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Ducks and geese are seen on a snow-covered pond in Central Park in New York City on December 27, 2025. New York City receieved around 4…
File photo of Argentina’s President Javier Milei. Argentina’s Congress passed the 2026 budget on Friday, the first approved by legislators since President Javier Milei took office in late 2023.The budget, passed 46 votes to 25 with one abstention, includes spending of $102bn (148bn Argentine pesos) and projects South America’s second-biggest economy will grow 5% with inflation at 10.1%.The bill projects a primary budget surplus equivalent to 1.2% of the gross domestic product. The 2023 budget was the last one passed by Congress. During the first two years of his term, Milei’s government had extended the budget of the previous year without passing a bill in Congress, resulting in sectors being dramatically hit by inflation, which hit an annual rate of almost 300% in April 2024.According to a report by the Civil Association for Equality and Justice, a Buenos Aires-based think tank, the new budget reflects a 7% increase in real terms from 2025 but a 24.6% drop in real terms compared to the 2023 Congress-approved budget. However, the think tank noted that some inflation projections are significantly higher than the executive branch’s forecast.Milei has ruled with sweeping austerity measures, which have often generated massive protests, and in 2024 Argentina had its first budget surplus in more than a decade. Congress this year overrode Milei’s vetoes of bills boosting funding for public universities, paediatric health care and people with disabilities. While the new budget boosts funding for social services -including health, social security and education – the bump does not compensate for sharp falls over the last several years, the ACIJ report said.After a strong showing in midterm legislative elections in October, Milei’s La Libertad Avanza party gained considerable power in the newly elected Congress, becoming the largest minority in the lower house and increasing its bloc in the Senate. The government hopes that will help it push forward a series of overhauls, including overhauls to the labour and tax systems, in the coming months. Related Story Source link
Yau Yiu-wai poses for a photo in Hong Kong’s Sham Shui Po district. – AFP Scores of residents flocked to a cramped shop in Hong Kong’s old district to bid farewell to the city’s “king of umbrellas”, who is retiring after spending decades repairing umbrellas at his family business.Established in 1842 during the Qing Dynasty, the Sun Rise Company was founded by the Yau family in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou.Current proprietor Yau Yiu-wai, 73, announced earlier this month that his 183-year-old family business would close its doors at year’s end.The family-run shop has been passed down through five generations, but due to shifting consumer habits towards online shopping and his advancing age, it has to cease operations, Yau told AFP on Friday.”We’ve upheld our family’s reputation, and this legacy has come down to me… It truly pains me to end it,” Yau said. “I’m sorry to my ancestors.”After enduring wartime turmoil, the shop relocated to Hong Kong, eventually finding its place amid the bustling meat and vegetable vendors in Sham Shui Po district.”(Today’s) wheel of time rolled over me and crushed me beneath its weight,” Yau said.News of the closure spread across social media, with one user calling it “another loss of a wonderful community business”.”He genuinely cared about selling customers a good, practical umbrella,” student Niki Lum told AFP, referring to Yau.”I could tell he put his heart into running this shop,” said the 20-year-old.Resident Peter Tam, 60, said witnessing the disappearance of these classic shops felt like the end of an era.”It’s such a pity… These are all pieces of history,” he said. “And we ourselves are becoming history too.”While most retailers rely on customers replacing damaged umbrellas with new ones, Yau said he aims for durability. “This is for environmental protection. It’s a social responsibility.”Those who brought umbrellas for repair included couples hoping to mend their relationships and married couples who had used umbrellas as tokens of affection.Yau said that fewer than five repairmen like him remain in Hong Kong practising this “barely profitable” umbrella trade.However, now Yau said he has no choice but to end the service he took pride in.”I’m getting old. You have to forgive me, I just can’t carry on any more,” he said, adding he had suffered a stroke several years ago.”The most important thing for you is to stay smart… and learn to be eco-friendly,” he added. Source link
Thailand and Cambodia agreed to an “immediate” ceasefire Saturday, the two countries said in a joint statement, pledging to end border clashes that killed dozens of people.UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres welcomed the announcement “as a positive step towards alleviating the suffering of civilians… and creating an environment conducive to achieving lasting peace”, spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.At least 47 people were killed and more than a million displaced in three weeks of fighting with artillery, tanks, drones and jets, according to official tallies.The conflict spread to nearly every border province on both sides, shattering an earlier truce for which US President Donald Trump took credit.Cambodia and Thailand agreed to the ceasefire that took effect at 12pm (0500 GMT), said the declaration signed by the Southeast Asian neighbours’ defence ministers at a border checkpoint on the Thai side.The truce applies to “all types of weapons, including attacks on civilians, civilian objects and infrastructures, and military objectives of either side, in all cases and all areas”.Both sides agreed to freeze all troop movements and allow civilians living in border areas to