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White House seeks extra funds for Iran war as part of $87.6bn request | US politics

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The White House has requested Congress approve $87.6bn in new funding, much of which would go towards the costs of Donald Trump’s war with Iran, but a top Democrat has signaled the party will not support paying for an unpopular conflict that lawmakers never authorized.

The Trump administration’s supplemental funding request released on Wednesday comes amid a logjam in US Congress sparked by the president’s demand that the Senate pass a measure to impose sweeping new restrictions on voting nationwide.

The standoff intensified this week, when Trump refused to sign a major housing bill approved with bipartisan majorities until the voting bill advances, after previously linking its passage to renewal of a key foreign surveillance law.

In a letter outlining the Iran war funding request, the White House office of management and budget director, Russell Vought, wrote that $67.1bn of the funds would be used to cover costs related to the conflict with Iran, and would include $21bn for munitions procurement and the defense industrial base.

The request also contains $1.4bn to respond to the outbreak of Ebola in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, and $11.1bn for US farmers, who have been struggling with economic shocks related to the Trump administration’s tariff regime, as well as prices for fertilizer and diesel driven higher by the conflict with Iran.

The White House also wants Congress to codify in the proposal year-round sales of E15, a gasoline blend with higher ethanol content that can be cheaper but also cause more air pollution in warmer months.

The latest funding request comes on top of Trump’s proposed $1.5tn budget for the Pentagon, its largest in decades. While appropriators in the Senate and House of Representatives have advanced legislation to authorize $1.15tn of those funds, the White House’s request that the remaining $350bn be approved in a party-line measure has been met with skepticism from senior Republicans.

Democratic lawmakers have also scorned the idea of paying for the war with Iran, which Trump initiated in February alongside Israel without first requesting Congress’s permission. Surveys have shown the conflict is unpopular with the public, with a Reuters/Ipsos poll released this week finding that just a quarter of Americans believe the United States has emerged stronger from the conflict.

Earlier this week, the Senate passed a largely symbolic measure that would prevent the president from restarting hostilities, which his administration is seeking to resolve through negotiations with Tehran.

Patty Murray, the top Democrat on the Senate appropriations committee, blasted the supplemental funding request, saying that the Pentagon currently has $100bn in unspent funds.

“I will closely review this request in its entirety and ensure we take care of our servicemembers, but I will not rubber stamp tens of billions more for this disastrous war of choice,” Murray said in a statement.

The battle over the voting measure, known as the Save America Act, may also delay consideration of the White House funding proposal. Though the voting bill does not have the votes to pass the Senate, the Republican congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna on Thursday said she would in effect shut down the floor of the House by opposing procedural motions until the upper chamber takes action on Save America.

On Thursday, the House Republican leadership cancelled votes planned for Friday, while the Senate has adjourned until 13 July.



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Mike Rogers says Democrats moved ‘so far to the left’ in Michigan race

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Republican Michigan Senate candidate and former Rep. Mike Rogers said the Democratic Party’s recent embrace of socialist candidates is evidence that the party has moved “so far to the left” that everyday Americans are now starting to “wake up” and notice.

“Welcome to the modern Democratic Party,” Rogers told Fox News Digital. “This is not your dad’s Democratic Party. It’s not your grandmother’s Democratic Party. This thing has veered so far to the left, and Michigan is at the epicenter of that.”

Following New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s mayoral primary victory, which shook the Democratic Party, three more socialist and progressive candidates emerged victorious in Democratic primaries.

Mamdani-backed Democratic Socialists of America members Darializa Avila Chevalier and state Rep. Claire Valdez, as well as progressive Brad Lander, prevailed in their Democratic primaries this week. The candidates have campaigned on platforms centered on abolishing ICE, universal healthcare, affordability and criticism of Israel.

WINNERS AND LOSERS EMERGE AFTER SOCIALIST EARTHQUAKE ROCKS NYC PRIMARIES

Rogers and Mamdani split

Republican Senate candidate and former Rep. Mike Rogers told Fox News Digital that Americans are starting to “wake up” and see the Democratic Party’s leftward shift. (Fox News Digital ; Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

The winning candidates have raised renewed concerns about where the future of the Democratic Party is headed. Rogers said the Democratic Party has neglected working-class and middle-class Americans, leaving more people in Michigan questioning whether they should build their futures in the state or look for opportunities elsewhere.

