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US President Donald Trump said in an interview with the Wall Street Journal that he is taking a larger daily dose of aspirin than his doctors recommend.“They say aspirin is good for thinning out the blood, and I don’t want thick blood pouring through my heart,” Trump told the paper in an interview published on Thursday. “I want nice, thin blood pouring through my heart. Does that make sense?” Trump, 79, is the second-oldest person to ever hold the presidency, following his Democratic predecessor President Joe Biden, who dropped his 2024 re-election bid amid questions about his fitness for the job and was aged 82 when he left office a year ago. Trump’s health has been in the spotlight in recent months due to bruises that have been spotted on his hands and an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) exam that he was reported to have undergone in October, as well as instances where the Republican president closed his eyes during public events. Daily use of aspirin can lower the chances of heart attack or stroke for people over the age of 60, according to the Mayo Clinic, which says a low dose of aspirin is most commonly 81mg.The president’s doctor, Sean Barbabella, told the Journal that Trump takes 325mg of aspirin daily for cardiac prevention. The bruising is the result of him shaking so many hands, according to the White House, which said last month the MRI was preventative.His right hand shows persistent bruising, often covered with thick makeup and at times a bandage, and his ankles have appeared swollen. On occasion, Trump has clearly struggled to keep his eyes open, including during an Oval Office meeting with health representatives in November.Trump told the Journal that he wasn’t dozing, just relaxing.“I’ll just close. It’s very relaxing to me,” he said. “Sometimes they’ll take a picture of me blinking, blinking, and they’ll catch me with the blink,” he added.When asked about the MRI, Trump and Barbabella told the Journal that the president actually got a CT scan. Barbabella stated that the president’s doctors had initially said they would perform either an MRI or a CT scan but decided to do the latter “to definitively rule out any cardiovascular issues”.It revealed no abnormalities, according to Barbabella. Yesterday Trump touted his “perfect health” and cognitive skills. “The White House Doctors have just reported that I am in ‘PERFECT HEALTH’, and that I ‘ACED’ (Meaning, was correct on 100% of the questions asked!), for the third straight time, my Cognitive Examination,something which no other President, or previous Vice President, was willing to take,” Trump posted on his Truth Social platform. Trump has based much of his political image on projecting vigour – whether through his frequent interactions with journalists, constant social media posting, or artificial intelligence (AI) memes depicting him as a superhero. Source link
Islamic State-linked rebels killed at least 15 people in three villages in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo’s Lubero territory, two officials said yesterday, keeping up a pattern of lethal attacks targeting mostly civilians. The Allied Democratic Forces began as an insurgent force in Uganda but has been based in the forests of neighbouring Congo since the late 1990s, and is recognised by Islamic State as an affiliate.Congo’s army and Ugandan forces have pursued operations against the ADF, but the group’s raids persist. Its latest attacks occurred on Thursday night in Lubero, part of North Kivu province. Nine civilians were killed in Kilonge, two civilians in Katanga and two civilians and two soldiers in Maendeleo, according to Macaire Sivikunula, chief of the Bapere locality where the villages are located.“The ADF rebels killed most of the victims with bladed weapons,” although they also exchanged gunfire with soldiers in Maendeleo, he told Reuters. Alain Kiwewa, Lubero’s military administrator, said yesterday afternoon that 16 people had been confirmed dead.An army spokesperson, Lieutenant Marc Elongo, said Congolese troops were “pursuing the enemy”, without providing details. Kakule Kagheni Samuel, head of civil society groups in Bapere, said the militants also burnt homes to the ground.The UN peacekeeping mission in the Central African country, known as Monusco, said in November that the ADF killed 89 civilians in a spate of strikes over the course of a week. And in September, the ADF claimed responsibility for an attack that claimed the lives of more than 60 civilians at a funeral in eastern Congo.Sivikunula said local officials were waiting for soldiers to secure the area before organising funerals for victims of the overnight attacks because “the ADF are cunning (and) can ambush civilians who try to organise this kind of activity.”The ADF violence is separate from the war between Congo and M23 rebels that killed thousands of people and displaced hundreds of thousands last year, prompting mediation. Source link
