Category: International

  • Un fost lider al Bangladeshului a autorizat o represiune mortală, sugerează o înregistrare audio scursă.

    Un fost lider al Bangladeshului a autorizat o represiune mortală, sugerează o înregistrare audio scursă.

    Ex-Bangladesh leader authorised deadly crackdown, leaked audio suggests

    7 hours agoShareSaveChristopher Giles, Riddhi Jha, Rafid Hossain and Tarekuzzaman ShimulBBC Eye Investigations and BBC BanglaShareSaveAFP

    A deadly crackdown on student-led protests in Bangladesh last year was authorised by then prime minister Sheikh Hasina, according to audio of one of her phone calls verified by BBC Eye.

    In the audio, which was leaked online in March, Hasina says she authorised her security forces to "use lethal weapons" against protesters and that "wherever they find [them], they will shoot".

    Prosecutors in Bangladesh plan to use the recording as crucial evidence against Hasina, who is being tried in absentia at a special tribunal for crimes against humanity.

    Up to 1,400 people died in last summer's unrest, according to UN investigators. Hasina, who fled to India, and her party reject all charges against her.

    A spokesperson for her Awami League party denied the tape showed any "unlawful intention" of "disproportionate response".

    Listen: Sheikh Hasina's leaked phone call recording

    The leaked audio of Hasina's conversation with an unidentified senior government official is the most significant evidence yet that she gave direct authorisation to shoot anti-government protesters, tens of thousands of whom had taken to the streets by last summer.

    The protests began against civil service job quotas for relatives of those who fought in the 1971 war of independence and escalated into a mass movement that ousted Hasina, who had been in power for 15 years. It is the worst violence Bangladesh had seen since the 1971 war.

    Some of the bloodiest scenes occurred on 5 August, the day Hasina fled by helicopter before crowds stormed her residence in Dhaka.

    The BBC World Service investigation established previously unreported details about a police massacre of protesters in the capital – including a much higher death toll.

    A protester holding a stick faces police lines in Dhaka in July 2024

    Hasina was at her residence in Dhaka, known as the Ganabhaban, for the duration of the call which took place on 18 July, a source with knowledge of the leaked audio told the BBC.

    It was a crucial moment in the demonstrations. Security officials were responding to public outrage at police killings of protesters captured on video and shared across social media. In the days following the call, military-grade rifles were deployed and used across Dhaka, according to police documents seen by the BBC.

    The recording the BBC examined is one of numerous calls involving Sheikh Hasina that were made by the National Telecommunications Monitoring Centre (NTMC), a Bangladeshi government body responsible for monitoring communications.

    The audio of the call was leaked in early March this year – it's unclear by whom. Since the protests, numerous clips of Hasina's calls have appeared online, many of them unverified.

    The leaked 18 July recording was voice matched by the Criminal Investigation Department in the Bangladesh Police with known audio of Sheikh Hasina's voice.

    The BBC conducted its own independent verification by sharing the recording with audio forensics experts Earshot, who found no evidence the speech had been edited or manipulated and said it was highly unlikely to have been synthetically generated.

    Earshot said the leaked recording was likely to have been taken in a room with the phone call played back on a speaker, due to the presence of distinctive telephonic frequencies and background sounds. Earshot identified Electric Network Frequency (ENF) throughout the recording, a frequency that's often present in audio recordings due to interference between a recording device and mains-powered equipment, an indicator that the audio has not been manipulated.

    Earshot also analysed Sheikh Hasina's speech – the rhythm, intonation and breath sounds – and identified consistent noise floor levels, finding no evidence of synthetic artefacts in the audio.

    "The recordings are critical for establishing her role, they are clear and have been properly authenticated, and are supported by other evidence," British international human rights barrister Toby Cadman told the BBC. He is advising Bangladesh's International Criminal Tribunal (ICT), the court hearing cases against Hasina and others.

    An Awami League spokesperson said: "We cannot confirm whether the tape recording referenced by the BBC is authentic."

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    Alongside Sheikh Hasina, former government and police officials have been implicated in the killings of protesters. A total of 203 individuals have been indicted by the ICT, of whom 73 are in custody.

