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‘Historic breakthrough’: Colombia climate talks end with hopes raised for fossil fuel phaseout | Climate crisis

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Governments have been asked to develop national “roadmaps” setting out how they will end the production and use of fossil fuels, after a landmark climate meeting involving nearly 60 countries.

The voluntary plans will form the bedrock of a new initiative to wean the world off coal, oil and gas, the focus of two days of intensive talks in Colombia this week.

The approach marks a departure from the annual UN climate negotiations, which have run for more than three decades even as greenhouse gas emissions have continued to rise. Most of the world’s biggest emitters are absent from the group of 59 signatories, though other countries are being invited to join.

Irene Vélez Torres, Colombia’s environment minister and chair of the talks, said: “We decided not to resign ourselves to an economy built on the destruction of life. We decided that the transition away from fossil fuels could no longer remain a slogan but must become a concrete, political and collective endeavour.

Joseph Sikulu, an activist from Tuvalu, talks to reporters. A second conference will take place early next year on the Pacific island. Photograph: Iván Valencia/AP

“When people look back on us from the future, they will not remember only this conference. They will remember whether or not we rose to the challenge of our time.”

Colombia and the Netherlands, co-hosts of the inaugural conference on transitioning away from fossil fuels, convened discussions on trade, debt, producer countries’ dependence on fossil fuel exports and ways to reduce demand. In the preceding days, activists, Indigenous leaders, scientists and other experts gathered in Santa Marta to discuss the social and economic impacts of fossil fuels and ways to curb demand.

With the US, China, India, Russia and petrostates such as Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates absent, attendance was limited to countries willing to commit to a phaseout. This “coalition of the willing” represents more than half of global GDP, nearly a third of energy demand and a fifth of fossil fuel supply.

An oil pump works at sunset in Sakhir, Bahrain. Several petrostates were absent from the conference. Photograph: Hasan Jamali/AP

Almost half of the countries are fossil fuel producers, and will be expected to set out how they intend to wind down output. However, there are no stipulations on how the plans should be structured, nor deadlines for completing the transition.

Colombia published a draft roadmap during the conference and set up a scientific panel to advise countries. On Tuesday, France became the first developed country to release a national roadmap to phase out fossil fuels.

Stientje van Veldhoven, the Netherlands’ minister for climate and green growth, told the Guardian: “We see the roadmaps as the tool for the ambition with which they came here [to transition away from fossil fuels]. There will be different speeds between countries – we should allow for this and acknowledge that countries start from a different position, have different challenges, so that it cannot be one size fits all.”

While countries already publish climate plans under the Paris agreement, known as nationally determined contributions (NDCs), Vélez said these were not sufficient to serve as roadmaps because they addressed only countries’ domestic greenhouse gas emissions, allowing fossil fuel producers to sidestep the climate impact of their exports.

Hurricane devastation in Roseau, Dominica. Many small island states are on the frontline of the climate crisis despite despite contributing negligible amounts of greenhouse gases. Photograph: Cedrick Isham Calvados/AFP/Getty Images

Participants also agreed to support poorer countries with the expertise needed to develop roadmaps, to scrutinise fossil fuel subsidies, and to collaborate on trade policy and financial reform – including helping poor and vulnerable countries tackle debt and raising the finance needed to make the transition.

A second conference will take place early next year on the Pacific island of Tuvalu, co-hosted by Ireland. Tuvalu’s minister for home affairs, climate and environment, Maina Talia, said: “We are encouraging governments and states [to draft roadmaps before the next conference], because if they come without concrete roadmaps, we are losing an opportunity. But, at the end of the day, they are voluntary.”

The Santa Marta conference was prompted by frustration with the UN climate summits, where consensus rules have often allowed fossil fuel interests to block direct discussion of the need to phase out coal, oil and gas. However, participating governments have said they will work closely within the UN system to help bring about global progress on the climate at the Cop31 UN climate conference in November.

Tzeporah Berman, a Canadian environmental activist, says: ‘Santa Marta represents a historic breakthrough.’ Photograph: Igor Kovalenko/EPA

Tzeporah Berman, the founder and chair of the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty Initiative, said: “Santa Marta represents a historic breakthrough – the first time we bring together a group of nations willing to act. We are building a coalition of ambitious countries willing to lead and break the consensus deadlock that has paralysed concrete action on fossil fuels in the UN negotiations.”

Participants praised the constructive nature of the Santa Marta talks. Fatima Eisam-Eldeen, of the Leave It in the Ground Initiative, said: “For too long, multilateral climate forums have felt like rooms where everyone speaks, but no one understands. Santa Marta broke that pattern. It spoke the language of hope.”

Kirtana Chandrasekaran, a climate justice and energy programme co-coordinator at Friends of the Earth International, called for governments to replace fossil fuels with renewable energy, given added impetus by the current oil crisis.

