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U.S. issues broad freeze on foreign aid after Trump orders review

Washington – The U.S. State Department issued a “stop-work” order on Friday for all existing foreign assistance and paused new aid, according to a cable seen by reporters, after President Donald Trump ordered a pause to review if aid allocation was aligned with his foreign policy. The cable, drafted by the Department’s foreign assistance office and approved by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, said waivers have been issued for military financing for Israel and Egypt. No other countries were mentioned in the cable. The move risks cutting off billions of dollars of life-saving assistance. The United States is the largest single donor of aid globally — in fiscal year 2023, it disbursed $72 billion in assistance. Source link

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Mega-iceberg drifts toward Antarctic penguin island

Paris – The world’s biggest iceberg — more than twice the size of London — could drift towards a remote island where a scientist warns it risks disrupting feeding for baby penguins and seals. The gigantic wall of ice is moving slowly from Antarctica on a potential collision course with South Georgia, a crucial wildlife breeding ground in the South Atlantic. Satellite imagery suggested that unlike previous “megabergs” this rogue was not crumbling into smaller chunks as it plodded through the Southern Ocean, Andrew Meijers, a physical oceanographer at the British Antarctic Survey, said Friday. He said predicting its exact course was difficult but prevailing currents suggested the colossus would reach the shallow continental shelf around South Georgia in two to four weeks. But what might happen next is anyone’s guess, he said. It could avoid the shelf and get carried into open water beyond South Georgia, a British overseas territory some 1,400 kilometers east of the Falkland Islands. Or it could strike the sloping bottom and get stuck for months or break up into pieces. Meijers said this scenario could seriously impede seals and penguins trying to feed and raise their young on the island. “Icebergs have grounded there in the past and that has caused significant mortality to penguin chicks and seal pups,” he said. Roughly 3,500 square kilometers, the world’s biggest and oldest iceberg, known as A23a, calved from the Antarctic shelf in 1986. It remained stuck for over 30 years before finally breaking free in 2020, its lumbering journey north sometimes delayed by ocean forces that kept it spinning in place. Meijers — who encountered the iceberg face to face while leading a scientific mission in late 2023 — described “a huge white cliff, 40 or 50 meters high, that stretches from horizon to horizon.” “It’s just like this white wall. It’s very sort of ‘Game of Thrones’-esque, actually,” he said, referring to the dark fantasy series. A23a has followed roughly the same path as previous massive icebergs, passing the east side of the Antarctica Peninsula through the Weddell Sea along a route called “iceberg alley.” Weighing a little under a trillion metric tons, this monster block of freshwater was being whisked along by the world’s most powerful ocean “jet stream” — the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. Raul Cordero from Chile’s University of Santiago, who is also part of the National Antarctic Research Committee, said he was confident the iceberg would sidestep South Georgia. “The island acts as an obstacle for ocean currents and therefore usually diverts the water long before it reaches the island,” he said. “The iceberg is moved by that water flow, so the chances of it hitting are not that high,” though chunks could, he said. Another scientist, glaciologist Soledad Tiranti currently on an Argentinian exploration voyage in the Antarctic, said that icebergs such as A23a “are so deep that before reaching an island or mainland they generally get stuck” on the seabed. It is summer in South Georgia and resident penguins and seals along its southern coastline are foraging in the frosty waters to bring back food to fatten their young. “If the iceberg parks there, it’ll either block physically where they feed from, or they’ll have to go around it,” said Meijers. “That burns a huge amount of extra energy for them, so that’s less energy for the pups and chicks, which causes increased mortality.” The seal and penguin populations on South Georgia have already been having a “bad season” with an outbreak of bird flu “and that (iceberg) would make it significantly worse,” he said. As A23a ultimately melts it could seed the water with nutrients that encourage phytoplankton growth, feeding whales and other species, and allowing scientists to study how such blooms absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. While icebergs are natural phenomena, Meijers said the rate at which they were being lost from Antarctica was increasing, likely due to human-induced climate change. Source link

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Trump fires 17 inspectors general in late-night purge

U.S. President Donald Trump fired 17 inspectors general, the internal watchdogs who monitor federal agencies, on Friday night, capping a week of dramatic shake-ups of the federal bureaucracy with a focus on loyalty to the president, three people with knowledge of the matter said. The sweeping move did not affect Michael E. Horowitz, the inspector general for the Justice Department, according to one of the people with knowledge of the matter. But inspectors general at several major agencies were believed to have been fired. The Washington Post reported the firings earlier. A White House spokesperson did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment. Source link

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Trump officials pause programs to let in immigrants, including Ukrainians

WASHINGTON – U.S. Department of Homeland Security officials have ordered what amounts to a pause for a range of programs that allowed immigrants to settle in the United States temporarily, including a key initiative providing an entryway for Ukrainians. The directive, contained in an email sent by the top official at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services on Thursday and obtained by The New York Times, demands an immediate end to “final decisions” on applications related to the programs while the administration reviews them and decides whether to terminate them. The scope of the programs mentioned in the pause is vast, and the decision will block the entrance of immigrants fleeing some of the most unstable and desperate places in the world. In addition to Ukraine, which has been battered by years of war, the programs offered a pathway to immigrants from Cuba, Haiti and Venezuela, among others. Source link

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Celtic boss braces for life without Japan star Kyogo Furuhashi

