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Tag: United Kingdom

  • Putin Says U.S.-Ukraine Text Could Form Basis Future Peace Agreement

    BISHKEK (Reuters) -President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday that the outlines of a draft peace plan discussed by the United States and Ukraine could become the basis of future agreements to end the conflict in Ukraine but that if not then Russia would continue to fight.

    “In general, we agree that this can be the basis for future agreements,” Putin said, adding that the variant of the plan discussed by the United States and Ukraine in Geneva had been passed to Russia.

    Putin said that the United States was taking into account Russia’s position but that some things still need to be discussed. He said that if Europe wanted a pledge not to attack it, then Russia was willing to give such a pledge.

    Russia, Putin said, was still being told it should cease the fighting.

    “Ukrainian troops must withdraw from the territories they hold, and then the fighting will cease. If they don’t leave, then we shall achieve this by armed means. That’s it,” Putin said. Russian forces, he said, were advancing in Ukraine at a faster pace.

    Putin said that he considered the Ukrainian leadership to be illegitimate and so it was legally impossible to sign a deal with Ukraine, so it was important to ensure any agreement was recognised by the international community – and that the international community recognised Russian gains in Ukraine.

    Putin rejected the suggestion that U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff had shown himself to be biased towards Moscow in peace talks over Ukraine, describing it as nonsense.

    (Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin Writing by Maxim Rodionov; editing by Guy Faulconbridge)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Netflix Hosts Kate Winslet for Afternoon Tea in Celebration of Her Directorial Debut ‘Goodbye June’: “I Had to Be Really, Really Ready”

    At afternoon tea with Kate Winslet and Andrea Riseborough, it’s a case of waiting your turn.

    The beloved British actresses were in central London Tuesday for a screening and informal discussion about their upcoming Netflix film Goodbye June. Winslet’s directorial debut — anchored by a gut-wrenching script from her 21-year-old son, Joe Anders — is a Christmas film with just as much joy as it has heartache.

    Helen Mirren stars as the titular character who, upon receiving a terminal cancer diagnosis, has her swarm of four children (played by Winslet, Riseborough, Toni Collette and Johnny Flynn) and their families descend on her hospital room ahead of Christmas Day. Winslet’s Julia and Riseborough’s Molly are forced to confront their long-running feud while everyone tussles with their bubbling grief. Timothy Spall, Stephen Merchant and Fisayo Akinade also star in the movie, in theaters Dec. 12 and hitting Netflix Dec. 24.

    Winslet and Anders spoke in depth with The Hollywood Reporter this week about just how the Oscar-winning actress brought her son’s script to the screen.

    And over a cup of tea and a macaron at a Netflix-hosted event, the Titanic star further detailed bringing a brilliant batch of actors together. “They are great people. I had to cast people who not only were going to be the only people who could play those parts, but who were going to be lovely,” Winslet says. “I knew they all were — even if I didn’t know them personally, I knew their reputations, because word gets around if someone’s tricky.”

    The original plan had been to take the film out to financiers and get another director on board, but Winslet didn’t want to let Goodbye June go. The magic she and Anders were able to conjure on set was more than enough validation. “He really found it fascinating,” she says about Anders seeing his project come to life through his mother.

    “We shot it in 35 days, and I had Helen Mirren for 16 days,” she continues. “So I had to be really ready. All those adult actors, all those children, the whole group, loads of different locations, I had to be really, really ready. So for [Anders], there were moments when he turned to me and [would] go, ‘What’s happening? How have we done all this?’ I’m like, ‘I don’t know! Let’s keep going!’ We just had to hold hands and run at it.”

    Some stellar performances from the film’s child actors strengthen an already solid cast. “The trick with children is you just mother them,” Winslet explains about working with the kids. “I used all of my own experience as a mother in empowering children, showing them how to have fun by saying to them, ‘Don’t learn any lines and make lots of mistakes. OK?’”

    What you don’t want is a child memorizing an abstract bit of dialogue, Winslet says. “We didn’t want that, because children bring the joy. And when you’re in a situation where there’s tragedy happening … they just get on with what they’re doing with the coloring or playing or hiding in the bed.”

    “It was so funny,” she recalls, “because I would carry the little ones on to set. They always felt like, ‘Oh, where’s Kate taking us?’ I said to them: ‘Do you know, that in that bed, I’ve actually hidden something…’ So then they’re looking for the hidden thing under the sheets [with] no idea that we were filming an entire scene around them and quite complicated emotions.”

    Those in attendance at the Netflix event were desperate to get the chance to talk with a prolific actress who has masterfully executed her long-awaited turn in the director’s chair. But Winslet is also just a mother gushing with pride. “He has brilliant ideas. He’s very, very smart,” she says about Anders. “For as long as I can remember, he’s always written… He’s very humble and very shy.”

    “I just wanted him to learn,” she continues. “And I wanted him to be around all these incredible actors.”

    Goodbye June hits Netflix on Christmas Eve.

    Lily Ford

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  • ‘Coalition of the Willing’ Supports Trump’s Efforts to Put an End to Ukraine War

    LONDON (Reuters) -Leaders of Britain, France and Germany, following their Coalition of the Willing meeting on Tuesday, expressed support for U.S. President Donald Trump’s efforts to end the war in Ukraine, emphasising that any solution must fully involve Ukraine.

    French President Emmanuel Macron, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said they were “clear on the principle that borders must not be changed by force.”

    “This remains one of the fundamental principles for preserving stability and peace in Europe and beyond,” the leaders said in a joint statement.

    (Reporting by Catarina Demony; Editing by Leslie Adler)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Britain’s unpopular government prepares a high-stakes budget and hopes for growth

    LONDON (AP) — After being elected in a landslide last year, Britain’s Labour Party government delivered a budget it billed as a one-off dose of tax hikes to fix the public finances, get debt down, ease the cost of living and spur economic growth.

    A year on, inflation remains stubbornly high, government borrowing is up and the economy is turgid. The annual budget, due on Wednesday, is expected to bring more tax hikes in pursuit of the same elusive economic boom.

    Rain Newton-Smith, head of business group the Confederation of British Industry, said Monday that “it feels less like we’re on the move, and more like we’re stuck in ‘Groundhog Day.’”

    It’s not just businesses who are concerned. Alarmed by the government’s consistently dire poll ratings, some Labour lawmakers are mulling the once-unthinkable idea of ousting Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who led them to victory less than 18 months ago.

    Luke Tryl, director of pollster More in Common, said voters “don’t understand why there has not been positive change.

    “This could be a last-chance saloon moment for the government.”

    Not much room for maneuver

    The government says Treasury chief Rachel Reeves will make “tough but right decisions” in her budget to ease the cost of living, safeguard public services and keep debt under control.

