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Today — 15 October 2025News

US strikes another vessel off Venezuela coast, killing six

15 October 2025 at 03:25
BBC Breaking NewsBBC

The US has struck another vessel off the coast of Venezuela, killing six people, President Donald Trump has said.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump said the vessel belonged to "narcoterrorists" and that it was "trafficking narcotics."

This is the fifth strike of its kind by the Trump administration on a boat accused of trafficking drugs on international waters since September. In total, 27 people have been reported killed, but the US has not provided evidence or details about identities of the vessels or those on board them.

Some lawyers have accused the US of breaching international law, and neighbouring nations like Colombia and Venezuela have condemned the strikes.

In his Truth Social post, Trump said "intelligence confirmed the vessel was trafficking narcotics, was associated with illicit narcoterrorist networks, and was transiting along a known" route for smuggling.

He also posted an aerial surveillance video showing a small boat on water that is struck by a missile and explodes.

Trump did not specify the nationality of those on board, or what drug smuggling organisation they are suspected of belonging to. He added that no US military personnel were injured.

The strike comes after a recent leaked memo sent to Congress, and reported on by US media, that said the administration determined the US was in a "non-international armed conflict" with drug cartels.

The US has positioned its strikes on alleged drug-trafficking vessels as self-defence, despite many lawyers questioning their legality.

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

You can receive Breaking News on a smartphone or tablet via the BBC News App. You can also follow @BBCBreaking on X to get the latest alerts.

French pair sentenced in Iran on spying charges

15 October 2025 at 02:30
Getty Images Pictures of Cecile Kohler and Jacques Paris are tied to railings.Getty Images
Cecile Kohler and Jacques Paris have been detained in Iran since they were arrested in May 2022

Two French nationals have been handed lengthy prison sentences by a court in Iran after being convicted of espionage, Iranian state media reports.

The reports do not name the defendants but they are believed to be Cecile Kohler, 40, and her partner Jacques Paris, 72, the only French nationals being held in Iran. They were arrested in May 2022 during a tourist trip.

The pair have been found guilty of spying on behalf of both France and Israel, the reports say.

The announcement comes more than a month after Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said a deal to exchange French detainees for an Iranian woman held in France was nearly complete.

Iran has previously said Kohler and Paris could be released as part of that agreement.

Another French tourist, Olivier Grondeau, 34, was released by Iran earlier this year after being handed a five-year prison sentence for "conspiracy against the Islamic republic".

Iran's judicial news agency Mizan said one of the defendants was sentenced to six years in prison for spying for France, five years for conspiracy against national security and 20 years in exile for "intelligence co-operation" with Israel.

The other was sentenced to 10 years in prison for spying for France, five years for conspiring against national security and 20 years in exile for being complicit in intelligence co-operation with Israel.

Under Iranian law, jail sentences run concurrently. It is unclear what "exile" entails, though in other instances convicts have been sent to remote areas.

Mizan reports that their pre-trial detention would be deducted from their sentences and that the verdict could be contested within 20 days.

France has accused Iran of holding Kohler and Paris arbitrarily and keeping them in conditions akin to torture. Iran denies the claims.

Human rights groups say tourists and dual nationals are often held for leverage in diplomatic negotiations, released only when Iran gets something in return.

The release of British-Iranian nationals Zaghari-Ratcliffe and Anoosheh Ashoori in 2022, after years in detention, came after months of negotiation that saw the UK settle a debt of nearly £400m dating from the 1970s.

Kohler and Paris were touted as exchangeable for Mahdieh Esfandiari, who has been held in France since February on charges of promoting terrorism on social media. Iran has repeatedly called her detention arbitrary.

Iran is thought to currently hold around 20 Europeans in detention, according to news agency AFP.

These include British couple Craig and Lindsay Foreman, who were detained in January while travelling through Iran on a motorcycling world tour and later charged with espionage.

Their family maintains they are innocent and are being held in "horrific conditions".

Last week, 18-year-old French-German cyclist Lennart Monterlos was released after an Iranian court acquitted him of espionage charges.

U.S. Attorney Was Forced Out After Clashes Over How to Handle Russia Inquiry

The departures of Todd Gilbert and his deputy in the Western District of Virginia show the pressure being brought on prosecutors to pursue the president’s perceived foes.

© Steve Helber/Associated Press

Todd Gilbert, a Republican, was a longtime legislator in Virginia until he was sworn in as the top prosecutor for the state’s western district in July.

US strikes another vessel off Venezuela coast, killing six

15 October 2025 at 03:25
BBC Breaking NewsBBC

The US has struck another vessel off the coast of Venezuela, killing six people, President Donald Trump has said.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump said the vessel belonged to "narcoterrorists" and that it was "trafficking narcotics."

This is the fifth strike of its kind by the Trump administration on a boat accused of trafficking drugs on international waters since September. In total, 27 people have been reported killed, but the US has not provided evidence or details about identities of the vessels or those on board them.

Some lawyers have accused the US of breaching international law, and neighbouring nations like Colombia and Venezuela have condemned the strikes.

In his Truth Social post, Trump said "intelligence confirmed the vessel was trafficking narcotics, was associated with illicit narcoterrorist networks, and was transiting along a known" route for smuggling.

He also posted an aerial surveillance video showing a small boat on water that is struck by a missile and explodes.

Trump did not specify the nationality of those on board, or what drug smuggling organisation they are suspected of belonging to. He added that no US military personnel were injured.

The strike comes after a recent leaked memo sent to Congress, and reported on by US media, that said the administration determined the US was in a "non-international armed conflict" with drug cartels.

The US has positioned its strikes on alleged drug-trafficking vessels as self-defence, despite many lawyers questioning their legality.

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

You can receive Breaking News on a smartphone or tablet via the BBC News App. You can also follow @BBCBreaking on X to get the latest alerts.

Elite military unit says it has seized power in Madagascar

15 October 2025 at 01:41
Col Michael Randrianirina among crowds

An elite military unit said it had taken power in Madagascar on Tuesday, after the country’s parliament impeached president Andry Rajoelina after weeks of anti-government protests.

Rajoelina, who said on Monday in a Facebook Live video that he had gone into hiding after attempts to kill him, had refused demands to step down, but the demonstrators won the backing of the influential Capsat unit at the weekend.

On Tuesday, the presidency posted a statement saying there had been an “attempted coup d’état”.

It continued: “The president of the republic remains fully in office and is ensuring the maintenance of constitutional order and national stability.”

Rajoelina has not been seen in public in Madagascar for several days. He reportedly fled the Indian Ocean island on a French military aircraft on Sunday night, after the Capsat military unit said on Saturday that it would not shoot at protesters.

While no order for the military to shoot civilians had been made public, the gendarmerie, a police force controlled by the Ministry of Defence, killed demonstrators during the early days of youth-led protests that began on 25 September.

The marches started in protest against water and electricity outages and quickly grew to calling for radical political reform and the president’s resignation.

Col Michael Randrianirina, the leader of Capsat, which is short for Corps d’administration des personnels et des services administratifs et techniques, told reporters at a government building in the capital Antananarivo on Tuesday that the military would form a council of officers from the army, gendarmerie military police and police, while a prime minister would be appointed to “quickly” form a civilian government.

Randrianirina said in the statement: “Perhaps in time [the council] will include senior civilian advisers. It is this committee that will carry out the work of the presidency … At the same time, after a few days, we will set up a civilian government.”

“We have taken power,” Randrianirina told Agence-France Presse, after reading out the statement.

Minutes earlier, the lower house of parliament had voted to impeach Rajoelina for desertion of duty. The official presidency Facebook account posted a statement saying that the parliamentary session was “devoid of any legal basis”. The president had dissolved parliament just hours before in a bid to rescue his position.

Capsat’s coup marked a dramatic fall from grace for Rajoelina, a 51-year-old former DJ who was himself brought to power by the military regiment, a unit that controls military logistics, in 2009, after street protests against the high cost of living and Rajoelina’s dismissal as mayor of Antananarivo by his predecessor as president, Marc Ravalomanana.

Rajoelina was initially president until 2014. He returned to power in 2019 and was re-elected in 2023, in a vote marred by allegations of rigging.

Madagascar is one of the world’s poorest countries, with a GDP per capita of just $545 last year, according to World Bank data. The island is rich in natural resources, including vanilla and precious gems, which campaigners say have been exploited by officials and corrupt businesspeople. The country ranked 140 out of 180 countries in Transparency International’s 2024 corruption perceptions index.

The United Nations said 22 people were killed in the first few days of the protest by security forces and during violence and looting by “individuals and gangs not associated with the protesters”. Rajoelina initially denied anyone had been killed, then said that 12 “looters and vandals” had died.

The protests were coordinated at first by Gen Z Madagascar, a leaderless group of young people. They use Discord and Signal privately, while posting publicly on Instagram and Facebook.

