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  • Trump bombs Iran after strike on cargo ship in Strait of Hormuz

    Trump bombs Iran after strike on cargo ship in Strait of Hormuz

    Tensions in the Middle East reignited dramatically on Friday when former U.S. President Donald Trump announced the resumption of military strikes against Iranian targets, just days after the two sides reached a fragile ceasefire memorandum and hours after an alleged drone attack on a commercial cargo vessel in the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz. The escalation comes as the U.S., Israel, and Lebanon signed a separate trilateral framework to de-escalate conflict along the Israel-Lebanon border, raising urgent questions about whether regional ceasefire efforts can hold.

  • Damascus races to reassure Beirut as Trump pushes Syria to take on Hezbollah

    Damascus races to reassure Beirut as Trump pushes Syria to take on Hezbollah

    In recent months, successive public statements from U.S. President Donald Trump suggesting Syria take charge of addressing the Hezbollah issue have rekindled deep-seated anxiety in Lebanon over a potential return of Syrian military involvement to the country, even as Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa and his administration have repeatedly rejected any plans for armed intervention. Trump’s increasingly explicit framing of a Syrian role has also exposed apparent inconsistencies in the Biden administration’s earlier messaging, directly contradicting a previous categorical denial from U.S. Ambassador to Syria Tom Barrack, who dismissed claims Washington had pressured Damascus to deploy troops into Lebanon as “false and inaccurate.”

    The most recent comments from Trump came during a June 21 interview with Fox News, where the U.S. leader expressed open disappointment with Israel’s ongoing campaign against Hezbollah, criticizing the operation for its widespread collateral damage. “They can’t do anything without knocking buildings down,” Trump told the outlet, adding “I’m close to giving it over to Syria.” Notably, Trump offered no additional context to clarify his use of the phrase “giving it over,” leaving observers uncertain whether he was referencing a full-scale Syrian military operation, regional political mediation, targeted pressure on Hezbollah, enhanced cross-border security coordination, or expanded cooperation with Lebanon’s central government. Even so, his remarks mark the latest in a string of public signals that the White House has actively explored assigning Damascus a formal role in managing the Lebanese armed group.

    The discourse around a potential Syrian involvement first emerged in public view on March 17, when Reuters published a report claiming U.S. officials had encouraged Damascus to consider deploying military forces into eastern Lebanon to support efforts to disarm Hezbollah. Citing five anonymous sources with direct knowledge of the behind-the-scenes talks, the outlet noted that Syrian officials had already expressed reluctance to move forward with the proposal, warning that intervention could drag Syria into a wider regional conflict and reignite volatile sectarian tensions in both Syria and Lebanon. According to the report, the proposal was first raised during bilateral talks between U.S. and Syrian officials in 2025, before being revisited in late February, shortly after the outbreak of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran. Within hours of the report’s publication, Barrack issued a forceful public rejection of the claims, writing on the social platform X that “Reporting regarding the United States encouraging Syria to send forces into Lebanon is false and inaccurate.”

    Despite these denials, regional outlet Middle East Eye (MEE) subsequently reported that Sharaa held a meeting with leaders of Syrian armed factions shortly after the Reuters report to discuss the circulating claims. A Syrian source briefed on the gathering told MEE that “Those present agreed that Syria had neither the intention nor the desire to intervene militarily in Lebanon.” A separate senior Lebanese source also confirmed to MEE that Lebanese authorities in Beirut had received multiple formal reassurances that Damascus had no plans to deploy troops across the shared border. The outlet further reported that Syrian officials have begun coordinating with regional allies including Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Turkey to push back against U.S. pressure for intervention. A second senior Syrian source told MEE that to avoid directly complying with Washington’s demands, Sharaa has laid out a series of preconditions for any Syrian involvement that would be nearly impossible for the U.S. to meet.

    Trump first floated the idea of a Syrian role in Lebanon publicly during a June 5 appearance on NBC’s *Meet the Press*, where he called for a more “surgical” campaign against Hezbollah and suggested Washington could either directly assist the effort or “recommend Syria” take the lead. “We can help them with that, or we can recommend Syria,” Trump said at the time, praising Sharaa and claiming the Syrian leader “would love to help.” While that initial stop stopped short of an explicit call for Syrian troops to enter Lebanon, Trump adopted a far more direct tone during a press availability at the G7 summit in Evian-les-Bains, France, on June 16. “I suggested to Israel to let Syria take care of Hezbollah, because, to be honest with you, I think they do a better job of doing it,” he told reporters. He doubled down on his criticism of Israel’s campaign, arguing it has progressed too slowly, caused unnecessary civilian casualties, and destroyed large swathes of residential infrastructure. He also reiterated his praise for Sharaa, claiming the Syrian leader has done an “amazing job” consolidating state control across Syria and “does not like” Hezbollah.