    She has limited room for maneuver. Britain’s economy, the world’s sixth-largest, has underperformed its long-run average since the global financial crisis of 2008-2009, and the center-left Labour government elected in July 2024 has struggled to deliver promised economic growth.

    Like other Western economies, Britain’s public finances have been squeezed by the costs of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Russia-Ukraine war and U.S. President Donald Trump’s global tariffs. The U.K. bears the extra burden of Brexit, which has knocked billions off the economy since the country left the European Union in 2020.

    The government currently spends more than 100 billion pounds ($130 billion) a year servicing the U.K.’s debt, which stands at around 95% of annual national income.

    Adding to pressure is the fact that Labour governments historically have had to work harder than Conservative administrations to convince businesses and the financial markets that they are economically sound.

    Reeves is mindful of how financial markets can react when the government’s numbers don’t add up. The short-lived premiership of Liz Truss ended in October 2022 after her package of unfunded tax cuts roiled financial markets, drove down the value of the pound and sent borrowing costs soaring.

    Luke Hickmore, an investment director at Aberdeen Investments, said the bond market is the “ultimate reality check” for budget policy.

    “If investors lose faith, the cost of borrowing rises sharply, and political leaders have little choice but to change course,” he said.

    Mixed pre-budget signals

    The government has ruled out public spending cuts of the kind seen during 14 years of Conservative government, and its attempts to cut Britain’s huge welfare bill have been stymied by Labour lawmakers.

    That leaves tax increases as the government’s main revenue-raising option.

    “We’re very much not in the position that Rachel Reeves hoped to be in,” said Jill Rutter, a senior fellow at the Institute for Government think tank.

    Instead of an economy that has “sparked into life,” enabling higher spending and lower taxes, Rutter said Reeves must decide whether “to fill a big fiscal black hole with tax increases or spending cuts.”

    The budget comes after weeks of messy mixed messaging that saw Reeves signal she would raise income tax rates – breaking a key election promise – before hastily reversing course.

    In a Nov. 4 speech, Reeves laid the groundwork for income tax hikes by arguing that the economy is sicker and the global outlook worse than the government knew when it took office.

    After an outcry among Labour lawmakers, and a better-than-expected update on the public finances, the government signaled it preferred a smorgasbord of smaller revenue-raising measures such as a “mansion tax” on expensive homes and a pay-per-mile tax for electric vehicle drivers.

    The government will try to ease the sting with sweeteners including an above-inflation boost to pension payments for millions of retirees and a freeze on train fares.

    Critics say more taxes on employees and businesses, following tax hikes on businesses in last year’s budget, will push the economy further into a low-growth doom loop.

    Patrick Diamond, professor in public policy at Queen Mary University of London, said satisfying both markets and voters is difficult.

    “You can give markets confidence, but that probably means raising taxes, which is very unpopular with voters,” he said. “On the other hand, you can give voters confidence by trying to minimize the impact of tax rises, but that makes markets nervous because they feel that the government doesn’t have a clear fiscal plan.”

    High stakes for Reeves and Starmer

    The budget comes as Starmer is facing mounting concern from Labour lawmakers over his dire poll ratings. Opinion polls consistently put Labour well behind the hard-right Reform UK party led by Nigel Farage.

    The prime minister’s office sparked a flurry of speculation earlier this month by preemptively telling news outlets that Starmer would fight any challenge to his leadership. What looked like an attempt to strengthen Starmer’s authority backfired. The reports set off jitters verging on panic among Labour lawmakers, who fear the party is heading for a big defeat at the next election.

    That election does not have to be held until 2029, and the government continues to hope that its economic measures will spur higher growth and ease financial pressures.

    But analysts say a misfiring budget could be another nail in the coffin of Starmer’s government.

    “Both Starmer and Reeves are really unpopular,” Rutter said. “They may be hanging on for now, but I don’t think people will be giving you great odds that they’ll necessarily last the course of the Parliament,” which runs until the next election.

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  • Analysis-France and Germany Step up Pressure on Arms Firms to Resolve Fighter Impasse

    By Michel Rose, Sabine Siebold, John Irish and Tim Hepher

    PARIS/BERLIN (Reuters) -France and Germany are ratcheting up pressure on their industrial champions to rescue Europe’s next-generation fighter as the 100-billion-euro ($115 billion) project teeters on the brink of collapse, sources close to the matter said.

    The Future Combat Air System (FCAS), floated more than eight years ago, has been mired in disputes between France’s Dassault Aviation and Airbus over workshare and prized technology.

    Following talks last week between French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Berlin has drafted a “decision roadmap” as part of a mid-December deadline to strike a deal, sources told Reuters.

    “The objective is that the CEOs of the participating industrial partners find and sign a written agreement on the core principles of cooperation for the next programme phase by mid-December,” the document reads, according to excerpts provided to Reuters.

    A government source said the roadmap, which also tasks air force chiefs with a review of their respective requirements, was designed to reassert political control.

    Airbus and Dassault declined to comment.

    ‘DECISION ROADMAP’ AIMS TO END INDUSTRIAL IMPASSE

    At stake is the next phase of plans to deliver a fighter flanked by drones for France, Germany and Spain by 2040, mirroring a UK-Italian-Japanese initiative called GCAP.

    Talks have stalled amid mistrust between Rafale manufacturer Dassault and Airbus, which represents both Germany and Spain in the project, known in France as SCAF.

    Dassault insists on leading design and development of the core fighter, citing blurred lines of responsibility and its track record of building fighters from start to finish. It says Airbus is free to lead its own uncrewed areas of the project.

    Airbus says this goes against agreements that each nation has an equal say.

    The family-owned French fighter firm and partially state-owned jetliner giant have both sharpened their rhetoric, inviting the other to leave if they don’t like the agreed arrangements and pledging to go it alone if necessary.

    German sources say Dassault wants 80% control, a figure Dassault denies. They accuse Dassault of limiting access to high-value work.

    French sources want to retain parity with Airbus, which stood at 50% before Spain’s arrival. They suspect Berlin of wanting to blunt Dassault’s technological advantage.

    “What seems to have happened was that a very close and strong political relationship between Paris and Berlin has weakened somewhat and the industrialists were let off the leash and are really having a go at each other,” Douglas Barrie, IISS senior fellow for military airspace, said in a recent interview.

    Failure to break the deadlock risks exposing Europe’s inability to forge defence unity at a time when war has returned to the continent.

    After weeks of political turmoil in Paris, the capitals are deepening efforts to avoid a damaging blow to Franco-German co-operation.

    Still, doubts persist whether Macron, nearing the end of his term and weakened by political crises, can strong-arm Dassault into concessions. Cushioned by strong Rafale exports, Dassault is under less immediate pressure to act and may be playing for time before 2027 elections, some officials and executives said.

    Dassault declined to comment.

