作者: admin

  • The nuclear challenge at the heart of Trump’s Iran negotiations

    The nuclear challenge at the heart of Trump’s Iran negotiations

    A senior official from the second Trump administration has publicly stated Washington is confident a historic deal to end the ongoing war with Iran will be finalized and signed in the coming days. If reached, the agreement is expected to reopen the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz — a chokepoint through which roughly 20% of the world’s daily oil shipments pass — in exchange for the United States lifting its current naval blockade on Iranian commercial shipping, according to early outlines of the emerging framework.

    Core to the proposed agreement is a requirement that Iran destroy and remove all of its existing enriched uranium stockpiles, a non-negotiable demand the Trump administration has insisted on since the war began in late February. Technical details surrounding how this process will be carried out, including verification protocols and disposal locations, are still being negotiated, the official confirmed.

    To understand the stakes of the emerging deal, it is necessary to contextualize the decades-long debate over Iran’s nuclear program. Uranium, a naturally occurring radioactive material, can be processed to fuel civilian nuclear power plants or refined to a high purity for use in nuclear weapons. The process of increasing the concentration of the uranium-235 isotope, the core fissionable component, is called enrichment. Low-enriched uranium, between 3% and 5% purity, is sufficient for civilian power generation, while weapons-grade uranium requires a minimum enrichment level of 90%.

    Iran has long maintained that “zero enrichment” is a non-negotiable red line that violates what it views as its sovereign right to a civilian nuclear program, a position that has been a major sticking point in negotiations for decades.

    This is not the first major nuclear agreement with Iran: the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), negotiated by the Obama administration alongside the UN Security Council and other world powers, already placed strict limits on Iran’s enrichment activities in exchange for widespread sanctions relief. When the JCPOA was reached, negotiators framed it as a landmark deal to eliminate the risk of Iran developing a nuclear weapon.

    Catherine Ashton, the former UN lead negotiator for the JCPOA, told BBC Verify that the entire agreement centered on one core goal: eliminating international fears that Iran would pursue an atomic bomb. “When it was introduced, the Obama administration declared that the JCPOA would prevent Iran from building a secret nuclear programme and that Tehran had agreed to extraordinary and robust monitoring, verification, and inspection,” Ashton explained. Under the JCPOA’s terms, Iran agreed to cut its enriched uranium stockpile by 98%, capping its holdings at 300kg (660lbs), limit enrichment to 3.67% purity, and accept strict caps on the number of centrifuges — the specialized machines used to enrich uranium. In exchange, the United States and international community lifted crippling economic sanctions on Iran’s oil sector, trade, and banking system, granting Tehran access to billions of dollars in previously frozen overseas assets.

    For years after the agreement entered into force, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the UN’s independent nuclear watchdog, repeatedly confirmed Iran was fully complying with all JCPOA requirements. The US State Department also officially confirmed in an April 2018 report that Iran was “transparently, verifiably, and fully implementing the JCPOA.”

    Kelsey Davenport, nonproliferation expert at the nonpartisan Arms Control Association, called the original deal “remarkably successful,” noting that any deviation from the agreement’s terms or any move toward a nuclear weapon would have been detected immediately by IAEA inspectors.

    That did not stop then-President Trump from withdrawing the US from the JCPOA in May 2018, when he labeled the agreement a “horrible, one-side deal that should never, ever have been made.” Trump argued the JCPOA failed to address Iran’s ballistic missile program, that inspection mechanisms were insufficient to prevent and punish cheating, and that the deal gave Iran access to billions in sanctions relief that it used to fund militant proxies across the Middle East. He has repeatedly criticized former President Obama for what he calls “bribing” Iran with billions in sanctions relief.

    Jacob Olidort, chief research officer at the pro-Trump America First Policy Institute, argues Trump was justified in pulling out of the deal. “All of these issues were completely pushed to the sidelines, completely deprioritised and not included in the arrangement,” Olidort told BBC Verify. He also pointed to the JCPOA’s so-called sunset clauses, which saw many core limits on enrichment expire after 15 years, arguing the deal would have eventually allowed Iran to expand its program openly.

