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US President Donald Trump affirmed that his country is not at war with Venezuela.In an interview with NBC News, Trump stated: “No, we’re not”, adding “We’re at war with people that sell drugs”.The US launched on Saturday a strike against Venezuela, capturing the country’s President Nicolas Maduro and his wife, and transferring them to the US.On Monday, Maduro appeared before the Manhattan federal court, where he was charged with narco-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine importation conspiracy, and possession of machine guns and destructive devices against the US, all of which Maduro has denied. (QNA Source link
Less than a year after watching flames raze his home in the Altadena foothills, Ted Koerner has moved into a brand new house, one of the first to rebuild in this Los Angeles suburb.It has been an uphill battle, and Koerner is visibly moved as he brings his dog, Daisy, back home.”We’ve been through a lot this year,” he told AFP.Altadena was hardest hit by the fires that ravaged parts of the sprawling US metropolis in January 2025.Thousands of homes were destroyed and 19 people died in the town – compared to 12 killed in the upscale Pacific Palisades neighbourhood.To rebuild his home, Koerner, a 67-year-old head of a security company, had to front up several hundred thousand dollars as his mortgage lender refused to release insurance payouts for months.Koerner also had to contend with the uncertainties created by the policies of US President Donald Trump.Tariffs on steel, wood, and cement, all of which are often imported, have increased construction costs, and Latino construction workers fear arrest by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).”If ICE grabs construction crews and Trump does that to us on top of tariffs, we’ll never get this town rebuilt,” Koerner said.Slowly, however, Altadena is coming back to life.Amid the thousands of empty lots, a few frames are beginning to rise from the ground.The hurricane-strength 160kph (100mph) gusts of wind that spread the fire at breakneck speed last January are still fresh in everyone’s minds.However, despite the destruction and the pervasive threat of climate change in California, dogged survivors refuse to move away.”Where are you gonna go?” sighs another Altadena resident, Catherine Ridder, a 67-year-old psychotherapist. “There’s no place around here that’s not vulnerable to catastrophic weather.”Her construction project has begun and she hopes to move in by August – before the $4,000 monthly rent she pays for a furnished apartment exhausts the housing allowance from her insurance.To speed things up, the Californian bureaucracy has streamlined its processes.Los Angeles County is issuing building permits within a few months.Before, it often took more than a year.However, Ridder has been frustrated by delays in inspections to verify compliance with new building codes, such as requiring a fire sprinkler system in the roof.”There’s a lot of chaos and delays. I mean, maybe it’s faster than pre-fire stuff, but this doesn’t feel easy at all,” she told AFP. “I know that I’m way better off than a lot of people who were underinsured.”In this high-risk area, many residents were covered by the state’s insurer of last resort, and their compensation is too meager to rebuild homes that often cost more than a million dollars.So many are counting on the financial outcome of lawsuits filed against Southern California Edison, the company that owns the faulty power line suspected of having triggered the fire that destroyed Altadena.Carol Momsen couldn’t wait.She was compensated only $300,000 for the destruction of her home, so the 76-year-old retiree sold her land. That paid for a new apartment elsewhere.”Even if I had the money, I don’t think I’d want to rebuild in Altadena, because it’s just a sad place right now,” the former saleswoman said.There is palpable anxiety that this diverse town, home to a sizable African American population, will lose its soul because people cannot afford to rebuild.Several empty lots display signs: “Altadena, not for sale!” and “Black homes matter.”Ellaird Bailey, 77, a retired technician at a telecommunications company, settled here with his wife in 1984 so his children could grow up in this “melting pot”.”So many of those people that we’ve known for 20 or 30 years are moving away” to more affordable communities, he said.”It’s hard to visualise what it’s going to be like moving forward.” Related Story Source link