    BBC Eye analysed and verified hundreds of videos, images and documents detailing police attacks against demonstrators across 36 days.

    The investigation found that in one incident on 5 August in Jatrabari, a busy Dhaka neighbourhood, at least 52 people were killed by police, making it one of the worst incidents of police violence in Bangladesh's history. Initial reports at the time suggested 30 dead in Jatrabari on that day.

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    Outside the UK, watch on YouTube

    The BBC investigation uncovered new details about how the massacre started and ended.

    Gathering eyewitness footage, CCTV and drone imagery, BBC Eye established that police opened fire indiscriminately on protesters immediately after army personnel, who were separating the police from the protesters, vacated the area.

    For more than 30 minutes the police shot at fleeing protesters as they tried to escape down alleyways and on the highway, before the police officers sought shelter in a nearby army camp. At least six police officers were also killed as protesters retaliated hours later, setting fire to the Jatrabari police station.

    A spokesperson for the Bangladesh Police told the BBC that 60 police officers had been arrested for their role in the violence in July and August last year.

    "There were regrettable incidents in which certain members of the then police force engaged in excessive use of force," said the spokesperson. "Bangladesh Police has launched thorough and impartial investigations."

    AFPPeople gather to see burnt Jatrabari police station after anti-government protesters set fire to it last August

    Sheikh Hasina's trial began last month. She has been charged with committing crimes against humanity, including issuing orders that led to mass killings and targeted violence against civilians, as well as incitement, conspiracy and failure to prevent mass murder.

    India has so far failed to comply with a Bangladeshi request for her extradition. It is unlikely that Hasina will return to the country for the trial, Mr Cadman said.

    The Awami League maintains that its leaders are not liable for the force used against protesters.

    "The Awami League categorically denies and rejects claims that some of its senior leaders, including the prime minister herself, were personally responsible for or directed the use of lethal force against crowds," a spokesperson for the party said.

    "The decisions made by senior government officials were proportionate in nature, made in good faith and intended to minimise the loss of life."

    The party has rejected the findings of United Nations investigators, who said they had found reasonable grounds to believe the actions of Hasina and her government could amount to crimes against humanity.

    The BBC approached the Bangladesh army for comment but did not receive a response.

    Since Hasina's fall, Bangladesh has been ruled by an interim government led by Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunus.

    His government is preparing for national elections. It's unclear if the Awami League will be allowed to contest the vote.

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    Sursa: BBC News

  • Peste 100 de răniți în urma unui incendiu de vegetație care a devastat Marsilia

    Peste 100 de răniți în urma unui incendiu de vegetație care a devastat Marsilia

    Peste 100 de răniți în urma unui incendiu de vegetație lângă Marsilia

    Acum 7 oreDistribuieSalveazăDistribuieSalveazăUrmărește: Avioanele sting flăcările în timp ce incendiul de vegetație face ravagii lângă Marsilia

    Aproximativ 110 persoane au fost rănite ușor într-un incendiu de vegetație cu rază rapidă de acțiune care a ajuns la marginea orașului Marsilia, al doilea oraș ca mărime din Franța.

    Ministrul de Interne, Bruno Retailleau, a declarat că aproximativ 800 de pompieri se află la fața locului și că eforturile de stingere a incendiilor vor continua „toată noaptea”, deoarece incendiul nu a fost încă ținut sub control.

    Primarul orașului, Benoît Payan, a declarat anterior că „batalionul de pompieri marini duce un război de gherilă, cu furtunurile în mână”, referindu-se la serviciul de pompieri și salvare din Marsilia.

    Cel puțin 400 de persoane au fost evacuate din locuințele lor, potrivit presei franceze. Se spune că nouă pompieri au fost răniți.

    Locuitorii au fost avertizați să rămână în case și îndemnați să nu evacueze decât dacă li se cere să facă acest lucru, astfel încât drumurile să fie libere pentru vehiculele de urgență.

