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RFK Jr ends COVID vaccine recommendation: What do facts say about risks? | Health News

In a one-minute video, US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr revoked the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s recommendation that healthy children and healthy pregnant women be vaccinated for COVID-19, leaving some experts concerned and others unsure about the policy’s details.

Kennedy was joined in the video, posted on May 27 on X, by Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Marty Makary and National Institutes of Health Director Jay Bhattacharya.

Kennedy, who was tapped by President Donald Trump after a years-long embrace of vaccine conspiracy theories, did not make it clear whether he was referring to a recommendation for children or pregnant women getting vaccinated for the first time, for getting subsequent booster shots, or both. Days after the announcement, HHS’s website provided no clarity, saying, “COVID-19 vaccines are available to everyone 6 months and older. Getting vaccinated is the best way to help protect people from COVID-19.” A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention webpage dated January 7 – before Kennedy was secretary – provided a similar broad vaccine endorsement.

Some experts say the low rates of serious COVID-19 cases among children justify tightening the federal vaccine recommendation. Others say that the move will make it harder to get vaccinated and cause preventable serious illnesses.

Kennedy broke from norms by not waiting for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices to vote on vaccine guidance at a scheduled June meeting.

Recommending against vaccination for certain groups could make it harder for most children and pregnant women to get the shot, if insurers decide not to cover COVID-19 shots for those groups. Immunization rates are already low, with 13 percent of children and 14.4 percent of pregnant women up to date with the 2024-25 edition of the COVID-19 vaccine, the CDC found in late April.

We fact-checked the three federal health officials’ comments with health experts.

Kennedy said child vaccine boosters lacked clinical data

Kennedy said, “Last year, the Biden administration urged healthy children to get yet another COVID shot, despite the lack of any clinical data to support the repeat booster strategy in children.”

In recent years, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices – a group of outside experts that advises the CDC on who should be vaccinated and how often – has recommended annual boosters for healthy children who have already received COVID-19 vaccines.

The committee made this recommendation without also recommending that every annual iteration of the vaccine undergo new rounds of clinical trials before being used, said Dr William Schaffner, professor of preventive medicine at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center. (The vaccine had been approved by the FDA for safety and efficacy early in the pandemic.) The panel concluded that the coronavirus vaccine operated in the same way as the annual flu vaccine, which has not required repeated clinical trials, said Schaffner, a former committee member and current adviser.

The American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Academy of Family Physicians also recommended COVID-19 vaccinations for children and did not urge new clinical trials.

Kids generally don’t need the vaccination, FDA chief said

Makary said, “There’s no evidence healthy kids need” the vaccine.

This is disputed. Most children will not face serious illness from COVID-19, but a small fraction will. Experts draw different lines when deciding how widespread the vaccination programme needs to be, given this scale of risk.

During the 2024-25 COVID-19 season, children and adolescents age 17 and younger comprised about 4 percent of COVID-19-associated hospitalisations. The relatively small number of serious cases among children has driven the belief among some scientists that the universal vaccination recommendation is too broad.

However, among all children, rates of COVID-19-associated hospitalisations were highest among infants less than six months old.

“With 4 million new children born every year with no exposure to COVID, young children have rates of disease similar to the disease rates in people older than 65,” Schaffner said, citing a September 2024 article on the CDC’s website.

COVID-19 was among the top 10 causes of death in children during the worst of the pandemic between 2020 and 2022, said Tara C Smith, a Kent State University epidemiologist. “Though we may no longer be at that stage … we vaccinate for influenza, so why not continue to do so for COVID?”

Some doctors are concerned about the lingering syndrome known as long COVID, about which less is known, especially among children.

The outside advisory committees and the medical academies found this level of serious disease to be sufficient to recommend continued annual vaccinations.

Makary said this policy is similar to those in other countries

Makary was accurate when he said that “most countries have stopped recommending” routine COVID-19 vaccination for children.

“Many countries will only offer the COVID vaccine to children if they have underlying health conditions or are immunocompromised,” said Brooke Nichols, a Boston University associate professor of global health.

Makary co-wrote a May 20 article that included a list of booster recommendations in Canada, Europe and Australia. It said in most countries, the recommendation was to vaccinate older people or those at high risk.

Most countries have taken this course, Schaffner said, because “by now, 95 percent of us have had experience with COVID, either through the vaccine or through illness or both. And second, the current variants are thought to be much milder than some of the earlier variants.”

The World Health Organization in 2024 recommended the COVID-19 vaccine for children with health risks who had never been vaccinated. For children and adolescents who had previously been vaccinated, it did not routinely recommend revaccination.

The European Medicines Agency recommended the BioNtech Pfizer vaccine for children over the age of five years and said the use of the vaccine for children is effective and safe. Euronews reported that the agency issued its recommendation in November 2021 and later recommended the Moderna vaccine for children ages 12 to 17.

In the United Kingdom, “only older people or those with specific diseases or illnesses making them susceptible to severe COVID were recommended to get boosters, and as a result, uptake in those groups was actually higher than in the US,” where outreach and advertising for the vaccinations focused on children as well as older people, said Babak Javid, an associate professor in the division of experimental medicine at the University of California-San Francisco.

The New York Times found that in Europe “many countries do not recommend the vaccines for healthy children under 5, but the shots are approved for everyone 6 months and older,” meaning that they can be safely used by anyone who’s at least six months old.

Doctors say the vaccine protects pregnant women

Experts disagreed with Kennedy’s recommendation against vaccinating pregnant women, saying the vaccine protects pregnant women and their infants.

Steven J Fleischman, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists president, said, “It is very clear that COVID-19 infection during pregnancy can be catastrophic and lead to major disability, and it can cause devastating consequences for families. In fact, growing evidence shows just how much vaccination during pregnancy protects the infant after birth, with the vast majority of hospitalised infants less than six months of age – those who are not yet eligible for vaccination – born to unvaccinated mothers.”

After a vaccination, antibodies reach the fetus. The doctors’ group said there is no evidence the vaccine creates adverse effects for either mother or the fetus, although fever or pain at the injection site are possible.

The federal government in May provided conflicting information about the vaccine and pregnancy.

In Makary’s May 20 article, he and his co-author included pregnancy on the CDC’s 2025 list of underlying medical conditions that increase the risk of severe COVID-19.

“They literally contradicted themselves over the course of a couple of days,” said Dr Peter Hotez, Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Development co-director. “It appears RFK Jr reversed his own FDA’s decision.”

Following the May 27 video announcement, Makary told NBC that the decision about vaccination should be between a pregnant woman and her doctor.

A 2024 review of 67 studies found that fully vaccinated pregnant women had a 61 percent lower likelihood of a COVID-19 infection during pregnancy.

What’s next?

In its June meeting, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices might move towards less sweeping recommendations for vaccinating children, closer to those that Kennedy enacted.

“If you listened to the discussions in the most recent previous meeting, they very much seemed to be moving in a more targeted approach,” Schaffner said.

The question of pregnant women may be one where the advisory committees may recommend more flexibility with vaccine usage than what Kennedy’s video statement seems to suggest, Schaffner said.

Other areas where the panels could back greater flexibility could be for otherwise healthy people who serve as caregivers or who live with more vulnerable people who are advanced in age or are immunocompromised.

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Japanese seafood set to return to China after Fukushima wastewater row | Fukushima News

Tokyo and Beijing are closing in on a deal to allow Japanese seafood exports to resume following 2023 ban.

China and Japan are closing in on a deal that would see the return of Japanese seafood imports to the Chinese market following a nearly two-year trade ban.

Tokyo said on Friday that the two sides are finalising details following a successful meeting in Beijing this week.

Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi told reporters that officials had “reached an agreement on the technical requirements necessary to resume exports of fishery products to China”.

“Exports to China will resume as soon as the re-registration process for export-related facilities is completed,” Hayashi said, hailing the pending deal as a “milestone.”

China banned Japanese seafood imports in August 2023 after Japan released more than 1 million metric tonnes of treated radioactive wastewater from the former Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. The power plant was destroyed during Japan’s infamous 2011 earthquake and tsunami, when three of its six nuclear reactors collapsed.

While the safety of the wastewater release was backed by the International Atomic Energy Agency, the move was controversial with neighbours like China.

China’s General Administration of Customs said on Friday that exports will resume once the “necessary procedures” are completed after “substantial progress” was made during negotiations.

The deal lays out several new procedures for Japan, whose fish processing facilities will be required to register with China.

