or infirmities in ways that seem unthinkable for public figures for whom any sign of fragility can threaten their authority and undermine their agenda. Within months of being elected, for example, Francis reached out to an Argentine doctor and journalist, Dr. Nelson Castro, and suggested he write a book about the health of popes, himself included.My hypothesis is that he wanted first of all to show himself as a human being, Castro said in an interview. We tend to see popes like saints, but the way he talked about his diseases showed me, Im like you and me, being exposed to diseases.Francis had read and appreciated Castros earlier book, The Sickness of Power, about the ailments that have afflicted Argentinas leaders and how power itself had afflicted them. He invited Castro to research and write about past popes and his own case in a similar light. The Health of Popes was published in 2021. Castro said what struck him most was that Francis disclosed not only his physical ailments, but his mental health challenges too: Francis revealed that he had gone to a psychiatrist when he was the Jesuit provincial during Argentinas military dictatorship in the 1970s to help him cope with fear and anxiety.Pope Francis is a man of power, Castro said. Only a man of power, feeling quite sure of himself, would dare to talk about his diseases so openly. The balance of strength in weakness is very JesuitFor the Rev. John Cecero, who was Jesuit provincial for the northeast United States from 2014-2020, Francis willingness to show his weaknesses while exercising supreme authority is consistent with his Jesuit training and the biblical teaching of St. Paul that when I am weak, then I am strong.A chief virtue on the part of everyone in the practice of Jesuit authority is humility, Cecero said in an interview. On the part of the individual Jesuit (that means) thinking beyond my own self-interest to the common good. I know its something that drives Francis: that you have that same humility, he said.And yet Francis critics often complain that hes authoritarian, that he takes decisions in a vacuum and without regard to the law, and wields power like a Dictator Pope, the title of a book written by a traditionalist critic early in Francis papacy. Many recite the joke about the way Jesuit superiors exercise power, which is supposed to be a process of joint discernment between the superior and the underling but, the joke goes, it can be anything but: I discern, you discern, we discern I decide.Those same conservative critics, of course, have been keenly watching Francis hospitalization and wondering if the end of his papacy is near. Even if he is absent, and even if he has to cut back his public activities going forward, Francis is very much still in power and leading the church, said Kurt Martens, a canon lawyer at Catholic University of America in Washington D.C.Were used to seeing a pope who is everywhere all the time, he said. But dont forget that in the past, not that long ago, popes would show up only rarely.He may be absent, but hes still in controlFrancis disappearance from public view has led some to doubt the authenticity of the first, and so far only photograph of Francis released by the Vatican since his hospitalization. It was shot from behind and showed Francis at prayer in his private hospital chapel, his face hidden.Avvenire, the newspaper of the Italian bishops conference, said the photo was not only real but showed Francis controlling the image that he wants the faithful to have of the papacy and his illness. Francis wants viewers to focus not on the spectacle of a sick pope, but on what should actually matter more to a Catholic anyway.If we cannot see his face ... what we must look at is precisely what he himself is facing: the altar and the crucifix, Avvenire wrote.___Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the APs collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.0 Comments 0 Shares 250 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMGeorge Foreman, the fearsome heavyweight who became a beloved champion, dies at 76Former heavyweight boxing champion George Foreman tells a story to the audience at the Sports Illustrated Legacy Awards, Oct. 1, 2015, in Louisville, Ky. (AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley, File)2025-03-22T02:34:21Z George Foreman, the fearsome heavyweight who lost the Rumble in the Jungle to Muhammad Ali before his inspiring second act as a 45-year-old champion and a successful businessman, died Friday night. He was 76.Foremans family announced his death on social media, not saying how or where he died.A devout preacher, a devoted husband, a loving father, and a proud grand- and great-grandfather, he lived a life marked by unwavering faith, humility and purpose, his family wrote. A humanitarian, an Olympian and two-time heavyweight champion of the world, he was deeply respected. A force for good, a man of discipline, conviction, and a protector of his legacy, fighting tirelessly to preserve his good name for his family.A native Texan, Foreman began his boxing career as an Olympic gold medalist who inspired fear as he climbed to the peak of the heavyweight division by stopping Joe Frazier in 1973. His formidable aura evaporated only a year later when Ali pulled off one of the most audacious victories in boxing history in Zaire, baiting and taunting Foreman into losing his belt in one of the greatest fights ever staged. Foreman left the sport a few years later, but returned after a 10-year absence and a self-described religious awakening.The 45-year-old then pulled off one of the most spectacular knockouts in boxing history in 1994, flooring Michael Moorer 19 years his junior with one perfect combination to claim Moorers two heavyweight belts. Foremans transformation into an inspirational figure was complete, and he fought only four more times before moving onto his next career as a genial businessman, pitchman and occasional actor.He was best known as the face of the George Foreman Grill, which launched in the same year as his victory over Moorer. The simple cooking machine sold more than 100 million units and made him much wealthier than his sport ever did. George was a great friend to not only myself, but to my entire family, Top Rank president Bob Arum said. Weve lost a family member and are absolutely devastated.In the first chapter of his boxing career, Foreman was nothing like the smiling grandfather who hawked his grills on television to great success.Foreman dabbled in petty crime while growing up in Houstons Fifth Ward, but changed his life through boxing. He made the U.S. Olympic team in 1968 and won gold in Mexico City as a teenager, stopping a 29-year-old opponent in a star-making performance.Foreman rose to the pinnacle of the pro game over the next five years, but was also perceived as an aloof, unfriendly athlete, both through his demeanor and through the skewed racial lenses of the time. He stopped Frazier in an upset in Jamaica in January 1973 to win the belt, with his knockout inspiring Howard Cosells iconic call: Down goes Frazier! Down goes Frazier!Foreman defended his belt against Ken Norton before accepting the fight with Ali in the now-immortal bout staged in Africa by promoter Don King. Ali put on a tactical masterclass against Foreman, showing off the rope-a-dope strategy that frustrated and infuriated the champion. Foreman was eventually knocked down for the first time