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  • Small Minneapolis Businesses Hit Hard by ICE Crackdown, While Corporations Stay Silent

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    By Maria Alejandra Cardona, Savyata Mishra and Ross Kerber

    MINNEAPOLIS, Jan 16 (Reuters) – Up and down Lake Street in the heavily ‌Latino ​area of south Minneapolis, numerous mom-and-pop restaurants have hung up signs ‌that say “No ICE,” referring to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials who have been conducting frequent raids in the area. The federal actions have ​also prompted thousands in the streets to protest after ICE agents killed 37-year-old Renee Good in her vehicle last week. 

    By contrast, large corporations in Minneapolis have been much less vocal about the effects of immigration enforcement on the ‍city, known as both a bastion of progressive politics in ​the U.S. Midwest and a robust corporate employer. Seventeen Fortune 500 companies are based in Minnesota, including Target, UnitedHealth, and General Mills. 

    Reuters reached out to those companies, as well as Minnesota-based corporations Best Buy, Hormel, Land ​O’Lakes, agricultural giant Cargill, and ⁠industrial conglomerate 3M. None would speak on the record on the guidance they have given to employees. Their websites also have not addressed the current federal actions or unrest in the city.

    It stands in contrast with how companies responded in 2020 after the police killing of George Floyd that spurred nationwide anger; many companies, including UnitedHealth and General Mills, spoke out in support of Floyd or his family after his death.

    FEAR RESHAPING OPERATIONS

    Their silence, according to Bill George, a Minneapolis-based former executive and current Harvard Business School fellow, is a mistake.

    “A lot of them are very silent and I think ‌it’s not a good time to be silent,” he told Reuters. He added he has spoken with numerous executives in the Minneapolis area who have expressed concerns about the toll on ​business, ‌with many still in the process of ‍formulating guidance to workers.

    “It is disappointing to me ⁠that we don’t hear their voices. They’re charged with the safety, security and well-being of their employees,” he said. 

    Businesses have been much less outspoken about President Donald Trump’s policies in his second term, due to fear of retaliation or threats of boycotts. After a Hilton-owned Hampton Inn cancelled bookings for ICE members in early January, the company removed it from its network.

    Many restaurants on Lake Street have reduced hours or closed. At Pineda Tacos, where a “No ICE” sign hangs in the front window and trash cans barricade the rear entrance, employees guard the door in an effort to prevent surprise raids, letting customers in one-by-one. Owner Luis Reyes Rojas said fear has reshaped daily operations.

    “We have plan A, plan B and plan C,” Reyes Rojas said, describing plans to retreat to offices or basements in case agents appear. “We don’t know how much longer we can endure this.”

    Business associations say ​the $350 billion regional economy is feeling the effects, from sales declines at small businesses to falling attendance at large companies and agricultural operations. “There are impacts that roll up to Fortune 500 companies and all the way down to sole proprietors,” said Mike Logan, CEO of the Minneapolis Regional Chamber of Commerce. 

    The Trump administration has defended the operations, and has added more agents even as 69% of Americans in a recent Reuters poll say federal agents should minimize the harm to people during operations, even if arrests decline.

    One high-profile ICE incident took place at a Target store in the suburb of Richfield, where a pair of workers – both U.S. citizens – were taken by ICE agents. One of those arrested was a 17-year-old Target employee, according to a source familiar with the situation. Target has not issued any public statement about the ICE raids; it declined to comment for this story. 

    Michael Howard, a Democratic state representative, whose district includes parts of Minneapolis and Richfield, said he has been trying to learn more about Target’s protocols related to ICE. He is urging them to “exert more clearly their private property rights and Fourth Amendment rights to request that if ICE is going into their public-private spaces that they present a judicial warrant.”

    Jeff, 61, who owns a residential cleaning ​company in the Minneapolis suburbs, said he has told his all-Latino workforce not to work if they feel threatened. He declined to share his last name or business name out of fear of attracting ICE attention. He has been filling the tanks of company cars following reports that ICE has questioned people at gas stations.

    “I’m not telling anyone they have to work,” he said. “If they want to, I will give them as safe a route as I can give them. If they don’t want to come in, I understand, and no one ​will get fired.”

    (Reporting by Maria Alejandra Cardona in Minneapolis, Savyata Mishra in Bengaluru and Ross Kerber in Boston; additional reporting by PJ Huffstutter in Chicago, Siddharth Cavale, Jessica DiNapoli and David Gaffen in New York; Writing by David Gaffen; Editing by Aurora Ellis)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Czech Citizen Imprisoned in Venezuela Released, Foreign Minister Says

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    PRAGUE, Jan ‌16 (Reuters) – ​A ‌Czech national imprisoned ​in Venezuela ‍since 2024 has ​been ​released ⁠along with other foreign nationals, Czech Foreign ‌Minister Petr Macinka ​said on ‌Friday.

    The ‍Czech citizen was ⁠detained over claims he was planning to ​participate in a plot to kill then President Nicolas Maduro and overthrow the government, according to Czech ​media.

    (Reporting by Jason Hovet and Jan Lopatka; ​Editing by Joe Bavier)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Explosion Causes Large Fire in Dutch Town of Utrecht

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    AMSTERDAM, Jan ‌15 (Reuters) – ​Several people ‌were injured after a ​major blast caused ‍a fire in the ​center ​of ⁠Utrecht, one of the Netherlands’ largest cities, on Thursday afternoon.

