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Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket nailed the landing this weekend, but failed at the crucial part of delivering a satellite to a usable orbit.
The rocketmaker, owned by Amazon kingpin Jeff Bezos, launched its New Glenn rocket on Sunday. The weekend outing marked the third launch as well as the company’s first attempt to reuse a first stage. Everything went well until the part where the satellite, AST SpaceMobile’s Bluebird 7, was supposed to be sent into its desired orbit.
The first stage landed successfully on Blue Origin’s Jacklyn floating platform, but the fate of Bluebird 7 was left up in the air… or not, as the case turned out to be.
After a pause, Blue Origin admitted via its social media mouthpiece that the satellite did separate from the second stage and was powered on, yet it was in an “off-nominal” orbit.
AST SpaceMobile later confirmed the satellite’s orbit was lower than planned and it would be unable to reach a usable location with its onboard thrusters. It said it is going to de-orbit the sat, and confirmed: “the cost of the satellite is expected to be recovered under the company’s insurance policy.”
Bezos’s crew launched the rocket at 1125 UTC on Sunday, April 19, from LC-36 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida.
Blue Origin has not yet explained what happened to the second stage, nor explained the impact on its manifest. It has launches scheduled for Starlink rival, Amazon Leo, another AST SpaceMobile mission, and a Blue Moon demonstrator. The Blue Moon is a robotic lunar cargo lander.
The lander will then demonstrate an uncrewed landing on the Moon, an essential step for future missions. NASA’s Artemis III is due to launch in 2027 and conduct demonstrations with lunar landing technologies. It is unclear what this weekend’s failure will mean for Blue Origin’s role in those demonstrations.
The landing and reuse of an orbital-class rocket is an achievement, however, the loss of the payload eclipses that success. BlueBird 7 was AST SpaceMobile’s eighth spacecraft deployed into low Earth orbit and was set to become part of its space-based cellular broadband network. BlueBird 1-5 were all launched on Falcon 9 rockets before the company turned to India’s LVM3 launcher for the heftier BlueBird 6.
According to AST, BlueBird 8-10 are “expected to be ready to ship in approximately 30 days.”
AST SpaceMobile has also launched a pair of BlueWalker prototype satellites using Indian and SpaceX rockets. ®
Baby food brand HiPP recalls products after Austrian police say a tampered jar contained rodent poison.
Published On 20 Apr 202620 Apr 2026
Baby food manufacturer HiPP has issued a product recall in Austria after authorities reported the presence of rat poison in one of the company’s jars.
HiPP said on Sunday that it had pulled all baby food sold at stores operating under the SPAR umbrella in Austria, including outlets of EUROSPAR, INTERSPAR and Maximarkt.
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The Swiss company, which bills itself as the world’s top organic baby food brand, said the recall was not due to quality problems in its production processes.
“The jars left our HiPP facility in perfect condition. The recall is related to a criminal act currently under investigation by the authorities,” the company said in a statement published on its website.
The Sachseln-based firm added that it was in “close and continuous contact” with investigating authorities.
“Due to the ongoing investigations, we can share only confirmed information relevant to consumer safety,” the statement said.
Police alert
The move comes after police in Austria’s eastern state of Burgenland urged the public to exercise caution following the discovery of a tampered jar of “Carrots with Potatoes” baby food.
“With the involvement of the Federal Criminal Police Office, a sample of the seized product was examined on Saturday afternoon and tested positive for rat poison,” the Burgenland State Criminal Police Office said in a statement.
Police said the jar was reported by a customer and had not been consumed.
HiPP baby food seized by authorities in the Czech Republic and Slovakia was also found to contain an unspecified “toxic additive” following laboratory testing, the Burgenland police said.
Police advised the public to avoid jars that have a white sticker with a red circle on the bottom of the jar, a damaged lid, a missing safety seal, or an unusual smell.
The Czech Republic’s Ministry of Health said on Sunday that police had seized two contaminated jars of baby food in the eastern city of Brno.
