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Today — 1 April 2026News

Weight-loss jabs will be offered on NHS for people at risk of further heart attacks

1 April 2026 at 07:01
Getty Images A woman uses a pre-filled injection pen to administer a dose. She is lifting her t-shirt to be able to inject.Getty Images

Weight-loss jab Wegovy will be offered for free on the NHS to more than a million people in England at risk of heart attacks and strokes.

The watchdog NICE says people with these health issues, or serious circulation problems in their legs, and who are overweight, should have the weekly jab "as an extra layer of protection".

A GP or specialist will check if it is the right option for those already taking other heart medicines, such as statins, and alongside a healthy diet.

Drug trials suggest Wegovy can help slash the risk of future heart and circulation problems.

Cutting heart risk

In tests on tens of thousands of people, the jabs - alongside existing heart medicines - were linked to a 20% reduced risk of heart attacks and strokes.

Importantly, benefits were seen early in the clinical trial, before significant weight loss occurred, suggesting the drug works directly on the heart and blood vessels, not just through weight loss, says NICE (the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence).

Each year in the UK, there are around 100,000 hospital admissions due to heart attacks, another 100,000 people experience a stroke and around 350,000 people live with peripheral arterial disease.

People who have already had one of these health issues are at higher risk of experiencing more problems and stand to benefit from medicines that can cut that risk.

Disease might be prevented in around seven in 10 cases, experts estimate, based on best evidence.

Helen Knight, from NICE, said: "We know that people who have already had a heart attack or stroke are living with real fear that it could happen again.

"The evidence from the clinical trial is compelling. It showed that people taking semaglutide alongside their existing heart medicines were significantly less likely to have another heart attack or stroke.

"Today's decision gives thousands of people in that situation an extra layer of protection, on top of the medicines they are already taking."

Patients prescribed Wegovy will be able to self-administer the drug at home using a special pen injector device.

It is recommended for those with a Body Mass Index (BMI) classed as overweight or obese - higher or equal to 27.

Rollout should begin this summer.

The drug, also known as semaglutide, works as an appetite suppressant by mimicking a hormone called GLP-1 that makes people feel fuller, which can help them lose weight.

It also slows down how quickly food is digested. Some people may experience bloating, nausea or discomfort as a side effect.

Doctors should also prescribe lifestyle changes that include eating healthily and getting enough exercise to help people keep the weight off.

Currently, treatment with Wegovy is limited to two years on the NHS through specialist services and its long-term risks are still being studied.

Many say the treatment should be considered life-long, given the risk of relapse.

NICE says the NHS has reached an agreement with the pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk that makes the treatment, ensuring it will be cost-effective.

Dr Sonya Babu-Narayan from the British Heart Foundation said she hoped the injections could be made available to everyone who could benefit "as soon as possible".

Prof Robert Storey, an expert in heart health at the University of Sheffield, warned GLP-1 drugs could reduce muscle mass as well as fat.

"Physical activity, such as resistance training, is important to counteract potential negative effects on muscle strength," he added.

Pay rise for 2.7 million people as minimum wage increase comes into force

1 April 2026 at 07:01
iStock A woman working as a cleaner in an office building. She is wearing yellow rubber gloves, a striped top and a blue apron. iStock
The Treasury said around 2.7 million people are on minimum wage

Around 2.7 million people are set to receive a pay rise this week as the national minimum wage goes up by 50p to £12.71 for over 21s.

Workers aged 18-20 will see an 85p rise to £10.85, and under-18s and apprentices will get 45p more to £8 an hour.

Campaigners have welcomed the increases, but businesses have said the higher wage bills will force them to increase prices or cut staff.

The Low Pay Commission, the government agency which recommended the increases, said previous minimum wage rises for over-21s had "not had a significant negative impact on jobs".

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said wages were going up "for the lowest paid" but said the government "must go further to bear down on costs".

Spencer Bowman is the managing director of of Mettricks, a chain of four coffee shops in Southampton. He says he would normally be "thrilled" to pay staff more, but "the cost increases have got to be sustainable".

"There's nothing that I'd want more than to ensure that my team can earn a really fair amount of money for a fair day's work. And it's been one of my long-term ambitions to see hospitality workers, my employees, paid far more."

But Spencer says his business is being squeezed from every angle – as well as minimum wage, he has had increases in business rates, national insurance, and statutory sick pay. He also expects energy bills to go up because of the war in the Middle East.

"We're running on a minimum number of staff on shift. We can't run on fewer people," he says.

"If something doesn't give somewhere, we will be closing sites.

Spencer Bowman, a white man, standing in a coffee shop. He is wearing a blue t shirt with the shop's logo on it.
Spencer Bowman says he may have to close one of his four coffee shops due to cost pressures

"It doesn't make any sense. Revenue is up. Our customer numbers are up. But our costs everywhere have hit a point where we're not financially sustainable and if that continues, there's only one outcome for that."

The minimum wage increases are on top of a 6.7% rise for over-21s and a 16.3% rise for 18 to 20-year-olds respectively last year, when there was also a rise in employers' National Insurance contributions.

Ministers are considering slowing down plans to pay adults of all ages the same minimum wage.

Labour committed in their election manifesto to remove "discretionary age bands" and increase the wages of 18 to 20-year-olds so they are paid the same as those over 21.

Ifunanya Ezechukwu, 25, calls the minimum wage rise a "step in the right direction".

"Especially with the cost of living being really bad, people need more money so they can actually afford the basics," she tells BBC Newsbeat.

She doesn't think employers paying staff more will necessarily translate to fewer job opportunities.

"I feel like they're probably just going to up the prices of their services, so I don't think there'll be less job opportunities," she says.

"I just feel like some things might get more expensive, which is unfortunate, and then the cycle just continues."

Ifunanya Ezechukwu smiles as she speaks in to a green BBC microphone.
Ifunanya says people need more money to afford the basics

Alex McCarthy, a university student who works part-time in a pub, says he is feeling "very, very happy" about the rise.

But the 18-year-old says it probably won't be enough for some of his friends, who are working while living at university but are still struggling to do weekly shops and are having to borrow money off their parents.

Amelia Evans, 18, believes the rise is necessary because "everything is going up in price". But she is concerned it will limit her job opportunities.

"So far this year I think I've done maybe 20 applications, and haven't got any. I feel like it's going to impact me even more now."

When Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced the increases in the Budget last year, she said the cost of living was still the biggest issue for working people.

"The economy isn't working well enough for those on the lowest incomes," she added.

At the time, the Treasury said the new minimum wage rates for 2026 struck a balance between "the needs of workers, the affordability for businesses and the opportunities for employment".

The Living Wage Foundation has welcomed the rises but says they do not go far enough.

The Foundation calculates what is known as the Real Living Wage, which it says is a more accurate reflection of the cost of living in the UK. It currently stands at £13.45 across the UK and £14.80 in London.

Kate Chapman, the executive director of the Living Wage Foundation, said one in seven businesses now pay the Real Living Wage.

"That's because they know the Living Wage is good for people, good for society and good for business," she said.

The British Chamber of Commerce has said that tax and labour costs are the biggest concerns for British businesses.

In its quarterly survey of 4,000 firms, 73% said labour costs are putting pressure on them to raise prices.

Additional reporting by Georgia Levy-Collins, Lizzy Bella, and Jemma Crew

普京强化互联网管控,俄罗斯转向伊朗模式?

简繁中文
纽约时报 出版语言
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普京强化互联网管控,俄罗斯转向伊朗模式?

