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Thousands rally in Athens protesting US-Israeli attacks on Iran | US-Israel war on Iran

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Protesters in Athens have marched to the US Embassy to condemn the US-Israeli attacks on Iran, joining protests held worldwide over the escalating conflict.



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Soros-backed DA blames pro-gun lawmakers for deadly campus shooting in Virginia

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The George Soros-backed district attorney in Norfolk, Virginia, where Thursday’s mass shooting at Old Dominion University took place, doubled down on his viral comments, saying community members looking to place blame on the shooting should direct it towards pro-gun lawmakers and judges.

Commonwealth’s Attorney Ramin Fatehi was pressed by Fox News Digital to elaborate on his comments during the press conference earlier, prompting him to stand by his comments.

“I absolutely stand by what I said. It is the truth, no matter how much the gun lobby wants to deny it,” Fatehi said when asked if he stood by his comments despite Thursday’s mass shooter in Virginia having a public record of supporting Islamic terrorism. 

The shooter, a former National Guardsman and naturalized citizen from Sierra Leone, was previously sentenced in 2017 for attempting to provide material support to ISIS, but appears to have been released by the federal Bureau of Prisons in late 2024 during the Biden administration.  

NYC BOOSTS PATROLS AMID ‘HEIGHTENED THREAT ENVIRONMENT,’ AFTER GUNMAN RAMS TRUCK INTO MICHIGAN SYNAGOGUE 
 

City of Norfolk Commonwealth's Attorney Ramin Fatehi next to an image from Thursday's mass shooting at Old Dominion University

City of Norfolk Commonwealth’s Attorney Ramin Fatehi (left) can be seen next to an image from Thursday’s mass shooting at Old Dominion University located in Norfolk, Virginia. (Kristen Zeis/For The Washington Post via Getty Images (left) and Norfolk Police Department (right))

“No matter the ideology of an attacker, that attacker is more dangerous with a gun than without one,” Fatehi, whose top two donors include the Soros-subsidized Justice and Public Safety PAC and Democracy PAC, said. A Fox News Digital review found that the two Soros-funded PACs donated over $650,000 combined to his campaign coffers between 2021 and 2025.

A conservative group that tracks nonprofit spending, The Capital Research Center, reported that across a decade, between 2012 and 2022, Soros spent $40 million on the Justice and Public Safety PAC, which is known for supporting left-wing prosecutors. Democracy PAC, a super PAC created by Soros in 2019, was given nearly $30 million during the first three months of 2020, The Capital Research Center also reported.

Some of the better-known liberal prosecutors supported by these Soros-backed groups include recalled San Francisco district attorney, Chesa Boudin, Chicago district attorney, Kim Foxx, and Los Angeles district attorney, George Gascon, according to the Capital Research Center.  

On Thursday, Fatehi, who has served as the Commonwealth’s Attorney in Norfolk since 2022, walked up to the podium during a post-shooting press conference unprovoked before giving his remarks about who should be to blame – at least in part – for the shooting. 

“I’m constrained in what I can say about the facts of the case, but I can speak a little more freely about the bigger questions,” Fatehi said after walking up to the podium.

‘UNDER SIEGE’: INSIDE THE GROWING RADICAL ISLAM THREAT CRITICS SAY IS HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT IN DEEP RED TEXAS

“These men work every day to make people safe,” he continued, referring to law enforcement officials. “People are as safe on the ODU campus as anywhere, arguably safer than in other parts of Norfolk. But this is not an ODU problem. This is a national sickness. We live in a country where people care more about guns than they care about 6-year-old children. They care more about guns than they care about synagogue worshipers. And they care more about guns than they do about college students.”

The left-wing prosecutor went on to say that it doesn’t matter “how hard” law enforcement or the university works to ensure tragic incidents like what happened Thursday, are not repeated, adding that “somebody will be a victim eventually.” 

These remarks sparked backlash on social media, with several conservatives attacking him and bringing up the criminal history of the shooter.

“I really try not to cuss here, but Fatehi can f— right off with this statement,” BearingArms editor Cam Edwards posted on X.

“Given this lunatic is the DA, there’s like a 90% chance he’s going to charge the hero who stabbed the Islamist to death to stop the attack,” RedState writer Bonchie wrote on X.

Students at Old Dominion University

Bystanders are evacuated from Old Dominion University’s campus after reports of an active shooter on Thursday, March 12, 2026 in Norfolk, Va.  (Kendall Warner/The Virginian-Pilot via AP)

“You see, ISIS terrorists wouldn’t be terrorists if it weren’t for Republican gun culture or something,” Bonchie said in another X post. “Mind-numbing.”