Officials were working to assess the risk to local consumers and had implemented “inspection and preventive measures”, the ministry said.
The Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety urged anyone experiencing symptoms of poisoning to consult a doctor.
Symptoms of ingesting rat poison, which interferes with the body’s use of vitamin K, include bleeding, extreme weakness and paleness, and typically take two to five days to appear, according to the food safety agency.
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The New South Wales premier has doubled down on an anti-protest law struck down in the state’s highest court last week, defending the legislation introduced by his government as “rational and proportionate”.
But advocates for protesters charged at demonstrations restricted under the laws have criticised Chris Minns’ comments, calling them a “extraordinary attack” on the judiciary.
On Thursday, the New South Wales court of appeal ruled in favour of the Palestine Action Group and Blak Caucus, finding an anti-protest law that gave police the power to restrict marches was unconstitutional. The law was introduced after the Bondi beach terror attack last year, in which 15 people were killed.
On Monday, in his first public statement about the court striking down the law, Minns said the government was “studying the judgment”.
Asked about the finding that social cohesion did not justify the law, Minns took aim at the Greens for supporting protesters charged after February’s anti-Herzog protest at Sydney’s town hall, when the law was in force. The rally is now subject of a police watchdog investigation into allegations of police misconduct and brutality.
Minns claimed there had been “violent confrontations” and “violent rhetoric and hateful, hateful phrases via loudspeakers on Sydney streets” in the two years leading up to the anti-Herzog protest.
“The idea that the police and the government’s rational and proportionate changes to the law that we pursued after that Bondi terrorist attack somehow spurred these people into a violent confrontation is utter garbage,” he said.
The premier did not respond to a follow-up question by Guardian Australia about whether he rejected the court’s findings. His office referred Guardian Australian to his comments made during the press conference.
He also did not respond to a question about which allegedly violent confrontations or rhetoric he was referring to. His office pointed towards comments he made in December after the Bondi attack, where he criticised the alleged use of Hezbollah flags, images of former supreme leader of Iran Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and protest signs comparing Zionism to neo-nazism.
The Greens justice spokesperson, Sue Higginson, released a statement after Minns’ comments, saying the premier had “launched an extraordinary attack on our independent judiciary”.
Majed Kheir, who is representing several of the 26 protesters who have been charged in the wake of the rally, said the court “vehemently disagreed” with the premier’s claims that the laws were “rational and proportionate”.
“Thankfully, the separation of powers is protected, and the decision as to whether those laws were rational, reasonable or proportionate was a question for our judiciary,” he said.
“Whatever personal views the premier has, in accordance with the interpretation of our most qualified and most experienced judges, they were not reasonable, they were not proportionate, and they were unconstitutional.”
Police reviewing charges
During the same press conference, the NSW police commissioner, Mal Lanyon, said officers were reviewing the charges against the anti-Herzog protesters amid calls for them to be dropped in the wake of Thursday’s finding. Before the court ruling, police had indicated to Nick Hanna, another lawyer representing several of the protesters, that the police planned to charge 30 more people.
The now defunct law, known as the public assembly restriction declaration, or Pard, meant protesters could not use the form 1 system in areas designated by police for up to three months after a terrorist attack, effectively meaning protesters could not march without the risk of arrest.
Minns has argued that because the anti-Herzog protest was also covered by a major events declaration, charges would still stand for those who did not comply with police directions. The major events declaration gave police similar move-on powers to the Pard laws.
Kheir said in all the police facts sheets – which outline police’s allegations against a person charged with a crime – he had seen, there were references to the area the protest was in being the subject of a Pard.
“It appears to be a pro forma reference that’s made in all of the facts sheets that I’ve seen,” he said.
In one facts sheet, seen by Guardian Australia, there is a specific reference to the arrested protester being before the courts for contravening the law, which now does not exist.
“Police, clearly identifiable by uniform, issued the group a move-on direction pursuant to their contravention of the PARD. This move-on direction was repeated over loudhailer and broadcast into the group,” the facts sheet says.