return home as soon as possible, the statement said.They also agreed to co-operate on demining efforts and combatting cybercrime, while Thailand was to return 18 captured Cambodian soldiers within 72 hours.Thai Defence Minister Nattaphon Narkphanit said the initial three-day window would be an “observation period to confirm that the ceasefire is real”.He called the truce “a door to a peaceful resolution” in a speech earlier.The ceasefire was holding, Thai defence ministry spokesperson Rear Admiral Surasant Kongsiri told Reuters about two hours after it went into effect.”So far there’s been no report of gunfire,” he said.Cambodia’s ministry of national defence did not report any clashes after what it said had been a Thai airstrike early on Saturday before the ceasefire announcement.Displaced Cambodian Oeum Raksmey told AFP that she was “very happy that people can return home” if the fighting stops.”But I dare not return home yet. I am still scared,” said the 22-year-old, who has sheltered with her family in Cambodia’s Siem Reap province.On the other side of the border, 55-year-old Thai village head Khampong Lueklarp was similarly cautious.”I personally think the ceasefire won’t really happen,” said the head of Ban Ta Sawang Samakkee village in Sisaket province, adding that he hoped for “a real peace”.The ceasefire followed three days of border talks convened following a crisis meeting of foreign ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean).EU foreign affairs spokesman Anouar El Anouni, in a post on X, thanked “Asean for playing a positive part” and called on Cambodia and Thailand to implement the agreement “in good faith”.The European bloc was ready to provide any needed support, he added.The United States and China also pushed for an end to the fighting.Beijing’s foreign ministry said the ceasefire “demonstrates that dialogue and consultations are a realistic and effective way of resolving complex disputes”, offering support moving forward.China’s top diplomat Wang Yi will host the Cambodian and Thai foreign ministers for talks in Yunnan province on January 28-29, the countries said.The conflict stems from a territorial dispute over the colonial-era demarcation of the 800km (500-mile) Thai-Cambodian border, where both sides claim ancient temples.Five days of fighting in July killed dozens of people before a truce was brokered by the United States, China and Asean chair Malaysia.Trump witnessed the signing of an expanded agreement between Thailand and Cambodia in October, but it was broken within months, with each side blaming the other for instigating the fresh fighting.At least 25 Thai soldiers and one Thai civilian were killed in the latest round of clashes, officials said.Cambodia, outgunned and outspent by Bangkok’s military, said 21 civilians were killed.Phnom Penh has reported no military deaths, even though an official Facebook post showed first lady Pich Chanmony, the wife of Cambodia’s leader Hun Manet, at a funeral for troops killed in the fighting.The violence was still raging while this week’s border talks were underway.On Friday, Cambodia accused Thailand of intensifying its bombardment of disputed border areas, and Thai media reported Cambodian attacks overnight.While both sides agreed to halt the fighting, they will still need to resolve the demarcation of their border following the ceasefire.The contested temples are claimed by both nations because of a vague demarcation made by Cambodia’s French colonial administrators in 1907.”War and clashes don’t make the two countries or the two people happy,” Thailand’s Air Chief Marshal Prapas Sornjaidee told reporters. “I want to stress that the Thai people and the Cambodian people are not in conflict with each other.”UN human rights chief Volker Turk said he hoped the ceasefire “will pave the way for confidence building & peace”. 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Local people rescue an elderly woman during a fire at the Werdha Damai retirement home in Manado, North Sulawesi Province, Indonesia, Monday. Sixteen people died in the tragedy which occurred late Sunday. The home's caretaker said its residents were the elderly, and about 30 people had been in the complex. Source link
A pair of Chinese JH-7A fighter-bomber aircraft fly over the Taiwan Strait as seen from Pingtan island, the closest point to Taiwan, in eastern China’s Fujian…
An international observer gets photographed with white elephants in an enclosure during her visit in Naypyidaw, a day before Myanmar’s general election. – AFP Myanmar heads to the polls today as it battles a civil war that has ravaged parts of the country as well as one of Asia’s worst humanitarian crises.Already one of Southeast Asia’s poorest countries, Myanmar has been hammered by a conflict triggered by a 2021 coup in which the military ousted an elected civilian government led by Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi.Myanmar’s humanitarian crisis is one of the most severe in Asia, driven by the intensifying civil war and repeated natural disasters, including a massive earthquake in March.The ruling junta has previously suppressed information about a severe food crisis gripping the country by pressuring researchers not to collect data about hunger and aid workers not to publish it, Reuters has reported, besides cracking down on journalists since the coup.Myanmar is one of the world’s most under-funded aid operations, with only 12% of required funds received, the United Nations says.US cuts to humanitarian aid are having a crushing impact on people, the UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar has said.The UN estimates that 20mn of Myanmar’s 51mn people need aid as soaring inflation and a plunging currency push about half the population below the poverty line.More than 3.6mn people have been displaced from their homes, with over 6,800 civilians killed in the conflict triggered by the coup, according to UN estimates.With mounting violence