    Local authorities told broadcaster ‌NOS at least four ​people were ‌injured, and ‍that an ⁠emergency hospital had been set up in the area.

    The fire was still raging ​around 1630 GMT. It was unclear if there were still people inside the impacted building, as it was not safe for firemen to enter it.

    The cause ​of the explosion was not known, authorities said.

    (Reporting by Benoit Van ​Overstraeten; Editing by Bart Meijer)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Back From Iran, Pakistani Students Say They Heard Gunshots While Confined to Campus

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    ISLAMABAD, Jan 15 (Reuters) – Pakistani students returning from ‌Iran ​on Thursday said they heard gunshots ‌and stories of rioting and violence while being confined to campus and ​not allowed out of their dormitories in the evening.

    Iran’s leadership is trying to quell the worst domestic unrest since ‍its 1979 revolution, with a rights ​group putting the death toll over 2,600.

    As the protests swell, Tehran is seeking to deter U.S. ​President Donald Trump’s ⁠repeated threats to intervene on behalf of anti-government protesters.

    “During nighttime, we would sit inside and we would hear gunshots,” Shahanshah Abbas, a fourth-year student at Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, said at the Islamabad airport.

    “The situation down there is that riots have been happening everywhere. People are dying. Force is ‌being used.”

    Abbas said students at the university were not allowed to leave campus and told to ​stay ‌in their dormitories after 4 ‍p.m.

    “There was nothing ⁠happening on campus,” Abbas said, but in his interactions with Iranians, he heard stories of violence and chaos.

    “The surrounding areas, like banks, mosques, they were damaged, set on fire … so things were really bad.”

    Trump has repeatedly threatened to intervene in support of protesters in Iran but adopted a wait-and-see posture on Thursday after protests appeared to have abated. Information flows have been hampered by an internet blackout for a week.

    “We were not allowed to ​go out of the university,” said Arslan Haider, a student in his final year. “The riots would mostly start later in the day.”

    Haider said he was unable to contact his family due to the blackout but “now that they opened international calls, the students are getting back because their parents were concerned”.

    A Pakistani diplomat in Tehran said the embassy was getting calls from many of the 3,500 students in Iran to send messages to their families back home.

    “Since they don’t have internet connections to make WhatsApp and other social network calls, what they do is they contact the embassy from local phone numbers and tell us to inform ​their families.”

    Rimsha Akbar, who was in the middle of her final year exams at Isfahan, said international students were kept safe.

    “Iranians would tell us if we are talking on Snapchat or if we were riding in a cab … that shelling had happened, tear gas had happened, ​and that a lot of people were killed.”

    (Reporting by Asif ShahzadAdditional reporting by Mubasher BukhariWriting by Saad SayeedEditing by Peter Graff)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Turkish Airlines Flight Makes Emergency Landing in Barcelona After Threat

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    MADRID, Jan ‌15 (Reuters) – ​A ‌Turkish Airlines flight ​from Istanbul made ‍an emergency ​landing ​at ⁠Barcelona-El Prat Airport on Thursday after an unspecified threat ‌on board, Spanish ​airports operator ‌AENA ‍said, adding ⁠that the airport was operating normally.

    The Guardia Civil police ​force said they were investigating the incident, without providing more information. Turkish Airlines officials were not immediately available for ​comment.

    (Reporting by Jesus Calero, editing by Andrei ​Khalip and Tomasz Janowski)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Iran Protests Show Bitter Schism Among Exiled Opposition Factions

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    PARIS, Jan 15 (Reuters) – Huge protests in Iran have galvanised exiled foes of the authorities but despite their hatred of ‌the ​ruling clerics, a bitter schism dating to before the 1979 Islamic Revolution ‌still afflicts the leading opposition factions.

    That split, between monarchists supporting Reza Pahlavi, son of the ousted shah, and a more organised leftist group, the Mujahedin-e Khalq, has played out ​online and even in angry arguments in street protests in Europe and North America.

    How far either faction has support inside Iran, or might be able to shape events there in the future, is hard to gauge, though analysts and diplomats have for decades regarded both ‍as being far more popular among emigres than inside the country.

    Many ​other Iranians outside Iran are also deeply sceptical of both the monarchists and MEK, but have no organised opposition network comparable to those factions.

    The lack of a universally accepted opposition movement or figurehead has complicated international approaches towards the deadly unrest sweeping Iran, ​with U.S. President Donald Trump questioning ⁠Pahlavi’s support even as he weighed air strikes.

    “What’s problematic is there has been no inclusive organisation that has been built that can bring together Iranians of all walks of life: religious, ethnic, socioeconomic,” said Sanam Vakil, Middle East head at the Chatham House think tank in London.

    During the past two weeks of violent unrest, videos in Iranian cities have shown some demonstrators chanting in support of the ousted monarchy and the late shah’s son, who has encouraged the protests.

    Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who fled into exile in 1979 and died a year later, was a close Western ally who harked back to ancient Persian heritage in framing his rule as a national leader and ‌moderniser. But he resisted democratic change as increasing economic disparities destabilised the country.

    His 65-year-old son, who is based in the U.S., says he wants democracy for Iran and has not specified any role he would seek ​if ‌the current system collapsed. His supporters run one ‍of the main Persian-language satellite television stations broadcasting into Iran.

    Reza ⁠Pahlavi’s supporters in the West have pointed to the videos of protesters in Iran chanting his name as evidence his popularity is growing, saying he is the only figure able to unite the country if the Islamic Republic implodes.