    Ashton rejects these criticisms, noting the JCPOA was designed to solve the most urgent problem: eliminating the immediate risk of an Iranian nuclear weapon. “There was always a criticism that we should have covered all kind of things. But the critical question was, ‘Could we prevent any fear that Iran was going to build a nuclear weapon?’ And we did that,” she said. “There was plenty of opportunity afterwards to talk about other issues, ballistic missiles, drones etc. And indeed the Trump administration in its first term could have done that. If President Trump felt that the deal was inadequate, then the answer was to build on it, not to rip it up.”

    Davenport also notes that while some core limits were set to expire in 2031, many critical provisions — including permanent IAEA monitoring and safeguards — would have remained in place, ensuring any move toward a nuclear weapon would be detected quickly. Sanctions relief, Ashton added, was a necessary quid pro quo: “If you sanction someone because they’re doing some behaviour and they change the behaviour, then by definition the sanction cannot stay.”

    After the US withdrawal, Iran began gradually expanding its enrichment program, steadily increasing its stockpile of medium-enriched uranium. By June 2025, when the US and Israel launched preemptive strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities, the IAEA estimated Iran held 440.9kg (972lbs) of uranium enriched to 60% purity — just a short technical step away from 90% weapons-grade material.

    The strikes, US officials have said, significantly set back Iran’s ability to build a nuclear weapon, destroying much of its enrichment infrastructure. Since the war began in February 2026, IAEA inspectors have been unable to access most of Iran’s key nuclear sites, including the underground tunnels at Isfahan where IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi estimated in April that roughly 200kg of 60% enriched uranium is stored. “We haven’t been able to inspect or to reject that the material is there and that the seals – the IAEA seals – remain there,” Grossi told the Associated Press, adding the watchdog also demands access to sites at Natanz and Fordo.

    Trump has already claimed any new deal he negotiates will be “far better” than the 2015 JCPOA. While the full terms of the emerging agreement remain undisclosed, experts say the outline is already taking shape. Davenport notes that Iran will never agree to a deal without significant sanctions relief and access to its frozen overseas assets, a demand that puts Trump in a difficult position given his longstanding criticism of the JCPOA’s sanctions relief provisions.

    Trump will likely seek to frame the deal as a historic breakthrough that secured concessions Obama never could, Davenport said, likely pointing to the permanent removal of Iran’s existing enriched uranium stockpiles and a multi-year suspension of enrichment activities. She also notes that direct comparisons to the JCPOA are largely unfair: after the 2025 US-Israeli strikes, Iran’s nuclear program is far smaller and less advanced than it was in 2015, a fact that changes the entire negotiation dynamic.

    Olidort argues the US is negotiating from a position of unprecedented strength, noting Iran’s military capabilities have been badly damaged by the war and its regional proxy network has been significantly weakened. Any deal, he said, will be far stronger than the original JCPOA.

    Still, former negotiator Ashton warns that military pressure alone cannot produce a lasting, sustainable agreement. “All I can say is in my experience, the way that negotiations work is that people have to feel that they’ve got enough to make it worthwhile participating in that negotiation,” she said. As both sides work to finalize technical details in the coming days, the world awaits what could be a pivotal shift in Middle Eastern security.

  • Trump’s name being removed from Kennedy Center after judge order

    Trump’s name being removed from Kennedy Center after judge order

    One day after a federal court’s ordered deadline for removal passed, construction crews have started taking former U.S. President Donald Trump’s name off the exterior facade of Washington DC’s iconic John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. The process follows a weeks-long legal battle over the controversial addition of Trump’s name to the national cultural landmark, which is permanently enshrined by federal law as a memorial to assassinated 35th President John F. Kennedy.

