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Many of the United Nations’ biggest successes are the crises that never make the headlines.Around the world, special political missions work quietly to ease tensions, broker agreements and support fragile political transitions. Their tools are…
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Many of the United Nations’ biggest successes are the crises that never make the headlines.Around…
Despite sport’s ability to promote diversity and inclusion, the report noted that those from racial…
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Palestinian Mohammad Salameh was building a home for his family in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where his recently engaged son was meant to start married life. Instead, before construction was complete, a group of Israeli settlers seized the property.Video filmed earlier in the week and verified by Reuters showed at least six settlers moving around on the roof of the two-storey house, which sits below a nearby hill.Salameh said appeals to the Israeli military and police brought no help. Now he fears his home, which like many others in the Palestinian territory is surrounded by Israeli settlements and smaller outposts, is lost forever. Other houses in the area could suffer the same fate, he said. Israeli soldiers prevent Palestinians from returning to their homes and lands in the village of Qabalan, south…
Schools across parts of northern Nigeria started reopening Monday, after months of closure triggered by the abduction of hundreds of students in November.The abductions last year had underlined the vulnerability of education facilities in a region plagued by criminal gangs and insurgents.Schools resumed academic activities this term after the federal government said in a circular last month that enhanced security measures had created a safer environment for students to return. It did not provide details.In northern Kaduna state, a 17-year-old student said it was difficult for her to return to school after two months away. Students buy school items near the gate of Government Girls Secondary School Maimuna Gwarzo, Tudun Wada, as…
The Trump administration has ramped up its pressure campaign on the US central bank, threatening to indict Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell over comments he made to Congress about a building renovation project, prompting the Fed chief to call the move a ‘pretext’ to gain more influence over the setting of interest rates. The latest development in a long-running effort by US President Donald Trump to push the Fed to dramatically lower rates had immediate fallout in Washington and on global markets.US Republican Senator Thom Tillis, a member of the Senate Banking Committee that vets presidential nominees for the Fed, said the threatened indictment puts the US Justice Department's ‘independence and credibility’ in question. Tillis, who is not running for re-election this year, said he would oppose any Trump nominees to the Fed, including whoever is named to succeed Powell as central bank chief, ‘until this legal matter is fully resolved.’Rates on longer-term US Treasury bonds rose as investors parsed what a less independent Fed could mean for inflation and monetary policy, the sort of reaction that could, if amplified, constrain Trump's efforts to reshape the Fed, considered the most influential central bank in the world and a cornerstone of the world financial system.Trump's efforts to address broad concerns about ‘affordability,’ particularly when it comes to financing home mortgages, could be upended if long-term borrowing costs rise, as they may if investors come to view the Fed as no longer setting monetary policy with a view to controlling inflation.Gold hit a record high and the dollar fell. Major US stock indexes opened lower, with bank stocks under pressure over a Trump proposal to cap interest rates on credit cards. ‘Obviously there are more concerns that Fed independence is going to be under the gun, with the latest news on the criminal investigation into Chair Powell really having reinforced those concerns,’ Jan Hatzius, chief economist at Goldman Sachs, said at the investment bank's annual global strategy conference in London.At stake is the independence of the Fed to set US monetary policy without undue influence by elected officials like Trump who would prefer cheaper borrowing costs for political reasons – at the possible expense of long-run inflation control that can require a central bank to slow the economy and take steps that raise the unemployment rate. Powell – who was nominated by Trump to lead the Fed in late 2017 and confirmed by the Senate to the position in early 2018 – will complete his term as Fed chief in May, but he is not obligated to leave its Washington-based Board of Governors until 2028, and a number of analysts saw the latest move by the administration as adding to the chances that he will defiantly remain at the central bank. The criminal indictment threat emerged about two weeks before Trump's effort to fire another Fed official, Governor Lisa Cook, will be argued before the Supreme Court.The latest move was met with a guarded reaction on Wall Street. Investors have been warily watching as the sparring match between the White House and the Fed has played out ever since Trump was elected to a second term in November 2024 on promises to improve affordability for Americans after a run of high inflation. The investigation and Powell's pointed response sharply escalate a row that risks upending the independence of the Fed, a bedrock of US economic policy and a cornerstone of its financial system, investors said.Trump officials' latest salvo was revealed late on Sunday by Powell, who said the Fed had received subpoenas from the US Justice Department last week pertaining to remarks he made to Congress last summer over cost overruns for a $2.5bn building renovation project at the Fed's headquarters complex in Washington. ‘On Friday, the Department of Justice served the Federal Reserve with grand jury subpoenas, threatening a criminal indictment related to my testimony before the Senate Banking Committee last June,’ Powell said.’I have deep respect for the rule of law and for accountability in our democracy. No one – certainly not the chair of the Federal Reserve – is above the law.’ ‘But this unprecedented action should be seen in the broader context of the administration's threats and ongoing pressure’ for lower interest rates and more broadly for greater say over the Fed, he said. ‘This new threat is not about my testimony last June or about the renovation of the Federal Reserve buildings. It is not about Congress's oversight role … Those are pretexts. The threat of criminal charges is a consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the President.’ Trump told NBC News Sunday that he had no knowledge of the Justice Department's actions. ‘I don't know anything about it, but he's certainly not very good at the Fed, and he's not very good at building buildings,’ Trump said.A Justice Department spokesperson declined to comment on the case but added: ‘The attorney-general has instructed her US attorneys to prioritise investigating any abuse of taxpayer dollars.’Trump has demanded the Fed cut rates sharply since returning to the White House in January, blaming the central bank for holding back the economy and musing about firing Powell despite the legal protections ostensibly covering the Fed chief from removal.The independence of central banks, at least in setting rates in order to control inflation, is considered a central tenet of robust economic policy, insulating monetary policymakers from short-term political considerations and allowing them to focus on longer-term efforts to keep prices relatively stable. The inquiry into Powell ‘is a low point in Trump's presidency and a low point in the history of central banking in America,’ said Peter Conti-Brown, a Fed historian at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School. Source link
Mohamed Salah scored as Egypt won 3-2 to dump defending champions Ivory Coast out of the Africa Cup…
Workers conduct a rescue operation at the collapsed landfill in Binaliw, Cebu, Philippines, Sunday. Hopes of finding survivors days after the collapse of a massive mountain of trash in the central Philippines were fading, officials said Sunday, as rescue workers dug through tons of rubble.The recovery of a body Sunday brought the confirmed death toll to seven, with at least 29 people still missing as the crucial 72-hour window since the landslide in Cebu City came to an end.About 50 sanitation workers were buried on Thursday when the mountain of garbage toppled onto them from an estimated height of 20 storeys at the Binaliw Landfill, a privately operated facility that handles refuse for the city of nearly 1mn.”On Saturday, we detected two signs of life through our specialised radar. There were still heartbeats 98 feet below the debris, but right now, there are no reports of that anymore,” local fire officer Wendell Villanueva said Sunday.He said it was unlikely “for people to still be alive” three days after “tonnes of debris and trash had collapsed over them”.So far 12 employees have been pulled alive from the garbage and hospitalised.On Saturday, a rescue official said emergency workers had faced the danger of further collapse by the still-shifting mountain of refuse, forcing pauses in their efforts.Rain had only increased that danger, Villanueva said.The focus was expected to turn from rescue to recovery today, Villanueva said adding that the final decision would be up to an inter-agency team.A public information officer separately said the focus was likely to shift to recovering bodies.Outside the disaster site, dozens of family members huddled under tents provided to shield them from the sun, while others found spots nearer the facility to watch the rescue efforts.”What we want now is to find them. Alive or dead – so we can properly take care of them,” said Jezille Matabid, whose brother Junelle, a welder at the site, was among the missing.Another woman, who declined to give her name, said the lack of information about her older sister, a landfill employee, had been agonising.”We feel like we’re going crazy here just waiting for an update. She’s three-months pregnant,” she said.Elmer Aguilar, whose brother Larry, a welder, was among the missing, said he had come with 10 others hoping to aid in the search effort, only to be turned away.”We went here because we thought we could help dig, but when we arrived, the guards did not allow us to enter.”Joel Garganera, a Cebu City council member, described the height from which the trash fell as “alarming”, estimating the top of the pile had stood 20 storeys above the area struck.Images released by police showed a massive mound of trash atop a hill directly behind buildings that officials contained administrative offices and housing for employees.In an interview with local media, Cebu mayor Nestor Archival pointed to a recent earthquake and typhoon-driven rains as potential precipitating circumstances.But Garganera said the mountain of garbage had been an obvious danger.”Every now and then, when it rains, there are landslides happening around the city,” with “a landfill or a mountain that is made of garbage” posing a particular danger, Garganera said.”The garbage is like a sponge, it really absorbs water. It doesn’t (take) a rocket scientist to say that eventually, the incident will happen.”He said the disaster was a “double whammy” for the city, noting that the facility was the lone service provider for Cebu and adjacent communities.According to the website of operator Prime Integrated Waste Solutions, the landfill processed 1,000 tonnes of municipal solid waste daily.Calls to the company went unanswered Sunday. Related Story Source…