in his career, and the fight was stopped in the eighth round. Foreman told the BBC in 2014 that he took the fight almost out of charity to Ali, who he suspected to be broke.I said I was going to go out there and kill him, and people said, Please, dont say youre going to kill Muhammad, Foreman said. So I said, OK, Ill just beat him down to the ground. Thats how easy I thought the fight would be.Exhausted and disillusioned, Foreman stopped fighting in 1977 and largely spent the next decade preaching and working with kids in Houston after his religious awakening. He returned to boxing in 1987 in his late 30s with a plan to defy time through frequent ring appearances, and he racked up a lengthy series of victories before losing to Evander Holyfield in a surprisingly competitive title fight in 1991.Three years later, Foreman got in the ring with Moorer in Las Vegas, more for his celebrity than for his perceived ability to beat Moorer. The champion appeared to win the first nine rounds rather comfortably, with Foreman unable to land his slower punches. But Foreman came alive in the 10th, hurting Moorer before slipping in the short right hand that sent Moorer to the canvas in spectacular fashion. Foreman quit the ring for good in 1997, although he occasionally discussed a comeback. He settled into a life as a boxing analyst for HBO and as a pitchman for the grills that grew his fame and fortune. He briefly starred in a sitcom called George in the 1990s, and he even appeared on the reality singing competition The Masked Singer in 2022. A biographical movie based on his life was released in 2023.Foreman had 12 children, including five sons who are all famously named George Edward Foreman.Legendary boxing champion, life-changing preacher, husband, father, grand- and great-grandfather and the best friend you could have, WBC President Mauricio Sulaiman wrote on social media. His memory is now eternal, may Big George rest in peace.___AP boxing: https://apnews.com/boxing GREG BEACHAM Beacham is a sports writer in California. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Comments 0 Shares 216 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMStates team up to defend green transportation projects targeted by TrumpA bicycle lane along Market Street in Philadelphia, on June 4, 2018. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)2025-03-22T04:04:15Z CHICAGO (AP) Hundreds of bicycle advocates were at an annual summit this month in Washington, D.C., when their cellphones lit up over breakfast with an urgent email warning that President Donald Trumps transportation department had just halted federal grant funding for bike lanes.As the administration targets green energy projects championed by former President Joe Biden that boosted transit, recreational trails and bicycle infrastructure, several states are banding together to advance those priorities on their own.California, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New York and Pennsylvania joined forces for a national organizing effort dubbed the Clean Rides Network. The group gained momentum in various statehouses this year on environmentally friendly transportation projects it contends the federal government has abandoned. These are changes we need to make anyway, but theyre more urgent than ever, said Justin Balik, senior state program director for the environmental advocacy group Evergreen Action and one of the organizers of the Clean Rides Network. Ive been calling the state departments of transportation the next frontier of climate advocacy. Trading highway expansion for busesAlthough Colorado wasnt among the seven charter members of the Clean Rides Network, a policy enacted there set the framework for one of its most ambitious goals.In 2021, Gov. Jared Polis committed to a dramatic reduction in Colorados greenhouse gas emissions and employed a novel approach to accelerate the timeline. Whenever the states transportation department commits money to a large-scale project that increases vehicle traffic such as a new highway, it must also pursue a corresponding project to offset the environmental harms. Two major highway expansion projects were canceled because of the policy, said Matt Frommer of the Southwest Energy Efficiency Project. The group advocated for the change. Colorado used the savings to expand an intercity bus service that has soared in popularity for urban residents and tourists traveling to ski resorts.Polis vision lined up with the multimodal transportation aims under the $1.1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure law Biden signed that year. In the final months of Bidens administration, the city of Denver won a $150 million federal grant to build a rapid transit bus line along one of its busiest corridors. Frommer, a transportation and land use policy manager, said there are fears that states will now have to pursue projects like that on their own.If your state cares about climate change, you need to take the reins and step up and direct your transportation funds to projects that are going to reduce emissions, Frommer said. We may not be able to rely on the federal government to put that policy in place or to really help you in many ways. Colorados approach moves eastMinnesota followed Colorados lead and adopted a similar rule to offset greenhouse emissions. Other states that are part of the network are pushing proposals this session.The Maryland House recently passed its version of the Colorado law, and Senate sponsor Shelly Hettleman said shes cautiously optimistic it will win final passage before lawmakers adjourn.In trying to persuade her colleagues, Hettleman has focused less on the environmental benefits than what she sees as economic ones. A study commissioned by the Colorado transportation department projected up to $40 billion in savings through improved air quality, road safety and reduced traffic congestion, among other things.Lawmakers in the Clean Rides states of Illinois and Massachusetts have advanced similar proposals, but theyve encountered resistance from some business leaders and advocates for road construction.This is another ill-advised piece of legislation, not based upon science, that will defer needed improvements to our crumbling transportation infrastructure in Illinois, said Mike Sturino, president and CEO of the Illinois Road and Transportation Builders Association. Commuters will have to wait for improvements to our existing interstate system, as this bill would delay addressing unsafe conditions on our roads and bridges. Is there any interest from red states?Although most of the state leaders who have pushed alternative transportation options have been Democrats, the Clean Rides Network said more conservative states have shown interest in some of the topics, too.Just as Colorados anticipated cost savings helped spur legislation in Maryland, economic concerns continue to be foremost in the minds of residents, with some studies showing that transportation ranks second to housing in consumer costs.Forget about the cost of eggs. Its never been more expensive to drive a car, said Miguel Moravec with the nonprofit climate think tank RMI, which created a calculator to help states project the money they could save through policies that reduce emissions. Virginia employs a scale that scores potential transportation projects based on factors such as safety, congestion relief, and environmental impacts.Utah launched an ambitious transit plan for the rapidly growing state, while Montana implemented land use and zoning reforms that made cities more walkable.Muhammed Patel, senior transportation advocate for the Natural Resources Defense Council in Chicago, said states are at least rethinking some of their policy priorities.We do live luckily in a country where states have authority over their own transportation systems, Patel said. Theres flexibility innately built in.0 Comments 0 Shares 235 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMFlights resume at London Heathrow after a daylong closure sparked travel chaos around the worldTravellers arrives at Terminal 5 as Heathrow Airport slowly resumes flights after a fire cut power to Europe's busiest airport in London, Saturday, March 22, 2025.(AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)2025-03-22T08:12:20Z LONDON (AP) London Heathrow Airport said it was fully operational on Saturday, after an almost daylong closure sparked by an electrical substation fire. But airlines warned that severe disruption will last for days as they scramble to relocate planes and crews and get travelers to their destinations.Inconvenienced passengers, angry airlines and concerned politicians sought answers about how one seemingly accidental fire could shut down Europes busiest air hub.We have hundreds of additional colleagues on hand in our terminals and we have added flights to todays schedule to facilitate an extra 10,000 passengers traveling through the airport, Heathrow said in a statement. Passengers traveling today should check with their airline for the latest information regarding their flight.British Airways, Heathrows biggest airline, said it expects to operate about 85% of its scheduled flights at the airport on Saturday. More than 1,300 flights were canceled and some 200,000 people stranded Friday after an overnight fire at a substation 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) away from the airport cut power to Heathrow, and to more than 60,000 properties. Residents in west London described hearing a large explosion and then seeing a fireball and clouds of smoke when the blaze ripped through the substation. The fire was brought under control after seven hours, but the airport was shut for almost 18. A handful of flights took off and landed late Friday. Police said they do not consider the fire suspicious, and the London Fire Brigade said its investigation would focus on the electrical distribution equipment at the substation.Still, the huge impact of the fire left authorities facing criticism that Britains creaking infrastructure is ill-prepared to deal with disasters or attacks.Heathrow is one of the worlds busiest airports for international travel, and saw 83.9 million passengers last year. Passengers on about 120 flights were in the air when the closure was announced found themselves landing in different cities, and even different countries.Fridays disruption was one of the most serious since the 2010 eruption of Icelands Eyjafjallajokull volcano, which spewed clouds of ash into the atmosphere and shut Europes airspace for days.Mark Doherty and his wife were halfway across the Atlantic when the inflight map showed their flight from New Yorks John F. Kennedy Airport to Heathrow was turning around.I was like, youre joking, Doherty said before the pilot told passengers they were heading back to New York.Doherty called the situation typical England got no back-up plan for something happens like this. Theres no contingency plan. JILL LAWLESS Lawless is an Associated Press reporter covering U.K. politics and more. She is based in London. twitter mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 242 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COM3 people killed in Russian attacks on Ukraines Zaporizhzhia despite limited trucePolice officers carry the body of a person killed by a Russian drone strike in a residential neighborhood in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, Friday, March 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Kateryna Klochko)2025-03-22T08:20:30Z KYIV, Ukraine (AP) Russia launched a drone attack on the Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia, killing three people and wounded 12, Ukrainian officials said Saturday, despite agreeing to a limited ceasefire.Zaporizhzhia was hit by 12 drones, police said. Regional head Ivan Fedorov said that residential buildings, cars and communal buildings were set on fire in the Friday night attack. Photos showing emergency services scouring the rubble for survivors. Ukraine and Russia agreed in principle Wednesday to a limited ceasefire after U.S. President Donald Trump spoke with the countries leaders, though it remains to be seen what possible targets would be off limits to attack.The three sides appeared to hold starkly different views about what the deal covered. While the White House said energy and infrastructure would be part of the agreement, the Kremlin declared that the agreement referred more narrowly to energy infrastructure. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he would also like railways and ports to be protected. The dead in Zaporizhzhia included three members of one family. The bodies of the daughter and father were pulled out from under the rubble while doctors unsuccessfully fought for the mothers life for more than 10 hours, Fedorov wrote on the Telegram messaging app. The Ukrainian air force reported that Russia fired a total of 179 drones and decoys in the latest wave of attacks overnight into Saturday. It said 100 were intercepted and another 63 lost, likely having been electronically jammed. Officials in the Kyiv and Dnipropetrovsk regions also reported fires breaking out due to the falling debris from intercepted drones.Russias Ministry of Defense, meanwhile, said its air defense systems shot down 47 Ukrainian drones. Zelenskyy told reporters after Wednesdays call with Trump that Ukraine and U.S. negotiators will discuss technical details related to the partial ceasefire during a meeting in Saudi Arabia on Monday. Russian negotiators are also set to hold separate talks with U.S. officials there. Zelenskyy emphasized that Ukraine is open to a full, 30-day ceasefire that Trump has proposed, saying: We will not be against any format, any steps toward unconditional ceasefire.Russian President Vladimir Putin has made a complete ceasefire conditional on a halt of arms supplies to Kyiv and a suspension of Ukraines military mobilization demands rejected by Ukraine and its Western allies.___Follow the APs coverage of the war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Comments 0 Shares 240 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMDetained Istanbul mayor faces 2nd day of questioning as protests intensifyA man, a Turkish flag draped on his back, stands in front of anti riot police officers during clashes in a rally against the arrest of Istanbul's Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, in Istanbul, Turkey, Friday, March 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)2025-03-22T08:36:11Z ISTANBUL (AP) Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu appeared before police for questioning on terror-related charges on Saturday, a day after his interrogation over corruption allegations. His arrest this week has sparked widespread protests across Turkey, with demonstrators rallying in multiple cities to voice their opposition.Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya posted on social media that 343 suspects had been detained in protests in major cities on Friday night, adding There will be no tolerance for those who seek to violate societal order, threaten the peoples peace and security, and pursue chaos and provocation. The cities listed included Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir, Adana, Antalya, anakkale, Eskiehir, Konya and Edirne.The mayor, who is a popular opposition figure and seen as a top challenger to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, was detained on Wednesday following a dawn raid on his residence over allegations of financial crimes and links to Kurdish militants. Dozens of other prominent figures, including two district mayors, were also detained. Many view the arrest as a politically driven attempt to remove a popular opposition figure and key challenger to Erdogan in the next presidential race, currently scheduled for 2028. Government officials reject accusations that legal actions against opposition figures are politically motivated and insist that Turkeys courts operate independently. On Friday, police questioned Imamoglu for four hours over the corruption accusations, during which he denied all of the charges, Cumhuriyet newspaper and other media reported. He was expected to be transferred to a courthouse later on Saturday for questioning by prosecutors and to face possible charges. His arrest has ignited protests that have steadily increased in intensity.On Friday, police in Istanbul used pepper spray, tear gas and rubber bullets to push back hundreds of protesters who tried to break through a barricade in front of the citys historic aqueduct while hurling flares, stones and other objects at officers. Police also dispersed groups that had rallied outside of the city hall for a third night running, after the opposition Republican Peoples Party leader, Ozgur Ozel, delivered a speech in support of the mayor. Simultaneously, police broke up demonstrations in Ankara, the capital, as well as in the Aegean coastal city of Izmir, resorting to forceful measures at times, according to television images. Thousands marched in several other cities calling on the government to resign.Earlier, Erdogan said the government would not tolerate street protests and accused the opposition party of links to corruption and terror organizations. Authorities in Ankara and Izmir meanwhile, announced a five-day ban on demonstrations, following a similar measure imposed earlier in Istanbul.An anti-corruption operation in Istanbul is being used as an excuse to stir unrest in our streets. I want it to be known that we will not allow a handful of opportunists to bring unrest to Turkey just to protect their plundering schemes, Erdogan said. Imamoglus arrest came just days before he was expected to be nominated as the opposition Republican Peoples Partys presidential candidate in a primary on Sunday. Ozel has said that the primary, where around 1.5 million delegates can vote, will go ahead as planned.The opposition party has also urged citizens to participate in a symbolic election on Sunday through improvised ballot boxes to be set up across Turkey to show solidarity with Imamoglu.In a message posted on his social media account Saturday, Imamoglu described his arrest as a coup and accused the government of exploiting the judiciary and worsening the countrys troubled economy.With your support, we will first defeat this coup, and then we will send packing those who caused this, he wrote on the social media platform X.0 Comments 0 Shares 276 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMSudanese military says it seized key buildings in Khartoum after retaking the Republican PalaceSudan army soldiers celebrate after they took over the Republican Palace in Khartoum, Sudan, Friday, March 21, 2025. (AP Photo)2025-03-22T10:45:36Z CAIRO (AP) Sudans military on Saturday consolidated its grip on the capital, retaking more key government buildings a day after it gained control of the Republican Palace from a notorious paramilitary group.Brig. Gen. Nabil Abdullah, a spokesperson for the Sudanese military, said troops expelled the Rapid Support Forces from the headquarters of the National Intelligence Service and Corinthia Hotel in central Khartoum.The military also retook the headquarters of the Central Bank of Sudan and other government and educational buildings in the area, Abdullah said. Hundreds of RSF fighters were killed while trying to flee the capital city, he said.There was no immediate comment from the RSF.The military on Friday retook the Republican Palace, the prewar seat of the government, in a major symbolic victory for the Sudanese military in its nearly two years of war against the RSF. A drone attack on the palace Friday believed to have been launched by the RSF killed two journalists and a driver with Sudanese state television, according to the ministry of information. Lt. Col. Hassan Ibrahim, from the militarys media office, was also killed in the attack, the military said. At the start of the war in April 2023, the RSF took over multiple government and military buildings in the capital including the Republican Palace, the headquarters of the state television and the besieged militarys headquarters, known as the General Command. It also occupied peoples houses and turned it into bases for their attacks against troops. In recent months, the military took the lead in the fighting. It reclaimed much of Khartoum and its sister cities of Omdurman and Khartoum North, along with other cities elsewhere in the country. In late January, troops lifted the RSF siege on the General Command, paving the way to retake the palace less than two months later. The military is now likely to try to retake the Khartoum International Airport, only some 2.5 kilometers (1.5 miles) southeast of the palace, which has been held by the RSF since the start of the war. Videos posted on social media Saturday purportedly showed soldiers on a road leading to the airport.The war wrecked the capital, and other urban cities across the country. It has killed more than 28,000 people, forced millions to flee their homes and left some families eating grass in a desperate attempt to survive as famine sweeps parts of the country. Other estimates suggest a far higher death toll.The fighting has been marked by atrocities including mass rape and ethnically motivated killings that amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity, especially in the western region of Darfur, according to the United Nations and international rights groups. SAMY MAGDY Magdy is a Middle East reporter for The Associated Press, based in Cairo. He focuses on conflict, migration and human rights abuses. twitter facebook mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 268 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMJames Monroes Oak Hill estate has historic roots. Some hope to preserve it as a Virginia parkThe portico of the main house at Oak Hill is seen from the garden in Aldie, Va., on Wednesday, March 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough)2025-03-22T11:00:43Z ALDIE, Va. (AP) The room where President James Monroe crafted part of his famed doctrine exudes a quiet, stately atmosphere.Inside the enclosed west porch a few footsteps away, a quarried-stone floor marked by fossilized dinosaur tracks glimmers in the sunlight. Just around the