    Among foreign officials and diplomats following Iran there are mixed views as to whether the latest protests show that Pahlavi’s role is growing.

    A Western diplomat said Pahlavi’s name may have been used by street protesters because there were few other recognisable opposition figures, but that there was no sign he commanded the sort of domestic support that could make him a future leader.

    A European official said a big spike in protest numbers after a call for street action by foreign opponents of the government, including Pahlavi, showed his stature may be broader than was previously understood.

    However, any role he played would need to be in the context of a wider democratic movement, said Iranian analyst and former diplomat Mehrdad Khonsari. “You need a coalition of people who believe in democratic values in order to sort of lighten the weight and ​give greater confidence to people,” he said.

    The idea that Pahlavi may have popularity inside Iran is not shared by the MEK, whose supporters regard the pre-revolution monarchy as comparable to the current Shi’ite theocracy.

    Its supporters online often use the slogan “No Monarchy, No Supreme Leader”.

    The MEK is a movement fusing leftist and Islamist ideas whose cadres carried out bombings inside Iran before and after the revolution, even as mass support was growing for rival factions on the streets.

    The ruling clerics banished the MEK in 1981 and it established military bases in Iraq that it used to launch attacks on Iranian troops during the 1980s Iran-Iraq war, something many Iranians remember with fury.

    It was listed as a terrorist organisation in the United States until 2012, but some Western politicians have voiced backing for the group including former U.S. secretary of state Mike Pompeo.

    However, the European official described the MEK as widely despised inside Iran, partly because of its conduct during the Iran-Iraq war, and analysts say it has had little presence in the country for decades.

    The group’s official leader Massoud Rajavi has not been seen since 2002 and is widely thought to be dead, though the MEK has not acknowledged that. His wife, Maryam Rajavi, runs the organisation and its affiliate, the National Council for Resistance in Iran.

    Group officials say their supporters are widespread in Iran and active, though there has been no public sign of support for the MEK seen by Reuters during the protests.

    Monarchists – along with many other Iranian ​dissidents and Iran’s current rulers – regard the MEK with intense suspicion, pointing to its history of violence and enforcement of ideological purity within its ranks.

    For many Iranians, the arguments between the Islamic Republic’s theocratic establishment, monarchists voicing nostalgia for the 1970s, and a revolutionary group that lost out in the early 1980s may seem outdated.

    Even as monarchist and MEK supporters remained prominent among émigrés and as the same faces revolved through the upper echelons of the Islamic Republic, Iran’s population was doubling in size and growing more urban and educated.

    Most major political movements inside Iran after 1979 sought to either bolster or reform the Islamic Republic, rather than ​sweep it away entirely, until successive waves of protest in recent years demanding more comprehensive change.

    “Iranians inside Iran are, I think, not just looking to the diaspora for their future,” said Vakil.

    (Reporting by John Irish in Paris, additional reporting by Vitalii Yalahuzian; writing by Angus McDowall; editing by Mark Heinrich)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Iran Closes Its Airspace to Commercial Aircraft for Hours as Tensions With US Remain High

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    The closure ran for over four hours, according to pilot guidance issued by Iran, which lies on a key East-West flight route. International carriers diverted north and south around Iran, but after one extension, the closure appeared to have expired and several domestic flights were in the air just after 7 a.m.

    Iran previously shut its airspace during the 12-day war against Israel in June and when it exchanged fire with Israel during the Israel-Hamas war. However, there were no signs of current hostilities though the closure immediately rippled through global aviation because Iran is located on a key East-West route for airlines.

    “Several airlines have already reduced or suspended services, and most carriers are avoiding Iranian airspace,” said the website SafeAirspace, which provides information on conflict areas and air travel. “The situation may signal further security or military activity, including the risk of missile launches or heightened air defense, increasing the risk of misidentification of civil traffic.”

    The airspace closure came as some personnel at a key U.S. military base in Qatar were advised to evacuate. The U.S. Embassy in Kuwait also ordered its personnel to “temporary halt” going to the multiple military bases in the small Gulf Arab country.

    U.S. President Donald Trump made a series of vague statements Wednesday that left unclear what American action, if any, would take place against Iran.

    In comments to reporters, Trump said he had been told that plans for executions in Iran have stopped, without providing many details. The shift comes a day after Trump told protesters in Iran that “help is on the way” and that his administration would “act accordingly” to respond to the Islamic Republic’s deadly crackdown.

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi also sought to tone down the rhetoric, urging the U.S. to find a solution through negotiation.

    Asked by Fox News what he would say to Trump, Araghchi said: “My message is: Between war and diplomacy, diplomacy is a better way, although we don’t have any positive experience from the United States. But still diplomacy is much better than war.”

    Activists warned that hangings of detainees could come soon. The security forces’ crackdown on the demonstrations has killed at least 2,615, the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency reported. The death toll exceeds that of any other round of protest or unrest in Iran in decades and recalls the chaos surrounding the country’s 1979 Islamic Revolution.

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  • Factbox-Key Quotes From President Trump’s Interview With Reuters

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    WASHINGTON, Jan 14 (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump sat for an interview with Reuters in ‌the ​Oval Office on Wednesday. Here are some key ‌quotes:

    FEDERAL RESERVE INDEPENDENCE

    “A president should have something to say” about Fed policy, Trump said. “I made a lot of ​money with business, so I think I have a better understanding of it than Too Late Jerome Powell.”

    Asked if he will remove Powell, Trump said, “I don’t have any plan ‍to do that.”

