British artist Morrissey has cancelled two shows in the US after receiving a death threat ahead of a concert in Ottawa, Canada.
A 26-year-old Ottawa man was released on bail after allegedly uttering a threat to kill the singer, whose real name is Steven Morrissey, ahead of his performance at a music festival last week.
The event went on as planned, but the singer later cancelled two shows in Massachusetts and Connecticut.
Morrissey was the front man of the rock band The Smiths, but left the band in 1987 to pursue a solo career.
He is known for being outspoken on issues such as animal welfare and politics.
In 2006, he refused to tour in Canada in protest at the annual seal hunt.
After the threat against his life in Ottawa last week, he cancelled Friday's show in Connecticut and one in Boston.
"In recent days, there has been a credible threat on Morrissey's life," said a statement from the Boston venue on Instagram.
"Out of an abundance of caution for the safety of both the artist and the band, tomorrow's engagement at the MGM Music Hall at Fenway has been canceled."
President Donald Trump and other prominent American political figures are heading to Arizona to speak at a memorial for Charlie Kirk, the 31-year-old conservative activist who was killed two weeks ago.
The event, organised by Turning Point USA (TPUSA), is on Sunday at State Farm Stadium in Glendale and could be attended by more than 100,000 people.
Heightened security is expected, including "TSA-level screening", according to TPUSA.
Kirk, who co-founded Turning Point USA when he was 18, was shot at a speaking event on a Utah university campus on 10 September, reigniting concerns about political violence in the US.
A polarising figure, differing perspectives about his legacy and possible motives for the shooting have exacerbated deep divisions in the US.
In addition to Trump, those expected to speak at the service include Kirk's widow, Erika, who took over his role as TPUSA CEO; Vice President JD Vance; the president's eldest son, Donald Trump Jr; right-wing political commentator Tucker Carlson; homeland security adviser and White House deputy chief of staff for policy Stephen Miller.
Public shootings in the US are normally met with calls from political leaders for calm, prayer and unity.
But the Trump administration has been seeking to blame and crack down on the "radical left", which in turn has prompted accusations of government overreach and claims Kirk's death is being used as a pretext to intrude on civil liberties.
Doors open at 08:00 local time (16:00 BST), with the official program due to start at 11:00 (19:00 BST). The dress code is "Sunday best - red, white or blue".
The stadium can hold just over 63,000 people, with the TPUSA website stating entry on Sunday will be on a "first come, first served" basis. A nearby 20,000 capacity stadium has been allocated as an overflow area.
It will also be live-streamed on Charlie Kirk's Rumble account, TPUSA said.
At the stadium, organisers said there will be "enhanced security measures" in place with "TSA-level screening".
A senior Department of Homeland Security official told CBS that the memorial service has the same security designation as high-profile events such as the Super Bowl.
The Secret Service told the outlet that a man was "observed exhibiting suspicious behaviour" at the stadium on Friday.
Agents approached the man, who was armed and claimed he was a member of law enforcement, CBS reported.
Officials said the man was booked for impersonating law enforcement and carrying a weapon in a prohibited place, but has been released on bond. TPUSA spokesman Andrew Kolvet later said the man was a private security advisor for a "known" guest who was checking the area ahead of the event.
"We do not believe this person was attempting anything nefarious, however the advance was not done in proper coordination with the TPUSA security team or US Secret Service," he said on social media. "Also important to note that this was before the site had been fully sealed and locked down. Every precaution is being taken to ensure everyone's safety."
Tensions are high following the killing of Kirk.
Much is still unknown about the suspected shooter's motive. Utah's governor said Tyler Robinson, 22, who was charged in the shooting and remains in jail, has a "leftist ideology". And shell casings with anti-fascist slogans were found, according to officials.
But the exact meaning of those and other messages is still unclear.
Police car set on fire amid Dutch anti-immigration protests
Dutch police used tear gas and water cannon to disperse violent anti-immigration protesters in The Hague on Saturday.
Thirty people were arrested and two officers injured as large groups of people clashed with police, with some throwing rocks and bottles.
Around 1,500 people blocked a highway crossing the city, while a police car was set on fire, the Netherlands news agency ANP reported, citing police figures.
Prime Minister Dick Schoof condemned the "shocking and bizarre images of shameless violence", saying it was "completely unacceptable".
Right-wing leader Geert Wilders, who won the previous election in the Netherlands and has retained his lead in opinion polls ahead of a 29 October vote, was invited to speak at the demonstration but did not attend.
Instead he also condemned the violence against police as "utterly unacceptable", saying it was the work of "idiots".
The protest was organised by a right-wing activist, demanding stricter migration policies and a clampdown on asylum seekers.
Violence erupted when large groups of protesters, many waving Dutch flags and flags associated with far-right groups, confronted security forces.
EPA
Protesters also smashed the windows of the headquarters of the centre-left D66 party, viewed by many on the far right as a party that serves a progressive elite.
D66 leader Rob Jetten said the damage inside was extensive and told the protesters to "stay away from political parties".
"If you think you can intimidate us, tough luck. We will never let extremist rioters take away our beautiful country," he said on social media platform X.
Nobody was present in the D66 offices at the time of the protests, according to party officials cited by ANP.
The Dutch government collapsed in June after Wilders withdrew his far-right PVV party from the governing coalition following a row over migration.
The dispute came after Wilders pushed for 10 additional asylum measures, including a freeze on applications, halting the construction of reception centres and limiting family reunification.
The governing coalition was in place for less than one year.
Pete Hegseth said reporters should follow the rules or 'go home'
The Pentagon has told journalists they must agree not to disclose unauthorised information or else risk losing access to the building.
The change is among a number of new restrictions, which also seek to impose limits on the movement of journalists within the facility, which is home to the Department of War, formerly known as the Department of Defense.
It follows a series of leaks in recent months.
Pete Hegseth, who was recently given the new title of Secretary of War, said on social media: "The 'press' does not run the Pentagon — the people do. The press is no longer allowed to roam the halls of a secure facility. Wear a badge and follow the rules — or go home."
The new restrictions were set out in a briefing note sent to members of the press, which they will be required to sign in order to maintain their Pentagon press credentials.
The department said it "remains committed to transparency to promote accountability and public trust".