corner, a portico built by enslaved African Americans looks out over rolling foothills stretching into the misty northern Virginia horizon, a captivating view untarnished by monied property developments bellying up nearby.Its an early morning at Oak Hill, where centuries of history are deeply rooted in Monroes Loudoun County estate. Its the last home of a presidential Founding Father still in private hands, according to conservation experts. That is, maybe, until now.The DeLashmutt family, which has owned Oak Hill in the community of Aldie since 1948, hopes to convert its sprawling 1,240 acres (502 hectares) into a state park. A bill to that effect unanimously passed the House of Delegates last month but failed in the Senate. The DeLashmutts, along with a nonprofit corporation, The Conservation Fund, hope Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin will revive the multimillion-dollar project by including it in his proposed amendment to the budget bill ahead of the General Assemblys veto session. The governor has until Monday to submit his revisions.Weve taken good care of it, family matriarch Gayle DeLashmutt said, gazing up at trees in the garden during a recent tour of the grounds. And I think its time to let somebody else do it. A long history of family ownershipThe DeLashmutt family, which is unrelated to the Monroes, is part of a long line of Virginians who have lived in Oak Hill. Other Founding Fathers homes in the state Thomas Jeffersons Monticello, George Washingtons Mount Vernon and Monroes Highland estate are owned by educational and historical institutions that open the estates doors to the public.The residence at Oak Hill has a complex heritage: At the top of a split staircase leading to the entrance sits a gifted bell from the decommissioned USS Oak Hill. Inside, elegant parlors feature fireplace mantelpieces made of decadent marble, a gift from Monroes longtime friend, the Marquis de LaFayette, to thank first lady Elizabeth Kortright Monroe for saving his wife from the guillotine. On an interior windowpane, a young man with the last name of Fairfax, a family that previously owned the house, scratched his name and the date of his graduation from the Virginia Military Institute.Gayle DeLashmutts daughter, India DeLashmutt, grew up on the estate, charging about on go-carts and sledding down steep hills in the same place that Monroe hosted first lady Dolley Madison more than 100 years earlier. Her father used to tell her stories about finding arrowheads in Little River, a tributary that streams through the property. Theres just this span of time, and this place can really represent it, she said. Histories of enslaved residents and Indigenous generationsThe estate also embodies the histories of the enslaved African Americans who built and cared for the property. There is George Williams, an enslaved carpenter who constructed the main house in Oak Hill, according to independent researcher Emily Stanfill. And Natus Berryman, who lived at Oak Hill before being forced to move to the South, said Lori Kimball, another researcher. Opening the estate to the public full time would allow people to learn more about their stories, Kimball said. Donna Bohanan, chair of the Black History Committee at a Loudon County genealogical library, said it would also educate the public about the Indigenous people and tenant farmers who lived on and worked the land. I advocate for not just focusing on the great men of history or military history because that leaves out a lot, Bohanan said. By telling our more inclusive stories, we can start to see the connections between all of us as members of the human race. Uncertain commitment from Virginia Loudoun County has allocated $22 million toward the roughly $52 million needed to support the project, while The Conservation Fund and other groups have raised another nearly $25 million. The family is selling the property for $20 million. The Conservation Fund says the state wont have to pay a dime toward the project.The legislation for such an acquisition, backed by Democratic Del. Alfonso Lopez, passed unanimously in the Virginia House last month but stalled in the state Senate. During the final days of the session, Democratic Sen. L. Louise Lucas told reporters that she thought the bill was an excellent idea but expressed concern about long-term commitments from the state, even if it has no upfront financial obligation.Thats a lot of park for somebody to take care of, she said. Those are the kinds of things you have to consider when youre working on these budgets.Youngkin said Wednesday he was initially resistant to the project because he was not sure the business plan was fully fleshed out. But he said he felt less uneasy after touring the estate with Republican Del. Geary Higgins, whose district includes Oak Hill.We had a good visit, and Im still trying to decide what we do, Youngkin said. No promises, but Im open-minded. ___Olivia Diaz is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. OLIVIA DIAZ Diaz covers Virginia politics with the Associated Press. twitter mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 260 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMExperts say US weather forecasts will worsen as DOGE cuts balloon launchesA National Weather Service weather balloon sits ready for launch in the Upper Air Inflation Building at the National Weather Service, April 27, 2006, in Sterling, Va. (AP Photo/Chris Greenberg, File)2025-03-22T12:42:26Z WASHINGTON (AP) With massive job cuts, the National Weather Service is eliminating or reducing vital weather balloon launches in eight northern locations, which meteorologists and former agency leaders said will degrade the accuracy of forecasts just as severe weather season kicks in.The normally twice-daily launches of weather balloons in about 100 locations provide information that forecasters and computer models use to figure out what the weather will be and how dangerous it can get, so cutting back is a mistake, said eight different scientists, meteorologists and former top officials at National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration the weather services parent agency. The balloons soar 100,000 feet in the air with sensors called radiosondes hanging about 20 feet below them that measure temperature, dew point, humidity, barometric pressure, wind speed and direction. The thing about weather balloons is that they give you information you cant get any other way, said D. James Baker, a former NOAA chief during the Clinton administration. He had to cut spending in the agency during his tenure but he said he refused to cut observations such as weather balloons. Its an absolutely essential piece of the forecasting system. University of Oklahoma environment professor Renee McPherson said, This frankly is just dangerous.Bad, Ryan Maue, who was NOAAs chief scientist at the end of President Donald Trumps first term, wrote in an email. We should not degrade our weather system by skipping balloon launches. Not only is this embarrassing for NOAA, the cessation of weather balloon launches will worsen Americas weather forecasts. Launches will be eliminated in Omaha, Nebraska, and Rapid City, South Dakota, due to a lack of Weather Forecast Office (WFO) staffing, the weather service said in a notice issued late Thursday. It also is cutting from twice daily to once daily launches i n Aberdeen, South Dakota; Grand Junction, Colorado; Green