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Who will answer for the Iranian schoolchildren killed in Minab? | News

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An investigation finds the Minab school strike may have been deliberate. Who can hold the US accountable?

A United States missile strike destroyed a primary school in Minab, Iran. It killed more than 170 people, most of them young children. An Al Jazeera investigation suggests the attack may have been deliberate. As US officials deny responsibility and launch an internal probe, can Americans hold the US accountable?

In this episode: 

Episode credits:

This episode was produced by Chloe K. Li, Sarí el-Khalili with Spencer Cline, Catherine Nouhan, Tuleen Barakat and our host, Malika Bilal. It was edited by Alexandra Locke. 

Our sound designer is Alex Roldan. Our video editors are Hisham Abu Salah and Mohannad al-Melhem. Alexandra Locke is The Take’s executive producer. 

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NYC triples spending to $368M as homeless population grows by 26%

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New York City has more than tripled spending on unsheltered homelessness since 2019, shelling out nearly $368 million even as the number of people living on the streets continued to rise, according to a state comptroller’s report.

The city’s own numbers show the unsheltered population grew from 3,588 in fiscal year 2019 to 4,504 in fiscal year 2025, a 26% increase from pre-pandemic levels. Over that same period, spending on services for the unsheltered jumped 262%, from $102 million to nearly $368 million. 

That works out to roughly $81,700 per unsheltered person in FY 2025 — slightly more than the city’s median household income, though the comparison is only a broad benchmark since public spending and household earnings are not directly comparable.

The numbers show the city is pouring in more money while the street homeless population continues to grow — and taxpayers are footing the bill.

FROM FREE BUSES TO CITY-OWNED GROCERY STORES, HERE ARE MAMDANI’S KEY ECONOMIC PROMISES

A man is seen sleeping on the E train, one of the subway lines most utilized by homeless New Yorkers for shelter on Monday, April 7, 2025.

A man sleeps on the E train, one of the subway lines most utilized by homeless New Yorkers for shelter, in Queens, New York, on Monday, April 7, 2025. (Victor J. Blue for The Washington Post/Getty Images)

Still, the report notes that New York’s shelter system remains unusually large by national standards. 

Los Angeles, the city with the next-largest homeless population, has about 71,000 homeless people, roughly half of New York City’s 2024 total, and about 70% of them are unsheltered. In New York City, by contrast, nearly 97% of the homeless population is in shelters.

The findings are likely to add fuel to the broader debate over housing affordability, as soaring rents and a shortage of low-cost housing remain central to New York City’s homelessness crisis — and a key issue for Mayor Zohran Mamdani.

While Mamdani has proposed freezing rents on roughly 2 million stabilized apartments, many economists argue that rent freezes may shield current tenants in the short term while worsening the city’s long-term housing shortage — doing little to solve the supply crisis at the root of New York’s homelessness problem.

MAMDANI BUDGET POURS MILLIONS INTO DEI OFFICES AND CUTS 5,000 NYPD JOBS

Zohran Mamdani speaking on New York City funding in front of a painting of Alexander Hamilton.

New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani unveiled his financial plan for the nation’s largest city during a news conference on Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026. (Seth Wenig/AP Photo)

More broadly, his $127 billion budget proposal calls for higher taxes on wealthy residents and corporations, along with a possible 9.5% property tax increase if state lawmakers decline to act.

Whether that approach will ease the affordability crunch or further disrupt the housing market remains an open question, with critics warning that rent freezes and higher taxes could discourage investment and strain supply.

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People are seen walking across the street in New York City.

Crowds walk through midtown Manhattan on October 16, 2025, in New York City.  (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

In the nation’s largest city and a global financial capital, the stakes of Mamdani’s agenda extend far beyond local politics. The success or failure of his housing and tax proposals could shape not only the future of New York’s affordability crisis, but also the broader debate over regulation, taxation and progressive urban governance.

Mamdani’s office did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.



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ConnectWise patches new flaw allowing ScreenConnect hijacking

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ConnectWise patches new flaw allowing ScreenConnect hijacking

ConnectWise is warning ScreenConnect customers of a cryptographic signature verification vulnerability that could lead to unauthorized access and privilege escalation.

The flaw affects ScreenConnect versions before 26.1. It is tracked as CVE-2026-3564 and received a critical severity score.

ScreenConnect is a remote access platform typically used by managed service providers (MSPs), IT departments, and support teams. It can be either cloud-hosted by ConnectWise or on-premise on the customer’s server.