“I generally stop short of telling bad faith morons to go to hell because eternal damnation isn’t a trifling matter, but this level of intentional and malicious imbecility is testing my resolve,” Amy Swearer, a senior legal fellow at Advancing American Freedom, wrote on X.

“Until there is the political will to break the spell of the cult of gun absolutism, you will see more incidents like this. So, if you are looking for somebody to blame, don’t look at anybody up here, look at our lawmakers who don’t have the courage to implement sensible gun control measures, look to a Supreme Court that enables them, and do something about it,” Fatehi continued. 

“That is the lesson – let’s mourn the people who’ve died, let’s decry what has happened, but let’s keep the focus where it belongs. It belongs on us, and having to change something so that we don’t have to suffer through this.”

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Old Dominion University

The campus of Old Dominion University, located in Norfolk, Virginia, was the victim of a mass shooting on Thursday, March 12, 2026. (John Greim/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Multiple federal sources confirmed to Fox News that the suspected shooter at ODU, in Norfolk, was Mohamed Jalloh. The shooting occurred shortly before 10:49 a.m., the university said in an emergency alert. The gunman was later pronounced dead when responding officers arrived following a shooting near ROTC cadets, Police Chief Garrett Shelton told reporters during a news conference. 

Reporting from the New York Post indicated that Jalloh was targeting ROTC members on campus, before one eventually stepped in to stop the madness, stabbing and killing the suspect.

Later in the day Thursday, ODU Police Chief Garrett Shelton indicated one victim died from the shooting, along with the gunman, while two others were injured. FBI Director Kash Patel also indicated Thursday that federal authorities were investigating the matter as an act of terrorism.

Fox News’ Ashley Carnahan, Louis Casiano, and Bill Melugin contributed to this report



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Two people die after donating plasma at Canadian clinics under federal investigation | Canada

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Two people have died in Canada after donating plasma at a chain of clinics that has been under scrutiny by federal inspectors for failing to keep accurate records, screen donors or maintain its machines.

While experts say the deaths are exceedingly rare, critics say Canada’s embrace of private companies to handle blood products reflects a “slow collapse of a system that has been the envy of the world”.

Health Canada, the federal agency that regulates plasma clinics, said it had received reports from the clinics regarding “fatal adverse reactions” after plasma donations in October 2025 and January 2026.

The deaths occurred at facilities operated by the Spanish healthcare company Grifols. In both cases, the two donors went into “distress” while donating, people familiar with the cases told the Guardian.

Health Canada said its investigations were continuing.

Grifols said in a statement it had “no reason to believe that there is a correlation between the donors’ passing and plasma donation”.

CBC News was the first to report the fatal adverse reactions in plasma donors.

Plasma, the pale yellow liquid part of blood, is used to create medications for a number of conditions, including haemophilia, and to help treat burn victims. But in recent years, Canada has faced stiff pushback over the extent to which Grifols, which operates 17 facilities in the country, has become enmeshed in the world of blood plasma collection.

Canada’s health agency did not disclose the identities of the two donors who died but friends say one was Rodiyat Alabede, 22, an international student who donated plasma in Winnipeg on 25 October.

“Rody aspired to become a social worker, dedicating her life to helping others, a dream she was so close to achieving,” friends wrote on a GoFundMe page to raise money to help her family. “Rody was known for her kindness, compassion, and unwavering faith. She was deeply devoted to her dream and always carried herself with grace, warmth, and sincerity.”

Three months later, another person died while donating plasma at a different location in Winnipeg.

Health Canada said there were immediate visits to the plasma collection centres after each reported fatality and records indicated standard operating procedures were being followed.

The Canadian Blood Service said it was “deeply saddened” by the deaths and that it monitored donor health and followed “the highest safety standards to safeguard both those who donate in our centres and the patients who receive blood products”.

Provincial health agencies were notified only recently about the fatalities, even though the first occurred nearly six months ago.

Grifols said: “Every donor undergoes an extensive health history evaluation and physical examination before being deemed eligible to donate. We strive to operate under strict operational procedures at the highest standard.”

According to federal inspection reports, one facility in the neighbouring province of Saskatchewan was inspected in January and failed to “accurately assess the donor’s suitability” – one of 11 deficiencies that prompted inspectors to rate the site as non-compliant with Canada’s Food and Drugs Act and the blood regulations.

Other failures include “validation, calibration, cleaning, or maintenance of critical equipment [that] were not always sufficient” and records that “were not always accurate, complete, legible, indelible and/or readily retrievable”.

Another site in Alberta was found to have 10 deficiencies, including record keeping, donor screening and equipment maintenance.

