Burkina Faso bans homosexuality with prison terms and fines for offendersNew Foto - Burkina Faso bans homosexuality with prison terms and fines for offenders

OUAGADOUGOU, Burkina Faso (AP) —Burkina Faso'sparliament has passed a law banning homosexuality with offenders facing two to five years in prison, the state broadcaster reported late Monday. The amended family code was approved by the parliament on Monday in an unanimous vote that puts the code into effect more than a year after it was approved by the military government of Capt. Ibrahim Traore. Burkina Faso joins thelist of more than half of Africa's 54 countriesthat have laws banning homosexuality with the penalties ranging from several years in prison to the death penalty. The laws, though criticized abroad, enjoy popularity in the countries where locals and officials have criticized homosexuality as behavior imported from abroad and not a sexual orientation. The new law goes into effect immediately with individuals in same-sex relationships risking prison sentences as well as fines, Justice Minister Edasso Rodrigue Bayala said during a briefing broadcast by the state TV. He described homosexual acts as "bizarre behavior." Officials touted the new law as a recognition of "marriage and family values" in Burkina Faso. "You will go before the judge," the justice minister said, addressing offenders. Burkina Faso has been run by the military following a coup in 2022 that the soldiers said was to stabilize the country amid a worsening security crisis and provide better governance. Rights group, however, accuse the junta ofclamping down on human rightswith the rampant arrest and military conscription of critics. Since coming to power in September 2022 after Burkina Faso's second coup that year, the junta leader Traore has also positioned himself as a pan-African leader with rhetoric of independence from the West — a message that often resonates with Africa's young population.

Burkina Faso bans homosexuality with prison terms and fines for offenders

Burkina Faso bans homosexuality with prison terms and fines for offenders OUAGADOUGOU, Burkina Faso (AP) —Burkina Faso'sparliament has p...
Taliban calls for foreign help after deadly Afghanistan earthquake. Here's what we knowNew Foto - Taliban calls for foreign help after deadly Afghanistan earthquake. Here's what we know

EDITOR'S NOTE:This story contains a disturbing image. Afghanistan's Taliban rulers have called for international help after a huge earthquake killed hundreds of people and leveled entire villages, piling further misery on the war-ravaged country that was already grappling with food shortages and cuts to foreign aid. At least 1,411 were killed and 3,124 others injured after the 6.0-magnitude quake struck towns and villages close to the Pakistan border on Sunday, causing strong aftershocks in Kabul, according to Taliban government spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid on Tuesday. The devastating earthquake has also destroyed more than 5,400 homes, Mujahid added. Heavy rain, landslides and damaged roads have made it difficult for relief teams to access the remote mountainous areas hit hardest by the quake. Meanwhile, recent US aid cuts have crunched relief efforts in the country, which has been contending with shrinking global aid since the Taliban seized control in 2021, imposing harsh rules and punishments on the nation's 43 million people. Here's what we know about the earthquake and the rescue operation. The earthquake hit just before midnight 27 kilometers (16.77 miles) north-east of Jalalabad, a bustling city of about 200,000 people in Nangarhar province near the border with Pakistan, in a mountainous area known for its seismic activity, according to the United States Geological Survey (USGS). The quake was relatively shallow with a depth of about 8 kilometers (4.97 miles), according to the USGS. Shallow earthquakes tend to be more destructive. The earthquake devastated neighboring Kunar province, razing three villages, Reuters reported, citing local authorities. Damage and injuries were also reported in Laghman, Nuristan and Panjshir provinces, according to the Taliban government and humanitarian workers. The earthquake was also felt in several cities in neighboring Pakistan, the Pakistan Meteorological Department said in a statement. The region was hit by at least five aftershocks, the strongest measuring 5.2-magnitude in the hours after the initial quake, according to USGS. This is the third major quake to hit since 2021 in Afghanistan, which faces a litany of man-made and natural disasters, including poverty, conflict, drought, and the forced return of millions of refugees by neighbors Pakistan and Iran. Powerful earthquakes in 2022 and 2023 killed more than 3,000 people in Afghanistan's Paktika and Herat provinces, by some estimates. Nearly half a million people likely felt strong to very strong shaking, which can result in considerable damage to poorly built structures, according to the USGS. Yousaf Hammad, a spokesman for Afghanistan's National Disaster Management Authority, said the number of dead and injured is likely to rise. "The injured are being evacuated, so these figures may change significantly," he told the AP. Photos from the aftermath showed rows of brick houses swept under muddy debris, as residents clambered over huge piles of fallen concrete. Eyewitnesses recalled fumbling for loved ones stuck under collapsed homes, as they waited hours for emergency workers to reach the worst-affected regions, according to the AP. "I was half-buried and unable to get out," Sadiqullah, a resident of Nurgal, in Kunar province, told AP. His wife and two sons were killed, he added. Ahmad Zameer, 41, a resident of Kabul, more than 100 miles from the epicenter, told CNN the earthquake jolted his neighborhood. He added that everyone from the nearby apartment buildings rushed into the street in fear of being trapped inside. Videos obtained by CNN show men digging with shovels to search for survivors under the rubble in Kunar province. Others showed chaotic scenes as officials worked to stretcher the wounded onto helicopters to be airlifted to hospital. The war-ravaged nation is in the throes of a humanitarian crisis that has only worsened since the Taliban seized power in 2021 following a chaotic United States withdrawal. Many international aid groups, wary of collaborating with a repressive regime known for its persecution ofwomen and girls, have since pulled out of the country. Earlier this year, the White House halted more than $1.7 billion worth of American aid contracts supporting dozens of programs in Afghanistan. The United Kingdom, France and Germany swiftly followed suit. Humanitarian aid to Afghanistan shrank to $767 million in 2025, down from $3.8 billion in 2022, according to Reuters. Thamindri De Silva, National Director of World Vision Afghanistan, said the sheer number of challenges facing the country has made it difficult for humanitarian organizations to support Afghans. "This is not the first shock that we've faced this year. We're undergoing a drought. We're supporting the returnee response. We're still working with the earthquake-affected people in Herat. There's a huge malnutrition crisis in the country," De Silva told CNN's Lynda Kinkade. "So it's not just the funding shortfalls, it's the compounding of shock after shock in the country, which is stretching already very thin resources." Body bags are one of the greatest needs in terms of supplies, she said, as well as basic necessities, such as clothing, hygiene products, and cooking equipment. The Taliban have appealed to the world for more aid to support relief efforts, but so far, few countries have stepped up. "We need it because here lots of people lost their lives and houses," health ministry spokesperson Sharafat Zaman told Reuters. The United Arab Emirates has dispatched food, medical supplies and tents to quake-stricken regions in Afghanistan – as well as a search and rescue team, state-run Emirate News Agency, WAM, reportedon Monday. The UK on Tuesday announced £1 million ($1.3 million) in new emergency funding to support families affected by the earthquake, to be split between the UN Population Fund and the International Red Cross. "The UK remains grateful to the aid workers on the ground, who help us to provide support to Afghanistan's most vulnerable people," Foreign Secretary David Lammysaid in a statement. European leaders donated $1.16 million (€1 million) of humanitarian emergency funding, as well as tents, clothes, medical supplies and other aid stocks to the region, the European Commission saidon Tuesday. A spokesperson for China's foreign ministry said it was ready to provide disaster relief assistance "according to Afghanistan's needs and within its capacity," Reuters reported. Meanwhile, India delivered 1,000 family tents to Kabul and 15 metric tons of food aid to Kunar, with more relief to come, Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar said according to Reuters. The US State Department's Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs extended "heartfelt condolences to the Afghan people" in apost to X, but there was no immediate word of aid from the US. CNN's Ivana Kottasová and Catherine Nicholls contributed reporting. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Taliban calls for foreign help after deadly Afghanistan earthquake. Here’s what we know

Taliban calls for foreign help after deadly Afghanistan earthquake. Here's what we know EDITOR'S NOTE:This story contains a disturbi...
Putin says Russia doesn't oppose Ukraine joining the EUNew Foto - Putin says Russia doesn't oppose Ukraine joining the EU

By Dmitry Antonov MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that Moscow had never opposed Ukraine's potential membership of the European Union, and that he thought it was possible to find a consensus on ensuring the security of both Russia and Ukraine. U.S. President Donald Trump said after his summit with Putin in Alaska last month that he thinks Putin is "tired" of the war in Ukraine but that it remains to be seen if peace can be secured to end Europe's deadliest conflict since World War Two. Ukraine and the leaders of Western European powers have said they do not believe Putin is serious about peace in Ukraine, and have warned that if Russia wins the Ukraine war then Putin could attack Europe and the U.S.-led NATO military alliance. In some of his most dovish remarks since the Alaska summit, Putin, speaking in China, pushed back against those claims, which he cast as "horror stories" and "hysteria" pumped up by incompetent people seeking to cast Russia as an enemy. Putin said Russia had been forced to act in Ukraine by what he cast as the West's attempt with the help of NATO to try to absorb the entire post-Soviet space. "As for Ukraine's membership of the EU, we have never objected to this," Putin told Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico at talks in China. "As for NATO, this is another issue... Our position here is well known: we consider this unacceptable for ourselves." A potential security guarantee for Ukraine - backed by the United States and Western European powers - is one of the toughest parts of any future peace settlement, according to diplomats and officials involved in discussions. Ukraine says that it is not for Russia to decide what Kyiv can or cannot join, while NATO says that Russia can have no veto over membership of the alliance which was formed in 1949 to counter the threat from the Soviet Union. Putin said that he had discussed Ukraine's security at his August 15 summit with Trump. "There are options for ensuring Ukraine's security in the event of an end to the conflict," Putin said. "And it seems to me that there is an opportunity to find consensus here." Russia, Putin said, was ready to cooperate with the United States at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, Europe's largest nuclear plant. Russia took control of it in March 2022, shortly after its invasion of Ukraine. "We can cooperate with American partners at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant," Putin said, adding that the issue had been discussed indirectly with Washington and that he was even prepared to work with Ukraine at the plant. (Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Guy Faulconbridge/Lucy Papachristou; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