    The following day, when pressed by reporters to confirm whether he had directly discussed the Hezbollah issue with Sharaa, Trump confirmed the conversation had occurred but declined to share whether the Syrian leader had agreed to take on a role, saying only that he would address the matter at a later date. The exchange confirmed that Trump’s proposal was not merely an abstract suggestion for Israeli policymakers, but that the prospect of a Syrian role had already been raised directly with the Damascus government.

    In recent weeks, Sharaa has moved aggressively to quell growing speculation over potential intervention. During a June 11 meeting with dignitaries from the Damascus countryside, he dismissed reports of an imminent Syrian military entry into Lebanon as baseless rumors. Later, in an interview with Al Arabiya, Syrian presidential adviser Ahmed Muwaffaq Zaidan confirmed that Washington had proposed Syrian involvement amid the ongoing regional escalation, but said Damascus had rejected any military or security role in Lebanon. He added that Syria supports extending the authority of Lebanon’s central government across all of its territory, but that this goal should be achieved by strengthening Lebanese state institutions rather than deploying Syrian troops.

    Sharaa expanded on this position in a June 21 interview with Al Mashhad TV, pushing back against claims that Trump’s comments were a signal Syrian forces would enter Lebanon imminently. He argued Trump’s remarks had been misinterpreted, explaining that the U.S. president had raised concerns over the ongoing war and discussed potential Syrian contributions to a peaceful, secure resolution, rather than calling for an invasion. Sharaa emphasized that Syria’s top priority is ending the war and halting Israeli bombardment, noting that Damascus has discussed political, economic, and social pathways forward with U.S. officials. “Our vision is based on supporting the Lebanese state once again, strengthening its institutions, and seeking a solution that everyone believes in,” he said. “We are looking for economic channels between Lebanon and Syria, not military ones.” Sharaa also noted that Damascus is open to dialogue with all Lebanese political factions, including Hezbollah, acknowledging that the group’s role in Syria’s civil war left a “deep Syrian wound” but adding he would meet with Hezbollah representatives if it advanced the shared interests of both Lebanon and Syria.

    Lebanese President Joseph Aoun welcomed Sharaa’s public clarification, saying the reassurances had been well received in Beirut and helped put an end to rampant speculation over a Syrian military role. While Syrian statements have eased immediate public anxiety in Lebanon’s capital, Trump’s repeated calls for a Syrian role, paired with conflicting accounts of earlier U.S.-Syrian talks, have left lingering, unresolved questions about what role Washington ultimately expects Damascus to play in the future of Hezbollah and Lebanese stability.

  • Hezbollah supporters protest in Beirut against Israel deal

    Hezbollah supporters protest in Beirut against Israel deal

    Fresh turmoil has erupted in Lebanon’s capital Beirut after hundreds of Hezbollah supporters launched mass street demonstrations opposing a landmark framework agreement brokered by the United States between Beirut and Jerusalem to end months of cross-border fighting. The protests, which stretched from late Friday into Saturday, saw demonstrators cruise through central Beirut, near the national parliament building, and along the key airport highway on motorbikes and mopeds, just hours after the deal was formally announced in Washington.

    Local media and social media footage captured crowds of protesters gathering in Dahieh, Hezbollah’s stronghold in southern Beirut — a neighborhood that was heavily damaged by Israeli airstrikes during the recent escalation of hostilities. Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency (NNA) confirmed that some demonstrators blocked a major arterial road near the prime minister’s office, while other groups used burning tires to shut down the airport road. Lebanese military forces intervened to disperse the blockading protesters, reopened the route, and deployed temporary security checkpoints across multiple districts of Beirut to contain unrest.

    The framework deal, hammered out over five rounds of direct negotiations between Israeli and Lebanese delegations in the U.S. capital, outlines a pilot plan that would see Lebanese armed forces take control of two small parcels of territory currently held by Israeli troops, alongside a formal process aimed at disarming Hezbollah, the Iran-aligned militant group that has long operated as a de facto military force independent of the Lebanese state. Critically, the agreement leaves the timeline and conditions for a full Israeli withdrawal from all occupied areas of southern Lebanon undefined, tying any pullout to improved security conditions and the elimination of what Israel defines as threats to its territory — effectively making full withdrawal dependent on the completion of Hezbollah’s disarmament.