Exporters will also need to include certificates of inspection guaranteeing that seafood has been checked for radioactive material, according to Japanese officials.

Chinese restrictions will remain on agricultural and marine exports from 10 Japanese prefectures due to concerns dating back to the 2011 accident.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa said Tokyo would continue to push China to lift any remaining restrictions.

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UK’s muddy saltmarshes vital to tackle climate change

Victoria Gill

Science correspondent, BBC News

WWF The image shows a saltmarsh from above. Channels of tidal water flow through an uneven, green landscape of marshland grasses and other plants. WWF

Saltmarshes are buffer zones between the land and the sea and act as natural flood defences

The UK’s saltmarshes are vital “sinks” that lock away climate-warming greenhouse gases in layers of mud, according to a new report from WWF.

Much of the UK’s saltmarshes have been lost to agriculture but the charity says they are unsung heroes in nature’s fight against climate change.

It is now calling for these muddy, tidal habitats to be added to the official UK inventory of how much carbon is emitted and how much is removed from our atmosphere every year.

This formal recognition could, it hopes, provide more of an incentive to restore and protect more of these sites.

Victoria Gill/BBC The image shows a yellow tower built of scaffolding poles that sits in a green carpet of marshland grass. The tower is fitted with analytical equipment that is measuring gases in the atmosphere around the saltmarsh Victoria Gill/BBC

The greenhouse gas monitoring station was installed on a tower to protect it from the saltwater and debris

Working with researchers from the UK’s Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, a WWF team installed solar-powered greenhouse gas monitoring stations on Hesketh Out Marsh, a saltmarsh in North-West England that has been restored and is managed by the RSPB.

Analysing gases in the air flowing around the marsh – over the course of a year – revealed how plants there “breathe in” more carbon dioxide in the summer than they release in winter.

These new findings build on previous studies that have measured the amount of carbon in the marshland’s mud.

To carry it out, the team fixed analytical equipment to a sturdy 2.5m tall tower made of scaffolding poles. The site is regularly flooded by the tide, so the tower has kept their kit safe from salt water and debris.

With WWF’s ocean conservation specialist, Tom Brook as our guide, we waded through the thigh-high grass to visit the site of the experiment.

RSPB The image shows an avocet - a distinctively-patterned black and white wading bird with a long up-curved beakRSPB

Wading bird like avocets have specially evolved bills for skimming food off the tidal mud and lagoons

At low tide, the sea is not visible beyond the expanse of grassland, but the area is littered with driftwood, some plastic waste and there is even a small, upturned boat nearby.

“The plants grow so quickly here in spring and summer that they almost grow on top of each other – layering and decomposing,” Tom said. “That captures carbon in the soils. So while we’re typically taught about how trees breathe in carbon and store that in the wood, here salt marshes are doing that as mud.

“So the mud here is just as important for climate mitigation as trees are.”

WWF has published its first year of findings in a report called The Importance of UK Saltmarshes. Unusually, this been co-published with an insurance company that is interested in understanding the role these sites have in protecting homes from coastal flooding.

The UK has lost about 85% of its saltmarshes since 1860. They were seen as useless land and many were drained for agriculture.

Victoria Gill/BBC News The image shows a sunny view over Hesketh Out Marsh, near Preston, in North-West England. The water levels in the tidal stream is low, revealing layers of uneven mud. There are long grasses and flowering plants growing across the marsh and the sky is bright blue. Victoria Gill/BBC News

Carbon is locked away in layers of marshland mud

Hesketh Out Marsh has been restored – bought by the wildlife charity RSPB and re-flooded by tide. Now, in late spring, it is teeming with bird life. A variety of species, including avocets, oyster catchers and black-tailed godwits, probe the mud for food and nest on the land between lagoons and streams.

The researchers hope the findings will help make the case to restore and protect more of these muddy bufferzones between the land and the sea.

“The mud here is so important,” explained Alex Pigott, the RSPB warden at Hesketh Out Marsh. “It’s is like a service station for birds.”

With their differently shaped bills – some ideal for scooping and some for probing – marshland birds feed in the tidal mud.

“We know these sites act as a natural flood defences, too and that they store carbon,” said Ms Pigott. “Any any of these habitats that we can restore will be a big win for nature.”

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ECOWAS at 50 Starkly Faces Security Challenges

Within the context of an enduring relationship dating back to May 1975, the establishment of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) as a regional bloc with an aspiration of transforming the elongated region along the Atlantic coast and stretching across the Sahel-Savanna bordering the Maghreb. ECOWAS sets out its broad operations incorporating politics, economy, security, social, and culture. The long-term goal is ensuring regional economic sovereignty and political unity among its twelve countries of West Africa.

Today, ECOWAS’s 50 years of its existence represent its marked achievement. It has lagged with issues of fostering strategic solidarity and commitments to its expected goals of sustainable economic transformation. As the regional bloc marked its 50th anniversary in May 2025, ECOWAS had a few achievements to show to the public but faced remarkable and daunting challenges, and these have raised questions about its future.  

On the stage of its aggrandizement, on May 26, ECOWAS officially launched activities commemorating its 50th anniversary in Praia, the capital city of Cabo Verde. The ceremony brought together high-level dignitaries, including the Secretary of State of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation of Cabo Verde, Miryan Vieira; the Acting Resident Representative of the ECOWAS Commission in Cabo Verde and Executive Director of ECREEE, Francis Sempore; the Director of the Multinational Maritime Coordination Centre for Zone G; members of the diplomatic corps; representatives of various municipalities; and ECOWAS officials in Cabo Verde.

Francis Sempore emphasized the importance of the golden jubilee, noting that “this 50th anniversary is a remarkable milestone — a time not only for celebration but also for reflection. As we mark five decades of regional cooperation and solidarity, we must redouble efforts to strengthen integration and foster collaboration for a brighter, united future in West Africa.”

Miryan Vieira commended ECOWAS for its continued presence and impact in Cabo Verde. Referring to the promotion of sustainable energy, she underlined the immense growth potential of the ECOWAS region and further called for a “people-centered approach” to regional integration that prioritizes human development and inclusivity.

The final launch was preceded by a press conference at the ECOWAS Representation in Praia. It is most important to remember here that ECOWAS’s golden jubilee commemorations aimed to deepen citizens’ connection to the regional vision, promote shared values, and inspire the next generation of West Africans to contribute to a more integrated and prosperous community.

Despite its excellent aspirations and objectives, regional security has been one of the main obstacles in the region. ECOWAS has seemingly been losing its decades-old credibility primarily due to its approach in ensuring regional peace and stability. The overarching combined narratives starkly pointed to this as its major weakness. The ultimate failure to comprehend the neocolonial goals of foreign powers has created deep cracks in ECOWAS.

According to our monitoring, Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger, on 29 January 2025, declared withdrawal from the bloc. The three French-speaking West African countries, currently governed by military juntas, have formed the Alliance of Sahel States, citing sovereignty concerns and dissatisfaction with ECOWAS’s responses to political and security developments. As the Sahel region continues to grapple with instability and conflict, Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger sought other alternatives, and foreign powers are competing to explore and control the abundant mineral resources of these countries in West Africa.

The regional bloc still looks for mechanisms to resolve the security crisis. It has persistently come under fierce criticism; it slackens on its primary responsibilities. Some experts have called for staff changes, attributing them to deep inefficiency. In fact, its reputation has been at stake, and most probably, it needs new dynamic faces at the Secretariat in Abuja, Nigeria.

On May 16th, the African Union Peace and Security Council (AU PSC) and the ECOWAS Mediation and Security Council (MSC) held their second joint consultative meeting at the AU Headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, which served as a strategic platform to strengthen cooperation on governance, peace, and security within the frameworks of the African Peace and Security Architecture (APSA), the African Governance Architecture (AGA), and the AU’s Master Roadmap to Silence the Guns by 2030.

Opening the session, Ambassador Harold Bundu Saffa, Chair of the AU PSC for May 2025, welcomed the symbolic significance of holding the meeting and called for a deeper AU–ECOWAS cooperation built on mutual trust and joint responses to emerging challenges such as climate-related security risks, digital conflicts, and youth-led peace initiatives.

In his remarks, Ambassador Musa Sani Nuhu, Chair of the ECOWAS MSC, stressed the urgent need to intensify regional cooperation amid rising insecurity across the continent. He cited threats such as unconstitutional changes of government, terrorism, transnational organized crime, and humanitarian crises. “Africa stands at a defining moment in its history,” he stated. “It is vital that we engage in open and constructive dialogue to identify synergies and build a strong, united response to the challenges we all face.”