Grifols said: “A ‘non-compliant’ rating means that the identified operational processes require improvement and we are working hard to address those swiftly.” It added that after two recent inspections, it had “submitted detailed action plans to Health Canada and began implementation immediately with a focus on preventing recurrence and strengthening overall compliance”.

It said its facilities in Calgary and Regina were previously compliant and “continue normal operations while we implement corrective actions to address the cited concerns”.

Of the eight documented instances of non-compliance for blood inspections, which date back to 2016, facilities operated by Grifols made up half of all cases.

One inspector with Health Canada, who asked not to be named, told the Guardian he felt the non-compliance reports were “very troubling” and believed they reflected a “deeper set of concerns” about the facilities and how they were run.

Curtis Brandell, a blood safety activist who is president of the independent British Columbia chapter of the Canadian Hemophilia Society, said: “When I heard about the first death, I thought it must be a mistake. The donation procedure is safe. But when I learned of a second death – in the same city – alarm bells started going off.”

One of the facilities in Winnipeg where a donor died in January, owned by Grifols, is the subject of a lawsuit after a donor said the facility used a faulty machine that damaged his blood, causing “non-reversible and permanent” injuries to his kidney.

Craig Loney, an aircraft maintenance technician, said he experienced intense pain and blood in his urine after using a machine that separates the plasma from the red blood cells. He later received an email from the company operating the facility, informing him that a “machine error” had caused some red blood cells removed during the procedure to be “broken” and erroneously returned into his body along with the plasma.

The allegations have not been tested in court. Grifols has asked a judge to dismiss the case and said in a court filing the donor was “fully informed of the risks” of the procedure and had consented to possible side-effects.

Questions over the structure of how Canadians give blood and plasma are set against the backdrop of a national scandal in which thousands of Canadians were infected with HIV/Aids and hepatitis C through contaminated blood products in the 1980s and early 90s.

Two of Brandell’s uncles were infected through contaminated blood products.

“The Canadian Red Cross knew they were sending out contaminated blood but figured anyone who needed blood needed it for life-saving reasons,” he said. “The Red Cross told themselves if people knew, it would lead to pandemonium and distrust of the system. So they just kept it quiet.”

The Royal Commission of Inquiry on the Blood System in Canada later made a series of recommendations to ensure the safety of the system. The commission said Canada should aim to be self-sufficient in blood and blood products – but not by creating a commercial donor market, and that a voluntary system was the safest and most ethical model.

Canada does not produce enough plasma for domestic use, meaning it must buy its supply from abroad – most often from the US. For decades, Grifols has been one of Canada’s main suppliers of immunoglobulin, a plasma protein used to treat medical conditions such as autoimmune diseases and neurological disorders.

Only three provinces – Ontario, British Columbia and Quebec – have a ban on paid donations for plasma, but under a 2022 agreement in Ontario, Grifols operates as an “agent” for the Canadian Blood Services, meaning it can in effect skirt the ban.

Grifols pays up to C$100 (£55) for each donation, and donations are permitted twice a week. Those who donate more frequently are enrolled in the company’s “super hero rewards” programme and can receive prizes and cash bonuses of C$50 for every 10 donations made within six weeks.

Documented concerns over the company’s problems with record-keeping and cleanliness of machinery were reminiscent of Canada’s tainted blood scandal, argued Brandell.

He said the “absolutely tragic” deaths were a wake-up call and added that advocates had been promised by Canadian Blood Services that there were “robust guardrails” in place.

“My concerns were, once you have a private company coming into Canada, you lose control over much of the industry. I fear the first thing we’re losing is public accountability and oversight. We were promised transparency. That’s not what we’re getting.”



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Lab-grown foie gras and chicken get safety checks for British dinner tables | Science, Climate & Tech News

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Lab-grown foie gras and chicken are being tested by scientists to ensure they are safe for humans to eat, and could hit British restaurants and dinner tables in the next five years.

It is the closest any such “cultivated meat” product has yet come to approval for human consumption in the UK, the Food Standards Agency (FSA) said today as it published an update on “innovative” foods.

Other products like edible insects, 3D-printed chocolate, vegetables with extra vitamins and cheese that is “brewed” in a lab could also reach the public in roughly the next 15 years, the regulator said.

“The science enabling these innovations is exciting and our food system is changing at a rapid pace,” Dr Thomas Vincent, deputy director of innovation at the FSA, told Sky News.

Last year the agency was awarded £1.6m by the government to develop a new system to ensure these novel foods are safe to eat.

It followed complaints by the industry that Britain’s approval process was too slow to keep up with rapid innovation.

Dr Vincent added: “No new foods reach UK shelves unless they meet our high food standards, so the public can be assured that the food is safe and what it says it is.”