    Hezbollah has repeatedly rejected any demand to surrender its weapons as long as Israeli occupation of Lebanese territory remains in place and the country faces security threats from Israel. Hassan Fadlallah, a senior Hezbollah member of Lebanon’s parliament, issued a stark warning Friday, arguing that Lebanese national authorities would only be able to enforce the Washington-brokered deal if they launched a civil war against the group with backing from the U.S. He added that the agreement was an intentional effort to undermine a prior U.S.-Iran understanding designed to prevent a full-scale regional war that would engulf Lebanon, and that no provision of the deal would be implemented without Hezbollah’s acquiescence.

    Even as protests unfolded in Beirut, cross-border activity continued Saturday: the NNA reported that an Israeli military drone carried out a strike in the Nabatieh region of southern Lebanon, and a second drone dropped an explosive sound device near a Lebanese army checkpoint in the town of Nabatieh al-Fawqa.

    Fadlallah reaffirmed that Hezbollah would actively resist all attempts to enforce the deal, and that the group would only strengthen its hold on its weapons stockpiles. He emphasized that Hezbollah’s opposition is uncompromising and would block the Lebanese government from meeting any of its commitments under the framework, but stressed that the group has no intention of clashing with the Lebanese national army. “The army will remain, the resistance will remain and the people will remain,” Fadlallah said.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu welcomed the deal, framing it as a diplomatic victory that allows Israeli forces to maintain their occupation of southern Lebanon until Hezbollah is fully disarmed. He positioned the agreement as a significant setback to Iran, which has long backed Hezbollah as a proxy force. “Iran is trying to force us into a withdrawal from southern Lebanon by force. In effect, Israel, Lebanon, and the United States are telling them: this is none of your business,” Netanyahu said.

    A senior anchor on Israel’s Channel 12 echoed a common strategic reading of the deal, noting that sowing internal division in Lebanon has long been a core Israeli policy goal. “It seems we’re leading Lebanon to a civil war. Maybe it’s not so bad for us, let the Lebanese government fight Hezbollah… That’s been the goal from the start,” the anchor said.

    The emerging standoff over the framework agreement has already raised fears of renewed domestic unrest in Lebanon, a country already grappling with a years-long economic collapse and the lingering fallout of months of cross-border conflict between Israel and Hezbollah.

  • Iran and US trade attacks in worst escalation since peace deal

    Iran and US trade attacks in worst escalation since peace deal

    Tensions between Iran and the United States have surged to their most dangerous level since the two parties signed an interim peace deal to end a four-month conflict, after a pair of consecutive days of reciprocal strikes that have threatened stability across a critical global waterway.

    The spiral of violence was triggered by an attack on a cargo vessel on Thursday, after which both sides traded accusations that the other had broken the terms of the ceasefire agreement. Washington immediately pinned responsibility for the assault on Tehran.

    Just two days later, the United Kingdom’s leading maritime security watchdog, UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO), confirmed another incident: a commercial tanker was hit by an unguided projectile while transiting the Strait of Hormuz. The strike caused significant damage to the vessel’s bridge, but official updates confirmed that all crew members escaped unharmed, and no leakage of fuel or cargo has resulted in environmental damage to the strait’s waters.

    In response to the string of recent hostile incidents, the Joint Maritime Information Center — a multinational naval coalition tasked with safeguarding commercial shipping in the region — has announced an upward adjustment to its regional security threat level, stepping up defensive patrols and alerting commercial operators to increased risks.

    On Saturday, Iranian officials confirmed that they had launched what they described as “defensive” strikes against military targets with links to the United States. The operation was framed as a direct response to US airstrikes that hit Iranian facilities on the country’s southern coast the previous day. Tehran condemned the US attack as a “barbaric air strike” that targeted coastal surveillance outposts, arguing that the action violated core principles of the United Nations Charter.

    While Iran’s foreign ministry declined to disclose the exact locations of its retaliatory strikes, Bahrain — which hosts the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet — issued a formal condemnation of what it called an Iranian drone strike on Bahraini territory.

    For its part, the US military defended its own pre-emptive strikes, saying they were carried out in direct response to an Iranian drone attack on the cargo vessel in the Strait of Hormuz.