    În punctul culminant, incendiul s-a răspândit cu o viteză de 1,2 km (0,7 mile) pe minut, a declarat primarul, potrivit postului de televiziune francez BFMTV. El a dat vina pe o combinație de rafale de vânt, vegetație densă și pante abrupte.

    Potrivit ministerului de interne, până marți seară, 110 persoane fuseseră rănite ușor, inclusiv nouă pompieri și 22 de polițiști.

    Președintele francez Emmanuel Macron, aflat într-o vizită de stat în Marea Britanie, și-a exprimat sprijinul pentru echipele de pompieri și a cerut locuitorilor să respecte instrucțiunile de siguranță.

    „Gândurile noastre sunt alături de răniți și de toți locuitorii.” a scris el pe X.

    Ministrul de Interne Retailleau a sosit la Marsilia marți seara, unde s-a întâlnit cu oficialii locali.

    Aeroportul Marsilia Provence a anunțat că se va redeschide parțial de la ora 21:30, ora locală (19:30 GMT), după ce a fost închis timp de mai multe ore, începând cu ora 12:00, marți. Julien Coffinier, președintele aeroportului, a declarat că „nu a mai experimentat niciodată o situație de o asemenea amploare”.

    Getty Images Noroi uriași de fum se ridicau deasupra celui de-al doilea oraș ca mărime din Franța.

    Se spune că incendiul, care a izbucnit marți mai devreme lângă Pennes-Mirabeau, la nord de Marsilia, a acoperit aproximativ 700 de hectare (7 km pătrați).

    Autoritățile locale au declarat că incendiul a fost declanșat de o mașină care a luat foc pe autostradă.

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    „Este foarte izbitor – chiar apocaliptic”, a declarat Monique Baillard, o locuitoare a orașului, pentru agenția de știri Reuters. Ea a spus că mulți dintre vecinii ei plecaseră deja.

    Imaginile au arătat nori uriași de fum deasupra Marsiliei, în timp ce incendiul făcea ravagii într-o zonă deluroasă din nord.

    Regiunea Bouches-du-Rhône nu a înregistrat nicio picătură de ploaie din 19 mai, potrivit BFMTV.

    Getty ImagesUn ofițer de poliție încearcă să stingă un incendiu într-o mașină lângă Marsilia

    În altă parte a Franței, un alt incendiu de vegetație care a izbucnit luni lângă Narbonne rămâne activ, alimentat de vânturi de 60 km/h (40 mph). Aproximativ 2.000 de hectare au ars, au declarat oficialii locali.

    Incendii de vegetație au fost raportate și în alte părți ale Europei, inclusiv în regiunea Catalonia din nord-estul Spaniei, unde peste 18.000 de persoane au primit ordin să stea acasă marți, din cauza unui incendiu de vegetație din provincia estică Tarragona.

    Unități de urgență au fost desfășurate alături de 300 de pompieri, în timp ce vânturile puternice peste noapte au alimentat flăcările, care s-au răspândit pe aproape 3.000 de hectare (7.413 acri) de teren.

    Mai multe alte părți ale Spaniei – care a înregistrat cea mai fierbinte lună iunie înregistrată vreodată – au fost în alertă maximă pentru incendii de vegetație.

    În Grecia, aproximativ 41 de incendii de vegetație au izbucnit în toată țara luni. Dintre acestea, 34 au fost ținute sub control devreme, în timp ce șapte au rămas active până luni seara, potrivit serviciului de pompieri.

    O mare parte din vestul și sudul Europei a fost lovită de un val de căldură puternic la începutul verii, care a provocat incendii care au dus la evacuarea a mii de persoane din casele lor.

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  • După Diddy: De ce hip-hop-ul încă se luptă să aibă propriul său moment „MeToo”

    După Diddy: De ce hip-hop-ul încă se luptă să aibă propriul său moment „MeToo”

    ” class=”sc-d1200759-0 dvfjxj”/>Neilson Barnard/Getty ImagesMs Ventura's lawyer said that by coming forward, she had "brought attention to the realities of powerful men in our orbit"

    Ms Ventura, an R&B singer who was previously signed to his record label, testified that throughout their long-term relationship, Combs – who was 17 years her senior – beat her, blackmailed her and coerced her into drug-fuelled sex sessions with escorts. He had, she continued, controlled her life.