PAUL SONNE, VALERIE HOPKINS, OLEG MATSNEV
在乌克兰战争持续的四年间,俄罗斯日益加剧的种种压制手段中,几乎没有哪一项像互联网限制举措那样影响到如此多的人。
在乌克兰战争持续的四年间,俄罗斯日益加剧的种种压制手段中,几乎没有哪一项像互联网限制举措那样影响到如此多的人。 Alexander Zemlianichenko/Associated Press
3月,克里姆林宫步行几分钟外的一家购物中心发生火灾时,俄罗斯一家以敢拼著称的Telegram新闻频道派了一名记者赶赴现场。
但出现了一个问题。莫斯科市中心的移动数据完全中断,而该国最流行的应用程序Telegram也被限流。
“就像回到了1997年,”这个名叫“Ostorozhno Novosti”的新闻频道主编谢尔盖·季托夫说。他回忆道,由于无法发回照片或视频,派到前方的记者只能打编辑部的座机电话进行口述——“三辆消防车,两辆救护车,很多人在奔跑。”
这起持续数天、发生在莫斯科最重要区域的断网事件加剧了人们的担忧:总统普京可能会采取比俄罗斯人想象的更进一步的措施,将他们与外界隔绝,并在把该国的互联网完全置于克里姆林宫控制之下的过程中,打乱他们的日常生活。
最近几周,俄罗斯人面临两重中断。当局凭借新的技术能力和战时借口在特定区域关闭移动互联网。同时,他们也在屏蔽越来越多被数百万俄罗斯人使用的外国应用程序。
1月,遭围困的乌克兰康斯坦丁尼夫卡市,一名乌克兰步兵。俄罗斯以战争为借口在国内打压互联网自由。
1月,遭围困的乌克兰康斯坦丁尼夫卡市,一名乌克兰步兵。俄罗斯以战争为借口在国内打压互联网自由。 Tyler Hicks/The New York Times
政府称断网是出于安全考量,称这是为防范利用俄罗斯移动网络进行定位的乌克兰无人机袭击所采取的预防措施。但专家指出,政府也在实施定向断网措施,这种手段通常发生在社会动荡时期,比如今年席卷伊朗的大规模示威期间。
在许多俄罗斯人看来,普京对Telegram的打击更为激进。在封锁了Facebook、Instagram、WhatsApp和YouTube之后,这位俄罗斯领导人现在又采取行动,削弱一款每月有超过1亿俄罗斯人用于通信和阅读新闻的应用(包括阅读来自被俄罗斯封禁的流亡媒体的新闻)。
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与此同时,莫斯科方面正迫使俄罗斯人改用一款经克里姆林宫批准的“超级应用”——MAX。有俄罗斯媒体报道称,当局计划从周三起全面封锁Telegram,但有迹象显示,由于引发公众反弹,当局可能会推迟这一行动。
在乌克兰战争持续的四年间,俄罗斯日益加剧的种种压制手段中,几乎没有哪一项像互联网限制举措那样影响到如此多的人。
时断时续的断网和封锁造成了严重混乱,支撑日常生活的数字服务时有时无,迫使人们费尽周折寻找替代方案。
当莫斯科部分地区的移动互联网中断时,人们开始改用现金支付。打车软件无法使用后,一些人只能搭乘顺路车。对讲机、模拟电话线路、纸质地图以及老式MP3播放器的网上销量激增。甚至在克里姆林宫内,官员们也重新用起座机电话。
本月,莫斯科市中心的移动互联网中断令许多俄罗斯人感到震惊。
本月,莫斯科市中心的移动互联网中断令许多俄罗斯人感到震惊。 Igor Ivanko/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
一些影响甚至是危险的。例如在断网期间,糖尿病儿童佩戴的血糖监测设备无法传输实时数据,而父母需要这些数据来调整胰岛素剂量。
在种种混乱中,公众愤怒的迹象开始显现,一些城市出现了针对断网和应用程序限流的抗议活动,尽管这些抗议被当局阻止。为了正常使用Telegram等应用,数百万俄罗斯人转而使用VPN来绕过限制。
Ostorozhno Novosti频道的主编季托夫强调,Telegram不仅仅是一个“社交网络”,更是俄罗斯所剩无几的自由互联网的基石。该媒体由俄罗斯名媛、前总统候选人克谢尼娅·索布恰克所有。
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“对俄罗斯人来说,至少对我这一代人——比如从20岁开始使用Telegram的那批人——它几乎就是他们全部的互联网生活,”季托夫说。从这个意义上讲,他说,“人们所熟悉的整个互联网体系,现在正在被摧毁。”
正在消失的自由
几十年来,俄罗斯一直享有一个相对自由、去中心化的互联网环境。一种充满活力的数字文化在这里生根发芽,人们可以自由地表达观点、组织政治活动,而且可以经常使用西方科技平台。
在2011年和2012年席卷莫斯科的大规模抗议活动之后,克里姆林宫开始将这种不受管控的俄罗斯互联网视为严重威胁。面对美国科技巨头的影响力,普京感到不满,于是着手打造一个“主权互联网”——一个他可以控制的、与外界隔绝的网络空间。
对克里姆林宫而言,也许没有人比反腐活动人士阿列克谢·纳瓦利内更具威胁性。他最初因在LiveJournal上揭露国家腐败走红。凭借获得数百万点击量的视频,他展示了爆火的网络内容如何在现实世界引发抗议。
在俄罗斯通信监管机构Roskomnadzor牵头下,当局封锁了他的网站,并施压西方科技巨头删除他的抗议投票应用和相关视频广告。
在2022年普京发动对乌克兰的全面入侵后,克里姆林宫开始以更为激进、更具破坏性的手段来收紧俄罗斯的互联网自由。
阿列克谢·纳瓦利内广泛的网络影响力曾对俄罗斯政府构成挑战。
阿列克谢·纳瓦利内广泛的网络影响力曾对俄罗斯政府构成挑战。 Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times
莫斯科迅速屏蔽了Twitter、Instagram和Facebook,并最终将矛头指向YouTube——这个长期以来在俄罗斯使用最广泛的网站之一——以及WhatsApp,试图封杀它们。VPN的使用量随之激增。
在国家强力打压之下,Telegram一度仍是相对开放的空间。
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利用自己的Telegram频道网络,克里姆林宫依靠这款应用传播其战争宣传信息,士兵则使用该应用与家人保持联系,并为部队筹集资金。与此同时,俄罗斯民众仍可以读到未经审查的新闻和评论,甚至包括最尖锐的批评政府的声音。
其中一位批评者是俄罗斯雇佣兵头目叶夫根尼·普里戈任。他在Telegram上发布未经修饰,甚至夹杂粗口的前线视频。他在心怀不满的士兵中培养了一批狂热的追随者,这股势力在2023年演变成一场未遂政变,这也让克里姆林宫意识到,Telegram上的帖子可能催生现实中的威胁。
“敌对的通信形式”
两年多之后,俄罗斯通信监管机构Roskomnadzor宣布对Telegram进行限制,并在今年2月表示,该应用程序因未能保护个人数据、打击欺诈以及防止被恐怖分子和犯罪分子利用,因而违反了俄罗斯法律。
此后,对该服务的间歇性封锁开始出现。《纽约时报》在3月中旬使用分布在俄罗斯各地的72台服务器测试了访问Telegram的情况,发现其中只有39台能够加载该应用的网页版。
长期以来,一种普遍看法认为,由于俄罗斯的互联网起步时是自由的,从技术和政治层面来说,克里姆林宫都不可能再把“精灵”重新塞回瓶子里。
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德国外交关系委员会的俄罗斯问题分析师阿列娜·叶皮凡诺娃表示,尽管俄罗斯无法复制中国那种从一开始就封闭互联网的“防火长城”模式,但它正迅速转向伊朗模式。她说,这种模式包括对网站实行“白名单”、实施定点断网,以及建立一个受政府控制的内部局域网。
许多俄罗斯人,包括一些普京的支持者,都认为封禁Telegram做得太过分了。
这一决定甚至让长期形同橡皮图章的俄罗斯议会短暂出现了政治争论。
公正俄罗斯党的领导人、乌克兰战争的高调支持者谢尔盖·米罗诺夫称,Telegram是俄罗斯军队“唯一可靠的通信手段”。
别尔哥罗德州州长维亚切斯拉夫·格拉德科夫去年在莫斯科,照片来自俄罗斯官方媒体发布。他称Telegram是关键的生存基础设施。
别尔哥罗德州州长维亚切斯拉夫·格拉德科夫去年在莫斯科,照片来自俄罗斯官方媒体发布。他称Telegram是关键的生存基础设施。 Mikhail Metzel/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
“那些正在流血牺牲的人无法与亲友取得联系,”米罗诺夫说。“你们在干什么,你们这些白痴?”
在俄罗斯国家杜马的一次投票中,包括米罗诺夫所在政党和共产党阵营在内的77名议员投票要求政府解释这一决定。该动议以102票反对未获通过,但暴露出罕见的意见分歧。
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普京此前曾表示,为了维护主权,莫斯科必须“扼杀”外国科技公司,但在该问题上他基本保持沉默。
不过,在3月5日克里姆林宫的一次会议上,他意味深长地询问一名军官,使用那些“不受我们控制”的通信系统,是否会对人员构成危险。
这名军官回答称确实如此,并称Telegram是一种“敌对的通信形式”。不过后来俄罗斯记者发现,这名军官本人却拥有Telegram的高级账号。
被压制的不满情绪
Telegram融合了类似Twitter和WhatsApp的功能,由出生于俄罗斯的科技亿万富翁帕维尔·杜罗夫创建,他现居阿联酋。杜罗夫谴责莫斯科此举是对言论自由的侵犯,是“一个害怕自己人民的国家的可悲景象”。俄罗斯方面已对他展开调查。
杜罗夫尚未宣布任何应对措施,但他可能通过技术手段调整Telegram,使俄罗斯用户在封锁的情况下仍能访问该应用。
组织抗议的尝试均告失败。
据俄罗斯政治活动人士德米特里·基西耶夫称,俄罗斯17个地区的28个城镇已提交了针对互联网限制的抗议活动许可申请,但全部被拒。俄罗斯人权组织OVD-Info表示,自2025年12月以来,至少有50人因参加反对互联网限制的抗议活动而被拘留。
在俄罗斯南部城市克拉斯诺达尔,一名支持战争的地方议员亚历山大·萨夫罗诺夫原本获得了举行一场200人规模抗议的许可,但随后又被撤销,当地官员称是出于安全考虑。
俄罗斯彼尔姆市,一场原计划针对Telegram限制的抗议活动许可被撤销后,警察出现在现场。
俄罗斯彼尔姆市,一场原计划针对Telegram限制的抗议活动许可被撤销后,警察出现在现场。 Associated Press
“左翼人士、右翼人士——许多人都不同意封禁和限制使用的做法,”他在电话采访中说。“政府甚至没有试图与公民进行清晰、严肃的对话,也没有向他们做任何解释。”
尽管人们表达了愤怒,并希望翻墙手段能够一直有效,但许多人也逐渐接受一个现实:未来将处于更严格的国家控制之下。
季托夫预测,他的新闻频道在政府管控的应用程序MAX上不会取得同样的成功。MAX的母公司、社交媒体巨头VK已经在对批评性的评论和新闻进行审查。但他说,他看不到任何能够回到过去的办法。
“很容易在互联网上看到社会各阶层的不满,”季托夫说。“但这种不满无处宣泄。即使在支持战争的人当中,也有很多对国家的批评,但每个人都多少已经明白,对此你无能为力。”

Alina Lobzina 、Nataliya Vasilyeva和Milana Mazaeva对本文有报道贡献。

Paul Sonne是一名国际新闻记者,报道俄罗斯新闻和普京的国内和国际政策产生的一系列影响,主要关注乌克兰战争。

Valerie Hopkins报道乌克兰战争和这场冲突正在如何改变俄罗斯、乌克兰、欧洲和美国,她常驻莫斯科。

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'My six-year-old has nosebleeds': Chiang Mai air pollution sparks health fears

1 April 2026 at 11:19
BBC/Wasawat Lukharang A couple standing at a lookout point; haze engulfs the landscape in the horizon BBC/Wasawat Lukharang
Some families are considering moving out of Chiang Mai because of its chronic air pollution

Tirayut Wongsantisuk and his wife moved to Chiang Mai in the 2010s, drawn by the hilly region's cool air and lush greenery.

But worsening air quality in the Thai city, especially during this time of the year, have prompted them to consider relocating for the sake of their children.

Two of their daughters have experienced frequent nosebleeds. "I've been thinking, maybe we really should move during this time... because if something bad happens to our child, we'll feel terrible forever," Tirayut , 41, told the BBC.

Smoke from raging fires have choked parts of northern Thailand this past week, with Chiang Mai ranking among the world's most polluted cities, according to monitoring group IQAir.

A thick blanket of haze hovered over the horizon when BBC Thai visited Tirayut and other families in Chiang Mai, covering what once were mountainous views. There was a persistent burning smell in the air.

Satellite data showed a record number of 4,750 hotspots across Thailand on Tuesday, mostly in forested areas.

As of Wednesday morning, Chiang Mai's PM2.5 level, which refers to the concentration of tiny, hazardous particles smaller than 2.5 micrometres, was classified as "very unhealthy".

The months of November to March mark peak fire season in the region as farmers burn off fields before new seeds are sown. In addition to these are wildfires that break out naturally because of dry conditions in forests and farmlands.

BBC/Wasawat Lukharang Thirayut Wongsantisuk with his wife and two daughters at their residence in Mueang district, Chiang MaiBBC/Wasawat Lukharang
Tirayut (second from left) says his oldest daughter, six, has experienced nosebleeds and developed rashes

Photographs on local media show mountains engulfed by flames, with some residents likening the blazes to "volcanoes erupting", according to local news outlet Khaosod.

Earlier this week, authorities ordered the closure of parks with high fire risk and warned that anyone found entering those areas to start fires would be arrested immediately.

In Thailand, those convicted of illegal forest burning face up to 20 years in prison and a 2m baht ($61,100; £46,200) fine.

Exposure to haze can cause various health issues, from itchy eyes and nose bleeds to heart attacks.

Tirayut says his oldest daughter, six, "had nosebleeds, a rash, and an allergic reaction in her eyes, to the point where her eyelids were swollen".

Benjamas Jaiparkan has sent her children to the neighbouring Phayao province, where the air quality is better, to temporarily live with relatives. But the 35-year-old is thinking of leaving Chiang Mai permanently.

Benjamas, a public school teacher, is especially worried about her four-year-old son, who started getting nosebleeds last year.

"I feel so sorry for him because I don't know how much more his lungs can take," she said.

Over the years, activists and residents in Thailand have filed lawsuits to demand government action against pollution.

In July 2023, about 1,700 people in Chiang Mai brought a case against former Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha and two state agencies for failing to exercise their authority to reduce pollution in the north, which they say was shortening each of their lives by about five years.

In January 2024, a Chiang Mai court ordered the government to come up with an emergency plan to improve air quality within 90 days.

Hazardous haze has also been choking people elsewhere in South East Asia, with the most number of hotspots flaring up across Malaysia and Indonesia in seven years.

The Sailors Stranded in the Persian Gulf

1 April 2026 at 12:01
Thousands of civilian sailors have been stranded for more than a month in waters surrounded by a conflict zone because of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran.

© Altaf Qadri/Associated Press

Almost 20,000 seafarers are stranded in the Persian Gulf, according to the International Maritime Organization, as Iran has effectively blocked the exit through the Strait of Hormuz.

Where Million-Dollar Coastal Homes Glitter Near Metal Shacks

A shortage of affordable housing in the coastal city in South Africa has forced many people to live far outside the city center, while tourists occupy prime real estate.

© Joao Silva/The New York Times

Failed experiment as England get grim glimpse of life without Kane

1 April 2026 at 06:42

Failed experiment as England get grim glimpse of life without Kane

Phil Foden and Harry Kane in England blue coats after the defeat by Japan, with both players stern-facedImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

England head coach Thomas Tuchel used Phil Foden as a false nine with captain Harry Kane injured - an experiment that failed in defeat against Japan

By
Chief football writer at Wembley

Thomas Tuchel and his England team had a taste of what life would be like without Harry Kane as they slumped to a deserved defeat against Japan at Wembley.

On the evidence of this grim spectacle, the presence of the 32-year-old captain and record goalscorer will be the difference between failure and any chance of English success at this summer's World Cup.

Kane was absent from the team list against Japan after suffering "a minor issue in training". He was at Wembley but afforded the night off.

For now, the words "minor issue" are enough to send shudders through England and their followers.