    The Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most vital chokepoints for global energy supplies, has seen a resumption of regular commercial traffic over the past two weeks after months of disruptive tensions. In that period, Iran has moved aggressively to assert its sovereign authority over shipping transiting the waterway, requiring vessels to obtain Iranian approval to use designated transit channels. While Tehran has not issued an official comment on specific reports of attacks on commercial ships, Iranian state television reported that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps had fired warning shots at vessels that attempted to use unapproved channels. The incident has pushed a growing number of commercial shipping operators to apply for Iranian transit permits before entering the strait.

    US Vice President JD Vance issued a public statement reaffirming that Washington had fully abided by the terms of the ceasefire agreement, and placed sole blame for the renewed escalation on Iran. “Iran signed a ceasefire agreement. We have honored it. If they have disagreements about how the MOU is being applied, they can pick up the phone. But violence will be met with violence,” Vance wrote in a post on the social platform X.

  • Tens of thousands march in the first Budapest Pride since Viktor Orbán was voted out

    Tens of thousands march in the first Budapest Pride since Viktor Orbán was voted out

    BUDAPEST, Hungary — Tens of thousands of Hungarians and their allies defied a record-breaking European heat wave to gather in the nation’s capital Saturday, marking the 31st annual Budapest Pride parade — the first fully authorized demonstration of its kind since populist former Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who spent 16 years pushing anti-LGBTQ+ policies and attempted to ban the event entirely, was removed from power in April’s general election.

    As temperatures climbed to a sweltering 38 degrees Celsius (100 Fahrenheit) amid the ongoing heat dome sweeping across most of the continent, event organizers made sure attendees stayed safe by distributing free bottled water, while Budapest’s public water utility activated additional public fountains along the entire parade route to offer constant access to cool water.

    The procession kicked off at Budapest’s world-famous Hungarian State Opera House, winding through the bustling central streets of the capital before crossing the iconic Erzsébet Bridge spanning the Danube River that cuts through the heart of the city. LGBTQ+ Hungarians and their supporters danced to upbeat music, cheered, and waved vibrant rainbow flags as they marched, creating a mood of celebration and cautious optimism not seen at recent Pride events in the country.

    Luca Új, a participant attending her third Budapest Pride march, noted a palpable shift in atmosphere compared to events held under Orbán’s administration. “There used to be a lot of tension when we marched. But now I see people as being somehow happier, and there are more older people joining too, which is a really nice change,” she shared.

    Saturday’s event comes just over a year after Orbán’s nationalist-populist government pushed through both formal legislation and a constitutional amendment to outlaw Pride parades entirely, a move that sparked widespread condemnation from global human rights organizations and political leaders across the European Union. Even with the ban in place, 2024’s Pride event went forward as scheduled in open defiance of the government, drawing a record 350,000 attendees to become the largest demonstration in the event’s history. That massive turnout, which came despite months of government insistence the march would never be permitted, was widely seen as a major rebuke that weakened Orbán’s political standing ahead of the April election.

    Orbán and his Fidesz party were handily defeated in the April vote by center-right challenger Prime Minister Péter Magyar and his opposition Tisza party. While Hungary’s new governing coalition has not yet formally repealed the Orbán-era ban on Pride events, national police granted full official authorization for this year’s march and deployed uniformed officers to provide security along the entire route.

    Kristóf Györgyi, a first-time Pride attendee who traveled to the capital from the southern Hungarian city of Szeged, said he holds significant hope that the new government will move to expand equal rights for LGBTQ+ Hungarians, bringing the country into line with protections common across most of the European Union.

    He pointed to ongoing parliamentary debate over adoption rights for same-sex couples — a debate that would have been unthinkable under the previous administration, which implemented a full ban on same-sex adoption and same-sex marriage. “The fact that there’s already a debate in Parliament about whether an orphaned child is better off with a loving same-sex couple or in an orphanage is a positive sign,” he explained. “Obviously, the laws haven’t changed yet, but there are already many signs of hope for our community.”

    For more than a decade, Orbán’s government framed Pride celebrations — which are held globally to honor LGBTQ+ visibility and advance demands for equal legal and social rights — as a threat to children’s moral and spiritual development, a claim that has been repeatedly rejected by independent human rights groups and child development experts across the continent.

    Just months before the election, in April 2025, the European Court of Justice — the EU’s highest judicial body — ruled that a 2021 Orbán-era law banning access to LGBTQ+ inclusive content for minors violates core European Union law, and breaches the bloc’s foundational treaty guarantees for human rights and legal equality.