Glasgow, Scotland – Brendan Rodgers is bracing himself for the exit of Kyogo Furuhashi during the January transfer window, with the Celtic boss confident the Scottish champions can cope without the Japan striker. Furuhashi, 30, has been strongly tipped to join French club Rennes and Rodgers said Friday: “We understand that we were going to lose him and we understand that we have to replace that quality to keep the team moving forward. “So that’s something that has been ongoing for a little while and hopefully we can come out of the window with a stronger squad.” Source link

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Central bank appears poised to break through 0.5% rate barrier this year

The Bank of Japan is on course to raise rates past the 0.5% barrier, unbroken for almost 30 years, if policymakers become confident that the country will achieve 2% inflation stably and sustainably. The central bank’s board voted Friday to increase its target for its short-term policy rate to around 0.5% from around 0.25%. If the BOJ continues to raise the rate, it will become close to the so-called neutral rate of interest, which neither stimulates nor cools the economy. The BOJ expects to raise the policy rate to the neutral rate, believed to be between 1% and 2.5%, by the end of fiscal 2026. A senior BOJ official has said that the central bank should raise the policy rate to at least 1%. However, determining the actual neutral rate is difficult. BOJ Gov. Kazuo Ueda has said that the question of when to stop raising rates remains a major challenge. The BOJ’s policy rate last reached 0.5% roughly 18 years ago, arriving at the level after the central bank raised it by 0.25 percentage point each in July 2006 and February 2007, following its lifting of quantitative monetary easing in March 2006. However, the BOJ resumed quantitative easing following the global financial crisis of 2008, bringing interest rates below zero. There is scarce empirical data on how the Japanese economy would react to sustained interest rate increases, so the BOJ needs to make any decision while closely monitoring economic and price reactions. Takahide Kiuchi, executive economist at Nomura Research Institute, estimated that Japan’s neutral rate of interest is just shy of 1%, given the country’s low potential growth rate. The BOJ “will have to steer policy carefully, so that there are no negative effects on the economy and prices,” Kiuchi said, predicting that the bank will increase the policy rate to 0.75% in the second half of 2025 before ending rate increases. Source link

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Seoul court rejects second request to extend Yoon detention

Seoul – A Seoul court rejected a second request Saturday to extend the detention of impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol over his failed attempt to declare martial law, putting pressure on prosecutors to quickly indict him. Yoon was arrested last week on insurrection charges, becoming the first sitting South Korean head of state to be detained in a criminal probe. His Dec. 3 martial law decree only lasted about six hours before it was voted down by lawmakers, but it still managed to plunge South Korea into its worst political crisis in decades. The Seoul Central District Court on Saturday turned down a request for a detention extension, prosecutors said in a brief statement. This follows a ruling by the same court a day earlier when a judge stated it was “difficult to find sufficient grounds” to grant an extension. Prosecutors had planned to keep the disgraced leader in custody until Feb. 6 for questioning before formally indicting him, but that plan will now need to be adjusted. “With the court’s rejection of the extension, prosecutors must now work quickly to formally indict Yoon to keep him behind bars,” said Yoo Jung-hoon, an attorney and political commentator. Yoon has refused to cooperate with the criminal probe, with his legal defense team arguing investigators lack legal authority. The suspended president is also facing a separate hearing in the Constitutional Court which, if it upholds his impeachment, would officially remove him from office. An election would then have to be held within 60 days. Source link

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Suspect says woman found dead on remote Tokyo island killed herself

The suspect in a case involving the death of a 37-year-old woman on a remote Tokyo island has told police investigators that the victim died by suicide, people familiar with the investigation said Saturday. The suspect, tatami store manager Sotatsu Yanase, 45, was arrested Friday on suspicion of abandoning and damaging the body of Shizuka Takase, with whom he was in a relationship. Some of Takase’s bones were discovered on the beach on Izu Oshima last October, and Yanase has admitted to disposing of her body. Investigators from the Metropolitan Police Department are examining Yanase’s statements carefully for inconsistencies, as Takase was planning to go on a trip with friends to Okinawa Prefecture after staying at the suspect’s home. Source link

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Sparkling Keys stuns Sabalenka to claim maiden Grand Slam title

MELBOURNE – American Madison Keys produced an inspired display to dethrone top seed Aryna Sabalenka at the Australian Open and capture her maiden Grand Slam title with a battling 6-3, 2-6, 7-5 victory in the final on Saturday. The 29-year-old became the fourth-oldest first-time Grand Slam champion in the professional era after Flavia Pennetta, Ann Jones and Francesca Schiavone, and her win ended Sabalenka’s bid for a third-straight Melbourne Park crown. Sabalenka made a couple of double faults to drop serve in the opening game and looked off color in the early exchanges as the free-hitting Keys heaped pressure on the top seed with a dipping cross-court winner en route to a double break. The American 19th seed rode her luck after a net cord winner and went up 5-1 in 20 minutes before conceding a break with a wayward backhand. Sabalenka later gifted her set point with a fourth double fault. Keys, who was hitting much harder than her opponent on both flanks, fired her 11th winner with a backhand down the line to clinch the opening set but Sabalenka began to mix up her game in the next set and sliced her way through to level the match. Both players relied on their powerful serves and shot-making to remain level until 5-5 in the decider but there was one final momentum shift as Keys produced some blistering winners to claim the next two games and the biggest triumph of her career. Source link

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