    As FCAS faces pivotal decisions over its future, options are being prepared for a repeat of the schism that saw France quit Eurofighter in 1985, leaving Dassault and Airbus to compete.

    Dassault has been a cornerstone of France’s defence since World War Two, building all generations of jets carrying its nuclear deterrent, and could most easily go alone.

    German industry has threatened to tap Berlin’s growing defence budget to bankroll a rival project.

    People familiar with the plans said these included a standalone stealth fighter. Other options included teaming with Sweden’s Saab, currently without a partner, or BAE Systems-led GCAP. Airbus has maintained regular CEO-level contacts on the issue with both camps, they said.

    A minimalist compromise increasingly touted would narrow FCAS to a “combat cloud” of secure connectivity while letting Airbus and Dassault develop separate jets – a partial divorce allowing Paris and Berlin to save face and avoid a public split.

    Each side continues to call the other’s bluff.

    French planners doubt Germany can easily build a competitive stealth fighter or engine alone, nor fit into the swiftly advancing GCAP project.

    Yet even though France has a track record of standalone developments, its budget crisis poses major funding hurdles.

    Before Berlin’s latest push, one German source put the chances of a joint fighter at “less than 50%”. Both capitals are now racing to salvage the project. “We can’t afford to let this project fail,” a French government source said.

    (Additional reporting by Florence Loeve and Giulia Segreti. Editing by Richard Lough and Mark Potter)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Trump’s Battle With the BBC Could Threaten Its Global Reach

    LONDON (Reuters) -When the BBC launched an expansion into the U.S. in June, its head of news promised “trust at a time of dramatic global uncertainty”.

    Five months on, President Donald Trump is threatening a $5 billion lawsuit, governments long hostile to independent news are vowing to make life difficult for the British broadcaster and its news chief Deborah Turness has gone.

    The crisis has been sparked by the admission that in a piece that aired before last year’s U.S. presidential election, the BBC’s flagship documentary programme “Panorama” spliced together parts of Trump’s speech on the day his supporters overran the Capitol in January 2021, making it look as though he had advocated violence.

    While it has apologised and Director General Tim Davie and Turness have quit, the failure hands ammunition to Trump and his supporters who accuse mainstream outlets like the BBC of bias, sucking it into a broader battle over journalistic standards and freedom to report.

    At risk is the credibility of an organisation that has long sought to be a standard-bearer for impartial journalism. The BBC broadcasts in 43 languages across 64 countries, reaching 418 million people every week, making it the biggest English-language digital news service in the world.

    The World Service has been relied on in times of conflict, broadcasting to Nazi-occupied parts of Europe during World War Two, behind the Iron Curtain in the Cold War. To this day it is viewed as a vital resource in places such as African countries where democracy and freedom of speech are under threat.

    CRITICS OF BBC VOW TO BECOME MORE AGGRESSIVE

    The organisation is facing a barrage of criticism.

    The White House has called the BBC “100% fake news” and a “propaganda machine”, terms that countries like Russia usually level at the 103-year-old broadcaster.

    In India, where the BBC has clashed with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government, an official told Reuters they would cite the Panorama edit the next time they had a problem.

    “If they say that ethics and morals guide them to report impartially, we would say that they first need to wash away this episode from their history books before brandishing their standards to us,” the official said, declining to be named.

    One diplomat from a G20 country that is normally hostile to the West told Reuters that it would now take a much tougher line with the BBC, saying that if an ally of Britain, like Trump, could sue, then so could they.

    Russia, which is ranked 171st out of 180 countries by Reporters Without Borders for press freedom, said the BBC was nothing but a propaganda and disinformation tool.

    Former BBC staff, media analysts and a historian of the corporation say the broadcaster can survive this crisis, but it cannot be seen to buckle in the face of pressure from Trump.

    “If you look at the difficulties the BBC faces, its correspondents in Moscow, in China; if the BBC is seen to give in, then other bullies will emulate Donald Trump,” Roger Bolton, a former BBC editor and presenter who now produces a podcast on it, told Reuters.

    BBC Chair Samir Shah has said it will fight any lawsuit, after U.S. peers ABC News and the parent company of CBS settled lawsuits with Trump by donating to his presidential library. Before settling, the networks called the accusations meritless.

    A BBC spokesperson said BBC World Service played “an active role in countering disinformation and serving those in extreme need with critical information through our lifeline services”.

    WIDELY RESPECTED BUT UNDER FINANCIAL AND POLITICAL PRESSURE

    Widely respected around the world, the BBC still tops polls in Britain as the most trusted news brand and according to pollster YouGov, it came second in a 2025 poll of the most trusted news brands in the U.S., behind the Weather Channel.

    But the corporation, which is largely funded by a licence fee paid by all television-watching households in Britain, comes under intense scrutiny from critics in the UK, who object to its funding model and perceived liberal stance. Current criticism has also alleged anti-Israel bias in its coverage of the war in Gaza.

    The BBC says its income is down by 1 billion pounds a year in real terms compared to 2010. Britain’s National Audit Office said this month that this had forced BBC World Service to cut staff, TV and radio stations, contributing to a 14% drop in audience numbers since 2022/23.

    In response the BBC has tried to expand commercially, including in the U.S., where it says nearly 60 million people use BBC.com and where it launched a paywall earlier this year.

    Emily Bell, previously at the Guardian and now at Columbia Journalism School in New York, said there was huge demand in the U.S. for impartial or non-aligned news.

    But she said the BBC could struggle if Trump pursues his case. His administration could apply pressure by limiting the BBC’s access to press briefings and subjecting it to closer regulatory scrutiny.

    “The bigger question will be, how much pressure does Donald Trump want to apply?” she said.

    OFFICIALS CAN APPLY PRESSURE IN DIFFERENT WAYS

    Last week the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) wrote to the BBC about its “deceptive conduct”, and to U.S. news outlets NPR and PBS to ask if they had aired the footage.

    In India, the BBC has faced tax searches and a fine for alleged foreign exchange violations after it broadcast a documentary in 2023 about Prime Minister Modi’s role during deadly 2002 Hindu-Muslim riots.

    Supporters say the government needs to defend the BBC, after Prime Minister Keir Starmer urged it to get its house in order. They cite surveys that show people overseas consuming BBC output feel more positively towards Britain.

    “One mistake is not what the whole of the BBC’s reputation is founded on,” said Mary Hockaday, a former controller of BBC World Service English and master of Trinity Hall, Cambridge.

    (Reporting by Kate HoltonAdditional reporting by Andrew MacAskill in London and Shivam Patel in New DelhiEditing by Frances Kerry)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • French President Macron Says Trump’s Ukraine Peace Plan Needs Improvement

    PARIS (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump’s peace plan goes in the right direction but there are aspects that need improvement to make it acceptable for Ukraine and Europe, French President Emmanuel Macron told RTL radio on Tuesday.