Because the evidence of these 90 minutes tells us that to lose Kane for a game of greater consequence would be a major issue.

Kane's importance simply cannot be overestimated.

Should any misfortune befall England's only world-class striker - perhaps their only high-class striker - in the 78 days between this game and their World Cup opener against Croatia in Arlington on 17 June, that could spell serious trouble.

Kane did not figure in either the draw against Uruguay or this loss to an impressive Japan, who sit 18th in the Fifa rankings, some 14 places below high-flying England.

Without him, England lacked punch, creativity and cutting edge.

Even head coach Tuchel appears to be struggling to find a solution should Kane be unavailable during the World Cup. Quite simply, it is not even worth contemplating from England's viewpoint.

England's threat, without Kane, falls off a cliff.

This is surely not news to Tuchel, but he will have everything crossed that the Bayern Munich striker is fit and well in June.

Alternatives have had try-outs during this camp, but recognised number nines in Dominic Solanke and Dominic Calvert-Lewin did not make their case strongly enough.

And the experiment of using Manchester City's Phil Foden as a false nine looked exactly that against Japan, Tuchel perhaps recognising it was not delivering desired results as it was abandoned inside an hour when he sent on an orthodox striker in Solanke.

Foden was tireless, but this was England's equivalent of an ill-fitting square peg in a round hole. It was a desperate measure, through no fault of Foden's, that should now be forgotten.

England head coach Thomas Tuchel, leaning back with arms out in front of him, looks frustrated during the defeat to Japan in the friendly at Wembley.Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

England head coach Thomas Tuchel shows frustration during the defeat by Japan at Wembley

In even more desperation, as England tried to offer some belated threat, the bankruptcy of ideas was such that it was back to lumping long balls to substitute Harry Maguire in the hope physical force and height might disrupt a composed Japanese defence.

It was ugly, basic - on this occasion unsuccessful, although Maguire did have a header cleared off the line by Yukinari Sugawara in a rare moment of danger for Japan's defence.

The Football Association labelled these two friendlies a 'Send-Off Series', the last home games before the World Cup.

England got a send-off all right, resounding boos greeting the final whistle before the players went around applauding thousands of empty red seats and the few fans who had bothered to stay.

Tuchel will rightly say Uruguay and Japan are the tough tests England required to tune up for the World Cup, but the burning question is still the same and has not been answered.

Do England really have a chance without Harry Kane? He is irreplaceable, the drop-off after him alarming.

Kane's outstanding record of 78 goals in 112 games is impressive enough, but in the wider context, since his debut against Lithuania in March 2015, he has either scored or assisted in 32% of England's goals in that period, having an involvement in 95 out of 293 goals.

The World Cup represents the short-term future, the most important matter on the horizon, but with Kane turning 33 in July, the long term looks bleak, with few serious contenders as a successor on the horizon.

Harry Maguire makes a sign with his left hand while playing in England's white shirt during the game against JapanImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Harry Maguire posed a belated threat as England resorted to long balls in the closing stages against Japan at Wembley.

Is reliance on Kane 'totally normal'?

Former England goalkeeper Paul Robinson, at Wembley for BBC Radio 5 Live, said: "This is the exact situation no England fan wants. We've talked about it for over a season with this World Cup coming up. What do England do without Harry Kane?

"This is what England and Thomas Tuchel do not want. He doesn't have an answer to this question. Hence why we're seeing this new formation again, with the interchange and false nine.

"We've spoken about Dominic Calvert-Lewin, Dominic Solanke, Ollie Watkins. Nobody stuck their arm up and said, 'I'll be his replacement'. that's why we're seeing this."

Robinson added: "It was a very disappointing evening for Thomas Tuchel. The experiment that he tried in the first half with the front four clearly didn't work.

"It didn't take him long in the second half to change it. You do give England credit because when those changes were made there was a lot more cohesion.

"The one area that Thomas Tuchel has got a problem is if there is a problem with Harry Kane. If that happens, then England have a real problem after watching that."

Tuchel answered the question about an over-reliance on Kane, saying: "Well, why would Argentina not rely on Lionel Messi, or Portugal not rely on Cristiano Ronaldo? This is totally normal. Key figures left camp for us and we saw that a bit.

"We lacked a punch in the last 20 metres in both matches. We encouraged the players. It was difficult for us."

Kane's potential absence is an immediate concern, leaving Tuchel short of viable alternatives when he needs them most, especially given these two toothless performances without him.

English strikers are suddenly a malaise.

Only 10 English strikers have appeared in the Premier League in the current campaign, with Chelsea's 22-year-old Liam Delap the only one aged under 26.

Brighton's Danny Welbeck, who turns 35 at the end of the month and might just have had a good international break by not being involved, and 33-year-old Callum Wilson from West Ham United, are the only English strikers who have scored more than one goal in a match in the Premier League this season.

Welbeck and Calvert-Lewin are the only English strikers to have scored 10 or more Premier League goals this season – with 43 scored by English strikers.

The cupboard is bare, underscoring just how indispensable Kane is.

This was a sobering night for England and Tuchel. This performance demonstrated that they simple cannot live without Harry Kane.

Tiger Woods to 'step away and seek treatment' after crash

1 April 2026 at 07:44

Woods to 'step away and seek treatment' after crash

Tiger WoodsImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Tiger Woods has won 15 golf majors - only Jack Nicklaus (18) has more

  • Published

Tiger Woods says he is "stepping away for a period of time to seek treatment and focus on my health" following an arrest after a car crash.

The 50-year-old was arrested and charged with driving under the influence after clipping a truck and rolling his car in Florida on Friday.

He was also charged with property damage and refusal to submit to a lawful test.

The 15-time major champion submitted a written plea of not guilty via his lawyers on Tuesday.

That came after a police report earlier on Tuesday detailed his behaviour after the crash.

It said Woods had two hydrocodone pills in his pocket - an opioid used to treat severe pain - and that officers observed him acting "lethargic and slow" while "sweating profusely" with "extremely dilated" pupils.

Speaking about the incident for the first time, Woods wrote on X: "I know and understand the seriousness of the situation I find myself in today.

"I am stepping away for a period of time to seek treatment and focus on my health. This is necessary in order for me to prioritise my well-being and work toward lasting recovery."

Prior to the crash he had not ruled out playing in next month's Masters - though he has not competed at a major since missing the cut at The Open in July 2024.

"I'm committed to taking the time needed to return in a healthier, stronger and more focused place, both personally and professionally," his statement added.

"I appreciate your understanding and support and ask for privacy for my family, loved ones and myself at this time."

'A legend of our sport but a person above all else'

The PGA Tour also issued its first comment on Woods following the golfer's statement.

"Tiger Woods is a legend of our sport whose impact extends far beyond his achievements on the course," it said.

"But above all else, Tiger is a person, and our focus is on his health and well‑being. Tiger continues to have our full support as he takes this important step."

The golf body's CEO, Brian Rolapp, added: "Tiger Woods is one of the most influential figures the sports world has ever known.

"Over the last year, I have come to deeply appreciate Tiger not only for his impact on the game, but for his friendship and the perspective he has shared with me as I joined the golf industry.

"My thoughts are with him and his family as he takes this step, for which he has my full respect and support."

More to follow.

Related topics

特朗普真的实现了伊朗“政权更迭”吗?

By: 黄安伟
1 April 2026 at 10:31

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特朗普真的实现了伊朗“政权更迭”吗?

黄安伟
国防部长皮特·海格塞斯在周二的新闻发布会上表示:“由于政权更迭,这个新政权应该比上一个政权更明智。”
国防部长皮特·海格塞斯在周二的新闻发布会上表示:“由于政权更迭,这个新政权应该比上一个政权更明智。” Eric Lee for The New York Times
伊朗已经发生了政权更迭。又或者根本没有。这是这场战争的目标。可又并非如此。
这些都是特朗普总统及其幕僚近几日放出的表态,令人无所适从。本周,“政权更迭”这个词从他们口中频频冒出,犹如波斯湾上空往来穿梭的战斗机。
但关于这个词的真正含义以及美以两国在对伊朗开战的四周里是否实现了这一目标,美国政府高层官员之间显然存在分歧。
在周二的新闻发布会上,国防部长皮特·海格塞思针对伊朗政府作出了斩钉截铁的表态:“既然政权更迭已经发生,这个新政权理应比上一届更明智。特朗普总统会达成协议的,他愿意这样做。”
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政权更迭的普遍定义是通过强制手段改组政府或领导层,进而带来政策、政治格局与治理体系的结构性变革。而在伊朗,那个威权、反美、且仍在持续作战的神权领导层至今依然掌权。
周一,在接受ABC新闻采访时,身兼总统国家安全顾问的国务卿鲁比奥对伊朗是否真的发生了实质性变化表达了些许质疑。
“领导他们的人,这个神职人员政权,才是问题所在,”他说。“如果现在掌权的是对未来抱有更理性构想的新领导层,那对我们、对伊朗、对整个世界而言,都会是好消息。但我们也必须做好准备,应对这种情况不会发生,甚至是大概率不会发生的可能性。”
美以联军对德黑兰的空袭仍在继续。
美以联军对德黑兰的空袭仍在继续。 Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times
随后,鲁比奥在接受半岛电视台采访时明确表示,摧毁伊朗的武器装备至关重要,因为该国现任领导层——也就是海格塞思口中的“新政权”——仍是美国的对手。
鲁比奥称:“鉴于伊朗当前执掌权力的人,我认为,实现地区稳定的最佳途径,就是彻底摧毁伊朗未来针对基础设施与平民发射导弹与无人机的能力。”
他还补充道:“我们从一开始的行动目标就和该国领导层无关。”
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2月28日,特朗普联合以色列发动空袭,炸死了伊朗最高领袖阿亚图拉阿里·哈梅内伊及其他多名高层官员,就此开启这场战争。空袭结束数小时后,他便呼吁伊朗民众在轰炸停止后推翻本国政府。以色列领导人曾向特朗普承诺的伊朗民众起义至今并未发生,但总统却宣称,政权更迭的目标已经达成。
事实上,他还声称,美国取得的战果极为辉煌,不仅终结了伊朗的一个政权,甚至是两个。
“你看看就知道,我们已经实现了政权更迭。因为上一个政权已经被彻底摧毁、毁灭,他们都死了,”周日,特朗普在空军一号上对记者表示。“继任的这个政权也基本都死了。现在是第三个政权,我们打交道的是以前从没有人接触过的一群人,是完全不同的一群人。所以我觉得,这就是政权更迭。”
为了强调这一点,他还说:“政权更迭是必须实现的,但在我看来,我们已经自动完成完成了这个目标。”
特朗普口中两个政权的覆灭似乎指的是最初的空袭行动:此次袭击不仅炸死了哈梅内伊及其他多名高层官员,还炸伤了他的儿子穆杰塔巴·哈梅内伊,穆杰塔巴随后由一众神职人员任命为伊朗新任最高领袖。伊朗与以色列官方均表示,哈梅内伊之子腿部受伤,自战争爆发以来从未公开露面。
外界普遍认为,小哈梅内伊是伊朗军方核心力量伊斯兰革命卫队的强硬派盟友。德黑兰政府已誓言抵抗,仍在持续与美国、以色列及阿拉伯盟友作战,并持续封锁霍尔木兹海峡的能源航运,对全球经济造成冲击。
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华盛顿卡内基国际和平基金会的伊朗问题专家卡里姆·萨贾德普尔表示:“伊朗发生的只是人事变动,绝非政权更迭。换了人,但意识形态没有变。”
特朗普关于政权更迭的表态让事态变得愈发扑朔迷离。但截至目前,他针对伊朗、委内瑞拉、古巴等少数国家采取军事行动与强制性经济战,核心目标始终是对他国领导层实施斩首,扶持愿意屈从美国要求的人上台,而非对该国政治体系进行彻底的全面变革。
总统的目标是通过逼迫他国政权顺从打造一批附庸国,这也是他复兴帝国这一宏大计划的一部分。他还频频提及一个模板:今年1月,美军暴力入侵委内瑞拉,抓捕了该国总统尼古拉斯·马杜罗;随后特朗普便与代总统德尔西·罗德里格斯就石油等事宜展开谈判,而罗德里格斯与马杜罗一样同属强硬左翼阵营。
白宫新闻秘书卡罗琳·莱维特在周一的新闻发布会上表示,由于与老哈梅内伊及其部分幕僚开展外交谈判的努力彻底落空,美国与以色列不得不将其除掉。她称,这些前领导人“如今已经不在人间,是因为他们欺骗了美国,在谈判中敷衍了事,这是总统无法接受的,这也是众多前领导层成员被杀死的原因”。
特朗普吹嘘自己完成了所谓政权更迭其实是近期才有的论调。2016年竞选总统时,他曾批评美国在伊拉克和阿富汗发动的劳民伤财的“永久战争”,称“我们必须摒弃国家建设与政权更迭这套失败的政策”。去年5月,他还在沙特阿拉伯发表演讲称,“到头来,这些所谓的国家建设者,毁掉的国家远比建设的多;而这些干涉主义者,干涉的是他们根本一无所知的复杂社会。”
尽管如今他已然拥抱战争与军事暴力,但截至目前,特朗普不愿让美国背负起彻底改造敌对国家的重担,这一本能似乎并未改变。
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总统本周宣称“对领导层实施斩首就是实现政权更迭”的言论可被解读为他试图重新定义这个词汇,以此宣告自己已经达成了这场战争的初始目标。
华盛顿智库“国防优先”中东项目主任罗斯玛丽·凯拉尼克表示:“整个美国政府,似乎正在逐步放弃将深度政权更迭作为这场战争的目标。想要在伊朗发动一场真正意义上的政权更迭战争,就必须投入地面部队——而且是大量地面部队。特朗普很明智,不愿在这件成本与风险远大于收益的事上投入如此多的精力。”