On Saturday, Capsat said it would not fire at protesters and called on other parts of the military to join forces with it. That afternoon, Capsat soldiers drove out of their barracks in southern Antananarivo, accompanied by thousands of cheering protesters, to the symbolic 13 May Square outside city hall.

On Sunday, Capsat said it was taking control of the military and appointed a new leader of the armed forces. The gendarmerie also fell in line, saying there had been “faults and excesses” in its response to the protests.

Also on Sunday, Gen Demosthene Pikulas, the head of Capsat, was installed as chief of the army staff during a ceremony at the army headquarters attended by armed forces minister Manantsoa Deramasinjaka Rakotoarivelo. “I give him my blessing,” the minister said of Pikulas.

Pikulas said to journalists after the ceremony that events in Madagascar had been “unpredictable”, adding: “The army has a responsibility to restore calm and peace throughout Madagascar.”

The Gen Z Madagascar movement celebrated the coup on Tuesday. “It’s a great day to be alive!!” it posted on its Instagram stories, followed by videos of people celebrating.

“I’m happy personally, because for now the army has been with us, the people, and it knows what we want and that’s what they’re doing right now,” said an 18-year-old activist who helps to run the Gen Z Madagascar social media accounts.

He continued: “So the president is calling it a coup, but he’s the one that left the country. He’s the one that came to power with a coup as well, so it’s very hypocritical.”

However, a fellow activist said he was “50:50” about the military’s intervention. “It was a must, because as you know, Madagascar was a very corrupt system and I’m happy that this is finally the end of this corrupt system,” he said.

“But … I don’t really know what intentions the military group have, so I prefer to stay on my guard and see what they want to do and what they are going to do.”

Jean-Luc Raharimanana, 58, a Malagasy novelist and playwright, also celebrated Rajoelina’s overthrow: “It’s a utopia in progress. I truly hope the result lives up to this magnificent struggle.”

Agence-France Presse contributed to this report

Young people dance in the streetsProtesters in Madagascar gather in the capital to celebrate – video

D’Angelo: 14 Essential Songs

15 October 2025 at 04:15
The soul singer, songwriter and producer, who died on Tuesday at 51, released three studio albums of meticulously constructed, vocally ambitious, genre-crossing music.

© Chad Batka for The New York Times

D’Angelo onstage at Bonnaroo in 2012. He could be a one-man studio band in the mold of Prince and Stevie Wonder, or multitrack himself to simulate the collective yowl and cackle of Funkadelic or Sly & the Family Stone.

Dallin H. Oaks Named President of the Mormon Church

15 October 2025 at 03:45
The church, which has more than 17 million members around the world, had been officially without a leader since Russell M. Nelson died.

© Scott G Winterton/The Deseret News, via Associated Press

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints uses seniority to determine succession. Dallin H. Oaks is 93.

南方周末|两分钟路人生死抢救:起火的车,拉不开的门

15 October 2025 at 02:38

file

  • 一位年轻男子把胳膊伸进车内,尝试从里面开门,持续了两三秒钟,门始终没有反应。“拉不开,真的拉不开。”袁华楷听到他喊。
  • 在消防员灭火时,那位年轻人的情绪彻底失控,“哭得稀里哗啦”。袁华楷猜测,可能是眼看着人在车里,却怎么也打不开门。

文|南方周末记者 陈佳慧 吴小飞

南方周末实习生 李佳彤 李佳珩 潘奕忻

责任编辑|何海宁

2025年10月13日凌晨3时18分,成都市天府大道发生一起交通事故,一辆小米SU7追尾一辆轿车后,撞上道路中央花坛后,冲进对向车道,起火燃烧。

当天,成都市公安局交通管理局发布警情通报,31岁的涉事司机邓某某已死亡,涉事两车不同程度受损。经检测,邓某某涉嫌酒后驾驶机动车。目前事故正在进一步调查。

事故发生后,现场多名路人加入救援,手拉车门、肘击、脚踹,均无法打开车门救援。10月13日下午,南方周末记者就事故中车门无法打开一事致电小米汽车客服。客服表示已如实记录问题,如有受访意向会另行回复。截至发稿,小米汽车尚未回应。

CDT 档案卡
标题:两分钟路人生死抢救:起火的车,拉不开的门
作者:南方周末
发表日期:2025.10.15
来源:微信公众号“南方周末”
主题归类:小米SU7事故
CDS收藏:公民馆
版权说明:该作品版权归原作者所有。中国数字时代仅对原作进行存档,以对抗中国的网络审查。详细版权说明

“真的拉不开”

30岁的李旭(化名)目击了全过程。那时他刚下夜班,驾车回家。这条路他每天都走,双向八车道,路面平直,没有弯道。他看到那辆车从前方驶过,速度很快。李旭后来在现场听到交警称,事故发生前,涉事车辆车速可能达到150公里/小时,而事发路段限速为80公里/小时。

数秒后,李旭听到两次撞击声:一次追尾,一次撞到花坛。同时,他看到那辆车飞过路中间的花坛,当他驶到事故地点时,涉事车辆已停在对向车道。

袁华楷正好行驶在对向车道。那时路上车辆不多,突然前方出现一个黑影,他仔细看是一辆失控的车。当时他距离事故车辆还有一两百米,尚未看到明显的火光。

袁华楷拿起手机,准备拍下这起车祸视频发给朋友,却没想到刚按下录制键,车辆就在他面前起火了。根据袁华楷拍摄的视频,火势凶猛,车辆右后方火势较大。因距离较近,袁华楷听到了他认为是“电磁起爆的声音”,“声音特别大,很吓人,我整个人都蒙了,反应不过来,很恐怖”。

向前行驶三十米左右,袁华楷把车停在路边,他的第一反应是报警。因为过于紧张,第一次拨号时只按了“11”,“0”还未按到就已拨出。根据他的手机记录,报警时间是凌晨3点20分。

报警后,袁华楷向起火车辆跑去。等他跑到跟前时,车窗边已经有人在施救。一位体型较壮的男子正用手敲玻璃,嘴里喊着“醒醒,醒醒”,另一位瘦高男子在用脚踹门。袁华楷对他们说:“这样打不开。”

他转身去喊人:“谁手上有扳手?什么工具拿过来。”几秒钟后,有人从对向车道递来一把扳手。

一位男子接过扳手,继续砸窗。两下之后,驾驶座一侧的车窗被砸开,但只碎了右半边的玻璃。随即,另一位年轻男子把胳膊伸进车内,尝试从里面开门,持续了两三秒钟,门始终没有反应。“拉不开,真的拉不开。”袁华楷听到他喊。

火势又大了,这次从驾驶座方向往外蹿。那位年轻男子连忙把胳膊抽出,动作太急,右手被碎裂的玻璃划伤了几处。袁华楷并不认识他,两人都是路过的司机。“他挺勇敢的。”袁华楷说,“那车的电池就在底下烧着。”

这时,有人从对向车道递来一罐绿色的泡沫灭火器。袁华楷上前接过,正好110和120的电话不断打来,灭火器被另一位男子接过去,对着车体喷射。“要是能把明火压一压,也许还能再试试开车门。”袁华楷说。

那罐灭火器可能来自李旭的车上。他平时随车携带,听到有人在找灭火器,便从车里取出递了过去。隔着花坛相距二三十米远,李旭看到那团从灭火器喷出的白雾融进火光,只觉得“作用不大”。

消防员切割破门

灭火器喷了数十秒,左侧车身的火势一度减弱。但很快,车底再次传出更激烈的爆炸声。爆炸瞬间,袁华楷感觉地面明显震动,一股气流冲过来。所有人几乎在同一时间后退,火势顺势向上蹿起,他们被迫撤离。

“那时候我们已经确认,司机救不了了,真的救不了了。”袁华楷感到手脚发麻,在破窗之前,他曾透过车窗看到车内浓烟翻滚,确认驾驶室里有人,但无法判断对方的状态。喊了几声,都没有回应。从开始救援,到无法靠近,袁华楷说“没到两分钟”。

两三分钟后,消防人员赶到。

消防员灭火时,袁华楷离开了。他说,现场焦糊味太重,空气里混着电池燃烧的气味,还有橡胶、塑料的味道,身上都沾满那种糊味。地面上也冲出很多碎屑,塑料的、金属的。“实在看不下去了。”他说。

那一夜,他几乎没睡,脑子里反复闪回救援画面。“那个伸手去开车门的小伙子更难受。”袁华楷说,在消防员灭火时,那位年轻人的情绪彻底失控,“哭得稀里哗啦”。袁华楷猜测,年轻人痛哭的原因可能是无力感,眼看着人在车里,却怎么也打不开门。

对消防员来说,这个车门也很难打开。李旭记得,包括消防指挥车在内,当晚一共来了七辆消防车。灭火持续了二十多分钟,火灭了又燃,燃了又灭。消防员一边扑火,一边尝试破门。李旭看到他们拿着撬棍去撬车门,撬了很久,却没能打开。随后消防员用切割机才把车门打开。那时,驾驶座的司机已无生命迹象。