    In late May, U.S. District Court Judge Christopher Cooper issued a landmark ruling that declared the addition of Trump’s name to the venue unlawful. The judge found that no federal statute grants the executive branch authority to rename a congressionally designated memorial without explicit approval from Congress, and he ordered the name to be fully removed by Friday, June 12.

    Crews first moved into place on the afternoon of June 12, assembling large scaffolding along the Kennedy Center’s front facade as curious onlookers gathered throughout the evening to watch the preparations. However, severe thunderstorms rolling through the DC area forced work to be halted overnight, pushing the start of actual letter removal to early Saturday morning. By the time work resumed Saturday, crews draped long opaque plastic sheeting along the structure to obscure the removal process from public view while the work proceeded.

    Ahead of the scheduled removal, the Trump administration mounted a last-ditch legal effort to pause the court’s order and delay the work indefinitely. Judge Cooper rejected this emergency request outright, clearing the path for crews to proceed with the deconstruction. A subsequent appeal to the federal appeals court also failed, with justices declining to issue an emergency stay to block the removal pending future legal arguments over the case.

    The entire legal dispute grows out of a sweeping power grab Trump executed at the Kennedy Center shortly after he began his second term. In February 2025, Trump replaced multiple existing sitting members of the Kennedy Center’s board of trustees, installed himself as a new trustee, and then arranged to be elected chairman of the institution’s governing body. Later that year, as part of a broader series of rebranding changes across Washington DC’s federal landmarks, Trump formally announced his decision to add his own name to the Kennedy Center’s exterior.

    Throughout the legal proceedings, the Trump administration defended the name addition, arguing that reversing the change would create unnecessary public confusion if the court’s ruling were eventually overturned on appeal. On the ground Friday, as scaffolding went up, some gathered onlookers openly supported the removal, chanting “take it down” as crews prepared the site, according to CBS News, the US-based news partner of the BBC.

  • Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney begins two-day visit to Ireland

    Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney begins two-day visit to Ireland

    Eight years after former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s last official bilateral trip to the Republic of Ireland, current Prime Minister Mark Carney has touched down in Dublin for a landmark two-day visit that aims to deepen political, economic and people-to-people ties between the two North Atlantic nations.

    Carney and his wife Diana Fox Carney arrived at Dublin Airport shortly after 10 a.m. local time on Saturday, where they were formally welcomed by Irish Taoiseach Micheál Martin. Gardaí, Ireland’s national police service, has noted that any traffic disruptions tied to the visit will be confined to small local areas and kept minimal, though temporary rolling road closures will be implemented across Saturday to accommodate the visit’s itinerary and required security escorts.

    At a joint press briefing held at Dublin’s Government Buildings following their opening meeting, Martin extended a warm, nationwide welcome to the Canadian leader, noting his deep Irish roots. “I know I speak for the people of Mayo, and indeed for the Irish people more broadly, when I say that we are deeply honoured to welcome him back,” Martin said, framing the visit as a unique chance to celebrate and reinforce the longstanding bond between Ireland and Canada.

    Responding to the welcome, Carney expressed gratitude for the hospitality, calling the trip a personal and professional milestone. “It is a true pleasure to return to Dublin, and an honour to be the first Canadian prime minister in a decade to be making an official visit here,” he said.

    Beyond ceremonial welcomes, the core policy focus of the visit is the adoption of a new framework for strategic and economic partnership between the two countries. The Irish government confirmed the agreement will expand collaboration across a range of high-priority sectors, including bilateral trade and investment, life sciences, academic research and innovation, and security and defense cooperation.

    Economic data released ahead of the meeting shows that bilateral ties have already expanded dramatically in recent years. Total two-way trade in goods and services between Ireland and Canada jumped from €3.2 billion (£2.76 billion) in 2016 to more than €12 billion (£10.35 billion) in 2024. Canadian direct investment in Ireland has grown 131% over the same period, and Ireland currently ranks as Canada’s eighth-largest foreign investor globally.