But it added: "DoW information must be approved for public release by an appropriate authorising official before it is released, even if it is unclassified".
It asks signatories to acknowledge that determinations on press credentials for the building "may be based on the unauthorised access, attempted unauthorised access, or unauthorised disclosure" of classified national security information, or information designated as controlled unclassified information.
"The guidelines in the memo provided to credentialed resident media at the Pentagon reaffirms the standards that are already in line with every other military base in the country," said Chief Pentagon Spokesman Sean Parnell in a statement. "These are basic, common-sense guidelines to protect sensitive information as well as the protection of national security and the safety of all who work at the Pentagon."
Hegseth has previously come under scrutiny for his own handling of sensitive information after it was revealed he shared details about the bombing of Yemen on a group chat that included a reporter in March. Former national security advisor Michael Waltz, who was recently confirmed as the US's ambassador to the UN, had invited the journalist to the chat inadvertently.
The administration reacted angrily in June when a leaked intelligence report appeared to contradict statements it had made about the damage caused by US strikes on Iran's nuclear programme.
The White House has announced that US companies will now control TikTok's algorithm and Americans will hold six of seven board seats for the app's US operations in a much-anticipated deal with China.
Press secretary Karoline Leavitt said a deal could be signed "in the coming days", but Beijing is yet to comment.
The US has sought to take the video-sharing app's US operations away from Chinese parent company ByteDance for national security reasons.
TikTok was previously told it had to sell its US operations or risk being shut down.
But US President Donald Trump delayed implementing the ban four times since it was first announced in January, and earlier this week extended the deadline again to December.
Leavitt said that data and privacy for the app in the US will be led by tech giant Oracle, which is owned by Larry Ellison, one of the world's richest people and a Trump ally.
"The data and privacy will be led by one of America's greatest tech companies, Oracle, and the algorithm will also be controlled by America as well," she told Fox News.
"So all of those details have already been agreed upon. Now we just need this deal to be signed."
Mr Ellison's son, David Ellison, recently acquired media company Paramount, which owns CBS News, making the Ellisons one of the country's most powerful families in media.
Trump wrote on Truth Social that the call was "productive" and he "appreciated" Xi's approval of deal, which would reportedly see TikTok's US business sold to a group of US investors.
China's official state news agency Xinhua left the outcome of their discussion less clear, with Xi quoted as saying that Beijing "welcomes negotiations over TikTok".
A sticking point in negotiations appears to have been over who will own the powerful algorithm that pushes content to TikTok's 170 million American users.
Speaking alongside British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer in the UK on Thursday, Trump sidestepped a question from a reporter about whether an American buyer would need to build a new algorithm, or if they could continue to use the current algorithm.
While Trump initially called for TikTok to be banned during his first term, he has changed course. He turned to the hugely popular platform to boost his support among young Americans during his successful 2024 presidential campaign.
In January, the US Supreme Court upheld a law first passed in early 2024, banning the app unless ByteDance divested from its US operations. The app went "dark" only briefly at the time, before the ban was delayed.
The US Department of Justice previously expressed concerns that TikTok's access to the data of US users posed a national security threat of "immense depth and scale".
Heathrow is among several European airports hit by a cyber-attack affecting an electronic check-in and baggage system.
The airport warned of possible delays due to a "technical issue" affecting software provided by Collins Aerospace to several airlines.
Brussels Airport said a cyber-attack on Friday night meant passengers were being checked in and boarded manually, while Berlin's Brandenburg Airport also said a "technical issue at a system provider operating across Europe" was causing longer waiting times.
RTX, which owns Collins Aerospace, said it was "aware of a cyber-related disruption" to its system "in select airports" and that it was working to resolve the issue as quickly as possible.
The company added: "The impact is limited to electronic customer check-in and baggage drop and can be mitigated with manual check-in operations."
Heathrow said additional staff were on hand in check-in areas to help minimise disruption.
It added: "We advise passengers to check their flight status with their airline before travelling to the airport and arrive no earlier than three hours before a long haul flight or two hours for a domestic flight."
Brussels said the disruption meant a "large impact on the flight schedule", including causing cancellations and delays.
Europe's combined aviation safety organisation, Eurocontrol, said airline operators had been asked to cancel half their flight schedules to and from the airport between 04:00 and 12:00 GMT due to the disruption.
It said "similar issues" were affecting Heathrow and Berlin, and that "measures may be required".
There have been nearly 100 delays in and out of Heathrow as of 10:00 BST on Saturday, according to tracker FlightAware, while there have been nearly 70 delays in Brussels and 15 in Berlin.
Sana Yousaf was a well-known social media influencer in Pakistan
A man has been charged in Pakistan over the killing of 17-year-old TikTok star Sana Yousaf who had repeatedly rejected his advances.
Ms Yousaf's murder in June drew widespread condemnation but also some comments appearing to blame her, igniting a fierce debate about women on social media.
"All the allegations made against me are baseless and false," the accused told the judge.
Authorities said at the time of his arrest that they believed Mr Hayat murdered Ms Yousaf at her home in Islamabad after she rejected what they called his "offers of friendship". He allegedly also repeatedly tried, and failed, to meet her.
They say he broke into her home, fired two shots, stole her phone and fled.
Hayat, the son of a former public servant and a TikToker himself, was arrested soon after.
Ms Yousaf already had a wide following in Pakistan, with half a million fans on Instagram before her death. Her TikTok account gained hundreds of thousands of followers overnight, and now stands at more than two million.
Condolences flooded her social media pages, where she shared videos of her favourite cafes, skincare products, and traditional outfits.
Her last video on Instagram showed her surrounded by balloons and cutting a cake for her birthday.
TikTok is very popular in Pakistan, with many women finding both an audience and income on the app, which is rare in a country where fewer than a quarter of women participate in the formal economy.
At least three people have been killed and more than 30 injured in a "massive" overnight Russian aerial attack on Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelensky says.
He says regions across the country were targeted as part of a "deliberate strategy" to "intimidate civilians and destroy our infrastructure", with one direct missile hit reported on a residential building.
Ukraine's air force says Moscow launched 619 drones and missiles. Russia's defence ministry says its "massive strike" used "precision weapons" and targeted military-industrial facilities.