The facts sheet makes no reference to the major events declaration.
Higginson called on the premier and Lanyon “to accept that they got it wrong and stop these bad prosecutions against the community”.
“The actions by the premier and the police caused serious harm and the police relied on powers that were unlawful. For the premier and the police commissioner to double down in the face of this failure and say ‘Oh well we had the major event declaration as backup’ likely won’t cut it in the courts.”
Microsoft has reverted a recent service update that was preventing some customers from launching the Microsoft Teams desktop client.
Affected users are getting stuck on the loading screen and seeing the “We’re having trouble loading your message. Try refreshing.” error message.
On Friday morning, after acknowledging the incident (tracked under TM1283300), Microsoft said the launch failures were due to a transient issue in the service infrastructure that caused some older Microsoft Teams desktop client builds to “enter an unhealthy state.”
“We’ve confirmed that our automated recovery system has successfully remediated impact and we’re reaching out to your representatives to validate this issue is fully resolved for all users,” Microsoft said.
Three hours later, Microsoft reverted the buggy service update to address the issue, adding that the issue was caused by “a regression within the Microsoft Teams client build caching system.”
Impacted Teams users are now advised to fully quit and restart their Teams clients to ensure that the fix propagates to their systems.
“Now that the update that introduced the regression has been fully reverted, a restart will be needed in which users fully quit and then restart Teams so that our solution propagates,” Microsoft added in the latest update to the message center.
“We’re continuing to await feedback from the subset of impacted users and monitoring our service telemetry to confirm the issue is resolved after we’ve completed the aforementioned reversion.”
While Microsoft didn’t share how many users or which regions are affected by this issue, it flagged the service outage as an incident, which commonly applies to critical service issues and noticeable user impact.
Last month, it resolved another known issue that caused launch failures in older builds of the Classic Outlook email client, rendering it unusable for users who had enabled the latest version of the Microsoft Teams Meeting Add-in.
Over the weekend, Microsoft also released a set of emergency updates to address known Windows Server issues, causing security update installation problems and domain controllers to enter a restart loop.
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Over the course of this week, temperatures in Spain are expected to soar well above the seasonal average. Daytime temperatures could reach about 30C in Madrid on Tuesday, 10C above the norm, while Seville may see 34C, about 9C above its late April average. An area of low pressure situated out in the Atlantic will allow for a south-westerly flow, introducing warm air from north Africa. In addition to this heat, a notable dust plume is expected to travel northwards from the Sahara, covering the skies above Iberia and south-western France, which may lead to some particularly orange or red skies at sunrise and sunset.
In Brazil, high temperatures are forecast for the states of São Paulo, Paraná, Mato Grosso do Sul and Santa Catarina over the next few days, eventually spreading into Minas Gerais. Here, daytime maximum temperatures are expected to reach the high 30s Celsius later in the week, about 5-10C above the seasonal average.
Botswana and South Africa are expected to see some severe thunderstorms on Tuesday. In the heaviest downpours, rainfall rates could reach 20-30mm an hour, bringing the risk of localised flooding, and there could be frequent lightning and hail.
In North America, a cold plunge that recently brought snow to western parts of the United States will be replaced with some exceptional mid-spring warmth this week. The core of the heat will probably be across north-western states including Montana and Nebraska, as well as North and South Dakota where temperatures could soar above 30C – about 15C above the seasonal norm. The anomalous warmth will spread eastwards, with parts of the midwest and north-east forecast to see very high temperatures by the end of the working week.
A football match between Paraguay’s major teams Olimpia and Cerro Porteno was suspended during the game after clashes broke out between fans and the police.
Khartoum, Sudan – Omar Othman, a gold miner in northern Sudan’s Abu Hamad town, had hoped for a fresh start to life in the capital – only for those hopes to be cut short by illness.
For months, he had worked deep in the gold mines under harsh conditions, which badly affected his health. At first, the symptoms seemed minor: a cough that lingered for weeks went largely unnoticed.