Bay, Wisconsin; Gaylord, Michigan; North Platte, Nebraska and Riverton, Wyoming. The Trump administration and its Department of Government Efficiency fired hundreds, likely more than 1,000, NOAA workers earlier this year. The government then sent out letters telling probationary employees let go that they will get paid, but should not report to work.Earlier this month, the agency had announced weather balloon cuts in Albany, New York and Gray, Maine, and in late February, it ended launches in Kotzebue, Alaska. That makes 11 announced sites with reduced or eliminated balloon observations, or about one out of nine launch locations which include part of the Pacific and Caribbean.Among regularly reporting weather stations, NOAA had averaged about only one outage of balloon launches a day from 2021 to 2024, according to an Associated Press analysis of launch data.Meteorologists Jeff Masters and Tomer Burg calculate that 14 of 83 U.S. balloon sites, or 17%, are doing partial or no launches. That includes two stations that arent launching because of a helium shortage and a third that is hindered because of coastal erosion. The more data we can feed into our weather models, the more accurate our forecasts, but I cant speculate on the extent of future impacts, weather service spokesperson Susan Buchanan said in an email.University at Albany meteorology professor Kristen Corbosiero looked at the map of launches Friday and said wow, that is an empty area ... Thats not great.Corbosiero works in the building where the Albany weather service used to go to the roof to launch twice-daily weather balloons. Its now down to one at night, which she said it is worrisome heading into severe weather season.For those of us east of the Rocky Mountains, this is probably the worst time of year, said Oklahomas McPherson. Its the time of year that we have some of our largest tornado outbreaks, especially as we move into April and May.Former National Weather Service Director Elbert Joe Friday said the weather balloons get the detailed lower atmospheric level of temperature and humidity that can determine whether the atmosphere is going to be hot enough to set off severe storms and how intense they might be. Satellites do a good job getting a big picture and ground measurements and radar show whats happening on the ground, but the weather balloons provide the key middle part of the forecasting puzzle the atmosphere where so much weather brews, several meteorologists said. All of the 10 announced reductions are in the northern part of the United States. Thats about where the jet stream which is a river of air that moves weather systems across the globe is this time of year, so not having as many observations is especially problematic, McPherson and Corbosiero said.Weather balloons are also vital for helping forecast when and where it will rain, said Baker and another former NOAA chief, Rick Spinrad. The weather agency has been launching balloons regularly since the 1930s. During World War II, weather balloon launches in the Arctic helped America win the air battle over Europe with better forecasts for planes, former weather chief Friday said. It takes 90 minutes to an hour to fill a weather balloon with helium or hydrogen, get it fitted with a sensor, then ready it for launch making sure the radiosonde doesnt drag on the ground, said Friday, who recalled launching a balloon in Nome, Alaska with 30 mph winds and windchill of about 30 degrees below zero.Meteorologists then track the data for a couple hours before the balloon falls back to the ground for a total of about four of five hours work for one person, Friday said. Its kind of fun to do, Friday said on Friday.-Data journalist Mary Katherine Wildeman contributed from Hartford, Connecticut.___The Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find APs standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org. SETH BORENSTEIN Borenstein is an Associated Press science writer, covering climate change, disasters, physics and other science topics. He is based in Washington, D.C. twitter mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 257 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMNew Hampshire town elections offer a preview of citizenship voting rules being considered nationwideElodie McCarran, 3, peaks out from a curtain as mother Lauren votes in Derry, N.H., Tuesday, March 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Reba Saldanha)2025-03-22T11:59:09Z CONCORD, N.H. (AP) A voter in Milford, New Hampshire, missed out on approving the towns $19 million operating budget, electing a cemetery trustee and buying a new dump truck. In Durham, an 18-year-old high school student did not get a say in who should serve on the school board or whether $125,000 should go toward replacing artificial turf on athletic fields.Neither was able to participate in recent town elections in New Hampshire thanks to a new state law requiring proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote. Their experiences, recounted by town clerks, could prove instructive for the rest of the country as the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act advances in Congress and more than a dozen states consider similar legislation.Everything that conservatives tried to downplay, New Hampshire told us exactly what would happen on a national scale under the SAVE Act, said Greta Bedekovics, a former policy adviser for Senate Democrats who is now with the Center for American Progress. Married women with changed names face extra hurdlesVoting rights groups are particularly concerned that married women who have changed their names will encounter trouble when trying to register because their birth certificates list their maiden names.That is exactly what happened to Brooke Yonge, a 45-year-old hairstylist who showed up at her polling place in Derry last week determined to show her support for public education.She was turned away initially because she did not have proof of citizenship. When she returned with her birth certificate, that still was not enough because the name on the document did not match the one on her drivers license. Back home she went to fetch her marriage license to prove she had changed her name.Third trip around the sun and here we are, said Yonge, who called the registration requirements reasonable despite the hassle. If I did a little research, I probably would have known that is what I needed. New Hampshire is among the 20 states that allow voters to register on the day of an election. According to the New Hampshire Campaign for Voting Rights, at least 56 people who tried to register statewide the day of the March 11 town elections were turned away, though it is unknown how many of them later completed the process.Derrys town clerk, Tina Guilford, wonders how it will go during a November general election, when turnout is much higher.Its just heartbreaking to me to see people turn around and think, I hope they come back, she said.At least one person who tried to register in Milford on Tuesday did not return, said Joan Dargie, the town clerk. Neither did an older woman who tried to register at Town Hall before the election. The first of the womans three marriages was in Florida in the 1970s and that license was long gone, Dargie said.Sometimes people are like, I didnt save any paperwork for that. I wanted to forget all that, Dargie said. Its disenfranchising women. Whats happening at the national