Author: Agencies

  • Israel Hits Iran Nuclear Facilities, Missile Factories; Tehran Launches Drones

    Israel Hits Iran Nuclear Facilities, Missile Factories; Tehran Launches Drones

    (Reuters) – Israel launched widescale strikes against Iran on Friday, saying it targeted nuclear facilities, ballistic missile factories and military commanders and that this was the start of a prolonged operation to prevent Tehran from building an atomic weapon.

    Iran had launched about 100 drones towards Israeli territory in retaliation, which Israel is working to intercept, Israeli military spokesman Brigadier General Effie Defrin said.

    Iranian media and witnesses reported explosions including at the country’s main uranium enrichment facility at Natanz, while Israel declared a state of emergency in anticipation of retaliatory missile and drone strikes.

    Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards corps said its top commander, Hossein Salami, was killed and state media reported the unit’s headquarters in Tehran had been hit. Several children had been killed in a strike on a residential area in the capital, it said.

    “We are at a decisive moment in Israel’s history,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a recorded video message.

    “Moments ago Israel launched Operation Rising Lion, a targeted military operation to roll back the Iranian threat to Israel’s very survival. This operation will continue for as many days as it takes to remove this threat.”

    Defrin said 200 Israeli fighter jets took part in the strikes, hitting more than 100 targets in Iran.

    Israel could now confirm that the chief of staff of the Iranian Armed Forces, the commander of the Revolutionary Guards and the commander of Iran’s Emergency Command were all killed in the strikes across Iran, he told an online briefing.

    Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a statement that Israel had “unleashed its wicked and bloody” hand in a crime against Iran and that it would receive “a bitter fate for itself”.

    Airlines cleared out of the airspace over Israel, Iran and Iraq and Jordan on Friday after the Israelis strikes, Flightradar24 data showed, with carriers scrambling to divert and cancel flights to keep passengers and crew safe.

    An Israeli military official said Israel was striking “dozens” of nuclear and military targets including the facility at Natanz in central Iran. The official said Iran had enough material to make 15 nuclear bombs within days.

    The United States said it had no part in the operation, which raises the risk of a fresh escalation in tensions in the Middle East, a major oil producing region.

    Alongside extensive air strikes, Israel’s Mossad spy agency led a series of covert sabotage operations inside Iran, Axios reported, citing a senior Israeli official. These operations were aimed at damaging Iran’s strategic missile sites and its air defence capabilities.

    Iranian state media reported that at least two nuclear scientists, Fereydoun Abbasi and Mohammad Mehdi Tehranchi were killed in Israeli strikes in Tehran.

    The National Iranian Oil Refining and Distribution Company said the country’s oil refining and storage facilities did not sustain damages and their activities were ongoing.

    Iran closed its airspace and Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion Airport was closed until further notice.

    Israeli military Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir said tens of thousands of soldiers had been called up and “prepared across all borders”.

    “We are amidst a historic campaign unlike any other. This is a critical operation to prevent an existential threat, by an enemy who is intent on destroying us,” he said.

    Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar was holding a “marathon of calls” with counterparts around the world regarding Israel’s attack on Iran, the foreign ministry said in a statement.

    TALKS WITH IRAN

    U.S. President Donald Trump said that Iran cannot have a nuclear bomb and that the United States was hoping to get back to the negotiating table, in an interview with Fox News after the start of the Israeli air strikes on Iran.

    “We will see,” Fox News reporter Jennifer Griffin quoted Trump as saying in a post on X.

    U.S. officials have repeatedly said that any new nuclear deal with Iran – to replace a failed 2015 accord between Tehran and six world powers – must include a commitment to scrap enrichment, viewed as a potential pathway to developing nuclear bombs.

    The Islamic Republic has repeatedly denied such intentions, saying it wants nuclear energy only for civilian purposes, and has publicly rejected Washington’s demand to scrap enrichment as an attack on its national sovereignty.

    Iran’s government said in a statement that Israel’s “cowardly” attack shows why Tehran insists on enrichment, nuclear technology and missile power.

    Trump would convene a meeting of the National Security Council on Friday morning, the White House said. He had said on Thursday an Israeli strike on Iran “could very well happen” but reiterated his hopes for a peaceful resolution.

    The U.S. military is planning for the full range of contingencies in the Middle East, including the possibility that it might have to help evacuate American civilians, a U.S. official told Reuters.

    Iran’s armed forces spokesperson said Israel and its chief ally the United States would pay a “heavy price” for the attack, accusing Washington of providing support for the operation.

    While the U.S. tried to distance itself from Israel’s military operation, an Israeli official told public broadcaster Kan that Israel had coordinated with Washington on Iran.

    U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the United States was not involved in the strikes and Tel Aviv had acted unilaterally for self-defence.

    “Let me be clear: Iran should not target U.S. interests or personnel,” he said.

    The attacks triggered sharp falls in stock prices in Asian trade on Friday, led by a selloff in U.S. futures, while oil prices jumped as investors scurried to safe havens such as gold and the Swiss franc.

    U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned any military escalation in the Middle East, said deputy U.N. spokesperson Farhan Haq.

    “The Secretary-General asks both sides to show maximum restraint, avoiding at all costs a descent into deeper conflict, a situation that the region can hardly afford,” Haq said.

    NUCLEAR TALKS

    U.S. and Iranian officials were scheduled to hold a sixth round of talks on Tehran’s escalating uranium enrichment programme in Oman on Sunday, according to officials from both countries and their Omani mediators.

    A U.S. official said those talks were still scheduled to proceed despite the Israeli attack.

    The Israeli military said on Friday that it was forced to act based on new intelligence information showing that Iran was “approaching the point of no return” in the development of a nuclear weapon.

    A source familiar with U.S. intelligence reports said there had been no recent change in the U.S. intelligence assessment that Iran was not building a nuclear weapon and that Khamenei had not authorised the restarting of the nuclear weapons programme that was shuttered in 2003.

  • One Survivor Confirmed in The Air India Fatal Plane Crash With 242 People on Board‬

    One Survivor Confirmed in The Air India Fatal Plane Crash With 242 People on Board‬

    ‪A man survived the Air India crash that killed at least 200 people, a police chief has told an Indian news agency.

    Ahmedabad Police Commissioner GS Malik told ANI there was one survivor who was in seat 11A on the London-bound Boeing 787-8 flight.

    The flight manifest shared by authorities said the passenger in that seat was British national Vishwash Kumar Ramesh.

    Indian media said they had spoken to Mr Ramesh in hospital and reported him saying: “Thirty seconds after take-off, there was a loud noise and then the plane crashed. It all happened so quickly.”

    Indian media said he shared his boarding pass which showed his name and seat number.

    Commissioner Malik told ANI the survivor “has been in the hospital and is under treatment”.

    There were 169 Indian nationals, 53 Britons, seven Portuguese nationals and one Canadian on the Gatwick Airport-bound flight, Air India said.

    The plane crashed into accommodation used by doctors less than a minute after take-off.