“I think that the Democratic Party walked away from working and middle-class Americans a decade ago, and in Michigan, people are starting to wake up to this notion that we can’t continue to do this and expect our kids to stay,” he said.

Rogers said Michigan has its own worries about socialism and called the ideas from far-left figures in Michigan “a little bit terrifying.”

“Matter of fact, I think all three of the Democrats who are running for the nomination are out of step already, and it’s only gonna get worse,” he said. “This really will be about crazy versus common sense in the state of Michigan.”

Michigan Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed, who is endorsed by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., has campaigned on many of the same policies as New York City’s winning candidates. The progressive has also faced criticism for opposing the current U.S. partnership with Israel over humanitarian concerns during the war in Gaza and for campaigning with controversial streamer Hasan Piker, who has called Hamas “the lesser of two evils” and said the U.S. “deserved 9/11.”

DEMOCRATIC U.S. SENATE HOPEFUL SAYS HER PARTY NIXING ROGAN INTERVIEW IS WHY PEOPLE ARE ‘TURNING AGAINST’ IT

Mamdani and endorsed candidates in NY primary

Congressional candidates Claire Valdez, left, Brad Lander, second from left, and Darializa Avila Chevalier, right, raise their hands with Mayor Zohran Mamdani during a Get Out the Vote rally in New York City on June 18, 2026. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

However, Rogers said voters are rejecting the Democratic Party’s shift, pointing to Graham Platner’s Senate primary victory in Maine and accusing Michigan Democrats of “flirting” with socialism.

New York’s socialist sweep came just weeks after another closely watched race in Maine, where Graham Platner won the party’s nomination despite multiple controversies, including inflammatory Reddit posts, a Nazi-linked chest tattoo, reports that he exchanged sexually explicit messages with multiple women while married, and allegations from former girlfriends involving rape fantasies, heavy drinking and violent behavior.

“But people see a guy in Maine, Nazi tattoo, communist in 2019 espousing,” Rogers said. “You see the candidates in our race who are flirting with all that Democrat socialism. That’s why our message is resonating, and that’s why we’re doing as well as we are on the ground.”

Rogers is running in Michigan’s Republican Senate primary, while El-Sayed will face fellow progressive state Sen. Mallory McMorrow and Rep. Haley Stevens, D-Mich., in the Democratic primary. Both primaries will be held on Aug. 4 to determine who will fill the seat being vacated by retiring Sen. Gary Peters.

Rogers said Michigan Democrats are promoting “shared misery” and predicted “the rest of the country is going to be as confused as we are about who they are and what they want to do.”

“What these three Democrats are talking about, shared misery,” he said. “We’re gonna share our misery with everybody in the state. Not selling well, so we look forward to November and let them hash it out between now and then about who the Democrats are.”

LIZ PEEK: DEMOCRATS FACE A SOCIALIST RECKONING THEY ARE TOO SCARED TO STOP

Abdul El-Sayed and Sen. Bernie Sanders

U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., stands with Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed after speaking at Mumford High School on May 3, 2026 in Detroit, Mich. (Sarah Rice/Getty Images)

Michigan depends on manufacturing jobs, Rogers said, arguing a socialist environment “doesn’t allow those jobs to grow” and instead “makes a lot less of them.” He said Sanders’ win in Michigan’s 2016 Democratic presidential primary is evidence that “there is a faction of Democrats that are willing to give up on the free-market idea of an American economy and aren’t really happy with America.”

But Rogers said voters he has spoken with no longer trust Democrats’ promises to lower costs, saying they are “ready for change” after years of Democratic control in the state and that “everything bad that’s happened to us has really happened in that time frame.”

Rogers also blamed Democratic leadership for weaker school rankings, slow wage growth, manufacturing job losses and higher utility bills, saying those issues can be “traced back to what Democrat policies did to us in the state.”

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Highlighting his own campaign, Rogers said his “optimism” and focus on affordability, jobs and education is helping him beat his Democratic opponents in recent polls.