Putin says Russia doesn't oppose Ukraine joining the EU

Putin says Russia doesn't oppose Ukraine joining the EU By Dmitry Antonov MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Tu...
His search for the Titanic concealed a top-secret military operation. How the iconic discovery unfoldedNew Foto - His search for the Titanic concealed a top-secret military operation. How the iconic discovery unfolded

Forty years ago, in the early hours of September 1, grainy black-and-white images of a metal cylinder appeared on the video feeds in the command center of Knorr, a research vessel searching the Atlantic seafloor for the world's most famous shipwreck: the Titanic. Members of the four-person watch team, suspecting the object might be a sunken ship's boiler, were unable to tear themselves away from what was unfolding on the screen, so they dispatched the team's cook to rouse Bob Ballard, the expedition's chief scientist who had been searching for the wreck since the 1970s. He was awake, reading in his cabin bunk. The cook "didn't even finish his sentence. I jumped out. I literally put my flight suit over my pajamas, which I didn't take off for several days after that," recalled Ballard, senior scientist emeritus in applied ocean physics and engineering at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts. CNN spoke to Ballard, and a member of his team, Dana Yoerger, a Woods Hole senior scientist in marine robotics, ahead of the 40th anniversary of the Titanic's discovery. They recounted the unusual chain of events that led to that stunning sighting — and how the adventure didn't stop there. "As I came in, we had a picture of the boiler on the wall, and we looked," Ballard said. "We realized it was definitely (from the) Titanic, and all bedlam grew loose." Even before Ballard and his team found the wreckage 73 years after the iconic vessel set sail in 1912, the Titanic was a source of ceaseless fascination.The "unsinkable" shipwent down on its maiden voyage in a gilded age with American's wealthiest on board, a tale of human folly, class prejudice and technological failure. Its discovery in 1985 only intensified the Titanic's pull on the public imagination; it unleashed a 1997 blockbuster movie that remains one of the highest grossing in film history, several documentaries and museum exhibits, and for those with deep pockets, high-stakes trips to see its final resting place about 13,000 feet (3,900 meters) below the ocean's surface,one of which, in 2023, resulted in fresh tragedy. For ocean explorers such as Ballard and his colleagues, finding the Titanic was like climbing Mount Everest for the first time. The prototype technology that made it possible has since transformed deep-sea exploration and science, vastly expanding scientists' knowledge of the ocean. But even with the right tools, it took an inspired shift in strategy to uncover the iconic shipwreck. The 1985 search for the Titanic was not Ballard's first attempt at locating the wreckage. A 1977 expedition failed when a 3,000-foot drilling pipe to which sonar and cameras were attached snapped in two, according to Ballard's 2021 memoir, "Into the Deep." The experience, along with the need for live imagery, convinced Ballard that remotely operated underwater vehicles that could stream video back to the exploration vessel were a better way forward, but he struggled to find funding for his vision. Ultimately, the US Navy supported the development of Ballard's technology, a deep-sea imaging system nicknamed theArgo. The Navy was interested in using it to determine why two nuclear submarines, theUSS Thresherand theUSS Scorpion, had sunk in the Atlantic in the 1960s, as well as for broader Cold War intelligence-gathering purposes. Ballard convinced Navy officials to build in some time to search for the Titanic during the expedition to survey the submarines, a ploy that ultimately acted as a cover story for the Navy's secret mission. "What people didn't know at the time, at least a lot of the people, was that the Titanic (search) was cover for a top-secret military operation I was doing as a naval intelligence officer," Ballard said. "We didn't want the Soviets to know where the submarine was." Despite years of planning, Ballard wasn't optimistic that he would find the Titanic for two reasons: The time allotted for the search was short and a French team, led by engineer Jean-Louis Michel of the French oceanographic institution IFREMER with whom Ballard had been cooperating, was using a new, sophisticated ship-mounted sonar system to locate the ship's final resting place. "The agreement was that the French would find it," Ballard said, "(and) once they found it, I'd have plenty of time, a week would be sufficient, to film it." The French team, while close, missed the wreckage, and Ballard's "camera on a string," as he described it, spotted the wreck — aided by a significantly narrowed search area following the French sonar scanning. Ballard had what he called a "light-bulb moment" while mapping the debris of the Scorpion sub that was pivotal to the mission success. Its debris field was a mile-long trail, not in a small circular area as expected. Heavier objects sank straight to the seafloor, but lighter debris went down at a slower rate, and ocean currents carried them farther away. He realized that the Titanic, which fell to a similar depth as the Scorpion sub, would have a similar, if not larger, debris field and that looking for this stream of detritus would be easier than finding the hull and other heavy parts of the vessel. "It was the technology and the knowledge of how to use it," Yoerger said. But also "the big thing that led to our success was Ballard's strategy. He wasn't trying to find the ship, he was trying to find the debris field, which is a much bigger target, and one that's particularly well-suited to finding with your eyeballs." The Argo took black-and-white video of the Titanic in 1985, while an older system called ANGUS, with its 35-mm camera system, captured blue-hued still images revealing the wreck's existence. The team returned a year later with more advanced, color cameras to record every inch of the wreckage, including the ship's swimming pool, grand staircase and bow, generating iconic images still familiar today. Ballard also became the first person to visit the wreck that year via Alvin, a crewed submersible that he had previously piloted, which took more than two hours to reach the seafloor. Once there, he spotted poignant artifacts, including a child's doll, uncorked champagne bottles and silverware. He saw no human remains. Trails of rust covered the Titanic, created by bacteria that feasted on the metal, creating long, reddish spikes — a phenomenon Ballard named "rusticles," a word that subsequently enteredthe Oxford English Dictionary. Ballard recalled that some areas, covered in a protective pink paint when the ship was built, looked pristine. To preserve the "very hallowed ground," Ballard said he advocated using a similar approach — protective paint perhaps applied by underwater robots — to prevent the wreckage from eroding further. The Titanic's final resting place was far from Ballard's only discovery in a long, distinguished career as a scientist and explorer. Expeditions to theMid-Atlantic Ridgeprovided key evidence for plate tectonics, while a voyage to the seafloor along theGalápagos Riftrevealed the existence ofhydrothermal vents and the fantastic life formsthat live on them — showing that life could thrive without sunlight and precipitating new theories about its origins. Ballard went on to discover several other storied wrecks: theNazi warship Bismarck, the aircraft carrierUSS Yorktownand PT-109, a Navy vessel commanded by President John F. Kennedy in his mid-20s during World War II. But his golden touch faltered in 2019 when an expedition to locate Amelia Earhart's downed plane turned up empty. The explorer said he thought it would be possible to find the aircraft with the help of new technologies. "It's still on our checkbox," he said. While human-operated submersibles still have a role to play, he said that the future of ocean exploration is remote and robotic, and he ultimately envisions that uncrewed ships will ply the world's oceans. To date,about 27% of the seafloor has been mapped. "We're now getting to where we can launch multiple AUVs, autonomous (underwater) vehicles, sort of a pack of dogs that you can send out. … We can put all those assets in the water at the same time," said Ballard, whose Zoom handle is Captain Nemo after the fictional character in Jules Verne's "Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea." "I mean, it's all about bottom time. The real calculation you make is how long you are underwater." Yoerger has turned his focus away from the ocean floor and is developingan underwater robot that can explore the twilight zone— the midwater ocean 200 to 1,000 meters (about 650 to 3,300 feet) below the ocean surface, just beyond the reach of sunlight, which plays a key role in regulating the globe's climate by mitigating the rise of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. At 83, Ballard is still actively exploring the ocean. In July, he returned from a 21-day expedition aboard the Nautilus operated by his nonprofit, the Ocean Exploration Trust,to Guadalcanal, in the Solomon Islandsin the Pacific. There, he began mapping vessels and planes lost during five major World War II naval battles between August and December 1942. "I love it when kids tell me to stop discovering things, so there's something left for them to find," Ballard said. But he said he's confident plenty of unknowns remain about the ocean for the next generation of explorers. Sign up forCNN's Wonder Theory science newsletter. Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

His search for the Titanic concealed a top-secret military operation. How the iconic discovery unfolded

His search for the Titanic concealed a top-secret military operation. How the iconic discovery unfolded Forty years ago, in the early hours ...
Jury duty phone scams on the rise as fraudsters impersonate local officials, threaten arrestNew Foto - Jury duty phone scams on the rise as fraudsters impersonate local officials, threaten arrest

