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University of Oregon to offer abortion pills to students this fall

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The University of Oregon recently announced that the school will begin offering abortion pills to its students beginning in the fall. 

The Lund Report, an independent outlet that covers health news for Oregon and southwest Washington, reported the school will start offering mifepristone and misoprostol to students only at the university health center. 

Mifepristone blocks progesterone, a hormone needed to sustain pregnancy, and is typically followed by misoprostol to complete the abortion.

PRO-LIFE ORGANIZATION CALLS ON HHS AND FDA TO SUSPEND ABORTION PILL APPROVAL, TIGHTEN SAFETY RULES

Packet of Misoprostol abortion pills

Packet of misoprostol abortion pills. (Sergei Gapon/AFP via Getty Images)

A study from the Ethics and Public Policy Center last April, authored by Ryan T. Anderson, the organization’s president, and Jamie Bryan Hall, its director of data analysis, reviewed a claims database that included 865,727 prescribed mifepristone abortions from 2017 to 2023.

It found that 10.93% of women “experience sepsis, infection, hemorrhaging, or another serious adverse event within 45 days following a mifepristone abortion.” 

The Lund Report said the decision to provide abortion pills came after a campaign from UO Students for Choice, Associated Students of UO and Young Democratic Socialists of America at the University of Oregon. 

In February, The Daily Emerald reported that UO YDSA “has been campaigning for campus abortion access for the past three years but has made it a major focus since this fall.”

CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY IN CHICAGO COVERS ‘ABORTION CARE SERVICES’ THROUGH STUDENT HEALTH PLAN

Boxes of Mifepristone

A container holding boxes of mifepristone, the first medication in a medical abortion.  (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters)

The group reportedly voted to make access to abortion pills at the school its top campaign priority, “and this fall, Students for Choice pitched a collaboration and launched a student-centered coalition that included ASUO, YDSA, S4C and other groups.” 

The Lund Report quoted Karlie Windle, president of UO Students for Choice, who said, “During a time when abortion access is being rolled back and literally people are dying as a result of it, this is a huge thing that it’s being expanded in our little corner of the world.”

She also said the school providing abortion pills on campus would help students who do not have cars.

PRO-LIFE GROUP FINDS BIDEN-ERA FDA POLICY IS DRIVING 500 ABORTIONS PER DAY, SAYS TRUMP HAS POWER TO END IT

Mifepristone pill

A patient prepares to take the first of two combination pills, mifepristone, for a medication abortion during a visit to a clinic in Kansas City, Kan., Oct. 12, 2022. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

“The dynamic of calling an Uber or taking public transportation to Planned Parenthood is just adding so many barriers to a situation which is already very difficult and emotionally heavy,” Windle said.

Fox News Digital reached out for comment to the University of Oregon, UO Students for Choice, Associated Students of UO and Young Democratic Socialists of America at the University of Oregon.

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Men accused of murdering Lyra McKee linked to scene by clothing, Belfast court told | UK news

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Three men accused of the murder of the Belfast journalist Lyra McKee have been linked to the scene by clothing and physical features, a court has heard.

The New IRA claimed responsibility for the death of McKee, 29, who died after being hit by a bullet as she stood close to police vehicles while observing rioting in the Creggan area of Derry on 18 April 2019.

Three men from Derry – Peter Cavanagh, 37, of Mary Street, Jordan Gareth Devine, 25, of Bishop Street, and Paul McIntyre, 58, of Kells Walk – have been charged with her murder. They are also facing other charges connected to the shooting and the rioting.

The trial opened in May 2024. In February, Judge Patricia Smyth rejected a defence application that there was no case to answer due to insufficiency of evidence.

Proceedings resumed at Belfast crown court on Wednesday morning when defendants filled the dock as the prosecution summed up their case against them.

Six other Derry men are on trial on charges including rioting and throwing petrol bombs. They are: Joseph Patrick Barr, 37, of Sandringham Drive; Jude Forest Coffey, 28, of Gartan Square; Joseph Anthony Campbell, 25, of Gosheden Cottages; Patrick Anthony Gallagher, 33, of John Field Place; Christopher Joseph Gillen, 45, of Balbane Pass; and Kieran George McCool, 57, of Ballymagowan Gardens.

The nine men all deny the charges.

Another man accused of rioting and throwing petrol bombs on the night of the murder died during trial proceedings last year.