“Our positive, issue-centered campaign for Michigan is working, and that’s why in the last six polls or so we’ve been ahead of our Democrat opponents,” he said.



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Venezuela struggles to respond to devastating twin earthquakes | Earthquakes

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Reporting from Caracas for Al Jazeera, Noris Soto says authorities appear to lack a clear response plan in the aftermath of two powerful earthquakes. The recovery is being hampered by severe damage to communication systems, as displaced residents are housed in hotels.



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Escaping Darfur: Mothers face starvation under trees in Chad | Conflict

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Darfur, Sudan – Under a lone tree in the Iridimi refugee camp in eastern Chad, 45-year-old Thuraya Mukhtar sits quietly, trying to piece together the remnants of a life that was safe before war tore it from its roots.

Just a week ago, the deafening roar of explosions and relentless gunfire forced her to abandon her home in the Orchi area of western Sudan. She left behind her life’s work and dreams, carrying across the border only the inescapable, haunting identity of a refugee.

“I left without realising that I would never return. I carried my children and ran, with fire behind us and bullets over our heads,” Thuraya told Al Jazeera, her voice steady but laced with exhaustion. “We haven’t eaten for two days, and my children are crying from hunger. I don’t know how I will feed them tomorrow, or where I will sleep tonight.”

Thuraya is but one of thousands of women now bearing the crushing weight of forced displacement. In their eyes lies an endless narrative of fear, hunger and wandering. In silence, they search for a single drop of water for children who ask them every day: When are we going home?

A trail of ashes

The devastation that drove Thuraya into the Chadian desert began on June 15 , when the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) launched a sweeping offensive on the Orchi area in the Um Baru locality of North Darfur.

Riding horses and camels and backed by heavily armed mechanised vehicles, the fighters left a trail of absolute ruin. The assault resulted in the complete incineration of ten villages. The local market was looted and burned to the ground, and vast numbers of livestock and civilian property were swept away.

Stripped of their homes and livelihoods, displaced families from North Darfur are forced to sleep on the bare earth without shelter or basic necessities.
Stripped of their homes and livelihoods, displaced families from North Darfur are forced to sleep on the bare earth without shelter or basic necessities [Mohammed Zakaria Khamis/Al Jazeera]

A week after the skies over Orchi turned black with smoke, thousands of displaced families are still living in the open. With no shelter, food, or medicine, they sleep on the harsh, unforgiving dirt. They huddle under trees that offer no real shield from the scorching daytime sun or the biting desert nights. Some try to cover their shivering children with dry branches; others cannot even find that.

Eating leaves to survive

While political leaders discuss military tactics, the reality for the civilians hiding in the valleys paints a visceral picture of survival. Water is the most urgent crisis; following the deliberate destruction of the Orchi reservoir, the water supply to the burning villages was entirely severed.

“We walked long distances before reaching the Chadian town of Tine. Along the way, we ate tree leaves and drank contaminated water we found in puddles,” Hawa Adam, a 35-year-old mother from Orchi, told Al Jazeera. “Food is almost nonexistent. Whatever supplies we had were either looted by the RSF or burned in our homes.”

For 40-year-old Um Ibrahim, the trauma is compounded by the helplessness of watching her family starve.

The modest belongings of displaced people in a valley near Tine represent all that remains of their lives following the burning and looting of Orchi.
The modest belongings of displaced people in a valley near Tine represent all that remains of their lives following the burning and looting of Orchi [Mohammed Zakaria Khamis/Al Jazeera]

“We left our homes with no food or medicine. The night is the hardest part, and the children cry from hunger and fear,” she said. “My kids haven’t eaten in two days. My husband was a farmer, but our livelihood burned along with our house.”

Nowhere to hide

The terror does not end once the ground forces move on. According to fleeing residents, the skies remain deadly.

Adam Abakar, a recently displaced civilian, told Al Jazeera that drones continue to heavily patrol the airspace over their region, methodically targeting remaining water sources, livestock and civilian homes.

“We cannot return to our villages. The planes fly over our heads every day and target any movement, as if they want to expel us from the last place we seek refuge in,” Abakar said, describing the feeling of being caught between the anvil of ground assaults and the hammer of aerial surveillance.