For his part, Ambassador Abdel-Fatau Musah, ECOWAS Commissioner for Political Affairs, Peace and Security, emphasized the need for inclusive and responsive governance, as well as stronger regional solidarity. “History will not remember our communiqués, but the peace we built, the lives we protected, and the future we dared to imagine together,” he said. Musah, however, advocated for the full involvement of youth and women in peace processes and urged Member States to make subsidiarity a practical foundation for trust and cooperation.

In his keynote address, Ambassador Bankole Adeoye, AU Commissioner for Political Affairs, Peace and Security, highlighted the importance of long-term institutional partnerships and regular consultations to secure regional peace and foster economic integration. “The AU PSC and ECOWAS MSC must work hand-in-hand on peace and security issues in West Africa,” he stated, commending ECOWAS’s leadership and achievements over its 50-year history, especially in conflict prevention and peace support operations.

At the conclusion of the meeting, the African Union and ECOWAS reaffirmed their strong commitment to strengthening their partnership in addressing the continent’s peace and security challenges through preventive diplomacy, mediation, and joint peace support operations, guided by the principles of subsidiarity, complementarity, and comparative advantage. Nevertheless, there is hope, most probably in the near future, to overcome these existing development roadblocks and make way for practical strategic development, as the countries in the region have both abundant human and natural resources under the umbrella of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

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Climate activist Greta Thunberg to join aid ship effort to break Gaza siege | Israel-Palestine conflict News

The Freedom Flotilla Coalition plans second sailing after earlier attempt saw ship targeted in a drone attack blamed on Israel.

Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg and Game of Thrones actor Liam Cunningham will join the next sailing of the Freedom Flotilla Coalition (FFC) as it attempts to break Israel’s months-long blockade of Gaza.

The “Madleen” is due to disembark from Catania, Sicily, on Sunday with a cargo of humanitarian aid and several high-profile activists on board, including Thunberg, European Member of Parliament Rima Hassan and Palestinian-American lawyer Huwaida Arraf.

Cunningham, an Irish actor best known for his role as Davos Seaworth in the hit HBO series, is a longtime advocate for Palestine and similar causes.

The sailing marks the second attempt in as many months by the FFC, a coalition of humanitarian groups, to reach Gaza.

A mission at the start of May was aborted after another FFC vessel, the “Conscience”, was attacked by two alleged drones while sailing in international waters off the coast of Malta.

The FFC alleges that Israel was responsible for the attack, which severely damaged the front section of the ship.

 

MEP Hassan said in a short video on social media that the trip by the “Madleen” is a protest against Israel as much as an attempt to deliver much-needed aid to Gaza.

“The first [goal] being of course to reject the blockade of humanitarian aid, the ongoing genocide, the impunity enjoyed by the State of Israel and to raise global international awareness,” she said.

“This action is also in response to the attack that took place on May 2 against the previous ship that took place in international waters near Malta.”

Israel partially lifted its nearly three-month blockade of Gaza last week, but since then has only allowed a tiny amount of assistance into the Palestinian territory, which the United States has warned is on the brink of famine.

This week, thousands of Palestinians rushed to so-called aid distribution stations set up by the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, leading to the deaths of at least three people and dozens of injuries in the chaos that ensued as desperate people tried to get food supplies.

The UN and other humanitarian organisations are boycotting the US and Israeli-backed initiative, accusing Israel of attempting to consolidate and control aid distribution across Gaza in a further weaponisation of food and starvation.

The World Health Organization has warned that Gaza is at risk of famine following months of prolonged food shortages amid Israel’s punishing blockade, and that about a quarter of the population is in a “catastrophic situation of hunger, acute malnutrition, starvation, illness and death”.



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Five Mexican musicians abducted, murdered by alleged drug cartel | Conflict News

Relatives of five members of the band Fugitivo, aged between 20 and 40, received ransom demands after their abduction.

Drug cartel members are suspected of murdering five Mexican band members, who went missing after being hired to perform a concert in a crime-ridden city in the northeast of the country.

The Diario de Mexico newspaper said on Thursday that the bodies of the five musicians had been discovered after they went missing on Sunday, and nine suspects were arrested in connection with their abduction and killing.

According to authorities, the nine suspects are part of the “Los Metros” faction of the Gulf Cartel, which operates in the city of Reynosa, in Tamaulipas state, near the United States border.

“Law enforcement arrested nine individuals considered likely responsible for the events. They are known to be members of a criminal cell of the Gulf Cartel,” Tamaulipas Attorney General Irving Barrios told a news conference.

Tamaulipas is considered one of Mexico’s most dangerous states due to the presence of cartel members involved in drug and migrant trafficking, as well as other crimes, including extortion.

The announcement of the arrests came hours after officials said five bodies had been found in the search for the men, who were members of a local band called Fugitivo.

The musicians were hired to put on a concert on Sunday but arrived to find that the location of their proposed performance was a vacant lot, according to family members who had held a protest urging the authorities to act.

Relatives had reported receiving ransom demands for the musicians, who were aged between 20 and 40 years old.

Mexican musicians have been targeted previously by cartel members amid rivalry, as some receive payment to compose and perform songs that glorify the exploits of gang leaders.

Investigators used video surveillance footage and mobile phone tracking to establish the musicians’ last movements, Barrios said.

Nine firearms and two vehicles were seized, he said.

More than 480,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence and organised crime, and about 120,000 people have gone missing, in Mexico.

In this Friday Nov. 19, 2010 photo, initials of the Gulf Cartel (Cartel del Golfo) and a heart cover a wall at the entrance to an abandoned low-income housing complex in Ciudad Mier, Mexico. While Mexicans have been increasingly fleeing border towns up and down the Rio Grande valley, Ciudad Mier is the most dramatic example so far of the increasingly ferocious drug violence, and the government's failure to fight back. (AP Photo/Dario Lopez-Mills)
Initials of the Gulf Cartel (Cartel del Golfo) drug gang and a heart cover a wall at the entrance to an abandoned low-income housing complex in Ciudad Mier, Mexico, in 2010 [File: Dario Lopez-Mills/AP]

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Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,191 | Russia-Ukraine war News

These are the key events on day 1,191 of Russia’s war on Ukraine.

Here’s where things stand on Friday, May 30:

Fighting

  • The Russian army said on Thursday that it had captured three villages in Ukraine’s Donetsk and Kharkiv regions in its latest advance.
  • Authorities in Ukraine said Russia had fired 90 drones overnight and at least seven people were killed in drone, missile and artillery strikes across five front-line Ukrainian regions.
  • Russia said it had repelled 48 Ukrainian drones overnight, including three near Moscow.
  • Drones made a night-time attack on Russia’s western Kursk region, damaging a hospital and apartment buildings, and injuring at least one person, the regional Governor Alexander Khinshtein said.
  • Ukraine’s military said its forces remained active in small areas of Kursk, though Russia’s military said last week it had completed the ejection of Ukrainian forces from the Russian region.
  • Across the border in Ukraine’s neighbouring Sumy region, the regional governor reported new fighting in villages near the border where Russia has been seizing territory. He said various areas in his region were constantly changing hands as both sides continued to battle for control.
  • “Active battles continue in certain border areas, notably around the settlements of Khotyn and Yunakivka,” Sumy Governor Oleh Hryhorov wrote on Facebook. “The situation on the line of contact is constantly changing. In some places, we hold the initiative, in others, the enemy is proving to be active.”
  • Russia’s Defence Ministry said its forces had captured three more villages as it slowly advances through parts of eastern Ukraine. These were Stroivka in the northeastern Kharkiv region, and Shevchenko Pershe and Hnativka near the town of Pokrovsk, the focal point of Russia’s westward drive for months.
  • Ukrainian military reports made no mention of any of the three villages coming under Russian control. Russian forces had launched 53 attacks over 24 hours near Pokrovsk, the military said.