The prosecution claim the three men accused of murder had accompanied a lone gunman to the firing point on the night, and had encouraged or assisted him.

McKee’s sister Nichola was among those in the public gallery watching on.

The prosecuting barrister, David McDowell KC, said Andrew Wooller, a forensic image analyst, had identified 19 individuals by height, build, clothing and trainers, who appeared to be involved in the disorder.

He said Cavanagh, Devine and McIntyre, as well as Campbell and Gillen, could be linked to the scene on 18 April by an analysis of imagery gathered, which includes footage filmed by an MTV crew on the day of the shooting.

McDowell also claimed that those involved in rioting in the area on 16 and 18 April had “displayed forensic awareness” by burning clothing.

McDowell contended that McIntyre had played a “leading role”, and had been spotted close to the gunman. He described him having been pictured wearing “distinctive” trainers with lace adornment, a hooded jacket, a red Superdry T-shirt, O’Neill tracksuit bottoms, a Nike cap and a metal bracelet, which, with his short height and heavy build, “overwhelmingly” linked him with person D seen in footage of the rioting on 18 April. He added that McIntyre had his name, Paul, tattooed to his knuckles and a distinctive tattoo on the upper of his left hand.

McDowell said Devine had been seen wearing distinctive trainers, tracksuit bottoms and a US Polo Association cap on a number of occasions, linking him with person B from riot footage on 18 April.

He said McIntyre and Devine had declined to give evidence to account for evidence against them.

The trial continues.



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Taylor Frankie Paul faces third alleged domestic violence probe in Utah

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“The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” star Taylor Frankie Paul has been accused of a third domestic violence incident.

Authorities in West Jordan, Utah, are investigating allegations of domestic violence against Paul stemming from an incident in 2024, brought by her ex-boyfriend, Dakota Mortensen, Fox News Digital has learned.

“The West Jordan Police Department is currently investigating an incident involving Taylor Frankie Paul and Dakota Mortensen. The allegations were reported at the end of February 2026, and detectives have reviewed video believed to have been recorded in early to mid-2024,” authorities confirmed.

‘BACHELORETTE’ CASTING DISASTER: TAYLOR FRANKIE PAUL SUITOR DROVE CAR IN WRECK THAT PARALYZED GOP CONGRESSMAN

Taylor Frankie Paul smiles

Taylor Frankie Paul is facing a third domestic violence investigation. (Natalie Cass/Disney)

Police are now reviewing multiple videos tied to the alleged altercation to determine details and timelines.

“Investigators are actively working to gather and verify information and are in the process of interviewing those involved. At this time,  have been filed, as the investigation remains ongoing.”

According to NBC News, police only have Mortensen’s account of the incident. Authorities have not interviewed Paul directly but have spoken with her attorney. Investigators are asking Paul to come in to give her side of the story or to submit a written statement.

Police in Draper, Utah, reportedly confirmed a separate domestic violence investigation involving both Paul and Mortensen, with allegations on both sides, was reported on Feb. 24 and Feb. 25. That case is still ongoing.

TAYLOR FRANKIE PAUL’S ‘BACHELORETTE’ SEASON AXED AMID DOMESTIC ASSAULT INVESTIGATION

Fox News Digital has reached out to Draper police for further details, in addition to Paul and Mortensen for comment, but did not immediately receive a response.

Taylor Frankie Paul

Police are reportedly seeking a statement from Paul on the new allegations against her. (Fred Hayes/Disney via Getty Images)

A spokesperson for Paul previously told Fox News Digital, following the cancellation of her season of “The Bachelorette,” “Taylor is very grateful for ABC’s support as she prioritizes her family’s safety and security. After years of silently suffering extensive mental and physical abuse as well as threats of retaliation, Taylor is finally gaining the strength to face her accuser and taking steps to ensure that she and her children are protected from any further harm.”

“There are too many women who are suffering in silence as they survive aggressive, jealous ex-partners who refuse to let them move on with their lives,” the spokesperson continued. “Taylor has remained silent out of fear of further abuse, retaliation, and public shaming. She is currently exploring all of her options, seeking support, and preparing to own and share her story.”

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Taylor Frankie Paul and Dakota Mortensen at a premiere

A spokesperson for Paul recently shared that the reality star is preparing to tell her side of the story. (Getty Images)

The first domestic violence incident resulted in charges against Paul, who pleaded guilty to aggravated assault in August 2023. Video of the incident was shared earlier this month by TMZ, and soon after, ABC announced that it would not be airing Paul’s season of “The Bachelorette.”