The catastrophic influx of refugees is now overwhelming local humanitarian networks. Mustafa Barah, head of the Darfur Genocide Victims Commission, noted that camps in eastern Chad are receiving up to 80 fleeing families every day. “They arrive exhausted, without food or water, some carrying their sick children on their shoulders,” he said.

Mohammed Safi, the media official for the Tine Emergency Room, told Al Jazeera that resources are virtually depleted. “Over the past two days, we have received more than 7,000 displaced families,” Safi said. “All of them are in desperate need of tents, blankets, food and safe drinking water. The situation requires urgent intervention.”

‘Systematic demographic change’

Sudanese officials argue that the horrors witnessed in Orchi are not random acts of war, but a calculated geopolitical strategy.

Salah Rassas Adam Tour, a member of Sudan’s Sovereign Council, told Al Jazeera that the ongoing military operations by the national army aim to “break the bones” of the RSF.

“The targeting and displacement of civilians is not a tactical error; it is a systematic policy followed by the Rapid Support Forces to change the demographic makeup of the region,” Tour said, warning that calls for the country’s partition are illusions aimed at destabilising Sudan.

Tour called on the international community to intervene and halt the “forced displacement.” Al Jazeera reached out to the RSF for comment regarding the accusations of torching villages and engineering forced displacement in Orchi, but the group had not responded by the time of publication.

A famine ignored

The horrific accounts from the Chad-Sudan border coincide with a dire warning from the international community. On June 17 , a joint report by the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the World Food Programme (WFP) declared that Sudan is facing the world’s worst hunger crisis, with 19.5 million people enduring acute food insecurity and famine threatening 14 areas across Darfur.

Yet, for mothers such as Thuraya and Hawa, official statements regarding “systematic displacement” translate into a grim daily reality. As the geography of displacement expands from Tine to Karnoi, and from Um Baru to Orchi, thousands of families are left fighting for survival under the sparse shade of trees. Amid UN warnings of an impending famine, these uprooted civilians are left waiting to see if international intervention will materialise before more villages are burned to the ground.



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Shark attack in Bahamas leaves 12-year-old American boy in stable condition

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A 12-year-old American boy is in stable condition after suffering a shark attack in the Bahamas on Tuesday, the Royal Bahamas Police Force told multiple media outlets.

The boy was vacationing in the Exuma Cays when the shark attacked him, the New York Post reported.

The boy was swimming off the coast of the Staniel Cay island when the assault occurred, according to the Post.

Authorities did not provide details on the species of shark.

AMERICAN TOURIST ATTACKED BY SHARK IN VACATION HOT SPOT

White sand beach and turquoise waters in Exuma Bahamas

Exuma, a district in The Bahamas consisting of over 365 islands and cays, features white sand beaches and turquoise waters, including the Tropic of Cancer Beach near George Town on Little Exuma. (iStock)

The boy was rushed by boat to receive medical treatment on New Providence, The Bahamas’ most populous island and home to the capital Nassau.

View of the entrance of the port of Nassau from the Sydney Poitier Bridge in Nassau, Bahamas on April 29, 2019.

View of the entrance of the port of Nassau from the Sydney Poitier Bridge in Nassau, Bahamas on April 29, 2019. (DANIEL SLIM/AFP via Getty Images)

The boy is in stable condition, the Royal Bahamas Police Force reportedly told the Post.

While The Bahamas ranks ninth globally in yearly shark attacks, the Tuesday attack is the second recorded unprovoked shark attack in The Bahamas in 2026.

SHARK ATTACK SURVIVOR WAKES FROM 10-DAY COMA AND SHARES FIRST WORDS WITH FAMILY AT HER HOSPITAL BEDSIDE

In March, an Australian woman was bitten while swimming near the country’s Andros Island, sustaining severe injuries to her right arm, according to the Global Shark Attack File.

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A shark swimming underwater in the ocean.

A great white shark swimming. (iStock)

There were five unprovoked shark attacks in the country’s waters in 2025, according to the database.

Fox News Digital contacted the Royal Bahamas Police Force for additional information.