“[Avoiding climate breakdown] requires systemic change to the current energy model – away from fossil fuelled corporate dominance and towards bottom-up, decentralised renewables that ensure energy sovereignty for all,” she said.



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Rep. Crockett endorses Colin Allred in Texas Democratic primary runoff

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Democratic Rep. Jasmine Crockett of Texas has endorsed former Rep. Colin Allred ahead of the candidate’s May Democratic primary runoff against Democratic U.S. Rep. Julie Johnson in the Lone Star State’s 33rd Congressional District.

“Colin has the record, the grit, and the heart to stand up for working families and communities under attack by this administration. He will fight to abolish ICE and go toe to toe with Donald Trump to stop his extreme agenda,” Crockett declared in a statement.

“I’ve seen Colin’s fight firsthand. We worked together to bring hundreds of millions in federal investments to North Texas for affordable housing, health care, and transportation. Colin doesn’t just talk about fighting for the community that raised him. He wins. That’s why I’m proud to stand with him,” Crockett noted.

JASMINE CROCKETT’S SOCIAL MEDIA POSTS ABOUT WHCD SHOOTING SHOW DIFFERENT TONES

Rep. Jasmine Crockett

Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, a U.S. Senate candidate, speaks during a campaign event at New Faith Church in Houston, Texas, on Monday, March 2, 2026. (Mark Felix/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Sharing Crockett’s statement of support in a post on X, Allred wrote, “Proud to receive the endorsement of my friend @JasmineForUS. Jasmine has never been afraid to speak truth to power, fight for our communities, and stand up for Texans who deserve better. I’m grateful to have her support in this fight to lower costs, protect our rights, and deliver real leadership for Texas.”

Crockett has served in the U.S. House of Representatives since early 2023.

‘STRAIGHT OUTTA CONGRESS’: TOP PROGRESSIVE CONCEDES RACE AFTER VIRAL MOCKERY FOR ‘EMBARRASSING’ DEFEAT

Colin Allred

Democratic U.S. Senate candidate, U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, D-Texas, speaks at a campaign rally for Democratic presidential nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, on Oct. 25, 2024 in Houston, Texas (Jordan Vonderhaar/Getty Images)

Last month she lost a Democratic Texas U.S. Senate primary to state Rep. James Talarico.

Allred, who had been running in the Texas Democratic U.S. Senate primary, dropped out of the contest the same day in December that Crockett jumped in.

Allred had endorsed Crockett before she lost that primary race.

DEMOCRAT ADMITS ‘OF COURSE’ JASMINE CROCKETT IS A FACTOR IN HIM DROPPING OUT OF TEXAS SENATE RACE

Rep. Julie Johnson

Rep. Julie Johnson, D-Texas, speaks during a news conference with freshmen women during the House Democrats 2025 Issues Conference at the Lansdowne Resort in Leesburg, Va., on Thursday, March 13, 2025. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

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“She’s tough. She speaks truth to power. She’s fearless in the face of vitriolic attacks from Donald Trump and the far right. She works day in and day out to protect our fundamental rights and strengthen our democracy. She’s a colleague, and she’s a friend. Her name is Jasmine Crockett. And I’m incredibly proud to be endorsing her in Texas’ U.S. Senate race,” he noted on Substack.



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Rise in caesarean section births in Gaza brings danger and infection risks | Gaza News

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Gaza City, Gaza Strip – On a mattress placed on the floor of a half-destroyed apartment, Duha Abu Yousef sits holding her newborn baby with great difficulty after an emergency caesarean section was performed following her arrival at a hospital the night before.

Abu Yousef, 24, who had entered her ninth month of pregnancy just a few days earlier, had hoped for a natural birth for her first child and to complete her final month of pregnancy.

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However, due to her severe anemia, doctors decided to perform a caesarean section to protect her baby.

Throughout her pregnancy, Abu Yousef endured physical and psychological pain due to Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza. What affected her the most was famine and the prolonged shortage of food and nutritional supplements, which severely weakened her body.

“Throughout my entire pregnancy, I didn’t taste meat, chicken or eggs, … only in the last three months when things improved slightly,” Abu Yousef, who is displaced, told Al Jazeera from her shelter.

“Even nutritional supplements were unavailable. I was constantly unable to move, suffering from headaches and continuous nausea due to lack of food.”

Famine and food shortages caused Abu Yousef to suffer from anemia throughout her pregnancy despite her attempts to improve her nutrition to raise her blood levels.

“Any pregnant woman generally suffers from low blood levels, but food helps improve her condition,” she said. “However, in Gaza, there is famine, iron deficiency and everything else.”

Compounding that was the psychological impact of events she had to face in the early months of her pregnancy, particularly the killing of her brother and his wife by an Israeli tank shell.

“I was crying all the time, … completely lost and deeply sad.”