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Production on Season 5 of “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” has also reportedly been halted following the resurfaced incident.

Taylor Frankie Paul

Paul has reportedly been “silently suffering extensive mental and physical abuse,” a rep for the reality star said. (MEGA/GC Images)

Paul, 31, shares two children — Indy, 8, and Ocean, 5 — with ex-husband Tate Paul, and a 1-year-old son, Ever, with Mortensen.

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In a statement to Fox News Digital last week, a spokesperson for Disney Entertainment Television said, “In light of the newly released video just surfaced today, we have made the decision to not move forward with the new season of ‘The Bachelorette’ at this time, and our focus is on supporting the family.”

Fox News Digital’s Christina Dugan Ramirez contributed to this report.



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LeakBase Admin Arrested in Russia Over Massive Stolen Credential Marketplace

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Ravie LakshmananMar 25, 2026Cybercrime / Dark Web

The alleged administrator of the LeakBase cybercrime forum has been arrested by Russian law enforcement authorities, state media reported Thursday.

According to TASS and MVD Media, a news website linked to the Russian Interior Ministry, the suspect is a resident of the city of Taganrog. The suspect is said to have been detained for creating and managing a criminal site that allowed stolen personal databases to be traded since 2021.

In addition, technical equipment and other items of evidentiary value were confiscated during a search of the suspect’s residence.

“The platform hosted hundreds of millions of user accounts, bank details, usernames, and passwords, as well as corporate documents obtained through hacking,” said Irina Volk, an official spokesperson for the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs. “More than 147,000 users registered on the forum could buy and sell this data, as well as use it to commit fraudulent acts against citizens.”

LeakBase was dismantled in a law enforcement operation earlier this month. The U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) said the cybercrime forum was one of the world’s largest hubs for cybercriminals to buy and sell stolen data and cybercrime tools.

This included hundreds of millions of account credentials and financial information such as credit and debit card numbers, banking account and routing information, usernames, and associated passwords that could be abused to conduct account takeover attacks.

The platform had over 142,000 members and more than 215,000 messages between members as of December 2025. Visitors to the clearnet site were greeted with a seizure banner that said “All forum content, including users’ accounts, posts, credit details, private messages, and IP logs, has been secured and preserved for evidentiary purposes.”

LeakBase is the work of a threat actor who goes by the online aliases Chucky, beakdaz, Chuckies, Sqlrip. In reports published following the takedown of the forum, KELA and TriTrace Investigations linked Chucky to a 33-year-old individual from Taganrog.



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‘We want peace’: Iranians try to maintain semblance of normal life as conflict drags on | US-Israel war on Iran

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The days after Nowruz, the Persian New Year, are usually a bustling time in Tehran, with spring arriving, trees blossoming, businesses reopening after the holidays, and people returning to work and school.

This year, however, Iranians are trying to maintain a semblance of ordinary life against the constant backdrop of explosions, airstrikes – and a conflict many fear may drag on for weeks or months.

“More and more, people are starting to normalise this war,” said Farhad, a photography editor in Tehran. “It’s difficult, but we’re adapting and trying to return to our daily lives as much as possible. There’s no alternative. We’re tired. We just want peace.”

Explosions lit up the city’s skyline overnight on Wednesday as Israel launched fresh airstrikes, but by the morning, joggers were exercising again in the sprawling Pardisan Park. Schools and universities remain closed since the start of the war, but shops, restaurants and cafes are slowly reopening.

Aylar, a 39-year-old human rights worker who spent the first weeks of the war sheltering in her apartment with her cats, said that she had paid for an expensive VPN to try to circumvent the internet blackout imposed by Iranian authorities so she can talk to relatives abroad. “On the same day, I also went for coffee and chocolate cake with friends on what felt like a sunny spring day. These conflicting realities are bizarre,” she said.

Iran’s official death toll has frozen at around 1,500 for days, but the real figure may be more than 3,000, with many more injured, according to the Iranian Human Rights Activists News Agency, which has been tracking attacks and casualties across the country.

Iranians exercise at Pardisan Park in Tehran as the war goes on. Photograph: Majid Asgaripour/Reuters

And while many Iranians have managed to stay in their homes away from attacks, others have found themselves dangerously close to the violence.