    “It’s an initiative that goes in the right direction: peace. However, there are aspects of that plan that deserve to be discussed, negotiated, improved,” Macron said. “We want peace, but we don’t want a peace that would be a capitulation.”

    He added that only the Ukrainians could decide what territorial concessions they are ready to make.

    “What was put on the table gives us an idea of what would be acceptable for the Russians. Does that mean that it is what must be accepted by the Ukrainians and the Europeans? The answer is no,” Macron added.

    Macron added Ukraine’s first line of defence in case of peace with Russia would be regenerating its own army, and there can be not limit on it. He also said frozen Russian assets are in Europe, and Europe alone can decide what to do with them.

    Asked if he was ready to go to Washington to help negotiate a better deal, Macron said he had no current plan to do so.

    (Reporting by Alessandro Parodi and Michel Rose;Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • BBC faces more headaches as its DC news editor exits due to ‘management style’ complaints

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    The BBC is facing more headaches — this time involving one of its top chiefs located across the pond.

    Deadline reported Monday that Adam Levy, a Washington DC-based executive producer and news editor, abruptly left the BBC after complaints were made about his “management style.”

    Sources told Deadline that a recent incident was the “final straw” for Levy, who reportedly spoke to a young producer in an “aggressive” manner following a mistake that was made.

    WHAT’S BEHIND TRUMP’S HEADED FEUD WITH THE BBC THAT RESULTED IN $5 BILLION LAWSUIT THREAT?

    A security guard walks outside the BBC headquarters in central London, Britain, March 11, 2023 (Reuters/Henry Nicholls)

    Levy joined the BBC in March 2023 following a 15-year stint at CNN.

    His former colleagues at CNN describe Levy as being a “good producer” and “harmless,” but that he was also “very by the book.” One ex-colleague told Fox News Digital that while it “wasn’t the most pleasant” to work with Levy, “It wasn’t anything that was awful,” either.

    A spokesperson for the BBC declined to comment on individual HR matters. Levy did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

    EX-BBC DIRECTOR GENERAL TELLS NETWORK THEY SHOULDN’T AGREE TO PAY TRUMP ANY MONEY

    The BBC also provided an update to its review of its Editorial Guidelines and Standards Committee (EGSC), which is responsible for “overseeing the corporation’s editorial standards and guidelines” and reports to the BBC board.

    A review of the EGSC began in June, before the broadcaster was under fire for a documentary that included a misleading edit of President Donald Trump‘s Jan. 6 comments.

    Graphic of President Donald Trump in front of the BBC headquarters building.

    President Trump has threatened a lawsuit against the BBC after the network apologized for altering footage of his January 6 speech in a documentary. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; Vuk Valcic/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

    In a press release Monday, the BBC said it will assess whether changes made to the EGSC have made a positive impact and make sure there is “appropriate action” when its coverage “falls short of our editorial standards.”

    The Guardian reported Friday that a member of the BBC’s board resigned after he was allegedly “cut out” of discussions that led to the abrupt resignations of BBC News CEO Deborah Turness and BBC Director-General Tim Davie.

    Trump said he plans to file a multibillion-dollar lawsuit against the BBC. The controversy began with a bombshell report from The Telegraph that featured excerpts from a whistleblower dossier compiled by Michael Prescott, a communications advisor hired by the BBC to review its editorial standards.

    The whistleblower alleged that a BBC “Panorama” documentary released last year included a misleading edit of comments Trump made during his Jan. 6, 2021, rally protesting the 2020 presidential election results.

    EX-BBC CEO DEBORAH TURNESS OVERSAW A STRING OF MEDIA CONTROVERSIES

    The documentary, “Trump: A Second Chance?,” omitted Trump urging his supporters to protest “peacefully” and instead spliced two separate comments made nearly an hour apart, creating the impression that he was calling for violence.

    “We’re gonna walk down to the Capitol. And I’ll be there with you. And we fight — we fight like hell,” the documentary showed Trump saying.

    In reality, Trump said, “We’re gonna walk down to the Capitol. And we’re gonna cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women, and we’re probably not going to be cheering so much for some of them because you’ll never take back our country with weakness. You have to show strength, and you have to be strong.” It wasn’t until 54 minutes later that Trump called on his supporters to “fight like hell” for election integrity.

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  • Jimmy Cliff, Reggae Giant and Star of Landmark Film ‘The Harder They Come,’ Dead at 81

    NEW YORK (AP) — Jimmy Cliff, the charismatic reggae pioneer and actor who preached joy, defiance and resilience in such classics as “Many Rivers to Cross,” “You Can Get it If You Really Want” and “Vietnam” and starred in the landmark movie “The Harder They Come,” has died at 81.

    His family posted a message Monday on his social media sites that he died from a “seizure followed by pneumonia.” Additional information was not immediately available.

    “”To all his fans around the world, please know that your support was his strength throughout his whole career,” the announcement reads in part. “He really appreciated each and every fan for their love.”

    Cliff was a native Jamaican with a spirited tenor and a gift for catchphrases and topical lyrics who joined Kingston’s emerging music scene in his teens and helped lead a movement in the 1960s that included such future stars as Bob Marley, Toots Hibbert and Peter Tosh. By the early 1970s, he had accepted director Perry Henzell’s offer to star in a film about an aspiring reggae musician, Ivanhoe “Ivan” Martin, who turns to crime when his career stalls. Henzell named the movie “The Harder They Come” after suggesting the title as a possible song for Cliff.

    “Ivanhoe was a real-life character for Jamaicans,” Cliff told Variety in 2022, upon the film’s 50th anniversary. “When I was a little boy, I used to hear about him as being a bad man. A real bad man. No one in Jamaica, at that time, had guns. But he had guns and shot a policeman, so he was someone to be feared. However, being a hero was the manner in which Perry wanted to make his name — an anti-hero in the way that Hollywood turns its bad guys into heroes.”

    “The Harder They Come,” delayed for some two years because of sporadic funding, was the first major commercial release to come out of Jamaica. It sold few tickets in its initial run, despite praise from Roger Ebert and other critics. But it now stands as a cultural touchstone, with a soundtrack widely cited as among the greatest ever and as a turning point in reggae’s worldwide rise.

    For a brief time, Cliff rivaled Marley as the genre’s most prominent artist. On an album that included Toots and the Maytals, the Slickers and Desmond Dekker, Cliff was the featured artist on four out of 11 songs, all well placed in the reggae canon.

    “Sitting in Limbo” was a moody, but hopeful take on a life in restless motion. “You Can Get it If You Really Want” and the title song were calls for action and vows of final payments: “The harder they come, the harder they fall, one and all.” Cliff otherwise lets out a weary cry on “Many Rivers to Cross,” a gospel-style testament that he wrote after confronting racism in England in the 1960s.