  • World Cup final day of group play will set the field for the round of 32

    World Cup final day of group play will set the field for the round of 32

    As the 2026 FIFA World Cup co-hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico enters its final day of group-stage competition, eight national sides remain locked in a tight battle for the four remaining spots in the tournament’s round of 32. So far, the three co-host nations have all secured their place in the knockout rounds, joining pre-tournament favorites and top-ranked sides including France, Germany, Spain, Portugal, Brazil, and Norway, among other successful qualifiers.

    With group-stage play winding down, the knockout bracket is already taking clear shape. The host United States, whose two-game winning streak was brought to a halt by a defeat to Turkey, will open their knockout campaign against Bosnia-Herzegovina on July 1 in Santa Clara, California. Ranked 62nd in the FIFA world rankings, Bosnia-Herzegovina earned its knockout spot as the third-place finisher in Group B with four points from one win, one draw, and one loss. The match marks a welcome return to full contention for U.S. star Christian Pulisic, who came off the bench in the second half against Turkey after recovering from a calf injury that forced him out early in the opening win over Paraguay. “We play every game like a knockout game,” said U.S. midfielder Sebastian Berhalter, who found the back of the net against Turkey. “You saw that in our intensity and the way we worked. For us, it’s keep doing what we’ve been doing.”

    Canada, which made history by reaching its first World Cup knockout stage as Group B runner-up with four points, will face South Africa, another historic qualifier that also earned four points as Group A runner-up including a stunning upset win over South Korea, in Southern California on June 28. This marks the first time both nations have progressed to the knockout round of a men’s World Cup.

    Other confirmed high-profile round of 32 fixtures are already set across the three host countries. Five-time World Cup champion Brazil will face Japan on June 29. Japan secured its place as Group F runner-up with a hard-fought 1-1 draw against Sweden, a matchup that carries extra narrative: Brazilian football legend Zico was brought in by Japan’s football association in 1991 to professionalize the nation’s domestic league and support its successful co-host bid for the 2002 World Cup, making this clash a full-circle moment for Japanese football to show how far the program has come against the global gold standard. After an opening draw against Morocco, Brazil bounced back to win its next two group games 3-0, with Vinícius Júnior silencing early critics and star forward Neymar returning to form after a minor injury. Japan, for its part, earned two draws and a dominant 4-0 rout of Tunisia to book its knockout spot.

    Also on June 29, the Netherlands, who topped Group F after outscoring opponents Sweden and Tunisia by a combined 8-2, will face Morocco, the 2022 World Cup semifinalists that finished unbeaten in Group C and are chasing history to become the first African nation to lift the World Cup trophy. That same day, four-time champion Germany will face Paraguay. Like the U.S., Germany clinched its group spot early and rested key players in its final group game, resulting in a late low-stakes defeat, but enter the knockout round as heavy favorites against Paraguay, who lost 4-1 to the U.S. in its opener but recovered enough to claim a knockout spot.

    On June 30, tournament favorite France, who won all three of its group matches to live up to pre-tournament expectations, will face Sweden, which holds a 5-1 win, 5-1 loss, and one draw from group play. That same day, Norway, which rested star striker Erling Haaland and nearly all of its starting lineup in its final group game after failing to catch France at the top of Group I, will face Ivory Coast at the home of the Dallas Cowboys in Arlington, Texas.

    Two more round of 32 matches are set for July 3. Australia, which picked up one win, one loss, and one draw in group play, will face Egypt, who advanced as Group G runner-up after a late late equalizer from Iran was ruled out for offside. In the other July 3 fixture, defending World Cup champion Argentina, who already sealed top spot in Group J, will face Cape Verde, the smallest nation ever to qualify for a World Cup knockout stage, who enter the match as massive underdogs.

    The path to the round of 32 for third-place teams follows a specific format: only the top eight third-place finishers across all groups advance, with tiebreakers decided first by goal differential, then by total goals scored if needed. So far, any team that has earned four points from three group games has secured a knockout spot, with Bosnia-Herzegovina, Sweden, Ecuador, and Paraguay all advancing via this route. Scotland, by contrast, is a long shot to qualify with three points, and needs multiple favorable results to break into the knockout stage, leaving its passionate fanbase waiting on a series of unlikely outcomes.