火势被完全扑灭后,李旭发现,事故车的前半部分还算完整,车标依然清晰,但从前挡风玻璃到后座几乎被烧空,只剩车架。

直到现场处理完毕,李旭才离开,当时已是凌晨4点40分,他在现场待了接近一个半小时。

image

事故车辆灭火现场。

国标已在征求意见

近两年,多起电动车事故中出现“车门打不开”的情况。

2024年4月,山西省侯平高速路段一辆电动车追尾道路养护车,随后起火,造成司乘三人死亡,事故车辆车门打不开,引发关注。2024年5月,山东省淄博市一辆电动车撞上路中央防护栏后起火,被困人员随后由路人用撬棍和小刀救出。2025年3月,安徽省铜陵市也发生类似事故,三人身亡,同样车门打不开。

电动车在发生事故时,门把手打不开有多种原因。“比如一些电动车门把手被设计成电控开关,有电的时候才能打开,一旦断电车门就无法打开;再比如车辆边框或者核心零部件在撞击后发生重大损伤、机械锁止装置损坏等情况,都会打不开车门。”一家车企的资深汽车工程师告诉南方周末记者。

一名小米SU7车主告诉南方周末记者,该车型门把手是半隐藏式,电控开关,在车辆断电的情况下,驾驶舱可以通过内置的机械拉手打开车门,但是车外无法通过机械方式打开车门。

“一旦发生断电,在驾驶舱人员无法开锁自救的情况下,外部救援无法通过直接拉开车门施救。平时或许没啥大影响,但对于逃生救援来说会比较重要。”前述工程师分析。

这位工程师介绍,电动车的隐藏式门把手和传统门把手的区别,可以简单理解为家用门锁里的电子锁和机械锁,两者的锁芯都是机械锁,不过隐藏式门把手需要电子系统先把门把手推开才能开门,比传统门把手多了一个前序步骤。

电控门把手在救援方面的潜在隐患,已引发职能部门重视。2025年9月下旬,工业和信息化部就《汽车车门把手安全技术要求》强制性国家标准公开征求意见,对车门内外把手均提出明确要求,强调必须配备机械释放装置,以便应急开门;即便是电控车门,也需保留机械门把手以策安全。

具体要求为,每个车门应配置具备机械释放功能的车门外把手,系统的设计应满足在锁止装置处于锁止状态时,发生不可逆约束装置展开或动力电池热事件等事故后,非碰撞侧车门应能在不借助工具的情况下,通过车门外把手开启车门。

对于车门内把手方面,也要求每个车门应配置具备机械释放功能的车门内把手,应能在不借助外部工具的情况下,通过具备机械释放功能的车门内把手释放门锁并开启车门。若装备电动式车门内把手,应同时配备具有机械释放功能的车门内把手。

U.S. Military Kills 6 People in Boat Attack Near Venezuela, Trump Says

15 October 2025 at 04:01
In a social media post, the president said the people aboard a boat were suspected of smuggling drugs for an unspecified group his team had labeled terrorists.

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

President Trump aboard Air Force One on Tuesday. The administration has not explained how a boat in the southern Caribbean Sea posed an imminent threat of armed attack that could prompt a right to use force in self-defense.

Why Was the President of FIFA at the Gaza Summit?

15 October 2025 at 01:58
Gianni Infantino, the head of soccer’s global governing body, frequently appears alongside President Trump at events outside the realm of sports.

© Pool photo by Suzanne Plunkett

The president of FIFA, Gianni Infantino, traveled to Monday’s Gaza summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, at President Trump’s invitation.

Renewable Energy Is Booming Despite Trump’s Efforts to Slow It

14 October 2025 at 17:01
With federal subsidies ending or becoming hard to claim, companies are racing ahead with solar, wind and battery projects.

© Kyle Grantham for The New York Times

The Little Elk solar project in Elkton, Md., is among those owned by CleanCapital, a company that develops and operates solar and battery storage projects around the country.

Zelensky Revokes Odesa Mayor’s Citizenship, Amid Feud With Local Leaders

15 October 2025 at 02:15
Ukraine’s security services said the mayor held Russian citizenship, which is forbidden, but he denied the accusation. Government opponents see it as part of a power grab.

© Nina Liashonok/Reuters

Mayor Hennady Trukhanov of Odesa in his office in 2022.

Bowen: Trump's role in Gaza ceasefire was decisive, but not a roadmap to peace

15 October 2025 at 01:31
EPA/Shutterstock US President Donald Trump, standing at podium, delivering a speech at a summit in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt. EPA/Shutterstock
Speaking to the Israeli parliament, Trump declared "the historic dawn of a new Middle East"

Donald Trump's quick trip to Israel and Egypt was the victory lap he wanted.

Anyone watching the speeches he made in Jerusalem and Sharm el-Sheikh, could see a man luxuriating in his power - enjoying the applause in Israel's parliament, and in Egypt, basking in the fact that so many heads of state and government had flown in.

One veteran diplomat in the room said it looked as if Trump saw the role of the world leaders there as extras on his film set.

Trump's message assembled at Sharm was, in effect, that he had created a historical turning point.

"All I've done all my life is deals. The greatest deals just sort of happen… That's what happened right here. And maybe this is going to be the greatest deal of them all," he said.

Observers might also have had the impression from the speeches that the job is done. It is not.

Without question, Trump can claim credit for the ceasefire and hostage exchange deal. Qatar, Turkey and Egypt used their leverage with Hamas to force it to accept.

That made it a joint effort, but Trump's role was decisive.

Without his push to demand Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's agreement to terms that he had previously rejected, the deal would not have been signed.

It helps to recognise what the deal is – and what it isn't.

The agreement was for a ceasefire and an exchange of hostages for prisoners. It is not a peace agreement, or even the start of a peace process.

The next phase of the Trump 20-point plan requires an agreement filling in the gaps of the framework which declares that the Gaza Strip will be demilitarised, secured and governed by a committee including Palestinians.

It will report to a Board of Peace chaired by President Trump. Significant work needs to be done on the detail needed to make that happen.

The Gaza agreement is not a route map to peace in the Middle East, the ultimate and so far, unreachable destination.

Reuters Donald Trump points to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. They are standing next to each other at the Ben Gurion International Airport ahead of Trump's visit to Egypt for the summit Reuters
Netanyahu called Trump the "greatest friend" Israel had ever had in the White House

Just as seriously, there is no evidence of the political will necessary to make a real peace deal. Most wars end with exhausted belligerents making some kind of agreement. The war in Gaza has become one of those, if as Trump has declared, it really is over.

The other way to end a war is with a total victory that lets the winners dictate the way ahead. The best example is the unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany in 1945.

Before 9 September, when Netanyahu ordered a missile strike on Qatar he seemed to still be intent on crushing Israel's enemy so comprehensively, that Israel would be able to dictate the future of Gaza.

The strike infuriated Trump.

Qatar is one of America's key allies in the region, and the site of the biggest US military base in the Middle East. It is also a place where his sons have been doing lucrative business. Trump dismissed Netanyahu's justification that the target, which was missed, was the Hamas leadership, not Qatar.

For Trump, America's interests come before Israel's. He is not like Joe Biden, who was prepared to accept harm to America's position in the region as the necessary price for supporting Israel.

CCTV captures moment of Israeli attack on Hamas leaders in Doha

Trump is back in Washington DC. Diplomats say the Americans realise that getting the detail sorted out is vital and will not happen quickly. The problem is that they might not have enough time.

Ceasefires always get violated in their early stages. The ones that survive tend to be based on a tight agreements, made by warring parties who have decided that their best option is to make them work.

The danger is that the Gaza ceasefire lacks those underpinnings. Only 24 hours after Israelis and Palestinians, for very different reasons, shared joy and relief that hostages, prisoners and detainees were home, cracks are appearing in the ceasefire.

Hamas has, so far, returned only four of the bodies of the 28 hostages who were killed during their incarceration. Its explanation is that it is very hard to find their graves in the sea of rubble that Israel has created in Gaza.

Israel's patience is thin.

The fate of the bodies of the hostages will become a bigger and bigger issue in Israel if their remains are not repatriated.

On Tuesday evening, it was reported that Israel will not reopen the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt on Wednesday and will reduce the flow of aid into the territory until Hamas finds the bodies and sends them home.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) still occupies 55% of the Gaza Strip. This morning its soldiers killed Palestinians who they said were approaching their forces. Palestinian Civil Defence in Gaza told the BBC that seven people were killed in two incidents.

It could be that the IDF is still observing the rules of engagement that it was using before the ceasefire. They order troops to watch two imaginary lines around their positions. If one is crossed, they fire warning shots. If Palestinians continue to approach their positions and cross a second imaginary line, IDF troops can shoot to kill.

A big problem with the system is that Palestinians do not know where the lines are. It is crowd control with live fire.

As for Hamas, it is reasserting its power.