Azadeh, a 46-year-old researcher and cinematographer who returned to Iran after finishing her PhD in Turkey, said she was outside with her pregnant sister when a strike hit.

“It was just 200 metres from us. I held her tightly in my arms to protect her from shrapnel and in that moment, I felt so helpless,” she said from her home in Tehran. “Every time I hear the sound of an explosion, I feel fear. But I also feel such a responsibility towards my family, my sister and my elderly grandmother. I want to protect them from this war. Since the attack, I’ve lived in constant fear.”

With schools and universities still closed, many international students have chosen to leave Iran for the time being. “There’s been a huge exodus,” said Hasina, a 26-year-old Afghan medical student, who undertook a train and bus journey from Tehran back to Afghanistan to wait out the war.

“It was sad and scary to leave, and it was difficult to return to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan. At the border, many of us women got into trouble with the Taliban because we arrived without a male guardian. I hope to be back in Iran soon,” she said from the western Afgahanistan city of Herat, near the Iranian border, adding that being with her family there was, for now, still better than “hiding from bombs in Tehran”.

For many Iranians the future is uncertain. Some voiced concerns that without significant political change, the conflict could become a recurring reality. “We went through the 12-day war with Israel last year, and now we’re under attack again,” said Abbas, a 41-year-old man in Tehran. “I worry this could become a pattern.”

That uncertainty is further compounded by deep divisions within society, and Tehran remains polarised.

Most Iranians, regardless of their political affiliation, oppose the war but some have welcomed it, seeing the violence as the best chance for the fall of the Islamic Republic.

In the hours after the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was announced, some Tehranis climbed onto their roofs in spontaneous scenes of celebration, shouting “azadi” (freedom) into the night, while elsewhere, government supporters gathered in the streets to mourn, holding vigils and reciting prayers.

A woman holds a picture of Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, while waving a national flag in Enghelab Square in central Tehran. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

But as attacks across the country have intensified, pro-government supporters have gathered on streets and in public squares every evening, chanting “God is great, Khamenei is the leader” and “death to America, death to Israel”.

“Our society is divided. Some believe this war could lead to a free, democratic government backed by the US, while others dismiss this, pointing to the failures of the US across the region,” said Farhad. “At the same time, many are suffering and being killed. Why aren’t there anti-war protests in the US? It seems that nobody cares.”



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Operation Epic Fury leaves 290 US troops injured, CENTCOM reveals

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Around 290 U.S. service members have been injured so far during Operation Epic Fury against Iran, U.S. Central Command spokesperson U.S. Navy Capt. Tim Hawkins told Fox News on Wednesday. 

“The vast majority of these injuries have been minor, and more than 255 troops have already returned to duty,” Hawkins added. 

The U.S. military operation, which was launched on Feb. 28, also has resulted in the deaths of 13 American service members. 

Six service members were killed in a March 1 Iranian drone attack in Kuwait, while another service member died of injuries suffered during an Iranian attack on troops in Saudi Arabia on the same day.

US STRIKES AGAINST IRAN-BACKED MILITIAS IN IRAQ REPORTEDLY CONTINUE AS BAGHDAD WARNS OF ‘RIGHT TO RESPOND’

U.S. Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt II plane

U.S. Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt II attack aircraft “have been used to strike Iranian naval vessels during Operation Epic Fury,” CENTCOM said Wednesday, March 25, 2026. (CENTCOM)

On March 12, another six service members were killed when a KC-135 refueling aircraft crashed in western Iraq during a combat mission in support of Operation Epic Fury. 

The American military operation has inflicted heavy losses on the Iranian regime, including the death of former Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei 

BIDEN SECRETARY OF STATE SAYS ‘I WISH WE HAD GOTTEN’ IRAN DEAL

Airplane targeted in strike

CENTCOM footage of strikes against airplanes during the war with Iran. (U.S. Central Command on X)

CENTCOM said Monday that over 140 Iranian vessels have been damaged or destroyed during Operation Epic Fury. 

In total, more than 9,000 combat flights have been conducted as part of the campaign. 

Two F/A-18 Super Hornets launch from flight deck of USS Abraham Lincoln during Operation Epic Fury

Two F/A-18 Super Hornets launch from the flight deck of the U.S. Navy Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln in support of Operation Epic Fury, from an undisclosed location on March 3, 2026. (U.S. Navy/Handout via Reuters)

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“CENTCOM forces are striking targets to dismantle the Iranian regime’s security apparatus, prioritizing locations that pose an imminent threat,” CENTCOM said. 