Separately, Russia says four people were killed in a Ukrainian drone attack on the Saratov region. Kyiv says it hit a major oil refinery there.
Ukraine also says another Russian oil refinery was damaged in the neighbouring Samara region.
The BBC has been unable to independently verify the claims made by the two warring sides.
Kyiv has been systematically targeting Russian oil and other key industrial facilities, which play a key role in Russia's continuing war effort in Ukraine.
Meanwhile, Moscow has in recent weeks escalated its aerial assaults on Ukraine, while Kyiv and its Western allies - including the US - continue to call for a ceasefire.
Earlier this month, the main government building was hit in Ukraine's capital Kyiv by what Ukraine said was a Russian Iskander cruise missile.
Zelensky said on Saturday that he planned to meet US President Donald Trump on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), taking place in New York next week.
Shohruhmirzo Ganiyev is representing Uzbekistan at Intervision
At a Moscow concert hall, Shohruhmirzo Ganiyev is crooning about love and his motherland, Uzbekistan.
"Put your legs together like a man," suggests his voice coach and choreographer. "And spread your arms wider!"
It's just a rehearsal, but Shohruhmirzo is singing his heart out. He's performing traditional Uzbek melodies to a modern beat and playing a doira, the ancient drum of Central Asia.
Uzbekistan is among 23 countries competing at the Intervision Song Contest.
It's Russia's answer to Eurovision. With less kitsch – and more Kremlin.
Intervision 2025 is Vladimir Putin's brainchild. He signed a decree reviving the Soviet-era songfest with the aim of "developing international cultural and humanitarian co-operation".
The more obvious objective is creating an international song contest in which Moscow can actually take part. In 2022 Russia was banned from competing in Eurovision after its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Ukraine says Intervision is an attempt to distract the world from Russia's ongoing invasion
A pattern's emerging.
When Team Russia was banned from the Olympic Games, Moscow tried to create alternatives, like the Games of the Future and the World Friendship Games.
Now the Kremlin's come up with its own version of Eurovision.
But what does it look like and who is taking part?
For Intervision, the Russians have cast their musical net far and wide, inviting allies from Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America. The starting line-up reflects the political and economic alliances of which Russia is part, like the Brics group of nations, the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation and the Commonwealth of Independent States.
The list of participating countries includes China, India, Brazil, South Africa, Vietnam, Venezuela, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Madagascar: a very different musical map from Eurovision, and an opportunity for the Kremlin to show that, despite its invasion of Ukraine, Russia still has friends.
The United States, too, is taking part: a sign of the thaw in US-Russian relations since Donald Trump's return to the White House.
Thaw doesn't mean problem-free. America's original Intervision entrant Brandon Howard pulled out on the eve of the contest.
"Unfortunately, I had some... family issues that happened here domestically, that I wasn't [going] to be able to go abroad and do that," the singer, who performs as B.Howard, tells me on a call from the US.
"However, I really believe that it's such a wonderful event."
"Were there some people who said to you 'Brandon, you shouldn't go, because of the war?'" I asked.
"Some fans would mention some things like that and expressed slight concern. However, for the most part, everyone was very supportive of me going there, being sent to be a beacon of light."
B.Howard has been replaced by Australian-Greek singer Vassy who lives in Los Angeles.
"4.3 billion people live in the 23 participating countries," boasted senior Kremlin official Sergei Kiriyenko. "That's more than half the world's population."
Russian culture is a big part of Intervision - like these Russian ravers dressed in traditional costumes
Mr Kiriyenko, President Putin's deputy chief of staff, chairs the song contest's supervisory board. He made a brief appearance this week at an Intervision press conference alongside Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko.
"I know some people think there's an element of politics in Eurovision," I tell Mr Lavrov. "But look who's represented here: the Kremlin, the foreign ministry and the Russian government. Isn't that proof that Intervision is a purely political or geopolitical project?"
"If the governments of some countries make no effort to create mechanisms for supporting culture, that's their choice," Mr Lavrov replies. "In our country the state is engaged in the promotion of the arts. Your question is rooted in the fear of competition."
In Ukraine they fear something quite different: that Moscow is using Intervision to divert global attention from the war.
"The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine considers that the Intervision 2025 song contest organised by Russia is an instrument of hostile propaganda and a means of whitewashing the aggressive policy of the Russian Federation," the ministry stated back in May.
The war is on some people's minds at Intervision.
"The scary thing is with the war, with whatever's happening. These are the things we were thinking about," says Renee Kruger from South African group Mzansi Jikelele.
"But we were assured: 'Just come, guys, nothing's wrong'. Obviously, we are [nervous], but we're here and we've been treated very well."
Mzansi Jikelele, South Africa's entry, say they've been treated well in Russia - but were nervous about attending
Representing Russia at Intervision 2025 is Yaroslav Dronov, better known by his stage name Shaman. Last year the European Union sanctioned him for "supporting actions and policies that undermine the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine."
His previous hits include I'm Russian, a patriotic pop song that declares:
"I'm Russian, I go to the end… I'm Russian, to spite the whole world."
Not exactly Love Shine A Light or Save Your Kisses for Me.
But Russia is using Intervision to project a softer image than the one forged by three-and-a-half years of its war in Ukraine.
At the official song contest draw to decide the running order, international delegations are being treated to a Russian feast, including cottage cheese pancakes and gingerbread sporting the Intervision logo. As folk dancers put on a spectacular show, volunteers hand out giant necklaces of bread rings, a symbol of Russian hospitality.
One by one the participants approach a gigantic samovar, select a tea cup and fill it with hot water. The magic mugs reveal the performance slot number for each country.
From the folk costumes to the blinis, the emphasis here is on tradition.
Vietnam's entry Duc Phuc poured hot water from a samovar as part of the Intervision contest draw
It's the same with the songs. The official goal of the contest is to "get to know the unique cultural traditions and achievements of participating countries [and] promote universal, spiritual, family, cultural, ethical and religious traditions of different nations."
The international performers have read the rulebook.
"My song tells about culture from Vietnam," Vietnamese entrant Duc Phuc informs me. "I need to share the culture of Vietnam with everyone."