Its men, armed and masked are back on the streets. It has attacked rival armed clans, some of which have been protected by the IDF. Videos have circulated of Hamas killing blindfolded and kneeling men who they have accused of collaborating with the Israelis.

The grisly videos of extra-judicial executions in the street send a message to any Palestinians who want to defy them that they should not dare - and to the outside world that Hamas has survived Israel's onslaught.

Reuters Palestinians on a vehicle pass by the rubble of destroyed buildings in Gaza City Reuters
Gaza City has been reduced to grey rubble

Point 15 of the Trump plan for Gaza says the US "will work with Arab and international partners to develop a temporary International Stabilisation Force (ISF) to immediately deploy in Gaza". Raising and deploying that force will be impossible if the ceasefire is not solid. Potential contributors will not send in their troops to use force to disarm Hamas.

Hamas has hinted it might give up some heavy weapons but will not be disarmed. It has an ideology of Islamic resistance to Israel, and knows that without weapons its Palestinian enemies will come for revenge. Netanyahu has threatened that if no-one else will do it, Israel will finish the job. Hamas's weapons have to go, he has said, the "easy way or the hard way".

Trump has proclaimed that his Gaza deal, as it stands, will end generations of conflict between Arabs and Jews over the land between the river Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea. He insists too that it will lead to a broader peace across the Middle East.

If he really believes that the job of making peace is done, then he is deluding himself. Just trying needs sustained focus, hard diplomatic work and a decision by the two sides in the fight that the time has come to make painful sacrifices and compromises. To make peace, other dreams have to be jettisoned.

Past American presidents have also believed that they can make peace in the Middle East. Trump will discover that peace is not made just because a president, however powerful, decides that it is going to happen.

Migrants will need A-level standard English to work in UK

15 October 2025 at 02:10
Reuters People queue up for passport control at an airport on the UK border. Reuters

Some migrants coming to the UK will need to speak English to an A-level standard under tougher new rules set to be introduced by the government.

Applicants will be tested in person on their speaking, listening, reading and writing at Home Office-approved providers, with their results checked as part of the visa process.

The changes, which come into force from 8 January 2026, form part of wider plans to cut levels of immigration to the UK outlined in a white paper in May.

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said: "If you come to this country, you must learn our language and play your part."

Those applying for skilled worker, scale-up and high potential individual (HPI) visas will be required to reach B2 level - a step up from the current B1 standard which is equivalent to GCSE.

"This country has always welcomed those who come to this country and contribute," Mahmood said.

"But it is unacceptable for migrants to come here without learning our language, unable to contribute to our national life."

To come to the UK on the skilled worker visa, migrants have to work for a government-approved employer and earn at least £41,700 a year, or the "going rate" for their type of work, whichever is highest.

The scale-up visa is open to migrants coming to work for a fast-growing UK business. Migrants can apply for a high potential individual visa if they have been awarded a qualification from a top global university within the last five years.

According to the British Council, which offers English language courses, learners who achieve B2 level can "understand the main ideas of complex texts on concrete or abstract topics."

They can express themselves "fluently and spontaneously" and communicate comfortably with other English speakers. They can also produce "clear, detailed text on many subjects and explain a complex viewpoint".

Further English language requirements for other visa routes and family dependants are expected to be introduced in due course, Home Office Minister Mike Tapp told Parliament on Tuesday.

The prime minister previously said the changes outlined in the white paper would make the UK's immigration system "controlled, selective and fair".

Home Office estimates suggest the measures could reduce the number of people coming to the UK by up to 100,000 per year.

Net migration to the UK - total permanent arrivals minus total permanent departures - fell to 431,000 in 2024, down almost 50% on the total in 2023, when it reached a record high of 906,000.

Other measures in the white paper include cutting the time period international students can stay in the UK to find a graduate job after their course ends from two years to 18 months, which will take effect from January 2027.

Students will also have to meet higher financial requirements, raised to £1,171 per month outside London (from £1,136) for up to nine months.

Further plans in the White Paper include, the immigration skills charge for UK employers to pay when sponsoring foreign workers on specific visas has also been increased to £480 per person per year for small organisations or charities, and to £1,320 for medium and large organisations.

This is raised from £364 and £1,000 respectively.

As part of the government's efforts to attract highly skilled people to the country, the HPI route will be expanded. The number of migrants on the visa is expected to double from 2,000 to 4,000, but there will be a cap of 8,000 applications each year.

The Global Talent visa, for high achievers in technology, arts and academia fields has also been expanded to include winners of more prestigious prizes.

Dr Madeleine Sumption, director of the Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford, said the government faced a "trade-off" between "ensuring migrants speak good English and enabling employers to recruit workers who are expected to bring economic benefits."

Many graduate jobs already require language skills above A-level standard, she said.

The new language requirements will have "more impact in middle-skilled jobs involving technical and manual skills, where employers sometimes do not require high language proficiency".

D’Angelo, R&B Grammy-award winning singer, dies aged 51

15 October 2025 at 01:33
BBC 'Breaking' graphicBBC

R&B award-winning singer Michael Eugene Archer, known to his fans as D’Angelo, died aged 51 after a battle with cancer, his family said in a statement.

His family said the singer was leaving behind a "legacy of extraordinarily moving music" and asked fans to celebrate “the gift of song that he has left for the world”.

The influential singer was known for pioneering the genre of neo-soul, which blends R&B music with other genres including hip-hop and jazz.

His three albums won him four Grammy awards. The music video for his hit song, Untitled (How Does it Feel), gained mainstream attention after he performed in the one-shot video, naked, belting the song.

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

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UK will be second-fastest-growing G7 economy, IMF says, but faces higher inflation

14 October 2025 at 21:49
Getty Images Chancellor Rachel Reeves smiles on a visit to Bury, in the northwest of England. She is wearing a navy blue suit.Getty Images
Chancellor Rachel Reeves said, despite the IMF's upgrade to UK economic growth, "for too many people, our economy feels stuck"

The UK is forecast to be the second-fastest growing of the world's most advanced economies this year and next, according to new projections from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

The rates of growth remain modest at 1.3% for both years, but that outperforms the other G7 economies apart from the US, in a torrid year of trade and geopolitical tensions.

However, UK inflation is set to rise to the highest in the G7 in 2025 and 2026, the IMF predicts, driven by larger energy and utility bills.

UK inflation is forecast to average 3.4% this year and 2.5% in 2026 but the IMF says this will be "temporary", and fall to 2% by the end of next year.

The G7 are seven advanced economies - the US, UK, France, Germany, Italy, Canada and Japan - but the group doesn't include fast-growing economies such as China and India.

The IMF is an international organisation with 190 member countries. They work together to try to stabilise the global economy.

In the IMF's forecast for economic growth, the UK overtook Canada, after its trade-war-affected economy was hit by the biggest downgrades for 2025 and 2026. Germany, France and Italy are all forecast to grow far more slowly at rates of between 0.2 and 0.9% in 2025 and 2026.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves welcomed the fresh upgrade to the IMF's outlook for the UK's economy.

"But know this is just the start. For too many people, our economy feels stuck," she said.

"Working people feel it every day, experts talk about it, and I am going to deal with it."

But highlighting the inflation forecasts, shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride said the IMF assessment on made for "grim reading".

He said that UK households "were being squeezed from all sides", adding: "Since taking office, Labour have allowed the cost of living to rise, debt to balloon and business confidence to collapse to record lows."

The IMF said a slight overall upgrade for the UK in its World Economic Outlook, from its previous outlook in April, was due to "strong activity in the first half of 2025" and an improved trade outlook, partly thanks to the recently announced US-UK trade deal.

Trump tariffs loom large

The global outlook is dominated by the so far "muted response" of the world economy to the imposition of hefty tariffs on almost all imports into the US, a weakened dollar, questions about the independence of the US Federal Reserve and sky high valuations of US tech companies.

The IMF expect some of this to unwind soon, saying "resilience is giving way to warning signs". In the US tariff costs which had been absorbed by exporters and retailers, are now feeding into higher goods prices.

So far tariffs have been reflected in higher prices for American shoppers of household appliances, but not for food and clothing.

The IMF cited Brexit as an example of how uncertainty around major changes in trading arrangements can, after a delay, lead to steady falls in investment.

AI warning

The Fund also pointed to a possible bursting of the US AI tech boom.

"Excessively optimistic growth expectations about AI could be revised in light of incoming data from early adopters and could trigger a market correction," the IMF said.

Disappointing profit numbers could lead to a "reassessment of the sustainability of AI-driven valuations and a drop in tech stock prices, with systemic implications. A potential bust of the AI boom could rival the dot-com crash of 2000–01 in severity".

The concentration of the stock market surge on a tiny number of firms and massive funding from less regulated sources outside the banking sector, were particular risks.

Slow growth could hit household wealth, with a lesser ability of major economies to use government borrowing to support their economies, as occurred in recent crises.