The toll of Thursday’s explosion at a ski resort in southwestern Switzerland’s Alps is 40 people killed and 115 injured, many critically, Swiss authorities have said.Frederick Gisler, head of police in the Valais canton, said authorities are still verifying the identities of the victims amid the scale of the disaster.President Guy Parmelin described the incident as one of the worst tragedies Switzerland has experienced, adding that New Year celebrations have turned into a period of national mourning. Officials said the blast was caused by a fire, ruling out any deliberate attack.Stefan Ganzer, Valais security adviser, said the explosion was significant and destroyed part of the resort. The number of casualties exceeded the capacity of the main Valais hospital, prompting transfers of patients to hospitals in Zurich, Lausanne, Geneva, and France.At least nine French nationals were injured, with eight others missing, and three were hospitalized in Lyon and Paris, according to the French Foreign Ministry. About 15 Italians were also injured, with a similar number reported missing, the Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said.Investigations are ongoing to determine the exact cause of the fire. Source link
Two people died in the Netherlands in fireworks accidents and there were scattered instances of violence as the country celebrated the New Year, and in a separate incident a historic church in the heart of Amsterdam burned down. The Netherlands traditionally rings in the New Year with people setting off their own fireworks, which causes hundreds of injuries and millions of euros in damage every year.This year, some 250 people were arrested on New Year’s Eve and in several towns riot police were deployed, police said. “The impact of heavy fireworks and arson this New Year’s Eve in some areas was utterly devastating,” police said in a statement Thursday. “The targeted violence against emergency services and police was intense again.” The head of the Dutch Police Union, Nine Kooiman, reported an “unprecedented amount of violence against police and emergency services” over New Year’s Eve. She said she herself had been pelted three times by fireworks and other explosives as she worked a shift in Amsterdam. Shortly after midnight, authorities released a rare country-wide alert on mobile phones warning people not to call overwhelmed emergency services unless lives were at risk. Reports of attacks against police and firefighters were widespread across the country. In the southern city of Breda, people threw petrol bombs at police. The fireworks accidents killed a 38-year-old man in Aalsmeer, close to Amsterdam, and a boy from Nijmegen, a town in the east of the country, police said. In Amsterdam, the neo-Gothic Vondelkerk, near the city’s central Vondelpark, was almost destroyed by a fire that started shortly after midnight. The 50m-high church tower collapsed and the roof was badly damaged but the structure was expected to remain intact, Amsterdam authorities said. The Amsterdam police and fire department said they were investigating and had no comment yet on what caused the blaze in the church, which was built in 1872. New Year’s Eve 2025 marked the last year before a nationwide ban on the sale of fireworks to consumers will come into effect. Emergency room doctors, police, firefighters and local and national politicians have campaigned for the ban for years. According to the Dutch Pyrotechnics Association, revellers splashed out a record €129mn ($151mn) on fireworks. Some areas had been designated firework-free zones, but this appeared to have little effect. An AFP journalist in such a zone in The Hague reported loud bangs until around 3am. In Belgium, meanwhile, police made scores of arrests as officers in both Brussels and Antwerp were targeted with fireworks – with a New Year’s ban on their use failing to prevent chaotic scenes in both major cities. Police used tear gas and arrested more than 100 people in the port city of Antwerp, where minors as young as 10 or 11 targeted officers and emergency services with fireworks and stones, setting fire to bikes, cars and trash cans, a spokesperson told AFP. Authorities confiscated a number of “very dangerous” professional grade fireworks, the spokesperson said. A 12-year-old child was seriously injured in a fireworks incident in the northern city. Likewise in the capital Brussels, police said they were “repeatedly” targeted with fireworks, making some 70 arrests overnight. In Germany, two 18-year-olds died in the western city of Bielefeld when they set off home-made fireworks that produced “deadly facial injuries”, local police said in a statement. Related Story Source link
This handout photo taken and released by the Taiwan Presidential Office on January 1, 2026 shows Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te delivering a New Year’s Day speech…