Fox News Digital’s Stephen Sorace and Bradford Betz contributed to this report. 



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Republicans propose bill to fund Iran war amid fight over DHS shutdown | Trump administration

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Senate Republicans on Wednesday announced plans to begin a unilateral push for legislation that may include funding for Donald Trump’s war with Iran and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), while also including elements of a voter ID bill that is a priority of the party’s right wing.

The legislative effort – which could take weeks to play out and has no guarantee of success – comes amid a protracted standoff with Democrats over the partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which has led to lengthy lines at Transportation Security Administration (TSA) checkpoints at some airports.

The Senate budget committee chair, Lindsey Graham, announced that, for the second time since Trump returned to the White House, the party intends to craft a bill using the reconciliation procedure, which will allow it to circumvent the Senate filibuster and thus pass with only Republican votes.

“The purpose of the second reconciliation bill is to make sure there is adequate funding to secure our homeland and to support our men and women in the military who are fighting so bravely,” Graham wrote on X.

He also hinted the proposal would contain elements of the Save America act, which would impose a host of ID requirements on voters when they register and cast ballots. That bill is currently under consideration in the Senate, but lacks the Democratic support to pass.

“I also think we have many opportunities to improve voter integrity through reconciliation,” Graham wrote.

A second reconciliation bill has been discussed for months in the Capitol, after Republicans last year used the procedure to pass the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), which funded Trump’s crackdown on undocumented immigrants, instituted an array of tax cuts and made major changes to eligibility for Medicaid.

Graham’s announcement came the day after John Thune, the Senate majority leader, made a proposal to Democrats to restart funding to most of the DHS and its subagencies, with the exception of ICE. But the proposal would exclude many of the reforms the minority has demanded in response to the deaths of two US citizens at the hands of agents conducting an intensive immigration enforcement operation in Minneapolis. It also would not stop Republicans from reauthorizing funding to ICE through the reconciliation procedure.

The Democratic Senate minority leader, Chuck Schumer, told reporters on Monday that his party would send a counteroffer to Republicans. A spokesman for Thune said on Tuesday that no offer had yet been received.

The compromise offers the chance to resolve the lengthy TSA lines that have snaked through major airports in recent days, including Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta international airport and George Bush intercontinental airport in Houston. On Monday, ICE agents deployed by Trump to address the congestion began appearing at certain terminals.

But some Democrats are reticent to accept any deal that would see them give up leverage to force reforms on ICE and other agencies involved in Trump’s mass deportation push. Among the party’s demands are an end to agents wearing masks, a requirement they display ID and adhere to a use of force policy, and seek judicial warrants before entering private property.

“Just as Democrats have been very clear, we will immediately fund TSA, Fema, Coast Guard, and CISA while talks continue on ICE and border patrol. We’ve also made very clear that if we are talking about funding any part of ICE or CBP, we absolutely must take some key steps to rein them in,” Senator Patty Murray, the top Democratic appropriator, said on Monday.

“The current Republican offer in front of us does not do that.”

The partial shutdown has not affected ICE’s involvement in Trump’s immigration crackdown, because the agency’s deportation operations received tens of billions of dollars in funding under the OBBBA.

The GOP is likely to face its own challenges in seeing through a second reconciliation bill. The party’s right wing, with Trump’s encouragement, has made passage of the Save America act a priority, but Democratic opposition means it has no pathway out of the Senate.

The Utah senator Mike Lee acknowledged that there was no way to get the measure passed under the reconciliation procedure, which requires bills address only spending, revenue and the debt limit.

“It’d be great [if] SAVE America fit within the rigid definition of ‘budgetary’ for purposes of budget reconciliation,” Lee wrote on X. “But it doesn’t.

“We need to keep debating SAVE America until it passes,” he added.

Meanwhile, Republican controls the House of Representatives by a mere one seat, with three seats vacant, allowing any objectors to Trump’s war with Iran to wield outsize power over the bill.

Republicans nonetheless sought to keep the pressure on Democrats, with the House homeland security committee on Wednesday convening a hearing to explore the impacts of the shutdown on the DHS and subagencies including the Coast Guard, TSA and the Federal Emergency Management Administration (Fema).

Ha Nguyen McNeill, the acting administrator of the TSA, said that her agency’s employees had missed $1bn in paychecks because of the shutdown.