Conversely, the IMF also said that "faster AI adoption" could help unleash significant gains in productivity, helping the global economy is handled appropriately.

Elsewhere, the IMF again pointed to the outperformance of the Spanish economy, the fastest-growing large western economy. But the war economy growth seen in Russia last year has now petered out.

There are also concerns about funding for the world's poorest countries now that aid budgets in many countries, such as the UK and US are being slashed in favour of increased defence spending.

The forecasts were released on the eve of the annual meetings of the IMF and World Bank attended by the world's finance ministers and central bankers in Washington DC, with considerable attention on a new US bailout for Argentina.

Military says it has seized power in Madagascar after president moves to 'safe place'

15 October 2025 at 01:35
'We have seized power,' says head of military unit

An elite military unit says it has seized power in Madagascar from President Andry Rajoelina following weeks of youth-led protests in the Indian Ocean island.

Standing outside the Presidential Palace, CAPSAT chief Col Michael Randrianirina said the military would form a government and hold elections within two years. He also suspended key democratic institutions, like the electoral commission.

Gen Z protestors will be part of the changes because "the movement was created in the streets so we have to respect their demands" he added.

Troops and protestors have been celebrating the apparent ousting of President Rajoelina, with thousands cheering and waving flags in the capital, Antananarivo.

Madagascar's constitutional court has named Col Randrianirina as the country's new leader, even though a statement from the president's office said he was still in charge and denounced what it described as an "attempted coup d'etat".

Rajoelina's whereabouts are unknown, but he has said he is sheltering in a "safe place" following an alleged attempt on his life by "military personnel and politicians", which CAPSAT has denied having any involvement in. There have been unconfirmed reports that the president was flown out of the country on a French military aircraft.

Col Randrianirina told the BBC that Madagascar was "a country where chaos reigns right now".

"Chaos because there's no president - he's gone abroad."

The unrest began just over two weeks ago, after a youth-led movement began protesting against chronic water and power cuts across the country.

AFP via Getty Images Dozens of people march in the Madagascar capital of  Antananarivo, with their fists in the air. AFP via Getty Images
Youth-led protests began over electricity cuts and water shortages

The demonstrations soon escalated, to reflect wider dissatisfaction with Rajoelina's government over high unemployment, rampant corruption and the cost-of-living crisis.

Protestors clashed with security forces resulting in the death of at least 22 people and more than 100 others injured, according to the UN, although the Malagasy government has dismissed those figures and described them as based on "rumours and misinformation".

CAPSAT, which supported Rajoelina when he came into power in 2009, joined the protestors on Saturday.

President Rajoelina, an entrepreneur and former DF, was once seen as a fresh start for Madagascar.

The baby-faced leader became president at the age of just 24, earning the title of Africa's youngest leader, and going on to govern for four years, before returning to power after the 2018 election.

AFP via Getty Images Video of President Andry Rajoelina on an tablet screenAFP via Getty Images
President Andry Rajoelina gave a speech on Monday via his Facebook page

But he fell out of favour following allegations of cronyism and corruption, which he denied.

Despite the fact that power appears to have shifted away from him, he has continued to try to influence events.

Rajoelina attempted to dissolve the national assembly before the opposition could vote to strip him of his presidency for abandonment of post, but that didn't work.

Lawmakers voted to impeach Rajoelina by 130 votes to one blank ballot. Even members of Rajoelina's party, IRMAR, voted overwhelmingly to impeach him.

Rajoelina rejected the vote, calling it "null and void".

The African Union (AU) has warned against soldiers "meddling" in Madagascar's political affairs and rejected "any attempt at unconstitutional changes of government".

French President Emmanuel Macron called the situation "greatly worrying".

The island has gone through a series of political upheavals in recent years.

Madagascar is one of the poorest countries in the world, with 75% of its 30 million people living below the poverty line, according to the World Bank.

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Peer faces Lords ban for raising speeding fines with police chief

15 October 2025 at 00:20
UK Parliament Baroness D'Souza stands in front of an ornately carved wooden panel featuring geometric and floral patterns. She wears a blue blazer over a red top, a multi-strand pearl necklace, and glasses.UK Parliament

Former House of Lords Speaker Baroness D'Souza faces an eight-week suspension after complaining to the Metropolitan Police Commissioner about "unfair" speeding fines.

A Lords inquiry found the 81-year-old peer broke rules on "personal honour" by writing to Sir Mark Rowley on Lords headed notepaper to query multiple breaches of the 20mph limit adding up to £400 in fines.

Baroness D'Souza said she only wanted to "open a conversation" on London speed limits, but later called the letter to Sir Mark "unwise" and said she regretted sending it.

The Lords Standards Commissioner ruled the letter was "an attempt to influence" the police investigation.

In his report, Commissioner for Standards Martin Jelley said Baroness D'Souza's actions "may harm the House by eroding public trust in parliamentarians and in institutions which exist to serve the public interest".

In the letter, Baroness D'Souza complained the offences would result in 12 points on her driving licence and losing her driving licence, which she said might mean she would have to "give up attending Parliament".

"I live deep in the countryside with no local bus services and unsuitable train schedules," she added.

The peer had asked Sir Mark if losing her licence was "a fair response for exceeding the speed limit while we are all still learning what a 20-mile speed actually feels like?"

"Who can say if my speedometer or your radar is entirely accurate in recording 21 miles instead of 20," she added in her letter, which was sent on House of Lords headed paper.

Baroness D'Souza, a crossbench peer who does not belong to a party, was eventually disqualified from driving temporarily on 16 July. She has only spoken in the House of Lords once since then and, voted twice.

In the letter, she acknowledged that Sir Mark, the UK's most senior police officer who also leads on Britain's counter-terrorism efforts, had "much other business to deal with".

"I apologise for bothering your office with such a trivial matter," she added.

The Met Police passed the letter to the House of Lords' commissioner for standards who recommended an eight-week suspension, citing the aggravating factor that the intervention was for personal benefit.

Baroness D'Souza, who was the Lords' speaker between 2011 and 2016, denied she had been attempting to influence the police investigation, but instead find "any mitigating factors" that might keep any driving ban to a minimum.

She told investigators she used Lords stationery because she had previously met Sir Mark "in the context" of her parliamentary role.

Baroness D'Souza accepted that her letter to the Met Police chief was "inappropriate" and said she "deeply regretted" the decision to send it.

She appealed against the proposed eight-week Lords ban, claiming it was "unduly severe" compared with shorter suspensions for bullying or misuse of facilities.

Her appeal rejected by the committee.

The report will now go before the House for approval. If agreed, the suspension will take effect immediately.

Baroness D'Souza was previously criticised for billing taxpayers thousands of pounds in expenses for chauffeur-driven cars.

This includes a keeping chauffeur-driven Mercedes waiting outside the Royal Opera House - just a mile from parliament - for four hours, before returning to the Lords at a cost of £230.40.

She also used a Mercedes to get from Westminster to Canterbury for the enthronement of Archbishop Justin Welby in March 2013 cost £627, freedom of information results found.

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Recognising Palestinian state helped get ceasefire, PM says

14 October 2025 at 23:07
Reuters Sir Keir Starmer holds an official black government folder on the steps of 10 Downing StreetReuters

The UK's decision to recognise Palestinian statehood helped to bring about the ceasefire deal in Gaza, Sir Keir Starmer has told MPs.

Speaking after a summit in Egypt, the PM stressed that the agreement signed there belonged to US President Donald Trump, telling MPs: "This is his deal."

But he said the UK had been in a position to work "behind the scenes" for a ceasefire "precisely because of the approach this government takes," including its recognition of a Palestinian state.

Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch said recognising Palestine without setting a condition for the release of hostages was "rewarding terrorism" and accused the PM of "diminishing" UK influence in the Middle East.

Sir Keir told MPs that Monday's deal provided "a moment of profound relief" as he paid tribute to both the hostages and the civilians killed in Gaza.

But he also stressed that "making that peace last will be no less difficult a task" and that implementing the peace plan "is no small challenge".

Negotiations will now follow on phase two of the deal, which involves Hamas laying down its weapons - a possibility the group is reported to have dismissed - and the rebuilding of Gaza under a "peace board" chaired by Trump and potentially including former prime minister Sir Tony Blair.

Sir Keir said the UK stood ready to deploy its diplomacy and expertise to support the reconstruction of Gaza - the devastation of which he says "defies description".

The UK will provide an additional £20m in humanitarian aid to provide "water, sanitation and hygiene products" to people in the territory, he added.

There are no plans to send British troops to be part of the multinational force that will monitor the truce, but the prime minister said the UK would help with the ceasefire monitoring process.

And he said the UK could draw on its experience in Northern Ireland to "play a full role" in the decommissioning of Hamas's weapons and capability.

The prime minster told MPs the deal represented the "first real chance we've had" of a two-state solution since the 1993 Oslo Accords, which were meant to provide interim self-government for Palestine as a stepping stone to an independent state.

