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A guest uses a mobile phone on the street after evacuating a hotel alongside staff during the earthquake in Mexico City. – AFP A powerful earthquake shook southern Mexico yesterday, sending millions scrambling after the New Year holiday and briefly interrupting President Claudia Sheinbaum’s daily press conference.The 6.5-magnitude quake struck near the Pacific coast in Guerrero state at a depth of 35km (22 miles), the US Geological Survey said.There were no immediate reports of injuries or serious damage in Guerrero, Sheinbaum and the state’s governor both said.Sheinbaum was speaking in Mexico City when earthquake alarms sounded.She noted the ground was shaking beneath her before calmly evacuating alongside journalists.Sheinbaum resumed the press conference shortly afterward.She said no damage had been reported in Mexico City, where residents fled their homes and sounds of nervous dogs barking filled the streets.Guerrero is home to Acapulco and other resort areas, which are a major draw for holiday tourists.Acapulco is still recovering from a Category 5 hurricane that devastated the area in 2023.Mexico, which is situated between five tectonic plates, is one of the world’s most seismically active countries.Karen Gomez, a 47-year-old office worker living on the 13th floor of an apartment building in Mexico City, told AFP that she was roused from her sleep by a street siren. “I woke up in terror. My cellphone alert said it was a powerful earthquake.”Norma Ortega, a 57-year-old kindergarten director, living in a 10th-floor apartment, said she could feel her building shake. “I got a terrible fright.”The centre of Mexico City is built on the muddy subsoil of what was once the bed of a lake, making it particularly vulnerable to earthquakes.Those most strongly felt usually originate off Guerrero state on the Pacific coast.On September 19, 1985, an 8.1-magnitude earthquake devastated a vast swathe of Mexico City, leaving nearly 13,000 dead, mostly in the city, according to official figures.In 2017, also on September 19, a 7.1-magnitude quake killed 369 people, also mostly in Mexico City.Early warning systems, including smartphone apps, have been developed to warn Mexico City residents of strong quakes and urge them to reach safety.The city has also installed loudspeakers on lampposts to broadcast the alerts. Source link
FILE PHOTO: Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores attend a year-end salutation to military forces in La Guaira, Venezuela December 28, 2025. Miraflores…
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, his wife Ri Sol Ju and their daughter Kim Ju Ae visit the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, in Pyongyang,…
Activists push for concrete action and fundingGBV classified ‘national disaster’ in South Africa For 15 minutes in late November, tens of thousands of South Africans, clad in black, stopped what they were doing and lay down on the ground in parks, parking lots, fields and homes across the country.This was part of a nationwide protest against gender-based violence and femicide to symbolise the 15 murders of women every day in South Africa.The day prior, after months of pressure from civil society, President Cyril Ramaphosa classified violence against women as a 'national disaster', a statement hailed as a victory by some activists and branded superficial by others.Ramaphosa said the classification would ‘enable faster emergency resource allocation for survivor services’.But child rights activists say the classification does not prioritise children enough who are nearly half of the number of abuse victims in South Africa.’We commend the declaration, but we urgently need more funding and action allocated to children specifically, and this has to happen now,’ said Shahedah Omar, the director of the Teddy Bear Clinic, a charity assisting abused children with medical, legal and psychosocial support.South Africa experiences some of the world's highest levels of gender-based violence (GBV), with the murder rate for women five times higher than the global average, according to the South African Medical Research Council (SAMRC), a research organisation.Physical violation cases involving children made up 47% of all such cases reported nationally in the 2022-3 financial year, and young girls aged 0-17 years made up two-thirds of all offences directed towards children in the same time period and 90% of physical violation cases, according to government data.Rapid funding support for GBV charities on the frontline has been made even more urgent since the US aid funding cuts in January that left charities reeling, rights group say.’People often say it must be so easy to get money for destitute children and I'm like: it's a lot easier to get money for trees,’ said Abubakr Hattas, the head of the Johannesburg Child Welfare (JCW), a child protection charity that works with abandoned and abused minors.For more than a century, JCW has served thousands of children through statutory child protection, family support, foster care, adoption and community programmes across the Johannesburg metro each year.’For those of us at the coalface fighting GBV, the (announcement by Ramaphosa) means nothing, we have heard this rhetoric before,’ said Hattas from the JCW offices.When US President Donald Trump cut foreign aid funding in January, Hattas said they had to adapt their GBV response overnight to their new reality.’What I really focused on was that the doors of trauma containment stay open,’ said Hattas, adding that they see about 300 to 400 GBV survivors every month in Johannesburg alone.Hattas had to make the difficult decision of prioritising children over adult survivors when it came to ‘depth of care’ – monitoring and guiding their case reporting, legal care and trauma counselling.’Although we will trauma-contain and link anybody to services requiring help, we can only supervise cases of children under the age of 12,’ he said.In the 2022/23 period, there were 19,418 reported assault cases against children, with physical violation accounting for 38% of these incidents, government statistics found.Among government's priorities for improving child protection are