Scammers are constantly finding new ways to trick people. While older tactics like phishing emails and impersonatinggovernment agenciesto steal credentials are becoming easier to spot, bad actors are now turning to more alarming methods. One of the latest involves impersonating local authorities. People have reported receiving phone calls claiming they missed jury duty and now face a warrant for their arrest. This kind of impersonation scam is harder to spot because it's highly personalized, but that doesn't mean you're defenseless. Let's break it down. Sign up for my FREE CyberGuy ReportGet my best tech tips, urgent security alerts and exclusive deals delivered straight to your inbox. Plus, you'll get instant access to my Ultimate Scam Survival Guide - free when you join myCYBERGUY.COMnewsletter. Don't Fall For This Bank Phishing Scam Trick Scammers posing as court officials are targeting individuals with false claims about missed jury duty, prompting warnings from law enforcement. The fraud typically begins with a call from a blocked or unknown number, alleging that the recipient has missed jury duty and is facing an arrest warrant. The scammers then demand payment, usually through wire transfers or gift cards. A key warning sign is being asked to pay money to avoid arrest or legal trouble. It is important never to give money or personal information to unknown callers. Read On The Fox News App These scamsoften target older or more vulnerable individuals, although younger people have also reported close calls. In one example, a person received repeated calls from an unidentified number before answering. The caller, claiming to be from a local sheriff's department and equipped with the individual's full name and address, insisted they had failed to appear for jury duty and faced multiple citations. How Fake Microsoft Alerts Trick You Into Phishing Scams No jury duty arrest warrants:Missing jury duty doesn't lead to criminal citations or warrants. Blocked or spoofed numbers:Real law enforcement won't hide their identity. Unusual payment methods:No government agency will ask for gift cards or crypto. Aggressive threats:Threats of arrest or contempt of court are a scare tactic. Legitimate jury summonses are delivered by mail, not through threatening phone calls. If you get a suspicious call about missed jury duty, don't panic. Follow these steps to stay safe and protect your personal information. This might sound obvious, but don't trust any unknown caller, especially if they demand money. Legitimate authorities will never ask for payment over the phone, especially not through gift cards, wire transfers,or cryptocurrency. If someone threatens you with arrest or legal action unless you pay immediately, it's almost certainly a scam. Hang up and call your local court or police department using an official number. If you receive a suspicious call, take a breath and fact-check. Court summonses are always delivered by mail, not over the phone. Even if the caller has personal information like your name or address, that doesn't make them credible. Scammers often use leaked or publicly available data to appear convincing. Be extra cautious, even if the scam comes through text messages or email. Do not click on any suspicious links, as they can install malware on your device and steal your personal data. The best way to safeguard yourself from malicious links that install malware, potentially accessing your private information, is to have strong antivirus software installed on all your devices. This protection can also alert you to phishing emails and ransomware scams, keeping your personal information and digital assets safe. Get my picks for the best 2025 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android & iOS devices atCyberGuy.com. The truth is, your data is already out there, from old social media profiles to past breaches. That's often how scammers get enough personal details to sound legitimate. Investing in a data removal service can help reduce your digital footprint by scrubbing your information from people-search sites and data brokers. While no service can guarantee the complete removal of your data from the internet, a data removal service is really a smart choice. They aren't cheap, and neither isyour privacy. These services do all the work for you by actively monitoring and systematically erasing your personal information from hundreds of websites. It's what gives me peace of mind and has proven to be the most effective way to erase your personal data from the internet. By limiting the information available, you reduce the risk of scammers cross-referencing data from breaches with information they might find on the dark web, making it harder for them to target you. Check out my top picks for data removal services and get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web by visitingCyberguy.com. Get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web:Cyberguy.com. If you receive a scam call, report it to local law enforcement or your country's fraud reporting agency. After hanging up,block the number on your phoneand report it to: FTC (USA):reportfraud.ftc.gov Local police orsheriff's office Yourphone carrier's scam call reporting option Many carriers allow you to forward scam texts to7726 (SPAM). Apps likeTruecaller,Hiya, and built-in features likeGoogle Call ScreenorSilence Unknown Callerson iPhones can detect and block fake calls automatically. Pro Tip:Enable your phone's "silence unknown callers" feature for extra protection. Older adults are frequent targets. Sit down with your parents, grandparents, or neighbors to explain how these scams work and what to watch for. A simple heads-up could stop a costly mistake. Scammers are getting bolder and more convincing, but you can stay a step ahead. Knowing the signs of a jury duty phone scam, using smart tools like antivirus and call blockers and limiting your digital footprint can dramatically reduce your risk. Empower yourself and your loved ones with this knowledge. Instead of relying on faceless phishing emails, scammers are now using hyper-personalized and emotionally charged phone calls. By impersonating local authorities and referencing civic duties like jury duty, they exploit both fear and a sense of responsibility. What makes this especially dangerous is how plausible it sounds, drawing on real processes that many people don't fully understand. Do you think law enforcement and government agencies are doing enough to educate the public about these scams? Let us know by writing to us atCyberguy.com. Sign up for my FREE CyberGuy ReportGet my best tech tips, urgent security alerts and exclusive deals delivered straight to your inbox. Plus, you'll get instant access to my Ultimate Scam Survival Guide - free when you join myCYBERGUY.COMnewsletter. Copyright 2025 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved. Original article source:Jury duty phone scams on the rise as fraudsters impersonate local officials, threaten arrest

Jury duty phone scams on the rise as fraudsters impersonate local officials, threaten arrest

Jury duty phone scams on the rise as fraudsters impersonate local officials, threaten arrest Scammers are constantly finding new ways to tri...
3 Sydney dockworkers charged over massive cocaine shipmentNew Foto - 3 Sydney dockworkers charged over massive cocaine shipment

SYDNEY (AP) — Three Sydney dockworkers have been charged over a massive shipment ofcocainein a law enforcement investigation into trusted insiders importing illicit drugs into Australia, authorities said on Tuesday. The three, aged 25, 38 and 42, appeared in a Sydney court on Monday charged over 506 kilograms (1,116 pounds) of cocaine found hidden behind a false wall in a shipping container on the Sydney waterfront on the weekend, Australian Federal Police said in a statement. The cocaine had a street value of more than 164 million Australian dollars ($107 million). The older two men were forklift drivers employed by a global shipping and logistics company that authorities have not named. Police also found AU$330,000 ($216,240) cash which they allege is the proceeds of crime. All three face potential life sentences if convicted. The 42-year-old man was released on bail but the others were remanded in custody. They will all appear in court next on Oct. 29. The shipping container was sent from Europe, but the source of the cocaine remained under investigation, according to police. The men were arrested by the Multi Agency Strike Team. The team is made up of state and federal agencies who target "trusted insiders" within supply chains that allow organized crime groups to smuggle illicit drugs into Australia.

3 Sydney dockworkers charged over massive cocaine shipment

3 Sydney dockworkers charged over massive cocaine shipment SYDNEY (AP) — Three Sydney dockworkers have been charged over a massive shipment ...
Train used by North Korea's Kim Jong Un seen in Beijing, witnesses sayNew Foto - Train used by North Korea's Kim Jong Un seen in Beijing, witnesses say

BEIJING (Reuters) -A train marked with a North Korean flag and other visible design features consistent with one that has been used by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was seen travelling on a railway track in Beijing, Reuters witnesses said on Tuesday. Shortly after the train was spotted, a motorcade with a North Korean flag was seen leaving the Beijing Railway Station, a Reuters witness said. Kim is expected to attend a military parade in Beijing on Wednesday, joining Chinese President Xi Jinping and other leaders, including Russian President Vladimir Putin and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian. Since becoming the North Korean leader in late 2011, Kim has travelled by train - a slow but specialised form of transport that the reclusive country's leaders have used for decades - to visit China, Vietnam and Russia. (Reporting by Alessandro Diviggiano, Go Nakamura and Florence Lo; Writing by Liz Lee; Editing by Bernadette Baum)

Train used by North Korea's Kim Jong Un seen in Beijing, witnesses say

Train used by North Korea's Kim Jong Un seen in Beijing, witnesses say BEIJING (Reuters) -A train marked with a North Korean flag and ot...
Kim Jong Un rides his trademark green train to China. He also has a plane, limos and white horsesNew Foto - Kim Jong Un rides his trademark green train to China. He also has a plane, limos and white horses

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — In his latest bid to place himself among world leaders confronting the United States, North Korean leaderKim Jong Untraveled toChinaon Tuesday aboard his trademark green armored train, an aging symbol of his family's dynastic rule that he has used for past foreign trips to break out of diplomatic isolation. North Korean state media published a photo of Kim smiling broadly while talking with his Foreign Minister, Choe Son Hui, in one of the train's luxurious meeting rooms, furnished with yellow-brown desks, leather chairs and curtains with golden knots. Another photo showed him smoking a cigarette outside a carriage marked with a golden state seal, reminiscent of a smoking break he took on the train to Vietnam in 2019 for a summit with U.S.President Donald Trump, though his sister wasn't there this time to hold acrystal ashtrayfor him. Here is a closer look at Kim's private train, a relic inherited from previous North Korean leaders, and other ways he chooses to travel. Kim's train allows him to securely join world leaders Kim's heavily fortified train, whichhe last used on a 2023 tripfor a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin, reportedly travels no faster than about 60 kph (37 mph), making his trip to Beijing a day-long journey. Kim is among 26 foreign leaders invited by Chinese President Xi Jinping to amassive military paradeon Wednesday marking the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II and China's fight against Japan's wartime aggressions. Kim is likely to stand alongside Xi and Putin on the rostrum at Tiananmen Square, according to South Korea's main spy agency, creating a symbolic image of the countries' Cold War-era solidarity that will allow Kim to interact with other world leaders as he seeks to furtherexpand his diplomatic footing. Train is a legacy from Kim's father The train was a signature mode of transport for Kim's famously flight-averse father, Kim Jong Il, who made roughly a dozen trips abroad during his 17-year rule, almost all to China and all by train. He was traveling by train when he died of a heart attack in 2011, according to North Korean state media. In a 2002 account, Russian official Konstantin Pulikovsky recounted accompanying Kim Jong ll on a three-week trip to Moscow. The train carried cases of expensive French wine and passengers could feast on fresh lobster and pork barbeque, he said. Train travel also was part of a heavy focus on security. Kim Jong Il had several trains equipped with reception halls, conference rooms, high-tech communication equipment and flat-screen televisions. To guard against possible attacks, his train reportedly traveled with two other trains, one running in advance of his vehicle to check the safety of the rail line while another carried security agents and followed behind, according to South Korean media reports. Kim has traveled by air During an active stretch of diplomacy in 2018 and 2019, Kim Jong Un used the family's armored train for some of his meetings with Putin, Xi andTrumpduring the U.S. leader's first term. Unlike his father, Kim Jong Un occasionally has used planes to travel across North Korea and abroad. When he jetted to the northeastern Chinese city of Dalian in May 2018 for a summit with Xi, Kim Jong Un became the first North Korean leader to have gone abroad by air since his grandfather and state founder Kim Il Sung flew to the Soviet Union in 1986. In June 2018, Kim Jong Un borrowed a Chinese plane for his first meeting with Trump in Singapore, reportedly because his jet was deemed unsafe. In 2019, for another summit with Trump in Hanoi, Vietnam, Kim took his train on a two-and-half day trip. Kim's official plane is a remodeled version of the Soviet-made IL-62. North Korea calls it "Chammae-1," named after the goshawk, the country's national bird. South Korean media reported Kim's plane can carry about 200 people and has a maximum range of about 9,200 kilometers (5,700 miles) but reportedly has never flown that far. Kim also has used the airplane to review air force planes taking part in combat aeronautics contests and inspect construction work in Pyongyang. Kim has luxury limos and white horses Kim has a collection of foreign-made, luxury cars that are believed to have been smuggled into his country in breach of United Nations sanctions. During his visit to Russia in 2023, he travelled between meeting sites in a Maybach limousine that was transported using one of his special train carriages. During an earlier Russia trip in 2019, Kim had two limos waiting for him at Vladivostok station including a Mercedes-Maybach S600 Pullman Guard and a Maybach S62. Kim reportedly used the S600 Pullman Guard in Singapore and Hanoi during his summits with Trump. In 2024, Putin gifted Kim a luxury Russian-made Aurus Senat limousine. Kim also has white horses that he and his family often ride in propaganda-driven events meant to bolster public support of their rule. In late 2019, North Korea's state media published photos showingKim riding a white horseto a sacred mountain on two occasions, months after the collapse of his Hanoi meeting with Trump. When Kim and his preteen daughter reviewed a military parade featuring ceremonial cavalry unit members riding white horses in 2023, state television described one of the animals as "most beloved" by the girl, believed by South Korean intelligence authorities to be Kim's likely heir apparent.