    (BBC)

  • Passenger Plane Carrying 242 People Crashes After Take-Off in India

    Passenger Plane Carrying 242 People Crashes After Take-Off in India

    A London-bound Air India plane carrying 242 people has crashed shortly after take-off in Ahmedabad, western India.

    Flight AI171 was travelling from Ahmedabad to London Gatwick.

    The plane – a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner – gave a mayday call to air traffic control after taking off, but then gave no response.

    There were 169 Indian nationals on the flight, as well as 53 Britons, one Canadian national and seven Portuguese nationals, Air India says.

    Tracking website Flightradar24 says it received the last signal from the aircraft at 625 feet (190m) “just seconds after take off”.

    The plane came down in a residential area near the airport.

    Videos show black smoke rising over a residential area.

    The BBC reporter in Ahmedabad says the scene is shocking, with ambulances and rescue workers still trying to put out a fire.

    A senior police officer in Ahmedabad told ANI news agency that the London-bound plane crashed into a doctors’ hostel.

    He said police, firefighters and other civic workers reached the spot within minutes. Rescue operations are still underway.

    (BBC)

  • Elon Musk Says He Regrets Some Posts He Made About Donald Trump

    Elon Musk Says He Regrets Some Posts He Made About Donald Trump

    Billionaire Elon Musk has said he regrets some of the posts he made about US President Donald Trump during their war of words on social media.

    “I regret some of my posts about President Donald Trump last week. They went too far,” he said on his platform X.

    The two were embroiled in a public fallout, after the Tesla owner called Trump’s tax bill a “disgusting abomination”.

    His post comes after Trump declared that their relationship was over, and that he had no interest in mending ties with Musk.

    The budget, which includes huge tax breaks and more defence spending, was passed by the House of Representatives last month and is now being considered by senators.

    Musk urged Americans to call their representatives in Washington to “kill the bill” as he believed it would “cause a recession in the second half of the year”.

    The tech billionaire claimed, without evidence, that Trump appears in unreleased government files linked to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The White House rubbished those claims.

    In response Trump said Musk had “lost his mind” and threatened to cancel his government contracts which have an estimated value of $38bn (£28bn).

    “I think it’s a very bad thing, because he’s very disrespectful. You could not disrespect the office of the president,” Trump said in an interview with NBC on Sunday.

    Musk deleted most of his posts over the weekend, including one that called for Trump’s impeachment and another claiming he won the election for him.

    Musk was the largest donor for Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign and had been considered the president’s right-hand man.

    Their blowout came shortly after Musk left the Department of Government Efficiency (Doge), after just 129 days in the job.

    (BBC)

  • Rapper Kendrick Lamar Lands The Biggest Wins at The 2025 BET Awards

    Rapper Kendrick Lamar Lands The Biggest Wins at The 2025 BET Awards

    LOS ANGELES, June 9 (Reuters) – Kendrick Lamar was the top winner on Monday at the BET Awards, an awards ceremony honoring Black actors, singers and sports stars.

    The “30 For 30″ rapper won the best male hip hop artist award, best album of the year as well as the video of the year award for “Not Like Us.”

    Lamar and filmmaker Dave Free also took home the video director of the year award at the event, which was held at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles and broadcast on the BET cable channel.

    “BET has always made sure they’re representing the culture right and always put me in the midst of the cycle of what we represent,” Lamar said on stage when accepting his award.

    Host comedian Kevin Hart opened the ceremony by recognizing the BET Awards’ 25th anniversary and all of the “history that has been made” on the stage.

    The ceremony traversed the evolution of Black music, starting with a performance by R&B artist Ashanti that featured a compilation of songs, including her 2002 song “Foolish.”

    Additional performances included other 2000s songs “Ballin’” by Mustard, “1 Thing” by Amerie and “Like You” by Bow Wow.

    Hart led with jokes while also highlighting the BET Ultimate Icon Award winners of the night, including Kirk Franklin, Mariah Carey, Jamie Foxx and Snoop Dogg.

    The special award was given to those that have paid homage to music, entertainment, advocacy and community impact.

    Presented by Stevie Wonder, Foxx accepted his award and reflected on his recovery journey after having a stroke in 2023.

    “I gotta be honest, when I saw the in memoriam, I was like, ‘Man, that could have been me’,” he said.

    Another honor included the best female hip hop artist award for rising rapper Doechii.

    “Trump is using military forces to stop protest,” Doechii said in her acceptance speech, addressing the anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles, where the National Guard and U.S. Marines are being deployed.

    “I want y’all to consider what kind of government it appears to be, when every time we exercise our democratic rights to protest, the military is deployed against us,” she added.

    (Reuters)

  • Trump Travel Ban in Effect, Citizens From 12 Nations Barred From US

    Trump Travel Ban in Effect, Citizens From 12 Nations Barred From US

    President Donald Trump’s sweeping new travel ban came into effect early Monday immediately after midnight, barring citizens from a dozen nations from entering the United States and reviving a divisive measure from his first term.

    The move is expected to disrupt refugee pathways and further restrict immigration as the Trump administration expands its crackdown on illegal entries.

    Many of the nations covered by the restrictions have adversarial relations with the United States, such as Iran and Afghanistan, while others face severe crises, like Haiti and Libya.

    In announcing his restrictions last week, Trump said the new measure was spurred by a recent “terrorist attack” on Jews in Colorado.

    The group had been protesting in solidarity with hostages held in Gaza when they were assaulted by a man the White House said had overstayed his visa.

    That attack, Trump said, “underscored the extreme dangers posed to our country by the entry of foreign nationals who are not properly vetted” or who overstay their visas.

    The move bans all travel to the United States by nationals of Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, Congo-Brazzaville, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen, according to the White House.

    Trump also imposed a partial ban on travelers from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela. Some temporary work visas from those countries will be allowed.

    New countries could be added, Trump warned, “as threats emerge around the world.”

    Mehria, a 23-year-old woman from Afghanistan who applied for refugee status, said the new rules have trapped her and many other Afghans in uncertainty.

    “We gave up thousands of hopes and our entire lives… on a promise from America, but today we are suffering one hell after another,” she told AFP.

    World Cup, Olympics, diplomats excluded

    The ban will not apply to athletes competing in the 2026 World Cup, which the United States is co-hosting with Canada and Mexico, or in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, Trump’s order said.

    Nor will it apply to diplomats from the targeted countries.

    United Nations rights chief Volker Turk warned that “the broad and sweeping nature of the new travel ban raises concerns from the perspective of international law.”

    US Democratic lawmakers and elected officials blasted the ban as draconian and unconstitutional.

    “I know the pain that Trump’s cruel and xenophobic travel bans inflict because my family has felt it firsthand,” congresswoman Yassamin Ansari, who is Iranian-American, posted Sunday on X.

    “We will fight this ban with everything we have.”

    Rumors of a new travel ban had circulated following the Colorado attack, with Trump’s administration vowing to pursue “terrorists” living in the United States on visas.

    US officials said suspect Mohamed Sabry Soliman, an Egyptian national according to court documents, was in the country illegally having overstayed a tourist visa, but that he had applied for asylum in September 2022.

    Trump’s new travel ban notably does not include Egypt.