    “It was a very frustrating time. I came to England with very big hopes, and I saw my hopes fading,” he told Rolling Stone in 2012.

    Cliff’s career peaked with “The Harder They Come,” but, after a break in the late 1970s, he worked steadily for decades, whether session work with the Rolling Stones or collaborations with Wyclef Jean, Sting and Annie Lennox among others. Meanwhile, his early music lived on. The Sandinistas in Nicaragua used “You Can Get it If You Really Want” as a campaign theme and Bruce Springsteen helped expand Cliff’s U.S. audience with his live cover of the reggae star’s “Trapped,” featured on the million-selling charity album from 1985, “We Are the World.” Others performing his songs included John Lennon, Cher and UB40.

    Cliff was nominated for seven Grammys and won twice for best reggae album: in 1986 for “Cliff Hanger” and in 2012 for the well-named “Rebirth,” widely regarded as his best work in years. His other albums included the Grammy-nominated “The Power and the Glory,” “Humanitarian” and the 2022 release “Refugees.” He also performed on Steve Van Zandt’s protest anthem, “Sun City,” and acted in the Robin Williams comedy “Club Paradise,” for which he contributed a handful of songs to the soundtrack and sang with Elvis Costello on the rocker “Seven Day Weekend.”

    In 2010, Cliff was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

    He was born James Chambers in suburban Saint James and, like Ivan Martin in “The Harder They Come,” moved to Kingston in his youth to become a musician. In the early 1960s, Jamaica was gaining its independence from Britain and the early sounds of reggae — first called ska and rocksteady — were catching on. Calling himself Jimmy Cliff, he had a handful of local hits, including “King of Kings” and “Miss Jamaica,” and, after overcoming the kinds of barriers that upended Martin, was called on to help represent his country at the 1964 World’s Fair in New York City.

    “(Reggae) is a pure music. It was born of the poorer class of people,” he told Spin in 2022. “It came from the need for recognition, identity and respect.”

    His popularity grew over the second half of the 1960s, and he signed with Island Records, the world’s leading reggae label. Island founder Chris Blackwell tried in vain to market him to rock audiences, but Cliff still managed to reach new listeners. He had a hit with a cover of Cat Stevens’ “Wild World,” and reached the top 10 in the UK with the uplifting “Wonderful World, Beautiful People.” Cliff’s widely heard protest chant, “Vietnam,” was inspired in part by a friend who had served in the war and returned damaged beyond recognition.

    His success as a recording artist and concert performer led Henzell to seek a meeting with him and flatter him into accepting the part: “You know, I think you’re a better actor than singer,” Cliff remembered him saying. Aware that “The Harder They Come” could be a breakthrough for Jamaican cinema, he openly wished for stardom, although Cliff remained surprised by how well known he became.

    “Back in those days there were few of us African descendants who came through the cracks to get any kind of recognition,′ he told The Guardian in 2021. “It was easier in music than movies. But when you start to see your face and name on the side of the buses in London that was like: ‘Wow, what’s going on?’”

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  • United EU Position Is Key to ‘Good Outcome’ From Ukraine Peace Moves, EU’s Costa Says

    BRUSSELS (Reuters) -A united and coordinated European Union position is key to ensuring a “good outcome” from talks on ending the war in Ukraine, European Council President Antonio Costa said on Monday after speaking to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

    “Spoke with Zelenskiy ahead of this morning’s informal EU leaders’ meeting on Ukraine peace efforts, to get his assessment of the situation. A united and coordinated EU position is key in ensuring a good outcome of peace negotiations – for Ukraine and for Europe,” Costa wrote on X.

    (Reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta, Editing by Timothy Heritage)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • China’s Premier Pitches to German Chancellor Closer Collaboration in Strategic Industries

    BEIJING (Reuters) -China’s Premier Li Qiang pitched closer collaboration to German Chancellor Friedrich Merz in new energy, smart manufacturing, biomedicine and intelligent driving during a meeting on Sunday on the sidelines of the G20 summit, Xinhua reported.

    Relations between the world’s second- and third-largest economies have improved significantly over the past month, after Chinese export curbs on chips and rare earths caused major disruptions for German firms and German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul to cancel a visit to Beijing last month due to China rejecting all but one of his meetings.

    German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil made the first official visit of Merz’s premiership last week, stabilising ties by meeting China’s top economic official Vice Premier He Lifeng, as U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs weigh on the two major exporters.

    Merz is also expected to visit China soon.

    Li said he “hoped Germany would maintain a rational and pragmatic policy toward China, eliminate interference and pressure, focus on shared interests, and consolidate the foundation for cooperation,” a state media readout released late on Sunday quoted China’s second-ranking official as saying.

    For all the friction over Beijing’s support for Russia and its actions in the Indo-Pacific, and Berlin’s vocal criticism of China’s human rights record and state-subsidised industrial policy, the two countries remain bound by a vast and mutually advantageous commercial relationship.

    “China is willing to work with Germany to seize future development opportunities … in emerging fields such as new energy, smart manufacturing, biomedicine, hydrogen energy technology, and intelligent driving, Li said in Johannesburg, South Africa, which is hosting the first G20 summit on the continent.

    China bought $95 billion worth of German goods last year, around 12% of which were cars, Chinese data shows, putting it among the $19 trillion economy’s top 10 trading partners. Germany purchased $107 billion of Chinese goods, mostly chips and other electronic components.

    But Berlin stands out for China as an investment partner, having injected $6.6 billion in fresh capital in 2024, according to data from the Mercator Institute for China Studies, accounting for 45% of all foreign direct investment into China from the European Union and the United Kingdom.

    For Germany, China represents a practically irreplaceable auto market, and is responsible for almost a third of German automakers’ sales. German chemicals and pharmaceuticals firms also have a large presence in the country, although they are facing increasing pressure from domestic competitors.