    Central to the trial was the claim that Combs, 55, a multimillionaire music mogul once credited with bringing rap into the mainstream, forced his partners to engage in elaborate sexual performances, known as "freak-offs", that he directed, often filmed and arranged with the help of his staff.

    Last week, he was found guilty on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. He was acquitted on the more serious charges of racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking.

    After the verdict was announced, Ms Ventura's lawyer, Doug Wigdor, said that by coming forward, she had "brought attention to the realities of powerful men in our orbit and the misconduct that has persisted for decades without repercussion".

    But now, campaigners, survivors of sexual violence and insiders within the music industry are asking: Why did it take so long to hold Combs accountable?

    And, in light of Hollywood's MeToo movement that uncovered and helped root out sexual harassment and abuse in the film industry, and which began nearly a decade ago – is it now time that the music industry, or more specifically, hip-hop, had a MeToo movement of its own?

    'A playbook that shields predators'

    Cristalle Bowen is a rapper from Chicago who was part of an all-female trio called RapperChicks. "The Diddy trial only highlights what many of us already know," she says, referring to the struggle to hold powerful people to account.

    In 2022 she wrote a book about misogyny in the industry. The tagline is: Navigating Hip-Hop and Relationships in a Culture of Misogyny. "Being the token women on labels and in crews leaves you susceptible to, at the very least, name calling," she claims. "At the most… you've been abused in some way.

    "When there is money involved, it becomes tricky. From hush money to stalled careers to the way we all see survivors treated… It's a difficult task."

    Campaigners and industry insiders who spoke to the BBC say that sexual abuse and harassment exists across all genres in the music business, not only hip-hop. They point to a culture of silence, where they claim that predators are protected and victims risk being blacklisted, sued or fired.

    Kevin Mazur/Getty ImagesCombs' label, Bad Boy Records, was praised for creating jobs and making hip-hop more mainstream. He's said to be worth around threats to push out women artists who are targets of abuse by men".

    "The music industry has followed a playbook for dealing with sexual abuse that shields predators, including musicians, producers, managers, executives, and other behind-the-scenes players, from liability," she claims.

    Non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) – legal contracts that stop people from sharing certain agreed-upon private information – are used legitimately in the industry, for example to help protect commercial secrets. But some argue that these are being misused and can contribute to a culture of silence in cases of abuse.

    "[It] makes for a very difficult decision for a lot of victims," says Arick Fudali, a New York-based lawyer. One of his clients is Dawn Richard, a singer who testified against Combs at the federal trial and has an ongoing lawsuit against him.

    "I've had clients who have declined that and chosen to file their lawsuit publicly," he adds. "They can receive less money than if they had just settled privately and confidentially."

    Ms Bowen argues that she has seen this happen first-hand. "Moguls write the cheques and artists need the cheques – there's usually no checks and balances when mogul money is involved."

    But, there may be other reasons for not speaking out.

    And in hip-hop specifically, some survivors of abuse and experts we spoke to argue that this culture of silence is exacerbated by the combined forces of racism and misogyny, and a desire to fiercely protect a genre that has created rare avenues to stardom and financial success.

    A mouthpiece for liberation and resistance

    Originating in the African-American and Latino communities of New York City in the 1970s, hip-hop became a mouthpiece for liberation and resistance against the authorities and social injustice.

    "Hip-hop allowed young black people to tell their own stories on their own terms, it gave that generation a voice," explains Mark Anthony Neal, professor of African-American studies at Duke University, particularly when popular culture was offering a limited portrayal of black America.

    It's now the most commercially successful music genre in the US, leading in album sales and streaming numbers. "Rappers are the new rock stars," says Thomas Hobbs, a writer and co-host of a hip-hop podcast, Exit the 36 Chambers. "They're the people now most likely to fill arenas."