“Many in our workforce have missed bill payments, received eviction notices, had their cars repossessed and utilities shut off, lost their childcare, defaulted on loans, damaged their credit line and drained their retirement savings,” she said.

“Some are sleeping in their cars, selling their blood and plasma and taking on second jobs to make ends meet.”

Before this most recent shutdown, only 4% of TSA employees would not report to work. Now, McNeill said that “multiple major airports are experiencing days where 40% to 50% of their staff are calling out” because they cannot afford to work without pay.

The Democratic ranking member on the House homeland security committee, Bennie Thompson, meanwhile condemned Trump for sending ICE agents to airports, saying that the agents are not trained to do TSA’s job.

“We see images of ICE agents standing around or walking through terminals doing nothing to reduce the lines at security checkpoints, while TSA personnel continue to do their jobs without pay because Republicans refuse to vote for legislation to fund TSA,” Thompson said.



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UK police arrest 2 over alleged antisemitic arson attack on Jewish ambulances

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Police in the United Kingdom arrested two men Wednesday allegedly behind what Prime Minister Keir Starmer described as an “antisemitic arson attack” as detectives are investigating a possible Iran link. 

Metropolitan Police said the men, ages 45 and 47, were detained at addresses in northwest and central London on suspicion of arson with intent to endanger life and that their properties are being searched. On Monday, “Four ambulances from Hatzola, a volunteer-led ambulance service operating in the Golders Green area of north London, were set on fire,” according to police. 

“The antisemitic arson attack in Golders Green is horrifying,” Starmer said on X in reaction to the incident. 

A video circulating online purports to show Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamiyya, an Iran-linked group that has claimed responsibility for recent attacks on Jewish sites in Belgium and the Netherlands, taking credit for the London attack, according to the Jewish Chronicle.

UK COUNTERTERRORISM POLICE PROBE ANTISEMITIC ARSON ATTACK AS IRAN-LINKED GROUP CLAIMS RESPONSIBILITY

Aftermath of arson attack on ambulances in London

Members of the Jewish community view the scene of an antisemitic arson attack in the Golders Green neighborhood of north London, on Tuesday, March 24, 2026. (Henry Nicholls/AFP via Getty Images)

“We are aware of an online claim from a group taking responsibility for this attack,” Detective Chief Superintendent Luke Williams of the Metropolitan Police previously said. “Establishing the authenticity and accuracy of this claim will be a priority… but it is not something we can confirm at this point.” 

When asked about the possible Iran link on Wednesday, the Metropolitan Police told Fox News Digital that establishing any potential motivation behind the attack is part of the ongoing investigation but that it could not comment further at this time. 

Commander Helen Flanagan, Head of Counterterrorism Policing London, which the Metropolitan Police said is leading the investigation, said Wednesday, “We have been working around the clock since this appalling attack took place and this has led to these arrests being made this morning.”

BELGIUM DEPLOYS MILITARY TO PROTECT JEWISH SITES AFTER ANTISEMITIC SYNAGOGUE EXPLOSION

Firefighter puts out blaze in north London

Firefighters are seen tackling a blaze at Highfield Road in the Golders Green neighborhood of London, following an apparent arson attack on four ambulances belonging to the Jewish Community Ambulance Service. (PA/PA Images via Getty Images)

“This appears to be an important breakthrough in the investigation, but we’re also mindful that CCTV footage of the incident suggests there were at least three people involved,” she added. “We fully recognize the local community will still be concerned and our investigation very much remains active and we will continue to work to identify and seek to arrest all of those who may have been involved.” 

“We know that community concerns remain heightened and I want to reassure the community that an enhanced, bespoke policing plan and activity, which is particularly focused around vulnerable areas right across London, will continue over coming days and weeks,” Williams said Wednesday.

Ambulances seen damaged following reported arson attack in London

Charred remains of ambulances belonging to Hatzola, a Jewish community organization, which were set on fire in an incident that the police say is being treated as an antisemitic hate crime, in northwest London, on Monday, March 23, 2026.  (Hannah McKay/TPX Images of the Day/Reuters)

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“This includes specialist officers and capability being deployed alongside local officers to help protect certain locations and will also involve highly visible armed police patrols to serve as a deterrent to anyone seeking to cause our communities harm,” he continued. “I must stress that these are precautionary and not in response to any specific threat, and we continue to work alongside our colleagues in Counter Terrorism policing to support their investigation.” 