Flights at Greek airports were cancelled or delayed Sunday after a technical problem knocked out airspace radio frequencies, the country's civil aviation authority said, calling the outage ‘unprecedented’.At Greece's main airport, Eleftherios Venizelos in Athens, passengers were stuck in long queues as several domestic and international flights were delayed or grounded altogether, an AFP reporter saw.The radio frequency loss was first reported around 0700 GMT.’No plane landed or took off for at least two hours,’ said the press office at Athens airport, where 31.6mn passengers transited in the first 11 months of 2025.For up to three hours, most aircraft headed for Greek airports were redirected to Turkiye, according to Greek public television ERT.Air traffic had been resuming progressively since 1100 GMT, authorities said. Panagiotis Psarros, head of Greece's air traffic controller union, called the incident ‘very serious’ and blamed what he said was ‘obsolete’ airport equipment.’For some reason all frequencies were suddenly lost. We could not communicate with aircraft in the sky,’ the chief of the Association of Greek Air Traffic Controllers, told state broadcaster ERT.The association later said the breakdown affected all frequencies used on the ground, and some frequencies used by Athens Approach, an air traffic control unit responsible for managing aircraft arriving in and departing from Athens's Eleftherios Venizelos airport.Among its responsibilities is radar monitoring for safe separation of aircraft in the sky as well as issuing instructions on speed, and altitude levels.The Air Traffic Controllers Association said controllers were using all means at their disposal to ensure the safety of flights, calling the scale of Sunday's incident ‘unprecedented and unacceptable’ for an air traffic control system.Psarros said the problem seemed to be a collapse of central radio frequency systems at the Athens and Macedonia area control systems, the largest air control facility in the country.It monitors the Athens Flight Information Region, a vast expanse of airspace under the control of Greek authorities.’We haven't been informed about the cause of this problem… certainly the equipment we have is virtually ancient. We have raised this many times in the past,’ Psarros said. Source link
Aircrafts stand parked, after flights were delayed and cancelled when the airspace was closed due to U.S. strikes on Venezuela overnight, at Luis Munoz Marin International…
US President Donald Trump threatened Sunday that Venezuela’s interim leader Delcy Rodriguez will pay a “very big price” if she doesn’t co-operate with the United States, after US forces seized and jailed her former boss Nicolas Maduro. “If she doesn’t do what’s right, she is going to pay a very big price, probably bigger than Maduro,” Trump told The Atlantic in a telephone interview held as he arrived at his West Palm Beach golf course in Florida. US forces attacked Caracas in the early hours of Saturday, bombing military targets and using Special Forces on helicopters to spirit away Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores to face federal narcotrafficking charges in New York. Maduro is in a New York detention centre awaiting a court appearance today. Images of the 63-year-old Maduro blindfolded and handcuffed stunned Venezuelans. The action is Washington’s most controversial intervention in Latin America since the invasion of Panama 37 years ago. European Union countries, with the exception of Hungary, Sunday called for restraint by all actors in Venezuela, and said respecting the will of the Venezuelan people was the only way to restore the country’s democracy. “The European Union calls for calm and restraint by all actors, to avoid escalation and to ensure a peaceful solution to the crisis,” the 26 EU countries and the EU’s top diplomat Kaja Kallas said in a statement. “Respecting the will of the Venezuelan people remains the only way for Venezuela to restore democracy and resolve the current crisis,” the statement added. The Trump administration says it is willing to work with the rest of Maduro’s government as long as Washington’s goals, including opening access to US investment in the enormous Venezuelan crude oil reserves, are met. Trump’s warning came as Rodriguez — who also serves as oil minister — was confirmed as interim president by Venezuela’s Supreme Court and military officials. Because of her connections with the private sector and deep knowledge of oil, Rodriguez has long been considered the most pragmatic member of Maduro’s inner circle. But she has publicly contradicted Trump’s claim she is willing to work with the United States. She sounded a defiant note Saturday after the US raid, saying that Maduro was the country’s sole legitimate leader and that “we’re ready to defend our natural resources.” Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello urged calm Sunday. “Here, the unity of the revolutionary force is more than guaranteed, and here there is only one president, whose name is Nicolas Maduro Moros,” said Cabello, who has close ties to the military. The Venezuelan government has said Trump’s pressure campaign is an effort to take the country’s vast natural resources. “We are outraged because in the end everything was revealed — it was revealed that they only want our oil,” added Cabello. Venezuela’s state-run oil company PDVSA is asking some joint ventures to cut back crude output amid an export paralysis, three sources told Reuters. The OPEC country’s oil exports halted after the US last month announced a blockade on sanctioned tankers and