levelThe U.S. House passed legislation last year to require proof of citizenship for voter registration, but it stalled in the Senate amid Democratic opposition. With Republicans now in full control of Congress, the House is expected to take up the issue again soon.Before the 2024 election, Donald Trump falsely claimed that noncitizens might vote in large enough numbers to sway the outcome. In fact, research and reviews of state cases have shown voting by noncitizens to be rare and typically a mistake rather than an intentional effort to subvert an election.Republicans argue that even small numbers of noncitizens voting undermines public confidence.New Hampshires new law also has had broad support. About 8 in 10 New Hampshire voters in the 2024 election favored requiring people in their state to show a passport, birth certificate or other evidence of U.S. citizenship when they register to vote, according to AP VoteCast, including about 6 in 10 who were strongly in favor. The vast majority of Trump voters were in support of the requirement, but so were more than half of voters for Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris in the race against Republican Trump. During the recent town hall elections, Michael Appleton had to return home to get his birth certificate and provide proof of a name change before he could register and vote. Even so, he wasnt critical of the new law.Its inconvenient for me personally in this moment, but I dont think its an unreasonable thing to ask, he said.Republican state Rep. Bob Lynn, who sponsored New Hampshires law, does not believe there is rampant voter fraud in the state. He also does not believe the new citizenship requirements are unduly burdensome.It seems to me that voting is pretty important, and its not unreasonable to say to people, look, youre going to have to give a little bit of forethought to what you need in order to vote, said Lynn, a former chief justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court. Other states also are taking actionNew Hampshire is one of eight states with laws that require documentary proof of citizenship to register to vote, and similar legislation is pending in 17 states, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.The experience has at times been fraught in some states that have enacted a proof-of-citizenship requirement.In Arizona, a recent state audit found that problems with the way data was handled had affected the tracking and verification of citizenship. It came after officials had identified some 200,000 voters who were thought to have provided citizenship, but had not. A proof of citizenship requirement was in effect for three years in Kansas before it was overturned through legal challenges. The states own expert estimated that almost all the roughly 30,000 people who were prevented from registering to vote during the time it was in effect were U.S. citizens who had been eligible to vote.In Texas, where Republicans control both houses of the Legislature, lawmakers have introduced a bill that would in some ways expand on the proposed federal SAVE Act. It would require proof of citizenship for voter registration and compel state and local election officials to verify the citizenship status of everyone who is already registered.If a persons citizenship cannot be verified, that person would be notified and allowed to vote in only congressional elections.Further changes possible in New HampshireEven as New Hampshires law faces legal challenges, state lawmakers are considering further changes.The state House gave preliminary approval last week to a bill that would create vouchers to cover the cost for indigent voters of obtaining a birth certificate, though opponents said asking voters to declare themselves poor would be demeaning. It also would instruct the secretary of state to make reasonable efforts to verify citizenship if someone is unable to provide documentation. Critics noted the office has access only to birth certificates issued in New Hampshire.If youre going to pass a bill, make sure that it can withstand litigation and make sure that it offers real solutions. This bill does neither, Democratic Rep. Connie Lane said.In Durham, where voting takes place in the towns high school, students enrolled in civics classes traditionally watch the process. They got an extra lesson during the recent town hall elections. A student who was old enough to vote wanted to register but did not have the documents to prove citizenship, according to Rachel Deane, the town clerk.The supervisors of the voter checklist are wonderful in Durham, and they walked the student through the process and encouraged them to come back, she said.Deane said she believes the student never did return.___Casey reported from Derry, New Hampshire, and Cassidy from Atlanta. Associated Press Polling Director Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux in Washington contributed to this report. MICHAEL CASEY Casey writes about the environment, housing and inequality for The Associated Press. He lives in Boston. twitter mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 265 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.404MEDIA.COWhats in Your Head? A Plastic Spoon and Lost Baby MemoriesWelcome back to the Abstract!You are all in for a treat this week. Scientists have opened up a new book of genomes and discovered a swashbuckling saga for the ages written inside. I dont even want to say anything more to spoil it. Im excited for you!Then, microplastics are in the air you breathe, the food you eat, and the grey neural matter you are using to read this sentence. But there is some hope on the horizon as humans have enlisted an unlikely hero (and occasional villain) to combat our plastic apocalypse.Next, scientists shed new light on the weird gap in our memories during the earliest years of life. I dont remember the rest. Last, does Arya Stark feel the Bern? Is Rey Palpatine coconut-pilled? Can anyone be coconut-pilled in the year 2025? I present a story about the political affiliations of fictional characters because that is much more palatable than confronting the political affiliations of real people.The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (Iguana Version)Scarpetta, Simon et al. Iguanas rafted more than 8,000 km from North America to Fiji. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.Step aside, Odysseus. Theres a new epic in town about ocean voyagers braving impossible odds, charting unknown waters, and venturing to distant shores. And this time, the heroes arent warriors or gods. Theyre freakin iguanas.Thats right: Scientists have presented compelling evidence that Fijian iguanas (Brachylophus) are descendents of intrepid mariners that rafted across an astonishing 5,000 miles of the Pacific Ocean to reach their current idyllic homeland.By analyzing the genomes of iguanas around the world, the team discovered that the closest relatives of Fijian iguanas are North American desert iguanas (Dipsosaurus). This revelation suggests that, sometime within the past 34 million years, a common ancestor of both families was washed out to sea, probably from the coast of California or Mexico, on muddy mats of sticks and trees. The journey would have taken months, but enough of these iguanadventurers survived to colonize the Fijian archipelago.Iguanas are large-bodied herbivores that are well-known overwater dispersers, including species that