Vatican body urges compensation for abused minors, action against priests
Black voters grapple with US electoral power – and the temptation of Trump
Is Cooking on a Gas Stove Affecting the Air Quality in Your Home? Here’s What Experts Say – EatingWell
- Is Cooking on a Gas Stove Affecting the Air Quality in Your Home? Here's What Experts Say EatingWell
- How Bad Are Gas Stoves for My Health? The New York Times
- Gas Stoves Linked to 40,000 Premature Deaths in Europe Annually Bloomberg
- Pollutants from gas stoves kill 40,000 Europeans each year, report finds The Guardian
- New paper proposes policy solutions to address critical health impacts of gas cooking European Public Health Alliance
Vatican Issues First Report on Sex Abuse, to Immediate Criticism – The New York Times
- Vatican Issues First Report on Sex Abuse, to Immediate Criticism The New York Times
- Catholic Church still failing to ensure clerical abuse is reported, Pope Francis’ commission says CNN
- Vatican’s first report on clergy sex abuse, by panel led by Boston’s Cardinal O’Malley, is met with criticism The Boston Globe
- Protecting Minors Commission presents Annual Report in Vatican Vatican News - English
- Pope’s abuse watchdog panel urges transparency, streamlining in Roman Curia Crux Now
Sri Lanka’s Arugam Bay in shock after terror threat to Israeli tourists
Israeli travellers told to evacuate area immediately as police set up patrols and roadblocks
The golden sands of Sri Lanka’s Arugam Bay are usually carefree, a place for tourists to surf the famous break and relax on the beach.
But last week, the slow rhythm of the bay was dealt a shock. The US embassy, followed up by Sri Lankan police and Israel’s national security council, warned of a serious terrorist threat in the area. Israeli travellers were believed to be the intended target of a planned attack and were told to evacuate immediately. Hundreds of police and senior intelligence officials descended on the small coastal town, setting up patrols and road blocks.
Continue reading...North Korean troops in Russia: How will it impact the Ukraine war?
It’s raining bombs in a city by the sea
Racist jokes about Puerto Rico at rally bring anger and disgust: ‘Truly how the Trump party sees us’
Tony Hinchcliffe’s series of racist jokes at Donald Trump’s rally on Sunday were widely condemned
Some Americans, particularly those of Puerto Rican descent, said that the racist remarks aired at Donald Trump’s Sunday night rally at Madison Square Garden in New York helped them decide who to vote for.
The speaker and comedian Tony Hinchcliffe took aim at Puerto Rico, in a series of racist jokes including one in which he called it “a floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean”.
Continue reading...Why are people boycotting Apple’s new iPhone 16?
Fireworks store fires in India set off huge explosions
Bacha Khan: Defying an Empire
Lost Maya city with temple pyramids and plazas discovered in Mexico
Archaeologists draw on laser mapping to find city they have named Valeriana, thought to have been founded pre-AD150
After swapping machetes and binoculars for computer screens and laser mapping, a team of researchers have stumbled on a lost Maya city of temple pyramids, enclosed plazas and a reservoir, all of which had been hidden for centuries by the Mexican jungle.
The discovery in the south-eastern Mexican state of Campeche came about after Luke Auld-Thomas, an anthropologist at Northern Arizona University, began wondering whether non-archaeological uses of the state-of-the-art laser mapping known as lidar could help shed light on the Maya world.
Continue reading...Puerto Rico Republican chair demands Trump apology for rally’s racist remarks
Angel M Cintrón, party’s chair on island, says he will not vote for Trump unless he says sorry for speaker’s comments
The president of the Republican party’s branch in Puerto Rico has said he will not vote for Donald Trump unless he apologises for racist remarks made at his rally referring to the US island territory as a “floating island of garbage”.
Outrage even among fellow Republicans is continuing to mount after the racist insult at the Republican nominee’s rally at New York’s Madison Square Garden on Sunday, with the podcaster Tony Hinchcliffe coming under fire for his inflammatory comments made about Puerto Rico in the opening speech.
Continue reading...Could Puerto Rican voters hurt Trump in US election after jibe at rally?
How this US election could change state of the world – BBC.com
- How this US election could change state of the world BBC.com
- A Contested U.S. Election Would Mean Global Instability Foreign Policy
- If Trump wins the election, this is what’s at stake for US foreign policy The Guardian US
- Video: National Security Experts Say Harris and Trump Both Fail to Inspire Confidence The Dispatch
- Breakingviews - How the US election affects the rest of the world: podcast Reuters
Georgia to run partial recount amid claims of election fraud
NHS will not be turned around in one budget, says Wes Streeting – UK politics live
Health secretary says measures to be announced on Wednesday would ‘arrest the decline’ amid significant NHS reform
Kemi Badenoch, who is the bookies’ favourite to be the next Conservative leader, has told Times Radio that the contest is poised “neck and neck”.
Interviewed by Kate McCann, Badenoch told listeners:
People are tired of the party looking like it is not out working for the people out there. That is what I want to bring: integrity, and a focus on conviction and conservative values.
There is something very significant that is going on, we are picking a leader of the opposition. People have a choice.
This is a sacrifice, because I worry about the direction of the country.
I worry about a lot of decisions we make, and us not being honest with the public about the serious trade-offs that are going to be required, and not saying enough about how the world is becoming a more dangerous place.
Continue reading...Middle East crisis: US concerned by ‘horrifying’ Israeli airstrike that killed at least 93 civilians, including 20 children, in Gaza – as it happened
This live blog is now closed. For the latest on the Middle East, read more coverage here.
Al Jazeera has spoken with the director-general of the Gaza government’s media office, Ismail al-Thawabta, who has said at least 93 people were killed in the Israeli airstrike on northern Gaza’s town of Beit Lahiya. Gaza’s health ministry said earlier today that 60 people were killed in the strike this morning, which hit a residential building housing displaced civilians. Al-Thawabta said that the building Israel attacked housed 200 people. Dozens of people are reported missing and 150 others estimated to be injured. Medics said 20 children were among the dead.
Many of those injured have been rushed to nearby Kamal Adwan hospital inside the Jabalia refugee camp. But the hospital is struggling to treat them as it reportedly has run out of medical supplies and only has two paediatric doctors, with no surgeons. Israeli forces detained dozens of medical staff at the hospital days ago. Dr Hossam Abu Safiya, director of the hospital, told Al Jazeera on Friday that most of the surgeons had been arrested by Israeli troops, meaning urgent surgeries could not be performed.
The UAV (drone) force of the Yemeni Armed Forces carried out a specific military operation targeting the industrial zone of the Israeli enemy in the Ashkelon region.
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