    (Reporting by Joe Cash; Editing by Richard Chang)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Ukraine and Western allies meet in Geneva to discuss US peace plan

    Talks between Ukraine and its Western allies on a U.S.-proposed peace plan to end Russia’s invasion got underway in Geneva on Sunday, Ukrainian officials said on Sunday.The head of the Ukrainian delegation, presidential chief of staff Andrii Yermak, wrote on social media that they held their first meeting with the national security advisers from the U.K., France, and Germany. The allies have rallied around Kyiv in a push to revise the plan, which is seen as favoring Moscow.U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio was expected to join the talks together with Army Secretary Dan Driscoll and President Donald Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff.”The next meeting is with the U.S. delegation. We are in a very constructive mood,” Yermak said. “We continue working together to achieve a lasting and just peace for Ukraine.”Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he was waiting for the outcome of the talks. “A positive result is needed for all of us,” he said.”Ukrainian and American teams, teams of our European partners, are in close contact, and I very much hope there will be a result. Bloodshed must be stopped, and it must be guaranteed that the war will not be reignited,” he wrote in a post on Telegram on Sunday.Ukraine and allies have ruled out territorial concessionsThe 28-point blueprint drawn up by the U.S. to end the nearly four-year war has sparked alarm in Kyiv and European capitals. Zelenskyy has said his country could face a stark choice between standing up for its sovereign rights and preserving the American support it needs.The plan acquiesces to many Russian demands that Zelenskyy has categorically rejected on dozens of occasions, including giving up large pieces of territory. The Ukrainian leader has vowed that his people”will always defend” their home.Speaking before Sunday’s talks, Alice Rufo, France’s minister delegate at the Defense Ministry, told broadcaster France Info that key points of discussion would include the plan’s restrictions on the Ukrainian army, which she described as “a limitation on its sovereignty.””Ukraine must be able to defend itself,” she said. “Russia wants war and waged war many times in fact over the past years.”Speaking to reporters outside the White House on Saturday, Trump said the U.S. proposal was not his “final offer.””I would like to get to peace. It should have happened a long time ago. The Ukraine war with Russia should have never happened,” Trump said. “One way or the other, we have to get it ended.”Trump didn’t explain what he meant by the plan not being his final offer, and the White House didn’t respond to a request for clarification.Rubio’s reported comments cause confusionPolish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said Sunday that Warsaw was ready to work on the plan with the leaders of Europe, Canada and Japan, but also said that it “would be good to know for sure who is the author of the plan and where was it created.”Some U.S. lawmakers said Saturday that Rubio had described the plan as a Russian “wish list” rather than a Washington-led proposal.The bipartisan group of senators told a news conference that they had spoken to Rubio about the peace plan after he reached out to some of them while on his way to Geneva. Independent Maine Sen. Angus King said Rubio told them the plan “was not the administration’s plan” but a “wish list of the Russians.”A State Department spokesperson denied their account, calling it “blatantly false.”Rubio himself then took the extraordinary step of suggesting online that the senators were mistaken, even though they said he was their source for the information. The Secretary of State doubled down on the assertion that Washington was responsible for a proposal that had surprised many from the beginning for being so favorable to Moscow.___Associated Press writers Claudia Ciobanu in Warsaw, Poland and Sylvie Corbet in Paris contributed to this report.

    Talks between Ukraine and its Western allies on a U.S.-proposed peace plan to end Russia’s invasion got underway in Geneva on Sunday, Ukrainian officials said on Sunday.

    The head of the Ukrainian delegation, presidential chief of staff Andrii Yermak, wrote on social media that they held their first meeting with the national security advisers from the U.K., France, and Germany. The allies have rallied around Kyiv in a push to revise the plan, which is seen as favoring Moscow.

    U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio was expected to join the talks together with Army Secretary Dan Driscoll and President Donald Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff.

    Win McNamee/Getty Images

    U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio

    “The next meeting is with the U.S. delegation. We are in a very constructive mood,” Yermak said. “We continue working together to achieve a lasting and just peace for Ukraine.”

    Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he was waiting for the outcome of the talks. “A positive result is needed for all of us,” he said.

    “Ukrainian and American teams, teams of our European partners, are in close contact, and I very much hope there will be a result. Bloodshed must be stopped, and it must be guaranteed that the war will not be reignited,” he wrote in a post on Telegram on Sunday.

    Ukraine and allies have ruled out territorial concessions

    The 28-point blueprint drawn up by the U.S. to end the nearly four-year war has sparked alarm in Kyiv and European capitals. Zelenskyy has said his country could face a stark choice between standing up for its sovereign rights and preserving the American support it needs.

    The plan acquiesces to many Russian demands that Zelenskyy has categorically rejected on dozens of occasions, including giving up large pieces of territory. The Ukrainian leader has vowed that his people”will always defend” their home.

    Speaking before Sunday’s talks, Alice Rufo, France’s minister delegate at the Defense Ministry, told broadcaster France Info that key points of discussion would include the plan’s restrictions on the Ukrainian army, which she described as “a limitation on its sovereignty.”

    “Ukraine must be able to defend itself,” she said. “Russia wants war and waged war many times in fact over the past years.”

    Speaking to reporters outside the White House on Saturday, Trump said the U.S. proposal was not his “final offer.”

    “I would like to get to peace. It should have happened a long time ago. The Ukraine war with Russia should have never happened,” Trump said. “One way or the other, we have to get it ended.”

    Trump didn’t explain what he meant by the plan not being his final offer, and the White House didn’t respond to a request for clarification.

    Rubio’s reported comments cause confusion

    Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said Sunday that Warsaw was ready to work on the plan with the leaders of Europe, Canada and Japan, but also said that it “would be good to know for sure who is the author of the plan and where was it created.”

    Some U.S. lawmakers said Saturday that Rubio had described the plan as a Russian “wish list” rather than a Washington-led proposal.

    The bipartisan group of senators told a news conference that they had spoken to Rubio about the peace plan after he reached out to some of them while on his way to Geneva. Independent Maine Sen. Angus King said Rubio told them the plan “was not the administration’s plan” but a “wish list of the Russians.”

    A State Department spokesperson denied their account, calling it “blatantly false.”

    Rubio himself then took the extraordinary step of suggesting online that the senators were mistaken, even though they said he was their source for the information. The Secretary of State doubled down on the assertion that Washington was responsible for a proposal that had surprised many from the beginning for being so favorable to Moscow.

    ___

    Associated Press writers Claudia Ciobanu in Warsaw, Poland and Sylvie Corbet in Paris contributed to this report.

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  • Western Leaders Race to Agree Response to US Peace Plan for Ukraine

    By Julia Payne and Anastasiia Malenko

    JOHANNESBURG/KYIV (Reuters) -European and other Western leaders meeting on the sidelines of a G20 summit scrambled on Saturday to come up with a coordinated response to U.S. President Donald Trump’s demand for Ukraine to accept his peace plan with Russia by Thursday.

    The U.S. plan, which endorses key Russian demands, was met with measured criticism in many European capitals, with leaders trying to balance praise for Trump for trying to end the fighting, but also recognising that for Kyiv, some of the terms in his proposal are unpalatable.

    On Friday, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Ukraine faced a choice of either losing its dignity and freedom or Washington’s backing over the peace plan. He appealed to Ukrainians for unity and said he would never betray Ukraine.

    EUROPEAN, WESTERN LEADERS MEET TO AGREE RESPONSE

    That signal prompted European leaders to rally. At the meeting of the Group of 20 major economies in South Africa, leaders from Britain, France, Germany, Japan, Canada, Italy, Spain, Norway, the Netherlands, Finland, Ireland, the EU Commission and EU Council met to discuss tactics, sources said.