colonized the Caribbean and the Galpagos islands, said researchers led by Simon Scarpetta of the University of San Francisco. However, the origin of Fijian iguanas had not been comprehensively tested."Our analyses strongly support the oceanic dispersal of Brachylophus from North America to Fiji, which is the greatest known oceanic dispersal event in the history of terrestrial vertebrates.Possible routes from North American to Fiji, with the most likely color-coded blue. Image: Simon Scarpetta and Jim McGuireWell, its the greatest ocean passage for terrestrial vertebrates besides all the human ones (sorry to pull rank, iguanas). But when humans go out to sea, it is generally intentional and involves a sturdy vessel and prepared provisions. These iguanas might have just been hanging out in a beachside tree one day when a bad storm hit, launching them into an accidental cross-oceanic cruise that changed the course of their lineage forever.So how did these lizards get their sea legs? Like, actually, what the heck? Months adrift on a tangle of wood and dirt? The answer, in short, is that iguanas are tenacious little thrillseekers that like to look death in the eye and laugh.Herbivorous iguanids forgo food for months at a time during brumationa form of reptile hibernationand extant Dipsosaurus brumate from OctoberMarch, said the study. However, floating vegetation mats are a known substrate for oceanic dispersal, so iguanas rafting from North America to Fiji could have had a food source during their journey.Additionally, some iguanas have other traits that may augment their capacity to survive overwater dispersal, including resistance to heat and dehydration, the researchers added. For example, Dipsosaurus have the highest voluntary thermal maximum temperature among lizards and largely inhabit areas without permanent freshwater.In other words, these seafaring lizards are hardy as hell. They could have either fasted as they rafted across one fifth of planet Earth, or perhaps subsisted on rations from an onboard mess hall.Either way, the reptiles stayed the course and were rewarded with an island paradise. Iguanas arent exactly known for their emotional expression, but I still cant help imagining their reaction to landing on terra firma after months of riding the waves. Surely, it was one small step for an iguana; one giant leap for iguana-kind.Boss Battle: E. Coli Versus PlasticChae, Tong Un et al. Biosynthesis of poly(ester amide)s in engineered Escherichia coli. Nature Chemical Biology.You may have seen a recent study that estimated that the average human brain contains enough microplastics to form a whole spoon if combined (about seven grams). Talk about neural plasticity! Ha ha ha.Okay, Ill stop. Because its not that funny. Nobody wants the equivalent of a plastic spoon in their brain. Its frankly ridiculous that weve let it get to the point where we all have plastic spoons in our brains. But petroleum-based plastic is just so convenient, which is why we make upwards of 400 trillion metric tons of it per year. This outflow, which will not biodegrade for centuries or longer, contaminates every conceivable corner of Earth (including your noggin) and is a big contributor to climate change.Who will save us from this self-inflicted body horror? Enter: Escherichia coli, better known by its stage name: E. coli. This microbe has a long rap sheet because it produces hazardous strains that contaminate our food, triggering product recalls and risking public health. Yes, this is bad, and nobody wants to contract the many maladies (some fatal) linked to E. coli.But E. coli contains multitudes. Most strains are totally harmless and the bacterium is a model organism that has been a goldmine for multiple fields. Now, scientists are enlisting the notorious microbe to help achieve the dream of engineering polyester amides (PEAs), which are a class of biodegradable polymers that deteriorate quickly compared to petroleum-based plastics.E. coli cultures. Image: HansNIn other words, this plastic replacement would not lodge any more utensils or assorted cookware into the brains of future generations (sorry, the spoon in your head is there to stay, and will indeed outlive your mortal form).To demonstrate the capability for sustainable PEA production, we engineered E. coli strains to produce proof-of-concept PEAs from glucose, a renewable resource derived from biomass, said researchers led by Tong Un Chae of the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST).This bacterial platform for the biobased production of various PEAsoffers several advantages over current chemical synthesis methods, the team said. Most importantly, it enables the sustainable production of PEAs, which is increasingly crucial as the climate crisis escalates.This study is just one of thousands of different efforts aimed at switching out petroleum plastics for biodegradable versions. Its hard to predict whether any of them will provide a scalable commercial option in the near-term, but it always lifts my spirits to see progress on this frontespecially when it gives E. coli a redemption arc. An occasionally deadly bacteria versus an indestructible symbol of human avarice? LET THEM FIGHT.The Gated Neighborhood on Memory LaneYates, Tristan et al. Hippocampal encoding of memories in human infants. Science.Lets stay on the subject of human brainsspecifically those without spoons. The only brains that meet this criteria are those of babies and toddlers, who havent had enough time to accumulate mental cutlery.This week, scientists investigated the fascinating mystery of infantile amnesia, which describes the strange recollective void in our lives as infants. Its not clear why most people cant remember experiences during this formative time, especially given that baby brains are super-powered learning machines in practically every other way.To shed light on this enigma, scientists examined the brains of infants aged from four months to two years old in magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machines. The goal was to see whether the hippocampus, a brain critical for memory, could encode memories, called engrams, at these young ages.By giving the young participants visual tests, the team documented fleeting engrams in the hippocampus starting at about one year of age. This discovery suggests infantile amnesia is caused by an inability to retrieve early memories later in life, rather than an inability to make and store them in the first place.Two of the studys authors during the fMRI experiment. Image: 160/90The results hint that the capacity to encode individual memories comes online during infancy, said researchers led by Tristan Yates of Columbia University. Our findings are consistent with recent studies in rodents showing that memory engrams formed during infancycan persist into adulthood but remain inaccessible at retrieval without direct stimulation or reminders.It turns out that there might be lots of those early memories still filed away somewhere in our heads, but they are behind walls, or locks, or other mental barriers. Theres something weirdly haunting about the concept of our baby memories floating aroundnot fully lost, but forever out of reach. What formative treasures are hidden in our neural folds?Then again, considering that I spent much of my early years eating dirt and getting stung by bees, maybe its best to let sleeping dogs lie.0 Comments 0 Shares 245 Views 0 Reviews