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India begins counting more than a billion people in massive census

1 April 2026 at 08:11
AFP via Getty Images A man speaks on a mobile phone as he walks across a crowded market in VaranasiAFP via Getty Images
With a median age of 28, India remains one of the world's youngest countries

Does your house have a concrete roof or a thatched one?

What is your main cereal? Do you have internet access - or just a basic mobile phone? And how many married couples live under your roof?

These are among the 33 questions that more than a billion Indians will be asked as the country launches the world's largest census on Wednesday, marking the first population count in more than 15 years.

The two-phase exercise, billed as the world's most ambitious of its kind, will see more than three million officials spend a year counting every person in India.

India's 16th census - the eighth since independence in 1947 - will also include caste data and is seen as crucial for policy, welfare delivery and political representation in the world's most populous country.

With more than 1.4 billion people, India overtook China in 2023, according to the United Nations Population Fund.

Yet, falling fertility and a median age of 28 mean it remains one of the world's youngest countries, with nearly 70% of its population of working age.

The last census was held in 2011, with the 2021 round delayed by the pandemic and later pushed back further due to administrative and electoral scheduling - the first time the decennial exercise missed its schedule.

The exercise will span 36 states and federally-administered territories, more than 7,000 sub-districts, over 9,700 towns and nearly 640,000 villages, with fieldwork carried out by enumerators and supervisors - typically schoolteachers, government staff and local officials.

For the first time, the census will be conducted digitally, with enumerators using mobile apps to collect and upload data.

Authorities have introduced self-enumeration, letting residents submit details online via a 16-language portal that generates a unique ID for verification by census workers.

There will be two phases of ⁠physical door-to-door surveys.

The first phase, known as the House Listing and Housing Census, will gather information on housing conditions, amenities and household assets.

The second phase - population enumeration - is scheduled for February 2027 and will collect detailed data on demographics, education, migration and fertility.

It will also include caste enumeration, a politically sensitive issue that has long been debated.

AFP via Getty Images An Indian census worker (2nd R) gathers data at a village in Lalgarh, some 130 kms west of KolkataAFP via Getty Images
A census worker gathers data at a village in West Bengal state in 2010

The initial rollout will begin in selected regions, including Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Delhi, Goa, Karnataka, Mizoram and Odisha.

In these areas, self-enumeration will run from 1 to 15 April, followed by a house listing and housing survey between 16 April and 15 May.

From its origins as a rudimentary headcount under colonial rule, India's census questionnaire has steadily expanded in scope, mirroring the state's changing priorities.

The first attempt in 1872 contained 17 questions and was essentially a house register - recording who lived where, along with basic markers such as age, religion, caste and occupation.

By 1881, when the first synchronous nationwide census was conducted, the template had stabilised around identity (name, gender, marital status), social markers (caste, religion, language) and rudimentary education and disability categories.

Over the next decades, questions on language, literacy and occupation were refined, adding secondary work and dependency details.

English proficiency - a colonial preoccupation - was one of 16 questions in the 1901 census.

A shift began with the 1941 census, when its 22-question schedule moved from "who you are" to also "how you live".

Fertility, employment status, economic dependency, migration and job search entered the frame, signalling a growing administrative focus on economic behaviour.

After independence, this widened further: the 1951 and 1961 rounds incorporated nationality, displacement (in the shadow of Partition), land ownership and more work categories.

AFP via Getty Images A pedestrian walks past a population clock board displayed outside the International Institute for Population Sciences (IIPS) in Mumbai. AFP via Getty Images
With more than 1.4 billion people, India overtook China in 2023 in terms of population, according to the UN

From the 1970s onwards, the census took on a distinctly socio-economic lens.

Migration histories, duration of residence, fertility patterns and detailed employment classifications became standard.

In more recent decades, especially in 2001 and 2011, the census has tracked the modernising economy: commuting patterns, marginal versus main work, education attendance and increasingly detailed disability and fertility data.

That evolving lens is now extending to how households themselves are defined. In the latest census, a couple in a live-in relationship can be recorded as married if they consider their "relationship as a stable union" - signalling a quiet shift towards recognising changing social realities.

But as the scope of data collection has widened, so too have concerns around how such information might be used.

Some analysts say recent efforts to build databases - including the National Population Register (NPR) - and intensive revisions of electoral rolls have sharpened public anxieties around official counting, often linking it to questions of citizenship and inclusion.

"Although the census has nothing to do with citizenship, this can create anxiety, prompting some families to over-report or list absent migrant members during the census to avoid any perceived exclusion," says KS James, an Indian demographer at Princeton University.

Beyond these concerns, there is a more fundamental problem: India has been making policy without a recent population baseline.

In the absence of a fresh census, it has relied on sample surveys - from consumption expenditure to labour force data - with the statistics ministry working to keep them broadly representative.

For economists like Ashwini Deshpande of Ashoka University, the census is essential to update the basic map of India itself - what counts as rural, urban or increasingly peri-urban.

Much of that classification still rests on 2011 data, even though many areas have since transformed, blurring the lines that underpin policy.

"That has real consequences for India's vast welfare and public spending system," says Deshpande.

If eligibility for schemes is based on faulty or outdated data, the number of beneficiaries can be misjudged, distorting delivery. Programmes like the nationwide rural jobs guarantee, for instance, depend on an accurate sense of which areas are still "rural" - a category that may have shifted significantly over 15 years.

Without current data, millions of urban migrants - often in informal jobs and housing - remain poorly captured in policy design, a gap laid bare during the pandemic.

"This census is crucial - it is the definitive snapshot of India, capturing everything from caste and religion to jobs, education and amenities, and offering the most complete picture of how the population lives," says Deshpande.

Tiger Woods to 'step away and seek treatment' after crash

1 April 2026 at 07:44

Woods to 'step away and seek treatment' after crash

Tiger WoodsImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Tiger Woods has won 15 golf majors - only Jack Nicklaus (18) has more

  • Published

Tiger Woods says he is "stepping away for a period of time to seek treatment and focus on my health" following an arrest after a car crash.

The 50-year-old was arrested and charged with driving under the influence after clipping a truck and rolling his car in Florida on Friday.

He was also charged with property damage and refusal to submit to a lawful test.

The 15-time major champion submitted a written plea of not guilty via his lawyers on Tuesday.

That came after a police report earlier on Tuesday detailed his behaviour after the crash.

It said Woods had two hydrocodone pills in his pocket - an opioid used to treat severe pain - and that officers observed him acting "lethargic and slow" while "sweating profusely" with "extremely dilated" pupils.

Speaking about the incident for the first time, Woods wrote on X: "I know and understand the seriousness of the situation I find myself in today.

"I am stepping away for a period of time to seek treatment and focus on my health. This is necessary in order for me to prioritise my well-being and work toward lasting recovery."

Prior to the crash he had not ruled out playing in next month's Masters - though he has not competed at a major since missing the cut at The Open in July 2024.

"I'm committed to taking the time needed to return in a healthier, stronger and more focused place, both personally and professionally," his statement added.

"I appreciate your understanding and support and ask for privacy for my family, loved ones and myself at this time."

'A legend of our sport but a person above all else'

The PGA Tour also issued its first comment on Woods following the golfer's statement.

"Tiger Woods is a legend of our sport whose impact extends far beyond his achievements on the course," it said.

"But above all else, Tiger is a person, and our focus is on his health and well‑being. Tiger continues to have our full support as he takes this important step."

The golf body's CEO, Brian Rolapp, added: "Tiger Woods is one of the most influential figures the sports world has ever known.

"Over the last year, I have come to deeply appreciate Tiger not only for his impact on the game, but for his friendship and the perspective he has shared with me as I joined the golf industry.

"My thoughts are with him and his family as he takes this step, for which he has my full respect and support."

More to follow.

Related topics

US Army pilots who flew near Kid Rock's home suspended and then reinstated within hours

1 April 2026 at 08:51
Getty Images Kid Rock is seen wearing a cowboy hatGetty Images
Kid Rock, a prominent Trump supporter, held an alternative Super Bowl halftime show this year for conservative group Turning Point USA

The crews of two military helicopters seen hovering outside musician Kid Rock's home have been suspended from flight duties, the US Army has said.

The Army is reviewing the circumstances surrounding the mission, Spokesman Maj Montrell Russell told the BBC in a statement, including whether the crews complied with federal flying regulations and aviation safety protocols.

Kid Rock, a supporter of President Donald Trump, posted a video of himself gesturing at the AH-64 Apaches above his swimming pool on Saturday, prompting many to question why the helicopters would visit his home.

Trump, when asked about the incident on Tuesday, said in a joking manner: "Maybe they were trying to defend him."

Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, Trump said the crews "probably shouldn't have been doing it. You're not supposed to be playing games".

"They like Kid Rock. I like Kid Rock," he added.

The Army confirmed that two of its Apache helicopters from the 101st Combat Aviation Brigade at Fort Campbell conducted a flight on 28 March in the Nashville area in the state of Tennessee, where Kid Rock lives and owns two restaurants.

"The Army takes any allegations of unauthorized or unsafe flight operations very seriously and is committed to enforcing standards and holding personnel accountable," Russell said, adding that the crews would be suspended during the ongoing investigation.

Kid Rock told local outlet WKRN-TV on Monday that it is not uncommon for helicopters from the nearby Fort Campbell Army base to fly near his home.

He noted that he has performed for troops at Fort Campbell and overseas.

"I think they know this is a pretty friendly spot," the musician said. "I've talked to some of these pilots. I've told them, 'You guys see me waving when you come by the house?' I'm like, 'You guys are always welcome to cruise by my house, any time.'"

Kid Rock, who also performed at the Republican convention in 2024 insulted California Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat who has feuded with him and Trump, in the caption of the footage he posted.

One clip shows Kid Rock, whose real name is Robert Ritchie, standing poolside next to a replica of the Statue of Liberty, clapping and saluting as the aircraft hovers before flying away.

"God Bless America and all those who have made the ultimate sacrifice to defend her," the caption reads.

Another video shows the Born Free singer pumping his fist before a second gunship appears to fly by his mansion, which he has dubbed the Southern White House.

Judge Dismisses Lawsuit That Challenged Ban on Endorsements by Churches

Conservatives had expected a victory in the case after the I.R.S. agreed to a settlement that allowed churches to voice support for candidates.