"How were you chosen to represent your country?" I ask.
"The Ministry of Culture chose me."
"Our song is about a woman called Maria," says Brazilian entrant Tais Nader. "Maria is like any Brazilian woman. She works hard to live. But she's always smiling and her eyes are shining."
"Have you heard of Eurovision?" I ask.
"Actually, we searched online about Intervision and discovered Eurovision! Before, we didn't know about Intervision or Eurovision. It's new for us."
For many Russians, too, Intervision is something new. In fact it is a ghost from communist times summoned from the grave of song contests past.
The original Intervision Song Contest was born behind the Iron Curtain at a time when East and West competed in everything. In the Cold War there was a space race, an arms race and culture wars, too.
From the mid-1950s Eurovision quickly established itself as a big deal in Western Europe, while in the Eastern bloc song festivals in Czechoslovakia and Poland acquired the occasional tag of 'Intervision'.
There was, though, some crossover. Finland took part in both Eurovision and Intervision, and big names from the West made guest appearances in the East. Gloria Gaynor, Petula Clarke and Boney-M all performed at Intervision.
After the fall of communism Russia and Eastern Europe embraced the political changes sweeping the continent and were eager to compete in Eurovision. I saw that first hand in 1996 when, by a quirk of fate, I co-presented Russian TV's Song for Europe competition to select a Eurovision entry.
During a guided tour of Russian TV, I'd got chatting to the show's director. When I told him I was a huge Eurovision fan he'd asked me to come back that evening to help anchor the programme. I'll never forget how excited everyone in the studio was that night: not only about Eurovision, but about Russia being part of the European family.
YouTube/RTR/Programma A/Pesnya dlya Evropy
Steve Rosenberg (right) appeared on Russia's Song for Europe in 1996
But as the Kremlin's relationship with the West soured and Moscow's attacks on Western liberalism and "non-traditional values" intensified, so did Russia's beef with the Eurovision Song Contest.
Especially after Austrian drag queen Conchita Wurst won Eurovision in 2014.
"Giving first place to a bearded lady is a slight on humanity," Russian MP Valery Rashkin told me at the time.
Mr Rashkin called on Russia to ditch Eurovision and organise its own Voice of Eurasia contest. Another MP suggested "Goodvision" as a possible replacement.
It was clear then that the Eurovision Song Contest and Russia were on a collision course. Eurovision made a point of welcoming the LGBTQ community, presenting itself as a showcase for inclusivity and diversity. In contrast, Russia launched a crackdown on gay rights, and has criminalised public expressions of LGBTQ identity.
There will be no sign of camp at the Intervision Song Contest.
Intervision 2025
Entrants know that their performances will be closely watched at Intervision
But will people watch it? Will the Intervision singers and songs capture the public's imagination across so many continents? The considerable time differences between the participating countries will likely preclude the kind of shared viewing experience you get with Eurovision.
And there'll be no public vote. Just a jury: one member per country. But how will the voting take place?
"The voting system is specially invented by a very famous scientist and mathematician," Russian TV's Intervision commentator Yana Churikova tells me. "Specially for Intervision."
Back in the rehearsal room, Uzbekistan's entrant Shohruhmirzo Ganiyev admits he doesn't know the intricacies of the voting system. He's just excited to be here. So is his mother. She's looking on proudly as her son rehearses.
Even though his country isn't in Eurovision, Shohruhmirzo tells me that contest is famous in Uzbekistan. Right now, though, he's focused on his performance here.
"I'm very happy to come to Intervision," he tells me. "I'm leaving Eurovision in the past."
Heathrow is among several European airports hit by a cyber-attack affecting an electronic check-in and baggage system.
The airport warned of possible delays due to a "technical issue" affecting software provided by Collins Aerospace to several airlines.
Brussels Airport said a cyber-attack on Friday night meant passengers were being checked in and boarded manually, while Berlin's Brandenburg Airport also said a "technical issue at a system provider operating across Europe" was causing longer waiting times.
RTX, which owns Collins Aerospace, said it was "aware of a cyber-related disruption" to its system "in select airports" and that it was working to resolve the issue as quickly as possible.
The company added: "The impact is limited to electronic customer check-in and baggage drop and can be mitigated with manual check-in operations."
Heathrow said additional staff were on hand in check-in areas to help minimise disruption.
It added: "We advise passengers to check their flight status with their airline before travelling to the airport and arrive no earlier than three hours before a long haul flight or two hours for a domestic flight."
Brussels said the disruption meant a "large impact on the flight schedule", including causing cancellations and delays.
Europe's combined aviation safety organisation, Eurocontrol, said airline operators had been asked to cancel half their flight schedules to and from the airport between 04:00 and 12:00 GMT due to the disruption.
It said "similar issues" were affecting Heathrow and Berlin, and that "measures may be required".
There have been nearly 100 delays in and out of Heathrow as of 10:00 BST on Saturday, according to tracker FlightAware, while there have been nearly 70 delays in Brussels and 15 in Berlin.
Watch: Their daughter Sarah was visibly emotional as she spoke to reporters in Doha ahead of the reunion
The son of an British couple detained by the Taliban in Afghanistan for nearly eight months has said he is "overwhelmed" by their release.
Peter Reynolds, 80, and his wife Barbie, 76, who lived in Afghanistan for nearly two decades, are due to fly to the UK on Saturday after being reunited with their daughter in Qatar.
Jonathan Reynolds told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that he was "ecstatic and massively grateful" to those who were involved in securing their release.
The Taliban, who detained the couple on their way home on 1 February, said the pair had broken Afghan laws and were released after judicial proceedings - but the Islamist group has never disclosed a reason for their detention.
There were emotional scenes on Friday as the couple's daughter, Sarah Entwistle, met her parents as they stepped off the plane in Doha.
"We are looking forward to returning to Afghanistan if we can. We are Afghan citizens," Barbie told Agence France-Presse at Kabul airport after Qatar-brokered negotiations for their release.
Their son Jonathan echoed those hopes, saying "their desire would be to carry on living there and to do the work they were doing".
Reuters
UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer praised the "vital role" played by Qatar in securing their release.
Peter and Barbie Reynolds married in Kabul in 1970 and spent the past 18 years running a charitable training programme that had been approved by local Taliban officials when the armed group reclaimed power in 2021.