    WATCH: Video shared with BBC – Sean "Diddy" Combs holds pool parties at his Miami mansion

    As an artist and businessman who ran an empire that encompassed fashion, alcohol and TV as well as his label, Bad Boy Records, Combs – who has an estimated net worth of about black excellence" – platforming achievements – as well as highlighting struggles within the black community.

    This was something his legal defence raised in court, saying: "Sean Combs has become something that is very, very hard to be. Very hard to be. He is a self-made, successful, black entrepreneur."

    Outside court during his trial, fans erupted in cheers after he was acquitted of the more serious charges and onlookers debated aloud whether he had been unfairly targeted. "Of course he was. He's a powerful black man," one said.

    For weeks, others had been wearing and selling "Free Puff" T-shirts, after Combs' 90s stage name, next to a speaker blaring out his music.

    Bryan Bedder/CP/Getty ImagesCombs, 55, a multimillionaire music mogul, was credited with bringing rap into the mainstream and hosted 'White Parties'

    Sociologist Katheryn Russell-Brown has described a phenomenon she calls "black protectionism".

    "Those who have managed to obtain large-scale prosperity, in spite of legal, political, economic, educational and social barriers, are given the status of racial pioneers," she wrote in her book, Protecting Our Own: Race, Crime, and African Americans, which was inspired by the OJ Simpson case.

    "It is, therefore, predictable that black people as a group are suspicious when criminal charges are brought against members of its elite, protected class."

    Black women in particular carry the fear that speaking out could reinforce harmful stereotypes about their community, argues Treva Lindsey, a professor in the Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Department at Ohio State University who researches misogyny in hip-hop.

    "When we portray hip-hop as uniquely sexist, or sexually violent, or harmful, that has repercussions for black people of all genders," she says.

    The start of a reckoning?

    And yet across the entertainment industry more broadly, a retrospective focus is slowly happening now, in part because of shifts in attitudes.

    Recent changes to law in some US states have also enabled people to take action over alleged historic misconduct.

    New York and California passed laws in 2022 called the Adult Survivors Act that for one-year only allowed people to file sexual abuse claims, regardless of when the alleged incidents took place.

    Ms Ventura filed a lawsuit against Combs in November 2023, accusing him of physical and sexual abuse. It was settled the following day, and Combs denied the claims.

    ReutersWhen Cassie Ventura filed her lawsuit, she faced online abuse and criticism from some within the hip-hop worldReutersCombs faces more than 60 civil cases from men and women accusing him of drugging or assault. He denies all allegations

    He now faces more than 60 civil cases from men and women accusing him of drugging or assault, spanning his entire three-decade career.

    In a statement, Combs' team has said: "No matter how many lawsuits are filed, it won't change the fact that Mr Combs has never sexually assaulted or sex trafficked anyone – man or woman, adult or minor."

    He is, however, one of several hip-hop titans of the 90s and 00s to have been accused in a relatively recent wave of allegations.

    Music executive and producer Antonio LA Reid, who worked with artists including Usher, Kanye West (now known as Ye) and Rihanna, was accused of sexual assault in a lawsuit filed in 2023. He denies all claims against him.

    Meanwhile, Russell Simmons, co-founder of hip-hop label Def Jam Recordings, has faced allegations of violent sexual behaviour by more than 20 women since 2017, all of which he has denied.

    Getty ImagesRussell Simmons, co-founder of Def Jam, has been accused of sexual violence by more than 20 women since 2017. He denies all allegations

    Drew Dixon, who is former vice president of Artists and Repertoire (A&R) at Arista Records, is among them. She has claimed she was abused by both Mr Simmons and Mr Reid when she worked in the music industry in the 1990s and 2000s.

    She told The New York Times: "You're not just going up against the person who assaulted you," she said. "You are going against everyone who benefits from their brand and revenue stream.

    "Those forces will mobilise against any accuser. It's daunting."

    Vezi mai multe știri aici

    Backlash after speaking out

    Sil Lai Abrams, who is a writer and gender violence activist, began working as an executive assistant at the Def Jam music label in 1992. She is one of the women who accused Mr Simmons of sexual assault. He has denied all allegations.