Ceasefire

  • The Kremlin said on Thursday that it was waiting for Kyiv’s response to its proposal for new talks in Istanbul next Monday.
  • Ukraine said it was ready to hold more talks with Russia in Istanbul but demanded that Moscow supply a document setting out its conditions for peace in the war, adding that Kyiv had already submitted its vision of a peace settlement.
  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that Russia was engaging in “yet another deception” by failing to hand over its peace settlement proposal in advance of the next potential meeting. “Even the so-called ‘memorandum’ they promised and seemingly prepared for more than a week has still not been seen by anyone,” Zelenskyy said in his nightly video address.
  • Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that Kyiv’s demand on the “memorandum” was “non-constructive”.
  • Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Heorhii Tykhyi, said Moscow’s refusal to send the document “suggests that it is likely filled with unrealistic ultimatums”.
  • Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who will host the new talks, called on Russia and Ukraine not to “shut the door” on dialogue.
  • The Russian delegation to the second round of talks in Istanbul will be the same as for the first round, the Russian TASS news agency cited Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova as saying.
  • United Nations Undersecretary-General for Political Affairs Rosemary DiCarlo told the Security Council that the “cautious hope” she expressed a month ago for a ceasefire in Ukraine has diminished in the face of the “brutal surge in large-scale Russian attacks” against Ukraine.
  • Ukrainian Deputy Ambassador to the UN Khrystyna Hayovyshyn told the council that “Russia is not signalling any genuine intention to stop its war”, and said that increased political, economic and military pressure on Moscow was required.
  • Russian Ambassador to the UN Vassily Nebenzia rejected the accusations, instead accusing Kyiv of “attempting to prolong the war” and warning that Ukraine’s defeat was inevitable. “No new anti-Russian sanctions, nor deliveries of weapons to Ukraine or any other hostile steps vis-a-vis Russia will be able to prevent the inevitable military defeat of the Zelenskyy regime,” Nebenzia said.
  • John Kelley, the United States’s alternate representative at the UN meeting, said that if Russia “makes the wrong decision to continue this catastrophic war”, Washington will consider “stepping back from our negotiation efforts to end this conflict”, adding that additional sanctions against Moscow were “still on the table”.

Military aid

  • Zelenskyy said he discussed the possible delivery of German Taurus cruise missiles to Ukraine with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz during his visit to Berlin. “The Taurus issue was discussed in a one-to-one meeting between the chancellor and me,” the Ukrainian president told the German broadcaster RTL.
  • Russia accused Serbia of exporting arms to Ukraine, saying it was a stab in the back by its longtime Slavic Balkan ally.
  • “Serbian defense enterprises, contrary to the ‘neutrality’ declared by official Belgrade, continue to supply ammunition to Kyiv,” Russia’s foreign intelligence service said in a statement.
  • The statement alleged that exports of Serbian arms to Ukraine are going through NATO intermediaries, “primarily the Czech Republic, Poland and Bulgaria”. It added: “Recently, exotic options involving African states have also been used for this purpose.”

Regional security

  • A Belarusian radio station has been flouting European Union sanctions to spread “disinformation” and back a pro-Russian candidate on social media in advance of Poland’s presidential election, according to reports.
  • A Polish-language radio station, set up by Belarus, has been posting pro-Russian narratives on social media for almost two years “despite EU sanctions”, experts said in a report published by three think tanks. Poland votes on Sunday in a hotly contested presidential run-off between pro-EU and nationalist candidates, which is being closely watched in Europe.

Economy

  • The International Monetary Fund announced it had reached an agreement with Ukraine on a loan programme review to unlock about $500m dollars of funds to support macroeconomic stability.

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Luke Humphries: Premier League Darts winner on personal struggles, Phil Taylor’s advice and Luke Littler

Victory was also payback for Humphries after he lost last year’s final to Littler as their rivalry continues to grow.

Since first playing each other in the 2024 World Championship final, the pair have faced off a further 22 times with Littler claiming 13 wins to Humphries’ 10.

They are the two top-ranked players in the world and over the past 18 months, that has been abundantly clear.

When they are on top form, it feels as if the other is the only player who can live with them.

Add in the consistency with which they are able to reach that level and it is little wonder the Littler-Humphries rivalry is being talked about as one that could dominate darts for years to come.

“These two could have darts sewn up,” Sky Sports pundit Wayne Mardle said.

“They are going to be the mainstay of the darting world. Others are going to have to play really well to get the better of these two.

“If they have that hunger for four, five, six or even 10 years then someone is going to have to step up.”

Asked if he felt that he and Littler would be fighting it out at the top for the next 10 or 15 years, Humphries was less convinced.

“The problem is, there’s always another person who comes around the corner,” he said.

“In five years’ time there could be about 10 players who are as good as me and Luke and it could be a battle between us all.

“I’d love to say over the next 10 years we’ll battle it out in many finals – and we probably will – but they’ll probably be a lot of other names involved with us.”

For the time being, though, Humphries and Littler have put some distance between themselves and the chasing pack.

But even after 23 matches against each other in such a short space of time, there is no sign of familiarity breeding contempt just yet.

“I love him. I think he’s a good kid,” Humphries said of his teenage competitor.

“He’s a close friend of mine in darts. He’ll probably win much more than I’ll ever win in my career because he’s young and he’s a great talent.

“I’m just happy when I nab one here and there. I said to him on the stage, I’m really happy to win this but I’m sure he’ll get me back plenty of times in the future.

“It’s just another final in the Luke and Luke saga.”

The next stage in the saga will see the rivals become team-mates as they join forces for England at June’s World Cup of Darts in Frankfurt.

“I cannot wait,” Littler told Sky Sports. “He won it last year so hopefully he can lead me to victory.”

They should form a formidable duo but it is only a matter of time before they will be battling it out again on the oche in a major tournament.

And next time it is Littler, rather than Humphries, who might have a bit of revenge on his mind.

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The Role of IoT in Remote Patient Monitoring

Healthcare is changing fast. More and more often, patients are monitored not in hospital beds but in their own homes. What makes this possible? A combination of smart technology, secure networks, and thoughtful design — all bundled into what we call Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM).

The real engine behind this change is the Internet of Things (IoT). Tiny sensors, wearable devices, and connected platforms now let doctors see how their patients are doing in real time — even from hundreds of miles away. And that’s just scratching the surface.

Healthcare providers who partner with a reliable remote patient monitoring software development company can create systems that support personalized, proactive care — not just reactive treatments.

So, What Is IoT in Remote Patient Monitoring?

In the simplest terms, IoT in healthcare means that physical devices — like smartwatches or blood pressure monitors — collect health-related information and send it to medical teams. These devices capture metrics automatically and share them securely through the cloud.

Think of it as a continuous feedback loop. A patient wears a patch or wristband. That device keeps tabs on things like pulse, oxygen levels, or movement. The data flows to a monitoring platform. Doctors or nurses get alerts if something goes wrong — often before the patient feels any symptoms.

That’s not science fiction. That’s IoT in real-world healthcare.

What Makes an IoT-Enabled RPM System Work?

To bring all these benefits together, an RPM solution typically includes:

1. The Devices Themselves

The “things” in IoT include wearable trackers, smart blood glucose meters, connected thermometers, and even fall sensors for elderly patients. Each one plays a role depending on what the care team needs to know.

2. Reliable Data Transmission

For any of this to work, information has to travel fast and securely. This often happens via Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, or cellular connections — and in some cases, low-power networks like NB-IoT or LoRaWAN.

3. A Secure Cloud Platform

Once data arrives, it needs to be stored, processed, and made useful. A central platform does the heavy lifting — spotting unusual patterns, comparing values against medical thresholds, and triggering notifications.

4. Interfaces That Make Sense

Apps and dashboards aren’t just nice to have — they’re essential. Patients need something simple to check their progress. Clinicians need tools that surface the right data at the right moment.

The Value IoT Brings to Remote Monitoring

Timely Alerts and Earlier Interventions

Instead of waiting for patients to call when they feel unwell, IoT devices can flag issues like rising heart rates or oxygen dips before they escalate. This helps doctors step in early — possibly avoiding a trip to the ER.

Better Care Without Leaving Home

RPM powered by IoT makes it easier for people to receive care in familiar surroundings. That’s not just more comfortable — it’s safer for those who might be at risk in hospitals or clinics.

More Control for People with Chronic Illness

When a person living with asthma or diabetes can track their data daily — and share it with their doctor — they’re more likely to stick to treatment plans and make informed choices.

Cost and Time Savings

Automated readings, reduced travel, and fewer emergency admissions mean healthcare systems can focus resources where they matter most. It’s better for budgets, staff, and outcomes.

Where It’s Already Making a Difference

After Surgery

Doctors can monitor a patient’s vitals, mobility, and pain levels through connected tools — ensuring they’re recovering as expected.