"So we are fully committed to this [deal] because a safe and secure Israel, alongside a viable Palestinian state, is the only way to secure lasting peace for the Middle East," he told MPs.

The PM also claimed that the UK's decision to recognise Palestinian statehood had aided the cause of peace.

He told MPs: "This move, taken alongside our allies France, Canada, Australia and others, helped lead to the historic New York declaration, where for the first time the entire Arab League condemned the atrocities of October 7, urged Hamas to disarm and, crucially, demanded that they end their rule in Gaza."

Kemi Badenoch accused the prime minister of "taking the wrong decisions time and time again, diminishing our influence in" the Middle East.

"It's quite clear that UK relations with Israel have been strained by the actions of this government," she told MPs, to cries of "shame" from the Labour benches.

The Conservative leader added: "In a move praised by Hamas, Labour decided to recognise a state of Palestine with no condition to release the hostages still held in the tunnels of Gaza, rewarding terrorism."

At the time, the US voiced strong opposition to the UK and other countries recognising Palestinian statehood, with Secretary of State Marco Rubio saying Hamas would "feel more emboldened" by the move.

Under Trump's proposed 20-point peace plan, Gaza would initially be governed by a temporary transitional committee of Palestinian technocrats - supervised by a "Board of Peace".

Governance of the Strip would eventually be handed over to the Palestinian Authority - which administers the West Bank - once it has undergone reforms.

According to the plan, Hamas - which seized control of Gaza in 2007 by ousting its rivals, a year after winning legislative elections - would play no future role in its governance, directly or indirectly.

The ceasefire deal says Hamas should release all the 48 Israeli and foreign hostages still in Gaza after two years of war.

All but one were among the 251 people abducted during the Palestinian group's attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, during which about 1,200 other people were killed.

Israel responded by launching a military campaign in Gaza, during which more than 67,800 people have been killed, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.

My friend Bipin threw back Hamas grenade - and saved my life

15 October 2025 at 00:20
Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary (left) and Bipin Joshi during their bachelor level college year at Far Western University school of agriculture, Tikapur.Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary
Dhan Bahadur (left) and Bipin, seen here in their bachelor level college year at Far Western University in Nepal

Bipin Joshi threw back a grenade from Hamas attackers before being taken hostage in the assault on Israel two years ago, says the fellow Nepalese student he saved.

"I may not have survived if both grenades had exploded. Bipin showed courage and threw the grenade out," Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary told BBC Nepali.

He was speaking after the Israeli military identified his friend's body as being among four dead hostages returned by Hamas under the Gaza ceasefire accord.

Bipin was 23 and working on a kibbutz when he was taken by Hamas into captivity along with 250 others on 7 October 2023. It's unclear how or when he died.

His family and friends hoped right up to the release deadline that he might be among living hostages returned on 13 October, but he wasn't, and a day later their worst fears were confirmed.

Bipin, Dhan Bahadur and 15 other Nepalese agriculture students had been in Israel for just over three weeks when Kibbutz Alumim was attacked.

"We knew that there may be a war in Israel. But we had no idea that there may be any ground attack of that magnitude," Dhan Bahadur said. "We thought that there could be missile attacks and we would be safe if we stay underground, in the bunkers."

For the students who'd been invited under the Israeli government's "Earn and Learn Programme" it was a great opportunity to make better lives for themselves and their families in Nepal.

Dhan Bahadur credits his survival to Bipin's courage.

"At the time of attack, two grenades were thrown near the bunkers. He [Bipin] picked up one and threw it outside; one exploded inside. Due to that explosion, I and four others were injured," he says.

"He was unharmed at that point. If both grenades had exploded, I would not have been speaking with you like this."

Ten of the Nepalese students were killed in the attack. Bipin was the only one captured.

"We met for the last time when he and others were being shifted to another bunker," Dhan Bahadur says. "Because, after the injury, I could not move and I stayed in the first bunker. I later came to know that there were two attacks in the bunker where he took shelter and he was held captive from there."

Courtesy Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary This selfie is taken 30 minutes before the attack inside the bunker. According to Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary, it is taken by one of the Nepali student who diedCourtesy Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary
Many of the students can be seen in this selfie inside the bunker 30 minutes before the attack, taken by one of those killed

The 27-year-old says he feels deeply saddened after hearing about his colleague's death. He and Bipin studied together in Far Western University School of Agriculture in Tikapur, Nepal.

"We made all possible efforts from our sides to secure his release. We did everything. But yesterday, we had to face such shocking news. All of Nepal is in grief. I do not know what to say. I have no words to explain my sorrow."

Dhan Bahadur says Bipin and other colleagues had the same goal of making little savings and starting their own enterprise after returning from the exchange programme in Israel.

"He loved playing football and basketball. We would chat for hours about our goals and dreams. He wanted to get his body in good shape and to buy a new mobile phone. We even recorded a song about friendship with my phone. He also talked about showcasing himself in a music video."

Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary Last selfie taken at the Kibbutz Alumim basketball court, showing Bipin, Dhan Bahadur and  Israeli friendsDhan Bahadur Chaudhary
Bipin and Dhan Bahadur with Israeli friends, in a final selfie at the Kibbutz Alumim basketball court

On 14 October, the Israeli military said it believed Bipin Joshi was "murdered in captivity during the first months of the war". There's no way of independently confirming that.

But if it's the case, Dhan Bahadur said, the international community should ask Hamas about why it happened.

He said he had not received any support from Nepal's government following his injury but hoped the Israeli government would help Bipin's family.

Bipin's immediate family members have not released any statement so far.

Footage from 7 October showed him walking inside al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City. His family received no signs of life for a year, until the Israeli military shared a video of him in captivity around November 2023.

Relatives described the footage as "proof of life" just hours before the ceasefire deal was agreed, and were hoping for a miracle.

Now in his hometown of Bhimdutta municipality Bipin's family are grieving after hearing news of his death.

Hostages and Missing Families Forum Bipin Joshi and Guy IllouzHostages and Missing Families Forum
The bodies of Bipin Joshi and fellow hostage Guy Illouz were handed over by Hamas in Gaza on Monday

His mother and sister had gone to the United States to lobby for the release of hostages, Bipin's cousin Kishore Joshi told BBC Nepali.

He says the family has no words to describe the grief. "His mother and sister are returning from US on Thursday. The father is not in the condition to express the pain in words."

Meanwhile it's unclear when Bipin's body will be returned to his family.

Israel is making all necessary arrangements to repatriate his remains to Nepal, as it did for the other students who died, Nepal's ministry of foreign affairs said.

"We are all shocked by the news of Bipin Joshi's death. In this time of sorrow [we] extend our deep sympathy to the grieving family," it said in a statement of condolence.

"Even after Bipin Joshi's body is brought back to Nepal, we will continue appropriate efforts in co-ordination and co-operation with the concerned government authorities and stakeholders - to uncover the truth about the actual cause and circumstances of his death."

Dhan Bahadur says he and other colleagues who returned safely from Israel plan to visit Bipin's family in Kanchanpur district.

"We will keep his memories alive. We will provide our care, support and consolation to his family."

He still feels numb.

"I returned to Nepal and I am studying at the moment. But Bipin's dreams remained unfulfilled."

Bowen: Trump's role in Gaza ceasefire was decisive, but not a roadmap to peace

15 October 2025 at 01:31
EPA/Shutterstock US President Donald Trump, standing at podium, delivering a speech at a summit in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt. EPA/Shutterstock
Speaking to the Israeli parliament, Trump declared "the historic dawn of a new Middle East"

Donald Trump's quick trip to Israel and Egypt was the victory lap he wanted.

Anyone watching the speeches he made in Jerusalem and Sharm el-Sheikh, could see a man luxuriating in his power - enjoying the applause in Israel's parliament, and in Egypt, basking in the fact that so many heads of state and government had flown in.

One veteran diplomat in the room said it looked as if Trump saw the role of the world leaders there as extras on his film set.

Trump's message assembled at Sharm was, in effect, that he had created a historical turning point.

"All I've done all my life is deals. The greatest deals just sort of happen… That's what happened right here. And maybe this is going to be the greatest deal of them all," he said.

Observers might also have had the impression from the speeches that the job is done. It is not.

Without question, Trump can claim credit for the ceasefire and hostage exchange deal. Qatar, Turkey and Egypt used their leverage with Hamas to force it to accept.

That made it a joint effort, but Trump's role was decisive.

Without his push to demand Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's agreement to terms that he had previously rejected, the deal would not have been signed.

It helps to recognise what the deal is – and what it isn't.

The agreement was for a ceasefire and an exchange of hostages for prisoners. It is not a peace agreement, or even the start of a peace process.

The next phase of the Trump 20-point plan requires an agreement filling in the gaps of the framework which declares that the Gaza Strip will be demilitarised, secured and governed by a committee including Palestinians.

It will report to a Board of Peace chaired by President Trump. Significant work needs to be done on the detail needed to make that happen.