    On the pushback by some Republican ​senators against the Justice Department probe, Trump said, “I don’t care. There’s nothing to say. They should be loyal. That’s what I say.” 

    On his pick for the next ​Fed chair: “The two ⁠Kevins are very good … You have some other good people too, but I’ll be announcing something over the next couple of weeks.”

    Trump was referring to White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett and former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh. 

    TRUMP UNSURE IF ZELENSKIY WANTS A PEACE DEAL”We have to get President Zelenskiy to go along with it,” Trump said about a deal with Russia to end its war in Ukraine. 

    Asked if he supported the idea of U.S. security guarantees ‌to protect Ukraine through intelligence sharing, Trump said, “If we can get something done, we’d help. They’re losing 30,000 soldiers a month between them and ​Russia. ‌Now, Europe is going to help ‍us with that.” 

    On Putin: “I think he’s ⁠ready to make a deal. I think Ukraine is less ready to make a deal,” Trump said. Asked what the holdup is, Trump responded, “Zelenskiy.”

    REZA PAHLAVI, SON OF IRAN’S DEPOSED SHAH

    “He seems very nice, but I don’t know how he’d play within his own country. And we really aren’t up to that point yet, we’re looking and studying a lot of things. But it’s very early – too soon to say. I don’t know how he gets along with his country.”

    “I don’t know whether or not his country would accept his leadership, and certainly if they would, that would be fine with me,” Trump said, noting he has not spoken with Pahlavi.

    TRUMP WILL MEET MACHADO, ​PRAISES DELCY RODRIGUEZ

    “I think we’re just going to talk. And I haven’t met her. She’s a very nice woman. I think we’re just going to talk basics,” Trump said about Venezuela’s opposition leader Maria Corina Machado.

    Asked if he wanted Machado to give him her Nobel Peace Prize, Trump said, “No, I didn’t say that. She won the Nobel Peace Prize.”

    What if she brings the prize? “Well, that’s what I’m hearing. I don’t know, but I shouldn’t be the one to say,” Trump said.

    The president also said he had “a very good talk” on Wednesday with Delcy Rodriguez, the interim president of Venezuela. “She’s been very good to deal with.”

    “I think she’s (Delcy) going to come, you know, eventually she’s going to… not quite yet, but eventually she’ll come and I’ll go to their country too.”MIDTERMS

    Trump said Republicans should do well “but if you go by the past, only three presidents have won out of 65 years, or whatever the number is. What is that number? The crazy ​number almost doesn’t make sense, right? Even if they had a successful presidency, yeah, there’s almost like there’s a latch on it.”

    Asked if the Cuban regime is more likely to fall after the U.S. military actions in Venezuela, Trump said, “Probably, yeah, I think so.”

    “Because they don’t get money anymore from Venezuela. They don’t get money, they don’t get oil, they don’t get gold from Venezuela. It’s cut off entirely. So ​you know it’s more likely it’s going to fall,” Trump added. 

    (Reporting by Steve Holland, Bo Erickson, Nandita Bose, Trevor Hunnicut, Jarrett Renshaw and Gram Slattery; Editing by Ross Colvin and Stephen Coates)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • UK Prosecutors Try to Reinstate Terrorism Charge Against Kneecap Rapper

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    LONDON, Jan 14 (Reuters) – British prosecutors sought to reinstate a ‌terrorism ​charge against a member of ‌Irish rap group Kneecap on Wednesday for displaying a flag of Iran-backed ​Lebanese militia Hezbollah at a London gig, after a court threw out the case last year.

    Liam Óg Ó ‍hAnnaidh, whose stage name is Mo ​Chara, was accused of having waved the flag of the banned militant group Hezbollah during a ​November 2024 ⁠gig.

    The charge was thrown out in September after a court ruled it had originally been brought without the permission of the Director of Public Prosecutions and the Attorney General, and also one day outside the six-month statutory limit.

    But the Crown Prosecution Service said it would challenge the ruling ‌and its lawyer Paul Jarvis told London’s High Court on Wednesday that permission was only required ​by ‌the time Ó hAnnaidh first ‍appeared in ⁠court, meaning the case can proceed.

    Kneecap – known for their politically charged lyrics and support for the Palestinian cause – have said the case is an attempt to distract from what they described as British complicity in Israel’s genocide in Gaza. Israel strongly denies committing a genocide in the tiny coastal territory.

    J.J. Ó Dochartaigh, who goes by DJ Próvaí, was in court but Ó hAnnaidh was not required to attend and was not ​present.

    KNEECAP SAYS PROSECUTION A DISTRACTION

    Ó hAnnaidh was charged in May with displaying the Hezbollah flag in such a way that aroused reasonable suspicion that he supported the banned group, after footage emerged of him holding the flag on stage while saying “Up Hamas, up Hezbollah”.

    Kneecap have previously said the flag was thrown on stage during their performance and that they “do not, and have never, supported Hamas or Hezbollah”.

    The group, who rap about Irish identity and support the republican cause of uniting Northern Ireland with the Republic of Ireland, have become increasingly vocal about the war in Gaza, particularly after Ó hAnnaidh was charged ​in May.

    During their performance at June’s Glastonbury Festival in England, Ó hAnnaidh accused Israel of committing war crimes, after Kneecap displayed pro-Palestinian messages during their set at the Coachella Festival in California in April.

    Kneecap have since been banned from Hungary and Canada, also cancelling ​a tour of the United States due to a clash with Ó hAnnaidh’s court appearances.