Supporting Aging in Place

IoT devices help track activity, detect falls, and even remind users to take medication — enabling seniors to remain independent longer.

Monitoring Pregnancies Remotely

Expecting mothers can use wearable belts to track fetal movement and maternal heart rate — sharing results with their obstetricians in real time.

Building Secure, Compliant, Scalable Systems

Patient data is sensitive, and healthcare apps must follow the rules — from HIPAA in the U.S. to GDPR in Europe. This means:

  • Encrypting data at every step
  • Using secure login systems with access control
  • Keeping detailed logs of system activity
  • Respecting patient consent preferences

At the same time, systems need to scale as more patients and device types come online. Choosing the right tech stack — and the right development partner — is critical.

Looking Ahead: What’s Next for IoT and RPM?

Healthcare doesn’t stand still — and neither does technology. As more people become comfortable with health tracking, and as more devices hit the market, we’ll see RPM grow from specialty use to standard care.

Imagine a platform where your smartwatch syncs with your doctor’s dashboard. Where sensors adjust treatment plans in real time. Where remote monitoring is the rule, not the exception.

That’s where we’re headed.

Conclusion – Smart Devices, Smarter Care

IoT isn’t about gadgets — it’s about better outcomes. When used thoughtfully, it lets healthcare teams catch problems early, give people more control over their health, and make care more human — even when it happens at a distance.

The real value comes not from the technology itself, but from what it enables: deeper insight, faster action, and stronger relationships between patients and providers.

For anyone building an RPM program, the message is clear: start with the right goals, choose the right tools, and work with a team that knows how to bring it all together. That’s how IoT becomes not just useful — but transformative.

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Chinese students in US grapple with uncertainty over Trump’s visa policies | Donald Trump News

Washington, DC – For Anson, hearing the news that Chinese student visas were the latest target of US President Donald Trump’s administration was “heartbreaking”.

The Chinese graduate student, who is studying foreign service at Georgetown University, told Al Jazeera that he feels uncertain about the future of students like himself after US Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced the US would begin to “aggressively revoke visas for Chinese students, including those with connections to the Chinese Communist Party or studying in critical fields”.

“There is definitely a degree of uncertainty and anxiety observed amongst us,” Anson said, asking that only his first name be used.

The Trump administration has offered little further clarity on which students would be affected, with some observers seeing the two-sentence announcement, which also vowed to “revise visa criteria to enhance scrutiny” for future visa applicants from China and Hong Kong, as intentionally vague.

While 23-year-old Anson said he understood the US government had concerns about foreign influence and national security when it came to China, he was confused as to why the Trump administration’s new policy was potentially so wide reaching.

Most students from his homeland, he said, were just like the other more than one million students who study every year in the US, a country that is known both for its educational opportunities and for its “inclusivity and broad demographics”.

“It is heartbreaking for many of us to see a country built by immigrants becoming more xenophobic and hostile to the rest of the world,” he said, adding that he and other Chinese students in the US were still trying to decipher the policy shift.

‘Greater and greater suspicion’

It is not the first time the Trump administration has taken aim at Chinese students, with the US Department of Justice in 2018, during Trump’s first term, launching the so-called “China Initiative” with the stated aim of combatting “trade secret theft, hacking, and economic espionage”.

An MIT analysis instead showed the programme focused predominantly on researchers and academics of Chinese descent, in what critics said amounted to “racial profiling and fear mongering”. It was discontinued in February 2022 by the administration of former US President Joe Biden.

Since then, there has only been “greater and greater suspicion in the US, almost on a bipartisan basis, of various aspects of Chinese technology, actions by Beijing around the world, and now these concerns about surveillance and spying within the US”, according to Kyle Chan, a researcher on China at Princeton University.

That included a Republican-led congressional report in September 2024 that claimed hundreds of millions of US tax dollars – funneled through US-China partnerships at universities – helped Beijing develop critical technologies, including those related to semiconductors, artificial intelligence, hypersonic weapons, and nuclear capabilities.

But Chan, while acknowledging “genuine security concerns” exist, said the broad announcement from the Trump administration did not appear to actually address those concerns.

Instead, it has sent “shock waves of fear throughout university campuses across the country”, he said.

That uncertainty has been compounded by Trump’s recent pressure campaigns on US universities, which most recently involved a since-blocked revocation of Harvard University’s ability to enrol international students.

“I think the vagueness is part of the [Trump administration’s] strategy, because it is not about a concrete policy,” Chan told Al Jazeera. “I don’t think it’s really, at the end of the day, about national security and trying to find the few individuals who may pose a genuine risk.”

Instead, he saw the move as aimed at Trump’s political audience, those sitting at an “overlap between people who are very anxious about immigrants in general, and people who are very anxious about China”.

‘Tremendous disruption’

The administration has offered little clarity on the scope of the visa revocations, or how it will define students with “connections to the Chinese Communist Party or studying in critical fields”.

Speaking to reporters on Thursday, State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce gave few further specifics, saying only that the department “will continue to use every tool in our tool chest to make sure that we know who it is who wants to come into this country and if they should be allowed to come in”.

“The United States, I further can say here, will not tolerate the CCP’s exploitation of US universities or theft of US research, intellectual property or technologies to grow its military power, conduct intelligence collection or repress voices of opposition,” she said.

Despite the dearth of clarity, the eventual shape of the policy will determine just how “disruptive” it could be, according to Cole McFaul, a research analyst at the Center for Security and Emerging Technology at Georgetown University.

He pointed to “real concerns about research security and about illicit IP [intellectual property] transfer” when it comes to Beijing, noting there have been a handful of documented cases of such activity in recent years.

“My hope is that this is a targeted action based on evidence and an accurate assessment of risk that takes into account the costs and the benefits,” McFaul said.

“My worry is that this will lead to broad-based, large-scale revocations of visas for Chinese students operating in STEM subjects,” he said, referencing the abbreviation for science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

McFaul noted that about 80 percent of the estimated 277,000 Chinese students who study in the US annually are in STEM subjects, in what he described as “an enormously important talent pipeline from China to the United States for the past 40 years”.

A vast majority of Chinese PhDs in STEM subjects – also about 80 percent – tend to stay in the US after their studies, in what McFaul described as another major benefit to the US.

“The question is, what counts as someone who’s working in a critical technology? Are life sciences critical? I would say ‘yes’. Are the physical sciences critical? I’d say ‘yes’. Is computer science critical? Is engineering critical?” McFaul said.

“So there’s a world where the vast majority of Chinese students are disallowed from studying in the United States, which would be an enormous loss and tremendous disruption for the United States science and technology ecosystem,” he said.

‘Generating unnecessary fear’

As the policy remains foggy, Chinese students in the US said they are monitoring the often fickle winds of the Trump administration.

Su, a 23-year-old applied analytics graduate student at Columbia University, said she swiftly changed her plans to travel home to China this summer amid the uncertainty.

“I was afraid if I go back to China, I won’t be able to come back to the US for when classes begin,” said Su, who asked to only use her last name given the “sensitive” situation.

“When Trump announces something, we never know if it’s going to be effective or not,” she told Al Jazeera. “It’s always changing”.

Deng, a graduate student at Georgetown who also asked that his full name not be used, said he broadly agreed that reforms were needed to address issues related to Chinese influence in US academia.

Those included intimidation of political dissidents, the spread of nationalist propaganda, and “oligarchy corruption”, he said.

But, in an email to Al Jazeera, he said the administration’s approach was misguided.

“The current measures not only do not achieve such goals,” he said, “but [are] also generating unnecessary fear even among the Chinese student communities that have long been fully committed to the development and enrichment of US society.”

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‘This must stop now’: UN food body condemns RSF attacks on Sudan premises | Sudan war News

Aid workers are also having to cope with a wave of cholera outbreaks in war-torn Sudan.

The World Food Programme (WFP) has said it is “shocked and alarmed” that its premises in southwestern Sudan have been hit by repeated shelling from the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), as the paramilitary group wages a brutal civil war, now in its third year, with the Sudanese army.

“Humanitarian staff, assets, operations and supplies should never be a target. This must stop now”, the United Nations body said on X on Thursday.

El-Fasher is the last major city held by the Sudanese army in the Darfur region. It has witnessed intense fighting between the army and RSF since May 2024, despite international warnings about the risks of violence in a city that serves as a key humanitarian hub for the five Darfur states.

