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New street patrol helps Nara’s deer clean up their act

Nara – As peckish deer chase delighted tourists in Japan’s temple-dotted Nara Park, a quiet but dedicated team of litter-pickers patrols the stone paths, collecting plastic waste that threatens the animals’ health. The ancient city of Nara is a major draw for the country’s record influx of visitors — but like in nearby Kyoto, where photo-hungry crowds have been accused of pestering the famous geisha, there have been unwelcome consequences. Tourists are only allowed to feed the deer special rice crackers sold in Nara, but the animals are increasingly eating rubbish by accident. Source link

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Kunichika’s vibrant ukiyo-e gets a chance to shine at anniversary exhibit

Toyohara Kunichika loved to draw. As a child, he was always scribbling, doodling, sketching. His enthusiasm was such that it probably cost him his first apprenticeship, in a yarn and thread shop, where there were few opportunities to hold a brush. Fortunately, he was happier in his brother’s padded oshi-e fabric business, where he contributed illustrations. But it was only when he began training as an ukiyo-e artist, culminating around 1848 when he entered the studio of Utagawa Kunisada (1786-1864), the most prolific and commercially successful woodblock print designer of all time, that he felt he had found a place where he could give his passion free rein. This year marks the 190th anniversary of the birth of Kunichika (1835-1900). For this occasion, the Ota Memorial Museum of Art in Tokyo’s Shibuya Ward presents a comprehensive retrospective featuring 211 artworks. These are displayed over two periods — Feb. 1 through Feb. 24 and March 1 through March 24 — with a changeover scheduled for the last week of February. Source link

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U.S. Steel and Nippon Steel were blindsided by Trump investment talk

U.S. President Donald Trump’s comments last week that Nippon Steel would invest in United States Steel instead of pursuing a takeover surprised shareholders. It turns out that his words blindsided both companies as well. The proposed investment disclosed by Trump on Feb. 7 following a meeting at the White House with Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba wasn’t communicated to either of the steelmakers beforehand, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified because they weren’t authorized to discuss the matter. The president’s comments sent shares of U.S. Steel plunging that day. Ishiba reiterated the planned investment in a TV interview last Sunday in Japan. But both companies, who are still trying to salvage their $14.1 billion blockbuster merger, remain silent on the idea. In private, they’re uncertain as to what such an investment would even look like, the people said. Source link

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Japan, U.S., South Korea top diplomats reaffirm ‘unshakeable’ trilateral ties

The top diplomats from Japan, South Korea and the United States on Saturday held their first meeting following U.S. President Donald Trump’s election, reaffirming “the unshakable trilateral partnership” and pledging to boost security and economic cooperation amid concerns over the three-way relationship’s durability. Meeting on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference in the German city, Foreign Minister Takeshi Iwaya, South Korean Foreign Minister Cho Tae-yul and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio “pledged to take decisive actions to counter threats, enhance economic resilience and advance shared interests,” they said in a joint statement. “The secretary and foreign ministers underscored the necessity of enhancing the strength of the alliances to ensure peace and prosperity, including through robust security cooperation among the three countries,” they added, specifically noting continued trilateral military exercises. Source link

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Trump says new tariffs on autos coming around April 2

President Donald Trump said he would unveil new tariffs on automobiles, adding to a wave of sweeping import levies as he seeks to remake global trade relationships and pressure companies to move production to the U.S. “We are going to do that on around April 2,” Trump told reporters Friday in the Oval Office, as he signed an executive order on energy policy. The move is the latest in a rapidly widening trade war as Trump delivers on his campaign pledges to institute sweeping tariffs on U.S. allies and rivals alike. It comes a day after Trump unveiled his most expansive measure yet, ordering his administration to develop plans for imposing reciprocal tariffs on numerous trading partners, an effort to address what he says is a system that is tilted against the U.S.. Source link

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TSMC considers running Intel’s U.S. factories after Trump team request

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. is considering taking a controlling stake in Intel’s factories at the request of Trump administration officials, a person familiar with the matter said, as the president looks to boost American manufacturing and maintain U.S. leadership in critical technologies. Trump officials raised the idea of a deal between the two companies in recent meetings with the Taiwanese chipmaker, the person said, and TSMC was receptive. It’s unclear whether Intel is open to a transaction. The talks are in very early stages, and the exact structure of a potential partnership hasn’t been established. But the intended result would have the world’s largest made-to-order chipmaker fully operating Intel’s U.S. semiconductor factories, said the person, who asked not to be identified because the conversations are private. It also would address concerns about Intel’s deteriorating financial state, which has forced the company to slash jobs and curb its global expansion plans. Source link

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Vance attack on Europe overshadows Ukraine talks at security conference

Munich – U.S. Vice President JD Vance accused European leaders on Friday of censoring free speech and failing to control immigration, drawing a sharp rebuke from Germany’s defense minister and overshadowing discussions on the war in Ukraine. The prospect of peace talks had been expected to dominate the annual Munich Security Conference after a call between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin this week but Vance barely mentioned Russia or Ukraine in his speech to the gathering. He said the threat to Europe that worried him most was not Russia or China but what he called a retreat from fundamental values of protecting free speech — as well as immigration, which he said was “out of control” in Europe. Source link

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China will have to hit back at U.S. ‘bullying,’ Beijing’s top diplomat says