"They have not just a heart for the people of Afghanistan, but they have strategy as well, and the work they've been doing has been very fruitful and has a massively positive impact," Jonathan told the BBC.
He said a few weeks ago he had managed to share the results of "really encouraging" reports about their programmes with his parents over the phone.
He said Barbie's initial reaction had been that they had "more work to do".
"But how do you do that in a country where you're not welcome," Jonathan added.
Reuters
Their affection for Afghanistan was demonstrated by their decision to remain in Bamiyan province after the authoritarian regime seized control in August 2021, while many other Westerners left.
The couple's release follows months of public lobbying by their family, who have described the harrowing conditions of their detention.
Jonathan said in July that his father had been suffering serious convulsions and his mother was "numb" from anaemia and malnutrition.
A Qatari official told the BBC the couple were moved from Kabul's central prison to a larger facility with better conditions during the final stage of negotiations over their release.
Taliban officials maintained they received adequate medical care during their detention and that their human rights were respected.
The couple were receiving medical checks in the Qatari capital, Doha, before leaving for London. They will arrive on a commercial flight on Saturday morning, AFP reports.
The UK does not recognise the Taliban government and closed its embassy in Kabul when the group returned to power.
The Foreign Office says support for British nationals in Afghanistan is therefore "severely limited" and advises against all travel to the country.
Malawians voted in presidential, parliamentary and local elections on Tuesday
Police in Malawi have arrested eight people for alleged electoral fraud as the country waits for the final results of Tuesday's general election.
Inspector General Merlyne Yolamu said the suspects, who were working as data entry clerks, had been trying to manipulate the figures.
Malawi's 2019 election was marred by controversy when the highest court annulled then President Peter Mutharika's victory, citing widespread irregularities.
As a result, Malawi's electoral commission is on high alert for any potential issues. Official tallies, so far, suggest Mutharika is leading the race for the presidency with incumbent Lazarus Chakwera in second place.
More results from Malawi's 36 districts are expected to be released on Saturday - a candidate needs to win more than 50% of the vote, or a run-off is held.
In the meantime, Chakwera's Malawi Congress Party said it had lodged a complaint with the electoral commission, claiming to have discovered irregularities in the count.
Officials did not specify what those irregularities were.
The commission is expected to announce the outcome of the election only after all votes have been tallied and verified in order to avoid the possibility of the final result being challenged.
According to law, the electoral commission has until the end of Wednesday to announce the final tallies.
In 2019, when Mutharika's victory was annulled, a court said there had been widespread tampering, including the use of Tipp-Ex correction fluid on results sheets.
AFP via Getty Images
Lazarus Chakwera (L) and Peter Mutharika (R) are long-standing political rivals
Chakwera, 70, won the re-run by a wide margin, propelling him to the presidency.
Mutharika, 85, is hoping to regain office in what would be a dramatic political comeback.
Malawians also voted in parliamentary and local elections following a campaign dominated by the worsening economic crisis that has seen a severe shortage of fuel and foreign currency.
The official inflation rate is close to 30%, with a frozen chicken in a supermarket in the capital, Lilongwe, costing about $20 (£15), in a nation where most people live on $2 a day or less.
Demonstrations have been held in Portugal demanding a ceasefire in Gaza
Portugal says it will recognise a Palestinian state on Sunday, making it the latest Western nation preparing to shift policy as the war in the Gaza Strip shows no sign of stopping.
The foreign ministry made the announcement ahead of next week's United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York.
France, the UK, Canada and Australia are preparing similar announcements.
Israel has denounced the move, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saying it "rewards terror" following Hamas's 7 October 2023 attack on Israel.
The US - Israel's main ally - has echoed Netanyahu's argument.
President Donald Trump, speaking alongside Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer this week, while on a state visit to the UK, said he disagreed with recognition.
Around three quarters of the UN's 193 members already recognise a Palestinian state, which in 2012 was granted the status of non-member observer state.
As world leaders prepare to gather at the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, Israeli tanks and troops are continuing to advance into Gaza City as part of a ground offensive, which has forced thousands of people to flee.
The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel in 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
At least 65,141 people have been killed in Israeli attacks in Gaza since then, according to the territory's health ministry.
US Senator Ted Cruz has accused the head of America's broadcast regulator of acting like "a mafioso" in the suspension of late-night host Jimmy Kimmel - the sharpest attack yet from a conservative Republican on the controversy.
He said Federal Communications Commission (FCC) chairman Brendan Carr's threat to ABC over their comedian's monologue about slain conservative influencer Charlie Kirk was "dangerous as hell".
"That's right out of Goodfellas," the Texas Republican said, affecting a mobster's accent.
Other Republicans in Congress have been more muted in their criticism of how the FCC pressed Disney-owned ABC to take action on Kimmel, who was indefinitely suspended on Wednesday.
The row started after Kimmel appeared to suggest in his monologue on Monday night that the alleged gunman charged with murdering Kirk was a Maga Republican, although authorities in Utah have said the suspect was "indoctrinated with leftist ideology".
Before ABC's decision, Carr said there would be consequences if Kimmel stayed on air. The FCC chairman said that Kimmel was "appearing to directly mislead the American public" in his on-air remarks.
Watch: Ros Atkins on… What Jimmy Kimmel being taken off air means for free speech in the US
The FCC is in charge of granting broadcast licenses to networks such as ABC, NBC and CBS, and they are required under statute to be in the public interest.
On his podcast Verdict with Ted Cruz, the senator emphasised on Friday that he hated what Kimmel said about Kirk, and he is "thrilled that he was fired". He also said Carr was "a good guy".
"But what he said there is dangerous as hell," Cruz added. "And so he threatens, explicitly, we're going to cancel ABC's licence.
"We're going to take them off the air so ABC cannot broadcast anymore. He says we can do this the easy way, or we could do this the hard way, yeah. And I got to say that's right out of Goodfellas.
"That's right out of a mafioso coming into a bar going, nice bar you have here, it'd be a shame if something happened to it," he added, using a mobster voice.
He warned that if the government gets into the business of bans and regulating what the media says "that will end up bad for conservatives".