    (Reporting by Sam TobinEditing by Gareth Jones)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Point to Battle Readiness and Increased Missile Stockpiles, State Media Says

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    DUBAI, Jan ‌14 (Reuters) – ​Iran’s stockpile ‌of missiles has ​increased since a ‍12-day war with ​Israel ​last ⁠year, Revolutionary Guards’ Aerospace Commander Majid Mousavi said on Wednesday according ‌to state media, following ​U.S. President ‌Donald ‍Trump’s threats ⁠of intervention amid anti-government protests in Iran.

    “We are at the peak of ​our readiness,” Mousavi was quoted as saying by state media, adding that wartime damages had been repaired and output in various areas ​by the guards’ aerospace forces was higher than before ​June 2025.

    (Reporting by Dubai Newsroom)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Trump Son-In-Law Kushner, Envoy Witkoff Plan to Meet Putin in Moscow, Bloomberg News Reports

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    Jan 14 (Reuters) – ‌White ​House envoy ‌Steve Witkoff ​and U.S. President ‍Donald Trump’s son-in-law ​Jared ​Kushner ⁠are seeking to travel to Moscow to meet Russian ‌President Vladimir Putin, Bloomberg ​News reported ‌on ‍Wednesday, citing ⁠people familiar with the matter.

    The meeting could happen this month, ​though plans are not final and timing may slip due to unrest in Iran, the report said.

    Reuters could not immediately ​verify the report.

    (Reporting by Bipasha Dey in Bengaluru; ​Editing by Andrew Heavens)

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  • French Foreign Minister: Iran Crackdown Could Be Most Violent in Its Contemporary History

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    PARIS, Jan ‌14 (Reuters) – ​France ‌suspects that Iran’s ​crackdown on ‍demonstrations across ​the ​country ⁠is the most violent in the country’s ‌contemporary history, French ​Foreign Minister ‌Jean-Noel ‍Barrot said on ⁠Wednesday.

    “What we suspect is that this ​is the most violent repression in Iran’s contemporary history and that it must absolutely stop,” Barrot said.

    (Reporting ​by Benoit Van Overstraeten and John ​Irish;Editing by Louise Rasmussen)

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  • 2025 Was the World’s Third-Warmest Year on Record, EU Scientists Say

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    BRUSSELS, Jan 14 (Reuters) – The planet experienced its third-warmest year on record ‌in ​2025, and average temperatures have exceeded 1.5 ‌degrees Celsius of global warming over three years, the longest period since records began, ​EU scientists said on Wednesday.

    The data from the European Union’s European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) found that the last three years were ‍the planet’s three hottest since records began – ​with 2025 marginally cooler than 2023, by just 0.01 C.

    Britain’s national weather service, the UK Met Office, confirmed its own ​data ranked 2025 ⁠as the third-warmest in records going back to 1850. The World Meteorological Organization will publish its temperature figures later on Wednesday.

    The hottest year on record was 2024. 

    ECMWF said the planet also just had its first three-year period in which the average global temperature was 1.5 C above the pre-industrial era – the limit beyond which scientists expect global warming will unleash ‌severe impacts, some of them irreversible.

    “1.5 C is not a cliff edge. However, we know that every fraction of a ​degree ‌matters, particularly for worsening extreme ‍weather events,” said Samantha ⁠Burgess, strategic lead for climate at ECMWF.

    Governments pledged under the 2015 Paris Agreement to try to avoid exceeding 1.5 C of global warming, measured as a decades-long average temperature compared with the pre-industrial era.

    But their failure to reduce greenhouse gas emissions means that level could now be breached before 2030 – a decade earlier than had been predicted when the Paris accord was signed in 2015, ECMWF said.

    “We are bound to pass it,” said Carlo Buontempo, director of the EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service. “The choice we now have is how ​to best manage the inevitable overshoot and its consequences on societies and natural systems.”

    Currently, the world’s long-term warming level is about 1.4 C above the pre-industrial era, ECMWF said. Measured on a short-term basis, the world already breached 1.5 C in 2024.

    Exceeding the long-term 1.5 C limit – even if only temporarily – would lead to more extreme and widespread impacts, including hotter and longer heatwaves, and more powerful storms and floods.

    In 2025, wildfires in Europe produced the highest total emissions on record, while scientific studies confirmed specific weather events were made worse by climate change – including Hurricane Melissa in the Caribbean and monsoon rains in Pakistan which killed more than 1,000 people in floods.

    Despite these worsening impacts, climate science is facing increased political pushback. U.S. President Donald Trump, ​who has called climate change “the greatest con job”, last week withdrew from dozens of U.N. entities including the scientific Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

    The long-established consensus among the world’s scientists is that climate change is real, mostly caused by humans, and getting worse. Its main cause is greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels such ​as coal, oil and gas, which trap heat in the atmosphere.

    (Reporting by Kate Abnett; Additional reporting by William James and Emma Farge; Editing by Alison Williams)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Russia Slams US Strike Threats, Warns Against Interference in Iran

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    MOSCOW, Jan ‌13 (Reuters) – ​Russia on ‌Tuesday condemned what ​it described as “subversive ‍external interference” in ​Iran’s ​internal ⁠politics and said U.S. threats of new military strikes against the country ‌were “categorically unacceptable.”