Kim Jong Un rides his trademark green train to China. He also has a plane, limos and white horses

Kim Jong Un rides his trademark green train to China. He also has a plane, limos and white horses SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — In his latest bi...
Israel starts calling up reservists as it pushes into initial stages of Gaza City offensiveNew Foto - Israel starts calling up reservists as it pushes into initial stages of Gaza City offensive

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israel began mobilizing tens of thousands of reservists on Tuesday as part of itsplan to widen its offensive in Gaza City,which has sparked opposition domestically and condemnation abroad. The beginning of Septembercall-up, announced last month,comes as ground and air forces press forward and pursue more targets in northern and central Gaza, striking parts of Zeitoun and Shijaiyah — two western Gaza City neighborhoods that Israeli forces have repeatedly invaded during the 23-month war against Hamas militants. Zeitoun, once Gaza City's largest neighborhood with markets, schools and clinics, has been transformed over the past month, with streets being emptied and buildings reduced to rubble as it becomes whatIsrael's military last week called a "dangerous combat zone." Gaza City is Hamas' political and military stronghold and, according to Israel, still home to a vast tunnel network despite multiple incursions throughout the war. It is also one of the last refuges in the northern strip, where hundreds of thousands of civilians are sheltering, facing twin threats of combat and famine. The reservist call-up will be gradual and include 60,000, Israel's military said last month. It will also extend the service of an additional 20,000 already on active duty. Since the world's leading authority on food crises declared last month thatGaza City was experiencing famine,malnutrition-related deaths have mounted. Gaza's Health Ministry said on Tuesday that a total of 185 people died of malnutrition in August — marking the highest count in months. A total of 63,557 Palestinians have been killed in the war, according to the ministry, which says another 160,660 people have been wounded. The ministry doesn't differentiate between civilians and combatants in its count, but says women and children make up around half the dead. The ministry is part of the Hamas-run government but staffed by medical professionals. U.N. agencies and many independent experts consider its figures to be the most reliable estimate of war casualties. Israel disputes them, but hasn't provided its own toll. The war started with an attack on Oct. 7, 2023, on southern Israel in which Hamas-led militants killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, andtook 251 people hostage. Forty-eight hostages are still inside Gaza, around 20 of them believed by Israel to be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefires or other deals. ___ Metz reported from Jerusalem. Associated Press writer Fatma Khaled in Cairo contributed to this report. ___ Follow AP coverage athttps://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war

Israel starts calling up reservists as it pushes into initial stages of Gaza City offensive

Israel starts calling up reservists as it pushes into initial stages of Gaza City offensive DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israel began mo...
Rescuers search for helicopter that went missing in Indonesia's BorneoNew Foto - Rescuers search for helicopter that went missing in Indonesia's Borneo

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Search and rescue teams in Indonesia searched on Tuesday fora helicopter that went missingover the forests of Borneo with eight people on board the previous day. The Airbus BK117 D-3, owned by Eastindo Air, lost contact with air traffic control eight minutes after departing from the airport in Kotabaru district in Indonesia's South Kalimantan province on Monday. The aircraft was on its way to Palangkaraya City in Central Kalimantan Province. Three foreign nationals — an American, a Brazilian and an Indian — are among the eight people who were on board the helicopter. A total of 140 personnel from a joint team, including police, military, local agencies and residents, were sent by land and air to comb a 27-square-kilometer (10 square mile) stretch of forest in Mantewe, Tanahbumbu district. The operation is also supported by two helicopters, which will take turns sweeping the area, said I Putu Sudayana, head of the Banjarmasin Search and Rescue Agency. "Hopefully, with everyone's prayers, today's operation will be successful and we will be able to find the location of the incident," Sudayana said.

Rescuers search for helicopter that went missing in Indonesia's Borneo

Rescuers search for helicopter that went missing in Indonesia's Borneo JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Search and rescue teams in Indonesia se...
Death toll from earthquake in Afghanistan rises to 900New Foto - Death toll from earthquake in Afghanistan rises to 900

JALALABAD, Afghanistan (AP) — The death toll from astrong earthquakein Afghanistan's east rose to 900, with 3,000 people injured, an official said Tuesday as rescue teams scoured the area for survivors. The 6.0 magnitude quake struck late Sunday night in a mountainous region, flattening villages and leaving people trapped under rubble for hours. "The injured are being evacuated, so these figures may change significantly," Yousaf Hammad, a spokesman for Afghanistan's National Disaster Management Authority, told The Associated Press. "The earthquake caused landslides in some areas, blocking roads, but they have been reopened, and the remaining roads will be reopened to allow access to areas that were difficult to reach."

Death toll from earthquake in Afghanistan rises to 900

Death toll from earthquake in Afghanistan rises to 900 JALALABAD, Afghanistan (AP) — The death toll from astrong earthquakein Afghanistan...
Powerball jackpot rises to an estimated $1.3 billion after no winning ticket soldNew Foto - Powerball jackpot rises to an estimated $1.3 billion after no winning ticket sold

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The Powerball jackpot rose to an estimated $1.3 billion Monday night after the winning numbers failed to appear. The numbers drawn were 8, 23, 25, 40, 53 with the Powerball 5. No one has matched all six numbers since May 31, allowing thejackpot to swellto $1.3 billion, which would be the fifth-largest prize in the game's history if there is a winner in the drawing Wednesday night. As ticket sales climbed during the past week, game officials raised the estimated Monday night jackpot to $1.1 billion before taxes. Although there was no lucky jackpot winner, two ticket holders in Montana and North Carolina each won $2 million. Payments for a jackpot would be spread over 30 years. A winner also can choose an immediate lump sum in cash before taxes, which now stands at $589 million. The odds of matching all six numbers are astronomical: 1 in 292.2 million. The odds of gettingstruck by lightningare far greater. But with so many people putting down money for a chance at life-changing wealth, someone eventually wins. Powerball, which costs $2 per ticket, is played in 45 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Drawings are held each week on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday nights.

Powerball jackpot rises to an estimated $1.3 billion after no winning ticket sold

Powerball jackpot rises to an estimated $1.3 billion after no winning ticket sold DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The Powerball jackpot rose to an e...
Ahead of China's war parade, Taiwan president says aggression will failNew Foto - Ahead of China's war parade, Taiwan president says aggression will fail

By Ben Blanchard TAIPEI (Reuters) -Taiwan President Lai Ching-te said on Tuesday that aggression will inevitably fail, pointing - on the day before a mass military parade in Beijing - to the lessons from World War Two and key victories Taiwan claims against Chinese forces in 1958. Democratically governed Taiwan has over the past five years repeatedly complained about heightened Chinese military activity including war games around the island as Beijing steps up pressure to enforce territorial claims the government in Taipei rejects. Chinese President Xi Jinping, flanked by Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, will oversee a large-scale military parade in Beijing on Wednesday to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War Two. Speaking to officers at the defence ministry, Lai noted that Tuesday marked the 67th anniversary of a 1958 naval battle Taiwan celebrates as a victory that was part of the August 23 Chinese attack on the Taiwan-controlled Kinmen Islands, better known internationally as the Second Taiwan Strait Crisis. Taiwan's victories then show that true peace stems from a resolve to unite against aggression, he added. "We all know that the current security environment is more severe than ever before. In recent years, the Chinese communists have persistently conducted high-intensity activities with military aircraft and vessels around the Taiwan Strait," Lai said. "From the victory in World War Two to the glorious achievements of the September 2nd naval battle and the August 23rd artillery exchange, the most valuable lesson remains: unity ensures victory, while aggression inevitably fails." China's Taiwan Affairs Office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Lai's remarks. China considers Lai a "separatist" and has rebuffed multiple offers of talks. China and Taiwan have both been engaged in an increasingly tense exchange of accusations about the World War Two anniversary and its broader historical meaning. Taiwan has told its people not to attend Beijing's parade, to China's anger. The most high profile person from Taiwan attending is Hung Hsiu-chu, a former chairwoman of Taiwan's largest opposition party the Kuomintang (KMT). The KMT and the Republic of China government it ran fled to Taiwan in 1949 after losing a civil war with Mao Zedong's communists. The two had an uneasy alliance against Japan in World War Two and the Japanese invasion of China that preceded that, though much of the fighting was done by republican forces, historians generally agree. Republic of China remains Taiwan's formal name. (Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