Duha and her husband walk with a baby near a damaged building filled with trash
Duha Abu Yousef returns to her partially destroyed shelter in western Gaza City with her newborn after undergoing an emergency caesarean section [Abdelhakim Abu Riash/Al Jazeera]

Rise in caesarean sections

April is Caesarean Awareness Month, which was designated to raise awareness about the procedure and support mothers who have gone through it.

In Gaza, the dangers that can accompany the operation are amplified by a wider health system collapse. And yet, as Dr Fathi al-Dahdouh, the head of obstetrics at Gaza City’s Al Helou International Hospital, explained, the number of caesarean sections has increased by about 2 percent since before the war, and now make up a quarter of all births.

Al-Dahdouh said difficulty in travel caused by the war means that some pregnant women arrive late to the hospital, reducing the possibility of natural births and increasing emergency surgeries.

He also noted a growing trend of pregnancy as a form of “compensation for loss”, especially among women who have lost children or family members.

“We see cases of women in their late 30s, even over 40, who decide to become pregnant despite the risks simply because they lost children during the war,” the doctor told Al Jazeera. Pregnant women who are older are more likely to have caesarean sections than younger women.

Dr Ruba al-Madhoun, an obstetrician-gynaecologist working at the International Medical Corps field hospital in Gaza, says many pregnant women arrive in critical condition with injuries due to bombardments. They can suffer placental abruptions, which pose a direct threat to both mother and fetus and require immediate surgery.

She added that shortages in medical equipment and supplies have played a major role in increasing reliance on caesarean sections, including the lack of continuous fetal monitoring devices and the absence of labour-inducing medications.

In some cases, this has eliminated the possibility of natural births altogether. Heavy pressure on hospital wards and shortages of staff have also made caesarean deliveries at times the fastest and safest available option.

Dr Fathi al-Dahdouh talks to two nurses
Dr Fathi al-Dahdouh, head of the obstetrics department at Gaza’s Al Helou International Hospital, provides guidance and advice to mothers to improve their recovery after caesarean sections as they navigate displacement and life in tents [Abdelhakim Abu Riash/Al Jazeera]

Infection danger

The dangers from caesarean sections in Gaza often come after the procedure, particularly with the risk of infection.

Displacement brought on by Israeli destruction of housing, malnutrition and deficiencies in essential nutrients, such as protein and iron, directly affect wound healing while overcrowded tents and contaminated water significantly increase infection risks, both for caesarean wounds and overall.

“This is further compounded by severe overcrowding in wards, where multiple patients often share a single room,” al-Madhoun said.

Al-Madhoun added that there have been a growing number of surgical wound infections at a time when hospitals face shortages of appropriate antibiotics and lack laboratory capacity to identify bacteria.

Sanaa al-Shukri, 35, returned to the hospital 10 days after giving birth due to a recurrent infection in her caesarean wound.

From her hospital bed, al-Shukri described the intense pain she experienced when doctors reopened the wound without anaesthesia and cleaned out the accumulated pus.

“I felt like my soul was leaving my body,” she said.

Sanaa Al-Shukri holds her newborn child as she lies in a hospital bed
Sanaa al-Shukri returned to the hospital 10 days after her caesarean due to complications and infections caused by the harsh living conditions in her tent [Abdelhakim Abu Riash/Al Jazeera]

Doctors attributed al-Shukri’s infection to the lack of a proper healing environment despite her attempts to care for the wound.

She lives in a tent in Gaza City’s Tuffah neighbourhood, where she faces major difficulties in her postpartum recovery.

“The bathroom is terrible and unclean. … It’s a pit in the sand, full of flies and insects, far away,” al-Shukri said. “There is no wall in the tent to lean on, no bed. … I sleep on the ground.”

“I tried to clean the wound and change the dressing, but it became infected. The tents have become very hot lately, and doctors say the water is not clean,” she added.

Al-Shukri’s husband, Mohammed, 50, lost his entire family – his wife and seven children – in a bombing on their home in Jabalia at the beginning of the war.

He has since tried to rebuild his life with Sanaa.

The couple named their newborn Ahmed after Mohammed’s eldest son.

Despite her happiness at the birth, her recovery inside a tent has become a daily struggle against harsh environmental conditions.

“I started saying it is wrong to give birth in these tents. … Heat, mosquitoes, flies, rats, dogs, … everything is here,” she said.

“All night I hear rats on the tarps,” al-Shukri added. “I couldn’t even move. I stayed awake and woke my mother out of fear for the baby. I will never give birth in a tent again. … It is suffering.”



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Moms for America calls for SPLC shutdown after DOJ wire fraud indictment

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The leader of a parental rights group that the Southern Poverty Law Center labeled an “extremist” organization is calling for the group to be “shut down” as it faces federal charges.

The Justice Department indicted the Southern Poverty Law Center on charges of wire fraud and conspiracy to commit concealment and money laundering, stemming from allegations that the civil rights organization funneled $3 million in donations to people linked to various violent extremist groups, including Unite the Right, the Ku Klux Klan and the Aryan Nations. These same extremist groups have been targeted by the Southern Poverty Law Center through its litigation and advocacy efforts for years.