    “Those who plan ​to use ‌externally inspired ‍unrest as ⁠a pretext for repeating the aggression against Iran committed in June ​2025 must be aware of the disastrous consequences of such actions for the situation in the Middle East and global international security,” the ​Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

    (Reporting by Maxim ​Rodionov; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Deaths Outnumber Births in France for First Time Since World War Two

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    PARIS, Jan 13 (Reuters) – France recorded more ‌deaths ​than births in 2025 ‌for the first time since the end of World ​War Two, a development that erodes its long-held demographic advantage over other European ‍Union nations, official figures ​showed on Tuesday.

    The national statistics institue INSEE reported 651,000 deaths last ​year ⁠and 645,000 births, which have collapsed in number since the global COVID pandemic.

    France has traditionally had stronger demographics than most of Europe, but an aging population and falling birth rates show it is not immune ‌to the demographic crunch straining public finances across the continent.

    INSEE said the ​fertility ‌rate dropped to 1.56 ‍children ⁠per woman last year, its lowest level since the World War One and well below the 1.8 assumed in pension funding forecasts by the pension advisory council.

    In 2023, the most recent year with EU comparisons, France ranked second highest with a fertility rate of 1.65, behind Bulgaria’s 1.81.

    The demographic shift ​will push public spending back to pandemic-era highs in the coming years while eroding the tax base, the national public audit office warned last month.

    “Given the retirement of the large generations born in the 1960s, labour market tensions and workforce problems are likely to increase rapidly in the coming years,” said economist Philippe Crevel with the Cercle d’Epargne think tank.

    Despite deaths outnumbering births, France’s population grew slightly last year to 69.1 million, due ​to net migration, which INSEE estimated at 176,000.

    Life expectancy reached record highs last year – 85.9 years for women and 80.3 for men – while the share of people aged 65 or older ​climbed to 22%, nearly matching those under 20.

    (Reporting by Leigh Thomas; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Iran’s Leadership Is in Its ‘Final Days and Weeks’, Germany’s Merz Says

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    BENGALURU, Jan 13 (Reuters) – German Chancellor Friedrich ‌Merz ​said on Tuesday ‌he assumes Iran’s leadership is in its “final days ​and weeks” as it faces widespread protests.

    Demonstrations in Iran have evolved ‍from complaints about dire economic ​hardships to calls for the fall of the ​clerical establishment ⁠in the Islamic Republic.

    “I assume that we are now witnessing the final days and weeks of this regime,” Merz said during a trip to India, questioning the Iranian leadership’s legitimacy.

    “When a ‌regime can only maintain power through violence, then it is ​effectively at ‌its end. The ‍population ⁠is now rising up against this regime.”

    Merz said Germany was in close contact with the United States and fellow European governments on the situation in Iran, and urged Tehran to end its deadly crackdown on protesters.

    He did not comment on Germany’s trade ties with ​Iran.

    U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday that any country that does business with Iran will face a tariff rate of 25% on trade with the United States.

    Germany maintains limited trade relations with Iran despite significant restrictions, making Berlin Tehran’s most important trading partner in the European Union.

    German exports to Iran fell 25% to just under 871 million euros ($1.02 billion) in the first 11 months ​of 2025, representing less than 0.1% of total German exports, according to federal statistics office data seen by Reuters on Tuesday.

    (Reporting by Andreas Rinke in Bengaluru ​and Rene Wagner in Berlin, Writing by Miranda Murray, Editing by Timothy Heritage)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni Seeks Seventh Term After Four Decades in Power

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    Jan 13 (Reuters) – When Yoweri Museveni seized power in Uganda in 1986, he said “the problem of ‌Africa ​in general and Uganda in particular is not the people but ‌leaders who want to overstay in power.”

    The 81-year-old president and former rebel is seeking a seventh term in office on Thursday after nearly ​four decades leading the East African nation, the vast majority of whose citizens have never known any other leader.

    Museveni came to power on a wave of optimism after leading insurgencies against autocratic governments. That goodwill was soon ‍squandered amid allegations of graft and authoritarianism. 

    “Corruption has been ​central to his rule from the beginning,” Kristof Titeca, a professor at the University of Antwerp, told Reuters.

    Museveni has acknowledged that some government officials have engaged in corrupt practices but says all those who have been ​caught have been prosecuted.

    The ⁠canny political strategist has also cultivated foreign allies by embracing the security priorities of Western powers, deploying peacekeepers to hotspots such as Somalia and South Sudan and welcoming huge numbers of refugees to Uganda.

    In his own country, his record has been mixed.

    His government won praise for tackling the AIDS epidemic and for beating back the Lord’s Resistance Army rebel group that brutalised Ugandans for nearly 20 years.

    But widespread corruption hollowed out state services and just one in four Ugandan children entering primary school makes it to secondary school, according to the United Nations children’s agency UNICEF, while well-paid ‌jobs remain largely out of reach for many.

    Born to Christian nomadic pastoralists, Museveni secured admission to an elite secondary school and went on to study political science at ​a ‌university in neighbouring Tanzania.

    There, he founded a ‍militant movement that eventually helped force out ⁠President Idi Amin, with Milton Obote taking over as Uganda’s leader in 1980.

    Obote was toppled in a coup in 1985. The following year, the military wing of Museveni’s National Resistance Movement overthrew Tito Okello, who had become president.

    “This is not a mere change of guard,” Museveni said at his swearing-in. “This is a fundamental change in the politics of our government.”

    His efforts to attract foreign investment, establish order and raise the standard of living were initially applauded by the West. But as Uganda’s economy picked up, so did public anger over corruption.