    While the leaders discussed next steps, Ukraine said it would hold talks with high-ranking U.S. officials in Switzerland on ending Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which is now in its fourth year.

    “Ukraine will never be an obstacle to peace, and representatives of the Ukrainian state will defend the legitimate interests of the Ukrainian people and the foundations of European security,” a statement from the Ukrainian presidency said.

    On Friday, Trump threw down the gauntlet to Ukraine, saying Zelenskiy had until Thursday to approve his 28-point plan, which calls on Ukraine to cede territory, accept limits on its military and renounce ambitions to join NATO.

    “He’ll have to like it, and if he doesn’t like it, then you know, they should just keep fighting, I guess,” he said. “At some point he’s going to have to accept something he hasn’t accepted.”

    Recalling their fractious February meeting with Zelenskiy, Trump added: “You remember right in the Oval Office, not so long ago, I said, ‘You don’t have the cards.’”

    U.S. Vice President JD Vance said late on Friday that any plan to end Russia’s war in Ukraine should preserve Ukrainian sovereignty and be acceptable to both countries but that it was a “fantasy” to think Ukraine could win if the U.S. were to give Kyiv more money or weapons or impose more sanctions on Moscow.

    “There is a fantasy that if we just give more money, more weapons, or more sanctions, victory is at hand,” Vance wrote on X.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin described the plan as being the basis of a resolution to the conflict, but Moscow may object to some proposals in the plan, which requires its forces to pull back from some areas they have captured.

    The peril for Zelenskiy was writ large when the Ukrainian president turned to a national address to prepare the population for a tough few days.

    “Now, Ukraine can face a very difficult choice — either losing dignity or risk losing a major partner,” he said in a speech to the nation. “I will fight 24/7 to ensure that at least two points in the plan are not overlooked – the dignity and freedom of Ukrainians.”

    (Writing by Elizabeth Piper, Editing by William Maclean)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • U.K. Government Borrowing Runs Ahead of Plan as Budget Looms

    The U.K. government’s borrowing continued to run ahead of projections in October, a deterioration in its finances that it will aim to correct with tax rises and some spending cuts in its annual budget statement next week.

    The Office for National Statistics on Friday said the government borrowed 17.4 billion pounds ($22.75 billion) in October, bringing the total for the first seven months of the fiscal year to 116.8 billion pounds, 9.9 billion pounds above the amount projected by the Office for Budget Responsibility in its March forecasts.

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  • Leonardo DiCaprio, Paul Thomas Anderson Explain Why They Had to Pause Production on ‘One Battle After Another’

    The One Battle After Another boys thrilled London fans Wednesday night at an exclusive in-conversation event at BFI Southbank.

    Paul Thomas Anderson and his star, Leonardo DiCaprio (aka Bob Ferguson), were hosted by Scottish presenter Edith Bowman to talk about the wild reaction to their action thriller — the Warner Bros. feature has so far grossed over $200 million — and dive into how it was made. Among other topics, Anderson touched on how important it was finding Chase Infiniti in the search for Willa, and gushed about DiCaprio’s acting choices.

    “The reaction has been incredible from people,” began the Titanic and Wolf of Wall Street star. “Not just from my friends and family, but people coming up to me and interacting with me about what the film meant to them. I don’t know. It’s been a really special moment making this film and seeing people’s feelings about what it meant to them.”

    One moment in particular that had the audience chuckling was when Anderson revealed that production was paused to wait for their sensei, Benicio del Toro. “We had to call a time-out because Benicio had to go off and do Wes Anderson’s [The Phoenician Scheme],” said the Boogie Nights and Phantom Thread director. “So we really had a decision to make there. Normally, in normal situations, you go, ‘Oh, shit, we lost Benicio.’ But we really said there’s no possible way we can do this without him. We’ll do something that we’re going to have to figure out how to do financially and creatively.”

    “We took a break shooting for two-and-a-half months, and picked back up again. And luckily, we were able to make that work, because everybody on the crew said, ‘Oh yeah, let’s wait for Benicio,” said Anderson. “I can’t imagine not waiting for Benicio.”

    The anecdote came up when the filmmaker was asked what had changed that meant he finally felt it was the right time to make this movie. “Chase, first of all,” he also said. “Leo aging into the part, honestly. Me aging into being able to tell the story properly, being a father and having children…. [And] just confidence to tell the story.”

    The men took turns gushing about the film’s female leads, including Teyana Taylor, whom Anderson described as “a stick of dynamite” but also “a real softy.” When they got onto antagonist Lockjaw, portrayed by Sean Penn, DiCaprio chimed in: “He really brought elements to it that a lot of other actors…wouldn’t have made that choice.”

    “We talked a lot about who Lockjaw was going to be,” said DiCaprio. “And then when Paul decided on Sean, what was so amazing to see it up on film — because I hadn’t seen a lot of it, I was off doing my own stuff — was the fragility that he brought to what would otherwise be an obvious choice [from] maybe some other actors to make him purely menacing.”

    DiCaprio continued about Penn’s interpretation of Lockjaw: “I just thought he was so incredibly pathetic and almost sympathetic at times. Sitting there, looking at his desk [and he’s] gone on this whole journey, and you have this generic IKEA desk, this window view of— is it Dallas? I don’t know. Sitting there and looking in that moment going, ‘I’ve arrived,’ as if he’s in the Shangri-La…. How pathetic he was.”

    Anderson concurred: “It’s a testament to Sean that from time to time, there would be weird subsets of the crew that would say: ‘I hate to admit this, but I’m Team Lockjaw!’”

    After discussing the brilliance of Jonny Greenwood’s score, Anderson and DiCaprio were also asked by Bowman about the film’s thrilling car chase on the iconic, hilly stretch of desert road. “I remember seeing those roads, and I was awestruck,” said DiCaprio. “They made it feels like you’re on a roller coaster ride. I think Regina [King] put it best, she said, ‘I’ve never been more tense in a car chase scene with three cars chasing each other down a straight road,’” he laughed. “It was money.”

    Anderson said, while a nightmare to film on, the road itself is a testament to “getting in the car and driving around looking for locations, rather than just looking at a book.” He added: “That stuff’s usually been shot before, and what you’re crossing your fingers’s will happen is something like coming across that river of hills. My imagination isn’t good enough to come up with something like that,” he said. “I would [have] just put everybody on flat roads and think, ‘Well, we’re gonna have to have a car chase.’ But you kind of hit the ceiling and it requires getting out into the world.”

    One Battle After Another is already generating intense awards buzz, with Anderson and DiCaprio among the frontrunners on The Hollywood Reporter‘s Oscars predictions via the Feinberg Forecast here.