But the pioneers of these new products have allowed limited previews. Sky News signed a waiver to try pork meatballs grown in a laboratory, and found them authentically crispy and oozing fatty juices.

The industry has high hopes that the meats can feed a growing global population with a lower environmental impact, since they don’t need the land, food or water demanded by a herd of pigs or cattle.

So far it has made more progress with meat products like mince, that can be mixed with other ingredients, than it has with whole cuts like steaks or filets, that have structures that are harder to replicate.

But producers still need to overcome “consumer scepticism” and the challenge of scaling up, the FSA said.

Dr Sarah Najera Espinosa, of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said novel technologies could “not only help reduce some of the health and environmental pressures we face, but could also create new jobs and strengthen our food resilience by bringing more production back home”.

But she also warned of “trade-offs” – amid concerns about the high costs and impact on farming.

What is lab-grown meat?

So-called “cultivated meat” – the term the industry prefers to “lab grown” – is made by taking a tiny clump of cells from plants or animals, which are then fed in a lab so that they multiply, in the same way they naturally would in a growing muscle or plant.

Meanwhile certain types of insects are also worming their way into our food chain.

They can be sold whole, or in future are expected to be mixed into familiar foods like a burger to displace some of the meat or add protein.

Four species are already on sale in the UK, under temporary arrangements after Britain’s exit from the EU, while they undergo further safety assessments.

Insects can contain structures similar to some crustaceans, with allergens one of the things assessed for safety.

The FSA will also test new foods for things like carcinogens, toxicity, and to ensure there are no adverse impacts from “ultra-processing”.

Read more from Sky News:
Tech giants handed deadline by UK regulator
Why Prince William turns down Kate’s coffee

Further off in the future are technologies that use plants as tiny factories to produce specific food ingredients, and “gas fermentation” which uses microbes to convert captured carbon dioxide into edible proteins.

The industry is seeking to keep the public onside with mysterious new food types by providing regular updates – in an attempt to learn from previous backlash in Europe to genetically modified food, which was successfully introduced elsewhere.

Professor Jonathan Jones from The Sainsbury Laboratory said: “The main lesson from the 90s is that where innovation is deployed about which consumers might have concerns, clear labelling and clear communication are required.”



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NASA targets April 1, 2026, launch date for Artemis II crewed moon mission

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NASA is targeting an April 1 launch for its Artemis II mission around the moon, marking the first crewed lunar flight since Apollo in 1972.

Officials said Thursday they completed a flight readiness review (FRR) and are set to roll the rocket back to the pad March 19 followed by final configuration for launch.

A potential launch for the 10-day mission is scheduled for 6:24 p.m. ET April 1, with a backup date of April 2 at 7:22 p.m.

“At the conclusion of the FRR, all the teams polled go to launch and fly Artemis II around the moon, pending completion of some of the work before we roll out to the launch pad,” Lori Glaze, acting associate administrator for the Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate, said at a news conference at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

NASA BEGINS INFRASTRUCTURE OVERHAUL UNDER ISAACMAN AS TRUMP PUSHES AMBITIOUS SPACE EXPLORATION GOALS

NASA's Artemis II mission rocket and spacecraft inside facility

NASA’s Artemis II sits in the Vehicle Assembly Building at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center Jan. 16, 2026, in Cape Canaveral, Fla. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

“It’s a test flight, and it is not without risk, but our team and our hardware are ready,” Glaze added.

Artemis II had been scheduled to launch in early February, but the mission was delayed after fuel leaks were discovered during a test run. A helium leak was later identified at the end of the month. The Space Launch System (SLS) rocket was transferred from the launchpad back to the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) for repairs that are nearly complete.

John Honeycutt, chair of the Artemis II Mission Management Team, said the mission’s success odds range from one in two to one in 50 when asked about the risks of Artemis II.

TRUMP RENOMINATES MUSK ALLY JARED ISAACMAN TO LEAD NASA AFTER EARLIER REVERSAL

NASA Artemis II Crew

The crew of NASA’s Artemis II mission (left to right): NASA astronauts Christina Hammock Koch, Reid Wiseman (seated), Victor Glover and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen. (NASA)

Honeycutt later said he does not want the mission’s success viewed as a 50-50 proposition.

“If you look at the data over time, over the lifespan of building new rockets, right, the data would show you that one out of two is successful. You’re only successful 50% of the time,” Honeycutt said. “I think we’re in a much better position than that.

“I don’t want people to take that as being that we should be scared to go fly because we’re not scared to go fly,” he added. “We do an outstanding job of understanding the risk, buying down the risk, mitigating the risk and putting together controls to manage the risk.”