    "It's harder for women of colour to speak out against abuse in the music industry," she argues – something that she believes still applies today. "[Women have] been conditioned to see abuse of power and sexual harassment as the price one pays to work in the industry."

    Then there is the question of the response from the public if people do speak out. When Ms Ventura first filed her lawsuit against Combs, she faced widespread abuse. Memes on social media accused her of being a gold-digger. Some in the hip-hop industry criticised her too.

    Mark Mainz/Getty ImagesCombs still awaits sentencing following his recent trial

    "Quit trying to expose people for money," US rapper Slim Thug said in a video shared with his two million followers on Instagram in 2023.

    Only when CNN broadcast security camera footage dating back to 2016 which showed Combs grabbing, dragging and kicking Ms Ventura in the hallway of a hotel did the sentiment towards her change.

    Slim Thug publicly apologised for his comments.

    Combs responded in a video statement posted on Instagram, saying: "My behaviour on that video is inexcusable. I take full responsibility… I'm committed to be a better man each and every day… I'm truly sorry."

    "Before the video of Combs beating her came out and people couldn't deny the evidence, people said Cassie was a liar," says Dr Nikki Lane, assistant professor in Gender, Sexuality & Feminist Studies at Duke University.

    Getty ImagesRapper Megan Thee Stallion, who was shot in the foot in 2020, pictured at the Met Gala

    Yet Dr Lane argues that more still needs to change. "Black women's bodies are constantly traded upon within the culture of hip-hop as tropes to be ridiculed".

    Dr Lane points to the example of rapper Megan Thee Stallion, who was shot in the foot in 2020.

    Fellow rapper Tory Lanez is currently serving a 10-year sentence for the assault, but after the incident, the artist Drake was criticised for lyrics in his 2022 song Circo Loco – "This b- lie 'bout gettin' shots, but she still a stallion" – which seemed to refer to the incident.

    'Some people look the other way'

    There remains the question of what happens to the art – and indeed the music – when an idol is convicted of serious crimes.

    R&B singer R Kelly was sentenced to 30 years in prison in 2022 for sex trafficking, racketeering and sexually abusing women and children, but years later, his music remains popular. It generated about 780 million audio streams in the US since January 2019. On Spotify, he has around 5.2 million monthly listeners.

    "There are still people [who] defend R Kelly," says Mr Hobbs. "I won't be surprised if Diddy's streams, just like R Kelly's, stay high."

    "There's a kind of cognitive dissonance" from fans, he argues. "These songs become so embedded in people's lives that they find it very difficult to get rid of them… [they're] part of people's DNA.

    "So, I think some people are able to look the other way."

    ReutersThe Combs verdict in itself is unlikely to lead to wider changes, according to Prof Lindsey

    The bigger question, perhaps, is how should the industry react? After the MeToo movement began in 2017, at least 200 prominent men accused of sexual harassment lost their jobs, and changes were made to workplace policies.

    However, the Combs verdict in itself is unlikely to lead to wider changes, according to Prof Lindsey. "I think what happens in this moment is Diddy, kind of like R Kelly in the R&B black music pantheon, is seen as exceptional… and not indicative of something else," she says.

    "There isn't a cultural reset where we look inward and ask: 'How does this happen?'"

    But that is exactly what is missing, argue some others in the industry, including Ms Abrams. "What is lacking is a political environment against which survivors can count on to change the material conditions that allowed someone like Combs to act with impunity," she says.

    Following MeToo in Hollywood, certain changes were introduced, including making intimacy coordinators more of a standard practice when filming sex scenes. Some music insiders now hope that migrates over to music video sets.

    The Sound Off Coalition is calling for new company rules that require people in positions of power in music to report accusations of sexual assault.

    Tangible measures are what matter, argues Dr Lane. "The only way for me to believe that there's been a reckoning would be to see changes in laws, policies, and actual business practices of the industry… [Ones] that are not based on how long Diddy goes down for."

    For all the latest reaction and analysis on the verdict, you can listen to the Diddy on Trial podcast available on BBC Sounds.