strengthening abuse reporting mechanisms and expanding psychosocial and family support services, according to the Ministry for Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities.Following similar protests in 2018 against GBV, the National Strategic Plan (NSP) was created by activists in collaboration with the South African government that outlines six key pillars aimed at ending all violence towards women by 2030.’The National Strategic Plan is so comprehensive, so well structured, so poorly implemented,’ said Hattas. ‘There are no dedicated funds to protect children in any framework.’Omar agrees.’There are six pillars in the NSP, but the great omission is the seventh pillar which should prioritise children who are often invisible and receiving less of the lion's share of funding,’ she said.Despite not receiving US funding as the aid cuts occurred, Teddy Bear Clinic said there are now generally less funds to be spread between frontline organisations.’We all had to carry a heavier load,’ she said.DISASTER RESPONSEBut activists note the distinction between Ramaphosa labelling GBV a ‘national crisis’ in 2019, and a ‘national disaster’ this November.’What we have now is something fundamentally different,’ said Sabrina Walter, founder of Women for Change, the advocacy group that spearheaded the shutdown and petition with more than 1mn signatories calling for a national disaster declaration.The formal ‘national disaster’ classification unlocks budgets, speeds up emergency measures and places responsibility on the country's national executive to co-ordinate a rapid response, said Walter, adding that tangible change had to follow.’The declaration is not the destination; it is simply the door we have finally managed to force open … On its own it changes nothing unless it is followed by real, measurable action’ said Walter.Women for Change have clearly outlined the ‘next steps’; the national disaster implementation plan needs to spell out the roles, budgets and timelines expected of all government departments, from policing to education and health.GBV awareness, including topics on consent, bodily autonomy and gender equality need to be implemented into school curriculums, Walter added.’Alongside this, we believe the government must secure ring-fenced funding specifically for survivor services and prevention work,’ said Walter.The Ministry for Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities said in an emailed statement the president's classification of a national disaster meant that ‘the priority is therefore not new policy, but to make existing systems work faster, better and together, with measurable impact at community level.’Despite the scepticism around the disaster classification and funding pressure, Hattas said civil society was determined to keep fighting for the safety of the country's children.’There are resilient people here,’ Hattas said.And while agreeing that children are not always prioritised in GBV campaigns, Walter sees them as part of the movement's future.’During the shutdown, for example, we saw hundreds of schools across South Africa taking part. Children were not spectators; they were part of the movement.’ Source link
Canada’s transport regulator has asked Air India to investigate an incident of a pilot who was removed from a plane before it was due to take off and found to be under the influence of alcohol, a person familiar with the matter said.Two breathalyser tests conducted by Canadian police at Vancouver International Airport showed the pilot was unfit for duty, the person said yesterday.The incident was labelled as a “serious matter” by Transport Canada in a letter to Air India and authorities are likely to pursue enforcement action, the person added.The person requested anonymity as they were not authorised to speak to the media. Transport Canada did not respond to an emailed request for comment outside regular working hours.In a statement, Air India said the flight from Vancouver to Delhi on December 23 experienced a last-minute delay due to the incident, adding that an alternate pilot was brought in to operate the flight. The airline said Canadian authorities raised concerns about the pilot’s fitness for duty but did not provide details.”The pilot has been taken off flying duties during the process of enquiry. Air India maintains a zero-tolerance policy towards any violation of applicable rules and regulations,” Air India said.”Pending the outcome of the investigation, any confirmed violation will attract strict disciplinary action in line with company policy.”The aircraft was a Boeing 777, a model that can seat up to 344 passengers, according to the websites of Flightradar24 and Air India.The letter from Transport Canada official Ajit Oommen has asked Air India to provide its findings and details of steps taken to prevent future occurrences by January 26, the person familiar with the matter said. Air India has been under intense scrutiny since the June 12 crash of a Boeing Dreamliner killed 260 people. India’s aviation regulator has flagged multiple safety lapses at the airline, which was previously owned by the government until 2022.Pilots at Air India, owned by Tata Group and Singapore Airlines, have also come under scrutiny. This week, India’s directorate general of civil aviation (DGCA) sent warning notices to four Air India pilots, flagging “serious safety concerns” related to regulatory compliance and flight crew decision-making.The DGCA said the pilots accepted an aircraft for operation last year despite prior knowledge of “repeated snags” and “existing systems degradations,” according to warning notices dated December 29.The aircraft is a Boeing 787 used for long-haul flights, according to Flightradar24. Earlier this year, the DGCA proposed tightened rules on alcohol testing for crew members, including one that would have a pilot lose their licence permanently after three positive tests. Current rules require post-flight breath-analyser examinations for each trip to be carried out at the first port of landing in India.Canadian rules state that a pilot cannot operate an aircraft within 12 hours of consuming an alcoholic beverage. Source link
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…