seized two oil cargoes. Trump has long campaigned against US nation building and regime change in foreign countries. However, he said Saturday that the United States will “run” Venezuela.The 79-year-old Republican defended his decision, telling The Atlantic: “You know, rebuilding there and regime change, anything you want to call it, is better than what you have right now. Can’t get any worse.” “The country’s gone to hell. It’s a failed country. It’s a totally failed country. It’s a country that’s a disaster in every way.” Sunday, some bakeries and coffee shops were open and joggers and cyclists were out like a normal Sunday morning, though Maduro opponents have been wary of celebrating his seizure. “Yesterday I was very afraid to go out, but today I had to. This situation caught me without food,” said a single mother in oil city Maracaibo. “If this is necessary for my son to grow up in a free country, I’ll keep enduring the fear.” Trump has given short shrift to the idea of opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Corina Machado taking over, saying she lacked support. Machado was banned from the 2024 election but has said her ally Edmundo Gonzalez, 76, who the opposition says won that vote, has a democratic mandate to take the presidency. While many Western nations oppose Maduro, there were calls for the US to respect international law. Democrats demanded a plan for what is to follow. The UN Security Council planned to meet today to discuss the attack, which Secretary-General Antonio Guterres described as a dangerous precedent. Russia and China, both major backers of Venezuela, have criticised the US. Trump also repeated his frequent demand that Greenland — an autonomous territory belonging to Nato ally Denmark — become part of the United States.Asked what the military action in Venezuela signalled for Greenland, Trump told The Atlantic: “They are going to have to view it themselves. I really don’t know. But we do need Greenland, absolutely. We need it for defence.” Related Story Source link
Released prisoners ride in a bus out of Insein prison during an annual amnesty to mark Myanmar’s Independence Day in Yangon Sunday. Hundreds of prisoners, including a former government minister and a model, walked free in Myanmar Sunday after the junta announced annual independence day pardons, a week after the start of an election that watchdogs have denounced as sham. The military grabbed power in a 2021 coup that triggered civil war, pitting pro-democracy rebels against junta forces, with thousands of activists since arrested. A dozen buses full of released prisoners exited Yangon’s Insein prison Sunday morning, with some waving to crowds of well-wishers. Family members outside Insein – notorious for alleged brutal rights abuses – held up signs with the names of their jailed loved ones, unsure if they would be among those freed. One man, who declined to be named due to security concerns, said he was hoping to see his father, who was jailed for “doing politics”. Ex-information minister Ye Htut was among those freed, after serving more than two years of a 10-year sentence for sedition and incitement against the military. “I was informed about my release early Sunday morning. I didn’t expect that,” Ye Htut said adding that he had been held in isolation and was not allowed family visits while detained. He was the presidential spokesman under the military government of Thein Sein, which ceded power to democratic figurehead Aung San Suu Kyi following landmark elections in 2015. Ye Htut was sentenced in late 2023, weeks after he was arrested for spreading “wrong information” on social media. In total, junta chief Min Aung Hlaing pardoned 6,134 imprisoned Myanmar nationals, the National Defence and Security Council said, adding that 52 foreign prisoners would also be released and deported. The yearly prisoner amnesty was announced as the country marks 78 years of independence from British colonial rule. Several freed men and women embraced relatives in tears outside Insein. Some who spoke said they had been arrested for drugs, theft and other non-political crimes. “I am very happy to reunite with my family,” said 35-year-old Yazar Tun, as he held one of his three children outside the prison. He said he served around eight months of a year-long sentence for loitering. Prominent model and former doctor Nang Mwe San was also among those released. She was arrested in 2022 on a charge of “harming culture and dignity” for posting allegedly explicit videos online. Myanmar’s junta opened voting in a phased month-long election a week ago, with its leaders pledging the poll would bring democracy and national reconciliation. However, rights advocates and Western diplomats have condemned it as a sham and an effort to rebrand martial rule. The pro-military Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) has a decisive lead in the first phase, winning 90% of the lower house seats announced so far, according to official results published in state media on Saturday and Sunday. Many analysts describe the USDP as a