    Additional reporting by Florence Freeman and Fiona Macdonald

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    Sean ‘Diddy’ CombsGrammy AwardsHip-hopMusic#MeToo campaignSexual harassmentSexual violenceWomen


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  • Instagram acuză pe nedrept unii utilizatori de încălcarea regulilor privind abuzul sexual asupra copiilor

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    A fost „oribil”, „stresant” și „izolant”, au declarat cei afectați pentru BBC News.


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    Video shows drivers pulling over on a bridge to take in the funnel-shaped clouds, which a meteorologist attributes to a storm in the region.

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    Three things we learned about Trump's foreign policy from Iran strikes

    He's unpredictable and his moves are unprecedented – the BBC's Bernd Debusmann lays out the US president's negotiating strategies.

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    Watch: How prosecutors went after Diddy in his sex trafficking trial

    From a hotel video to baby oil – the BBC's Nada Tawfik breaks down the evidence and testimony heard on the stand so far.

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    Watch: Moment helicopter flips and crash lands in Michigan

    No injuries were reported after the aircraft abruptly turned on its side while landing in Clay Township.

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    23 Jun 2025US & Canada

    US strikes on Iran trigger protests internationally

    Demonstrators take to the streets in France, Pakistan, Greece and the Philippines to condemn the military action.

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    Read had pleaded not guilty to the charges, with her lawyers arguing that she was being framed for her boyfriend's death.

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    According to the president, the two flag poles are 100ft (30.5m) tall and paid for out of his own pocket.

    18 Jun 2025US & Canada

    'It's horrible, it's mind-numbing': Murdered US lawmaker's family speaks

    The parents and brother of Democratic state lawmaker Melissa Hortman spoke out for the first time since the shooting last week.

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    'Spectacular' moment an enormous tornado crosses a rainbow

    Stormchasers captured footage of the major twister swirling near Dickens, Nebraska.

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    Watch: How Trump loomed over G7 despite early departure

    The BBC's James Landale highlights the role of the US president at the summit as the conflict in the Middle East overshadowed the gathering.

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    Watch: Virginia police find alligator outside motel

    The reptile was found just 20 minutes south of Washington DC.

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    Sursa: BBC News

  • Sunt cerul Indiei sigur? Organismul de supraveghere a siguranței aeriene răspunde pe fondul îngrijorărilor tot mai mari

    Sunt cerul Indiei sigur? Organismul de supraveghere a siguranței aeriene răspunde pe fondul îngrijorărilor tot mai mari

    Cerul Indiei rămâne sigur, cu rate ale accidentelor sub mediile globale, a declarat pentru BBC șeful autorității de reglementare în siguranța aeriană.


    Sursa: BBC News

  • La câteva zile după inundațiile din Texas, cel puțin 161 de persoane sunt încă dispărute într-un comitat.

    La câteva zile după inundațiile din Texas, cel puțin 161 de persoane sunt încă dispărute într-un comitat.

    Days after Texas floods, at least 161 people are still missing in one county

    4 hours agoShareSaveAlex Lederman in Kerr County, Texas, & Ali Abbas AhmadiBBC NewsShareSaveWatch: Texas resident survived floods by standing on electrical box for three hours

    At least 161 people are still missing in a single Texas county four days after deadly and devastating flash floods hit parts of the state last week, Governor Greg Abbott said, as hope fades for survivors to be found alive.

    The missing in the hard-hit Kerr County include five campers and one counsellor from Camp Mystic, a Christian all-girls summer camp located on the banks of Guadalupe river.

    At least 109 people have died in the disaster, including 94 in the Kerrville area alone, Abbott said in a news conference on Tuesday.

    Texas is not alone. New Mexico saw a flash flood emergency as well, with the National Weather Service (NWS) warning of intense flooding on Tuesday night.

    In Texas, frantic search and rescue efforts continue, with Abbott vowing emergency crews "will not stop until every missing person is accounted for".

    Abbott added that it is very likely more missing will be added to the list in the coming days, and urged people to report anyone they think is unaccounted for.