For more than a year, the RSF has sought to wrest control of el-Fasher, located more than 800km (500 miles) southwest of the capital, Khartoum, from the army, launching regular attacks on the city and two major famine-hit camps for displaced people on its outskirts.

Adding to humanitarian woes on the ground, the Health Ministry in Khartoum state on Thursday reported 942 new cholera infections and 25 deaths the previous day, following 1,177 cases and 45 deaths the day before.

Aid workers say the scale of the cholera outbreak is deteriorating due to the near-total collapse of health services, with about 90 percent of hospitals in key war zones no longer operational.

Since August 2024, Sudan has reported more than 65,000 suspected cholera cases and at least 1,700 deaths across 12 of its 18 states. Khartoum alone has seen 7,700 cases and 185 deaths, including more than 1,000 infections in children under five, as it contends with more than two years of fighting between the army and the RSF.

Sudan’s army-backed government in Khartoum state announced earlier this month that all relief initiatives in the state must register with the Humanitarian Aid Commission (HAC), a government body that oversees humanitarian operations in Sudan.

Aid workers and activists are fearful these regulations will lead to a crackdown on local relief volunteers, exacerbating the catastrophic hunger crisis affecting 25 million people across the country.

The HAC was given expanded powers to register, monitor and, critics argue, crack down on local and Western aid groups by former leader Omar al-Bashir in 2006, according to aid groups, local relief volunteers and experts.

The army-backed government announced last week that it had dislodged RSF fighters from their last bases in Khartoum state, two months after retaking the heart of the capital from the paramilitaries.

The city, nonetheless, remains devastated with health and sanitation infrastructure barely functioning.

The RSF has been battling the SAF for control of Sudan since April 2023. The civil war has killed more than 20,000 people, uprooted 15 million and created what the UN considers the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.



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Why I’m writing about rich people again

Emma Saunders

Culture reporter at the Hay Festival

Getty Images Jesse Armstrong wearing black glasses and a light blue denim shirtGetty Images

Jesse Armstrong, one of the UK’s most successful screenwriters, is not one to rest on his laurels.

Hot off the back of his hit show Succession, which followed the twists and turns in the lives of media mogul Logan Roy, played by Brian Cox, and his four children, Armstrong is back with his first feature-length film, Mountainhead.

It’s a satire film about a group of four tech billionaire friends who go away to a mountain resort for the weekend but find themselves and their social media companies under scrutiny as social unrest spreads across the globe.

Speaking at the Hay Festival, Armstrong says: “People start by saying, ‘Why are you doing these rich people again? And it’s a fair question. They’re tech billionaires. Succession was about a big media family. And I think it’s because I’m interested in power, I don’t think it’s about just wealth.

“Succession was very clearly about why is the world like it is, who has power?”

HBO’s Mountainhead, starring Steve Carrell and Ramy Youssef, was made very quickly.

“We did it at great speed. I pitched it in December and wrote it in January… carried on re-writing it through pre-production and then shot it in 22 days, then edited it.

“We only finished (editing) about a week ago and it’s on TV this weekend!”

Armstrong, 54, wanted to do a quick turnaround on the film to try to capture the feeling and pace of technological developments and society’s fear about keeping up.

“The anxieties that we have about technology, especially AI, feel very present and move quite fast. And I wanted to try and write it in the same mood as you might be when you’re watching it, so I was keen to do it quickly,” he says.

“Another attraction for me was that I’ve never directed anything before and it made me feel less anxious to run at it and do it really, really quickly.”

HBO Steve Carrell and Ramy Youssef star in Mountainhead - Carrell is on the left and is wearing a grey cardigan, Youssef has a beige top and light brown waistcoat on.HBO

Steve Carrell and Ramy Youssef star in Mountainhead

Armstrong, who cut his teeth in children’s TV before writing for shows such as The Thick of It and going on to co-create series like Peep Show and Fresh Meat, said the inspiration for Mountainhead came from listening to podcasts.

“I wrote a book review about Sam-Bankman-Fried, the crypto fraudster, and then I read more and more about tech, and I started listening to podcasts of senior tech figures, from Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg and Sam Altman, but also the mid-level people and even lower level – it’s an ecosphere.

“I couldn’t stop thinking about the voice of these people. I do love getting the vocabulary right. For me, that opens the door, once I can hear them talking. And since it seems like the AI companies are scraping so much of our hard work to train their models, I thought I would scrape them back [using their podcasts]!”

Armstrong told the Hay audience that while he knew his job was to engage viewers, writing the film “was a way of expressing a load of feelings about that world and about those men – they’re almost all men in that world – and it’s cathartic”.

His shows are known for their dark humour and Armstrong says if he had to write his job description in his passport application, he would put down “comedy writer”, adding that he doesn’t think of himself as a storyteller.

“I’m trying to make a story engaging that will probably involve people laughing. And the bit that I find most challenging is finding a story because people remember jokes, but you just won’t make it through that half hour or hour unless that story is is compelling enough to make an audience follow along.”

‘More fearful’

Many writers and showrunners end up directing episodes of the series that they have created but Armstrong says he couldn’t do that on Succession, which won multiple awards including 14 primetime Emmys.

“I always felt like the people who did it were so good at it that it was rather rude of me to suggest I could just come in and do it just as well.”

Armstrong doesn’t appear to be your stereotypical confident showrunner, coming across as quite shy and humble, despite his success.

“Sometimes very creative people have a real ‘screw you’ attitude to authority, and I don’t have that. Maybe I’m a bit more fearful, a bit more amenable. I like everyone to be happy. I want to to give people what they want in quite a decent and humane way.

“I don’t have a confrontational attitude to people I work with, unless someone’s a jerk – I hope I can stand up for myself and the work.”

Mountainhead is released on HBO and Max on 31 May

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New Presale for Snorter Token Raises $150K in 24 Hours – Best Crypto to Buy?

A new Telegram trading bot has arrived and it’s going viral on day one. Snorter ($SNORT) is the cheapest and most-advanced way to trade on Solana, helping users maximize their bull market wins.

The project launched a presale one day ago and has already raised over $150K, illustrating strong market appeal from the get-go.

Snorter won’t be the first Telegram trading bot – the market is already worth $41 billion; but it will be the cheapest. And that’s one of the many benefits positioning Snorter for huge success in the coming months.

Currently, investors can buy $SNORT at its lowest presale price of $0.0935. However, this price will rise throughout the campaign, with the next uptick in just one day. For those seeking the most value for money, now is the time to act.

Cut trading fees from 1.5% to 0.85% with $SNORT

One of Snorter’s many competitive advantages is its fee structure, with token holders receiving a discount that slashes trading fees from 1.5% to 0.85%. This makes Snorter cheaper than Bonk Bot, Maestro, Trojan, Banana Gun, SOL Trading Bot, and the rest.

The crypto industry is moving faster than ever. There are countless launchpads for developers to create new projects on. There are endless informational streams for investors to discover new projects. And there are thousands of cryptocurrencies emerging daily.

It’s an information overload. Manual research and trading is no longer viable to catch high-growth opportunities. Automated trading tools can’t be an afterthought; they’re a must-have. That’s why the crypto trading bot market is projected to reach a $154 billion valuation by 2033.

But as the newest market emergent with better fees than its competitors, Snorter is uniquely positioned to benefit from the sector’s growing demand. But that’s far from its only advantage.

Snorter’s premium trading features unlock explosive opportunities

Move over, web-based browser bots. Snorter’s Telegram app is easy to use, featuring an integrated UI for swaps, snipes, copy-trading, limit orders, and portfolio commands.

The app features an institutional-grade dashboard that displays real-time updates on PnL, portfolio size, and cost basis. It all happens inside the Telegram app, making on-chain trading as easy as sending a text message.

However, it’s not just about catching trading opportunities easily; the Snorter bot also features stop-loss integration, allowing users to dynamically manage risk.

So far, it appears that instant sniping will be the main feature; after all, getting in early is where most of the money will be made.

And here’s where Snorter’s sniping bot stands out: the project has built-in scam and honeypot detection features, meaning that users are less likely to buy duds and more likely to catch real runners.

Beta tests for the rugpull protection feature reportedly catch 85% of scam tokens, significantly bolstering the platform’s safety and security.

Something else that helps differentiate Snorter is that the bot will operate on multiple blockchains. While its journey begins on Solana, it will also be available on Ethereum, BNB, Polygon, and Base. It means that users can capitalize on the hottest trading opportunities regardless of where they occur.