civilian proxy of the military. Two more phases of voting are scheduled for January 11 and 25. The massively popular but dissolved National League for Democracy (NLD) of Suu Kyi did not appear on ballots, and she has been jailed since the coup. The military overturned the results of the last poll in 2020 after the NLD defeated the USDP by a landslide. The military and USDP then alleged massive voter fraud, claims that international monitors say were unfounded. The junta has said turnout in the first phase last week exceeded 50% of eligible voters, below the 2020 participation rate of around 70%. Myanmar frequently grants amnesty to thousands of prisoners to commemorate holidays or Buddhist festivals. A key aide to Suu Kyi was among hundreds of prisoners freed in a pre-election amnesty in November. The junta said that month it was dropping sentences for more than 3,000 prisoners, after they were prosecuted under post-coup legislation restricting free speech. Related Story Source…
Venezuelan migrants around the world erupted in celebration Saturday following the US-led deposition of President Nicolas Maduro, whose government oversaw one of the world’s largest migration exoduses in recent history.Chants celebrating Maduro’s capture were heard in the streets of Chile’s capital, where Venezuelans gathered to share their joy.”We are free. We are all happy that the dictatorship has fallen and that we have a free country,” said Khaty Yanez, a Venezuelan woman who has spent the last seven years in Chile.”My joy is too big,” her compatriot Jose Gregorio said. “After so many years, after so many struggles, after so much work, today is the day. Today is the day of freedom.”Since 2014, some 7.7mn Venezuelans or 20% of the population have left the country, unable to afford food or seeking better opportunities abroad, according to the UN International Organisation for Migration.Neighbouring Colombia has received the largest share of the diaspora, with around 2.8mn Venezuelans, followed by 1.7mn in Peru, according to the R4V platform, a group of regional non-governmental organisations (NGOs) assisting migrants and refugees from Venezuela set up by the UN migration agency.In Peru’s capital Lima, dozens of Venezuelans gathered, many wrapped in their country’s flag, to mark Maduro’s deposition.Venezuelan migrant Milagros Ortega, whose parents are still in Venezuela, said she hoped to go back.”Knowing that my dad was alive to see the fall of Nicolas Maduro is very emotional. I would like to see his face,” she said.Peruvian President Jose Jeri said on X that his government would facilitate the immediate return of Venezuelans, regardless of their immigration status.For years, the US was a haven for Venezuelans but many were branded criminals and forced to seek refuge elsewhere during President Donald Trump’s second term.In Spain, thousands of people gathered at central Madrid’s Puerta del Sol and applauded as they watched Trump’s press conference live.In the afternoon, groups of Venezuelans are also expected to gather to celebrate in Argentina’s capital Buenos Aires.After the initial joy, doubts about Venezuela’s future also set in, as Venezuelans abroad wondered what the future would hold for their country and its citizens.Andres Losada, who has lived in Spain for three years and is among the 400,000 Venezuelans residing in the country according to official data, said he is struggling between worry and joy about the situation in Venezuela.”Although what people are going through in Caracas is tough, I believe that beyond that there is a light that will lead us to freedom,” he added.Venezuelan security forces patrolled largely empty streets at dawn in the capital, Caracas, Saturday.Most residents stayed home, devouring the latest information on their phones, while some went to stock up on groceries in case they need to hunker down for a prolonged period.A lingering smell of explosives hung over Caracas where a few hundred Maduro supporters gathered to clamour for his freedom.”I felt the explosions lift me out of bed. In that instant I thought: ‘My God, the day has come,’ and I cried,” Maria Eugenia Escobar, a 58-year-old resident of the city of 6mn people, told AFP.The strikes started around 2am local time, with dozens of detonations some at first mistook for fireworks.Windows rattled from the shockwaves and residents rushed out onto terraces and balconies as military aircraft zoomed overhead.”It was horrible, we felt the planes flying over our house,” said a resident of the Coche neighbourhood, near the city’s largest military complex, which was targeted in the raid.Residents saw columns of smoke rising from several parts of the city, which was soon cloaked in a fog-like haze.Witnesses spoke of bombings in La Guaira, Caracas’s airport and port, in Maracay to the west, and in Higuerote to the east.A few hundred supporters gathered in Caracas to demand news of their leader’s fate.”Long live Nicolas Maduro,” echoed a rally cry from a hastily-erected stage with speakers blaring revolutionary music.”Long live!” retorted the