Moms for America founder Kimberly Fletcher accused the Southern Poverty Law Center of being a “hate group against America, families, freedom, and God.”

“They’re not going to stop what they’re doing,” Fletcher said. “They’re going to continue funneling money into organizations that are extremist hate groups, and they’re going to continue to target organizations like ours, moms who just want to make sure that our kids are protected, our freedoms are defended, and we restore the republic.”

DAVID MARCUS: ERIKA KIRK IS THE MOTHER SQUABBLING CONSERVATIVES NEED

Kimberly-Fletcher-Moms-for-America

Kimberly Fletcher, president and founder of Moms for America, speaking at CPAC 2025 held at the at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland.. (Moms for America)

In its “Year in Hate and Extremism 2022” report, the Southern Poverty Law Center identified Moms for America as an “anti-government extremist” group, alleging that it is an “anti-student inclusion” group and that its measures have “contributed to a volatile climate” for teachers, faculty and school board members.

“I find it ironic that the Southern Poverty Law Center turns out to be the extremist group, which we’ve always known, but now that they’re finally being exposed because the DOJ has investigated them and found them to be funneling money into all the extremist organizations that they’re supposed to be protecting us against,” Moms for America President and founder Kimberly Fletcher said in an interview with Fox News Digital.

“Putting moms in the same category as the Ku Klux Klan or these violent protesters, rioters, it absolutely is not compatible.”

ANTIFA VIOLENCE EXPOSES UC BERKELEY’S HYPOCRISY ON FREE SPEECH AND TOLERANCE

Southern Poverty Law Center building

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) building seen in March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama. (Barry Lewis/InPictures via Getty Images)

Moms for America, which consists of roughly 500,000 mothers across the country, advocates for restoring “truth, family, freedom and the Constitution” in schools and American culture, and opposes critical race theory and LGBT ideology in public school curricula.

Fletcher said that the SPLC’s “extremist” label has disrupted the group’s operations, claiming that tech companies cut off services and that the organization faced threats and harassment, prompting dozens of the organization’s leadership to step down.

“We have been continuously targeted in threats of violence,” Fletcher told Fox News Digital. “I’ve had emails sent to me saying, ‘I know where your kids live, I know who your grandkids are. And mostly it’s just trying to scare us, but there have been times where I’ve gone face to face with the belly of the beast and people have been right in my face and physically pushing on me.”

OPPONENTS OF MAINE CAMPUS PRO-LIFE GROUP INVOKE CHARLIE KIRK IN SOCIAL MEDIA THREAT : ‘GOTTA BE CAREFUL’

Clashes occurring at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia

Clashes occurred at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Va., on Aug. 12, 2017. (Evelyn Hockstein/For The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Despite threats and alleged shadowbanning by social media companies, Fletcher said the extremist label from the SPLC is “almost like a badge of honor.”

“You’re standing up for the right principles and values and so they’re gonna label you as an extremist,” and so we’ll just keep doing what we’re doing.”

To celebrate America’s 250th birthday, Fletcher said Moms for America is hosting a traveling festival in all 50 states geared toward families and children.

Fletcher said the key to countering the Southern Poverty Law Center and other leftist organizations’ attacks is to reach young people and unite families.

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“We are shining a light on all that’s good in America so that the darkness will be exposed for what it is because people gravitate to the lake,” Fletcher said.

Fox News Digital reached out to the Southern Poverty Law Center for comment.



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Critical cPanel, WHM flaw probs exploited as 0-day, pros say • The Register

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Emergency patches are available for a critical vulnerability in cPanel and WHM that allows attackers to bypass authentication and gain root access to servers managed using it.

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Dev targeted by sophisticated job scam: ‘I let my guard down, and ran the freaking code’

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Given that cPanel and WebHost Manager (WHM) control panel help manage properties for  70 million domains, by some estimates, and the critical severity of CVE-2026-41940 (9.8), the vulnerability is being considered a disaster by those in the security scene.

It also affects every single supported version of the software prior to the patch.

For the uninitiated, cPanel and WHM are both Linux-based control panels. The former is used to manage websites, databases, file transfers, email configurations, and domains, while WHM is used for servers.

They are both backbones of the internet. Breaking into them would provide an attacker with unfettered access to all the secrets associated with these functions.

Or, as watchTowr put it: “Think of it as the keys to the kingdom, and then the keys to every individual apartment inside the kingdom. If the kingdom were the internet and the apartments were websites. For everything.”

Perhaps the worst part is that early signals from defenders, such as KnownHost CEO Daniel Pearson, suggest it may have been exploited as a zero-day for at least 30 days.

Or maybe worse still is the nature of the vulnerability itself – that attackers can gain root access while bypassing all kinds of authentication – a feat worthy of the near-maximum CVSS.

The vulnerability also affects WP Squared, a WordPress hosting platform owned by cPanel.