In the Oval Office on Friday, President Donald Trump defended Carr and said "I disagree with Ted Cruz", who is ordinarily one of his staunchest allies.
The president also lashed out at ABC News reporter Jonathan Karl when he asked the president about free speech.
Another Republican Senator, Thom Tillis of North Carolina, told reporters that Cruz was "absolutely right" in his criticism of Carr.
Tillis, who will not seek re-election next year, said the FCC chairman's comments were "just unacceptable behaviour".
Republicans in Congress have generally been toeing the party line with their response to Kimmel's suspension as the nation is shaken by the political and cultural aftershocks of Kirk's killing.
But Senator Jerry Moran, a Republican from Kansas, sounded a note of caution on Thursday.
"The conservative position is free speech is free speech, and we better be very careful about any lines we cross in diminishing free speech," Moran told Politico.
South Dakota Senator Mike Rounds said he would approach it as an "employer-employee issue".
Kimmel has not publicly commented about his suspension, but his late-night colleagues - including Jon Stewart, Jimmy Fallon and outgoing host Stephen Colbert - responded on Thursday with a show of solidarity.
Kirk was fatally shot on 10 September during an open-air event on a Utah college campus.
On Thursday, the Senate passed a resolution to designate 14 October - Kirk's birthday - a day of remembrance for him.
Lawmakers in the US House of Representatives approved the resolution - nearly 100 Democrats opposed it.
Watch: Their daughter Sarah was visibly emotional as she spoke to reporters in Doha ahead of the reunion
The son of an British couple detained by the Taliban in Afghanistan for nearly eight months has said he is "overwhelmed" by their release.
Peter Reynolds, 80, and his wife Barbie, 76, who lived in Afghanistan for nearly two decades, are due to fly to the UK on Saturday after being reunited with their daughter in Qatar.
Jonathan Reynolds told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that he was "ecstatic and massively grateful" to those who were involved in securing their release.
The Taliban, who detained the couple on their way home on 1 February, said the pair had broken Afghan laws and were released after judicial proceedings - but the Islamist group has never disclosed a reason for their detention.
There were emotional scenes on Friday as the couple's daughter, Sarah Entwistle, met her parents as they stepped off the plane in Doha.
"We are looking forward to returning to Afghanistan if we can. We are Afghan citizens," Barbie told Agence France-Presse at Kabul airport after Qatar-brokered negotiations for their release.
Their son Jonathan echoed those hopes, saying "their desire would be to carry on living there and to do the work they were doing".
Reuters
UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer praised the "vital role" played by Qatar in securing their release.
Peter and Barbie Reynolds married in Kabul in 1970 and spent the past 18 years running a charitable training programme that had been approved by local Taliban officials when the armed group reclaimed power in 2021.
"They have not just a heart for the people of Afghanistan, but they have strategy as well, and the work they've been doing has been very fruitful and has a massively positive impact," Jonathan told the BBC.
He said a few weeks ago he had managed to share the results of "really encouraging" reports about their programmes with his parents over the phone.
He said Barbie's initial reaction had been that they had "more work to do".
"But how do you do that in a country where you're not welcome," Jonathan added.
Reuters
Their affection for Afghanistan was demonstrated by their decision to remain in Bamiyan province after the authoritarian regime seized control in August 2021, while many other Westerners left.
The couple's release follows months of public lobbying by their family, who have described the harrowing conditions of their detention.
Jonathan said in July that his father had been suffering serious convulsions and his mother was "numb" from anaemia and malnutrition.
A Qatari official told the BBC the couple were moved from Kabul's central prison to a larger facility with better conditions during the final stage of negotiations over their release.
Taliban officials maintained they received adequate medical care during their detention and that their human rights were respected.
The couple were receiving medical checks in the Qatari capital, Doha, before leaving for London. They will arrive on a commercial flight on Saturday morning, AFP reports.
The UK does not recognise the Taliban government and closed its embassy in Kabul when the group returned to power.
The Foreign Office says support for British nationals in Afghanistan is therefore "severely limited" and advises against all travel to the country.
A British couple who were detained for nearly eight months by the Taliban in Afghanistan have been released, an official with knowledge of the case has said.
Peter Reynolds, 80, and his wife Barbie, 76, who have lived in the country for nearly two decades, were held after being stopped while travelling home on 1 February.
The couple were freed through Qatari mediation, after they were transferred from Kabul's central prison to a larger prison during the final phase of negotiations, the official said.
It follows months of public lobbying by their family for their release.
Just six days ago, an American woman who was detained with them and subsequently released told the BBC they were "literally dying" in prison and that "time is running out".
Faye Hall, who was let go two months into her detention, highlighted that the elderly couple's health had deteriorated rapidly while in prison.
"Covering more than two-thirds of the ocean, the agreement sets binding rules to conserve and sustainably use marine biodiversity," United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said.
Decades of overfishing, pollution from shipping and warming oceans from climate change have damaged life below the surface.
In the latest assessment of marine species, nearly 10% were found to be at risk of extinction, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
Three years ago countries agreed that 30% of the world's national and international waters - high seas - must be protected by 2030 to help depleted marine life recover.
But protecting the high seas is challenging. No one country controls these waters and all nations have a right to ship and fish there.
Currently just 1% of the high seas are protected, leaving marine life at risk from overexploitation.
So, in 2023 countries signed the High Seas Treaty pledging to put 30% of these waters into Marine Protected Areas.
With many nations requiring parliament approval, ratification can often take more than five years, Elizabeth Wilson, senior director for environmental policy at environmental NGO The Pews Charitable Trust, told the BBC at the UN Oceans Conference earlier this year. She said this was "record time".
The UK introduced its bill for ratification to Parliament earlier this month.
Kirsten Schuijt, director general of WWF International, hailed "a monumental achievement for ocean conservation" after the treaty threshold was reached.
She added: "The High Seas Treaty will be a positive catalyst for collaboration across international waters and agreements and is a turning point for two-thirds of the world's ocean that lie beyond national jurisdiction."
Mads Christensen, executive director of Greenpeace International, called it "a landmark moment" and "proof that countries can come together to protect our blue planet".
"The era of exploitation and destruction must end. Our oceans can't wait and neither can we," he added.