An attacker could exploit the security issue to extract and use the ASP.NET machine keys for unauthorized session authentication.

“If the machine key material for a ScreenConnect instance is disclosed, a threat actor may be able to generate or modify protected values in ways that may be accepted by the instance as valid,” reads the vendor’s advisory.

“This can result in unauthorized access and unauthorized actions within ScreenConnect.”

The vendor addressed this by adding stronger protection for machine keys, including encrypted storage and improved handling starting ScreenConnect version 26.1.

Cloud users have been automatically moved to the safe version, but system administrators managing on-premises deployments must upgrade to version 26.1 as soon as possible.

ConnectWise also stated that researchers observed attempts to abuse disclosed ASP.NET machine key material in the wild, so the risk from CVE-2026-3564 is tangible right now.

However, the vendor told BleepingComputer that it has no evidence of active exploitation in the wild as of writing, and therefore has no indicators of compromise (IoCs) to share with defenders.

“We do not have evidence that this specific vulnerability (CVE-2026-3564) was exploited in ConnectWise-hosted ScreenConnect, so we do not have any confirmed IOCs to share,” stated ConnectWise to BleepingComputer.

“We encourage any researchers who believe they have identified active exploitation to engage in responsible disclosure so findings can be validated and addressed appropriately.”

However, there are claims that the issue has been actively exploited by Chinese hackers for years, but it is unclear if the same security flaw was leveraged.

There have been in the past attacks from nation-state hackers that exploited CVE-2025-3935 to steal the secret machine keys used by a ScreenConnect server.

Apart from upgrading to ScreenConnect version 26.1, the software vendor also recommends tightening access to configuration files and secrets, checking logs for unusual authentication activity, protecting backups and old data snapshots, and keeping extensions up to date.

Malware is getting smarter. The Red Report 2026 reveals how new threats use math to detect sandboxes and hide in plain sight.

Download our analysis of 1.1 million malicious samples to uncover the top 10 techniques and see if your security stack is blinded.



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Trump temporarily waives century-old shipping law amid rising fuel costs | Donald Trump News

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United States President Donald Trump has waived a more than century-old maritime shipping law in an effort to quell rising fuel costs amid the ongoing US and Israeli war against Iran.

On Wednesday, the White House issued a 60-day waiver to lift the Jones Act, which would allow foreign-flagged vessels to transport cargo to US ports.

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Normally, under the Jones Act, goods shipped between US ports must be carried on vessels that are US-built, US-flagged and mostly US-owned. The requirement sharply limits the number of tankers available for domestic shipments but is supported by maritime industry unions.

Those industry groups questioned whether Wednesday’s waiver would be effective in lowering fuel costs.

“Waiving the Jones Act would do nothing to reduce gasoline [petrol] prices. In fact, the primary driver of gasoline prices is the cost of crude oil, not domestic shipping costs,” leaders from American Maritime Officers, a maritime labour union, said in a letter to President Trump earlier this month.

“A Jones Act waiver would instead create opportunities for foreign-flag operators that avoid paying US taxes, rely heavily on low-wage labor, and operate under regulatory regimes that circumvent international labor and vessel safety standards.”

But the Trump administration defended the waiver as a temporary measure that could reduce shipping costs and speed up deliveries.

“This action will allow vital resources like oil, natural gas, fertilizer, and coal to flow freely to US ports for sixty days, and the Administration remains committed to continuing to strengthen our critical supply chains,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told Al Jazeera in a statement.

The move comes less than three weeks into the US-and-Israeli-led war against Iran.

As part of its counteroffensive, Iran has largely blocked shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway that connects the Gulf to the Indian Ocean.

Roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas supply passes through that trade route.

But since the war began on February 28, the number of tankers in the strait has dropped. Only about 90 ships have passed through the passage since the war began, and 20 ships have been attacked in the area.

More than 400 vessels are still stranded near the passage, according to Kpler, a global market intelligence platform. That blockage has, in turn, caused the price of fuel to spike worldwide.

To bring prices down domestically, Trump has already indicated he would release 172 million barrels of oil from the US government’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve, a supply kept for emergencies.

Rachel Ziemba, a senior fellow at the think tank Center for a New American Security, said the Jones Act waiver is designed to support that move — but it will have limited impact on global price fluctuations.