    On Saturday evening, Carney will be the guest of honor at an official dinner hosted at Dublin’s historic Dublin Castle, before traveling to Trinity College Dublin on Sunday to deliver a public address. The visit also carries deep personal meaning for Carney, who traces his heritage to Ireland. On the second day of the trip, he will travel west to County Mayo, to visit Aghagower, the small village where his paternal grandparents lived before emigrating to Canada more than a century ago.

    While in Aghagower, Carney will attend Mass at the local parish church and tour the nearby village cemetery, where multiple generations of his ancestors are buried. He also has a second set of grandparents with roots in County Cavan. After his visit to the ancestral village, Carney will travel to nearby Westport to meet with Irish President Catherine Connolly to wrap up his official trip.

  • Surrounded by Knicks fever, Spurs fans in New York need to celebrate, too

    Surrounded by Knicks fever, Spurs fans in New York need to celebrate, too

    As New York City buzzes with unprecedented excitement ahead of tonight’s decisive Game 5 of the NBA Finals between the New York Knicks and San Antonio Spurs, local Spurs supporters find themselves navigating a city swept up in overwhelming Knicks championship fever — and a small group of local venues are stepping up to create welcoming, safe spaces for outnumbered Texas fans.

    The matchup carries historic stakes for the Knicks: a win tonight in the best-of-seven series would hand the franchise its first NBA championship in more than 50 years, a milestone that has sent the city’s already rabid fanbase into a frenzy. But for transplants and lifelong San Antonio supporters who call New York home, that intense local passion has turned hostile in isolated, alarming cases. Local media reports have documented multiple assaults on Spurs fans in the city, including one incident that left a fan hospitalized and another attack on a fast food employee who wore a Spurs jersey to work.

    Amid this tension, Manhattan’s Yellow Rose, a Texas-themed restaurant owned by San Antonio native Dave Rizo, has emerged as a quiet refuge for local Spurs fans. Decorated with a cardboard cutout of Spurs star Victor Wembanyama, an official Spurs team flag, a hand-painted fan banner, and a signed greeting from Spurs owner Peter Holt, the restaurant has opened its doors to stream every Finals game for supporters, while intentionally keeping the atmosphere low-key to avoid stoking conflict. “I don’t want to unintentionally add more fuel to any of the fire that’s going on,” Rizo explained to the BBC. “I want this to be a safe space for people that are Spurs fans. Spurs fans that live in New York City are just as much part of the city as anyone else.”

    Rizo, who has lived in New York for a decade, got a first-hand taste of the hostility facing visible Spurs fans when he walked around Manhattan in a Spurs jersey ahead of Game 3. Multiple passersby stopped to warn him he was putting himself at risk, commenting on how “bold” his choice of clothing was. At the time, he brushed off the warnings, but seeing reports of harassment and violence against fellow fans on social media left him disheartened. Still, the lifelong Spurs fan who now calls New York home remains upbeat: even if the Knicks take the title tonight, he says, “Either way, I win.”

    Both teams’ top players have publicly condemned the fan violence and harassment, calling for respectful competition between supporters. Spurs phenom Victor Wembanyama emphasized at a recent press conference that the game should stay on the court. “We’re just playing a game out there. And I’m all for passion, but with respect for each other. It’s unacceptable,” he said. Knicks star Karl-Anthony Towns echoed that call, urging fans to “leave the physicality to everyone on the court.”

    Across the city, other venues have worked to foster unity between opposing fanbases, showing that friendly coexistence is possible even amid the high stakes of a championship race. At Manhattan’s Whiskey Tavern, which has drawn packed crowds on every Finals game night, manager Alex told the BBC the bar has hosted a healthy mix of both Knicks and Spurs fans, with zero reported clashes between the groups. “It’s fun, it’s good energy. Everybody’s here just having a good time and celebrating either team. It is definitely heavily mixed,” Alex said, adding that she has even seen Knicks fans reserve seats for attending Spurs fans. “It’s all just people here together.”