    On the final day of group play, three key matchups will decide the last remaining qualification spots. At 5 p.m. ET, Group L will wrap up with Panama facing England and Croatia taking on Ghana. Panama has already been eliminated, while England and Ghana will advance with any result other than a lopsided loss, and can still progress even in defeat if the margin is small. Croatia advances with either a win or a draw. In Group K kicking off at 7:30 p.m. ET, Colombia faces Portugal and Congo takes on Uzbekistan. Colombia has already advanced, and will finish top of the group with a win or draw against Portugal, who will advance with a draw and claim first place with a win. Congo advances with a win or draw and is eliminated with a loss, while Uzbekistan is a long shot that needs a dominant victory to qualify. Finally, at 10 p.m. ET in Group J, Algeria faces Austria and winless Jordan takes on already-qualified group winners Argentina. Jordan has been eliminated, and barring a multigoal Croatia defeat to Ghana, the winner of Algeria-Austria will advance, while the loser retains an outside chance. A draw would see Austria qualify, and would likely send Algeria through as well.

  • In Caracas, this feels like the hardest moment in Venezuela’s modern history

    In Caracas, this feels like the hardest moment in Venezuela’s modern history

    Venezuela is grappling with the devastating aftermath of back-to-back earthquakes that have left thousands homeless, scores missing, and communities across the capital Caracas and coastal regions reeling from widespread destruction. Days after the tremors hit, survivors wake each morning to a grimmer reality, as hopes of finding trapped missing loved ones alive continue to dwindle. Many have spent nights sleeping rough in public spaces, traumatized by nightmares of collapsing structures and haunted by their sudden loss.

    For 50-year-old former police officer Jan Carlos Roa Garcia and his family, life has been upended overnight. While their Caracas apartment building did not fully collapse, severe structural damage has rendered it unsafe to reoccupy. Speaking through tears, Garcia said he feels lost about how to rebuild his family’s life after the disaster. “If I were 30 instead of 50, maybe I could start over. But I have no idea where to begin, and up until now, no government official has reached out to us,” he explained. Though exhausted and frustrated, the longtime public servant refrained from harsh public criticism of the official disaster response.

    Local musician Zaira Castro, who lives just a block from two leveled buildings in the heavily damaged Chacao district of Caracas, had no such hesitation. “Everyone is deeply frustrated because the government has not delivered the urgent, serious support we need right now,” Castro said from a neighborhood plaza. “Right now, it is ordinary Venezuelans helping each other. We have learned to rely on one another because the government does not exist for us in moments like this.”

    When interim president Delcy Rodriguez visited the Chacao area alongside the local mayor to assess the damage, she was met with open anger from displaced residents. One resident yelled at the delegation that officials were “campaigning in the middle of a tragedy” while the government did nothing to support affected families.

    The reporter has a personal connection to the damaged area, having lived in Los Palos Grandes, one of the hardest-hit neighborhoods in Chacao, during their time as BBC Venezuela Correspondent. Their former apartment building sits just meters from the collapsed Petunia building, where rescue crews have worked around the clock to reach people trapped under the rubble. A friend recently shared on social media that her mother is among those still missing at the Petunia site. It was a small relief to find the reporter’s former apartment building, Alheli, still standing, with its friendly long-time caretaker Pedro still greeting residents on the front porch. Even among unharmed buildings, residents are shaken: one elderly resident twisted her ankle fleeing during the tremors, and all said they had never experienced a disaster of this scale in Venezuela in their lifetimes.

    The desperation is far more acute in the worst-hit regions, particularly the coastal town of La Guaira, where more than 100 buildings have been completely flattened, leaving an apocalyptic landscape. As rescue efforts stretch past the critical 72-hour window, fading hopes have fueled growing public anger. “There are still people trapped under that concrete, we need heavy machinery to reach them,” pleaded Eileen Lada, a La Guaira resident who lost her home. “Please, send help.”

    Amid the widespread despair, moments of hope have emerged: rescue teams, both local and international, have pulled several survivors out of the rubble, including a newborn baby rescued in a widely shared operation. Videos circulating on social media show rescue workers celebrating small victories with the characteristic determination and warmth of Venezuelan people, moments that have moved viewers across the country.

    Local hospitals along the northern coast are already stretched to breaking point. Venezuela’s healthcare system has suffered from decades of systemic underfunding, and it is now being forced to respond to a disaster that would overwhelm even better-resourced nations. Doctors and nurses are working tirelessly in impossible conditions to treat the injured, but survivors’ accounts of their experiences paint a grim picture. “It was horrific – so many people dead, so many family members missing,” Maria Vargas, a survivor recovering from her injuries in a hospital bed, told AFP. “I lost my entire home, but we are alive, thank God.”