“The waiver of the Jones Act helps to make the Strategic Petroleum Reserve release more effective and reduces the costs of getting fuel from the Gulf Coast to other parts of the US,” Ziemba said.

“It won’t add supplies on its own, though — just mitigates some friction of getting supplies to the Northeast and, to an extent, the Pacific coasts and US territories.”

Costs jump

The cost of shipping has also increased since the war began. Maritime insurance costs have surged across the board, in some cases by more than 1,000 percent, according to a Reuters analysis.

That comes in addition to the surge in fuel prices, as global oil supply is strained. The average price for a gallon of petrol in the US is $3.84, up from $2.92 ($1.01 per litre from $0.77 per litre) this time last month, according to the American Automobile Association (AAA).

But changes at the petrol pump as a result of the Jones Act waiver will likely be negligible, according to experts.

“The waiver will simplify logistics, making it slightly cheaper and easier for products to flow, mainly from the Gulf to the US Northeast,” said Patrick De Haan, the head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy, an app that tracks fuel costs.

But De Haan warned not to expect steep price drops from the waiver.

“It won’t have a ‘visible’ impact in reducing prices at the pump as of now; it will merely offset rising retail prices. I estimate it may offset 3 to 10 cents per gallon ($0.007 to $0.02 per litre) of price increases,” he said.

That assessment was echoed by 2022 analysis, which found that a Jones Act waiver would only save drivers on the US East Coast about 10 cents per gallon.

Others believe that there will not be an impact for consumers at all.

David St Amand, the president of the maritime consulting firm Navigistics Consulting, explained the cost breakdown in a statement to Al Jazeera.

“A Jones Act waiver is unlikely to reduce the price of gasoline at the pump, and any claims of a material – eg, $0.05 – benefit to US consumers is not possible. Any benefit would almost certainly flow to new entrants to the market  – eg, commodity traders,” St Amand said.

US markets are trending downward following news of the Jones Act waiver. The Nasdaq and the S&P 500 are both down 0.5 percent, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average is down 0.8 percent in midday trading.

Meanwhile, shipping giants are seeing a surge in their stocks on the heels of the news.

Shares for the logistics company Maersk, which previously suspended shipments through the Strait of Hormuz following the strikes, are up 2.5 percent. Hapag-Lloyd AG, a container company that also suspended shipments, is up 2.6 percent.



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Martin Scorsese brings Mary’s story to life in ‘The Saints’ Easter special

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Academy Award-winning filmmaker Martin Scorsese returns to Fox Nation this Easter season with a special extended episode of “The Saints,” bringing viewers a deeply personal and cinematic exploration of the Virgin Mary, the mother of Jesus and one of the most revered figures in Christianity.

“[Jesus’] resurrection is intertwined with the life of his mother,” Scorsese said in the special.

“She was chosen by God. She was a vessel, and she was a mother who loved her son.”

ACTOR REVEALS WHY PLAYING ST. PATRICK IN MARTIN SCORSESE’S ‘THE SAINTS’ IS ‘MORE IMPORTANT THAN EVER’

An actress portraying Saint Mary, the mother of Jesus

This photo features a portrayal of Saint Mary, the mother of Jesus, in a special Easter season episode of Martin Scorsese’s “The Saints,” available for streaming on Fox Nation this Mar. 27. (Fox Nation)

Mary, a figure whose willingness to answer God’s call has resonated for centuries, is at the center of the episode debuting March 27. Beyond her willingness to answer the call, the special looks deeper into her life, her enduring faith, sacrifice and the sorrow she faced at the end of Jesus’ life.

Scorsese acknowledged that Mary’s significance was a profound challenge to portray.

“We tried our best to do justice to the life of Mary, the mother of Jesus, in this very special Easter episode of ‘The Saints,'” he said.

MARTIN SCORSESE’S DAUGHTER, FRANCESCA, MAKES FOX NATION DIRECTORIAL DEBUT

martin scorsese

Fox Nation’s “Martin Scorsese Presents: The Saints” is set to release a brand-new special episode featuring Saint Mary, the mother of Jesus, on March 27. (Fox Nation)

Embedded in the episode are nuggets from Scorsese’s youth that helped shape his understanding of faith, sacrifice and devotion, all of which are themes woven throughout the feature.

Growing up in New York’s Little Italy, Scorsese was immersed in the rituals, imagery and storytelling of the Catholic faith – experiences that would go on to shape his admiration for Mary and the significance of Easter.