    Other spots lean into their preference for the Spurs while still welcoming all comers. Brooklyn cocktail bar Doris, for example, rebranded as a makeshift Finals sports bar when the series began, openly advertising its support for San Antonio while still extending an invite to fans of any team. Its Instagram page features photos of Texas’ iconic Lone Star Beer, highlights a Manu Ginobili jersey that has hung on the wall since 2013, and proclaims “GO SPURS GO” in bold all caps, with a playful addendum: “Doris loves the Knicks, too! We just LOVE the SPURS more!”

    As tip-off for the most consequential game of the season approaches, New York remains divided: swept up in a historic, city-wide celebration of the Knicks’ underdog run, but also holding space for the small, passionate community of Spurs fans who call the five boroughs home.

  • Ghana government wants review of Partey Canada ban

    Ghana government wants review of Partey Canada ban

    Ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup group stage, a diplomatic dispute has erupted over Canada’s decision to bar Ghanaian international midfielder Thomas Partey from entering the country, a move that has already forced the 32-year-old to miss Ghana’s opening Group L clash against Panama in Toronto this Wednesday.

    Partey, who recently left Arsenal for Villarreal in August 2025 following the expiration of his contract with the Premier League side, currently faces pending criminal proceedings in the United Kingdom linked to allegations from four women. The former Arsenal anchorman has entered a plea of not guilty to seven counts of rape and one count of sexual assault, which date back to incidents alleged between 2020 and 2022. His trial is scheduled to begin in 2026, and he has not been convicted of any wrongdoing to date.

    The Ghanaian government has publicly denounced the Canadian entry ban as “high-handed and extremely unfair”, and has launched active diplomatic negotiations with Canadian authorities in a bid to overturn the controversial decision. In an official statement, the government emphasized that Canada’s ruling is rooted solely in unproven pending criminal charges that have not resulted in a conviction, reaffirming its commitment to the core legal principle of presumption of innocence, a foundational standard of global justice systems. The statement added that Ghana will exhaust all available legal and diplomatic remedies to ensure a fair and full review of all facts related to Partey’s case.

    Current Canadian immigration regulations explicitly state that foreign nationals with pending or past criminal convictions may be deemed inadmissible to enter the country. However, the situation stands in stark contrast to the United States’ treatment of Partey: U.S. Customs and Border Protection confirmed that while the agency is aware of the pending UK case, Partey was granted a U.S. visa and admitted to the country without issue. He currently remains at Ghana’s pre-tournament training camp based in Boston, Massachusetts.

    Ghana’s subsequent group stage matches against England on June 23 at Boston Stadium in Foxborough and Croatia on June 27 are both hosted in the U.S., meaning Partey will be eligible to feature in those fixtures if selected by head coach Carlos Queiroz. Queiroz previously expressed full confidence in his decision to call up Partey ahead of the tournament, dismissing any concerns over the pending case. If Ghana finishes second in Group L, they would advance to the round of 32, where a potential knockout match could be held in Canada – a outcome that would reignite the entry ban dispute if Partey is part of the squad.

    BBC Sport has reached out to the Ghana Football Association for additional comment on the situation, but has not yet received a response.

  • Switzerland to vote on plan to cap population at 10 million

    Switzerland to vote on plan to cap population at 10 million

    This Sunday, Swiss voters will head to the ballot box to decide on one of the most divisive policy proposals in the Alpine nation’s recent history: a nationwide initiative to cap the country’s total population at 10 million by 2050, a vote that has laid bare deep national rifts over immigration, economic stability and Switzerland’s relationship with the European Union.