    The first 48 hours after an earthquake, widely considered the most critical window for rescuing trapped survivors, has long passed. For a country that has already endured years of political and economic crisis, this disaster now stands as one of the darkest moments in Venezuela’s modern history.

  • Burkina Faso severs diplomatic ties with France

    Burkina Faso severs diplomatic ties with France

    In a sharp escalation of tensions that have been simmering for more than two years, Burkina Faso’s military-led government has formally severed all diplomatic relations with France, marking one of the most significant breaks between the West African nation and its former colonial ruler in modern history. The split comes after years of escalating friction that began when Captain Ibrahim Traore seized control of the country in a 2022 coup, after which the new junta quickly pivoted away from longstanding Western alliances and toward alternative partners including Russia and China. The announcement was delivered in a nationally televised address Friday by Communications Minister Pingdwendé Gilbert Ouédraogo, who laid out the junta’s full slate of grievances against Paris. Ouédraogo accused France of engaging in “ceaseless activism” that directly undermines Burkina Faso’s national interests, leveling fresh claims that France continues to harbor overt neo-colonial ambitions for the Sahel region nation. The statement further alleged that France provides covert support to subversive networks operating within Burkina Faso and actively works to marginalize the country in global diplomatic forums. After more than two years of escalating disagreements, Ouédraogo emphasized that the fundamental conditions for mutually respectful bilateral relations no longer exist between the two governments. In a carefully worded clarification, the minister added that the severance of ties applies only to official institutional diplomatic relations, and does not challenge the deep historical, cultural, social and people-to-people ties that connect the populations of both countries. The French Ministry of Foreign Affairs quickly pushed back against the decision, dismissing the junta’s claims as “hostile and unfounded.” In a formal response, the French foreign ministry argued that the move underscores what it called a “troubling drift” by Traore’s administration, and issued an urgent advisory urging all French citizens currently residing in Burkina Faso to exercise extreme vigilance amid the rising diplomatic uncertainty. This formal break in relations is the culmination of a steady deterioration of ties that began immediately after Traore’s 2022 coup. Within months of taking power, Traore expelled all French combat troops that had been deployed to the country to support counter-insurgency operations, marking an end to a partnership that had stood for years. France has not had a sitting ambassador in Ouagadougou since January 2023, and in 2024, Burkina Faso expelled three senior French diplomats over unsubstantiated claims of subversive activity—claims that Paris immediately and categorically denied. Like its neighboring military-ruled states Mali and Niger, Burkina Faso has been locked in a brutal decade-long battle against Islamist insurgent groups across its territory, a conflict that once saw French forces fighting alongside Burkinabe troops to counter extremist expansion. Since taking power, Traore’s government has repeatedly accused France of pursuing a hidden “secret agenda” in the Sahel, justifying its decision to reorient the country’s foreign policy toward Moscow and Beijing. Beyond its split with France, the Traore administration has overseen a series of major shifts in Burkina Faso’s regional and political standing. The junta initially pledged to restore civilian democratic rule by 2024, but later backed out of that commitment and formally dissolved all national political parties in January 2025. Just weeks after that move, Burkina Faso joined Mali and Niger in officially withdrawing from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), the region’s leading political and economic bloc, to launch a new alternative regional alliance called the Alliance of the Sahel States.

  • Newborn baby rescued from Venezuela earthquake rubble

    Newborn baby rescued from Venezuela earthquake rubble

    A stunning story of survival has emerged from the wreckage of catastrophic seismic events that struck Venezuela this Wednesday, as rescue teams pulled a newborn baby alive from collapsed building rubble. The remarkable rescue comes in the wake of a devastating natural disaster that shook the South American nation: two massive earthquakes struck mere seconds apart, leaving a trail of death and destruction across affected regions. As of the latest official updates, the confirmed death toll from the twin quakes has climbed to at least 920 people, with many more still missing or injured amid the flattened structures and broken infrastructure. Emergency response teams have been working around the clock to dig through debris, searching for any signs of life trapped beneath the ruins, and the successful extraction of the newborn has provided a glimmer of hope to communities shattered by the disaster. Local authorities and international aid organizations have mobilized resources to support search and rescue efforts, deliver emergency medical care, and provide basic supplies to thousands of people displaced by the quakes.