    His proclamation said Taliban-ruled Afghanistan and war-torn Libya, Sudan, Somalia and Yemen lacked “competent” central authorities for processing passports and vetting.

    Iran was included because it is a “state sponsor of terrorism,” the order said.

    For the other countries, Trump’s order cited an above-average likelihood that people would overstay their visas.

    (AFP)

  • Trump Threatens Musk With ‘Serious Consequences’ Over Spending Bill Feud

    Trump Threatens Musk With ‘Serious Consequences’ Over Spending Bill Feud

    US President Donald Trump threatened former close advisor Elon Musk with “serious consequences” if he sought to punish Republicans voting for a contentious spending bill.

    The president made the threat in an interview on US television Saturday days after the world’s most powerful leader and the world’s richest man became embroiled in a public bust-up.

    US President Donald Trump threatened his former advisor Elon Musk with “serious consequences” Saturday if the tech billionaire seeks to punish Republicans who vote for a controversial spending bill.

    The comments by Trump to NBC News come after the relationship between the world’s most powerful person and the world’s richest imploded in bitter and spectacular fashion this week

    The blistering break-up — largely carried out on social media before a riveted public on Thursday — was ignited by Musk’s harsh criticism of Trump’s so-called “big, beautiful” spending bill, which is currently before Congress.

    Some lawmakers who were against the bill had called on Musk — one of the Republican Party’s biggest financial backers in last year’s presidential election — to fund primary challenges against Republicans who voted for the legislation.

    “He’ll have to pay very serious consequences if he does that,” Trump, who also branded Musk “disrespectful,” told NBC News on Saturday, without specifying what those consequences would be.

    He also said he had “no” desire to repair his relationship with the South African-born Tesla and SpaceX chief, and that he has “no intention of speaking to him.”

    Just last week, Trump gave Musk a glowing send-off as he left his cost-cutting role at the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

    But their relationship cracked within days as Musk described as an “abomination” the spending bill that, if passed by Congress, could define Trump’s second term in office.

    Trump hit back in an Oval Office diatribe and from, there the row detonated, leaving Washington stunned.

    With real political and economic risks to their falling out, both had appeared to inch back from the brink on Friday, with Trump telling reporters “I just wish him well,” and Musk responding on X: “Likewise.”

    ‘Old news’

    Trump spoke to NBC Saturday after Musk deleted one of the explosive allegations he had made during their fallout, linking the president with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.

    Musk had alleged that the Republican leader is featured in unreleased government files on former associates of Epstein, who died by suicide in 2019 while he faced sex trafficking charges.

    The Trump administration has acknowledged it is reviewing tens of thousands of documents, videos and investigative material that his “MAGA” movement says will unmask public figures complicit in Epstein’s crimes.

    Trump was named in a trove of deposition and statements linked to Epstein that were unsealed by a New York judge in early 2024. The president has not been accused of any wrongdoing in the case.

    “Time to drop the really big bomb: (Trump) is in the Epstein files,” Musk posted on his social media platform, X.

    “That is the real reason they have not been made public.”

    Musk did not reveal which files he was talking about and offered no evidence for his claim.

    He initially doubled down on the claim, writing in a follow-up message: “Mark this post for the future. The truth will come out.”

    However, he appeared to have deleted both tweets by Saturday morning.

    Trump dismissed the claim as “old news” in his comments to NBC on Saturday, adding: “Even Epstein’s lawyer said I had nothing to do with it.”

    Supporters on the conspiratorial end of Trump’s “Make America Great Again” base allege that Epstein’s associates had their roles in his crimes covered up by government officials and others.

    They point the finger at Democrats and Hollywood celebrities, although not at Trump himself. No official source has ever confirmed that the president appears in any of the as yet unreleased material.

    Trump knew and socialized with Epstein but has denied spending time on Little Saint James, the private redoubt in the US Virgin Islands where prosecutors alleged Epstein trafficked underage girls for sex.

    “Terrific guy,” Trump, who was Epstein’s neighbor in both Florida and New York, said in an early 2000s profile of the financier.

    “He’s a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.”

    (AFP)

  • Trump and Musk Enter Bitter Feud – and Washington Buckles Up

    Trump and Musk Enter Bitter Feud – and Washington Buckles Up

    What happens when the richest person and the most powerful politician have a knock-down, drag-out fight?

    The world may be about to find out.

    A disagreement between Elon Musk and Donald Trump started at a simmer last week, began bubbling on Wednesday and is now in full-on boil. And like everything these two men do, it is all spilling out into public view. These two men have two of the world’s biggest megaphones, and they clearly enjoy using them.

    In remarks at the Oval Office on Thursday afternoon, Trump sounded a bit like a spurned lover. He expressed surprise at Musk’s criticism of his “big, beautiful” tax and spending legislation. He pushed back against the notion that he would have lost last year’s presidential election without Musk’s hundreds of millions of dollars in support. And he said Musk was only changing his tune now because his car company, Tesla, will be hurt by the Republican push to end electric vehicle tax credits.

    Musk took to his social media site, X, with a very Generation X response for his 220 million followers: “Whatever”. He said he didn’t care about the car subsidies, he wanted to shrink the national debt, which he says is an existential threat to the nation. He called Trump “ungrateful” for his help last year and insisted that Democrats would have prevailed without him.

    Musk and Trump had formed a powerful but unlikely alliance , culminating in the tech billionaire having a key position of budget-slashing authority in the Trump administration. Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency, or Doge, became one of the biggest stories of Trump’s first 100 days, as it shuttered entire agencies and dismissed thousands of government workers.

    It wasn’t long, however, before speculation began over when – and how – the two outsized personalities would ultimately fall out.

    For a while, it seemed like those predictions were off the mark. Trump stood by Musk even as the latter’s popularity dropped, as he feuded with administration officials and as he became a liability in several key elections earlier this year. Every time it appeared there would be a break, Musk would pop up in the Oval Office, or the Cabinet room or on the president’s Air Force One flight to Mar-a-Lago.

    When Musk’s 130 days as a “special government employee” ended last week, the two had a chummy Oval Office send-off, with hints that Musk might someday return.

    It’s safe to say that any invitation has been rescinded.

    “Elon and I had a great relationship,” Trump said on Thursday – a comment notable for its use of the past tense.

    There had been some thought that Trump’s surprise announcement on Wednesday night of a new travel ban, additional sanctions on Harvard and a conspiracy-laced administration investigation of former President Joe Biden were all efforts to change the subject from Musk’s criticism. The White House and its allies in Congress seemed careful not to further antagonise him after his earlier comments.

    Then Trump spoke out and … so much for that.

    Now the question is where the dispute goes next. Congressional Republicans could find it harder to keep their members behind Trump’s bill with Musk providing rhetorical – and, perhaps financial – air for those who break ranks.

    Trump, who takes pride in being a devastating counterpuncher, will have plenty of opportunity to lay into Musk. What will happen to Musk’s Doge allies still in the Trump administration or government contracts to Musk-related companies or Biden-era investigations into Musk’s business dealings?

    “The easiest way to save money in our budget, billions and billions of dollars, is to terminate Elon’s governmental subsidies and contracts,” Trump posted menacingly on his own social media website.