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

A federal judge in Texas on Tuesday dismissed a lawsuit seeking to overturn the 70-year-old ban on political activity by churches.

South Dakotans React to Daily Mail Article on Bryon Noem, Kristi Noem’s Husband

1 April 2026 at 09:08
In the tiny town of Castlewood, S.D., where everyone knows the Noems, the prevailing sense was that people can’t help but feel bad for Bryon Noem after a tabloid photo leak.

© Ben Brewer for The New York Times

Castlewood is not far from the Noem family farm in South Dakota.

Weight-loss jabs will be offered on NHS for people at risk of further heart attacks

1 April 2026 at 07:01
Getty Images A woman uses a pre-filled injection pen to administer a dose. She is lifting her t-shirt to be able to inject.Getty Images

Weight-loss jab Wegovy will be offered for free on the NHS to more than a million people in England at risk of heart attacks and strokes.

The watchdog NICE says people with these health issues, or serious circulation problems in their legs, and who are overweight, should have the weekly jab "as an extra layer of protection".

A GP or specialist will check if it is the right option for those already taking other heart medicines, such as statins, and alongside a healthy diet.

Drug trials suggest Wegovy can help slash the risk of future heart and circulation problems.

Cutting heart risk

In tests on tens of thousands of people, the jabs - alongside existing heart medicines - were linked to a 20% reduced risk of heart attacks and strokes.

Importantly, benefits were seen early in the clinical trial, before significant weight loss occurred, suggesting the drug works directly on the heart and blood vessels, not just through weight loss, says NICE (the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence).

Each year in the UK, there are around 100,000 hospital admissions due to heart attacks, another 100,000 people experience a stroke and around 350,000 people live with peripheral arterial disease.

People who have already had one of these health issues are at higher risk of experiencing more problems and stand to benefit from medicines that can cut that risk.

Disease might be prevented in around seven in 10 cases, experts estimate, based on best evidence.

Helen Knight, from NICE, said: "We know that people who have already had a heart attack or stroke are living with real fear that it could happen again.

"The evidence from the clinical trial is compelling. It showed that people taking semaglutide alongside their existing heart medicines were significantly less likely to have another heart attack or stroke.

"Today's decision gives thousands of people in that situation an extra layer of protection, on top of the medicines they are already taking."

Patients prescribed Wegovy will be able to self-administer the drug at home using a special pen injector device.

It is recommended for those with a Body Mass Index (BMI) classed as overweight or obese - higher or equal to 27.

Rollout should begin this summer.

The drug, also known as semaglutide, works as an appetite suppressant by mimicking a hormone called GLP-1 that makes people feel fuller, which can help them lose weight.

It also slows down how quickly food is digested. Some people may experience bloating, nausea or discomfort as a side effect.

Doctors should also prescribe lifestyle changes that include eating healthily and getting enough exercise to help people keep the weight off.

Currently, treatment with Wegovy is limited to two years on the NHS through specialist services and its long-term risks are still being studied.

Many say the treatment should be considered life-long, given the risk of relapse.

NICE says the NHS has reached an agreement with the pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk that makes the treatment, ensuring it will be cost-effective.

Dr Sonya Babu-Narayan from the British Heart Foundation said she hoped the injections could be made available to everyone who could benefit "as soon as possible".

Prof Robert Storey, an expert in heart health at the University of Sheffield, warned GLP-1 drugs could reduce muscle mass as well as fat.

"Physical activity, such as resistance training, is important to counteract potential negative effects on muscle strength," he added.

What it's like to be on Florida's Space Coast ahead of Artemis launch

1 April 2026 at 08:00
Getty Images Employees from the Johnson Space Center hold signs along Brantly Avenue near Ellington Field as they gather to send off the Artemis II astronauts ahead of their mission to the moon in Houston, Friday, March 27, 2026. Getty Images
Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to watch the rocket launch

"People going up to the Moon is kind of cool," eight-year-old Isiah says.

He is among the 400,000 people expected to cram the causeways, beaches and motel balconies of Florida's Space Coast for the launch attempt of Artemis II tonight.

They will watch as four astronauts blast into space in the hope of flying around the Moon and potentially travelling further from Earth than anyone has ever been before.

Nasa's 10-day test flight will not land on the Moon. However, the crew may witness views of the lunar landscapes that have never been seen by human eyes.

Amanda Garcia has travelled more than 1,000 miles from New Mexico to witness the launch. "I'm pretty excited about it," she tells us.

"I came out here to see it, and I heard it's gonna be a great show. A lot of people are going to be here."

Kevin Church/BBC News Split screen showing a woman holding a small dog, and a young man with the beach behind him.Kevin Church/BBC News
Amanda Garcia has travelled more than 1,000 miles to watch the launch, while Isiah, 8, said it was "kind of cool"

Beyond the Kennedy Space Centre launch site, along the lagoon and beaches of Titusville and Cocoa Beach, bars are advertising "moonshots" and hotels are warning guests to expect long delays getting to and from viewing spots.

Local officials talk of a "historic influx" of tourists and an economic impact of around $160m (£121m), putting traffic plans in place for a night when the highway lights will compete with the glow of floodlit launch towers as well as camper van barbecues.

A mile or so from the pads where Artemis II will light up the sky, Brenda Mulberry, owner of Space Shirts, has been selling Nasa T-shirts and souvenirs for 40 years.

In her small shop on Merritt Island, racks of orange, blue and black T-shirts depict hand drawn rockets, mission patches and moonscapes, ready for the crowds who arrive on regular launch days. But this launch is different, she tells us. "We've wanted to go back to the Moon since the '70s. People are excited. People are beyond excited," she said.

Brenda says she has stocked up for the biggest surge of customers she has ever seen.

"I want to have the first T-shirt shop on the Moon," she says. "Because if you've been there, you get the T-shirt, right?" she adds, laughing.

Pallab Ghosh/BBC News Inside a small, crowded NASA gift shop, two people stand behind a grey marble-effect counter. Shelves and walls around them are packed with space souvenirs, mission posters, and astronaut photos. On the left are boxes of mugs; the woman holds two white mugs decorated with NASA-style logos. Next to her, a younger person in a pale T‑shirt leans on the counter near two neat piles of bright yellow folded T‑shirts. To the right, a rack displays beige and orange NASA baseball caps and small astronaut toys, giving the scene a busy, colourful, fan-filled atmosphere.Pallab Ghosh/BBC News
Brenda Mulberry (left) has been selling Nasa souvenirs for 40 years and ambitiously wants to open the first T-shirt shop on the Moon

Future Artemis missions plan to land humans on the Moon for the first time since 1972. But this time, the goal is to build a permanent Moon base to exploit its natural resources and provide a springboard for an attempt to reach Mars.

Artemis II's mission commander, Reid Wiseman, said he hoped the effort to return to the Moon would inspire a new generation.

"In our lifetime, we've looked at the Moon knowing that people had been there. And now in the Artemis generation, kids will walk out and look at the Moon going, we are there. We are there now, and we are going further into our solar system."

Joe Raedle/Getty Images On a grassy patch near water, three Artemis II astronauts in bright blue flight suits crouch down to talk with a group of young children. The children in the centre wear miniature pink spacesuits and caps, facing the astronauts and giving them high‑fives. Other children and parents cluster around them, some holding toddlers, forming a loose semicircle. In the distance, partly blurred, a tall rocket and launch tower rise above the trees. The mood is warm and playful, with astronauts and families smiling and interacting at eye level, turning a serious mission into a friendly, down‑to‑earth moment.Joe Raedle/Getty Images
The astronauts want their mission to inspire a new generation to follow in their footsteps

Tonight, all attention will turn to Launch Pad 39B - the same historic stretch of concrete from which the US Apollo programme first landed men on the Moon in 1969. Standing on the pad is Nasa's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket.

At 98m (321ft) tall, the white and orange giant is the heaviest rocket the agency has ever launched. At its top sits Orion, a capsule about the size of a small van, where the four astronauts will spend the next 10 days in close proximity. It will be the first time the capsule has been put through its paces with a human crew on board.

If all goes to schedule, the rocket will launch between 18:24-20:24 local time (23:24-01:24 BST) on Wednesday.

The astronauts who will strap into Orion about four hours before launch have spent years training together.

Up front, on the left hand side will be Wiseman, the Artemis II commander, while pilot Victor Glover will sit beside him. Behind them will be Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen, a Canadian fighter pilot turned astronaut. This will be his first trip into space.

After reaching orbit, Orion spends its first day in high Earth orbit practising manual flying and testing life support before shaping its path towards the Moon.

On Day 2, a long trans-lunar injection burn puts the spacecraft onto a free return trajectory that would naturally loop it around the Moon and back to Earth, with small correction burns fine tuning the course.

AFP via Getty Images Four Artemis II astronauts stand side by side on a sunny runway, posing for a group portrait. They all wear bright blue NASA flight suits covered in mission patches and name badges, with dark boots. One astronaut in the centre holds a small mascot or model in both hands. Behind them, two sleek white-and-blue T‑38 training jets sit on the concrete, their pointed noses facing left and right, with the NASA “meatball” logo visible on a tail fin. The sky above is clear and pale blue, giving the scene a crisp, formal but upbeat feel.AFP via Getty Images
Astronauts Jeremy Hansen, Christina Koch, Commander Reid Wiseman and Pilot Victor Glover arrive in style at Kennedy Space Centre on their Nasa jets with shades to match

Each day of the mission involves different tests and challenges for the crew.

Day 6 stands out because Orion is due to fly around the far side of the moon. All radio contact will be lost for about 40 minutes, meaning flight controllers won't know what is happening on board.

Orion will be travelling about 4,000–6,000 miles above the Moon's surface and may slightly exceed Apollo 13's record distance of about 250,000 miles (400,000km) from Earth, depending on the exact trajectory.

In the days that follow, Orion will be pulled naturally back towards Earth by the same free return trajectory that sent it out, with small course adjustment burns ensuring the capsule hits the atmosphere at just the right angle.

On the final day, the crew will strap in for the most brutal part of the trip: re-entry into Earth's atmosphere at about 25,000mph (40,000 km/h), when Orion's heat shield must again face temperatures hot enough to char rock.

NASA A small, round soft toy sits on a white tabletop, about the size of a large grapefruit. Its fabric face is pale cream with big black embroidered eyes, rosy pink cheeks and a simple smiling mouth, giving it a cute cartoon look. On top, it wears a dark blue cap sprinkled with embroidered yellow stars and tiny white rockets. Above the cap is a padded green‑and‑blue globe, like a miniature Earth, with a short dark loop for hanging. The toy’s overall impression is friendly and playful, like a cheerful mascot for a children’s space adventure.NASA
Rise, the Artemis II "zero‑g indicator" – a soft toy the crew will release inside Orion to show when they've reached weightlessness – sits ready for its first trip to space

After the first uncrewed test flight, Artemis I, engineers found that chunks of the heat shield's coating had cracked and broken away during a two‑stage "skip" re‑entry manoeuvre. This saw the capsule dip into the upper atmosphere, briefly climb again, then plunge back in so as to best cope with the heat, G-forces and splashdown accuracy needed.

For Artemis II they are keeping this two‑step re-entry, but changing the angle and timing so Orion spends less time in the initial, gentler dip. Modelling suggests this should reduce the heating and loads that caused extra charring, but this will be the first time the revised descent is flown with a crew.

If Artemis II is a success, the next time the Space Coast fills up like this it will be for another test flight – another step closer to people actually walking on the Moon again, half a century after the last footprints were made.

And somewhere between the marsh grass and the launch pads, there will almost certainly be someone wearing one of Brenda Mulberry's shirts, already dreaming of the day when her logo appears not just on Florida cotton, but in a photograph taken on the Moon.

Minimum wage rises to £12.71 an hour

1 April 2026 at 07:01
iStock A woman working as a cleaner in an office building. She is wearing yellow rubber gloves, a striped top and a blue apron. iStock
The Treasury said around 2.7 million people are on minimum wage

Around 2.7 million people are set to receive a pay rise this week as the national minimum wage goes up by 50p to £12.71 for over 21s.