Successfully exploiting CVE-2026-41940, which can be summarized as a carriage return line feed (CRLF) flaw – meaning the application that was attacked does not properly sanitize user-supplied input – involves just a few steps. 

An attacker creates a session cookie by completing a failed login attempt and then sends a request with a specially crafted header with an instruction to change privileges to root. They can then use that cookie to log into cPanel and WHM as root.

In normal scenarios, cPanel would encrypt attacker-supplied values, but in unpatched versions, attackers can remove a hex value and stop this process from running, allowing the plaintext make-me-root commands to pass through like any other trusted code.

Above is a high-level, concise summary of the procedure. Those looking for a winding tale of how the experts figured out the attack path, watchTowr published its workflow in its typical tongue-in-cheek style.

The prevailing advice is that if you run cPanel and WHM, get patching ASAP. This is a bad one, and given the likelihood of zero-day exploitation, running cPanel’s detection script can help defenders understand whether it’s just a patch they need, or if it’s pull the cables out time.

watchTowr also published its own detection artefact generator to help defenders sniff out signs of compromise. ®



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Civilians or Hezbollah: Who did Israel hit on Lebanon’s ‘Black Wednesday’? | Israel attacks Lebanon News

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Beirut, Lebanon – On April 8, Ahmad Hamdi, 22, was sitting on his couch at home in Beirut’s Tallet el Khayat neighbourhood, hours after Israel had launched more than 100 attacks in under 10 minutes across Lebanon.

Then he heard the “indescribable sound” of a rocket. Ahmad jumped off the couch as the glass in his building shattered around him before more rockets hit.

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Clouds of dust obscured the view from his apartment on the fourth floor. When they dispersed, he saw the building directly facing his had been reduced to a pile of rubble.

He looked back at the couch he had been sitting on. At some point between the second and fourth explosion, shards of shrapnel had hit the couch exactly where his chest had been when the first rocket struck.

“When you think of Tallet el Khayat, you feel it is safe and secure,” Ahmad told Al Jazeera. “No one would expect something like that would happen.”

Indiscriminate attacks

April 8 has become known in Lebanon as Black Wednesday. Israel’s attacks on that day killed at least 357 people across the country. Israel claimed it killed 250 Hezbollah operatives. The exact breakdown of civilians and combatants is still not known, but numerous sources looking into the day’s casualties told Al Jazeera that the attacks appeared to be indiscriminate at best and in some cases may have amounted to the direct targeting of civilians. United Nations experts have described Israel’s attacks on April 8 as “indiscriminate”.

“The method in which the attacks happened in the middle of the day with dozens of strikes all at one time without warning and when civilians were present shows recklessness in Israeli military conduct,” Ramzi Kaiss, Lebanon researcher at Human Rights Watch, told Al Jazeera.

On March 2, Israel intensified its war on Lebanon for the second time in under two years. Earlier that day, Hezbollah had responded to near-daily Israeli attacks on Lebanon for the first time since December 2024 in response to the United States and Israel’s assassination of Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Israel also invaded southern Lebanon, where it has gone about systematically destroying towns and villages in what experts – and Israeli officials – said is an effort to create an uninhabitable “buffer zone” along its border.

“Part of [Israel’s] military strategy is to create a buffer zone and no man’s land,” Bassel Doueik, the Lebanon researcher for the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data (ACLED) conflict monitor, told Al Jazeera. “What Israel is doing in southern Lebanon is creating a multilayered buffer zone inside Lebanese territory and that is why they are demolishing houses in towns along the border.”

Israel has not stopped attacking Lebanon since October 2023 and has violated a November 2024 ceasefire more than 10,000 times, according to the UN. Most of its attacks have been in southern Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley in the east.

Doubts about Israel’s claims

Israel conducted 100 air strikes and dropped more than 160 bombs across Lebanon on April 8, according to ACLED.

Israel claimed the attacks targeted Hezbollah headquarters, command-and-control sites, military formations and assets of its air force unit and elite Radwan Force.

Hezbollah discontinued the practice of providing the circumstances of its fighters’ deaths in September 2024. The Lebanese group does conduct some public funerals for fighters killed during the battles in southern Lebanon, but it is difficult to ascertain the exact number of those killed, making it hard to prove or disprove Israel’s claims.

But groups investigating the April 8 attacks said the available information casts doubt on the Israeli narrative. Analysts with ACLED said they are still confirming casualties but early indications showed that only a few victims were known Hezbollah members.

“One hundred one women and children were killed on April 8,” Ghida Frangieh, a Lebanese lawyer and researcher with Legal Agenda, a Beirut-based nonprofit research and advocacy organisation, told Al Jazeera. “For this number of 250 to be correct, it means every man killed must have been a Hezbollah combatant. This is not true as we were able to document several civilian men killed during these attacks.”