SENATE CONFIRMS JARED ISAACMAN AS NASA CHIEF MONTHS AFTER TRUMP-MUSK RIFT THAT MAY HAVE PULLED HIS NOMINATION

Lori Glaze, acting associate administrator, Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate looks on as John Honeycutt, the Artemis II Mission Management Team chair

Lori Glaze, acting associate administrator for NASA’s Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate, and Artemis II Mission Management Team Chair John Honeycutt addressed reporters during a news conference at Kennedy Space Center. (Gregg Newton/AFP via Getty Images)

NASA also said it will not conduct another “wet dress rehearsal,” a prelaunch fueling test for Artemis II.

“When we tank the vehicle the very next time, I would like it to be on a day that we could actually launch. I would like to do it on launch day,” Glaze said. “And if we are able to successfully fully tank the vehicle, I want to be able to go to launch.”

She added that NASA does not want to use up any days in its April launch window for a wet dress rehearsal.

NASA LIKELY TO DELAY ARTEMIS II MOON MISSION LAUNCH AGAIN DUE TO HELIUM FLOW PROBLEM

Artemis sing in front of rocket at Kennedy Space Center

NASA’s Artemis II Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft are seen at Launch Pad 39B at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., Feb. 20, 2026. (Gregg Newton/AFP via Getty Images)

The Artemis program was first established by President Donald Trump during his first term in December 2017.

The four astronauts involved in Artemis II — Americans Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch and Canadian Jeremy Hansen — are expected to orbit the moon before returning home in what would be the farthest human spaceflight ever.

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NASA has said Artemis III, Artemis IV and Artemis V are expected to launch before the end of Trump’s current term, with Artemis IV and V aiming to return astronauts to the moon’s surface

Fox News Digital’s Preston Mizell and Brie Stimson contributed to this report.



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Pentagon praises Palantir tech for battlefield strike speed • The Register

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As the US continues its strikes on Iran as part of Operation Epic Fury, speakers at Palantir’s AIPCON event on Thursday said the company’s Maven Smart System product has shortened the time it takes the Department of Defense to select and hit targets on the battlefield during the conflict.

“So we’ve gone from identifying the target to now coming up with a course of action, to now actioning that target, all from one system. This is revolutionary,” said Cameron Stanley, chief digital and artificial intelligence officer for the DoD. “We were having this done in about eight or nine systems where humans were literally moving detections left and right in order to get to our desired end state, in this case closing a kill chain.”

Palantir’s chief commercial officer Ted Mabrey told the AIPCON audience that the analytics software company is supporting Operation Epic Fury.

“Because of the pacing and the way in which it can operate, technology is in the fight for these customers. Whether that is literally in the fight supporting something like Epic Fury or as you heard from Admiral Okano, what it is accountable to in ShipOS is not some technical requirement. It’s to ships at sea and subs in the water,” he said, referring to Vice Admiral Seiko Okano, who also spoke.

Stanley’s keynote was all about Maven’s widespread deployment across the military. From 2021 to 2022, he was chief of the Algorithmic Warfare Cross Functional Team, which was also known as Project Maven.

He said Maven began in 2016 when commanders were looking for what the military called “the third offset,” with “offset” meaning the area in which the US military had an overwhelming advantage against an adversary. The first offset is nuclear weapons, and the second is stealth and precision guided arms. The third is the speed and accuracy of the decisions made by commanders, and that’s where Maven came in.

Google was the original partner on the project but quit the work in 2018 due to employee protests.

It took seven years, but Maven Smart System, as Palantir calls it, has consolidated “eight or nine” systems for decision makers to look at into a “single visualization tool,” Stanley said. Maven allows operators to select data and move it into a workflow where commanders can determine how best “to prosecute” the target, he said.

Palantir architect Chad Wahlquist added that data, logic, and action are all orchestrated through Maven.

“I saw stats where normally we would have 2,000 intelligence officers, actually trying to do targeting and look at stuff. Now that’s 20 and they’re doing it in rapid succession as well,” Wahlquist said. “So, that, doing more with less, is really enabling the warfighter to really keep everyone safe and really go after the mission.”

During Thursday’s AIPCON sessions, Patrick Dods, a US Naval Academy graduate, former submariner, and now an engineer who works on Maven, said the project started by using computer vision models in support of intelligence analysts who needed to make sense of the battlefield more quickly, or “collapsing the kill chain.” Dods compared it to reducing the hay in a haystack when hunting the needle.

“This is enabling them to identify the points of interest of the objects of interest that they care about and rapidly build a plan of action, not only around tactical action, but around operational and theater level missions that they might need to execute,” he said.