China’s top diplomat said the country will respond to any further unilateral U.S. sanctions, calling such moves a form of “bullying” in his first major public remarks since U.S. President Donald Trump launched a new trade conflict. “If the U.S. is not willing, if it is bent on suppressing and containing China, then we have no choice but to play along to the end,” Foreign Minister Wang Yi told officials at the Munich Security Conference on Friday. “We will resolutely respond to unilateral bullying practices of the U.S..” The Trump administration imposed 10% tariffs on China days into his second term. Beijing retaliated by targeting a handful of American companies, slapping levies on some U.S. goods and placing export controls on some critical metals. Source link

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Elon Musk’s tactics frustrate some White House senior officials

As tech billionaire Elon Musk expands his influence over more than a dozen U.S. federal agencies, frustration is growing among some top aides to President Donald Trump, who want more coordination from Musk’s team as he slashes the U.S. government, according to four people aware of the tensions. Trump’s chief of staff, Susie Wiles, and her team have at times felt out of the loop as Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency seeks to fire thousands of federal workers while accessing sensitive data and disrupting operations, the four people said. Wiles and some of her top aides spoke to Musk recently about the issues, according to one of the sources. Speaking to reporters at the White House on Tuesday, Musk projected alignment between himself, his tight-knit group of DOGE staffers and Trump. But underlying tensions with some White House officials highlight potential difficulties for Trump in balancing his core team with Musk’s DOGE staff as they upend agencies in a sweeping restructuring that has challenged congressional authority and faced a series of lawsuits. In the recent conversation, Wiles and her staff delivered a message to Musk: “We need to message all this. We need to be looped in,” according to the source familiar with the encounter. Reuters was not able to determine the specific date they spoke or what, if any, changes Musk made after that conversation. The source added that Trump himself continued to speak positively about Musk to donors and others. Musk did not respond to a request for comment. The White House declined to comment. An official with knowledge of the matter pushed back at the sources’ description of tensions, saying initial “operational hiccups” had been smoothed out. Musk sends reports to Wiles at the end of each day and they speak by phone almost every day, the official said. The official added that it was Musk’s idea to speak with reporters on Tuesday at the Oval Office with his 4-year-old son by his side. “He showed up with his kid. We rolled with it,” the official said. On Tuesday, Trump issued an executive order that expanded Musk’s power over the federal bureaucracy, requiring federal agencies to work with DOGE to make large workforce reductions and limit hiring. The order calls for DOGE to station a “team lead” at every government agency who will oversee all hiring decisions. “This is a unified team,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Wednesday. “Elon Musk is serving at the pleasure of the president, just like everybody else on this team. He takes directives directly from the president of the United States.” In a subsequent statement to reporters Friday after this story was published, Leavitt said: “This story is complete bulls— from unknown sources who have no idea what they are talking about.” Trump’s chief of staff, Susie Wiles, and her team have at times felt out of the loop as Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency seeks to fire thousands of federal workers while accessing sensitive data and disrupting operations, sources say. | REUTERS At the Oval Office news conference, with Trump beside him, Musk defended his role as an unelected official who has been granted unprecedented authority by the Republican president to dismantle parts of the U.S. government. He told reporters he speaks to Trump nearly every day, saying his work is in the interest of the public and democracy. “The people voted for major government reform, and that’s what people are going to get,” said Musk. “All of our actions are maximally transparent.” DOGE, however, has operated in deep secrecy. It has provided almost no information on whom it employs, where it is operating or what actions it is taking inside government agencies. It posts little information about its work, providing only dollar figures for purported cuts in specific agencies and little concrete detail. It has stunned federal employees, sending its members into at least 15 agencies and gaining access to sensitive data. As a “special government employee,” Musk’s financial disclosure filings will not be made public, the White House has said. One of the four sources said that Wiles was not upset with Musk’s efforts to dismantle government agencies and downsize the federal workforce, but rather with his approach. Wiles, one of the two managers of Trump’s 2024 election campaign, wants Musk and DOGE to keep her team informed and work in a more orderly fashion, said the source, who has direct knowledge of the matter. “There is some frustration, but it’s overblown to say it’s a rift,” the source said. The fourth source, an associate of high-ranking White House officials, described the friction as more serious and said Wiles’ subordinates had expressed discomfort over information that Musk released on his social media platform X before it had been vetted by senior White House staff. “They’re definitely finding things out on Twitter.” One point of contention is a series of emails that Musk associates began sending out to federal employees, including a Jan. 28 message offering 2 million federal workers financial incentives to quit. Wiles and her team did not sign off on some of those emails, according to one of the four sources and a separate, fifth, source close to Trump. To be sure, many of Trump’s close allies and White House aides appear to revel in Musk’s uncompromising style of governance. But his backing is far from unanimous, according to interviews. Musk, the world’s richest person, spent over a quarter of a billion dollars to help Trump win last year’s presidential election. After Trump’s November victory, Musk began to spend extended periods of time with Trump, who has called Musk “fantastic” and praised DOGE staffers as a group of “super geniuses.” As chief of staff, Wiles is one of Washington’s top power brokers. Under her management, Trump’s latest presidential campaign was widely praised as his most disciplined to date. She has a reputation for being self-effacing, turning down an invitation from Trump to speak to the crowd on the night he

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Trump team makes confused start to Ukraine diplomacy

Washington – This was a disorienting week for those anxious over how the new Trump administration will fulfill Donald Trump’s vow to end the Ukraine war. As the U.S. president took his first steps toward diplomacy over the nearly three-year conflict, comments from his top officials left many unsure what he has planned for the biggest security crisis to face Europe in decades. Trump spoke to Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy by phone on Wednesday and tasked officials with kick-starting negotiations, adding that a summit with Putin in Saudi Arabia was likely. Source link

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