Lebanese media reported on a number of those killed by Israel on April 8, including employees of local restaurants, teachers, a poet, journalists, Lebanese soldiers and a member of a Druze-majority political party.

In some cases, Israeli attacks wiped out several members of the same family. Seven members of the Nasreddine family were reportedly killed on April 8 in Hermel in northeastern Lebanon. And three generations of the displaced Hawi family, including three children, were killed in the Jnah neighbourhood bordering Beirut.

Israel ’emboldened to continue’ violations of international law

Even if Hezbollah targets were present at all of the sites struck during the April 8 attacks, researchers said the attacks should still be considered indiscriminate. And while there still may be a discrepancy over the exact numbers of Hezbollah members vs civilians killed, international humanitarian law places the burden of proof on the attacking army.

“International humanitarian law is clear: Armed forces must distinguish at all times between civilians and military objectives,” Reina Wehbi, Amnesty International’s Lebanon campaigner, told Al Jazeera. “Even when there is a legitimate military target and in order to avoid indiscriminate, disproportionate or other unlawful attacks, parties must respect the principle of precaution and do everything feasible to verify that targets are military objectives, to assess the proportionality of attacks and to halt attacks if it becomes apparent they are wrongly directed or disproportionate.”

Over the past two and a half years, Israel has regularly violated the laws of war in Lebanon and in Gaza by indiscriminately attacking civilians, targeting paramedics and journalists, and using white phosphorus. Still, experts said there is little chance Israel will be held accountable.

“For the Israeli military, there is no deterrence to committing violations in Lebanon,” Kaiss of Human Rights Watch said. “After the crimes of humanity against Gaza, countries could have immediately suspended arms sales, the transit of arms through airports, placed targeted sanctions on officials, and the US and others could have suspended arms sales, but none of that happened.”

Kaiss said Lebanon could also give jurisdiction to the International Criminal Court (ICC), of which it is not currently a member, to investigate and prosecute Israel’s crimes in Lebanon. The ICC has already issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Attacks on Beirut have temporarily halted since US President Donald Trump announced a ceasefire in Lebanon on April 16. But the war rages on in southern Lebanon with Israel continuing to kill civilians, including rescue workers. Israel and Lebanon have started to engage in direct negotiations despite Hezbollah’s objections in what the Lebanese state hopes will bring an end to Israel’s attacks and occupation of southern Lebanon.

But on the ground, there has been little deterrence or accountability for Israel’s crimes against civilians.

“This hasn’t happened in the last two years, so the Israeli military on the ground feels emboldened to continue,” Kaiss said.



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15 stolen spray drones recovered in NJ as former DHS official warns of threat

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Federal authorities have recovered 15 stolen industrial drones capable of dispersing liquid chemicals, but a former Department of Homeland Security official warns the biggest question remains unanswered: were they stolen for a “quick buck,” or to “facilitate action against the homeland?”

Fifteen Ceres Air C31 industrial spray drones were stolen from CAC International, a logistics and shipping company in Harrison, New Jersey, on March 24, according to The High Side Substack. The drones were recovered over a month later on April 27 in Dover, New Jersey.

In an earlier statement to Fox News, the New Jersey State Police said that the drones were recovered at Prudent Corporation, a trucking company that has a warehouse at the location.

“On April 27th, the New Jersey State Police Cargo Theft Unit recovered 15 stolen agricultural drones and spray systems. These drones are labeled as agricultural drones due to their specified function as registered crop dusters. The theft occurred on March 24th at CAC International, a logistics and shipping company located in Harrison, NJ. The drones were recovered at Prudent Corporation located in Dover, NJ. This is an active, ongoing investigation that Homeland Security Investigations and Customs and Border Patrol are assisting with. No additional information is available,” the New Jersey State Police wrote.

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HSI agents looking at drones.

HSI agents recovered the stolen drones on April 27. (HSI Newark)

Despite the drones being recovered, Vincent Martinez, former DHS tactical terrorism response team member and director of service enhancement at ZeroEyes, told Fox News Digital that he “cannot underscore the risk that this poses.”

While Martinez said it’s good the drones were recovered, he warned the biggest questions remain unanswered.

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“Where were these intended to land? Who is the ultimate end user? Were they meant simply as a quick buck — or to facilitate action against the homeland?” he said.

In the wrong hands, Martinez warned, the drones could “absolutely” pose a “substantial threat,” particularly if loaded with a chemical agent and deployed over a populated area, which he believes is the primary concern.

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A drone flying over a residential neighborhood in Florida

A drone is pictured flying over a residential neighborhood. (iStock)

“Because of its design and nature, that is the absolute primary concern in and of itself. Who’s actually conducting the thefts, where they’re going to, who’s funding and financing these? It’s a litany of different phases of escalation that we have to actually look at when we’re conducting the investigation,” Martinez said.

He said it’s “not difficult” for an adversary to weaponize these kinds of drones with the proper training and knowledge.