The Gaza agreement is not a route map to peace in the Middle East, the ultimate and so far, unreachable destination.

Reuters Donald Trump points to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. They are standing next to each other at the Ben Gurion International Airport ahead of Trump's visit to Egypt for the summit Reuters
Netanyahu called Trump the "greatest friend" Israel had ever had in the White House

Just as seriously, there is no evidence of the political will necessary to make a real peace deal. Most wars end with exhausted belligerents making some kind of agreement. The war in Gaza has become one of those, if as Trump has declared, it really is over.

The other way to end a war is with a total victory that lets the winners dictate the way ahead. The best example is the unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany in 1945.

Before 9 September, when Netanyahu ordered a missile strike on Qatar he seemed to still be intent on crushing Israel's enemy so comprehensively, that Israel would be able to dictate the future of Gaza.

The strike infuriated Trump.

Qatar is one of America's key allies in the region, and the site of the biggest US military base in the Middle East. It is also a place where his sons have been doing lucrative business. Trump dismissed Netanyahu's justification that the target, which was missed, was the Hamas leadership, not Qatar.

For Trump, America's interests come before Israel's. He is not like Joe Biden, who was prepared to accept harm to America's position in the region as the necessary price for supporting Israel.

CCTV captures moment of Israeli attack on Hamas leaders in Doha

Trump is back in Washington DC. Diplomats say the Americans realise that getting the detail sorted out is vital and will not happen quickly. The problem is that they might not have enough time.

Ceasefires always get violated in their early stages. The ones that survive tend to be based on a tight agreements, made by warring parties who have decided that their best option is to make them work.

The danger is that the Gaza ceasefire lacks those underpinnings. Only 24 hours after Israelis and Palestinians, for very different reasons, shared joy and relief that hostages, prisoners and detainees were home, cracks are appearing in the ceasefire.

Hamas has, so far, returned only four of the bodies of the 28 hostages who were killed during their incarceration. Its explanation is that it is very hard to find their graves in the sea of rubble that Israel has created in Gaza.

Israel's patience is thin.

The fate of the bodies of the hostages will become a bigger and bigger issue in Israel if their remains are not repatriated.

On Tuesday evening, it was reported that Israel will not reopen the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt on Wednesday and will reduce the flow of aid into the territory until Hamas finds the bodies and sends them home.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) still occupies 55% of the Gaza Strip. This morning its soldiers killed Palestinians who they said were approaching their forces. Palestinian Civil Defence in Gaza told the BBC that seven people were killed in two incidents.

It could be that the IDF is still observing the rules of engagement that it was using before the ceasefire. They order troops to watch two imaginary lines around their positions. If one is crossed, they fire warning shots. If Palestinians continue to approach their positions and cross a second imaginary line, IDF troops can shoot to kill.

A big problem with the system is that Palestinians do not know where the lines are. It is crowd control with live fire.

As for Hamas, it is reasserting its power.

Its men, armed and masked are back on the streets. It has attacked rival armed clans, some of which have been protected by the IDF. Videos have circulated of Hamas killing blindfolded and kneeling men who they have accused of collaborating with the Israelis.

The grisly videos of extra-judicial executions in the street send a message to any Palestinians who want to defy them that they should not dare - and to the outside world that Hamas has survived Israel's onslaught.

Reuters Palestinians on a vehicle pass by the rubble of destroyed buildings in Gaza City Reuters
Gaza City has been reduced to grey rubble

Point 15 of the Trump plan for Gaza says the US "will work with Arab and international partners to develop a temporary International Stabilisation Force (ISF) to immediately deploy in Gaza". Raising and deploying that force will be impossible if the ceasefire is not solid. Potential contributors will not send in their troops to use force to disarm Hamas.

Hamas has hinted it might give up some heavy weapons but will not be disarmed. It has an ideology of Islamic resistance to Israel, and knows that without weapons its Palestinian enemies will come for revenge. Netanyahu has threatened that if no-one else will do it, Israel will finish the job. Hamas's weapons have to go, he has said, the "easy way or the hard way".

Trump has proclaimed that his Gaza deal, as it stands, will end generations of conflict between Arabs and Jews over the land between the river Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea. He insists too that it will lead to a broader peace across the Middle East.

If he really believes that the job of making peace is done, then he is deluding himself. Just trying needs sustained focus, hard diplomatic work and a decision by the two sides in the fight that the time has come to make painful sacrifices and compromises. To make peace, other dreams have to be jettisoned.

Past American presidents have also believed that they can make peace in the Middle East. Trump will discover that peace is not made just because a president, however powerful, decides that it is going to happen.

My friend Bipin threw back Hamas grenade - and saved my life

15 October 2025 at 00:20
Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary (left) and Bipin Joshi during their bachelor level college year at Far Western University school of agriculture, Tikapur.Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary
Dhan Bahadur (left) and Bipin, seen here in their bachelor level college year at Far Western University in Nepal

Bipin Joshi threw back a grenade from Hamas attackers before being taken hostage in the assault on Israel two years ago, says the fellow Nepalese student he saved.

"I may not have survived if both grenades had exploded. Bipin showed courage and threw the grenade out," Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary told BBC Nepali.

He was speaking after the Israeli military identified his friend's body as being among four dead hostages returned by Hamas under the Gaza ceasefire accord.

Bipin was 23 and working on a kibbutz when he was taken by Hamas into captivity along with 250 others on 7 October 2023. It's unclear how or when he died.

His family and friends hoped right up to the release deadline that he might be among living hostages returned on 13 October, but he wasn't, and a day later their worst fears were confirmed.

Bipin, Dhan Bahadur and 15 other Nepalese agriculture students had been in Israel for just over three weeks when Kibbutz Alumim was attacked.

"We knew that there may be a war in Israel. But we had no idea that there may be any ground attack of that magnitude," Dhan Bahadur said. "We thought that there could be missile attacks and we would be safe if we stay underground, in the bunkers."

For the students who'd been invited under the Israeli government's "Earn and Learn Programme" it was a great opportunity to make better lives for themselves and their families in Nepal.

Dhan Bahadur credits his survival to Bipin's courage.

"At the time of attack, two grenades were thrown near the bunkers. He [Bipin] picked up one and threw it outside; one exploded inside. Due to that explosion, I and four others were injured," he says.

"He was unharmed at that point. If both grenades had exploded, I would not have been speaking with you like this."

Ten of the Nepalese students were killed in the attack. Bipin was the only one captured.

"We met for the last time when he and others were being shifted to another bunker," Dhan Bahadur says. "Because, after the injury, I could not move and I stayed in the first bunker. I later came to know that there were two attacks in the bunker where he took shelter and he was held captive from there."

Courtesy Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary This selfie is taken 30 minutes before the attack inside the bunker. According to Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary, it is taken by one of the Nepali student who diedCourtesy Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary
Many of the students can be seen in this selfie inside the bunker 30 minutes before the attack, taken by one of those killed

The 27-year-old says he feels deeply saddened after hearing about his colleague's death. He and Bipin studied together in Far Western University School of Agriculture in Tikapur, Nepal.

"We made all possible efforts from our sides to secure his release. We did everything. But yesterday, we had to face such shocking news. All of Nepal is in grief. I do not know what to say. I have no words to explain my sorrow."

Dhan Bahadur says Bipin and other colleagues had the same goal of making little savings and starting their own enterprise after returning from the exchange programme in Israel.

"He loved playing football and basketball. We would chat for hours about our goals and dreams. He wanted to get his body in good shape and to buy a new mobile phone. We even recorded a song about friendship with my phone. He also talked about showcasing himself in a music video."

Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary Last selfie taken at the Kibbutz Alumim basketball court, showing Bipin, Dhan Bahadur and  Israeli friendsDhan Bahadur Chaudhary
Bipin and Dhan Bahadur with Israeli friends, in a final selfie at the Kibbutz Alumim basketball court

On 14 October, the Israeli military said it believed Bipin Joshi was "murdered in captivity during the first months of the war". There's no way of independently confirming that.

But if it's the case, Dhan Bahadur said, the international community should ask Hamas about why it happened.

He said he had not received any support from Nepal's government following his injury but hoped the Israeli government would help Bipin's family.

Bipin's immediate family members have not released any statement so far.

Footage from 7 October showed him walking inside al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City. His family received no signs of life for a year, until the Israeli military shared a video of him in captivity around November 2023.

Relatives described the footage as "proof of life" just hours before the ceasefire deal was agreed, and were hoping for a miracle.

Now in his hometown of Bhimdutta municipality Bipin's family are grieving after hearing news of his death.

Hostages and Missing Families Forum Bipin Joshi and Guy IllouzHostages and Missing Families Forum
The bodies of Bipin Joshi and fellow hostage Guy Illouz were handed over by Hamas in Gaza on Monday

His mother and sister had gone to the United States to lobby for the release of hostages, Bipin's cousin Kishore Joshi told BBC Nepali.