Workers aged 18-20 will see an 85p rise to £10.85, and under-18s and apprentices will get 45p more to £8 an hour.

Campaigners have welcomed the increases, but businesses have said the higher wage bills will force them to increase prices or cut staff.

The Low Pay Commission, the government agency which recommended the increases, said previous minimum wage rises for over-21s had "not had a significant negative impact on jobs".

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said wages were going up "for the lowest paid" but said the government "must go further to bear down on costs".

Spencer Bowman is the managing director of of Mettricks, a chain of four coffee shops in Southampton. He says he would normally be "thrilled" to pay staff more, but "the cost increases have got to be sustainable".

"There's nothing that I'd want more than to ensure that my team can earn a really fair amount of money for a fair day's work. And it's been one of my long-term ambitions to see hospitality workers, my employees, paid far more."

But Spencer says his business is being squeezed from every angle – as well as minimum wage, he has had increases in business rates, national insurance, and statutory sick pay. He also expects energy bills to go up because of the war in the Middle East.

"We're running on a minimum number of staff on shift. We can't run on fewer people," he says.

"If something doesn't give somewhere, we will be closing sites.

Spencer Bowman, a white man, standing in a coffee shop. He is wearing a blue t shirt with the shop's logo on it.
Spencer Bowman says he may have to close one of his four coffee shops due to cost pressures

"It doesn't make any sense. Revenue is up. Our customer numbers are up. But our costs everywhere have hit a point where we're not financially sustainable and if that continues, there's only one outcome for that."

The minimum wage increases are on top of a 6.7% rise for over-21s and a 16.3% rise for 18 to 20-year-olds respectively last year, when there was also a rise in employers' National Insurance contributions.

Ministers are considering slowing down plans to pay adults of all ages the same minimum wage.

Labour committed in their election manifesto to remove "discretionary age bands" and increase the wages of 18 to 20-year-olds so they are paid the same as those over 21.

Ifunanya Ezechukwu, 25, calls the minimum wage rise a "step in the right direction".

"Especially with the cost of living being really bad, people need more money so they can actually afford the basics," she tells BBC Newsbeat.

She doesn't think employers paying staff more will necessarily translate to fewer job opportunities.

"I feel like they're probably just going to up the prices of their services, so I don't think there'll be less job opportunities," she says.

"I just feel like some things might get more expensive, which is unfortunate, and then the cycle just continues."

Ifunanya Ezechukwu smiles as she speaks in to a green BBC microphone.
Ifunanya says people need more money to afford the basics

Alex McCarthy, a university student who works part-time in a pub, says he is feeling "very, very happy" about the rise.

But the 18-year-old says it probably won't be enough for some of his friends, who are working while living at university but are still struggling to do weekly shops and are having to borrow money off their parents.

Amelia Evans, 18, believes the rise is necessary because "everything is going up in price". But she is concerned it will limit her job opportunities.

"So far this year I think I've done maybe 20 applications, and haven't got any. I feel like it's going to impact me even more now."

When Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced the increases in the Budget last year, she said the cost of living was still the biggest issue for working people.

"The economy isn't working well enough for those on the lowest incomes," she added.

At the time, the Treasury said the new minimum wage rates for 2026 struck a balance between "the needs of workers, the affordability for businesses and the opportunities for employment".

The Living Wage Foundation has welcomed the rises but says they do not go far enough.

The Foundation calculates what is known as the Real Living Wage, which it says is a more accurate reflection of the cost of living in the UK. It currently stands at £13.45 across the UK and £14.80 in London.

Kate Chapman, the executive director of the Living Wage Foundation, said one in seven businesses now pay the Real Living Wage.

"That's because they know the Living Wage is good for people, good for society and good for business," she said.

The British Chamber of Commerce has said that tax and labour costs are the biggest concerns for British businesses.

In its quarterly survey of 4,000 firms, 73% said labour costs are putting pressure on them to raise prices.

Additional reporting by Georgia Levy-Collins, Lizzy Bella, and Jemma Crew

Woods to 'step away and seek treatment' after crash

1 April 2026 at 07:44

Woods to 'step away and seek treatment' after crash

Tiger WoodsImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Tiger Woods has won 15 golf majors - only Jack Nicklaus (18) has more

  • Published

Tiger Woods says he is "stepping away for a period of time to seek treatment and focus on my health" following an arrest after a car crash.

The 50-year-old was arrested and charged with driving under the influence after clipping a truck and rolling his car in Florida on Friday.

He was also charged with property damage and refusal to submit to a lawful test.

The 15-time major champion submitted a written plea of not guilty via his lawyers on Tuesday.

That came after a police report earlier on Tuesday detailed his behaviour after the crash.

It said Woods had two hydrocodone pills in his pocket - an opioid used to treat severe pain - and that officers observed him acting "lethargic and slow" while "sweating profusely" with "extremely dilated" pupils.

Speaking about the incident for the first time, Woods wrote on X: "I know and understand the seriousness of the situation I find myself in today.

"I am stepping away for a period of time to seek treatment and focus on my health. This is necessary in order for me to prioritise my well-being and work toward lasting recovery."

Prior to the crash he had not ruled out playing in next month's Masters - though he has not competed at a major since missing the cut at The Open in July 2024.

"I'm committed to taking the time needed to return in a healthier, stronger and more focused place, both personally and professionally," his statement added.

"I appreciate your understanding and support and ask for privacy for my family, loved ones and myself at this time."

'A legend of our sport but a person above all else'

The PGA Tour also issued its first comment on Woods following the golfer's statement.

"Tiger Woods is a legend of our sport whose impact extends far beyond his achievements on the course," it said.

"But above all else, Tiger is a person, and our focus is on his health and well‑being. Tiger continues to have our full support as he takes this important step."

The golf body's CEO, Brian Rolapp, added: "Tiger Woods is one of the most influential figures the sports world has ever known.

"Over the last year, I have come to deeply appreciate Tiger not only for his impact on the game, but for his friendship and the perspective he has shared with me as I joined the golf industry.

"My thoughts are with him and his family as he takes this step, for which he has my full respect and support."

More to follow.

Related topics

'A million things could go wrong' - why seizing Iran's uranium would be so risky for the US

1 April 2026 at 07:16
Getty Images Maxar satellite imagery shows extensive building damage across the Isfahan nuclear technology center in June 2025Getty Images
Most of Iran's uranium that can be turned into material for weapons is believed to be stored at Isfahan, which was damaged in US-Israeli strikes last year

US troops storming a secretive, underground nuclear facility to seize Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium may sound far-fetched, but it is an option President Donald Trump is reportedly considering to achieve his main objective in the war: preventing the regime from developing nuclear weapons.

Such an operation would be extremely challenging and fraught with danger, according to military experts and former US defence officials who spoke to the BBC. They said it would require the deployment of ground troops and could take several days or even weeks to complete.

Removing the uranium stockpile would be one of the "most complicated special operations in history," said Mick Mulroy, a former deputy assistant secretary of defence for the Middle East.

The scenario is just one of several military actions that Trump could take in Iran.

Others include the US taking control of Kharg Island in an effort to pressure Iran to fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The administration may also be using the threat of new military operations to pressure Iran to the negotiating table.

In a telephone interview with the BBC's US partner CBS News on Tuesday, President Trump declined to say whether it would be possible to declare victory in the war without removing or destroying Iran's enriched uranium.

But he appeared to play down the significance of the stockpile, pointing to the damage caused in US-Israeli strikes last June. "That's so deeply buried it's gonna be very hard for anybody," Trump said. "It's down there deep. So… it's pretty safe. But, you know, we'll make a determination."

His remarks came after the Wall Street Journal reported that the US was considering an operation to extract the material. The White House said Trump was yet to make a final decision.

Map showing Iran's main nuclear sites

An operation targeting Iran's stockpile would face several major logistical challenges, experts said.

At the start of the war, Iran possessed approximately 440kg of uranium enriched to 60%, according to senior US officials. The material can be fairly quickly enriched to the 90% threshold needed for weapons-grade uranium.

Iran also has roughly 1,000kg of uranium enriched to 20%, and 8,500kg that are enriched to the 3.6% threshold accepted for medical research.

Most of the highly enriched uranium that can be easily turned into material for bombs or missiles is believed to be stored at Isfahan. The facility is one of three underground nuclear sites in Iran that were targeted in US-Israeli airstrikes last year.

But it is unclear how much of the highly enriched uranium is stored at other locations.

A military operation to retrieve the material would be easier if the US knew exactly where the stockpile was, said Jason Campbell, a former senior US defence official in the Obama and Trump administrations.

"The ideal scenario is that you know exactly where it is," Campbell said. "If it's been dispersed to four different sites, then you're talking about a whole different" level of complexity.

Image shows the Isfahan nuclear site=

In addition to Isfahan, some highly enriched uranium could also be stored at Fordo and Natanz, the other two enrichment facilities that were targeted in Operation Midnight Hammer last year.

Rafael Grossi, the director of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said last month that the majority of Iran's highly enriched uranium is stored at Isfahan, with some additional material at Natanz. But Grossi said more detailed information wasn't available because inspectors haven't visited the sites since being evacuated from Iran after the US-Israeli air campaign in 2025.

"There are many questions that we will only elucidate when we are able to go back," Grossi told reporters.

Gaining access to the highly enriched uranium presents another set of challenges, assuming the US knows where it is.

There are signs that Iran fortified an underground complex near one of its nuclear facilities before this year's US-Israeli strikes. At Isfahan, for example, satellite imagery from February indicated all entrances to its tunnel complex appeared to be sealed off with earth, which would make any operation more difficult.

Satellite images from February show Isfahan tunnels sealed with earth

Since the start of the war, the US and Israel have been able to use air strikes alone to decimate Iran's navy, degrade its ballistic missiles and damage its industrial base. But unlike those other military objectives, experts said that securing Iran's enriched uranium could not be done without using ground forces.

The US could use elements of the 82nd Airborne Division - which were deployed to the Middle East - to secure the areas surrounding Isfahan and Natanz. Special operations forces that are trained to handle nuclear material would then be sent in to retrieve the enriched uranium. The uranium itself is in gaseous form and is believed to be stored in large metal containers.

Satellite imagery shows that the entrances to Isfahan and Natanz were badly damaged by US airstrikes. US forces would likely need heavy machinery to dig through rubble in order to locate the enriched uranium, which is believed to be stored in tunnels buried deep underground - all while facing potential counterattacks from Iran.

"You've first got to excavate the site and detect [the enriched uranium] while likely being under near constant threat," Campbell said.

Image shows Natanz nuclear facility

It is an open question how Iran might respond, or how much of a threat it might pose to US ground troops targeting the country's main nuclear facilities.

The US and Israel have been degrading "Iranian defence capabilities to enable this type of operation if it was necessary," said Alex Plitsas, a former US defence official and nonresident senior fellow at the Scowcroft Middle East Security Initiative. Nevertheless, he said it would still be a "high risk" operation.

US ground troops would be isolated at Isfahan, which is located approximately 300 miles (482km) inland from Iran's third largest city. "It makes [medical evacuations] difficult given the distances. It makes [US troops] vulnerable to anti-aircraft fire coming in and out, as well as attacks while they're" at the nuclear facility," Plitsas said.

While the operation could take multiple forms, experts said it would likely involve the seizure of an airfield or landing zone from which US forces could operate - and then remove the enriched uranium from Iran once they have retrieved it.

The 82nd Airborne Division, which is trained to secure airfields and other infrastructure, could be used along with other US forces to stage an operating base for the mission, military experts said. Once the uranium is secured, the US would then face the question of removing it from the country or diluting it on site.

Senior administration officials said at the start of the war that the US might consider diluting Iran's highly enriched uranium on site, rather than removing it from the country. But that would be a large, complex and time-consuming operation, said Jonathan Ruhe, an expert on Iran's nuclear programme at the Jewish Institute for National Security of America, a conservative think tank in Washington DC.

Seizing and taking the uranium out of Iran is faster and would allow the US to dilute the material in the United States, Ruhe said. The operation would be deeply risky no matter how it is done, he added.

"You've got basically a half ton of what's effectively weapons grade uranium that you've got to extricate," Ruhe said.