    The proposal, branded the “sustainability initiative” by its backer, the right-wing Swiss People’s Party (SVP), frames population caps as a solution to growing public strains. The country’s population has surged from 7.3 million in 2002 to 9.1 million today, with 27% of current residents born abroad. SVP supporters argue that unregulated immigration has directly driven a national housing shortage, overcrowded transit networks, overburdened public schools, and strained social and health services. Limiting population growth, they claim, will preserve Switzerland’s unique quality of life for current and future generations.

    Opponents from across the political spectrum, including the Swiss federal government, business associations, trade unions, and left-leaning parties, have dismissed the plan as a dangerous “chaos initiative” that threatens Switzerland’s economic prosperity and global standing. Under the proposal, once the population hits 9.5 million, the government would be required to implement strict restrictions, including cutting asylum acceptances and ending family reunification rights for foreign workers. If the 10 million cap is reached, Switzerland would be forced to withdraw from existing international agreements, most notably the EU’s free movement of people accord.

    For business leaders, that prospect carries severe risks. Switzerland’s economy, particularly its critical hospitality and healthcare sectors, relies heavily on immigrant labor: half of all hotel workers in the country are foreign-born, and hospitals and care facilities depend on overseas staff to address persistent labor gaps. Economiesuisse, Switzerland’s leading business association, warns that ending free movement of people would jeopardize Switzerland’s access to the EU single market — its largest trading partner by far. EU officials have repeatedly made clear that non-member states cannot cherry-pick single market benefits while rejecting core commitments like free movement, raising the specter of trade barriers and economic disruption.

    Demographic experts and opponents also argue the plan ignores Switzerland’s pressing aging population crisis: roughly 20% of Swiss residents are currently over 65, and the country requires a steady inflow of young working immigrants to fund pension systems and staff care services for the elderly.

    The referendum is made possible by Switzerland’s iconic direct democracy system, which allows any initiative to go to a national ballot if organizers collect 100,000 valid signatures. For many undecided voters, the core question remains how exactly a hard population cap — a policy never attempted by any other modern nation, outside of China’s now-discarded one-child policy aimed at slowing birth rates — would function in practice.

    Recent polling points to an extraordinarily tight race, with opponents holding a wafer-thin 52% to 45% lead, though pollsters note a large share of voters remain undecided. The national divide is illustrated by two young politicians from Bern, both from immigrant backgrounds, who hold diametrically opposed views on the initiative. Twenty-nine-year-old Nils Fiechter, an SVP member of the Bern cantonal parliament who holds dual Swiss-Canadian citizenship, argues unchecked immigration is eroding Switzerland’s national identity. “Unchecked immigration is leading to Switzerland no longer being Switzerland,” he says, framing the initiative as a push to protect the country’s prosperous, safe way of life for all residents, regardless of background.

    Thirty-one-year-old Helin Genis, a Social Democrat on the Bern city council whose parents immigrated from Turkey, calls the SVP’s arguments blatant scapegoating. “It is not migrants who determine rent levels. It is not migrants who raise health insurance premiums. Nor is it migrants who make political decisions on housing, infrastructure or social investment,” she explains. “Viewing problems through the lens of migration does not lead to solutions, but to division.” Genis argues the real policy challenge is expanding affordable housing and strengthening public services, not excluding new residents.

    As voting day approaches, fears of international isolation have become a central argument for the no campaign. Amid heightened global geopolitical uncertainty — from the war in Ukraine to ongoing trade tensions with the United States that have already left 15% punitive tariffs on Swiss goods unresolved — anti-initiative posters have adopted a striking visual to drive home their message: the posters feature U.S. President Donald Trump with the silhouettes of Russian leader Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping behind him, with the headline: “Break with Europe, at a time like this?”

    While SVP supporters dismiss warnings of EU retaliation as fearmongering, arguing existing trade agreements benefit the bloc as much as Switzerland, the threat of broken ties and international isolation could prove the deciding factor for swing voters. As the country heads to the polls, all sides agree the outcome of this unprecedented referendum will shape Switzerland’s demographic, economic and political trajectory for decades to come.