During the presentation, Stanley displayed a map of the middle east in Maven that showed dozens of cartographic icons in Iran marked in red, some designated “HQ.” One of the marks was positioned on an area of the map that corresponds to Minab, where a missle struck a girls’ school near a military target, killing more than 160 people. There were also several apparent overlaps with an Iranian strike map the Department of War showed to reporters on Tuesday.

Maven’s capabilities keep US service members alive, he said.

“Palantir is very helpful in delivering this. Maven Smart System is an incredible system,” Stanley said. “No fair fights. If I can avoid it, let’s not have fair fights. Our guys win and we come home.”

In his opening remarks at AIPCON, Palantir CEO Alex Karp said the company’s goal is to bring US servicemen and servicewomen home alive. He did not mention the strikes in Iran or Operation Epic Fury.

“If you’re expecting us not to support warfighters once they’re in battle you got the wrong company,” he said. “Once the war starts, we’re not interested in debating how we’re supporting them. We are very, very proud to have our role in making sure that American men and women come home safe and happy and proud of what they’re doing. And that sometimes means that people on the other side don’t go home. And we are very proud of that.” ®



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Short tempers and legal threats: UK teachers report rise in problem parents | Teaching

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Teachers are used to outbreaks of rudeness and defiance from their pupils, but are now saying parents are some of the worst offenders and affecting staff mental health, according to a headteachers’ union.

More than 90% of headteachers and other senior leaders said they had been on the receiving end of “challenging behaviour” from parents including rude or disrespectful responses, while 60% have had verbal abuse and threats within the past 12 months, according to the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL).

More than three-quarters surveyed said the worsening parental behaviour was harming their mental health and wellbeing.

School leaders said parents were now more likely to disagree with a school’s handling of incidents, and would often dispute sanctions such as detentions or suspensions for misbehaviour or truancy.

Jo Rowley, a deputy headteacher from Stafford and ASCL’s president, wants the government to back a national campaign calling on parents to support their children’s school or college.

Rowley is expected to tell the ASCL’s national conference in Liverpool that “a minority of parents with unreasonable expectations and short tempers are a drain on time, energy, and resources”.

While most parents “work productively” with teachers, she will underline the importance of parents making complaints “in a polite and reasonable manner” to avoid conflict.

“Some parents are clearly struggling to deal with the pressures in their own lives, and their behaviour is very challenging,” Rowley will tell the conferences. “The huge amount of work and stress they generate detracts from other children, undermines behaviour policies, and contributes to the pressures which drive people out of teaching.”

Experienced headteachers said flashpoints included confiscating pupils’ mobile phones, with one parent accusing the school of theft and threatening to call the police. Other bitter disputes can come from turning down requests for pupils to take time off for family holidays in termtime.

More recently, heads said parents had been using AI to generate lengthy, legalistic complaints that required increasing amounts of time to administer.

Of the 1,700 school leaders surveyed by ASCL, 73% said subject access requests – statutory demands for personal data held by an institution – were being used by parents “in a challenging or excessive manner,” while more than half said they had experienced hostile or defamatory comments from parents on social media.

Martyn Oliver, Ofsted’s chief inspector, will also defend his organisation’s new inspection regime to the conference, explaining that more schools in England are receiving “needs attention” grades because of Ofsted’s “more exacting” standards. “Needs attention” is the fourth-lowest out of five on Ofsted’s new scale, which ranges from “exceptional” to “urgent improvement”.

Oliver is to say Ofsted will continue to highlight schools where it finds disadvantaged children “who are not making the strides that they should”. “We will never acquiesce to the quiet curse of low expectations that would see Ofsted prioritise context over outcomes for the most disadvantaged and vulnerable children.”

Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, is expected to tell delegates: “The changes you have seen in your classrooms over the past decade – the poverty, the additional need, the technology – this is a new era of childhood, and it calls for a new era of education. An end to policy in parts. Instead, a village around the child. Every child. With schools as the beating heart of that support.”



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Share Market Live Updates March 13: Stock to buy today: Jindal Saw (₹199.25)

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talk Market Today | Share Market Live Updates – Find here all the live updates related to Sensex, Nifty, BSE, NSE, share prices and Indian stock markets for 13 March 2026

The stock of Jindal Saw has been trading with a positive bias since the beginning of this year. Since January, it has seen two sharp price rises. First, on the back of the support at ₹155 during the third week of January and now, it has gained nearly 20 per cent so far this week. The price action shows the formation of a higher high, and the price is now above both 21- and 50-day moving averages.

The prevailing price action shows strong upward momentum and the chances of a further rally are high. Therefore, traders can consider buying now at ₹199 and accumulating at ₹182. Place stop-loss at ₹170. When the stock rises to ₹220, revise the stop-loss to ₹205. On a rally to ₹235, raise the stop-loss to ₹225. Exit at ₹250.