"And there are a million things that could go wrong."

Watch: Why is it so hard to pass through the Strait of Hormuz?

Asia's migrant workers debate if Gulf jobs are worth deadly risk of Iran war

1 April 2026 at 06:48
Getty Images Three women waving the Philippine flag and wearing face masks, walking from an airplane in the background after being repatriated fro the Middle East due to the US and Israel's war on IranGetty Images
Philippine migrant workers have been returning from the Gulf in the wake of the conflict

All Norma Tactacon can do is pray as the sirens blare.

The 49-year-old, who works in the Middle East as a domestic worker, is thousands of miles away from her home in the Philippines, where her husband and three children live.

Stuck in Qatar, which is caught in the crossfire of the US and Israel's war on Iran, her only hope is that she makes it home to her family.

"I get scared and nervous every time I see pictures and videos of missiles in the air," she tells the BBC. "I need to be alive to be there for my family. I'm all that they have."

As wealthy Gulf states turned into targets of Iranian strikes because of the US military bases they host, expats left in large numbers, while tourists and travellers have stayed away.

But it has been especially hard for the millions of migrants whose futures have now turned uncertain. From domestic help to construction workers, they have long supported these economies to lift their families back home from poverty.

Tactacon had hoped to pay for her 23-year-old son to graduate from a police academy and for her two daughters, aged 22 and 24, to become nurses, a springboard for high-paying jobs overseas.

That's why she spent a good part of the last two decades working as a maid in Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

What is still keeping her there is her salary. Filipino domestic workers in the Middle East earn a minimum wage of $500 (£370) a month, roughly four to five times more than what they would make in a similar job back home.

"I hope the world will be peaceful again and things go back to the way they were. I pray that the war will stop," says Tactacon in Qatar.

Getty Images Motorists drive past a plume of smoke rising from a reported Iranian strike in the industrial district of Doha on March 1, 2026. Getty Images
A plume of smoke rises from a reported Iranian strike in Doha, Qatar

But the war is making her reconsider. She might return home and start a small business with her husband. She has reason to be worried.

One of the first victims of the conflict was 32-year-old Filipina Mary Ann Veolasquez, who worked as a caregiver in Israel.

The Israeli embassy in Manila said she was injured while leading her patient to safety, after a ballistic missile struck her apartment in Tel Aviv.

According to the International Labour Organisation (ILO), the region hosts 24 million migrant workers, making it the world's top destination for overseas labour. Most of them come from Asia - India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, the Philippines and Indonesia. Many of these workers take low paid or precarious jobs, and have little access to things like healthcare, the ILO says.

At least 12 South Asian migrant workers have died so far as a result of the conflict, according to reports.

The war's mounting fatalities include Dibas Shrestha, a 29-year-old Nepali who worked as a security guard in Abu Dhabi. He died in an Iranian strike on 1 March.

"I tried to convince him to move back to Nepal, but he said he liked his job in Abu Dhabi, and that he had a good life," his uncle Ramesh told the BBC.

"We have many relatives who've moved to the Gulf for work, so we were very worried for all of them,"

When the war started, Shrestha assured his family it was safe. In a post on Facebook, he wrote that watching the news had made him "concerned" but he also felt, "The news sometimes presents exaggerated or misleading information".

His uncle said Shrestha had been saving up to rebuild his parents' home after it had been damaged in an earthquake in 2015 that killed hundreds.

"He was their only son," Ramesh added. "So kind, and very smart."

BBC/Dibash Shrestha's family Nepali worker Dibas ShresthaBBC/Dibash Shrestha's family
Dibas Shrestha worked as a security guard in Abu Dhabi

More than 120kms away, in Dubai, debris from an intercepted missile killed Ahmad Ali, a 55-year-old water tank supplier from Bangladesh.

His son, Abdul Haque, said he joined his father to work in the UAE but returned to Bangladesh before the war started. His father continued sending money home - $500 to $600 every month, which is a huge sum in the poor South Asia nation.

Ahmad died during Ramadan, and his son was told it happened in the evening, just as people were breaking their fast.

"He really liked the people in Dubai, he said they were welcoming, that it was a great place to live," Abdul told the BBC.

"I don't even think he knew the war was going on. He didn't read the news and didn't have a smartphone."

Abdul's his view of Dubai and the region has changed: "It's not safe now, nobody wants to lose a father."

Governments in Asia have been scrambling to bring migrant workers home.

But the threat of missile strikes has disrupted travel to and from Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Qatar. So people seeking to leave have had to take longer routes home.

Getty Images Workers wearing blue uniform and neon green jackets resting on the beardwalk with the Dubai skyline in the background during daytimeGetty Images
The Middle East is a top destination for migrant workrs from South and South East Asia

The last repatriation flight saw 234 Filipino workers from Kuwait, Qatar, and Bahrain travel up to eight hours by land to Saudi Arabia, where 109 others were waiting to join them on a Philippine Airlines flight.

Close to 2,000 Filipino workers and their dependents were flown back to Manila as of 23 March, according to the government.

The Middle East is home to roughly half of the more than two million Filipinos working overseas, and their remittances account for 10% of the economy.

Remittances are just as crucial for Bangladesh - most of its 14 million migrant workers are in the Middle East.

Close to 500 Bangladeshi workers have been repatriated since the conflict started, and the government in Dhaka has arranged for at least two more flights home, departing from Bahrain.

For some leaving is not an option.

Su Su from Myanmar found a safe home in Dubai when she left behind a country gripped by a bloody civil war that has dragged on since 2021.

The 31-year-old, who works as an operations specialist for a real estate company, has been in Dubai for two years.

She says her current work-from-home set-up reminds her of Covid lockdowns - except when she hears the sirens. Then she needs to stay away from her window.

"I have an emergency bag prepared in case I have to evacuate... This is just a habit I got from Myanmar."

And yet, she says, "The feeling here is more calm. I believe at the end of the day, we will be fine".

Additional reporting by BBC Burmese and BBC Indonesian

'You're no longer my sister' - rows erupt as war divides Iranian families

1 April 2026 at 07:25
Supplied Smoke rising from above buildings in two clouds, one above the other. The boom of a red crane can be seen on the left.Supplied
One person the BBC has been in contact with captured this image of an explosion in mid-March in Tehran

"He said to her: 'You're no longer my sister', and she told him to go to hell."

This argument between a man and his sister in a city near Tehran - witnessed and recounted by one of their relatives - gives a telling insight into the painful rows erupting among families and friends as US and Israeli strikes continue.

The relative, who we are calling Sina, says that when his family recently got together at his grandmother's house, emotions quickly exploded, exposing stark divisions.

His uncle, a member of the Basij - a volunteer militia often deployed to suppress dissent in Iran - refused to even greet his own sister, who is opposed to the ruling regime.

After their exchange, the uncle was "very quiet… and left early", Sina says.

He and other young Iranians have described emotional scenes as rifts open up over the war.

Even among those opposed to the government, there are deep divisions over whether the war will help or hinder attempts to bring about change.

Despite the government-imposed internet blackout, the BBC has been able to maintain contact with some of the few Iranians who have found ways to remain online.

Iranians can be sent to prison for speaking to certain international media. But even so, over the month-long war, these contacts have been sharing information through intermittent text messages and occasional voice calls.

Their initial responses of shock and fear have given way to attempts to adapt, switching locations and changing routines. They describe the details of their lives; practising yoga despite the sounds of explosions, eating birthday cake alone and venturing out to near-empty coffee shops.

And, in some surprisingly personal notes, they have shared details about how the conflict is affecting their relationships. All of the names in this article have been changed.

Supplied A figure in a military vest, helmet and fatigues standing in the back of a white pick-up truck, which is driving along a road in Tehran. A damaged building can be seen in the background.Supplied
People in Tehran have described seeing Iranian security forces on the streets

Towards the end of March, Iranians celebrated Nowruz, the Persian new year festival that marks the spring equinox and is often a time when families get together.

Sina, who is in his 20s, is opposed to the clerical establishment and continues to support the Israeli and US air strikes, believing that they will help bring the regime down.

He says his uncle, the Basij member, had not attended Nowruz family gatherings in recent years, but turned up this time, to the surprise of his family. Usually, "we don't talk to him, nor to his children", says Sina.

He says he has barely spoken to his uncle since major protests in 2022 following the death in custody of a young woman, Mahsa Amini, who was accused of not wearing the compulsory hijab properly.

More recently, Iran saw an unprecedented crackdown by the Basij and other security forces on protests that swept across the country in December and January. At least 6,508 protesters were killed and 53,000 arrested, according to the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA).

Sina says that, according to other relatives, his uncle was so angered by the protests that he said even if his own children went onto the streets and were killed, he wouldn't go to collect their bodies.

And yet, Sina says, his uncle seems to be "afraid of dying" in the war and appears to have been trying to improve relations with some family members, including his own mother, Sina's grandmother.

At Nowruz, he and his wife "just looked really down and helpless", says Sina. "I didn't get into an argument with them. They should be in prison."

Supplied Items displayed to mark Nowruz, including a candle, a glass containing the spice sumac and a green, leafy plantSupplied
Nowruz is marked by families coming together and also with symbolic items displayed on a table

Another young man, Kaveh from Tehran, spent Nowruz alone.

He says his relationship with his sister, who is also a Basij member, was already difficult. After he joined the 2022 protests, he says, she became critical of his activities and unsympathetic over the deaths of friends of his in the January protests.

Kaveh has been providing internet access to friends and family via SpaceX's Starlink, which offers connectivity via satellites. In Iran, owning or using Starlink terminals is punishable by up to two years in prison.

He initially joined his family for the holiday, but he says he left the place where they were staying and later returned to find his sister had disconnected his Starlink and the devices connected to it. When he challenged her, a row broke out, he says.

"I can't stand her anymore… I just had a fight and said I can't stand it and I left," he says.

"I was so excited about Nowruz. I packed my clothes and wanted to be there with the family," Kaveh said over an encrypted line as he travelled home alone. "But now I don't feel it at all."

Supplied A close-up image of a plate stacked with small biscuits, each with a distinctive shape like a four-leaf clover.Supplied
Maral sent this image of biscuits baked as her family celebrated Nowruz despite the war

Most Iranians have no internet access. Starlink devices are expensive as well as illegal, so those who have access tend to be relatively wealthy. A few others manage to connect via VPNs.

Most Iranians who agree to speak to BBC Persian are opposed to the Iranian regime. But even among the government's critics, there are deep differences over this war and its impact.

According to the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, 1,900 people have been killed in Iran by the US and Israeli strikes, while HRANA puts the total at over 3,400, more than 1,500 of them civilians.

Maral, a student in her 20s in the city of Rasht in northern Iran, has become very frustrated with her father for his continued support of the war.

He is an enthusiastic supporter of Reza Pahlavi, the crown prince of Iran before the 1979 revolution.

Pahlavi now lives in the US and has positioned himself as a potential transitional leader of the country. He supports the US and Israeli strikes on Iran despite mounting casualties, describing the attacks as a "humanitarian intervention" and recently urging the US to "stay the course".

He has gained traction in Iran in recent months as an opposition figure, with some demonstrators in the January protests chanting his name.

"I just want this war to end as soon as possible," says Maral. "Many ordinary people have died."

She says she gets "annoyed" because her father is "really optimistic", even as the bombs fall.

"We try to talk to him, but he just keeps going on about 'the Prince, the Prince,'" she says.

"My dad lives in this illusion that Iran will open up its borders and within five years everything will be rebuilt, everything will be fine. He's being influenced by Israeli propaganda that the two countries will be friends."

Her father and mother often argue about Pahlavi, she adds.

Supplied Close-up image showing a green coloured matcha latte in a glass, next to a cup of tea in a glass, resting on a white saucer, with a cheesecake dessert on a plate behind.Supplied
Tara has tried to continue with her day-to-day life, including visiting cafes

Meanwhile, Tara, a woman in her 20s in Tehran, says her close family members initially criticised her for being opposed to the war.