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US Supreme Court paves way for government to block asylum seekers at border | Donald Trump News

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The court’s three liberal justices dissented, saying the ruling ‘circumvents’ US law by allowing agents to prevent asylum seekers from making a claim.

The United States Supreme Court has ruled that government officials can turn away asylum seekers at the southern border with Mexico if they have not yet set foot on US soil.

The ruling on Thursday clears the way for the administration of President Donald Trump to revive a controversial policy known as “metering”, in which immigration agents physically block those seeking asylum from crossing the border.

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Rights groups have argued that the practice is a way of bypassing domestic law requiring the US to grant the right to apply for asylum to anyone arriving in the country. They also point out that physically blocking individuals from seeking asylum incentivises more dangerous routes.

The 6-3 ruling broke down along ideological lines, with the court’s six conservative justices ruling in favour and the three liberal justices dissenting.

In the majority opinion, Justice Samuel Alito pointed to the provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) that says a foreigner who “arrives in the United States” may apply for asylum and must be inspected ‌by a federal immigration official.

“The wisdom of the policy of metering alien arrivals at the southern border is not before us,” Alito wrote. “We decide only that an alien standing in Mexico does not ‘arriv[e] in the United States’. The INA neither entitles such an alien to apply for asylum nor requires an immigration officer to inspect him.”

The ruling reverses a lower court’s decision that found the practice of “metering” illegal. The Trump administration, which has taken a hardline approach to all forms of immigration to the US, had appealed the lower court’s decision.

The practice predates Trump, with former President Barack Obama using “metering” to turn people away at the southern border in the final year of his presidency, amid a dramatic uptick in crossings.

Trump formalised the strategy during his first term, allowing border agents to decline asylum claims when they deem they no longer have the necessary resources to process them. The administration of US President Joe Biden ended the practice in 2021.

In a scathing dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor said the majority’s ruling allows the White House to “circumvent” legal procedures designed to assure every asylum case is individually assessed.

She also underscored the cruelty of authorities refusing asylum seekers who escaped persecution and arrived at the US border, only to be turned away.

“They may do so even if the asylum seeker is at the threshold of a port of entry designated to receive all noncitizens who seek entrance into the country. Even if the port of entry has ample capacity to inspect that person, including an available asylum officer trained to process asylum applications,” she wrote.

“Even if the asylum seeker is certain to be persecuted, or killed, if she is turned away.”

Sotomayor further said the majority’s “illogical interpretation is driven almost entirely by a fixation on a single word: ‘in.’” She argued the majority failed to consider the “statutory context and history” of how the word is used.

The ruling comes shortly after a federal judge in early June ruled the Trump administration must lift a separate blanket pause on processing asylum cases, which the administration had imposed due to what it called a border “emergency”.

Haiti and Syria TPS ruling

In another immigration ruling on Thursday, the top court cleared the way for the Trump administration to strip legal protections from hundreds of thousands of Syrians and Haitians living in the US with Temporary Protected Status (TPS).

The status is granted when it is deemed unsafe for citizens of a country to return to their homelands, in light of armed conflict, political instability or natural disaster.

About 350,000 Haitians and 6,100 Syrians are believed to currently be living in the US under TPS. Following Thursday’s ruling, those with TPS were subject to losing their work authorisation and could be subject to deportation.

Justice Alito again wrote the majority opinion, saying that the US law on TPS “plainly bars” judicial review of the executive branch’s decision.

Alito also opposed a lower court’s finding that Trump’s actions towards Haitians were likely motivated by “racial animus”.

Plaintiffs in that case had pointed to Trump’s campaign comments, including spreading unfounded claims that Haitians living in Ohio were killing and eating pets.



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ABB Robotics and PSYONIC use bionic hand data to train robot grips

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Robots have gotten very good at moving fast, repeating steps and doing jobs that would wear you and me out. But ask a robot to pick up something delicate, oddly shaped or slightly different from the last item it handled, and things can get a little complicated quickly.

That is where a new collaboration between ABB Robotics and PSYONIC comes in. ABB Robotics is working with PSYONIC, a California bionics company, to explore whether real-world touch and motion data from human prosthetic use can help train robotic arms.