Ahead of China's war parade, Taiwan president says aggression will fail

Ahead of China's war parade, Taiwan president says aggression will fail By Ben Blanchard TAIPEI (Reuters) -Taiwan President Lai Ching-t...
Xi and Putin reaffirm 'old friend' ties in the face of US challengesNew Foto - Xi and Putin reaffirm 'old friend' ties in the face of US challenges

BEIJING (AP) — Chinese leader Xi Jinping welcomed Russian President Vladimir Putin as an "old friend" as the two began a series of meetings Tuesday at a time when their countries face both overlapping and differing challenges from the United States. Relations between China and Russia have deepened in recent years, particularly after theRussian invasion of Ukrainein early 2022. Putin addressed Xi as "dear friend" and said that Moscow's ties with Beijing are "at an unprecedentedly high level." Following their formal talks, they planned to have another meeting over tea with some of their top aides. The talks come the day after both attended a summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization in the nearby Chinese city of Tianjin, and the day before a grandChinese military paradein Beijing to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II. The Soviet Union was neutral for much of the war in Asia, but provided assistance to China in earlier fighting against invading Japanese forces in the 1930s. It also declared war on Japan in the last days of World War II and sent troops over the border into Japanese-occupied northeastern China. "We were always together then, we remain together now," Putin said. China says it is neutral in the Ukraine war but has provided an economic lifeline to Russia by continuing trade despite western sanctions. Some of its companies have been accused of abetting the military industry. The summit of the 10-member Shanghai Cooperation Organization brought Xi and Putin together with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who heldseparate talkswith both leaders on the sidelines of the meeting. U.S.President Donald Trump's steep tariffs on India and the tone coming from the White House have pushed New Delhi closer to China and Russia, though Modi will not attend China's military parade. Putin and Xi held a three-way meeting with Mongolian President Khurelsukh Ukhnaa ahead of their talks. His landlocked country of grasslands and mineral mines is sandwiched between the two giants. Putin said in opening remarks that the three countries are good neighbors, with a shared interest in developing ties. "Our three countries have much in common," he said. In 2024, Putin madean official visit to Mongolia, where the government ignored calls to arrest him on an International Criminal Court warrant for alleged war crimes stemming from the invasion of Ukraine.

Xi and Putin reaffirm 'old friend' ties in the face of US challenges

Xi and Putin reaffirm 'old friend' ties in the face of US challenges BEIJING (AP) — Chinese leader Xi Jinping welcomed Russian Presi...
Indonesia police use tear gas near campuses, rights groups criticise security response to protestsNew Foto - Indonesia police use tear gas near campuses, rights groups criticise security response to protests

JAKARTA (Reuters) -Indonesian police have fired tear gas into crowds of protesters near two universities in a major regional city, student bodies and authorities said on Tuesday, adding new tensions to deadly protests that have rocked the country since last week. Student bodies of the Islamic University of Bandung, known locally as UNISBA, and nearby Pasundan University, over 140 kilometres west of Jakarta, said on Instagram that authorities fired tear gas canisters into crowds near the campuses on Monday evening. Local police official Hendra Rochmawan said authorities did not enter the campuses but were trying to break up non-student protesters who were seeking protection inside university grounds, because the crowds were blocking roads in the area. UNISBA Dean Harits Nu'man echoed the police statement, adding the campus was a medical hub for protesters. The UNISBA student body said security forces "brutally attacked" the campus, saying the tear gas caused breathing problems for some students and accusing security forces of seeking to silence dissent. University students have long been regarded as vanguards of Indonesia's democracy, including playing a leading role in the protests that helped topple authoritarian leader President Suharto in 1998. The current president, Prabowo Subianto, was a military leader under Suharto. The protests started in Jakarta a week ago targeting government spending such as enhanced perks for lawmakers, and have since escalated nationwide, with some rioting and looting, after a police vehicle hit and killed a motorcycle taxi driver. At least eight people have died in the protests, a senior minister said on Monday. Prabowo has warned the police and the military would stand firm against violent escalations. International rights groups have criticised the security response to the protests. "The Indonesian authorities acted irresponsibly by treating the protests as acts of treason or terrorism," said Meenakshi Ganguly, deputy Asia director at the Human Rights Watch, calling for investigations into alleged rights violations by security forces. Non-profit legal aid group Lokataru Foundation said on Tuesday their director, Delpedro Marhaen, had been arrested by police. The Jakarta police did not immediately respond to a request for comment. (Reporting by Stanley Widianto)

Indonesia police use tear gas near campuses, rights groups criticise security response to protests

Indonesia police use tear gas near campuses, rights groups criticise security response to protests JAKARTA (Reuters) -Indonesian police have...
A devastating earthquake in Afghanistan: See the photosNew Foto - A devastating earthquake in Afghanistan: See the photos

KUNAR PROVINCE, Afghanistan (AP) — A 6.0-magnitudeearthquake struck eastern Afghanistanlate Sunday flatted villages and killed hundreds of people and injured thousands. Rescue crews have struggled in the mountainous and remote Kunar region. This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

A devastating earthquake in Afghanistan: See the photos

A devastating earthquake in Afghanistan: See the photos KUNAR PROVINCE, Afghanistan (AP) — A 6.0-magnitudeearthquake struck eastern Afghanis...
Oil, threat of war, and China: why elections in this small South American country are crucial for the USNew Foto - Oil, threat of war, and China: why elections in this small South American country are crucial for the US

Guyana is one of the smallest countries in South America, but its elections on Monday might have outsized implications foroil marketsand the United States. Here is what you should know. Surrounded by mineral resources, Guyana's oil production is growing and could surpass Iran's by 2027. But the threat of a military clash islooming over Guyana, becauseVenezuelaclaims one of the country's oil-rich territories. Meanwhile, Guyana's extraction of strategic resources has drawn the attention of the United States and China. Although it's the third smallest country in South America, Guyana has the highest expected growth inoil productionin the world through 2035, according to a report by Global Energy Monitor. By then, the country will already be producing about 2 million barrels daily – the same amount that Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela produced combined in 2022. In the future, the ability to produce oil sustainably will continue to position Guyana at the center of the competition between the United States and China, analysts told CNN. On Monday, Guyana is electing its next president, as well as members of its parliament and regional councils. The current president, Irfaan Ali, leader of the People's Progressive Party/Civic, is seeking reelection. The other main contenders are Aubrey Norton, a longtime parliamentarian who is the leader of the opposition, the People's National Congress Reform party, and the son of a businessman Azurddin Mohamed, representing a new party called We Invest in the Nation (WIN). Mohamed was sanctioned in 2024 by the US, according to a US Treasury Departmentstatementthat claimed he sought to "exploit Guyana's underdeveloped gold sector for personal gain." The country's economic transformation began in 2015, when US oil company ExxonMobil discovered nearly 11 billion barrels in deep waters. Since then, the country has clung to oil as a magic bullet for prosperity – a policy pursued by former president David Granger, who governed until 2020. That strategy has been maintained by current president Ali, who has said the oil wealth will allow the country to improve its infrastructure and healthcare, among other. Guyana is a country with high poverty rates. But since 2019, when oil production began, it has posted a rising GDP, with growth of 63.3% in 2022 and 33.8% in 2023, according to World Bank data. In 2024, Guyana's economy marked its fifth consecutive year of double-digit growth, expanding by 43.6%. This was due to oil production and exports, according to the country's Finance Minister Ashni Singh last January. The country produces about 650,000 barrels of oil daily. That has made Guyana's energy sector a central pillar of its own economy, with the IMF highlighting it as having the world's highest GDP growth rate between 2022 and 2024. "Guyana's current growth rate is truly impressive," Ryan Berg, director of the Americas Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), told CNN. He said the country will need to "manage its new wealth" in a way that achieves growth "in an inclusive and stable way." Imdat Oner, a political analyst at Florida International University who was a former Turkish diplomat in Venezuela, told CNN that elections without major conflicts "would demonstrate that sudden oil wealth doesn't have to erode democracy, as happened in Venezuela." "If the next government manages this boom with transparency and stronger institutions, it could be an example for the entire region. That's why these elections are important," Oner said. This exponential growth driven by the energy sector has also transcended its own borders and attracted global interest at a key moment, when major producers like Russia and Iran are subject to sanctions, according to Benjamin Gedan, a researcher at Johns Hopkins University and former director for South America at the US National Security Council. The last electoral process plunged the country into a prolonged and destabilizing political dispute, according to Gedan, who is also the director of the Latin America Program at the Wilson Center. He traveled to Guyana in March, where he met with President Ali and other officials. With these elections, Gedan does not rule out the possibility of new social tensions that could deepen polarization along ethnic lines, which he believes could interrupt the country's development "and make it more vulnerable to potential interference" from Venezuela. The elections are being held amid increased tension with Venezuela over that country's claim to sovereignty over the region of Essequibo, where the main economic activities are oil extraction and gold reserves. An estimated 125,000 people live in that region, which is home to several indigenous groups and rich in natural, forest and agricultural resources. As a former British colony, from which it became independent in 1966, Guyana inherited the territorial dispute after the 1899 Paris Arbitral Award granted the area's sovereignty to the United Kingdom. The Essequibo has been a matter of controversy between Guyana and Venezuela ever since then but tensions reached a peak in recent years withCaracas' claim. In 2024, the Venezuelan National Assembly approved a law creating the State of Guayana Esequiba, and just weeks ago, the Venezuelan government went to the International Court of Justice (ICJ), where it presented "additional evidence" regarding the sovereignty it claims over about two-thirds of Guyana. Nevertheless, Venezuela clarified that it does not recognize the jurisdiction of the UN's highest court, and that it will not abide by "any ruling issued in this matter" to resolve the territorial conflict. The case remains pending. The Guyanese government has called Venezuela's claims an "existential threat" for the country. Gedan told CNN that Guyana lacks the resources to defend itself against a potential invasion of its territory, which has led its government to move closer to countries at odds with Venezuela – particularly the United States. "Last year, a British navy warship visited the region to support Guyana, and the US armed forces organized joint military exercises with Guyana," the analyst said. He added that in August, Trinidad and Tobago expressed support for a potential military intervention by Washington to defend the country. Berg, from the think tank CSIS, said the United States needs a strong partner in Guyana for many reasons, both economic and in terms of security. For its part, the US hasannounced military deploymentsin Caribbean waters near Venezuela, as well as intensified its rhetoric about drug trafficking against the Maduro government – allegations repeatedly rejected by Caracas. Guyana positioned itself in firm support of the American initiative, something Secretary of State Marco Rubio has highlighted. A solid alliance with the US "could guarantee that the status quo prevails and that the Maduro regime cannot attempt any adventurous policy with Guyana," Berg said. Oner added that he considers it unlikely that the tension between Venezuela and Guyana would escalate to armed conflict, saying the risks are too high for both sides, particularly in light of US energy assets that would be involved. Guyana is also caught in the middle of the economic rivalry between the US and China. While American companies lead oil production in the country, China has invested in infrastructure. "Guyana's ability to produce oil for many years, in a cleaner and more profitable way than most current producers, will position it at the heart of the competition between the United States and China," Berg said. He does not foresee that Guyana will lean exclusively toward trading with one superpower or the other, but rather will maintain ties "and decide to align with both countries depending on the project." The Wilson Center's Gedan said the current president of Guyana "appears to have a clear preference for the United States," which has been his destination for numerous overseas trips. He has also met with senior US government officials. However, Gedan noted there is receptiveness to investment from China, even beyond the oil sector. For example, the new Demerara River bridge in Guyana's capital is being built by Beijing. But Gedan emphasized that Exxon and Bechtel are among the most influential companies in the country, both of which are firms headquartered in the United States. Oner, the political analyst at Florida International University, said that China's interest it's not just about oil, but also about influence in a region traditionally considered "the US' backyard." The challenge for Guyana will be in maintaining the balance. If Guyana succeeds, Oner says, it can turn the connections with both superpowers into real economic and political rewards: "Time will tell." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Oil, threat of war, and China: why elections in this small South American country are crucial for the US