    If Trump turns the machinery of government against Musk, the tech billionaire will feel pain. Tesla’s stock price was down 12% on Thursday.

    But Musk also has near limitless resources to respond, including by funding insurgent challengers to Republicans in next year’s elections and primaries. He may not win a fight against the whole of Trump’s government, but he could exact a high political price.

    Meanwhile, Democrats are on the sidelines, wondering how to respond. Few seem willing to welcome Musk, a former donor to their party, back into the fold. But there’s also the old adage that the enemy of an enemy is a friend.

    “It’s a zero-sum game,” Liam Kerr, a Democratic strategist, told Politico. “Anything that he does that moves more toward Democrats hurts Republicans.”

    At the very least, Democrats seem happy to stand back and let the two men exchange blows. And until they abandon this fight, the din is likely to drown out everything else in American politics.

    But don’t expect this spat to end anytime soon.

    “Trump has 3.5 years left as president,” Musk wrote on X, “but I will be around for 40-plus years.”

    (BBC)

  • Daring Ukrainian Drones Hit Russian Bases 1,000 Miles Inside Enemy Territory—$2B in Jets Destroyed!

    Daring Ukrainian Drones Hit Russian Bases 1,000 Miles Inside Enemy Territory—$2B in Jets Destroyed!

    Kyiv (Ukraine) (AFP)Ukraine said Sunday it launched a “large-scale” attack to destroy Russian bombers as it geared up for talks in Istanbul with Moscow counterparts to explore prospects of a ceasefire.

    The spectacular claim that Ukraine damaged $2 billion worth of Russian aircraft parked at airbases thousands of kilometres (miles) away came as Kyiv announced a Russian military strike killed at least 12 soldiers at an army training site, leading to the resignation of its ground forces commander.

    Russia also said two bridges that collapsed in regions bordering Ukraine were brought down by explosions. Officials were treating them as “acts of terrorism” but had not immediately accused Ukraine.

    The developments followed Russian ground advances in recent days in Ukraine’s border Sumy region and both sides unleashing punishing aerial attacks on the other.

    President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Sunday that he was sending a Ukrainian delegation to Istanbul led by his Defence Minister Rustem Umerov for the talks on Monday with Russian officials.

    Turkey is hosting the meeting, which was spurred by US President Donald Trump’s push for a quick deal to end the three-year war.

    Zelensky, who previously voiced scepticism about the seriousness of the Russian side in proposing Monday’s meeting, said he had defined the Ukrainian delegation’s position going into it.

    Priorities included “a complete and unconditional ceasefire” and the return of prisoners and abducted children, he said on social media.

    Russia has said it has formulated its own peace terms but refused to divulge them in advance. Russian President Vladimir Putin ruled out a Turkish proposal for the meeting to be held at leaders’ level.

    Russian news agencies said the Russian delegation was headed to Istanbul on Sunday for the talks.

    Drone attacks inside Russia

    The intensified strikes waged by each side came as Kyiv and Moscow each strived to show themselves coming from a position of strength.

    Ukraine's air force said it was hit by 472 Russian drones and seven missiles overnight SERGEY BOBOK / AFP
    Ukraine’s air force said it was hit by 472 Russian drones and seven missiles overnight SERGEY BOBOK / AFP

    A source with Ukraine’s SBU security service said the coordinated attacks inside Russia were “aimed at destroying enemy bombers far from the front”.

    The source said Russian airbases in the eastern Siberian city of Belaya, in Olenya, up in the Arctic near Finland, and in Ivanovo and Dyagilevo, both east of Moscow, had been targeted.

    More than 40 aircraft had been hit at the Belaya base, and a fire had broken out there, the source said, showing a video in which several aircraft could be seen in flames and black smoke rising.

    AFP was not able to independently verify the claims or the video images.

    Russia’s defence ministry confirmed on Telegram that several of its military aircraft “caught fire”, adding that there were no casualties and that several “participants” had been arrested.

    Igor Kobzev, Governor of Russia’s Irkutsk region, which hosts the targeted Belaya airbase, said “it’s the first attack of this sort in Siberia”.

    He called on the population to not panic and posted an amateur video apparently showing a drone flying in the sky and a large cloud of grey smoke.

    The governor of the Murmansk region where the Olenya base was located, Andrey Chibis, also said “enemy drones” were flying overhead, and anti-aircraft defences were operating.

    Russia has been announcing Ukrainian drone attacks on a near daily basis, usually saying they had all been shot down. But it was rare for such drone strikes to be reported so deep within its territory.

    At the same time, Russia has been carrying out constant attacks on Ukraine.

    On Sunday, Ukraine’s air force said it was hit by 472 Russian drones and seven missiles overnight — a record since the beginning of the invasion.

    In a rare admission of its military losses, the Ukraine army said Russia’s “missile strike on the location of one of the training units” had killed a dozen soldiers, most of whom had been in shelters during the attack.

    “As of 12:50 pm (0950 GMT), 12 people are known to have been killed and more than 60 wounded,” it said.

    The attack led Ukrainian ground forces commander Mykhailo Drapaty to announce his resignation, saying he felt “responsibility” for the soldiers’ deaths.

    Blasts fell bridges

    Separately on Sunday, the Russian army said it had captured another village in Ukraine’s northern Sumy region, where Kyiv fears Moscow could mount a fresh ground assault.

    Russia claims to have captured several settlements in the region in recent weeks, and has amassed more than 50,000 soldiers on the other side of the border, according to Zelensky.

    Authorities in the region have evacuated more than 200 villages amid intensified shelling.

    Back in Russia, officials said a blast brought down a road bridge in the Bryansk region bordering Ukraine on Saturday, derailing a passenger train heading to Moscow and killing seven people.

    A separate rail bridge in the neighbouring Kursk region was blown up hours later in the early hours of Sunday, derailing a freight train and injuring the driver.

    Authorities did not say who was behind the explosions, but investigators said a criminal inquiry was underway.

    (AFP)

  • UN Petition Filed: International Pressure Mounts for Lissu’s Release

    UN Petition Filed: International Pressure Mounts for Lissu’s Release

    Lawyers for Tanzania’s jailed opposition leader Tundu Lissu filed a complaint on Friday to the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention in a bid to ramp up international pressure for his release.

    Lissu, chairman of Tanzania’s main opposition party and runner-up in the 2020 presidential election, was arrested last month and charged with treason, a capital offence, over comments he is alleged to have made calling on supporters to prevent national elections in October from going ahead.

    Tanzania’s government spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    While President Samia Suluhu Hassan has won plaudits for easing political repression, she has faced questions about unexplained abductions of government critics in recent months.

    Hassan, who will stand for re-election in October, has said her government respects human rights and ordered an investigation into the reported abductions.

    Lissu’s international lawyer, Robert Amsterdam, said the confidential complaint to the U.N. working group, which issues opinions but has no enforcement power, was part of a wider pressure campaign.

    The European Parliament this month adopted a resolution denouncing Lissu’s arrest as politically motivated, and Amsterdam said he would petition the U.S. State Department to impose sanctions.