    Under a privatisation programme, dozens of state enterprises were sold to Museveni’s relatives and cronies at fire-sale prices, according to parliamentary reports which said some of the proceeds were embezzled.

    Kizza Besigye, Museveni’s doctor during his years in the bush, fell out with him, accusing him of presiding over corruption and rights abuses.

    Museveni has won ​all six presidential elections he has contested, including four against Besigye, who was arrested in 2024 and faces treason charges.

    In 2005, parliament scrapped presidential term limits, a move critics said was aimed at letting him keep power for life.

    Museveni’s election opponents rejected election results over alleged irregularities. The authorities denied the allegations and police cracked down on demonstrations by opposition supporters.

    Museveni dismissed criticism from Western powers, saying in 2006: “If the international community has lost confidence in us, then that is a compliment because they are habitually wrong.”

    He also sought to cultivate ties with other countries, including China, Russia, Iran and the United Arab Emirates, to reduce Uganda’s dependence on the West.

    The discovery of substantial oil deposits buoyed his status, leading to agreements with energy giants TotalEnergies and CNOOC to build an export pipeline.

    Muzeveni’s main rival in Thursday’s presidential election is Bobi Wine, a 43-year-old pop star. Political analysts say that while victory for Museveni is all but certain, the road ahead is clouded by uncertainty, with the president starting to show signs of frailty .

    “The big question looming over the election is the question of succession,” university professor Titeca said, reflecting on the rapid rise of Muhoozi Kainerugaba, Museveni’s son and Uganda’s military chief.

    Uganda’s opposition has ​accused Museveni of fast-tracking Kainerugaba’s military career to prepare him to eventually succeed him, despite the 51-year-old frequently taking to X to make inflammatory remarks, while veteran politicians who once fought alongside Museveni in the bush have sidelined.

    The election outcome could determine Museveni’s next move, with a poor showing potentially prompting him to promote other party members and deflect criticism of an outright dynastic succession, said former newspaper editor Charles Onyango-Obbo.

    “This is less about the results that will be announced, and more about the mood on the ground,” said ​Onyango-Obbo, adding that a handover could be some years away.

    “Museveni is more frail now, but he is a workaholic… he will not leave even if he needs to use a walking stick,” he said.

    (Reporting by Ammu Kannampilly, Editing by Timothy Heritage)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Iranians Able to Make Some Calls Abroad While Internet Access Is Still Out After Protests

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    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Mobile phones in Iran were able to call abroad Tuesday after a crackdown on nationwide protests in which the internet and international calls were cut.

    Several people in Tehran were able to call The Associated Press and speak to a journalist there. The AP bureau in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, was unable to call those numbers back.

    Iranians said text messaging appeared to remain down, and witnesses said the internet remained cut off from the outside world.

    Iran cut off the internet and calls on Thursday as protests intensified.

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, speaking to the Qatar-funded satellite news network Al Jazeera in an interview aired Monday night, said he continued to communicate with U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff.

    The communication “continued before and after the protests and are still ongoing,” Araghchi said. However, “Washington’s proposed ideas and threats against our country are incompatible.”

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Iran’s public rhetoric diverges from the private messaging the administration has received from Tehran in recent days.

    “I think the president has an interest in exploring those messages,” Leavitt said. “However, with that said, the president has shown he’s unafraid to use military options if and when he deems necessary, and nobody knows that better than Iran.”

    Meanwhile, pro-government demonstrators flooded the streets Monday in support of the theocracy, a show of force after days of protests directly challenging the rule of 86-year-old Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Iranian state television aired chants from the crowd, which appeared to number in the tens of thousands, who shouted “Death to America!” and “Death to Israel!”

    Others cried out, “Death to the enemies of God!” Iran’s attorney general has warned that anyone taking part in protests will be considered an “enemy of God,” a death-penalty charge.

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  • Pacts, Patronage and Fear: How Myanmar’s Junta Chief Holds on to Power

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    BANGKOK, Jan 13 (Reuters) – His name is not on the ballot, and his photographs don’t appear on campaign posters. But one man looms large over the general election underway ‌in ​Myanmar: junta chief Min Aung Hlaing.

    The 69-year-old general has ruled the impoverished Southeast Asian nation since ‌ousting Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected government in a 2021 coup. That sparked a civil war of unprecedented violence, which has displaced millions and left much of Myanmar’s borderlands in rebel hands. 

    The general said in ​a New Year address, as votes for the first phase of the three-stage election were being counted, that he intends to hand over “state responsibilities” to the next government.

    Suu Kyi’s party, however, has been dissolved and other major opposition parties are not contesting the polls, which have been widely criticised as an exercise to keep the junta in power via proxies. ‍The United Nations and Western rights groups have said the elections are neither ​free nor fair. 

    Reuters interviewed six people familiar with Min Aung Hlaing as well as two analysts of junta politics who offered insight into the thinking of the enigmatic general. Since the coup, he has only had limited diplomatic contact with many of Myanmar’s regional neighbours and has rarely spoken to non-state-controlled media. 

    The junta chief and acting president is a rigid ​military leader, but also a political creature ⁠with a fine-tuned sense for managing the country’s elites, according to three of the people and the two analysts. 

    Those qualities, the people said, have helped him keep power through battlefield defeats that have dented the military’s prestige and hold over the country, exposing Min Aung Hlaing to criticism from supporters of the armed forces. At least 16,600 civilians have died in conflict since the coup, according to Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, a coalition of independent international researchers. 