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“It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to go into the root menu of a lot of these hardware systems. What it does take is a lot of open source knowledge and an acumen to be technically savvy and technically sound. You can break into almost any drone platform. And there are a lot of laws and regulations specifically by the FAA that prevent that. But I would argue that using these against an adversary or against a homeland, let’s just say, it’s not difficult. You just have to know how to research how to do it,” Martinez said.

In a statement to Fox News Digital, Ceres Air said “at no point was there a risk of unauthorized use.”

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A drone flying over the ocean at dawn with a clear sky.

A drone flies over the ocean at dawn, capturing aerial views as the sun rises. (iStock)

“Ceres systems are built with multiple layers of control, including secure activation protocols, remote lock capability, and separated battery logistics. Without proper authorization, these units cannot be operated,” the company said. 

“This situation highlights a broader reality in the drone industry. When systems are built and supported domestically, there is accountability. Our equipment is fully traceable through serial tracking and coordinated support networks, all of which exist within the USA. It doesn’t disappear, and it doesn’t operate outside of controlled channels. We build our systems in the United States so they can be tracked, secured, and supported here. That’s exactly what allowed this situation to be resolved quickly and without risk.”

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In total, a Ceres Air C31 costs around $58,000, meaning that nearly $870,000 of equipment was allegedly stolen. 

The drones were allegedly stolen by a delivery driver who duped the company, according to The High Side Substack. The report said that a fraudulent bill of lading was shown when picking up the drones, and CAC International allegedly considered them legitimate.



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Everyone’s building AI agents. Almost nobody’s ready for what they do to identity.

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Anthropic recently announced that it would not release Mythos, its most powerful AI model, to the public. The model discovered thousands of previously unknown software vulnerabilities — flaws that had sat undetected in major operating systems and web browsers for as long as nearly three decades. Anthropic said the model was too dangerous to deploy broadly because the same capabilities that let it find and fix security flaws could let attackers exploit them. A single AI agent, the company warned, could scan for weaknesses faster and more persistently than hundreds of human hackers. 

That decision tells you something important about where we are. The same AI systems that companies are racing to deploy as autonomous assistants — scheduling your appointments, writing your code, managing your workflows — are also capable of probing digital defenses at a speed and scale no human team can match. And most of the systems they’d be probing still rely on a security model designed for an era when a person sat behind every keyboard. 

Think of it like a building where every door has a lock, but the locks were all designed to recognize human hands. Now the building is full of robots — some of them authorized couriers, some of them intruders — and the locks can’t tell the difference. 

Not long ago, you could sit at your desk, glance at the sticky note on your monitor for your username and password, type them in, and grab a cup of coffee while your browser opened a doorway to the rest of the world. Every layer of security that followed — passwords, security questions, biometric scans, two-factor authentication — grew out of a single bedrock assumption: a person was on the other end. 

AI agents break that assumption from two directions at the same time. Legitimate agents need credentials to act like a human. OpenAI’s Operator navigates websites on your behalf. Google’s Gemini can plan your next family vacation while you sleep. Visa recently unveiled Intelligence Commerce Connect, a platform that lets AI agents do the shopping for consumers. These aren’t demos or hot takes from a tech conference floor. They’re shipping products that act on behalf of real people—and to do that, they need your identity. 

At the same time, adversaries can fake humanity at scale. The same AI that can act like a helpful assistant convincing can also be a malicious impersonator. They don’t break in, they log in—through shared credentials, hiring pipelines, vendor onboarding portals, and collaboration tools. Most organizations still treat identity as a login problem—something IT handles with stronger passwords or additional authentication steps layered on top of existing systems. The harder challenge now is knowing who, or what, you’ve already let in. 

That distinction is collapsing just as digital systems become more autonomous. 

When that distinction blurs, the damage is concrete. If a procurement workflow cannot distinguish between a human manager and an AI impersonator, purchase orders go out under false authority. When compliance logs cannot determine how a decision was authorized — by a person or a bot — the accountability chain falls apart. Regulators and customers will not accept “we’re not sure” as an explanation. 

The economics have tilted sharply toward the attacker. Sophisticated fraud once required coordination, with people researching targets, crafting messages, and adjusting tactics in real time. AI agents eliminate those constraints. One person can now supervise an army of autonomous systems, each running a valid persona across multiple interactions simultaneously. A single operator can field a hundred synthetic employees for the cost of one real salary. The barrier to large-scale impersonation is no longer skill or manpower. It is access to a capable model and a set of stolen credentials. 

Stronger identity controls do carry a cost. Every additional verification step is a moment when a customer might abandon a transaction, or an employee might lose patience with a security protocol. The goal is not to shut down automation. It is to make sure the systems acting in your name are authorized to do so. 

Some organizations are adapting. They are treating AI agents less like software and more like new employees, cataloging every agent in their environment, limiting permissions, requiring human approval for sensitive actions. They are moving beyond passwords to phishing-resistant authentication that binds access to a known device and a verified user. They are building behavioral baselines so that when a customer service bot suddenly queries a financial database, or a new hire accesses source code on day one, alarms go off. 