He says the family has no words to describe the grief. "His mother and sister are returning from US on Thursday. The father is not in the condition to express the pain in words."

Meanwhile it's unclear when Bipin's body will be returned to his family.

Israel is making all necessary arrangements to repatriate his remains to Nepal, as it did for the other students who died, Nepal's ministry of foreign affairs said.

"We are all shocked by the news of Bipin Joshi's death. In this time of sorrow [we] extend our deep sympathy to the grieving family," it said in a statement of condolence.

"Even after Bipin Joshi's body is brought back to Nepal, we will continue appropriate efforts in co-ordination and co-operation with the concerned government authorities and stakeholders - to uncover the truth about the actual cause and circumstances of his death."

Dhan Bahadur says he and other colleagues who returned safely from Israel plan to visit Bipin's family in Kanchanpur district.

"We will keep his memories alive. We will provide our care, support and consolation to his family."

He still feels numb.

"I returned to Nepal and I am studying at the moment. But Bipin's dreams remained unfulfilled."

Military says it has seized power in Madagascar after president moves to 'safe place'

15 October 2025 at 01:35
'We have seized power,' says head of military unit

An elite military unit says it has seized power in Madagascar from President Andry Rajoelina following weeks of youth-led protests in the Indian Ocean island.

Standing outside the Presidential Palace, CAPSAT chief Col Michael Randrianirina said the military would form a government and hold elections within two years. He also suspended key democratic institutions, like the electoral commission.

Gen Z protestors will be part of the changes because "the movement was created in the streets so we have to respect their demands" he added.

Troops and protestors have been celebrating the apparent ousting of President Rajoelina, with thousands cheering and waving flags in the capital, Antananarivo.

Madagascar's constitutional court has named Col Randrianirina as the country's new leader, even though a statement from the president's office said he was still in charge and denounced what it described as an "attempted coup d'etat".

Rajoelina's whereabouts are unknown, but he has said he is sheltering in a "safe place" following an alleged attempt on his life by "military personnel and politicians", which CAPSAT has denied having any involvement in. There have been unconfirmed reports that the president was flown out of the country on a French military aircraft.

Col Randrianirina told the BBC that Madagascar was "a country where chaos reigns right now".

"Chaos because there's no president - he's gone abroad."

The unrest began just over two weeks ago, after a youth-led movement began protesting against chronic water and power cuts across the country.

AFP via Getty Images Dozens of people march in the Madagascar capital of  Antananarivo, with their fists in the air. AFP via Getty Images
Youth-led protests began over electricity cuts and water shortages

The demonstrations soon escalated, to reflect wider dissatisfaction with Rajoelina's government over high unemployment, rampant corruption and the cost-of-living crisis.

Protestors clashed with security forces resulting in the death of at least 22 people and more than 100 others injured, according to the UN, although the Malagasy government has dismissed those figures and described them as based on "rumours and misinformation".

CAPSAT, which supported Rajoelina when he came into power in 2009, joined the protestors on Saturday.

President Rajoelina, an entrepreneur and former DF, was once seen as a fresh start for Madagascar.

The baby-faced leader became president at the age of just 24, earning the title of Africa's youngest leader, and going on to govern for four years, before returning to power after the 2018 election.

AFP via Getty Images Video of President Andry Rajoelina on an tablet screenAFP via Getty Images
President Andry Rajoelina gave a speech on Monday via his Facebook page

But he fell out of favour following allegations of cronyism and corruption, which he denied.

Despite the fact that power appears to have shifted away from him, he has continued to try to influence events.

Rajoelina attempted to dissolve the national assembly before the opposition could vote to strip him of his presidency for abandonment of post, but that didn't work.

Lawmakers voted to impeach Rajoelina by 130 votes to one blank ballot. Even members of Rajoelina's party, IRMAR, voted overwhelmingly to impeach him.

Rajoelina rejected the vote, calling it "null and void".

The African Union (AU) has warned against soldiers "meddling" in Madagascar's political affairs and rejected "any attempt at unconstitutional changes of government".

French President Emmanuel Macron called the situation "greatly worrying".

The island has gone through a series of political upheavals in recent years.

Madagascar is one of the poorest countries in the world, with 75% of its 30 million people living below the poverty line, according to the World Bank.

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D’Angelo, R&B Grammy-award winning singer, dies aged 51

15 October 2025 at 01:33
BBC 'Breaking' graphicBBC

R&B award-winning singer Michael Eugene Archer, known to his fans as D’Angelo, died aged 51 after a battle with cancer, his family said in a statement.

His family said the singer was leaving behind a "legacy of extraordinarily moving music" and asked fans to celebrate “the gift of song that he has left for the world”.

The influential singer was known for pioneering the genre of neo-soul, which blends R&B music with other genres including hip-hop and jazz.

His three albums won him four Grammy awards. The music video for his hit song, Untitled (How Does it Feel), gained mainstream attention after he performed in the one-shot video, naked, belting the song.

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

You can receive Breaking News on a smartphone or tablet via the BBC News App. You can also follow @BBCBreaking on X to get the latest alerts.

US Supreme Court rejects Alex Jones appeal in Sandy Hook shooting case

15 October 2025 at 01:12
Reuters Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones gestures with his right hand as he is speaking with a defiant look on his faceReuters
Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones

The US Supreme Court has rejected a request from right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones to overturn the nearly $1.5bn (£1.1bn) defamation judgment against him.

Jones was ordered to make the payout in 2022 for claiming the 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School - which killed 20 schoolchildren and six educators - was a hoax.

In order to make that payout, Jones was being forced to sell his Infowars media company to the satirical news site The Onion. He told the highest US court the sale would cause irreparable harm to him and his audience of 30 million.

Jones has not yet paid any of the damages he owes Sandy Hook families.

The Supreme Court did not explain its decision to deny his request.

Jones’s lawyers had made a free speech argument - that he should have the same protections under the First Amendment of the Constitution that journalists have. And Jones argued the financial consequences were too steep.

"The result is a financial death penalty by fiat imposed on a media defendant whose broadcasts reach millions," he told the Supreme Court in the appeal.

While The Onion's attempt to buy Infowars was rejected by a bankruptcy judge last year, Infowars could soon be up for sale again, giving The Onion another chance.

Legal pressure against Jones has been mounting since he was found liable by two juries for defamation and emotional distress over his lies about the Sandy Hook school shooting.

After the first verdict in Connecticut, Jones filed for bankruptcy protection in Texas, and Infowars was put up for auction to pay the Sandy Hook families, who had sued to collect on the judgment.

It was during Texas court proceedings that Jones acknowledged the attack was "100% real". He had previously claimed the massacre was "staged" as part of a government plot to take guns from Americans and that "no-one died".

Man who set fire to Pennsylvania governor’s mansion sentenced to 25 to 50 years in prison

15 October 2025 at 00:58
Getty Images Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro's residence is shown after an arsonist set fire to the home in April. Walls are sooty and burned and rubble and ash are across the floor.Getty Images
An arsonist set fire to Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro's residence

The man accused of setting Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro’s residence on fire in April was sentenced to 25 to 50 years in state prison as part of a plea deal.

Cody Balmer, 38, pleaded guilty to attempted murder, aggravated arson, 22 counts of arson, burglary and other offenses at a court hearing on Tuesday.

While the official residence in the state capital of Harrisburg was severely damaged during the fire, people home at the time - including Shapiro, his wife, his four children, and guests and staff members - were able to escape unscathed.

Shapiro said his family was supportive of the plea agreement announced by prosecutors.

The attack against the governor and his family is part of a wave of political violence in the US, including attempted kidnapping of Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, two assassination attempts against President Donald Trump, the killings of two Minnesota state officials and the killing of commentator Charlie Kirk.

At a press conference on Tuesday, the Pennsylvania governor - standing alongside his wife - said his family has had to lean on their faith as they navigated a difficult recovery since the attack.

“We will forever be changed by this, we know that time will heal, but the scars will remain,” Shapiro said.

Balmer was accused of breaking into the govenor's residence and setting it on fire on the second day of Passover. The governor, who is Jewish, had hosted a Passover celebration the night before.

Getty Images An entrance to the Pennsylvania governor's mansion is shown with police tape across it and broken windows. Getty Images
An arsonist set fire to the Pennsylvania govenor's mansion

Balmer had admitted to officials that he removed petrol from a lawn mower and poured it into beer bottles to make Molotov cocktails he used in the attack, Pennsylvania State Police said.

He turned himself in 13 hours after the break-in and admitted to “harboring hatred toward Governor Shapiro,” officials said.

Balmer was asked in a police interview what he would have done if he had come face to face with Shapiro. He told police he would have beaten the governor with a hammer, according to an affidavit.

Shapiro has served as Pennsylvania's governor since 2023, after working as the state's attorney general.

The Democrat was among the top picks to be Kamala Harris's running mate during the 2024 presidential election but was ultimately passed over. He has frequently been mentioned as a possible future presidential candidate.

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