  • Ukrainian drone strike kills 1 in southern Russia and triggers fire at sea terminal

    Ukrainian drone strike kills 1 in southern Russia and triggers fire at sea terminal

    As the long-stagnant front line of the Russia-Ukraine war continues to lock both sides into costly positional conflict, Kyiv has intensified its cross-border long-range strike campaign targeting Russian military and energy infrastructure deep behind enemy lines. The latest incident unfolded Saturday in Russia’s southern Krasnodar region, where local officials confirmed a Ukrainian drone strike left one civilian dead and three others injured.

    Krasnodar Governor Veniamin Kondratyev reported that falling drone debris ignited a blaze at a coastal terminal facility. While the governor did not release specific details about the site’s function, Russian independent news outlets confirmed the damaged terminal is located in the village of Volna, a key Black Sea hub that handles exports of crude oil, petroleum products and liquefied natural gas.

    Ukraine’s General Staff has not issued an official confirmation or comment on the Krasnodar strike, but the military body did acknowledge overnight long-range operations targeting multiple sites. It confirmed successful strikes on an oil processing and pumping station in Russia’s Volgograd region, in addition to military targets in Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk and southern Zaporizhzhia regions.

    The weekend strike marks the latest progression of Kyiv’s expanding deep-strike strategy, which Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy publicly acknowledged earlier this week. Zelenskyy announced Wednesday that Ukrainian forces had used domestically produced FP-5 Flamingo long-range missiles to hit a key military manufacturing facility in Cheboksary, located in Russia’s Chuvashiya region more than 900 kilometers from the active front line. The facility, Zelenskyy noted, produces critical components for Russian attack drones and cruise missiles used in regular strikes against Ukrainian infrastructure.

    More than four years after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the roughly 1,000-kilometer front line has remained largely static. Dense drone usage from both sides has effectively repelled large-scale ground advances, leading both militaries to shift increasingly to long-range strike operations to disrupt the opponent’s logistics, supply chains and critical infrastructure.

    The latest wave of Ukrainian strikes comes just one week after high-profile attacks that damaged an oil terminal in St. Petersburg and struck a nearby Russian naval base. Those attacks occurred during a major Kremlin-hosted economic forum in Putin’s hometown, creating an embarrassing public setback for the Russian leader. In response, Putin publicly pledged to bolster Russia’s nationwide air defense network to intercept more incoming long-range weapons and drones.

    The escalation of cross-border attacks was not limited to Ukraine on Saturday: Ukrainian regional authorities reported that Russian strikes targeting the southern Dnipropetrovsk region left nine people injured. Regional governor Oleksandr Hanzha wrote in a Telegram post that Russian forces launched more than 20 separate attacks across three districts of the region, using both attack drones and aerial bombs. The strikes ignited a large fire at a local public marketplace, and six of the injured people were hospitalized for treatment, including one man in critical condition, Hanzha added.

    The Associated Press continues to provide ongoing full coverage of the Russia-Ukraine war, with additional reporting available at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine.

  • New Zealand adds Will Young to test squad after Kane Williamson retires from international duty

    New Zealand adds Will Young to test squad after Kane Williamson retires from international duty

    In a sudden announcement that has sent ripples through the international cricket community, star New Zealand batsman Kane Williamson has brought an end to his decorated international career, stepping away from the game with immediate effect during an ongoing test series against England in the United Kingdom. The 35-year-old’s retirement came on Friday, just days after he took the field in the Lord’s test match where New Zealand fell to a defeat, with Williamson managing scores of zero and 18 across the two innings of the encounter.

    Following the match at Lord’s, Williamson had already withdrawn himself from the remaining fixtures of the three-match series, ahead of the third test that is scheduled to get underway at London’s iconic Oval cricket ground this coming Wednesday. Moving quickly to fill the gap left by Williamson’s unexpected departure, New Zealand Cricket confirmed on Saturday that uncapped call-up Will Young has been added to the side’s test squad for the final two matches of the series.