The Qatar Calendar House on Thursday said that planet Earth will reach the closest point in its orbit around the Sun — known as perihelion—on the evening of the day after tomorrow, Saturday, 14 Rajab 1447 AH, corresponding to 3 January 2026. At that time, Earth will be at an approximate distance of 147 million kilometers from the Sun, about five million kilometers closer than it was in July of last year.Dr. Bashir Marzouq, an astronomy expert at the Qatar Calendar House, stated that Earth reaches perihelion at the beginning of January each year, while it reaches the farthest point in its orbit around the Sun-known as aphelion-during the month of July.He noted that variations in the distance between the Earth and the Sun are not the cause of climatic changes on Earth’s surface. Rather, this variation plays an important role in determining the lengths of the four astronomical seasons. He emphasized that this phenomenon is entirely natural and has no negative effects on the inhabitants of the planet, contrary to claims made by non-specialists.Dr. Marzouq further pointed out a striking paradox: despite Earth being closest to the Sun in January, which corresponds to winter in the Northern Hemisphere, temperatures are low. Conversely, when Earth is farthest from the Sun in July—summer in the Northern Hemisphere, temperatures are high. This is due to the angle of incidence of solar radiation. In winter, the Sun’s rays strike the Northern Hemisphere at a more oblique angle, causing them to pass through a longer path in the atmosphere and lose a significant portion of their heat. In summer, the Sun’s rays fall more directly, traverse a shorter atmospheric path, and therefore retain more of their heat. The situation is entirely reversed in the Southern Hemisphere.It is worth noting that Earth, like the other planets, orbits the Sun in an elliptical (oval-shaped) path, with the Sun located at one of the two foci of the ellipse. Consequently, Earth has the nearest point in its orbit called perihelion and the farthest point known as aphelion. Related Story Source link
Zohran Mamdani was sworn in as mayor of New York City shortly after midnight during a historic ceremony held at a decommissioned subway station in Manhattan. Becoming the first Muslim to lead the largest city in the United States, Mamdani took the oath of office with his hand placed on the Quran. “This is truly the honour and privilege of a lifetime,” Mamdani said in a brief address. The private ceremony was administered by New York Attorney General Letitia James at the former City Hall station, an architecturally striking landmark known for its arched ceilings and among the city’s original subway stops, formally marking the transfer of power. Source link
Firefighters, police officers and members of the forensic police arrive at the bar Le Constellation following an explosion that ripped the venue in Crans-Montana, in January…
One of the two trains affected after a head-on collision connecting Machu Picchu with Ollantaytambo is pictured in Pampacahua, Cusco Department, Peru. A head-on collision between two trains on the line that services Peru’s Machu Picchu killed one person and injured at least 40 others, authorities said, updating an earlier toll.The deceased was the conductor of one of the two trains, according to the prosecutor’s office in Cusco, the city closest to the famous Inca citadel.Officials said they were working to identify the injured train passengers, many of them foreign visitors and most of them seriously hurt.Videos sent by passengers to the RPP television channel showed injured victims lying next to the tracks with two damaged locomotives standing idle nearby.A dozen ambulances and medical personnel were rushed to the site in a remote Andean area without direct road access.Police wearing hardhats and neon-colored jackets carried injured passengers on stretchers from the trains to receive treatment.A Unesco World Heritage Site since 1983, the ancient fortified complex of Machu Picchu receives some 4,500 visitors on average each day, many of them foreigners, according to the tourism ministry.Most tourists take a train and a bus to reach the historic site high in the Andes mountains.Rail agency Ferrocarril Transandino said a train operated by PeruRail collided with another belonging to Inca Rail around lunchtime on the single track that links the town of Ollantaytambo with Machu Picchu.The cause of the accident was not yet known.In September, about 1,400 tourists were evacuated from the Aguas Calientes train station that serves Machu Picchu and 900 others were left stranded after protesters blocked the railway tracks with logs and rocks.Locals were demanding a new bus company be chosen in a fair bidding process to ferry visitors to the foot of Machu Picchu, and have repeatedly protested to press their demands.The Inca empire’s ancient capital Machu Picchu was built in the 15th century at an altitude of about 8,200 feet on orders from the Inca ruler Pachacutec.It is considered a marvel of architecture and engineering. Related Story Source…