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But after arriving in Khartoum, it developed into a sharp chest pain that forced him to seek medical attention. He was diagnosed with pulmonary tuberculosis, one of several infectious diseases spreading in Sudan, where a three-year war between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has collapsed the African country’s health system.
At the Tropical Diseases Teaching Hospital in Omdurman, Sudan’s second largest city west of Khartoum, laboratory tests confirmed the diagnosis.
The hospital offers treatment for infectious diseases and psychological counselling to patients [Al Jazeera]
Othman told Al Jazeera that although the result left him anxious, counselling sessions and a clear explanation of the treatment plan helped ease his fears and allowed him to come to terms with his condition.
But his treatment was only the beginning, with many obstacles still ahead.
Shortage of supplies
During his first visit to hospital, Othman said he faced no difficulties. He paid a small fee for the tests and received treatment free of charge.
But on his second visit, essential medication was no longer available, forcing him to buy it privately at a high cost.
The Tropical Diseases Teaching Hospital, once a refuge for patients, now operates with limited capacity amid the wider collapse in health services across the country, with the war into its fourth year.
The Sudanese health ministry this month said 37 percent of its health facilities have been rendered non-functional due to the war, which erupted on April 15, 2023 following a power struggle between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) chief General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the RSF leader Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, widely known as Hemedti.
The SAF currently controls much of eastern and central Sudan, including Khartoum, while the RSF controls the western Darfur region.
The World Health Organization (WHO) earlier this month verified and documented at least 217 attacks on health infrastructure in Sudan, leading to the deaths of 2,052 healthcare workers, even as some 40 percent of the country’s 52 million people require urgent medical assistance.
“Given the high rates of malnutrition, a debilitated health system and low immunisation coverage, disease outbreaks will continue to have catastrophic impacts, particularly for children,” it warned.
The Tropical Diseases Teaching Hospital in Omdurman was also shut for nearly two years due to the war, with hospital Director General, Abu Bakr Hassan Al-Mubarak, saying efforts are under way to restart key departments, including internal medicine, dermatology, sexually transmitted diseases, as well as clinics for psychological counselling and medical testing units.
He added that even as the hospital is partially operational, “huge challenges remain, particularly related to funding and the urgent need to repair damaged wards”. Outpatient clinics continue to operate in the country’s first specialised infectious disease hospital, receiving large numbers of patients daily.
The hospital’s Director of Media and Public Relations, Hasaballah Suleiman, says it depends heavily on support from health and humanitarian organisations to meet basic needs. The volume of patients “puts pressure on already limited equipment, medicines and staff”, adding that the facility suffered losses exceeding half a million dollars due to the war.
A large number of hospitals and health facilities in Sudan’s Darfur and Kordofan regions have been rendered out of service due to the three-year war [Al Jazeera]
Rimah Fadl Al-Mawla, an officer in the Psychological Counselling Centre, says staff are under “growing strain due to rising patient numbers and limited resources”.
He said conditions were “significantly better” before the war, but damage to laboratories and counselling centres reduced space and forced them into less-equipped facilities, affecting quality of care.
Despite the setbacks, he said efforts continue to rebuild and restore the hospital’s role in providing medical and psychological services.
Collapsing healthcare system
The crisis at the Tropical Diseases Teaching Hospital is testimony to Sudan’s collapsing healthcare system, while also highlighting the resilience of the remaining facilities and staff.
Large parts of Sudan’s medical infrastructure, particularly in the worst-hit Darfur and Kordofan regions, have been rendered inoperative due to shelling and supply shortages.
Outbreaks of life-threatening diseases such as malaria, dengue fever, measles, rubella and cholera place further pressure on Sudan’s strained health facilities, raising concerns over their ability to meet rising demand.
Recent strikes, including on hospitals in White Nile and East Darfur states, have killed dozens of civilians and medical workers and further reduced access to emergency care.
The situation has been worsened by the collapse of basic infrastructure, with up to 40 percent of power generation capacity lost and main water systems destroyed or seized, cutting communities off from clean water and sanitation, and accelerating the spread of diseases.