(Note: The recommendations are based on technical analysis. There is a risk of loss in trading)
  • March 13, 2026 06:55
    technicalcallbuy timeline icon

    Today’s Stock Recommendation: March 13, 2026

  • March 13, 2026 06:53
    technicalcallbuy timeline icon

    Day Trading Guide for March 13, 2026: Intraday supports, resistances for Nifty50 stocks

    Day Trading Guide for March 13, 2026: Intraday supports, resistances for Nifty50 stocks

    Get key intraday supports, resistances, and trade recommendations for Nifty Futures and major stocks in March-13.

  • March 13, 2026 06:38
    technicalcallbuy timeline icon

    Stock Market Live Updates: Stock to buy today: Jindal Saw (₹199.25)

    The stock of Jindal Saw has been trading with a positive bias since the beginning of this year. Since January, it has seen two sharp price rises. First, on the back of the support at ₹155 during the third week of January and now, it has gained nearly 20 per cent so far this week. The price action shows the formation of a higher high, and the price is now above both 21- and 50-day moving averages.

    Read more

Published on March 13, 2026

UK weighs options to defend shipping in Strait of Hormuz | World News

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The UK is considering possible options to help defend shipping in the Strait of Hormuz from Iranian attacks, the defence secretary has said.

John Healey also signalled that British forces needed to be ready in coordination with allies to evacuate UK nationals from the Middle East if the US and Israeli war with Iran worsens.

He said he had spoken to his counterparts in the so-called E5 group of European powers, which includes Germany, France, Italy and Poland, on Wednesday to discuss the crisis.

On the threat to oil tankers in the Gulf, the senior cabinet minister said the best way to unblock the vital waterway would be an end to the war between the US, Israel and Iran.

Iran war latest: follow live

However, as conflict rages and with tankers ablaze, he said he has asked his military planners to look at what the UK could offer alongside other nations to protect commercial tankers needing to pass through the Strait from attacks by Iranian drones, mines and missiles.

An oil tanker on fire near Basra, Iraq, this week. Pic: AP
Image: An oil tanker on fire near Basra, Iraq, this week. Pic: AP

This could include autonomous vessels that can counter mines.

In addition, the British military has personnel based at a headquarters in Bahrain with expertise in commanding maritime security operations.

The UK is already sending HMS Dragon, a Type 45 destroyer, with significant air defence capabilities, to bolster its defences in the region. This ship could also potentially be an option if there is a move to protect shipping.

Watch: HMS Dragon sets sail for Cyprus

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“Recognising the huge impact this potentially has on oil prices and the cost of living, there is an international imperative to try and see this resolved,” Mr Healey said, referring to the disruption to the flow of tankers carrying oil and gas through the Strait.

“I have – pre-positioned in the region – some autonomous mine hunting systems,” the defence secretary told reporters, speaking after meeting with commanders at the permanent joint headquarters, PJHQ, in Northwood, in northwest London, which is the main headquarters overseeing British military operations around the world.

“I have been talking to planners today about additional options we can bring to bear alongside allies should it be needed.”

John Healey (left) meeting Cyprus' minister of defence Vasilis Palmas. Pic: Reuters
Image: John Healey (left) meeting Cyprus’ minister of defence Vasilis Palmas. Pic: Reuters

However, Mr Healey stressed that this work was “early days”.

“You should not read into that that we have got some hard options poised to go. But… I am discussing additional options with our planners.”

Mr Healey said he had spoken with E5 defence ministers about greater coordination in the Eastern Mediterranean.

He signalled this could also mean in any future evacuation efforts.

“If this conflict worsens, we have to be ready should evacuations be required,” he told commanders.

The UK has placed RFA Lyme Bay, a vast support ship, on heightened readiness to deploy, in a sign of the kind of assets being readied.

However, the options to assist in defending shipping through the Strait of Hormuz or conducting evacuations are more limited than they have been in the past following defence cuts.

A decade ago, the Royal Navy had at least one major warship operating out of Bahrain and up to four minehunters – each one a large, crewed ship – as well as a huge support vessel.

Today, there are no warships based out of Bahrain, with the last crewed minehunter, HMS Middleton, sent back to the UK for maintenance.

It means the UK could only contribute to an effort to protect shipping in the Gulf alongside allies like the US and France.



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Sammy Hagar says he would never play with Alex Van Halen again after feud

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Sammy Hagar suggested he would “never play” with Alex Van Halen again more than 20 years after they finished their last tour together.