Oil, threat of war, and China: why elections in this small South American country are crucial for the US Guyana is one of the smallest count...
She Was Working Her Shift at Walmart — Then a Group of Women Brutally Attacked HerNew Foto - She Was Working Her Shift at Walmart — Then a Group of Women Brutally Attacked Her

Google Maps Tikerra Hicks, an employee at a Walmart in Indianapolis, was brutally assaulted by a group of women at the store on Aug. 29 An investigation into the incident is ongoing, and no arrests have been made yet A video of the fight has gone viral online A woman's shift at Walmart took an unexpected turn when she was assaulted by a group of women. The altercation took place on Friday, Aug. 29, at a Walmart on Keystone Avenue in Indianapolis, according to the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department. Avideo of the fight, posted by a social media user going by the name Kind Butler has since gone viral. The clip runs for more than four minutes and starts with the employee, identified as Tikerra Hicks byFOX59, on the ground as a group of women surround her and rain down blows. Hicks was brutally kicked and punched with her hair pulled. A man was also seen kicking her before he was removed by a group trying to break up the fight. "No fighting at Walmart," one person trying to stop the assault was heard saying. A group of employees finally managed to split the women up. However, after they were separated, Hicks ran after the women and retaliated, sparking a second altercation. Once the argument calmed down, an employee tried to get shoppers in the store to stop recording. However, they insisted that they would continue. Butler documented the moment that the group of attackers, which appeared to include a woman holding a baby, ran out of the store. Speaking to FOX59, he implied that the assailants were a family and said that the fight started "instantly on sight." "There wasn't any questioning, no anything," he said. "Just as soon as they saw the girl, the whole family came over and started beating her up." Hicks told the outlet that she had been suspended after the fight, adding that it took her by surprise. "I just hear, 'There she go' and then boom on the side of my head I feel somebody hitting me," Hicks said. She implied that the fight had to do with a friend of hers, who allegedly raped another friend. According to reporting by FOX59, Hicks was named as an "other person" in a police report about the alleged incident from the Beech Grove Police Department. Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Sign up forPEOPLE's free True Crime newsletterfor breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases. However, Hicks said that the alleged rape had "nothing to do with me" and that she had not been contacted by police about the allegations. "I wasn't there, even if it did happen, to protect he. And I wasn't there to defend him either," she said. "This remains an open investigation referencing a verbal argument and a physical altercation," the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department told PEOPLE in a statement on Monday, Sept. 1. "There have been no arrest(s) at this time." "The violence that occurred at our store on Friday was unacceptable. We appreciate police for acting quickly," a representative for Walmart said in a statement shared with PEOPLE. PEOPLE contacted the Beech Grove Police Department for additional comment but did not hear back by the time of publication. FOX59 reported that management at Walmart location was unable to comment on the altercation. Read the original article onPeople

She Was Working Her Shift at Walmart — Then a Group of Women Brutally Attacked Her

She Was Working Her Shift at Walmart — Then a Group of Women Brutally Attacked Her Google Maps Tikerra Hicks, an employee at a Walmart in In...
What are the Labor Day 'Workers Over Billionaires' protests?New Foto - What are the Labor Day 'Workers Over Billionaires' protests?

As Americans observe Labor Day, workers across the country are taking to the streets to protest President Donald Trump and other billionaires who, they say, are taking power away from the working class. The"Workers Over Billionaires" protests,led by the AFL-CIO, the nation's largest federation of unions, along with dozens of other organizations, kicked off on Monday a multiday mobilization featuring some 1,000 rallies, picnics, marches and other events. Advocates hope to amass momentum and support among workers against the Trump administration and the wealthier segment of Americans who stand to benefit the most from the president's policies. "Every single thing working people have won for ourselves in this country's history — it's not because we asked those in power," said Liz Shuler, president of the AFL-CIO, in a state of the union address last week. "It's not because they were handed to us. It's because we fought for them relentlessly," she said. In addition to the AFL-CIO, groups like One Fair Wage, a nongovernmental nonprofit that advocates for restaurant workers; Newtown Action Alliance, a gun violence prevention advocacy group; and many local organizations have participated in the planning of the nationwide protests. Many of the "Billionaires" organizers are also part of May Day Strong, a coalition of labor unions, teachers associations and more that hosted a series of events and demonstrations protesting the administration on May 1, International Workers Day. Advocates are railing against the "billionaire takeover" in government, criticizing corporate influence along with what many activists label as authoritarian policies, including the targeting of immigrant workers and the deployment of military forces in Washington, D.C. "It's important to show that there is opposition to the Trump-billionaire agenda in every community, big and small; it's not just cities that are united against what's happening… it's all towns, it's small towns that voted overwhelmingly for Trump,"Saqib Bhatti,executive director of Action Center on Race and the Economy, told USA Today. The May Day Strong Coalition wrote on its website alist of five demandsthey are making, including the protection of Medicaid, Social Security and other programs for working people; an end to the attacks on immigrants and communities of color; and for the full funding of schools, health care and housing for all. In response to NBC News' questions about "Workers Over Billionaires," the White House did not directly address the protests. But spokesperson Taylor Rogers said in a statement that "no one has done more for working men and women than President Trump." "Under President Trump's leadership, Republicans are once again the proud party of the American worker," Rogers said. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt similarly touted Trump as a voice of the working class. "President Trump believes that American workers are the heart and soul of our economy and our national identity, which is why he's championed an agenda that puts them first always," Leavitt said in a separate statement. Demonstrations are being held in small towns and major cities across the U.S. A large group is expected to rally in front of Manhattan's Trump Tower, where the attendees are expected to call for a $30 an hour minimum wage. Down Fifth Avenue, organizers have planned an afternoon protest with multiple references to the acronym TACO, which stands for "Trump Always Chickens Out." The protest is slated to feature Trump costumes, taco props and a "restaurant in the street" where participants will be serving up tacos. "The rally will center the question workers are asking New York legislators — Which side are you on?" according to a press release from One Fair Wage. "Trump and the National Restaurant Association corporate lobby, or workers fighting for a living wage and an end to the subminimum wage for tipped workers?" In Chicago, protests,which began at 11am, have been centered around Trump's threats to"straighten out"the city with federal law enforcement. "The federal government can do a lot to help Chicago,"Chicago Teacher's Union President Stacy Davis Gatessaid. "We're not asking for a militarized force. We're asking for SNAP benefits to be restored. We're asking for the Department of Education to be funded and resourced so that special education children have recourse when their school districts fail to educate them appropriately."

What are the Labor Day 'Workers Over Billionaires' protests?