    Young is set to complete his travel to the United Kingdom, with an expected arrival in Britain scheduled for Sunday, where he will link up with the rest of the New Zealand squad ahead of the upcoming matches against England. Williamson’s retirement mid-series marks an unexpected end to a decades-long international career that cemented his status as one of modern cricket’s greatest batsmen and most respected team leaders.

  • Hundreds march in Kathmandu for Nepal’s Pride Month

    Hundreds march in Kathmandu for Nepal’s Pride Month

    Hundreds of LGBTQ+ activists, community members and allied supporters filled the streets of Nepal’s capital Kathmandu Saturday, marking Pride Month with a public demonstration of visibility and celebration amid a wave of incremental but groundbreaking legal and political wins for queer rights in the South Asian nation.

    Unlike many regional neighbors where gender and sexual minority rights remain heavily restricted or criminalized, Nepal has emerged as a surprising trailblazer for LGBTQ+ inclusion in Asia over the past 15 years. The nation’s progress traces back to a landmark 2007 Supreme Court ruling that mandated the government implement policy reforms to protect non-cisgender and queer citizens from discrimination. That ruling laid the legal groundwork for one of South Asia’s most progressive gender identification policies, which today allows people who do not fit within the traditional binary of male or female to select a dedicated “third gender” category on official government documents, including passports.

    That momentum was codified into national law with the adoption of Nepal’s 2015 constitution, which included an explicit ban on discrimination based on sexual orientation — a protection that put Nepal far ahead of most other Asian nations. More recently, the country solidified its status as a regional leader by becoming one of the first Asian countries to formally legalize same-sex marriage, a move that drew international attention as a milestone for queer rights in the region.

    The most recent step forward came following the general election held this past March, which brought Prime Minister Balendra Shah’s government to power. In a historic move for the nation, the new administration launched a dedicated cabinet-level department: the Ministry of Women, Children, Gender and Sexual Minorities and Social Security. This marks the first time Nepal has created a standalone government body specifically tasked with addressing policy and social issues affecting women and sexual minority groups, a shift that community leaders frame as a critical step toward embedding LGBTQ+ needs into national governance.

    Saturday’s Pride march was both a celebration of how far Nepal has come and a public affirmation of the growing visibility of the country’s queer community, which continues to build on the legal wins of the past 15 years to push for broader social acceptance and full equal rights.

  • Rain showers delay the start of the first India-Afghanistan one-day cricket match

    Rain showers delay the start of the first India-Afghanistan one-day cricket match

    Saturday’s highly anticipated opening fixture of the first-ever bilateral one-day international cricket series between India and Afghanistan in Dharamshala faced an early setback, as persistent inclement rain forced officials to push back both the pre-match coin toss and the game’s starting time.

    This three-match series marks a historic milestone for both cricketing nations, as it is the first time they have faced off in a standalone bilateral ODI arrangement. Prior to this series, the two sides only clashed in the 50-over format during top global and regional competitions: the ICC Cricket World Cup and the ACC Asia Cup. Across their four previous ODI meetings, India has claimed victory in three contests, while the fourth ended in a rare tied result.

    Heading into the opening match of the new series, the two teams bring contrasting recent run of forms to the pitch. India has struggled for consistency in its most recent 50-over outings, dropping three of its last five ODI matches. In sharp contrast, Afghanistan has built strong momentum ahead of the series, securing wins in four consecutive ODI fixtures ahead of Saturday’s game. This meeting comes just one week after India dominated Afghanistan in a one-off test match, sealing a massive innings-and-300-run victory inside just three days of play.

    The series is scheduled to continue after the Dharamshala opener, with the second ODI set to take place in Lucknow this coming Wednesday. The third and final match of the three-game series will be hosted in Chennai on June 20, wrapping up the historic first bilateral ODI contest between the two nations.