Palestinians stand outside makeshift shelters in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, Wendesday. OIC Condemns Israel Decision to Bar 37 Aid Groups from GazaEU says Israel suspending GazaThe UN rights chief described Wednesday Israel’s threat to suspend dozens of aid groups from operating in Gaza from January as “outrageous”, calling on states to urgently insist Israel shift course.”Israel’s suspension of numerous aid agencies from Gaza is outrageous,” Volker Turk said in a statement.”Such arbitrary suspensions make an already intolerable situation even worse for the people of Gaza,” he warned.His comment came after Israel said that 37 aid organisations will be banned from operating in Gaza starting Thursday, unless they comply with its new guidelines requiring detailed information on Palestinian staff.Israel has singled out international medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF), alleging that it had two employees who were members of Palestinian fighter groups.Apart from MSF, some of the 37 NGOs to be hit with the ban are Norwegian Refugee Council, World Vision International, CARE and Oxfam, according to the list given by Zwick.Several NGOs have told AFP the new rules will have a major impact on aid distribution in Gaza, with humanitarian organisations saying the amount of aid entering the region remains inadequate.”This is the latest in a pattern of unlawful restrictions on humanitarian access,” Turk said, pointing to Israel’s ban on the UN agency supporting Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, and “attacks on Israeli and Palestinian NGOs amid broader access issues faced by the UN and other humanitarians”.”I urge all States, in particular those with influence, to take urgent steps and insist that Israel immediately allows aid to get into Gaza unhindered,” he said.The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said he wanted to “remind the Israeli authorities of their obligation under international law to ensure the essential supplies of daily life in Gaza”.This, he stressed, includes “allowing and facilitating humanitarian relief”.EU CONCERNThe EU warned Wednesday that Israel’s threat to suspend several aid groups in Gaza from January would block “life-saving” assistance from reaching the population, AFP reported from Brussels.”The EU has been clear: the NGO registration law cannot be implemented in its current form,” EU humanitarian chief Hadja Lahbib posted on X, after Israel said several groups would be barred for failing to provide details of their Palestinian employees.”IHL (international humanitarian law) leaves no room for doubt: aid must reach those in need,” Lahbib wrote.NGOs had until December 31 to register under the new framework, which Israel says aims to prevent “hostile actors” operating in the Palestinian territories, rather than impede aid.The Israeli government told AFP earlier this month that 14 NGO requests had been rejected as of November 25.Several NGOs said the new rules will have a major impact on aid distribution in Gaza, with humanitarian organisations saying the amount of aid entering Gaza remains inadequate.While an accord for a ceasefire that started on October 10 stipulated the entry of 600 trucks per day, only 100 to 300 are carrying humanitarian aid, according to NGOs and the UN.Cogat, the Israeli defence ministry body responsible for Palestinian civilian affairs, said last week that on average 4,200 aid trucks enter Gaza weekly, which corresponds to around 600 daily.OIC CONDEMNSThe Organisation of Islamic Co-operation (OIC) has strongly condemned an Israeli decision to prevent 37 international NGOs from operating in the occupied Palestinian territories, particularly the Gaza Strip, QNA reported from Jeddah.In a statement issued Wednesday, the OIC’s general secretariat said the NGOs played a vital and irreplaceable role in easing the humanitarian and medical crisis in Gaza.It warned that the arbitrary measure would significantly worsen what it called the territory’s already catastrophic humanitarian situation, citing Israeli restrictions that it said were limiting the flow of sufficient humanitarian and medical assistance into Gaza.The OIC said the decision was illegal and amounted to a serious violation of international humanitarian law. It also referred to an advisory opinion by the International Court of Justice, which it said obliges an occupying power to facilitate the work of international and humanitarian organisations and to allow the unimpeded delivery of adequate aid to Gaza.The organisation called on the international community to take action and apply effective pressure on Israel to reverse the decision. Related Story Source link