    “Right down to prosecutors, judges, police – all the people that are involved in this false show trial had better be aware that they should protect their U.S. assets,” Amsterdam told Reuters.

    In response to the European Parliament resolution, Tanzania’s foreign ministry said outside criticisms about the case were based on “incomplete or partisan information”.

    The U.S. State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Lissu, who was shot 16 times in a 2017 attack for which no one has ever been charged, will appear in court on Monday.

    Before he appeared in court last week, authorities detained a Kenyan and an Ugandan rights activist who had come to attend the hearing.

    They were abandoned several days later near the borders of their home countries, and the Kenyan activist, Boniface Mwangi, said both were badly tortured while in custody.

    Tanzanian officials have not responded to requests for comment about the allegation. Hassan has warned outsiders against “invading and interfering in our affairs”.

  • Elon Musk Attends Trump Event With Black Eye

    Elon Musk Attends Trump Event With Black Eye

    bruised Elon Musk explained away a black eye during a White House appearance on Friday by saying that his 5-year-old son had punched him in the face while the two were playing around.

    Musk made the comments during an Oval Office event with Donald Trump marking the end of the billionaire’s formal cost-cutting role in the president’s administration.

    Elon Musk reacts during a press conference with US President Donald Trump (not pictured), at the White House in Washington, DC, US, May 30, 2025. Photo credit: Reuters
    Elon Musk reacts during a press conference with US President Donald Trump (not pictured), at the White House in Washington, DC, US, May 30, 2025.
    Photo credit: Reuters

    Musk’s visibly bruised right eye caught reporters’ attention. Asked about the injury, Musk said he was “horsing around” with his son, who is named X.

    “And I said, ‘Go ahead, punch me in the face.’ And he did,” Musk said.

    Trump then interjected. “That was X that did that? …X could do it. If you knew X.”

    When he was initially asked about the bruise, Musk brushed it off with his usual cryptic humor. “I wasn’t anywhere near France,” he quipped, referencing a recent incident where President Emmanuel Macron’s wife shoved him in the face.

    Elon Musk is seen with a bruised eye that Musk claimed he received at the hands of his son, X Æ A-12, as he attends a press conference with U.S. President Donald Trump in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC, US, May 30, 2025. Photo credit: Reuters
    Elon Musk is seen with a bruised eye that Musk claimed he received at the hands of his son, X Æ A-12, as he attends a press conference with U.S. President Donald Trump in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC, US, May 30, 2025.
    Photo credit: Reuters

    Musk said he didn’t feel much at the time but it bruised later.

    The Tesla CEO is leaving the Trump administration after leading a tumultuous cost-cutting drive, during which he upended several federal agencies but ultimately failed to deliver the generational savings he had sought.

    (Reuters)

  • Comedian Russell Brand Pleads Not Guilty to Rape, Sexual Assault Charges

    Comedian Russell Brand Pleads Not Guilty to Rape, Sexual Assault Charges

    British comedian and actor Russell Brand pleaded not guilty Friday at a London criminal court to five charges of sexual offences including rape and sexual assault.

    The media personality turned anti-establishment influencer faces one count of rape, one of oral rape, two of sexual assault and one of indecent assault between 1999 and 2005, involving four women.

    Crowds were waiting as Brand, 49, arrived at Southwark Crown Court in an open-buttoned shirt and dark blazer for the plea hearing, after being granted conditional bail at a previous hearing.

    He gained international recognition as the husband of pop star Katy Perry, but is better known in the UK for his hyper-sexualised and often lewd comedy routines and TV and radio appearances in the early 2000s.

    Now living partly in the US, Brand appeared at Westminster Magistrates Court in central London earlier this month, where he showed no emotion as a prosecutor read out allegations against him.

    On Friday Brand appeared in the dock flanked by two officers, where he stood stock-still and looked straight ahead as he delivered his pleas.

    He is now due to stand trial next year, on June 3, 2026.

    Prosecutors charged Brand following a police probe into allegations aired in a 2003 Channel 4 documentary.

    He is accused of raping one woman in a hotel room following an event in the southern Bournemouth area in 1999.

    Another charge relates to the oral rape and sexual assault of a woman in 2004 in central London.

    The accusations involve four women, including one who was a TV worker, and another who was a radio station worker at the time of the alleged assaults.

    In a video response on X after he was charged in April, Brand said he was “grateful” for the “opportunity” to defend himself.

    – Conservative guru –

    “I was a fool before I lived in the light of the Lord. I was a drug addict, a sex addict and an imbecile, but what I never was was a rapist. I’ve never engaged in non-consensual activity,” he said in the video.

    Born in 1975 to working-class parents in Essex, east of London, Brand began his stand-up career as a teenager, eventually working as an MTV presenter and host of a Big Brother spin-off.

    He presented a show on the BBC’s Radio 2 station between 2006 and 2008, but quit after an on-air prank when he left a sexually explicit voicemail for “Fawlty Towers” actor Andrew Sachs about his granddaughter.

    Once a left-leaning political campaigner and Hollywood star, he has rebranded himself as a conservative guru to his millions of social media followers.

    Brand often peddles in conspiracy theories, as well as sharing wellness tips, in his anti-establishment videos. Last year, he said he became a Christian after being baptised in the Thames river.

    (AFP)

  • Plane Carrying Liberian President Involved in Landing Scare

    Plane Carrying Liberian President Involved in Landing Scare

    Flights were temporarily disrupted at Liberia main airport on Thursday night after a private jet carrying President Joseph Boakai almost crashed while landing.

    Part of the presidential jet’s landing gear malfunctioned while approaching the runway, causing a rough landing, airport authorities said.

    The incident, which sparked panic at the airport, forced the cancellation of all scheduled flights for the night, local media reported.

    President Boakai, who was returning from a trip in Nigeria with his entourage, was safely evacuated unharmed, as authorities announced an investigation.

    Photos of the stalled jet at the Roberts International Airport (RIA) circulated on social media, triggering concerns about the president’s safety.

    Local media, citing airport authorities, said one of the plane’s tyres had burst upon landing leaving it stranded on the runway.

    In a statement, the Liberia Airport Authority (LAA) confirmed the “unfortunate near-accident situation” involving the presidential jet.

    The authority dismissed reports suggesting that the incident was caused by poor runway conditions.

    “The runway infrastructure remains fully compliant with international aviation safety standards,” the LAA said.

    The aircraft has since been removed from the runway and normal operations have resumed at the airport, the authorities said.

    “At this stage, investigation to establish the actual cause of the incident is ongoing, and the airport authority will keep the public informed,” the LAA said.

    The Liberian presidency is yet to comment on the incident but it shared photos of Boakai arriving at the airport, where he briefly spoke to journalists without mentioning the plane scare.

    He had gone to Nigeria to attend the 50th anniversary of the regional Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas).

    (BBC)

  • South African Woman Gets Life Term For Selling 6-year-Old Daughter

    South African Woman Gets Life Term For Selling 6-year-Old Daughter

    A South African court on Thursday sentenced a woman to life in prison for kidnapping and selling her six-year-old daughter, in a case that horrified the country.