crowd.Katia Briceno, a 54-year-old university professor, came out to protest what she described as US “barbarism”.”How is it that a foreign government comes into the country and removes the president? It’s absurd!” she told AFP.Apart from the protesters, there were few Venezuelans out and about, and just an occasional car on the usually bustling streets.Those who did venture out did so under the watchful eye of black-clad agents patrolling the centre with long guns.Many stores were shuttered in the hours after the attack, while queues formed at others that were letting people in a few at a time.Damage from the explosions was mostly limited to military installations, where vehicles stood riddled with bullet impacts, others smouldering and charred. Related Story Source link
Mamdani greets a child before speaking at Grand Army Plaza in Brooklyn, New York City, on Friday. – AFP New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani has defended his revocation of executive orders that his predecessor Eric Adams issued after being indicted in 2024 on federal charges of accepting illegal campaign contributions.The dozen orders Adams issued since his indictment included a directive to allow federal agents, including immigration officers, to use an office on Rikers Island, the city’s main jail.That order was later struck down by a court.The new mayor also struck down executive orders that Adams had portrayed as addressing antisemitism.Mamdani, a Muslim who some have accused of antisemitism over his support of Palestinians in Gaza, told reporters on Friday that he would fund measures to prevent hate crimes, and would make protection of Jewish New Yorkers a focus of his administration.Mamdani recalled September 26, 2024, the day when Adams was charged with accepting illegal campaign contributions and luxury travel from foreign nationals seeking to influence him, as “a moment when many New Yorkers lost even more faith in New York City politics and the ability of city government to actually prioritise the needs of the public, as opposed to the needs of the person”.In April, a US judge dismissed the charges against Adams, a Democrat, at the request of the US Justice Department, which had argued that the case was distracting the mayor from helping Republican President Donald Trump step up deportations.Mamdani, from the left wing of the Democratic Party, has clashed with Trump over the immigration crackdown.On Thursday, Mamdani revoked orders by Adams that had prevented city institutions from divesting from Israel and that defined antisemitism in a way recognised by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA), an intergovernmental organisation of 35 countries that promotes Holocaust education.The Council on American-Islamic Relations is among groups that argue that the IHRA definition has been used to try to silence advocates for Palestinian rights.While Islamic organisations praised Mamdani’s moves, Israel’s Foreign Ministry posted on X on Friday that Mamdani “shows his true face: He scraps the IHRA definition of antisemitism and lifts restrictions on boycotting Israel. This isn’t leadership. It’s antisemitic gasoline on an open fire”. Related Story Source link
US President Donald Trump said Saturday that the United States will “run” Venezuela and tap its huge oil reserves after snatching leftist leader Nicolas Maduro out of the country during a bombing raid on Caracas.Trump’s announcement came hours after a lightning attack in which special forces grabbed Maduro and his wife, while airstrikes pounded multiple sites, stunning the capital city.Trump did not go into detail what he meant but told a press conference in Florida: “We’re going to be running it with a group.””We’re designating people,” he said, mentioning that cabinet officials standing with him would be in charge.In another surprise, Trump indicated that US troops could be deployed in Venezuela.The US is “not afraid of boots on the ground,” he said. U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a press conference following a U.S. strike on Venezuela where President Nicolas Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, were…
A makeshift memorial outside Le Constellation in the upscale ski resort of Crans-Montana, southwestern Switzerland. – Reuters Two people who ran a Swiss club that burst into flames during a New Year’s Eve party, killing 40, have been placed under criminal investigation on suspicion of offences including homicide by negligence, prosecutors said Saturday.Two days after the fire, in which 119 people suffered injuries including severe burns, officials were still trying to identify many of those killed and attention turned to how one of Switzerland’s worst tragedies could have occurred.The club’s two operators are suspected of offences including homicide by negligence, causing bodily harm by negligence and arson by negligence, prosecutors in Valais, the canton that is home to the club in the upscale ski resort of Crans-Montana, said in a statement, without naming them. A photo shows the Swiss flag flying at…