Let’s face it, investors buy meme coins to make profits, not friends. If we strip everything back, 99% of investors care far more about money than community. Yet, there’s no doubt that memetic branding helps projects go viral and attracts attention. That’s the reason meme coin prices can be so explosive.

Snorter is a project that fulfils investors’ appetite for gains, while retaining the virality of a meme coin. By design, the real utility and a meme coin allure – it’s the best of both worlds.

As mentioned, the crypto trading bot market is expected to reach a $154 billion valuation by 2033, growing at a 14% compound annual growth rate (CAGR).

However, the AI-driven crypto trading bot sector (which Snorter falls into) is forecasted to hit $985 billion by 2034 with a 37.2% CAGR, reflecting even bigger potential.

With a meme coin allure and a position at the forefront of a rapidly expanding technology domain, Snorter appears firmly set for strong growth in the years ahead, both as an application and an investment opportunity.

With apps like Pump.fun, Believe, and LaunchLab making it easy for anyone to create meme coins; the bar has been raised, and simple joke tokens no longer cut it. Now, investors are shifting to meme coins with real utility.

Eye-catching artwork, cultural resonance, and a profitable business model underneath; that’s the holy grail trifecta for new meme coins – and that’s precisely what Snorter offers.

In terms of utility, holding $SNORT unlocks access to the trading bot and also broadens investors’ opportunities to earn. Notably, holders can lock up their tokens in the project’s staking contract and currently earn a 1,901% APY.

However, the staking yield is variable and will decrease as the staking pool grows. This means that investors seeking to maximize their gains should not wait around.

How to buy $SNORT at presale

Investing in the $SNORT presale is easy. Simply visit the project’s website, connect your wallet, choose the crypto you want to pay with, and the amount of tokens you want to buy.

The presale accepts payments on the Ethereum and Solana networks, and investors can even use bank card. This means there’s seamless accessibility for everyone.

With a use case that blurs the lines between light-hearted meme coin and industry-leading trading bot, Snorter is uniquely positioned for growth. The $SNORT token is the centerpiece of the ecosystem, meaning its price will rise alongside the platform’s adoption.

There are over one billion users on Telegram, who now all have instant, low-cost access to identify explosive crypto trading opportunities using Snorter.

The project’s presale offers a rare chance for investors to capitalize, and that could lead to substantial gains. However, with price hikes occurring throughout the presale, prospective investors should not wait to get involved.

Follow Snorter on X or Instagram for updates. Alternatively, visit its website to buy and stake tokens.

Visit Snorter Presale

This article is for informational purposes only and does not provide financial advice. Cryptocurrencies are highly volatile, and the market can be unpredictable. Always perform thorough research before making any cryptocurrency-related decisions.



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Ex-DRC President Kabila holds talks in M23-held city of Goma: Reports | Conflict News

Joseph Kabila is visiting the eastern city of Goma, which has been seized by rebels, after he was stripped of immunity.

Former President Joseph Kabila has returned to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, just days after he lost his immunity amid accusations he has helped armed rebels fighting in the eastern DRC, according to the Reuters and AFP news agencies.

Kabila, on Thursday, was visiting the eastern city of Goma, which had been seized by the Rwanda-backed M23 militia along with several other areas in the resource-rich east of the country earlier this year.

A team of AFP journalists saw Kabila meet local religious figures in the presence of M23’s spokesperson Lawrence Kanyuka, without giving a statement.

Citing three unidentified sources close to Kabila, Reuters also said the ex-president held talks with locals in Goma.

The visit comes despite the former president facing the possibility of a treason trial over his alleged support for M23.

Earlier this month, the DRC Senate voted to lift Kabila’s immunity, paving the way for him to be prosecuted.

The ex-president, who has been in self-imposed exile since 2023, denies the allegations and has slammed the charges against him as “arbitrary decisions with disconcerting levity”.

On Thursday, a member of Kabila’s entourage told AFP that though no formal alliance existed between his party and M23, both shared the “same goal” of ending the rule of President Felix Tshisekedi.

The United Nations and the DRC’s government say Rwanda has supported the M23 with arms and troops – an accusation the neighbouring country denies.

The renewed violence has raised fears of igniting a full-blown conflict, akin to the wars that the DRC endured in the late 1990s, involving several African countries, which killed millions of people.

The current fighting has already displaced about 700,000 people this year, according to the UN.

On Tuesday, Amnesty International accused M23 of committing abuses against civilians in areas under its control, “including torture, killings and enforced disappearances”.

“These acts violate international humanitarian law and may amount to war crimes,” the group said in a statement.

M23 says its goal is to protect ethnic minorities against the government in Kinshasa.

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Why has Elon Musk quit Donald Trump’s administration? | Elon Musk News

Billionaire and Tesla chief Elon Musk has stepped down from his role as head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), in which he was charged with reducing federal spending, as he nears the maximum limit for his tenure as a special government adviser.

His departure comes just after his first major public disagreement with President Donald Trump over the administration’s much-touted tax-and-spending budget bill, which was passed by the Republican-controlled US House of Representatives on May 22 by a single vote.

In a post on X on Wednesday, Musk said his time with the administration had “come to an end”.

“I would like to thank President Donald Trump for the opportunity to reduce wasteful spending,” the SpaceX founder wrote.

Musk, who was appointed by Trump to lead DOGE, has seen his tenure in the White House marred by controversy, in particular sparked by his attempt to dismantle the US Agency for International Development (USAID), an agency dedicated to distributing foreign aid.

With Musk’s departure, what will become of DOGE? And what legacy does the Tesla CEO leave behind?

How long was Musk at DOGE?

Musk’s term as a “special government employee” in the Trump administration meant he was only entitled to serve for 130 days in any 365-day period, and is barred from using government roles for any monetary gain.

Musk’s term has lasted just over four months, a few days short of the maximum legal limit.

In late April, Musk said he would soon shift his focus back to his own business enterprises and that his “time allocation” at DOGE would “drop significantly” starting in May.

However, Musk did note that he would spend “a day or two per week on government matters for as long as the President would like me to do so, as long as it is useful”.

Why does Musk disagree with Trump’s tax-and-spending bill?

In a clip from an interview with news channel CBS’s Sunday Morning programme, released on Tuesday, Musk revealed he was “disappointed to see the massive spending bill”.

According to him, the wide-ranging budget bill, also known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill”, increases the budget deficit and undermines his work at DOGE.

“I think a bill can be big or it can be beautiful. But I don’t know if it can be both. My personal opinion,” Musk told journalist David Pogue.

On Wednesday, Trump staunchly defended the bill. “We will be negotiating that bill, and I’m not happy about certain aspects of it, but I’m thrilled by other aspects of it,” Trump told reporters at the White House. “That’s the way they go.”

Musk and Trump
Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk and US President Donald Trump [File: Alex Brandon/AP Photo]

The budget bill spans more than a thousand pages and outlines various domestic policy goals favoured by the Trump administration.

Among its provisions are measures that extend tax cuts introduced during Trump’s first presidential term in 2017. The bill also boosts funding for Trump’s proposed “mass deportation” initiative and for security along the US-Mexico border.

The disagreement over the tax-and-spending bill was one of several challenges Musk has encountered during his time at the White House.

What else has Musk disagreed with the Trump administration about?

Musk ran afoul of several Trump officials during his stint at the White House, including the president’s chief trade adviser, Peter Navarro, whom he called a “moron” over Trump’s sweeping increase in trade tariffs across the globe. Musk has also stated publicly that he would be more in favour of “predictable tariff structures”, in addition to “free trade and lower tariffs”.

In April, the SpaceX founder expressed hopes for “a zero-tariff situation” between the US and Europe. Instead, Trump has threatened to impose a 50 percent tariff on imported goods from the European Union unless the two sides can agree to a trade deal. 

What will happen to DOGE now?

Trump established DOGE by executive order the day he was sworn into office on January 20. With Musk’s departure, it’s unclear what fate awaits the agency, as Trump has yet to appoint anyone to replace him.

Musk was given a mandate to reduce federal funding, which included downsizing the government’s workforce, terminating government contracts and attempting to close down entire agencies. In February, he and Trump both claimed they had unearthed billions of dollars worth of fraud related to diversity and climate schemes within the government. This was proved to be largely untrue or misleading.

In his post on Wednesday, Musk said: “The DOGE mission will only strengthen over time as it becomes a way of life throughout the government.”