Once the treaty comes into force, countries will propose areas to be protected, and these will then be voted on by the countries that sign up to the treaty.
Critics point out that countries will conduct their own environmental impact assessments (EIA) and make the final decision - although other countries can register concerns with the monitoring bodies.
The ocean is crucial for the survival of all organisms on the planet. It is the largest ecosystem, is estimated to contribute $2.5 trillion to world economies, and provides up to 80% of the oxygen we breathe.
US president Donald Trump said he plans to meet Chinese Premier Xi Jinping in South Korea next month following a phone call in which the Chinese leader also approved of a deal to take control of TikTok's US operations.
Trump wrote on Truth Social the call was "productive" and the approval was "appreciated", adding that he would travel to China next year after the two meet.
TikTok, which is run by Chinese firm Bytedance, was previously told it had to sell its US operations or risk being shut down.
Trump, however, delayed implementing the ban four times since it was first announced in January, and earlier this week extended the deadline again to December.
In his post, Trump wrote the two "made progress" on trade issues and would meet at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in South Korea, scheduled to begin at the end of October.
That, he said, would be followed by a visit to China and a subsequent visit by Xi to the US.
The president provided no further details on the TikTok deal, which he said earlier this week that the call would confirm.
That deal will reportedly see a group of US firms- said to include Oracle - that would enable TikTok to continue operating in the US, using algorithm technology licensed from ByteDance.
Xinhua reported that China's position on TikTok is "very clear" and that it welcomed firms to "conduct commercial negotiations based on market rules and reach solutions that comply with Chinese laws and regulations and a balance of interests".
"We hope that the US will provide an open, fair and non-discriminatory business environment for Chinese companies to invest in the United States," it added.
Speaking alongside British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer in the UK on Thursday, Trump said he believes TikTok has "tremendous value" to the US.
"The people that are investing it are among the greatest investors in the world," he said. "And they'll do a great job - and we're doing it in conjunction with China."
Still, many US lawmakers - including some from within Trump's own party - have expressed unease with the deal, citing ongoing concerns about ByteDance's links with the Chinese Communist Party, or CCP.
"I am concerned the reported licensing deal may involve ongoing reliance by the new TikTok on a ByteDance algorithm that could allow continued CCP control or influence," Michigan Republican representative John Moolenar, chair of the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party, said in a statement.
While Trump initially called for TikTok to be banned during his first term, he has changed course, and on Thursday said he viewed the platform as a key part of his 2024 electoral campaign.
In January, the US Supreme Court upheld a law first passed in early 2024, banning the app unless ByteDance divested from its US operations. The app went "dark" only briefly at the time, before the ban was delayed.
The US Justice Department had previously expressed concerns that TikTok's access to the data of US users posed a national security threat of "immense depth and scale".
The call between Xi and Trump is the second so far this year.
In June, the two leaders spoke to discuss China's export of rare earth minerals, resulting in China agreeing to approve a "certain number" of export permits to US companies, as well as the magnets made from them.
Chinese and US officials have held four rounds of talks in recent months, and so far held off on implementing extremely high tariffs and strict export controls.
The US has already imposed 20% tariffs on some Chinese goods it says are linked to fentanyl trafficking.
Other thorny issues - including tech export restrictions and Chinese purchases of US agricultural products - so far remain unresolved.
President Donald Trump has said US forces carried out a "lethal kinetic strike" on a vessel which he said was trafficking drugs, and the attack "killed 3 male narcoterrorists" on board.
Trump said he ordered the attack on the boat, which was in the US Southern Command's area of responsibility, after US intelligence confirmed it was trafficking drugs. It was the third such strike on alleged drug boats in recent weeks.
Trump's statement on Truth Social on Friday said the strike happened in international waters. The US Southern Command's area of responsibility covers most of South America and the Caribbean.
Two previous strikes have killed a total of 14 people on boats allegedly from Venezuela.
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has previously condemned the strikes and said his country will defend itself against US "aggression".
Trump's post on Friday evening mirrored previous announcements of such strikes. It featured a video showing the boat travelling on a body of water, and seconds later it explodes and bursts into flames.
"On my Orders, the Secretary of War ordered a lethal kinetic strike on a vessel affiliated with a Designated Terrorist Organization conducting narcotrafficking in the USSOUTHCOM area of responsibility," Trump said.
"Intelligence confirmed the vessel was trafficking illicit narcotics, and was transiting along a known narcotrafficking passage enroute to poison Americans," he wrote.
""No U.S. Forces were harmed in this strike. STOP SELLING FENTANYL, NARCOTICS, AND ILLEGAL DRUGS IN AMERICA, AND COMMITTING VIOLENCE AND TERRORISM AGAINST AMERICANS!!!"
Legal experts previously told the BBC that the fatal strike on the first vessel in international waters may have violated international human rights and maritime law.
US president Donald Trump said he plans to meet Chinese Premier Xi Jinping in South Korea next month following a phone call in which the Chinese leader also approved of a deal to take control of TikTok's US operations.
Trump wrote on Truth Social the call was "productive" and the approval was "appreciated", adding that he would travel to China next year after the two meet.
TikTok, which is run by Chinese firm Bytedance, was previously told it had to sell its US operations or risk being shut down.
Trump, however, delayed implementing the ban four times since it was first announced in January, and earlier this week extended the deadline again to December.
In his post, Trump wrote the two "made progress" on trade issues and would meet at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in South Korea, scheduled to begin at the end of October.
That, he said, would be followed by a visit to China and a subsequent visit by Xi to the US.
The president provided no further details on the TikTok deal, which he said earlier this week that the call would confirm.
That deal will reportedly see a group of US firms- said to include Oracle - that would enable TikTok to continue operating in the US, using algorithm technology licensed from ByteDance.
Xinhua reported that China's position on TikTok is "very clear" and that it welcomed firms to "conduct commercial negotiations based on market rules and reach solutions that comply with Chinese laws and regulations and a balance of interests".
"We hope that the US will provide an open, fair and non-discriminatory business environment for Chinese companies to invest in the United States," it added.
Speaking alongside British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer in the UK on Thursday, Trump said he believes TikTok has "tremendous value" to the US.