MARTIN SCORSESE BRINGS ST THOMAS BECKET’S CLASH WITH THE CROWN TO LIFE IN ‘THE SAINTS’

Woman holding rosary beads

A woman holds rosary beads while she prays and waits for smoke to emanate from the chimney on the roof of the Sistine Chapel on Mar. 13, 2013 in Vatican City. Scorsese highlights the link between Mary and Christ’s example as the Easter season approaches. (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

“I was born in the 1940s, and I grew up in Little Italy in New York. There was a different time and a different world and, for everyone in that world, Easter was the most sacred holiday of the year,” he said.

“Christmas was different, more of a secular holiday, less a celebration of the birth of Jesus. [It was] a kind of magical children’s day with Santa Claus and presents everywhere — but Easter weekend, that was something else.”

It started with Good Friday, in the depths of suffering, defeat and hopelessness that, much like Christ’s death, would end in triumph and the redemption of humanity with his resurrection three days later.

“The Saints” is a cinematic docudrama series featuring the remarkable stories of Christianity’s most devoted figures and the faith that defined their lives.

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To watch the miraculous story of Saint Mary, subscribe to Fox Nation and begin streaming “The Saints.”



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OFAC Sanctions DPRK IT Worker Network Funding WMD Programs Through Fake Remote Jobs

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The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has sanctioned six individuals and two entities for their involvement in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) information technology (IT) worker scheme with an aim to defraud U.S. businesses and generate illicit revenue for the regime to fund its weapons of mass destruction (WMD) programs.

“The North Korean regime targets American companies through deceptive schemes carried out by its overseas IT operatives, who weaponize sensitive data and extort businesses for substantial payments,” said Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent.

The fraudulent scheme, also called Coral Sleet/Jasper Sleet, PurpleDelta and Wagemole, relies on bogus documentation, stolen identities, and fabricated personas to help the IT workers obscure their true origins and land jobs at legitimate companies in the U.S. and elsewhere. A disproportionate portion of the salaries is then funneled back to North Korea to facilitate the nation’s missile programs in violation of international sanctions.

In some cases, these efforts are complemented by the deployment of malware to steal proprietary and sensitive information, as well as engaging in extortion efforts by demanding ransoms in return for not publicly leaking the stolen data.

The individuals and entities targeted by the latest round of OFAC sanctions are listed below –

  • Amnokgang Technology Development Company, an IT company that manages delegations of overseas IT workers and conducts other illicit procurement activities to obtain and sell military and commercial technology through their overseas networks.
  • Nguyen Quang Viet, the Chief Executive Officer of Vietnamese company Quangvietdnbg International Services Company Limited that facilitates currency conversion services for North Koreans. The company is estimated to have converted about $2.5 million into cryptocurrency between mid-2023 and mid-2025.
  • Do Phi Khanh, an associate of Kim Se Un, who was sanctioned by the U.S. in July 2025. Do is alleged to have acted as Kim’s proxy and allowed Kim to use his identity to open bank accounts and launder proceeds from IT workers.
  • Hoang Van Nguyen, who also assists Kim in opening bank accounts and enables cryptocurrency transactions for Kim.
  • Yun Song Guk, a North Korean national who led a group of IT workers conducting freelance IT work from Boten, Laos, since at least 2023. Yun has coordinated several dozen financial transactions amounting to more than $70,000 with Hoang Minh Quang relating to IT services, and has worked with York Louis Celestino Herrera to develop freelance IT service contracts.

The development comes as LevelBlue highlighted the IT worker scheme’s use of Astrill VPN to conduct their operations while located in countries like China, owing to the service’s ability to bypass China’s Great Firewall. The idea is to tunnel traffic through U.S. exit nodes, effectively allowing them to masquerade as legitimate domestic employees.

“These threat actors commonly operate from China rather than North Korea for two reasons: more reliable Internet infrastructure and the ability to leverage VPN services to conceal their true geographic origin,” security researcher Tue Luu said. “Lazarus Group’s subgroups, including Contagious Interview, rely on this capability to access the global Internet unrestricted, manage command-and-control infrastructure, and mask their true location.”

The cybersecurity company also said it detected an unsuccessful attempt made by North Korea to infiltrate an organization by replying to a help wanted ad. The IT worker, who was hired on August 15, 2025, as a remote employee to work on Salesforce data, was terminated 10 days later after exhibiting indicators showing consistent logins from China.