In other words, the same kind of bionic hand that helps a person grip a tool, pick up a fragile object or adjust pressure in real time could help teach robots how to do those tasks better.

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SOFT ROBOTIC ARMBAND GIVES PROSTHETIC HAND USERS NATURAL CONTROL

Bionic hands

The PSYONIC Ability Hand can capture touch, motion and grip-force data from real human prosthetic use. (ABB Robotics)

How a bionic hand could teach a robot

The collaboration centers on PSYONIC’s Ability Hand and ABB’s GoFa cobot. The Ability Hand was originally developed for prosthetic use. It has multi-articulating fingers, pressure sensors, vibration feedback and flexible mechanics that help it conform to irregular objects. That combination is important because human grip isn’tt one fixed action. You hold a coffee cup differently than a screwdriver. You handle an egg differently than a phone. Most of us do that without thinking about it.

For robots, that instinctive adjustment is hard. ABB and PSYONIC want to explore how movement, contact and grip-force data from the Ability Hand can help train robots to handle objects that are fragile, uneven or unpredictable. ABB’s GoFa cobot brings the industrial side of the equation, offering the accuracy and repeatability needed to test those movements in a controlled way. The result could be a robot arm that learns from real human handling data, then applies that information to factory and warehouse tasks.

Why robot grip is such a hard problem

Industrial robots can already lift, move, weld, sort and assemble with impressive speed. However, many still struggle when a task involves subtle touch. Think about a robot picking up a soft package, a medical component or a part that shifts slightly on a conveyor belt. Too much pressure can damage the item. Too little pressure can make the robot drop it. A tiny change in angle can throw off the whole process.

JOB-KILLING ROBOT LEARNS AT WORK, AND IT’S COMING TO THE FACTORY FLOOR

That is why gripping and dexterity remain major challenges in automation. ABB calls this a key part of Autonomous Versatile Robotics, or AVR, its vision for robots that can sense, reason, move and handle objects with precision in changing environments.

Marc Segura, president of ABB Robotics, put it this way: Human dexterity remains “one of the most difficult things to replicate in industrial-grade robotics.” He said the collaboration with PSYONIC could help “close the long-standing gap” between human and robot dexterity. That gap is where this technology could make a real difference.

What makes the PSYONIC Ability Hand different

The PSYONIC Ability Hand was built to help people. It uses myoelectric control, touch sensing and compliant mechanics in a lightweight design. Its sensors can detect pressure during a grip, while vibration feedback can help communicate touch back to the person using it. That same sensing ability could be valuable for robots.

AI ENABLES PARALYZED MAN TO CONTROL ROBOTIC ARM WITH BRAIN SIGNALS

PSYONIC says the Ability Hand can capture detailed data about movement, contact and grip force. When that hand is used by people in real-world situations, it can generate a more natural dataset than a lab-only robot demonstration.

Bionic hands

ABB’s GoFa cobot is being used to test how bionic hand data could help robots handle delicate and irregular objects. (ABB Robotics)

Dr. Aadeel Akhtar, founder and CEO of PSYONIC, called dexterous manipulation “a data challenge as much as a hardware challenge.” That line really gets to the heart of this. Better robot hands are important. Yet the training data behind those hands may be what decides how useful they become in real workplaces.

Where bionic hand data could show up first

ABB and PSYONIC say this work could apply across automotive, aerospace, packaging, logistics and life sciences. That makes sense. These are industries where robots already play a major role, but where delicate or variable handling can still slow things down. A robot that can better adjust its grip could help with fragile components, oddly shaped products, soft packaging or repetitive tasks that are tough on the body.

HUMANOID ROBOTS HANDLE QUALITY CHECKS AND ASSEMBLY AT AUTO PLANT

The International Federation of Robotics has also pointed to advanced gripping and digital integration as a way to reduce engineering time by up to 30%. That’s important for companies because automation often gets delayed by setup, tuning and custom engineering. If touch-enabled robotic hands can reduce some of that work, companies could deploy robots faster and use them in more flexible ways.

How touch-trained robots could change factory work

There is a hopeful side to this. Robots that handle repetitive or ergonomically challenging work could reduce strain on people. That could mean fewer workers stuck doing the same painful motion all day. However, there is also a bigger labor question here. More capable robots could take on tasks that once seemed too variable to automate. That may affect how companies hire, train and assign work in the future.