What are the Labor Day 'Workers Over Billionaires' protests? As Americans observe Labor Day, workers across the country are taking t...
11-year-old fatally shot after 'ding dong ditching' in Houston, police sayNew Foto - 11-year-old fatally shot after 'ding dong ditching' in Houston, police say

An 11-year-old has died after he was shot while playing a doorbell ditch prank in Houston, police said, the latest tragic example of a TikTok trend authorities have been warning parents about in a case that could yield a murder charge. The boy and his friends were playing a game of "ding dong ditch" at a house down the street from their homes just before 11 p.m. Saturday when a person inside the house came out and shot the boy, Houston police said. A witness said the boy was running from the house on Racine Street after ringing the doorbell when he was shot,police said. The boy was taken to a hospital and pronounced dead on Sunday, according to police. Authorities used a bullhorn outside the home Saturday night to urge the person inside to come out with their hands up,CNN affiliate KTRKreported. Police detained one person for questioning. Officers brought a person back to the home in handcuffs shortly before 6 a.m. Sunday, according to KTRK. Authorities said the person was detained again Sunday night but was not formally charged, KTRK reported. Houston Police are still actively investigating, the department told CNN Monday. Investigators are reviewing surveillance video and working with the Harris County District Attorney's Office on possible charges, KHOU reported. "It'll more than likely be a murder charge," Sgt. Michael Cass, a homicide detective with the Houston Police Department, told KHOU, noting the boy's death does not appear to involve self-defense because the shooting "wasn't close to the house." George Skinner, a resident of the neighborhood, told CNN affiliate KPRC the tragedy hit close to home for him because he has a 10-year-old grandchild and other young family members who often play in the area. The 70-year-old said he has lived in the neighborhood most of his life and has never seen anything like this happen before. "Me and couple of my neighbors, we just were real sad that something like that actually happened to a child, you know?" he said. "Ten years old, you got a long ways to go." "Ding dong ditching" is an age-old prank that's risen in popularity in recent years as a social media challenge. TikTok videos often feature variations where pranksters pound on or kick people's front doors. In a Dallas suburb at the end of July, a man fired shots into a fleeing car after someone banged on his door,according to police. The man was arrested on charges of aggravated assault. In May, an 18-year-old high school senior in Virginia was shot and killed while filming a "ding dong ditch" to post on TikTok,The New York Times reported.The man accused of shooting the teen was charged with second-degree murder. In 2020, three 16-year-olds were killed when a man rammed his car into their vehiclein retaliation for pulling a "ding dong ditch" prankon him. The man was convicted ofthree counts of murderand sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole in 2023. Authorities across the country have raised concerns about the door knock challenge, warning of both the potential danger and legal consequences for those involved. "Think it's funny to bang on doors and run? Think again," the Hamilton County Sheriff's Office in Indiana wrote in aFacebook post in August. "What might seem like a prank can lead to serious legal trouble, property damage, or worse – someone getting hurt." "That's a good way to end up dead, especially in Florida," Sheriff Mike Chitwood of the Volusia County Sheriff's Office toldCNN affiliate WESHin July after arresting a 13-year-old girl and a 15-year-old boy for kicking a resident's door one night. The teens were captured on a doorbell camera creeping up to a family's home and kicking the door before running away, WESH reported. Authorities took two hours to find them. "You're endangering your future with this TikTok challenge," Chitwood said. "You're going to be charged with a felony." The two teens were charged with burglary, according to WESH. CNN's Lauren Mascarenhas contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

11-year-old fatally shot after ‘ding dong ditching’ in Houston, police say

11-year-old fatally shot after 'ding dong ditching' in Houston, police say An 11-year-old has died after he was shot while playing a...
Israel considers West Bank annexation as Palestinian statehood recognition gains momentumNew Foto - Israel considers West Bank annexation as Palestinian statehood recognition gains momentum

Israelis weighing the annexation of parts of the occupied West Bank, three Israeli officials said, just as several Western nations move towards recognizingPalestinianstatehood this month. It's one of the steps Israel is considering in retaliation for the anticipated recognition of Palestinian statehood by France, Australia, Canada, Portugal and the United Kingdom, which would join more than 140 nations that already recognize a Palestinian state. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held an initial discussion on the matter last week, but the security cabinet has yet to discuss the matter in detail and no decision has been made yet, the officials told CNN on condition of anonymity. Israel captured the West Bank from Jordan in the 1967 war and began establishing Jewish settlements there soon after in defiance of international law. The Palestinians want the West Bank, East Jerusalem and theGaza Stripfor a future state, a position supported by most of the international community. The Israeli officials said Netanyahu is considering various scales and levels of annexation options, ranging from a limited takeover of several Jewish settlements to a broader approach calling for annexation of Area C, which comprises 60% of the territory. A series of peace agreements between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization in the 1990s known as the Oslo Accords split the West Bank into Areas A, B, and C, where Area C falls entirely under Israeli administrative and security control. Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar updated US Secretary of State Marco Rubio about Israel's annexation plans during a meeting last week, according to an Israeli official. However, other Israeli sources told CNN the plans have not received a green light from the US yet. When asked about Israel's annexation plans, a US State Department spokesperson told CNN on Monday that the agency does not divulge the details of interagency or diplomatic discussions. Two of the officials said one of the main options being considered is annexation of the Jordan Valley – a strip of land on the eastern edge of the West Bank that runs along the Jordan River. The officials said there was a broader Israeli public consensus in favor of such a proposal, adding that Israel's need to use it as a security perimeter would be easier to sell to the international community – and, most importantly, Washington. However, Netanyahu's far-right political allies, ministers Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben Gvir, as well as the settler leadership, oppose the idea of partial annexation involving specific strips or settlement blocks, and are instead pushing for the maximalist approach – applying Israeli sovereignty over all territory not inhabited by Palestinians. The move would allow Israel to encircle Palestinian population centers, further undermining the viability of a contiguous Palestinian state. Whereas applying sovereignty to territory with Palestinian inhabitants could obligate Israel to provide citizenship or residency status to the roughly 3 million Palestinians who live in the West Bank. Annexing any part of the occupied West Bank by applying Israeli sovereignty would violate multiple UN Security Council resolutions and spark an enormous diplomatic backlash. Israeli settlements in the West Bank are considered illegal under international law. The United Nations reinforced that designation in 2016 with Security Council resolution 2334, which declared that Jewish settlements in occupied territory are a "flagrant violation" of international law and have "no legal validity." Omer Rahamim, CEO of the Yesha Council, the umbrella organization of West Bank Jewish settlements, told CNN that applying sovereignty should be "a preemptive move ahead of the French recognition of Palestinian statehood. By applying sovereignty, we will prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state, because it is impossible to establish a state on the sovereign territory of another country." Rahamim said the settler leadership is demanding broad annexation moves, not just within the settlement blocs or the Jordan Valley "because the meaning of applying sovereignty only to several or specific settlement blocs is that the rest of the area would become a terror state – another Gaza in the heart of the country. And we vehemently oppose that." According to one Israeli official, given the expected political and international pressure, Netanyahu is considering a phased and gradual annexation plan, which would start with a selected territory on a pathway toward broader sovereignty. The official said a phased plan would enable Israel to walk back from a full annexation in exchange for normalization with Saudi Arabia. The last time Israel seriously contemplated West Bank annexation in 2020, Netanyahu eventually dropped the plans as part of the Abraham Accords that saw Israel normalize relations with the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco. Saudi Arabia has said that no normalization would take place until Israel commits to a pathway to Palestinian statehood. Alongside annexation, Israel is contemplating other punitive measures in response to the Palestinian statehood developments, including sanctioning the Palestinian Authority, which governs parts of the West Bank as part of a peace agreement with Israel, or evacuating the Palestinian village of Khan Al-Ahmar. On Friday, the US announced it had decided to deny visas to Palestinian Authority officials arriving at this month's UN General Assembly, where French President Emmanuel Macron plans to announce France's recognition of Palestinian statehood, becoming the first permanent UN Security Council member to do so. An Israeli official said the US decision to deny visas was coordinated with the Israeli government as part of an attempt to prevent Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas from attending. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Israel considers West Bank annexation as Palestinian statehood recognition gains momentum

Israel considers West Bank annexation as Palestinian statehood recognition gains momentum Israelis weighing the annexation of parts of the o...
As Trump takes aim at the Smithsonian, meet the woman racing to visit every exhibitNew Foto - As Trump takes aim at the Smithsonian, meet the woman racing to visit every exhibit