    Joshlin Smith went missing in February last year from her home in Saldanha Bay, a fishing town 135 kilometres (85 miles) north of Cape Town, and has never been found.

    Her mother, Racquel “Kelly” Smith, was found guilty of kidnapping and selling the young girl, reportedly for 20,000 rand ($1,100).

    Judge Nathan Erasmus ruled that Smith, 35, and her two co-accused — a boyfriend and mutual friend — also be jailed for life for human trafficking.

    They were all sentenced to a concurrent 10 years imprisonment for kidnapping.

    “I am also ordering the entry of your names to the child protection register,” Erasmus ruled.

    Smith was present at the court and sat through the hour-long proceeding with an impassive gaze.

    She was initially a figure of sympathy when her child disappeared, sparking a massive nationwide search operation.

    Photos showing Joshlin’s striking green eyes, broad smile and brown pigtails flooded the internet.

    The case drew national attention, including from a minister who offered who offered a one-million-rand ($54,000) reward for her safe return.

    But it took a turn when prosecutors alleged that Smith sold her daughter to a traditional healer, who was interested in her eyes and fair complexion.

    South Africa has one of the highest crime rates in the world and the kidnapping of children is on the rise.

    (AFP)

  • Diddy Threatened to Release Cassie’s Sex Tapes, Says Former Stylist

    Diddy Threatened to Release Cassie’s Sex Tapes, Says Former Stylist

    • Hip-hop mogul threatened release to internet, stylist says
    • Combs fails in bid to have judge declare a mistrial
    • Defense says Combs was not involved in alleged arson

    Sean “Diddy” Combs routinely beat his ex-girlfriend and during fits of rage threatened to release sex tapes of her to the internet, a stylist testified on Wednesday at the hip-hop mogul’s sex trafficking trial.

    Deonte Nash, who worked as a stylist for Combs and Combs’ former girlfriend Casandra Ventura from 2008 to 2018, alleged that Combs repeatedly beat Ventura and threatened to release the tapes while raging at her for not being obedient.

    “He told her she fucked up and he was going to put her sex tapes on the internet,” Nash said, recounting an alleged incident in 2013 or 2014.

    Combs, 55, has pleaded not guilty to five counts including racketeering and sex trafficking. He faces up to life in prison if convicted on all counts.

    Last week, Scott Mescudi – the rapper known as Kid Cudi – testified that his car was set on fire in 2012, shortly after Combs learned that Mescudi had a romantic relationship with Ventura.

    Prosecutors say the alleged arson of Mescudi’s car was one of several violent or illegal acts that Combs or his associates undertook to prevent women from leaving his orbit and keep his abuse quiet.

    On Wednesday, a lawyer for Combs told the judge outside the jury’s presence that prosecutors’ questions to a Los Angeles arson investigator implied that Combs had a role in the destruction of fingerprint evidence, arguing the questions were grounds for a mistrial.

    U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian swiftly denied the request, saying none of the testimony was unfair to Combs. He told jurors to disregard the questions and answers about the fingerprints.

    Testimony in Combs’ trial in Manhattan federal court is in its third week. Prosecutors say Combs, the founder of Bad Boy Records, coerced women, including Ventura, over two decades to take part in days-long, drug-fueled sexual performances with male sex workers known as “Freak Offs.”

    Combs’ lawyers have acknowledged that he was at times abusive in domestic relationships, but said the women who participated in Freak Offs did so consensually.

    Over four days of emotional testimony during the first week of trial, Ventura recounted years of alleged physical and emotional abuse by Combs.

    Ventura, a rhythm and blues singer known as Cassie, said she hated the Freak Offs. She said she participated because she loved Combs and because she feared how he would react if she didn’t.

  • Elon Musk is Leaving The Trump Administration After Criticizing President’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’

    Elon Musk is Leaving The Trump Administration After Criticizing President’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Elon Musk is leaving his government role as a top adviser to President Donald Trump after spearheading efforts to reduce and overhaul the federal bureaucracy.

    The billionaire entrepreneur posted Wednesday about his decision on X, his social media website.

    “As my scheduled time as a Special Government Employee comes to an end, I would like to thank President @realDonaldTrump for the opportunity to reduce wasteful spending,” he wrote. “The @DOGE mission will only strengthen over time as it becomes a way of life throughout the government.”

    A White House official, who requested anonymity to talk about the change, confirmed that Musk was leaving.

    Musk’s departure comes one day after he criticized the centerpiece of Trump’s legislative agenda, saying he was “disappointed” by what the president calls his “big beautiful bill.”

    The legislation includes a mix of tax cuts and enhanced immigration enforcement. While speaking to CBS, Musk described it as a “massive spending bill” that increases the federal deficit and “undermines the work” of his Department of Government Efficiency, known as DOGE.

    President Donald Trump and Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., speak to reporters after departing a House Republican conference meeting, Tuesday, May 20, 2025, at the U.S. Capitol in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)
    President Donald Trump and Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., speak to reporters after departing a House Republican conference meeting, Tuesday, May 20, 2025, at the U.S. Capitol in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)

    “I think a bill can be big or it could be beautiful,” Musk said. “But I don’t know if it could be both.”

    His CBS interview came out Tuesday night. Trump, speaking in the Oval Office on Wednesday, defended his agenda by talking about the delicate politics involved with negotiating the legislation.

    “I’m not happy about certain aspects of it, but I’m thrilled by other aspects of it,” he said.

    Trump also suggested that more changes could be made.

    “We’re going to see what happens,” he said. “It’s got a way to go.”

    Republicans recently pushed the measure through the House and are debating it in the Senate.

    Musk’s concerns are shared by some Republican lawmakers. “I sympathize with Elon being discouraged,” said Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson.

    Speaking at a Milwaukee Press Club event on Wednesday, Johnson added that he was “pretty confident” there was enough opposition “to slow this process down until the president, our leadership, gets serious” about reducing spending. He said there was no amount of pressure Trump could put on him to change his position.

    Speaker Mike Johnson has asked senators to make as few changes to the legislation as possible, saying that House Republicans reached a “very delicate balance” that could be upended with major changes. The narrowly divided House will have to vote again on final passage once the Senate alters the bill.

    On Wednesday, Johnson thanked Musk for his work and promised to pursue more spending cuts in the future, saying “the House is eager and ready to act on DOGE’s findings.”

    The White House is sending some proposed rescissions, a mechanism used to cancel previously authorized spending, to Capitol Hill to solidify some of DOGE’s cuts. A spokesperson for the Office of Management and Budget said the package will include $1.1 billion from the Corporation of Public Broadcasting, which funds NPR and PBS, and $8.3 billion in foreign assistance.

    Musk’s criticism come as he steps back from his government work, rededicating himself to companies like the electric automaker Tesla and rocket manufacturer SpaceX. He’s also said he’ll reduce his political spending, because “I think I’ve done enough.”

    At times, he’s seemed chastened by his experience working in government. Although he hoped that DOGE would generate $1 trillion in spending cuts, he’s fallen far short of that target.