    General Thomas Suelzer from the Texas National Guard said search efforts include Chinook and Black Hawk helicopters with rescue hoists.

    He said there are 13 Black Hawk helicopters helping in the search effort, including four that arrived from Arkansas. He added that authorities were also using reaper drones.

    Responders from various agencies are working together on rescue efforts, including agents from border patrol, the FBI and the National Guard.

    More than 250 responders from various agencies have been assigned to the Kerrville area alone to help with search and rescue.

    One of those rescue volunteers, named Tim, told the BBC he has never seen any destruction at this scale before.

    "I've done the floods down in East Texas and Southeast Texas, and hurricanes, and this is a nightmare," he said.

    Another rescue volunteer, named Justin, compared the effort to "trying to find a single hay in a haystack".

    "There's a wide trail of destruction for miles, and there's not enough cadaver dogs to go through all of it," he told the BBC.

    "It's hard to access a lot of it with heavy machinery. Guys are trying to pick at it with tools and hands, and they're not even putting a dent in it – not for lack of effort."

    Questions have been raised about whether authorities provided adequate flood warnings before the disaster, and why people were not evacuated earlier.

    • 'Lives are at stake:' Deadly Texas storms puts spotlight on Trump's weather agency cuts
    • Three key factors that made Texas floods so deadly

    Experts say there were a number of factors that contributed to the tragedy in Texas, including the extreme weather, the location of the holiday homes and timing.

    The governor, who had spent part of the day surveying the flood zone, said authorities had issued a storm warning and knew about a possible flash flood, but "didn't know the magnitude of the storm".

    No one knew it would lead to a "30-foot high tsunami wall of water", he said.

    The governor responded to a question about who was to "blame" for the enormous death toll, saying: "That's the word choice of losers."

    He made a sports analogy, saying American football teams make mistakes; champion teams are the ones who don't "point fingers".

    Citește mai multe știri pe top10stiri.ro

    Watch: Drones and dogs help in Texas rescue

    • 'Hero' dad, twin girls and riverside campers among Texas flood victims
    • What early warnings did flood-hit Texas receive?

    Most of the victims died in Kerr County, where the Guadalupe River was swollen by torrential downpours before daybreak on Friday, the July Fourth public holiday.

    Camp Mystic had earlier confirmed at least 27 girls and staff were among the dead.

    Those who survived are now focused on trying to rebuild.

    Justin Brown has lived along the Guadalupe River for more than 25 years.

    A week ago, he lived in his mobile home at the Blue Oak RV Park with his two young daughters and dog. Now, there is a huge puddle where his home once stood – his RV swept away in the floods.

    "We were one of the few parks that got almost everybody out," Mr Brown told the BBC as he described the efforts of his landlord and emergency workers, who evacuated almost all of the park's residents.

    Looking out over the empty lot where his home once stood – now just debris – he said he hopes to move back in as soon as he can.

    President Donald Trump will travel to the flood-ravaged areas with First Lady Melania Trump on Friday.

    Separately, in New Mexico, the NWS declared a flash flood emergency on Tuesday and told residents of Ruidoso to be on high alert for flooding.

    Officials there are already working to rescue people trapped in floodwaters and houses are reportedly being washed away.

    A flood wave on the Rio Ruidoso has reached 15 feet (4.5m), the NWS in Albuquerque said in a post on X.

    The waters receded about two hours later, according to CBS, the BBC's US partner.

    Officials had to perform some swift boat rescues and some people were unaccounted for as of Tuesday evening.

    Watch: Moment house is swept away in New Mexico flash flooding

    Texas floods death toll climbs to at least 107

    'Hero' dad, twin girls and riverside campers among Texas flood victims

    'Their house was swept away. We lost three beautiful friends'

    FloodsTexasUnited States


    Sursa: BBC News

  • Familii îngrijorate de siguranța indienilor răpiți în Mali

    Familii îngrijorate de siguranța indienilor răpiți în Mali

    Atacatori înarmați au răpit săptămâna trecută trei bărbați indieni de la locul lor de muncă din Mali.


    Sursa: BBC News