    Pulling back from absolute rule and sharing power through elections functions as “an elite management strategy, diffusing responsibility and preserving regime cohesion,” said Naing Min Khant, program associate at the Institute for Strategy and Policy – Myanmar, a think-tank in Thailand. 

    “He became the leader not only because of military ruthlessness but because of his subtle skills that help reduce all sorts of pressure around him,” said another of the people, a foreign former official who has met Min ‌Aung Hlaing.

    “I think if another person was put in that position, there may have been even more pressure on them.”

    Myanmar’s information ministry did not reply to a request for comment on Reuters’ findings. 

    Min Aung Hlaing has handed some generals lucrative positions atop military-linked businesses, even as ​he ‌occasionally detained other senior officers, including court marshalling one likely ‍successor. 

    Such moves have helped control potential rivals, according to Naing Min Khant. 

    “Power-sharing is ⁠managed through elite pacts embedded within the officer corps, where regime survival is closely tied to collective officer survival,” the analyst said. 

    At the same time, Min Aung Hlaing has prioritised keeping important positions for loyalists, including some experienced at dealing with foreign leaders, two of the people said. 

    Diplomatic backing from China, in particular, has bolstered the general’s position and supported the junta’s recent limited comeback on some frontlines, Reuters reported in December. 

    Among the loyalists is retired military officer and former U.N. ambassador Than Swe, who serves as junta foreign minister, the people said. One of them added that the diplomat has been coaching Min Aung Hlaing as he emerges from diplomatic isolation. 

    Than Swe has also since been part of efforts to rebuild diplomatic relationships with the Association of Southeast Asian Nation bloc that froze ties with the generals soon after the coup.

    Min Aung Hlaing’s interest in politics was clear even before the coup, when he was serving as armed forces commander-in-chief, said another person familiar with the general. 

    A previous junta had pared back the military’s outsized role in administering the country and handed power to a quasi-civilian government in the 2010s, but the general continued meeting community and religious leaders, the person said.

    “All that didn’t make sense, if you were only a professional soldier,” they said. 

    The fourth of five siblings born to a family from Myanmar’s south, Min Aung Hlaing read law at ​university in Yangon, then the country’s capital. 

    In 1977, he passed out of the Defence Services Academy, the crucible of the officer corps and made a steady ascent through the ranks. This included time as a commander in Myanmar’s historically restive borderlands. 

    The academy’s motto – “The Triumphant Elites of the Future” – signals the institution’s central role in shaping generations of military brass. 

    Most leave seeing the military as the self-appointed guardian of national unity, as well as of the rights of the majority Bamar ethnic group and the Buddhist religion many of them follow.

    That sense of the generals as the country’s ultimate protectors pushed Min Aung Hlaing to take absolute control in February 2021, months after a military-backed party was crushed at polls by Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy, said one of the officials familiar with his thinking. 

    “He felt justified in doing the coup,” the official said. “Suu Kyi was not listening to him, to his concerns.”

    Suu Kyi, now 80, is serving a 27-year sentence for offences including incitement, corruption and election fraud. She denies the charges. 

    The politician has spent previous bouts of detention in the relative comfort of house arrest. This time, the junta has not released specifics on her whereabouts or wellbeing, though it insists she is in good health. 

    Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim made a failed diplomatic push for the release of Suu Kyi last year, according to the foreign former official. 

    “Min Aung Hlaing quickly closed the door on that,” the person said. “I know that this was their red line.”    

    Anwar’s office and a lawyer who previously represented Suu Kyi did not respond to requests for comment. 

    After casting his vote inside the heavily-guarded capital of Naypyitaw on December 28, a smiling Min Aung Hlaing walked up to a gaggle of reporters, where he was asked if he planned to become president following the polls.

    “I can’t simply say that I want to do this or that. I am not a leader of a political party,” he said. 

    However, the general has recently indicated ​he is considering appointing a successor as armed forces chief and will himself likely move into a fully political role, said the official familiar with his thinking, without specifying what position he might take.

    “There will be a new government,” the source said. “He won’t be holding on to (absolute) power.” 

    Under the military-drafted constitution, the president wields significant executive power but does not have authority over the armed forces. 

    The president is picked by a college of elected and military-appointed lawmakers, according to the constitution. The military retains the right to select ministers in charge of national security. 

    Early results from the general elections put the Union Solidarity and Development Party, headed by retired generals, in the lead. The date when the final results will be announced has not been declared. 

    The next generation of military leaders isn’t likely to take a significantly different approach toward Suu Kyi or ​the resistance movement, said Maj. Naung Yoe, who left the junta after the coup and now researches the civil war. 

    “There might be some who don’t like the way the military is handling things and they don’t like Min Aung Hlaing,” he said.

    “But that does not mean that they like the revolution.”

    (Reporting by Devjyot Ghoshal and Panu Wongcha-um; Additional reporting by Reuters Staff; Editing by Katerina Ang)

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  • Russian Drones Hit Two Foreign Vessels Near Ukraine’s Port, Source Says

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    KYIV, ‌Jan ​12 (Reuters) – ‌Russian drones ​on ‍Monday ​hit ​two foreign-flagged vessels ⁠near Ukraine’s southern ‌port of ​Chornomorsk, a ‌person ‍familiar with ⁠the matter told ​Reuters.

    One of the vessels was heading to Italy, the person said.

    (Reporting ​by Yuliia DysaEditing by ​Tomasz Janowski)

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