    “The federal bureaucracy situation is much worse than I realized,” he told The Washington Post. “I thought there were problems, but it sure is an uphill battle trying to improve things in D.C., to say the least.”

    Musk had previously been energized by the opportunity to reshape Washington. He wore campaign hats in the White House, held his own campaign rallies, and talked about excessive spending as an existential crisis. He often tended to be effusive in his praise of Trump.

    “The more I’ve gotten to know President Trump, the more I like the guy,” Musk said in February. “Frankly, I love him.”

    Trump repaid the favor, describing Musk as “a truly great American.” When Tesla faced declining sales, he turned the White House driveway into a makeshift showroom to illustrate his support.

    It’s unclear what, if any, impact that Musk’s comments about the bill would have on the legislative debate. During the transition period, he helped whip up opposition to a spending measure as the country stood on the brink of a federal government shutdown.

    His latest criticism could embolden Republicans who want bigger spending cuts. Republican Utah Sen. Mike Lee reposted a Fox News story about Musk’s interview while also adding his own take on the measure, saying there was “still time to fix it.”

    “The Senate version will be more aggressive,” Lee said. “It can, it must, and it will be. Or it won’t pass.”

    Only two Republicans — Reps. Warren Davidson of Ohio and Thomas Massie of Kentucky — voted against the bill when the House took up the measure last week.

    Davidson took note of Musk’s comments on social media.

    “Hopefully, the Senate will succeed with the Big Beautiful Bill where the House missed the moment,” he wrote. “Don’t hope someone else will cut deficits someday, know it has been done this Congress.”

    The Congressional Budget Office, in a preliminary estimate, said the tax provisions would increase federal deficits by $3.8 trillion over the decade, while the changes to Medicaid, food stamps and other services would reduce spending by slightly more than $1 trillion over the same period.

    House Republican leaders say increased economic growth would allow the bill to be deficit-neutral or deficit-reducing, but outside watchdogs are skeptical. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimates the bill would add $3 trillion to the debt, including interest, over the next decade.

  • Tate Brothers Face Rape and Trafficking Charges in The UK

    Tate Brothers Face Rape and Trafficking Charges in The UK

    LONDON (AP) — Influencer brothers Andrew and Tristan Tate have been charged in Britain with rape and other crimes, prosecutors said Wednesday.

    The charges were authorized in January last year but not publicized, though news media at the time reported on a U.K. arrest warrant issued against the Tates, dual U.S. and British citizens who moved to Romania in 2016. The Crown Prosecution Service said this was the first time it confirmed the two had been criminally charged in Britain.

    Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan, top left, arrives at a police station in a Lada vehicle in Voluntari, Romania, Wednesday, May 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)
    Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan, top left, arrives at a police station in a Lada vehicle in Voluntari, Romania, Wednesday, May 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)

    Andrew Tate, 38, faces 10 charges related to three women that include rape, actual bodily harm, human trafficking and controlling prostitution for gain. Tristan Tate, 36, faces 11 charges related to one woman that include rape, human trafficking and actual bodily harm.

    The brothers are both former professional kickboxers who have millions of followers on social media. Andrew is more well-known, having drawn a larger following with his unapologetic misogyny that has drawn boys and young men to the luxurious lifestyle he projects.

    A spokesperson for the two had no immediate comment when reached by The Associated Press. But Andrew Tate commented on the BBC’s story on the charges on the X social media platform.

    Andrew Tate, left, and his brother Tristan, right, wait at the Court of Appeals building in Bucharest, Romania, on Oct. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda, File)
    Andrew Tate, left, and his brother Tristan, right, wait at the Court of Appeals building in Bucharest, Romania, on Oct. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda, File)

    “They do this to any man who fights against them,” Tate said, referring to the government. “Never give up men. Never give in. Do not be scared.”

    The Tates were arrested in Romania in late 2022 and formally indicted last year on charges that they participated in a criminal ring that lured women there, where they were allegedly sexually exploited. Andrew Tate was also charged with rape.

    They have denied all the allegations in Romania.

    Romanian courts have issued an order to extradite the two to the U.K. once their court case is concluded in there, British prosecutors said.

    The warrant issued by Bedfordshire Police last year for the siblings dates back to allegations between 2012 and 2015.

    The whereabouts of the brothers was not immediately clear. They were photographed a week ago outside a police station in Voluntari, Romania, where they have to report regularly while facing charges there.

  • World Bank Issues Stark Warning on Kenya’s Debt Crisis While Proposing Tax Overhaul

    World Bank Issues Stark Warning on Kenya’s Debt Crisis While Proposing Tax Overhaul

    Multilateral lender calls for structural reforms beyond austerity measures as government faces mounting fiscal pressures

    The World Bank has delivered a sobering assessment of Kenya’s fiscal position, warning that the country faces a “high risk of default” while simultaneously proposing a radical restructuring of the income tax system that would see top earners pay significantly more.

    In a stark warning delivered this week, World Bank Division Director for Kenya Qimiao Fan cautioned that Kenya’s debt levels have reached concerning heights, with austerity measures alone proving insufficient to address the country’s mounting fiscal challenges.

    “Default will not be an easy solution for Kenya,” Fan warned, citing research showing that sovereign defaults typically reduce GDP per capita by 8.5% and increase poverty rates by 6% within five years. “We have seen that default is not an effective solution for anyone.”

    Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi has outlined what he termed “aggressive fiscal consolidation measures” to prevent default, including Ksh 120 billion in expenditure cuts for the 2025/26 financial year.

    The government aims to reduce the fiscal deficit below 5.3% in 2025, with the next financial year projecting Ksh 559 billion in non-tax revenue against a total deficit of Ksh 877 billion.

    “We were bold as a government. We took the decision to be radical in terms of projecting our fiscal deficit and in terms of projecting our revenues, which we feel have been exaggerated over the years,” Mbadi stated, acknowledging the Treasury had to cut the budget by Ksh 120 billion.

    The deficit will be financed through a combination of domestic borrowing (Ksh 592 billion) and external borrowing (Ksh 284 billion).

    World Bank proposes tax system overhaul

    However, the World Bank argues that fiscal consolidation must be accompanied by structural reforms, including a comprehensive overhaul of Kenya’s personal income tax system.

    The institution is proposing the creation of a new six-tier tax structure that would shift the burden toward high earners while providing relief to lower and middle-income workers.

    Under the proposed system, Kenyans earning above Ksh 800,000 monthly would face a top tax rate of 38% – up from the current 35%.

    This represents a significant increase for the country’s highest earners, though the move would impact fewer than 10% of formal sector employees.

    The restructuring would benefit lower-income earners significantly.

    Workers earning between Ksh 24,000 and Ksh 32,333 would see their tax rate drop to 15% from 25%, while those earning between Ksh 32,334 and Ksh 166,667 would pay 25% instead of the current 30%.

    Relief for struggling workers

    The proposal comes as Kenyan workers endure their fifth consecutive year of declining real wages.

    Average monthly real pay has fallen from Ksh 62,256 in 2020 to Ksh 55,451 last year – an erosion of Ksh 6,805 in purchasing power.