forcing increasing numbers of people to flee, more than 12mn in Myanmar will face acute hunger next year, including 1mn who will need lifesaving support, according to the UN’s World Food Programme (WFP).More than 16mn people across Myanmar are acutely food insecure, meaning that their lack of food threatens lives and livelihoods, the WFP estimates.They are the fifth-largest group needing aid anywhere in the world, making Myanmar “a hunger hotspot of very high concern”, the agency said.More than 540,000 children across the country are expected to suffer this year from acute malnutrition – life-threatening wasting that can have severe and lifelong effects – a 26% increase from last year, the WFP said.One in three children under the age of five is already suffering from stunted growth, according to the WFP.Myanmar’s economy – once deemed as one of the region’s most promising – has struggled in recent years, reeling from the civil war, natural disasters and mismanagement.However, despite the challenges, Myanmar’s economy is showing some signs of improvement and its GDP growth is estimated to rebound to 3% in the next fiscal year, the World Bank said this month.The projected growth is driven by post-earthquake reconstruction and continued targeted assistance for the hardest-hit areas, although inflation is expected to remain above 20%.With electricity supply deteriorating, exposing millions of people to chronic blackouts, households and businesses are increasingly embracing solar energy for reliable power.Russia, which has been building ties with the junta, signed an investment agreement with Myanmar in June that it said could open up new opportunities for Russian energy companies in the south Asian country. Related…
Former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro underwent a medical procedure on Saturday to treat recurrent hiccups he has been dealing with for months, according to his medical team.The 70-year-old ex-president, who is serving a 27-year prison sentence for an attempted coup, had been released from prison on Wednesday to undergo surgery for a groin hernia at the DF Star Hospital in Brasilia.That surgery was performed on Thursday without incident, and Bolsonaro remained hospitalised for several days for evaluation.During that time, Bolsonaro's medical team determined it was necessary to perform an anesthetic block of the phrenic nerve – which controls the diaphragm – to treat his recurring hiccups. Bolsonaro's doctor, Claudio Birolini, told reporters on Thursday that the procedure involved locating the nerve using an ultrasound machine and then injecting it with a local analgesic.The procedure on Saturday ‘went well’, according to another of the doctors, Mateus Saldanha.Birolini said the process took about an hour, adding that ‘it's not surgery… it does not involve any incisions”.The right side of the nerve was treated on Saturday, and a procedure to treat the left side of the nerve is set Monday.’My love just went to the surgical centre to have his phrenic nerve blocked,’ former first lady Michelle Bolsonaro wrote in an Instagram post on Saturday. ‘It's been nine months of struggle and anguish with daily hiccups.’ The far-right former president, who was in power from 2019-2022, has for years been dealing with the aftermath of an abdominal stab wound he suffered during a 2018 campaign rally, requiring several major surgeries.In September, Brazil's Supreme Court found Bolsonaro guilty of conspiring to stay in power after losing the 2022 election to leftist Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and handed him a 27-year prison sentence.The coup failed due to a lack of support from top military brass.The far-right ex-president has claimed his innocence, claiming that he was being persecuted by the Supreme Court.Bolsonaro was under house arrest from August until his imprisonment on November 22.Once discharged from the hospital, Bolsonaro will return to serving his sentence at a federal police jail in the capital.Brazil's Supreme Court on Saturday also ordered house arrest for 10 officials from Bolsonaro's administration who were involved in planning the coup plot, sought legal justification for it, or spread disinformation about it on social media.The 10 officials had been convicted but were out of prison due to pending appeals.One of the officials, Silvinei Vasques, was detained in Paraguay on Friday after he allegedly tried to board a flight with false papers. Source link
Sixteen people were killed in a fire that broke out at a nursing home in Manado, North Sulawesi province, in Indonesia, local authorities said on Monday.Head of public relations of the North Sulawesi Regional Police Alamsyah P. Hasibuan said that the police began procedures to identify the victims. He explained that the fire broke out in the Panti Werdha Damai nursing home in Manado and noted that the fire brigades were able to control the fire.He added that police forces evacuated the survivors to another hospital and opened an investigation into the incident to determine its circumstances and the initial cause of its outbreak. Related Story Source link
Under the shadow of civil war and questions over the poll’s credibility, the initial round of Myanmar’s phased general election closed Sunday, with signs of low voter turnout for the first polls since a military coup in 2021.The junta, having crushed pro-democracy protests after the coup and sparked a nationwide rebellion, said the vote would bring political stability to the impoverished Southeast Asian nation, despite international condemnation of the exercise.The United Nations, some Western countries and human rights groups have said the vote is not free, fair or credible, given that anti-junta political parties are out of the running and it is illegal to criticise the polls. Members of Myanmar’s Union Election commission (UEC) count ballots after the closing of polls at a polling station in the first phase of Myanmar’s general…