“I’m the biggest Pink Floyd fan. I see David Gilmour say: ‘I will never play with Roger Waters again,’ and I know what he means,” the 78-year-old told Classic Rock in a recent interview. “I feel that way about Alex Van Halen. They’re negative people.”

Hagar told Rolling Stone last year that he and his former Van Halen bandmate hadn’t spoken in 21 years.

“I hate to say it, but I dreamt about Alex the other night, man,” he told the magazine last April. “It was crazy. And it was so friggin’ real. I was saying, ‘What are you pissed off at me about, man? What the f—? Now just tell me what your problem is. What did I do? Just tell me.'”

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Sammy Hagar with Van Halen

Van Halen members Michael Anthony, Eddie Van Halen, Sammy Hagar and Alex Van Halen in 1985.  (Ann Summa/Getty Images)

Alex Van Halen didn’t even mention Hagar by name in his 2024 memoir “Brothers,” about his relationship with Van Halen co-founder Eddie Van Helen, who died in 2020.

While the interviewer posited that Alex was hurt by Hagar writing about Eddie’s personal struggles in his own memoir, The Red Rocker disagreed.

“And I’ve had this conversation with a few people, including [former VH manager] Irving Azoff,” he said at the time. “I’ve asked him, ‘What’s the problem?’ And some people have said to me, ‘Oh, Cabo Wabo. At one time, Van Halen, when you built it, you guys were all partners in that. And then they didn’t want it anymore when it was losing money, and they gave it to you, and you turned it around and made hundreds of millions of dollars on it. And they’re angry. Alex is angry about that.'”

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He said his response was: “How the f— could they be angry about that? They gave me the damn thing, they walked out on me, left me with it. And they made me indemnify them in case I got sued and lost everything. They made me sign off big time. And I’m going, ‘I hope it’s not that.'”

Split of Alex Van Halen and Sammy Hagar

Sammy Hager hasn’t spoken to Alex Van Halen in more than 20 years. (Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic; Jeffrey Mayer/WireImage)

The “I Can’t Drive 55” singer told Rolling Stone he thinks Alex is upset with him “because I’m out doing it, and Mike [Anthony] and I are out doing it, and he can’t. He’s not a singer. He’s not a guitar player. He is not really a band leader. And he seems like he doesn’t want to play drums or can’t play drums anymore, and he can’t go write a new record.”

“Alex wasn’t the songwriter in the band,” he continued. “He was the drummer. Eddie and I wrote the songs. Dave [Lee Roth] and Eddie wrote the songs, and so we can go out and do them. And I think that really bothers him that Mike and I are still out there doing it. I would feel bad. If I put myself in his shoes, I would feel terrible if I couldn’t do it anymore.”

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Hagar, who replaced Roth as lead singer of Van Halen in 1985, told Classic Rock in his interview this week that he’s leaning into his time with the band more.  

“Since Eddie died and since Alex sold his drum kit, I feel more comfortable leaning into my era of Van Halen, and even playing a few of the old songs,” he said. “Because frickin’ Mike Anthony’s in the band I feel good about playing a lot of Van Halen stuff, cos no one will ever hear it again. And that was the biggest part of my career, and everybody’s career, for god’s sake. It was the biggest band in the world.”

Hagar previously had a falling out with Eddie too, but the former bandmates made up before the Van Halen co-founder died in 2020 of a stroke following a cancer battle.

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“Eddie was the sweetest person I ever met when I first joined that band,” Hagar remembered to Classic Rock. “He was a superstar, there wasn’t anybody who didn’t look up to him and go: ‘Wow, f—ing Eddie Van Halen’, but it never went to his head. He’d just drink too much – he had an addictive personality. I guess you could say drugs and alcohol and fame and fortune got to him, but that took a long time.”

The Red Rocker told Fox News Digital that he and Eddie reconciled months before his death.

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“To be able to have talked to Eddie and have a wonderful rapport with him on text, it means everything to me,” Hagar shared. “If he would have died and we would have not ever said, ‘I love you’ to each other, I would have felt really bad.”

He continued, “I wouldn’t be able to talk to you about it. So that means a lot to me. And it means a lot, I think, for me to feel good about talking about being in Van Halen now. Because I feel like we buried the hatchet. Otherwise, I’d be saying, ‘Well, those guys.’ Because, you know, I was mad. I was hurt. And it’s very important that we connected.”

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Hagar also told Fox News Digital about his difficulties with Roth.

“David is a strange person for me,” he said. “We’re oil and water. We just don’t gel. I mean, I’ve tried. I thought it would be really cool if him and I were friends. It would be really cool if him and I went out with a great band and did all those great Van Halen songs together, but he’s just not user-friendly.”



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