The most useful version of this technology would support people instead of simply replacing them. For example, robots could handle the repetitive gripping while workers focus on oversight, quality checks, machine setup and higher-skill work.

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Kurt’s key takeaways

ABB Robotics and PSYONIC are taking a different approach to one of robotics’ hardest problems: touch. Instead of training robots only in a lab, they want to use real movement and grip data from a bionic hand that people already use. That could help robots become better at delicate, variable tasks that have traditionally been hard to automate. It could also push industrial robots closer to working safely and effectively around humans in more settings. But the human side should not get lost in the excitement. If robots are going to learn from human touch, companies need to be clear about data use, workplace impact and safety testing.

Bionic hands

The collaboration could help robots become more useful in factories, warehouses and other workplaces where precise grip matters. (ABB Robotics)

Would you feel comfortable knowing a robot at work was trained using real human touch data?  Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.com.

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Israeli forces shoot and kill Palestinians in occupied West Bank, Gaza | Israel-Palestine conflict News

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The deaths come amid escalating Israeli military raids and settler attacks across the occupied territories.

Israeli forces have killed at least two Palestinians in separate shooting incidents in the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

In a statement on Thursday, the Palestinian health ministry announced the death of 32-year-old Mustafa Taha Mustafa al-Khatib “at dawn today after being shot by Israeli occupation forces in Salfit”.

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Al-Khatib was killed after Israeli forces stormed his home and shot him dead, local sources told news agencies.

His family told the Anadolu news agency that al-Khatib had returned from Jordan two years ago to work and had no known security or armed group affiliation.

His uncle Yassin Khatib described the killing as a “cold-blooded execution”.

“From the broken door and the damaged contents of the room, it was obvious they [Israeli forces] forced their way in without giving [al-Khatib] him time even to open the door or get dressed,” Yassin Khatib told Anadolu.

He said his nephew, who held both Jordanian and Palestinian citizenship, had lived on the property for four years, working in agriculture and construction.

Relatives said Israeli troops prevented ambulances from reaching al-Khatib for nearly two hours.

The Palestinian Prisoner’s Society said Israeli forces left his body inside the house after ransacking it.

The Israeli military told the AFP news agency that its troops had fired at someone “throwing objects” at soldiers during a raid in the area.

The killing came alongside separate settler violence in Halhul, north of Hebron, where residents said Israeli settlers pelted Palestinian homes with stones after the dismantling of a nearby outpost. A local resident told Israeli news outlet Haaretz he saw about 35 masked settlers throwing stones at houses and trying to start fires.

The violence came a day after another Palestinian, Mohammad Nazem Zayed, was killed in Yabad, west of Jenin, after Israeli undercover agents besieged a house and shot him inside.

One killed in Gaza

At the same time, Israeli attacks have not ceased in Gaza, despite a so-called “ceasefire” agreed in October.

In northern Gaza, one Palestinian was killed after Israeli troops opened fire in the al-Atatra area of Beit Lahiya on Thursday, Anadolu reported.

The deceased was transferred to al-Shifa Medical Complex, medical sources said.

A separate drone strike hit a group of pedestrians near the Italian Complex in Gaza City’s Nassr neighbourhood, wounding two people, one critically.

Gaza’s Health Ministry says Israeli violations of the ceasefire, which took effect on October 10, 2025, have already killed 1,031 Palestinians and injured 3309 others. In total, since Israel’s genocidal war began in October 2023, more than 73,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza.

At the same time, violence against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank has escalated sharply since Israel launched its genocidal war, with intensifying Israeli military raids and settler attacks on homes and property.

The Palestinian health ministry said al-Khatib’s death brought the number of Palestinians killed in the West Bank since the beginning of the year to 72, including 17 children, five women, and two elderly people.



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Rubio: Gulf countries don’t support Strait of Hormuz tolls | GCC

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NewsFeed

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said all Gulf countries oppose a toll in the Strait of Hormuz during a tour of the region following US-Iran talks. Rubio added, “There isn’t a nation on Earth that supports having to pay money to go through the straits”.



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