"They all support attacks on Iran… My mum and sister told me: 'You haven't lost anyone [during the protests], that's why you are against the strikes. You don't want your routine, exercise and coffee catch-ups to get disrupted… If they [the regime] had killed one of your friends or relatives [during the protests] you would have a different opinion.'"

But Tara says: "Thousands of innocent people could be killed in the war as well, without anyone even remembering them."

However, she says, her sister's view – like that of several other Iranians the BBC has heard from - has softened as the attacks have continued. More recently, after a nearby area was hit, she says her sister simply said: "I hope the war finishes soon."

And despite their differences, the family still try to go everywhere together, Tara says. That way, "we would all die together if they hit us".

美国参议员敦促台湾增加军费开支,北京表示抗议

By: 储百亮
1 April 2026 at 08:48

简繁中文
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美国参议员敦促台湾增加军费开支,北京表示抗议

储百亮
周一,访问台湾的参议员在台湾桃园的一个研究所。(从左至右:新罕布什尔州民主党参议员珍妮·夏欣、犹他州共和党参议员约翰·柯蒂斯、北卡罗来纳州共和党参议员汤姆·蒂利斯和内华达州民主党参议员杰基·罗森)
周一,访问台湾的参议员在台湾桃园的一个研究所。(从左至右:新罕布什尔州民主党参议员珍妮·夏欣、犹他州共和党参议员约翰·柯蒂斯、北卡罗来纳州共和党参议员汤姆·蒂利斯和内华达州民主党参议员杰基·罗森) Ann Wang/Reuters
过去几个月来,台湾总统赖清德提出的八年内追加1.25万亿新台币(约合400亿美元)的国防预算计划一直遭到政治对手的阻挠。本周,一个由美国两党参议员组成的代表团利用访台机会表达了对该计划的支持。该预算计划被视为缓解华盛顿方面对台湾自身防务承诺担忧的关键基石。
特朗普政府将与北京的谈判列为优先事项之际,这四位来自参议院外交委员会的议员(两名共和党人,两名民主党人)也试图展示美国对台承诺。
不过,这些参议员也听到了台湾方面对已采购的美国武器交付延误的担忧。同时,中国方面对这次访问提出了抗议。中国宣称对台湾拥有主权,并已敦促特朗普总统限制对台军售。
为什么400亿美元的国防计划陷入停滞
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参议员们公开敦促台湾立法机构批准赖清德的支出提案,称这笔追加资金不仅有助于威慑中国,使其不敢轻举妄动,同时也能推动台湾自身国防工业的增长,例如无人机和弹药等领域。
来自新罕布什尔州的民主党参议员珍妮·夏欣在台北对记者表示:“这不仅是钱的问题,更关乎关键能力的建设。面对潜在威胁和未来挑战,这些能力需要达到一定水平,而这必然需要投入相应的技术和资金。”
赖清德总统的这项提案是在特朗普政府施压要求台湾增加国防支出的背景下提出的。但由于在野党在立法机构中占多数席位,该提案目前在立法院遇阻。
台湾主要在野党国民党批评赖清德的提案缺乏透明度,并指出美国积压的武器订单尚未交付,令他们担忧。
周一,台湾国防部副部长徐斯俭在陪同参议员参观一家无人机研发机构时,表达了这些关切。“目前仍有部分军购项目已经付款但尚未交货,”徐斯俭在电视播出的发言中说,并表示这是转达一位台湾在野党立委的意见。
国民党主席郑丽文提议拨款3800亿台币(约合120亿美元)用于购买更多美国武器,并表示后续可能还会进行更多采购。
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这些参议员的表态在台湾具有重要影响,因为台湾的选民和许多政界人士通常对华盛顿的态度非常敏感。这些言论也可能促使部分在野党政治人物支持更大幅度的军费增长。
习特会”将如何改变博弈筹码
特朗普总统计划在5月中旬与中国领导人习近平会面,这引发了外界对于特朗普是否会软化美国对台口头支持的猜测。据美国官员透露,特朗普政府已暂缓决定一项价值数十亿美元的对台军售方案,以避免激怒习近平。习近平在上个月的通话中曾警告特朗普,对台军售问题应当谨慎处理。
一些专家表示,举例而言,习近平可能会试图劝诱特朗普表态美国反对台湾独立。实际上目前没有迹象表明台湾有意宣布正式独立,而华盛顿反对此类举动也并非新鲜事。但如果这些话是特朗普在北京亲口说出,其分量将更重,并可能加剧台湾内部对特朗普是否坚定支持这个岛屿的担忧。
代表犹他州的共和党参议员匡希恒(John Curtis)表示,美国国会对台湾的支持依然稳固,而且是跨党派的。他补充道,美中关系的改善对台湾而言未必是坏事。“如果我们与中国的关系恶化,中国反而更有可能对台湾采取激进行动,”他说道。
中国警告:访问释放了“错误信号”
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参议员的此次访问遭到了北京方面的抗议,这与中国政府长期以来反对外国议员访问台北的立场一致。中国认为,这类访问等同于对台湾争取国际承认的支持。
中国外交部发言人毛宁指责美国向所谓“分裂势力”发出“错误信号”。“分裂势力”是北京对赖清德所属政党的称呼,该党对北京持怀疑态度,并主张台湾事实上已经是独立的。
中国媒体援引学者的观点称,此次访问无非是台湾执政党为了向在野党施压而搞的一场政治表演。
中国也试图展示其在台湾政治格局中的影响力。参议院代表团访台之际,国民党主席郑丽文周一宣布,她将于下周访问中国,期间或将与习近平会面。
当被问及郑丽文此行时,参议员夏欣表示:“我们认为对话是好事。正如我们所知,特朗普总统下个月也将访问中国。”但她补充道,中国应当对与台湾所有政党展开对话持开放态度。

储百亮(Chris Buckley)是《纽约时报》首席中国记者,自台北报道中国和台湾问题,重点关注政治、社会变革以及安全和军事问题。

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Tugboat Captain Is Charged in Miami Beach Crash That Killed 3 Children

Six people, including a camp counselor, were thrown into the water on July 28 when their sailboat was struck by a barge that was being pushed by a tugboat, the authorities said.

© Joe Raedle/Getty Images

An aerial view of Biscayne Bay surrounding Hibiscus Island in Miami Beach, where a barge struck a sailboat in July, killing three children.

Peacekeepers killed by roadside explosion in Lebanon, initial report finds

1 April 2026 at 06:07
Reuters White UNIFIL vehicles drive on a main road in Qlayaa, amid escalating hostilities between Israel and HezbollahReuters
The UN's peacekeeping force patrols the de facto border between Lebanon and Israel, in collaboration with the Lebanese army

Two Indonesian peacekeepers were killed on Monday by a "roadside explosion" in southern Lebanon, UN peacekeeping chief Jean-Pierre Lacroix has said, citing the findings of an initial investigation.

In a separate statement, the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (Unifil) said the explosion was of "unknown origin" and "destroyed" the peacekeepers' vehicle near Bani Hayyan.

A third peacekeeper was "severely" injured in the explosion, and a fourth was hurt, Unifil said.

It was the second such fatal incident in 24 hours. Another peacekeeper - who was also Indonesian - was killed on Sunday when a projectile, also of unknown origin, exploded in Adchit Al Qusayr, southern Lebanon.

Unifil said it had launched investigations to determine what happened in both incidents.

The findings of an "initial" investigation into the incident on Monday "point to a roadside explosion striking the convoy", Lacroix told the UN Security Council earlier.

Their deaths had "most likely" been caused by an IED (improvised explosive device), Stéphane Dujarric, spokesperson for the UN secretary-general, later said at a briefing.

Speaking about the other incident, on Sunday, Dujarric said it was likely caused by "an explosive that landed in the position that the Indonesians were holding".

The deaths come shortly after the Israeli military announced it would step up ground and air attacks against the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah.

Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed militia as well as a political party, has fired rockets into Israel in retaliation for the ongoing US-Israeli strikes on Iran.

In a statement on Telegram, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said its own review had concluded that the Bani Hayyan explosion "was not caused by IDF activity".

It went on: "A comprehensive operational examination indicates that no explosive device was placed in the area by IDF troops, and that no IDF troops were present in the area at all."

Separately, the IDF said on Tuesday that four of its soldiers had been killed in combat in southern Lebanon. Another soldier was severely wounded and a reservist moderately wounded, the IDF said.

Dujarric, of the UN, said the peacekeepers in Lebanon were "soldiers sent there on behalf of the international community... and everyone needs to ensure that they are protected and never targeted".

He urged Lebanon and Israel to use the Unifil mechanism for dialogue, saying "the bottom line is that the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Lebanon needs to be respected".

Antara, an Indonesian government-owned news agency, named the soldier killed on Sunday as Chief Private Farizal Rhomadhon. The two soldiers killed on Monday were named as Captain Zulmi Aditya Iskandar and First Sergeant Muhammad Nur Ichwan.

In a statement, Unifil said: "We extend our sincerest condolences to the family, friends, and colleagues of those brave peacekeepers who gave their lives in service of peace."

Created by the UN Security Council in 1978, Unifil has since served as a buffer between Israel and Lebanon.

The peacekeeping force patrols the "Blue Line" - the de facto border between Lebanon and Israel, in collaboration with the Lebanese army.

Around 339 peacekeepers have been killed since the mission was established.

Despite a November 2024 ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, brokered after violence flared between the two over the war in Gaza, Israel has conducted near-daily strikes on Hezbollah targets.

It says the armed group has not abided by the terms of the ceasefire - under which Hezbollah was meant to disarm and leave its positions in the south - and has accused Unifil and the Lebanese army of not doing enough to remove its militants from the region.

Israel says its latest operation in southern Lebanon was intended to ensure the security of communities in the north.

Since the ceasefire began, 1,268 people have been killed in Lebanon, according to the Lebanese health ministry, including 124 children.

US Army suspends crews who flew helicopters near Kid Rock's home

1 April 2026 at 06:36
Getty Images Kid Rock is seen wearing a cowboy hatGetty Images
Kid Rock, a prominent Trump supporter, held an alternative Super Bowl halftime show this year for conservative group Turning Point USA

The crews of two military helicopters seen hovering outside musician Kid Rock's home have been suspended from flight duties, the US Army has said.

The Army is reviewing the circumstances surrounding the mission, Spokesman Maj Montrell Russell told the BBC in a statement, including whether the crews complied with federal flying regulations and aviation safety protocols.

Kid Rock, a supporter of President Donald Trump, posted a video of himself gesturing at the AH-64 Apaches above his swimming pool on Saturday, prompting many to question why the helicopters would visit his home.

Trump, when asked about the incident on Tuesday, said in a joking manner: "Maybe they were trying to defend him."

Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, Trump said the crews "probably shouldn't have been doing it. You're not supposed to be playing games".

"They like Kid Rock. I like Kid Rock," he added.

The Army confirmed that two of its Apache helicopters from the 101st Combat Aviation Brigade at Fort Campbell conducted a flight on 28 March in the Nashville area in the state of Tennessee, where Kid Rock lives and owns two restaurants.

"The Army takes any allegations of unauthorized or unsafe flight operations very seriously and is committed to enforcing standards and holding personnel accountable," Russell said, adding that the crews would be suspended during the ongoing investigation.

Kid Rock told local outlet WKRN-TV on Monday that it is not uncommon for helicopters from the nearby Fort Campbell Army base to fly near his home.

He noted that he has performed for troops at Fort Campbell and overseas.

"I think they know this is a pretty friendly spot," the musician said. "I've talked to some of these pilots. I've told them, 'You guys see me waving when you come by the house?' I'm like, 'You guys are always welcome to cruise by my house, any time.'"

Kid Rock, who also performed at the Republican convention in 2024 insulted California Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat who has feuded with him and Trump, in the caption of the footage he posted.

One clip shows Kid Rock, whose real name is Robert Ritchie, standing poolside next to a replica of the Statue of Liberty, clapping and saluting as the aircraft hovers before flying away.

"God Bless America and all those who have made the ultimate sacrifice to defend her," the caption reads.

Another video shows the Born Free singer pumping his fist before a second gunship appears to fly by his mansion, which he has dubbed the Southern White House.

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