Two men recently attempted to carry out an alleged terrorist attack in New York City, an attack that, according to investigators, was intended to kill as many as 60 people. Details are still unfolding, but the intent appears unmistakable: mass casualties and maximum fear.
For many New Yorkers, the immediate question wasn’t just how the plot was stopped. It was how the city’s new leadership would respond — specifically, how Mayor Zohran Mamdani would react. The answer was not encouraging, and it’s not a reassuring sign for the next four years.
We’ve been here before
After the 9/11 attacks, the city faced profound uncertainty. I was here then, working as a cop in Manhattan. No one knew what would come next or whether the city could recover. We initially didn’t even know who had attacked us.
What steadied New York was leadership. Mayor Rudy Giuliani projected calm and resolve, offering reassurance when it was needed most. Just as critical was the role of the NYPD, which secured Lower Manhattan, restored order and helped normalize life. There was no prolonged military presence. The police handled it.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani has passed 100 days on the job but not without a big failure.(Getty)
What followed was a remarkable recovery. Under Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly, crime fell to historic lows, tourism surged and neighborhoods flourished. It worked so well that, over the ensuing years, many came to believe terrorism was no longer an immediate threat. In the Intelligence Bureau, where I served, we had a saying: “The further we get from 9/11, the closer we get to 9/10.”
Now, as we approach the 25th anniversary of 9/11 and with global tensions rising — including conflict involving Iran — New York once again faces that reality. And once again, it has been the NYPD that stepped forward. When the two suspects allegedly attempted to deploy improvised explosive devices, it wasn’t rhetoric that stopped them. It was police work — officers pursuing and tackling a fleeing suspect in real time.
The response from city hall, however, was less inspiring. Mamdani appeared to pivot quickly to a favored political narrative, initially focusing on “White supremacy” before grudgingly admitting the terrorist attack. It is telling that the mayor’s and other city leaders’ reflex was to immediately focus on the idiotic — but peaceful — demonstration the terrorists were targeting rather than two allegedly ISIS-inspired perpetrators.
Compounding that concern was a highly publicized Ramadan event at Gracie Mansion featuring Mahmoud Khalil, who was previously taken into federal custody following his involvement in disruptive protests at Columbia University.
The optics were hard to miss, particularly coming on the heels of a near mass-casualty attack. Khalil, facing deportation for campus activism, is the hero. The police, who just days earlier apprehended two terrorists, are not. None of the cops involved got their Gracie Mansion moment.
Mamdani represents a younger generation that did not experience 9/11 in the same formative way. For many New Yorkers, that day still defines how seriously threats are taken. Yet the mayor’s dogged ideological posture — particularly his embrace of “collectivist” themes — suggests a naive worldview that risks prioritizing theory over hard-earned lessons. In short, when it comes to public safety, he does not appear to be learning.
At a time when New York is still recovering from COVID-19, that carries real-world consequences. Financial warning signs are already visible, with three different rating agencies raising concerns about the city’s fiscal outlook by downgrading New York’s bond rating.
Emir Balat, 18, is arrested after allegedly throwing a handmade smoke grenade during a “Stop the Islamic Takeover of New York City” protest March 7, 2026.(Ryan Murphy/Getty Images)
Mamdani at the 100 day-plus mark
New York’s history makes one point clear: Everything begins with public safety. Investment, tourism, the economy and quality of life, all depend on it — and on a supported NYPD. There was a time when Wall Street could be counted on to drag us out of the doldrums. But in a remote worker economy, that cushion is gone.
So, at the 100-day mark of Mamdani’s administration, residents here — and indeed, in many blue cities around the country — are forced to consider: do we have leadership that is up to handling crisis?
Based on what we’ve seen so far in New York, the answer is far from reassuring.
Paul Mauro is a contributor for FOX News Media providing legal and criminal justice analysis across FOX News Channel and FOX Business Network programming. He joined the network in 2024.