A notable aspect of Jasper Sleet’s tradecraft is the use of artificial intelligence to enable identity fabrication, social engineering, and long‑term operational persistence at low cost, underscoring how AI‑powered services can lower technical barriers and augment threat actors’ capabilities.

“Jasper Sleet leverages AI across the attack lifecycle to get hired, stay hired, and misuse access at scale,” Microsoft said. “Threat actors are using AI to shortcut the reconnaissance process that informs the development of convincing digital personas tailored to specific job markets and roles.”

Another crucial component involves using an AI application called Faceswap to insert the faces of North Korean IT workers into stolen identity documents and to generate polished headshots for resumes. In doing so, these efforts not only aim to improve the precision of their campaigns, but also increase the credibility by crafting convincing digital identities.

Furthermore, the remote IT worker threat is assessed to have leveraged agentic AI tools to create fake company websites, and to rapidly generate, refine, and reimplement malware components, in some cases by jailbreaking large language models (LLMs).

“Threat actors such as North Korean remote IT workers rely on long‑term, trusted access,” Microsoft said. “Because of this fact, defenders should treat fraudulent employment and access misuse as an insider‑risk scenario, focusing on detecting misuse of legitimate credentials, abnormal access patterns, and sustained low‑and‑slow activity.”

In a detailed report published by Flare and IBM X-Force examining the tactics and techniques employed by the IT worker operatives, it has come to light that the threat actors use timesheets for tracking job applications and work progress, IP Messenger (aka IPMsg) for decentralized internal communication, and Google Translate to translate job descriptions, craft applications, and even interpret responses from tools like ChatGPT.

The IT worker scheme is built atop a multi-tiered operational structure involving recruiters, facilitators, IT workers, and collaborators, each of whom play a distinct part –

  • Recruiters, who are responsible for screening potential IT workers and recording initial interview sessions to send to facilitators.
  • Facilitators and IT workers, who are tasked with persona creation, obtaining freelance or full-time employment, and onboarding new hires.
  • Collaborators, who are recruited to donate their personal identity and/or information to help the IT workers complete the hiring process and receive company-issued laptops.

“With the help of recruited western collaborators, primarily from LinkedIn and GitHub, who, willingly or unwillingly, provide their identities for use in the IT worker fraud scheme, NKITW are able to penetrate more deeply and reliably into an organization, for a longer period of time,” the companies said in a report shared with The Hacker News.

“North Korea’s IT worker operations are widespread and deeply integrated within the DPRK party-state. It is an integral component in the DPRK’s revenue-generation and sanctions-evasion machinery.”



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Iranian women’s football team return to Iran | Football

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The Iranian national women’s football team has returned to Iran, amongst them several players who withdrew their asylum bid in Australia after refusing to sing the national anthem before their opening game at the Women’s Asian Cup.



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FBI thwarted 4 terror attacks in December using online tracking, Patel says

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FBI Director Kash Patel on Wednesday said the bureau thwarted four terrorist attacks across the U.S. last December — including three inspired by ISIS — by tracking suspects both online and in person.

Patel was testifying at the Senate Intelligence Worldwide Threats hearing on Capitol Hill when Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, asked about what measures the FBI was taking to stop foreign terrorist organizations from recruiting and influencing Americans online.

Patel testified that foreign terrorist organizations, including ISIS, have become “all the more powerful” by moving their recruitment capabilities online.

“What we have done is extended and expanded resources to environments like the Threat Screening Center, which allows us to collect biometric capabilities from all over the world,” Patel said, noting double-digit increases in those resources and the bureau’s intelligence production.

FBI DISRUPTS ALLEGED ISIS-INSPIRED NEW YEAR’S EVE ATTACK PLOT TARGETING NC GROCERY STORE, FAST FOOD RESTAURANT

Kash Patel sitting at hearing

FBI Director Kash Patel listens during the Senate Committee on Intelligence hearings on Capitol Hill Wednesday, March 18, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

Patel said the FBI has also increased its manpower to detect such threats online.

“But what we’ve also done in the [counterterrorism] space specifically is expand the number of agents and intel analysts that go online and detect based on our biometric capabilities and intelligence that we have from the interagency,” he said.

4 INDICTED IN FOILED NEW YEAR’S EVE TERROR BOMBING PLOT TARGETING SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BUSINESSES

Patel said that led the bureau to foil four terrorist attacks in California, Texas, North Carolina and Pennsylvania in December. He said three of those attacks were inspired by ISIS.