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  • US, UK, Australia Announce Sanctions Against Russia-Based Media Land Over Ransomware Operations

    (Reuters) -The United States, Australia and the United Kingdom announced coordinated sanctions on Wednesday against Russia-based bulletproof hosting service provider Media Land for its role in supporting ransomware operations.

    U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) also designated three members of the Russian company’s leadership team and three of its sister companies, the Department of Treasury said in a statement.

    “These so-called bulletproof hosting service providers like Media Land provide cybercriminals essential services to aid them in attacking businesses in the United States and in allied countries,” said John Hurley, Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence.

    (Reporting by Bhargav Acharya in Toronto;)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Russia Says Ukraine Fired U.S.-Made ATACMS Missiles at Voronezh

    MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russia’s defence ministry said on Wednesday that Ukrainian forces had fired four U.S.-made ATACMS missiles at the southern Russian city of Voronezh in an attempted strike on civilian targets.

    Ukraine’s military said on Tuesday it had attacked military targets in Russia with U.S.-supplied ATACMS missiles, calling it a “significant development.”

    Kyiv received the systems in 2023 but was initially restricted to using them only on its own territories, nearly a fifth of which are controlled by Russia.

    “Russian S-400 air defence crews and Pantsir missile and gun systems shot down all ATACMS missiles,” Russia’s defence ministry said on Telegram.

    Falling debris from the destroyed missiles damaged the roofs of a Voronezh retirement home and an orphanage, as well as one house, the ministry said adding that there were no casualties or injured among civilians.

    The ministry published pictures of pieces of the missiles and said that air reconnaissance forces identified the Kharkiv region as the location of the ATACMS launch.

    Russia said it had fired Iskander-M missiles to destroy two Ukrainian multiple rocket launchers.

    Ukraine previously attacked Russian territories with U.S.-made ATACMS missiles on January, firing six missiles on Russia’s Belgorod region.

    After Ukraine fired U.S. ATACMS and British Storm Shadow missiles into Russia last year, Putin ordered a hypersonic missile be fired at Ukraine.

    (Reporting by Reuters in Moscow and Lidia Kelly in Melbourne; Editing by Tom Hogue)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • New coin honors Freddie Mercury and his 4-octave range

    LONDON (AP) — Britain’s Royal Mint is celebrating Freddie Mercury with a new coin design that marks 40 years since his iconic Live Aid concert performance.

    The coin features an image of the Queen front man, head thrown back and holding the microphone stand midperformance. A musical stave that runs around the edge of the coin represents his four-octave vocal range.

    The first coin was struck by Mercury’s sister Kashmira Bulsara at the Royal Mint in Wales last week.

    “As Freddie died young, he didn’t get the chance of being awarded a royal medal for his talents in the music world. So to have a royal coin this way is wonderful and very fitting,” she said.

    “The coin perfectly captures his passion and the joy he brought to millions through his music,” she added. “I think the design is very impressive and they managed to catch the most iconic pose of Freddie, which is so recognizable worldwide.”

    The Royal Mint’s director of commemorative coin, Rebecca Morgan, said the timing was perfect for Mercury to be celebrated with his own coin. She said fans had been “calling out” for it and “this felt like the year to do it,” because it’s 40 years since he captivated audiences at the 1985 Live Aid concert, hailed by many as the greatest live gig of all time.

    This year also marks the 40th anniversary of Mercury’s solo studio album, “Mr Bad Guy.”

    Mercury died at age 45 in 1991, just one day after he publicly announced he was HIV positive.

    The Royal Mint has issued special coins to celebrate other music legends including David Bowie, George Michael, Shirley Bassey and Paul McCartney.

    The coins go on sale on the Royal Mint website on Tuesday. Prices start at 18.50 pounds ($24.4) for an uncirculated 5-pound denomination version. A 2 oz. gold proof coin costs 9,350 pounds ($12,315.)

    The Royal Mint said it will donate a special gold edition of the coin to the Mercury Phoenix Trust, a charity that was started in the singer’s memory and donates funds to those living with AIDS and HIV.

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  • U.K. Follows Europe and U.S. in Crackdown on Asylum Seekers

    LONDON—The U.K. government on Monday announced an overhaul of its immigration policy to deter asylum seekers from arriving on British shores, the latest European nation to tighten rules in response to growing dissatisfaction from voters at levels of illegal immigration.

    The Labour government of Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced a suite of policies including changing laws to make it easier to expel migrants, quadrupling the length of time they have to wait to become permanent residents to 20 years and regularly reviewing whether their home countries have become safer and can take them back.

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  • Bridget Jones Statue Unveiling Sees Renée Zellweger and ‘Mad About the Boy’ Cast Reunite

    Renée Zellweger is now a permanent fixture in London’s Leicester Square as a statue of her beloved character, Bridget Jones, was unveiled Monday.

    Zellweger, who first played the unlucky-in-love Londoner in Bridget Jones’s Diary in 2001, was in attendance at the unveiling. Stars of the latest instalment, Mad About the Boy, also joined her: Leo Woodall, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Sally Phillips stood with Zellweger in front of the statue and posed for photos. “I think she’s much cuter than me,” Zellweger told BBC News about the sculpture, which can be seen clutching the character’s iconic diary and holding a pen.

    Mad About the Boy, released on Peacock in February this year, is the fourth of the Bridget Jones series. In the U.K. and Ireland, the movie earned the best box office opening ever for a rom-com, per Universal data.

    Based on the books by Helen Fielding — also photographed with Zellweger at Monday’s ceremony — the films follow chain-smoking, wine-loving Bridget Jones as she navigates personal and professional hurdles through her 30s, 40s and 50s. Colin Firth and Hugh Grant starred as her main love interests as Mark Darcy and Daniel Cleaver, respectively, with Woodall and Ejiofor entering the fray as romantic newcomers in Mad About the Boy.

    Bridget Jones has become something of a national treasure in Fielding’s native Britain; not dissimilar to Harry Potter or the James Bond franchise, as the character was overdue representation for thousands of women muddling through life.

    When Texan Oscar winner Zellweger took on the role, she wowed fans and critics alike with an impeccable British accent and classic Bridget charm. “I don’t think I’ll ever let go of Bridget,” Zellweger told The Hollywood Reporter when Mad About the Boy released. “I have conversations about Bridget Jones pretty much every day. I meet people on the sidewalk and they want to share about their own Bridget Jones experiences. All my friends call me Bridget!”

    “I’m not alone in feeling like I relate to Bridget Jones in more ways than I’d like to admit,” she continued. “She feels very familiar to me.”

    The statue is one of Leicester Square’s Scenes in the Square trail — and the first of the bunch to honor a romantic comedy. Others that feature include Paddington Bear, Mr. Bean, Harry Potter as well as the Iron Throne from Game of Thrones.

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