    Workers’ disposable income has been further squeezed by additional levies including the 1.5% housing tax and the 2.75% social health insurance levy, leaving many with take-home pay below the legally required one-third of their gross salary.

    “What we find is that there is a distortion in the labour market, especially for the low-income earners where the tax band is relatively high compared to higher-income earners,” explained Marek Hanusch, Lead Economist at the World Bank in Kenya.

    “When you adjust the overall income tax in a way that becomes progressive, you would increase the incentive to formalise.”

    The proposed changes would have varying effects across income levels.

    A worker earning Ksh 1 million monthly would see their take-home pay reduced by Ksh 12,123 to Ksh 646,805, while someone earning Ksh 800,000 would face a reduction of Ksh 7,325.

    Conversely, lower-income earners would benefit substantially. A worker earning Ksh 50,000 would see their take-home pay increase by Ksh 179 to Ksh 39,208, while those earning Ksh 100,000 would gain Ksh 3,788.

    Structural reforms required

    World Bank economist Jorge Tudela Pye emphasized that fiscal measures alone would not solve Kenya’s problems.

    “Austerity measures alone might not be enough to get Kenya out of its fiscal hurdles. Structural and governance reforms are also needed,” he noted.

    The warning comes at a critical time as the Treasury prepares to present its budget in the coming weeks, facing the challenge of balancing fiscal responsibility with the need to support economic growth and employment creation in an increasingly challenging environment.

    Kenya’s tax wedge – the difference between pre-tax and post-tax pay – currently stands at 19%, more than double that of countries like Austria, the Netherlands, and Belgium.

    This high tax burden on lower-income earners is seen as discouraging formalization of the economy.

    The World Bank maintains that its proposed tax restructuring would be revenue-neutral, with reduced taxes on lower earners offset by increased levies on the wealthy.

    However, the success of such measures will depend on broader structural reforms to address the underlying challenges facing Kenya’s economy.

    As the government grapples with mounting debt pressures and the World Bank’s stark warnings, the proposed tax reforms represent both an opportunity to create a more equitable system and a test of political will to implement potentially unpopular measures affecting the country’s highest earners.

  • ‪US Suspends Student Visa Processing, Embassies to Ramp Up Social Media Vetting‬

    ‪US Suspends Student Visa Processing, Embassies to Ramp Up Social Media Vetting‬

    CNN — The US State Department has instructed US embassies and consulates around the world to pause new student visa appointments as it moves to expand “social media screening and vetting” to all applicants for student visas, according to a diplomatic cable seen by CNN.

    It’s the latest move from the Trump administration that could deter international students from studying at universities in the United States.

    The cable, issued on Tuesday morning and signed by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, comes as the Trump administration has revoked scores of student visas and has attempted to stop foreign students from studying at Harvard University – a move that has been halted by a judge for the time being.

    The cable states that the State Department “is conducting a review of existing operations and processes for screening and vetting of student and exchange visitor (F, M, J) visa applicants, and based on that review, plans to issue guidance on expanded social media vetting for all such applicants.”

    The State Department has required visa applicants to provide social media identifiers on immigrant and nonimmigrant visa application forms since 2019, a spokesperson said. In addition, it had already called for extra social media vetting of some applicants, largely related to alleged antisemitism. It is unclear what the expanded social media vetting would entail.

    However, an expansion of the efforts could severely slow down the overall student visa issuance process. In addition, the pause on new appointments, if it lasts, could create a significant backlog. Former consular officers say that appointments for student visas are typically prioritized at this time of year.

    Lawyers who have focused on the issue of student visas are concerned about the implications that this review could have on student enrollment in the fall.

    “Now is exactly when students would be applying for visas to start school in August. The timing is no accident. This is designed to significantly damage foreign student enrollment in the fall, and hurt the many universities that rely on these students,” said Charles Kuck, a lawyer working with students whose visas were revoked earlier this year, who is a former president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association.

    While students can technically apply for visas up to a year in advance, the enrollment process at universities means that they cannot typically start that process until the late spring or early summer. The students have to be admitted, put down a deposit and then wait to receive the necessary forms from their schools before they can apply, the former consular officers said.

    According to a report from the Institute of International Education, more than 1.1 million international students studied at US higher education institutions in the 2023-2024 school year. Many US universities rely on tuition from international students.

    Politico was first to report the news.

    The cable notes that expanded social media screening and vetting of all the applicants for student visas could have “potentially significant implications for consular section operations, processes and resource allocations.”

    As a result, the consular sections – which issue visas – “will need to take into consideration the workload requirements of each case prior to scheduling them going forward.”

    It instructs embassies and consulates, effective immediately, not to add “any additional student or exchange visa…appointment capacity until further guidance is issued,” and to remove “appointments that are available, but not taken as of the release of this cable.”

    Appointments that were already scheduled can still take place, the cable notes.

    “Consular sections should remain focused on consular priorities including services for U.S. citizens, immigrant visas, and fraud prevention,” it states.

    State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce would not confirm the cable when asked about the matter at a State Department briefing. However, she noted, “we use every tool in our tool chest to vet anyone coming in, who wants to come into this country.” A senior State Department official confirmed the veracity of the cable.

    A separate State Department spokesperson said “scheduling of nonimmigrant visa interview appointments is dynamic.”

    “An embassy or consulate’s capacity reflects the time required for consular officers to adjudicate the cases before them in full compliance with U.S. law, including to ensure applicants do not pose a security or safety risk to the United States,” they said.

  • Trump Says Putin ‘Playing With Fire’ in New Jab at Russian Leader

    Trump Says Putin ‘Playing With Fire’ in New Jab at Russian Leader

    US President Donald Trump warned Vladimir Putin Tuesday that he was “playing with fire,” launching a fresh broadside at his Russian counterpart over stalled Ukraine peace efforts.

    Trump’s latest comments came after he called the Kremlin leader “CRAZY” over the weekend following a mass Russian air attack on Kyiv, and warned that Moscow risked new sanctions.

    “What Vladimir Putin doesn’t realize is that if it weren’t for me, lots of really bad things would have already happened to Russia, and I mean REALLY BAD,” Trump said on his Truth Social network Tuesday.

    “He’s playing with fire!”

    Trump did not specify what the “really bad” things were, or make any specific threats.

    But the Wall Street Journal and CNN both reported that Trump was now considering fresh sanctions against Russia as early as this week, while stressing that he could still change his mind.

    Trump had told reporters on Sunday he was “absolutely” considering increasing sanctions on Moscow.

    The US president’s recent rebukes mark a major change from his previous attitude towards Putin, whom he often speaks of with admiration and has previously held off criticizing.

    Trump has however expressed increasing frustration with Moscow’s position in deadlocked truce negotiations with Kyiv.

    That frustration boiled over at the weekend when Russia launched a record drone barrage at Ukraine, killing at least 13 people.

    “I’ve always had a very good relationship with Vladimir Putin of Russia, but something has happened to him. He has gone absolutely CRAZY!” Trump said in a Truth Social post on Sunday night.

    Russia’s attacks have continued despite a phone call between Trump and Putin eight days ago in which the US leader said the Russian president had agreed to “immediately” start ceasefire talks.

    (AFP)