However, Colleen Graffy, a former US diplomat and professor of law at Pepperdine University in California, said DOGE’s future was on shaky ground. “The power of DOGE came from the world’s richest man, Musk, having the ear of the world’s most powerful person, Trump,” she told Al Jazeera. “DOGE will likely struggle along for a while, but without Musk, and with pending court cases against it, its days are numbered. It would be a poisoned chalice appointment for anyone to take. Trump’s tax cuts will dwarf any savings.”

What will Musk’s DOGE legacy be?

Musk’s role in the Trump administration has sparked a large amount of controversy.

He has overseen major reductions in the number of federal employees and the dismantling of multiple government-funded programmes – moves that have drawn widespread criticism.

“Elon Musk’s DOGE was like one of his rockets exploding soon after liftoff, thereby demonstrating how not to do things,” Graffy told Al Jazeera.

“The difference is that for one, the learning experience is paid in money; for the other, the price is paid in human lives,” she added.

A major point of criticism directed at Trump and Musk centred on their decision to severely scale back USAID’s operations.

protest
A woman protests against Elon Musk outside the US Agency for International Development (USAID) building in Washington, DC, the US [File: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters]

By late February, the main offices of the agency in Washington, DC, had been essentially shut down.

Following the dismissal of roughly 1,600 employees and the placement of approximately 4,700 more on leave, staff were given just 15 minutes to gather their belongings and exit the building.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio later revealed that 83 percent of all contracts managed by USAID had been closed.

In March, a federal judge in Maryland stated that DOGE had “likely violated” the US Constitution by attempting to dismantle the agency. The judge authorised a temporary injunction to stop DOGE from proceeding with USAID-related staff reductions, building closures, contract terminations, or the destruction of USAID materials.

Lisa Gilbert, co-president of Public Citizen, a consumer rights advocacy group, described DOGE as a “mantra of destruction”.

“The legacy of Elon Musk is lost livelihoods for critical government employees, hindered American education, loss of funding for scientists and the violation of Americans’ personal privacy, all in the service of corrupt tech-bro billionaire special interests,” she told Al Jazeera.

“The carnage is even more horrifying internationally, as Musk’s chainsaw will lead to the pointless and needless deaths of likely millions of people in the developing world.”

Max Yoeli, senior research fellow in the US and the Americas Programme at Chatham House, said Musk’s brief tenure has “irrevocably altered US government”.

“DOGE’s weakening of state capacity and disruption of America’s research and development ecosystem pose lasting risks to US economic prospects and resilience, even as courts still grapple with legal issues his approach raised,” Yoeli told Al Jazeera.



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Trump tariff ruling doesn’t really change US-UK deal

This latest twist in the Trump trade tariff drama has many people asking what it means for the UK’s deal with the US.

The answer is actually not as much as you might think.

For a start, the tariffs that the US court has ruled illegal do not include those on cars, which make up the bulk of what the UK exports to the US, and steel and aluminium, which are the other UK industries most affected.

UK exports of cars are currently attracting 27.5% tariffs while steel and aluminium are hit with 25% tariffs – the same as every other country. Wednesday’s ruling has not changed that.

And although the UK has done a deal with the US to reduce car tariffs to 10% and steel and aluminium tariffs to zero, that deal is yet to come into force.

Sources at Jaguar Land Rover told the BBC that these tariffs were costing them “a huge amount of money” and pushed back on the notion floated by the car industry trade body, the SMMT, that they could run down current US inventories before feeling the pain of the tariffs.

The government said it was working to implement the deal as quickly as possible and that Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds would press the case for speedy implementation when he meets US representatives at a meeting of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development think-tank in Paris next week.

The ruling does block Trump’s imposition of blanket tariffs of 10% on other UK goods entering the US – such as products like salmon and whisky. So how that part of the tariff deal will pan out remains uncertain.

British exporters’ sigh of relief at tariffs being stopped could be short-lived as the White House has said it intends to appeal the decision.

There are also other mechanisms for the President to impose tariffs – through different provisions in trade acts or pushing them through congress.

The UK announced its trade deal with the US to some fanfare, but there are question marks as to how much better off the UK will be than other countries if it turns out that the President is prevented from imposing swingeing tariffs on others by either the courts or his own legislature.

Perhaps the most corrosive effect of all is yet another wild card being thrown into an already unpredictable game of international trade stand-off.

It makes it hard for businesses to plan, to invest, with any confidence.

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Best Crypto Presales: AI-Powered Meme Coin Set for Parabolic Gains Next Week

There are less than two days until MIND of Pepe ($MIND) closes its viral presale campaign, which has raised over $11 million to date.

Investors are on the edges of their seats as prominent industry pundits speculate on how far this project could go once it hits exchanges. We’ve seen numerous exciting forecasts, with some well-known analysts targeting between 50x and 100x gains.

MIND of Pepe is building an AI agent ecosystem, which might just be the most crucial tool in the arsenal of retail trades. The cryptocurrency market is evolving rapidly; crypto whales have access to a range of sophisticated trading tools; and there are too many emerging cryptos for any individual investor to keep tabs manually.

The MIND of Pepe agent scans the market 24/7 to spot the hottest and most promising crypto trading opportunities. This juncture levels the playing field between everyday traders and high-net-worth whales.

Its presale will end on 3 June at 2 PM UTC. This is the last opportunity for investors to buy $MIND at $0.0037515. Once the presale ends, $MIND will list on exchanges, and it’s at that point we could see its price begin to soar.

MIND of Pepe’s trading terminal, token launchpad could print the next 100x

Imagine there was a team of analysts and traders working around the clock to pump your bags. That’s what MIND of Pepe offers, except it will be an AI agent, not humans.

The project is preparing to launch an agent that monitors blockchain and social media data to identify trends and patterns, which it will consolidate into actionable insights and share with its community.

The core of the operation is the data insights terminal. This is where $MIND holders will receive access to trading signals, deep technical analysis, risk-to-reward ratio analysis, and curated X posts.

Essentially, it’s a dashboard that serves AI-driven, real-time market intelligence directly to $MIND holders’ devices.

As the crypto industry evolves, it’s becoming too vast for any individual to keep track of it all. AI agents that monitor and consolidate data solve this problem. By using MIND of Pepe, investors have the potential to capture lucrative trading opportunities that they may have otherwise missed.

But there’s more. The agent also has its own crypto wallet where it can interact with dApps and even launch tokens. The latter point may be the most crucial.

It will use the data it collects to identify market gaps and then create tokens to fill them. $MIND holders will get first access, then the agent will promote the launch using its X account.

While the agent’s token deployment capabilities have yet to be tested in the real world, we can use other AI-created cryptos as an anchor. One of the most well-known is Fartcoin, which peaked at over $2 billion. Another is Goatseus Maximus, which reached a $1 billion market cap.

Evidently, AI agents are fully capable of deploying resonant and viral meme coins, so there’s every chance that MIND of Pepe creates the next one.

And remember, $MIND holders will get insider access to the token launches. So suppose that the agent creates the next $1 billion meme coin; $MIND holders could well get in when the valuation is below $10 million, providing an opportunity for 100x gains.

Top Traders Backs $MIND for 100X

MIND of Pepe isn’t just a trading ecosystem; it’s also a meme coin. The team clearly understands the explosive nature of joke tokens, and they’re using that to their advantage.

The project uses Pepe-themed branding and artwork, harnessing the vitality of this cycle’s most popular meme coin.

This combination of a strong use case and meme coin allure is turning heads. In addition to investors showing support throughout the $MIND presale, the project is also backed by top analysts.

For example, one pundit from the prominent Cryptonews YouTube channel says that $MIND could 50x.

But others have gone even further. For instance, Jacob Bury from 99Bitcoins recently stated that $MIND could yield 100x gains.

 

Secure $MIND at $0.0037515 before presale ends

Expectations are high on how much gains the $MIND presale could provide, but time is running out to buy at a fixed and discounted presale price.

Right now, the market is shaping up for explosive growth. Bitcoin holds steady above $100K, while Ethereum and the broader altcoin market are gaining. Top analysts say this marks the beginning of an altcoin season.

And if it is, then the timing couldn’t be better for $MIND to emerge on the open market.

Follow MIND of Pepe on X or join its Telegram for updates. Alternatively, visit its website to buy and stake tokens.

Visit MIND of Pepe Presale

This article is for informational purposes only and does not provide financial advice. Cryptocurrencies are highly volatile, and the market can be unpredictable. Always perform thorough research before making any cryptocurrency-related decisions.

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