Pausing next to a hulking steam locomotive at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History on Friday, Kathryn Jones bent down to look at a tiny silk slipper. "I've never seen one in person. It's so small," she said, pointing at the shoe once worn by a Chinese immigrant with bound feet. "That's why I love museums. It takes those facts and solidifies it." The recording of a trail whistle hooted in the background, bringing to life the 1887 Jupiter steam engine that hauled fruit picked by immigrants in Watsonville, California. "The immersion, the sounds, the small little touches that suck you in. I'm a sucker for small objects," she said as she walked through "America on the Move," her 100th Smithsonian exhibit this year. In January, Jones began a quest to visit every exhibit at theSmithsonian Institution museumsin Washington, D.C., and read every plaque. During the past eight months, she has visited 100 exhibits at 13 museums, meticulously logging her time on detailed spreadsheets. According to her records, that's 73 hours inside the museums and almost 51 total hours reading signs. She traverses each exhibit twice, first reading every description and watching every video, then looking at the exhibit again and filming videofor her TikTok account. "My goal for that is almost to kind of provide a marketing sizzle reel for the exhibit," she said. "A priority of mine is getting people in museums, getting people curious, reminding people that learning is fun as well as hopefully right, breaking down the stigma that museums and galleries are stuffy and exclusive and people can't come." Jones paused to take in historic footage of a streetcar passing the White House. "This is what I love to see, D.C. streets which I recognize," she said. "Look how close to the White House they are with a streetcar." She added, "People on roller skates! I did not expect that. A tour! This is so cool." This year, Jones found herself at a professional crossroads after leaving her job as a vice president of marketing. "I called it my grown-up gap year," she said. "There were so many aspects of what I was doing that I loved, but I was just kind of burnt out and felt adrift. So, I took the year off with the intention to figure out what brought me joy in life, what I wanted to do." Making videos about the Smithsonian, she discovered a passion for content creation, which she intends to continue after filming her last Smithsonian exhibition. "I tried, I think, three times and failed before I did my first exhibit. I went to a museum with the intention to read everything, and was either too anxious to do it, embarrassed to be filming in public," she said. "I'm really proud of myself for the strides that I've made in my ability to focus, my confidence in myself." As Jones has built her channel, the Smithsonian has found itself under increased scrutiny. Last month, the Trump administration informed Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie G. Bunch thatit would begin a systematic reviewto "remove divisive or partisan narratives" in advance of the nation's 250th anniversary. A week later, President Donald Trumptook aim at the Smithsonian on Truth Social. "The Smithsonian is OUT OF CONTROL, where everything discussed is how horrible our Country is, how bad Slavery was, and how unaccomplished the downtrodden have been — Nothing about Success, nothing about Brightness, nothing about the Future," he wrote. "We are not going to allow this to happen." The first phase of the review will focus on eight Smithsonian museums, including the National Museum of American History, the National Museum of African American History and Culture and the National Portrait Gallery. In an interview with Fox News, Lindsey Halligan, one of the White House officials who signed the administration's Aug. 12 letter to the Smithsonian, addressed the review. "The fact that … our country was involved in slavery is awful — no one thinks otherwise," she said. "But what I saw when I was going through the museums, personally, was an overemphasis on slavery, and I think there should be more of an overemphasis on how far we've come since slavery." The Smithsonian Institution was in the administration's crosshairs prior to last month's review announcement. In March, Trump signed an executive order titled "Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History," which directed the institution to "prohibit expenditure on exhibits or programs that degrade shared American values, divide Americans based on race, or promote programs or ideologies inconsistent with Federal law and policy." In April, an exhibit by African LGBTQ artists was abruptly postponed by the Smithsonian's National Museum of African Art. The following month, NBC News documented more than 30artifacts that were removedfrom the National Museum of African American History and Culture. And in July,artist Amy Sherald canceled an upcoming showat the National Portrait Gallery after she said curators expressed concerns about a painting of a transgender Statue of Liberty. "It became clear during my exchanges with the gallery how quickly curatorial independence collapses when politics enters the room,"she wrote on MSNBC.com. "Museums are not stages for loyalty. They are civic laboratories. They are places where we wrestle with contradictions, encounter the unfamiliar and widen our circle of empathy. But only if they remain free." This is not the first time that the Smithsonian has found itself in the crossfire of a culture war. In 2010, the institution withdrew part of an exhibition called Hide/Seek featuring works by LGBTQ artists after sustained outcry by then-House Speaker John Boehner and Catholic organizations. The institution was also roiled by a debate over a National Air and Space Museum exhibit of the Enola Gay aircraft, which dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, during World War II. Critics derided plans to include Japanese perspectives and information about the effects of nuclear warfare as an example of "politically correct curating." "The Smithsonian has faced crisis moments in the past … but the crisis moments have never come from a direct political assault, certainly not at the hands of the executive," said Dr. Sam Redman, director of the public history program at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. "I know we use the word unprecedented a lot in this era, but this is truly unprecedented in terms of thinking about the Smithsonian." Some museum scholars dispute the Trump administration's claims that the Smithsonian overemphasizes narratives by Black and LGBTQ artists. "We all know that museums are historically and culturally extremely conservative, and that there's a striking lack of exhibitions devoted to women artists, or women's history or Black artists or LGBTQ," said Lisa Strong, director of the art and museum studies master's program at Georgetown University. "Museums know this and have been working, working to fix this." A2022 reportby journalists Julia Halperin and Charlotte Burns for Artnet found 14.9% of exhibits at 31 major U.S. museums, including the National Portrait Gallery, between 2008 and 2020 were of work by female-identifying artists, and 6.3 % were of work by Black American artists. Trump says the Smithsonian focuses too much on 'how bad slavery was' Queer art facing widespread museum censorship, curators say White House reviewing Smithsonian exhibits to make sure they align with Trump's vision Artist Amy Sherald cancels her Smithsonian show over censorship concerns Jones said her priority on her TikTok channel is encouraging people to visit the Smithsonian museums and local museums that document history. "Hearing those stories of people that have suffered before, problems that we face, that's honestly why I kind of started doing this challenge," she said. "Because when we read these stories and see things, the more we know, the better we can empathize with other people, because we have other experiences to pull from." She sat in the arched alcove of a railroad waiting room to listen to the story of Charlotte Hawkins Brown, who traveled to the Jim Crow South on racially segregated railroad cars during the 1920s. "She talks about how someone said to her, 'This is God's country. You can't sit there,'" Jones said. "Hearing those stories, I do think it's important to confront those things, because that led to where we are now," she said. "People are affected by that. Some people will carry the scars of that."

As Trump takes aim at the Smithsonian, meet the woman racing to visit every exhibit

As Trump takes aim at the Smithsonian, meet the woman racing to visit every exhibit Pausing next to a hulking steam locomotive at the Smiths...
Is summer over? Fall 2025 weather forecast is here.New Foto - Is summer over? Fall 2025 weather forecast is here.

Folks in the eastern half of the United States might be wondering if the current ongoing cool pattern, which even saw temperatures dip into the 20s in portions of West Virginia on Aug. 26, is here to stay. Is summer over? Forecasters say it will definitely stay chilly in the short term: "A fresh area of high pressure will move from Canada into the Northeast over the weekend and remain in place for the Labor Day holiday,"AccuWeather meteorologist Adam Douty said in late August. "Most locations will experience comfortable days with a good deal of sunshine and chilly nights." Indeed, temperatures more common for October will trend as much as 15 degrees below historical averages, with near-record lows at night for many locations. Daytime highs will range from the 60s to 70s, with nighttime lows in the 40s and 50s. Federal forecasters agree with this prediction, noting that "current outlooks for early September favor below-normal temperatures for much of the Midwest and East," Dan Collins, an extended range forecaster withNOAA's Climate Prediction Center, told USA TODAY via e-mail. Sept. 1 is the beginning of meteorological fall in the Northern Hemisphere, while the beginning of astronomical fall is still three weeks away, this year occurring on Sept. 22. Meteorologists use the calendar to determine the change of seasons, while astronomers and the general public usually go with the autumnal equinox, when the sun is directly aligned with the equator, resulting in equal hours of daylight and darkness. Residents of Florida and the western U.S. must wonder what the fuss is about, as summerlike warmth is predicted to continue over these areas for most of September, according to theClimate Prediction Center. In early September, temperatures will be most unusually warm in the Northwest, with upper 90s likely, possibly reaching 100 degrees east of the Cascades,the Weather Prediction Center said in an online forecast. However, according to AccuWeather senior meteorologist Chad Merrill, the warmth will return to the East by mid-month: the current cool temperatures should be replaced by above-average temperatures. Forecasters from the Climate Prediction Center also note that "we are favoring above normal temperatures for much of the lower 48, including the Midwest and East, over the month of September," meteorologist Anthony Artusa told USA TODAY. But AccuWeather's Merrill does not foresee a return to any extreme summertime heat of 95 degrees or above this season. "In the East, those temperatures are finished for the year," he told USA TODAY. What is worrisome in the short-term is the lack of rainfall in the Northeast, which has prompted an expansion of drought in New England, according to the latestU.S. Drought Monitor released Aug. 28. "Drought will worsen in New England before tropical moisture moves in for the second half of the month," Merrill said. AccuWeathermeteorologists anticipate periods of increased tropical activity in the Atlantic Basin during the rest of the hurricane season. After the current storm lull during the end of August and early September due in part to dusty, dry air and cool water in Hurricane Erin's wake, the threat of tropical cyclones is favored to return by the second half of the month and into October and even November, Merrill said. "We are expecting the second half of the hurricane season to be busy," he told USA TODAY. "Chances for the development of La Niña increase as we approach the upcoming winter," Johnna Infanti, a seasonal forecaster with NOAA'sClimate Prediction Centertold USA TODAY in an email. The climate pattern, marked by cooler-than-average sea-surface temperatures in the Pacific Ocean, could also help boost the number of hurricanes that form in the Atlantic by the tail end of the season: "La Niña conditions are associated with more activity (double the amount) in November when compared to ENSO Neutral and especially when compared to Novembers with El Niño conditions," said Matthew Rosencrans, NOAA's lead hurricane seasonal forecaster, in an email to USA TODAY. ENSO-neutral conditions occur when Pacific Ocean seawater is neither unusually warm or unusually cold. According to Infanti, some typical impacts of a La Niña winter can include cooler temperatures over the northern United States, and diminished storm track activity over the southern tier of the U.S. leading to milder-than-normal temperatures and below normal precipitation. In turn, she said the storm track is typically shifted northward, bringing above-normal precipitation to parts of the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes. "However, predictions of this event are still uncertain, and indications point to a short lived, weak event. Weak and short lived events tend to have less reliable impacts than strong, long lived events," Infanti said. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Fall 2025 weather forecast on hurricanes, cool weather and La Niña

Is summer over? Fall 2025 weather forecast is here.

Is summer over? Fall 2025 weather forecast is here. Folks in the eastern half of the United States might be wondering if the current ongoing...

 

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