  • German highways are buckling under extreme heat as Central Europe sizzles

    German highways are buckling under extreme heat as Central Europe sizzles

    A crippling heat wave that earlier scorched Western Europe has shifted east and central across the continent this weekend, bringing widespread disruption to critical infrastructure, overwhelming healthcare systems, and causing multiple fatalities across the region. Climate scientists have confirmed that this extreme heat event is directly tied to human-caused climate change, reinforcing global calls for urgent climate action.

    In Germany, where peak temperatures are forecast to reach 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit), the country’s iconic Autobahn highway network has already suffered heat-related damage. According to German daily newspaper Bild, concrete pavement on the A2 highway buckled in two sections outside Berlin, forcing complete closures of those stretches, with other damage reported across the country’s road network. National rail operator Deutsche Bahn and other regional rail companies have urged the public to cancel all nonessential long-distance and regional travel this weekend, noting that the country’s entire transportation network is buckling under the record heat.

    In the western German city of Dormagen, dangerous indoor temperatures forced the evacuation of dozens of nursing home residents for emergency medical care. Local fire departments reported indoor temperatures at the facility hit 35 degrees Celsius (95 degrees Fahrenheit) — a particularly dangerous level for vulnerable elderly residents. Unlike many warmer regions, air conditioning is not standard in most German and European buildings, as the continent has historically rarely experienced such sustained extreme heat. A city spokesperson confirmed to German news agency dpa that one resident died overnight, though officials have not yet confirmed whether the heat contributed to the death.

    Across the border in France, temperatures began to slowly decline Saturday after two days of extreme heat that put three-quarters of the country under red heat alerts, with temperatures topping 40 Celsius in multiple locations including Paris. While the peak of the crisis appears to be passing for now, hospitals remain under extreme pressure from a surge of heat-related medical emergencies, including heatstroke, dehydration, and heat-triggered heart attacks. Paris’ public hospital network AP-HP activated its full emergency response protocol across all 38 city hospitals to handle the unrelenting increase in patient volume. Over the 24 hours ending Friday, AP-HP emergency departments treated nearly 3,000 patients — a 35% increase from normal volumes, with more than a third of those patients hospitalized patients over the age of 75. Calls to medical dispatch centers rose nearly 80% compared to the same period last year.

    The strain on healthcare systems forced the cancellation of two major public events: the annual Saturday Paris Pride march for LGBTQ+ rights and a three-day music festival, both postponed to avoid putting additional stress on emergency services. This heat wave has already recorded higher peak temperatures than the historic 2003 European heat wave, which killed an estimated 15,000 people in France, most of them elderly. AP-HP director Nicolas Revel noted that improved heat-related treatment protocols mean officials do not expect the same catastrophic death toll seen in 2003, after more than 5,700 heat-attributed deaths recorded in France during the 2024 extreme heat event. Revel noted that, while death totals are unlikely to reach 2003 levels, the country should still prepare for hundreds of additional heat-related fatalities.

    In the United Kingdom, the heat wave broke all-time June temperature records three days in a row, with a provisional 37.3 Celsius (99 Fahrenheit) recorded in eastern England on Friday — more than 1 degree higher than the previous 1976 June record. While temperatures are forecast to gradually cool this weekend, an amber heat warning remains in effect through Saturday night. Police confirmed Saturday that the body of a 22-year-old man was recovered from a river after he got into trouble while cooling off during the heat. This death joins roughly 40 heat and swimming-related fatalities recorded in France over the past week, prompting repeated official warnings to avoid unregulated swimming in rivers and lakes.

    In Italy’s capital Rome, which remains under a top-level red heat alert, tourists have sought any available relief from sweltering temperatures, crowding into shade near historic buildings and cooling off in public fountains. Street vendors have reported booming sales of bottled water, sun protection, and cooling accessories, with many tourists turning to local favorites like gelato and cold fruit for relief. Italy’s Ministry of Health extended red alerts to 18 major cities Saturday, including top tourism hubs Venice, Florence, Bologna and Milan.

    As the heat wave cripples much of Western and Central Europe, a new rapid analysis from climate research collaboration World Weather Attribution confirms that this extreme heat and humidity event would not have been possible without human-induced climate change. The study found that such a heat wave was virtually impossible 50 years ago, and is 200 times more likely to occur today than it was just two decades ago. André Corrêa do Lago, president of the UN COP30 climate talks, said the widespread disruption and danger of this heat wave has underscored the urgent need for global climate action. “The fact that we are living with this amazing heat in London is a strong argument… we need to take action as soon as possible,” do Lago told the Associated Press.