Fox News Digital’s Efrat Lachter contributed to this report. 



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HMRC hands £473M migration deal to AWS after rivals walk • The Register

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The UK’s tax collection agency has awarded Amazon Web Services – the only remaining bidder – a contract worth nearly £500 million to migrate services from three Fujitsu-run datacenters and host them for up to a decade.

His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) said the British branch of AWS’s Luxembourg-based subsidiary submitted the only tender it received and assessed for the deal in a contract award notice published on March 23.

negotiating but contract hurts you

UK govt office admits ability to negotiate billions in cloud spending curbed by vendor lock-in

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The agreement, priced at £472.8 million including VAT, is scheduled to run for a minimum of seven years from April 2026 with an option to extend it to ten years. HMRC can pay for extras including business services transformation, migration of services not run from the three Fujitsu datacenters, and application modernization.

The “Procurement for the provision of Hyperscaler Services to enable Data Centre Exit” contract is intended to let the tax collector end its use of three datacenters managed by Fujitsu by June 2028. As the project’s title suggests, the tender was aimed at the largest cloud suppliers.

In its initial March 2025 contract notice, the total financial value was estimated at £500 million including VAT. HMRC said it “anticipated that the appointment will be limited to a single Hyperscaler” able to migrate services and infrastructure from the Fujitsu-run bit barns – which use about a dozen operating systems including HP’s Unix, IBM’s AIX, and Sun’s Solaris – to UK-based cloud hosting.

When it published the tender in June, HMRC added “Hyperscaler services” to the title and said “modern hyperscaler cloud technologies would be the preferred solution.”

The notice stated that 70 percent of the contract decision would be based on quality, with just 20 percent on price and 10 percent on social value, with the full list of criteria provided to shortlisted suppliers.

Sources close to the bidding process told The Register in October that HMRC unofficially shortlisted AWS, Google, and IBM. Microsoft, the only other supplier of a similar scale to AWS, was not in the running. One insider suggested the tender had been written so that only AWS or Microsoft could realistically win it.

“[It was all about] ability to execute, a proven history of working with departments like this – seven-year track record of hosting massive hyperscaler-type services. It could only be AWS or Microsoft.”

HMRC specified it did not want hybrid cloud services so IBM decided not to bid further, a person familiar with the matter added. Google also decided to drop out. Bidding for contracts is an expensive exercise.

“There was only one company capable of bidding [at that point],” he added. “AWS was going into a tender negotiation knowing the value of the contract, and there was zero power for government to negotiate.”

“This is hugely political,” a well-placed source said. “Politicians stand up and talk about standardizing frameworks for procurement to get better discounts and value for money… sometimes it appears contracts are already locked down.”

In January 2025, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said it planned to look at how AWS and Microsoft dominate the UK market for cloud services, saying that “competition is not working as well as it could.” The pair account for up to 80 percent of cloud services market in Britain.

Earlier this month, in a parliamentary written question, Conservative MP Julia Lopez asked the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology how much this limited competition was costing public sector bodies.

Minister Kanishka Narayan said the CMA’s investigation had “identified a number of potential competition concerns with clear negative impacts for UK businesses, consumers and the public sector” without providing a cost. Previously, the CMA estimated businesses and the public sector were paying around £500 million more annually for cloud services than they should.

Narayan pointed out that the CMA had recommended its board prioritize a strategic market status investigation into this back in July, but as it was independent of government, this was up to the authority.

Kip Meeks, former cloud inquiry lead at the CMA, quit the agency in January over the slow rate of progress amid questions about the regulator’s independence.

In an article for The Register earlier this week, former Irish government chief information officer Bill McCluggage wrote: “If the UK is serious about digital sovereignty, fiscal responsibility, and fostering innovation and economic growth, then the CMA must act swiftly. Because the longer this drags on, the more expensive the outcome becomes for the UK taxpayer.”

The UK government is to draft an outage blueprint following the massive AWS outage in October that knocked out services at several departments, including HMRC. Clearly that didn’t deter the latest contract award heading in the direction of Amazon. ®



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What we know about US attack on Iraqi military site | US-Israel war on Iran

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NewsFeed

Iraqi authorities say a US air strike on a military site in Anbar killed seven soldiers and wounded 13, in an attack they described as a violation of international law amid escalating strikes on Iran-aligned forces in the country.



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