FBI Director Kash Patel speaks at a podium during a news conference inside the Justice Department.

FBI Director Kash Patel speaks during a news conference at the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C, on Dec. 4, 2025. (Daniel Heuer/AFP via Getty Images)

“We were able to detect these individuals, both online and in person, using our covert platforms,” Patel said. “And we shuttered a bombing campaign in Southern California and two mass casualty events for New Year’s Eve.”

Kash Patel, James Adams, Tulsi Gabbard, William Hartman and John Ratcliffe seated at hearing

From left, FBI Director Kash Patel, Defense Intelligence Agency Director James Adams, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, Acting Commander of the U.S. Cyber Command William Hartman, and CIA Director John Ratcliffe are seated before the Senate Committee on Intelligence hearings to examine worldwide threats on Capitol Hill Wednesday, March 18, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

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Patel testified at the Senate hearing alongside Defense Intelligence Agency Director James Adams, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, Acting Commander of the U.S. Cyber Command William Hartman and CIA Director John Ratcliffe.



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Middle East crisis live: Israel strike on Iranian gas field reportedly coordinated with US; Tehran confirms intelligence minister killed | US-Israel war on Iran

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Israel strike on Iranian gas field coordinated with US – report

Israel’s strike against Iran’s South Pars gas field was coordinated with and approved by the Trump administration, the American news website Axios reported, citing two senior Israeli officials.

The report says a US defence official also confirmed the claim.

The offshore gas field in the Persian Gulf, which Iran shares with Qatar, is the largest such facility in the world. Qatar’s foreign ministry spokesman, Majed Al Ansari, described the targeting of the field — an extension of Qatar’s North Field — as a “dangerous and irresponsible step”.

Key events

‘Murderers’ must pay for killing Iran’s Larijani, says Khamenei

Iran’s new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei said Wednesday in a written message that the killers of security chief Ali Larijani, who died in an Israeli strike, “will have to pay for it”.

“Without a doubt, the assassination of such a figure attests to his importance and to the hatred that the enemies of Islam harbour toward him,” Mojtaba Khamenei said, in a message published on his official Telegram channel on the day of Larijani’s funeral in Tehran.

“Every drop of spilled blood comes at a price, and the criminal murderers of these martyrs will soon have to pay it,” added Mojtaba Khamenei, who has yet to appear in public after taking office following the killing of his father, ex-supreme leader Ali Khamenei at the start of the war.



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Fly-tippers to be forced to join ‘clean-up squads’ – and made to ‘pick up the bill’ | UK News

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Fly-tippers could be forced to carry out unpaid clean-ups of streets, parks and dumping hotspots under new plans announced by the government.

So-called “clean-up squads” will see fly-tippers given conditional cautions by local authorities, making them clear up waste for up to 20 hours.

Currently, fly-tippers are only punished after conviction, often after lengthy court proceedings.

Court grants a restriction order to close Epping waste site

The government hopes this plan will speed up enforcement.

The measure is part of a major 10-point plan being unveiled by the Environment Agency on Friday, aimed at tackling both low-level fly-tipping and large-scale organised illegal waste crime.

EA staff block the illegal waste dump site in Epping, Essex
Image: EA staff block the illegal waste dump site in Epping, Essex

Environment Secretary Emma Reynolds said: “If you dump rubbish on our streets, you will be joining a clean-up squad and picking up the bill, not the taxpayer.

“We are clamping down on these criminals, making sure those responsible clean up and pay up. This government is handing both the Environment Agency and local authorities the power to boost waste crime enforcement, hand out tougher sentences and tackle illegal dumping faster.”

Hazardous waste near M25: ‘Taxpayer will have to clean it up’

The government says there has been an 8% increase in enforcement action against fly-tippers, with local authorities carrying out 572,000 actions in 2024/25.

Read more from Sky News:
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The EA’s enforcement budget for 2025/26 has been increased to £15.6m – but many still feel it is not enough to tackle the rapidly growing problem.

It’s hoped the new clean-up squad measures will be introduced at the start of 2027.

The Local Government Association, which represents town halls, has called on the government and Sentencing Council to urgently review sentencing guidelines for fly-tipping, saying court fines are lower on average than penalties handed out directly by local authorities.

Arooj Shah, chair of the LGA’s neighbourhoods committee, said: “Sentencing guidelines must be reviewed so punishments properly reflect the seriousness of the offence and the harm it causes to communities.”



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