Nobody keeps their password on a sticky note anymore (I hope). But the assumption behind the sticky note, that a human hand would type it in, still underpins most of the systems we depend on. These systems hold your medical records, process your mortgage, and let an AI assistant rebook your flight. In a world where AI agents act faster, more persistently, and more convincingly than any person, that assumption is the vulnerability. 

The organizations that can verify identity continuously — not just at the door, but at every action, for every actor, human or machine — will have a durable advantage. The ones that cannot will find out what ambiguity costs. 

Devin Lynch is Senior Director of the Paladin Global Institute and a former Director for Policy and Strategy Implementation at the Office of the National Cyber Director. 

Devin Lynch

Written by Devin Lynch

Devin Lynch is senior director of the Paladin Global Institute and a former Director for Policy and Strategy Implementation at the Office of the National Cyber Director.



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Hegseth faces further grilling over Iran war strategy and costs – US politics live | US news

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Key events

Hegseth faces a second day of Democrats grilling him over the Iran war

Hello and welcome to our US politics coverage as Pete Hegseth faces a second day of grilling from Democrats on Capitol Hill, with senators getting their first opportunity to confront or praise the Pentagon chief over his handling of the Iran war.

The defense secretary battled with Democrats – and some Republicans – yesterday during a nearly six-hour House armed services committee hearing, where he faced questioning over the war’s costs in dollars, lives and the diminishing stockpiles of critical weapons.

The Senate armed services committee will hear a similar presentation on the Trump administration’s 2027 military budget proposal, which would boost defense spending to a historic $1.5 trillion.

Yesterday Hegseth denied that the US-Israel war on Iran, which the Pentagon estimates has cost the US at least $25bn, was “a quagmire”.

During the hearing, California Democrat John Garamendi attacked Hegseth over the “astounding incompetence” that Garamendi argued had led to “political and economic disaster at every level”.

“The president has gotten himself and America stuck in a quagmire of another war in the Middle East,” Garamendi said. “He is desperately trying to extricate himself from his own mistakes; it is in America’s, and indeed the world’s, interest he succeed in that.”

Hegseth was incensed, responding “Your hatred for president Trump blinds you to the truth of the success of this mission … you call it a quagmire, handing propaganda to our enemies? Shame on you for that statement.”

Stay with us today for round two starting at 10am ET. The chief of staffs, Dan Caine, and Jules Hurst III, chief financial official for the Pentagon, will also be appearing.

In other developments:

  • US economic growth likely accelerated in the first quarter on a rebound in government spending after a crippling government shutdown. The anticipated increase in gross domestic product last quarter also would reflect robust growth in business investment in equipment, fueled by an artificial intelligence spending boom and the building of data centers underpinning the technology. Figures will be out at 8.30am ET

  • King Charles and Queen Camilla are expected to make stops in Virginia before wrapping up their US visit back at the White House on Thursday with a formal farewell from Trump. Charles will then travel solo to Bermuda on his first visit as king to a British overseas territory.

  • Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer said that Democrats will once again force a vote on a war powers resolution on Iran, the sixth time in recent weeks. “This week, Democrats will force a vote on our war powers resolution for the sixth time. We’ll continue to force votes every week as this war rages on,” Schumer said from the Senate floor.

  • The House approved a three-year reauthorization of a divisive US surveillance program ahead of its expiration on Friday, adding new oversight measures but stopping short of the warrant requirement that critics have demanded. A large group of Democrats joined most Republicans in passing the bill by a 235-191 vote.

  • Trump once again reinforced his feelings towards James Comey in a social media post. Commenting on the accusation that the former FBI director called for him to be killed after posting a picture of some seashells in a pattern showing 86 47, Trump wrote: ““86” is a mob term for “kill him.” They say 86 him! 86 47 means “kill President Trump.”James Comey, who is a Dirty Cop, one of the worst, knows this full well! EIGHT MILES OUT, SIX FEET DOWN! Didn’t he also lie to the FBI about this??? I think so!”. Trump is the 47th president of the US.

  • The US supreme court’s conservative majority struck down a major element of the Voting Rights Act which protects against racial discrimination in redistricting, in a ruling that paves the way for aggressive gerrymandering in states across the nation that could affect elections for years to come.

  • The Florida Legislature approved a new congressional map intended to maximize Republicans’ advantage in the state as part of the national redistricting battle that Republicans launched ahead of this year’s midterms.

  • Outgoing Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell said he will stay on as a central bank governor when his leadership term ends in just over two weeks.

  • The Department of Justice announced on Wednesday that three anti-ICE protesters have been charged with allegedly assaulting Savannah Hernandez, a rightwing video journalist who was shoved to the ground during a skirmish with three members of a family outside an immigration detention facility in St Paul Minnesota this month.



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