"The people that are investing it are among the greatest investors in the world," he said. "And they'll do a great job - and we're doing it in conjunction with China."
Still, many US lawmakers - including some from within Trump's own party - have expressed unease with the deal, citing ongoing concerns about ByteDance's links with the Chinese Communist Party, or CCP.
"I am concerned the reported licensing deal may involve ongoing reliance by the new TikTok on a ByteDance algorithm that could allow continued CCP control or influence," Michigan Republican representative John Moolenar, chair of the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party, said in a statement.
While Trump initially called for TikTok to be banned during his first term, he has changed course, and on Thursday said he viewed the platform as a key part of his 2024 electoral campaign.
In January, the US Supreme Court upheld a law first passed in early 2024, banning the app unless ByteDance divested from its US operations. The app went "dark" only briefly at the time, before the ban was delayed.
The US Justice Department had previously expressed concerns that TikTok's access to the data of US users posed a national security threat of "immense depth and scale".
The call between Xi and Trump is the second so far this year.
In June, the two leaders spoke to discuss China's export of rare earth minerals, resulting in China agreeing to approve a "certain number" of export permits to US companies, as well as the magnets made from them.
Chinese and US officials have held four rounds of talks in recent months, and so far held off on implementing extremely high tariffs and strict export controls.
The US has already imposed 20% tariffs on some Chinese goods it says are linked to fentanyl trafficking.
Other thorny issues - including tech export restrictions and Chinese purchases of US agricultural products - so far remain unresolved.
Watch: "We need great workers," says Trump on additional H-1B visa fee
US President Donald Trump has signed an executive order that will add a $100,000 (£74,000) fee for applicants to the H-1B visa programme aimed at bringing in skilled workers from abroad into certain industries.
The proclamation mentions "abuse" of the programme and will restrict entry unless payment is made.
Critics of the programme have long argued that H-1Bs undercut the American workforce, while supporters - including billionaire Elon Musk - argue it allows the US to attract top talent from around the world.
In another order, Trump set up a new "gold card" to fast-track visas for certain immigrants in exchange for fees starting at £1m.
Joining Trump in the Oval Office on Friday was US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.
"A hundred thousand dollars a year for H1-B visas, and all of the big companies are on board," he said. "We've spoken to them.
"If you're going to train somebody, you're going to train one of the recent graduates from one of the great universities across our land. Train Americans. Stop bringing in people to take our jobs."
Since 2004, the number of H-1B applications has been capped at 85,000 per year.
Until now, H-1B visas have carried various administrative fees totalling around $1,500.
Data from US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) shows that applications for H-1B visas for the next fiscal year fell to about 359,000 - a four-year low.
The greatest beneficiary of the programme the previous fiscal year was Amazon, followed by tech giants Tata, Microsoft, Meta, Apple and Google, according to government statistics.
The BBC has contacted these companies for comment.
Tahmina Watson, a founding attorney at Watson Immigration Law, told the BBC that the ruling could be a "nail in the coffin" for many of her clients that are mostly small businesses and start-ups.
"Almost everyone's going to be priced out. This $100,000 as an entry point is going to have a devastating impact," she added, noting that many small or medium-sized companies "will tell you they actually can't find workers to do the job".
"When employers sponsor foreign talent, more often than not, they're doing that because they have not been able to fulfil those positions," Ms Watson added.
Jorge Lopez, the chair of the immigration and global mobility practice group at Littler Mendelson PC, said a $100,000 fee "will put the brakes on American competitiveness in the tech sector and all industries".
Some companies might consider setting up operations outside the US, though doing so can be challenging in practice, he added.
The debate over H-1Bs had previously caused splits within Trump's team and supporters, pitting those in favour of the visas against critics such as former strategist Steve Bannon.
Trump told reporters at the White House in January that he understands "both sides of the argument" on H-1Bs.
The year before - while seeking to attract support from the tech industry while on the campaign trail - Trump vowed to make the process of attracting talent easier, going as far as to propose green cards for college graduates.
"You need a pool of people to work for companies," he told the All-In Podcast. "You have to be able to recruit these people and keep these people."
Early in his first term in 2017, Trump signed an executive order that increased scrutiny of H-1B applications, seeking to improve fraud detection.
Rejections rose to an all-time high of 24% in the 2018 fiscal year, compared to between 5% and 8% under Barack Obama and then between 2% and 4% under Joe Biden.
At the time, tech companies pushed back, harshly criticising the Trump administration's H-1B order.
The potential for additional restrictions to the H-1B programme has caused considerable concern in countries such as India - which is by far the largest source country for such visa applications.
The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices makes recommendations on the use of vaccinations in the United States
A key US vaccine advisory committee has voted to stop recommending all adults get the Covid-19 vaccine, which has until now been officially approved for most Americans annually since the pandemic.
The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (Acip) also narrowly voted against advocating prescriptions for the Covid vaccine.
In two days of meetings, Acip changed its recommendations on the combined measles, mumps, rubella, varicella (MMRV) vaccine, and delayed plans for a vote on the hepatitis B vaccine.
Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr, a vaccine sceptic, fired all 17 members of the committee in June and handpicked their successors, sparking uproar in the medical community.
The panel spent Friday debating the Covid-19 vaccine, which has for the past several years been a routine recommendation, like the yearly flu jab.
Acip voted to abandon broad support for recommending the jab, including for high-risk populations like people aged over 65.
Instead it decided they could make their own decision after talking with a medical professional.
In May, the federal government stopped recommending Covid-19 vaccines for healthy pregnant women and children.
In one exchange on Friday, Kennedy's ally Dr Robert Malone argued there was no evidence that the Covid vaccine prevented serious infection.
Dr Cody Meissner, once part of the Food and Drug Administration's vaccines panel, argued there is "pretty well-defined" data that the jab protects against infection.
There was confusion during the debate over the MMRV vaccine - measles, mumps and rubella, and varicella (commonly known as chickenpox).
On Thursday, the panel voted against recommending the combined MMRV shot for children aged four and under.
But on Friday they decided to endorse two separate jabs - a combined one for measles, mumps and rubella, and another for varicella.
The American Medical Association, which represents doctors and medical students, said the new MMRV recommendations "leave parents confused".
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US Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr has cast doubt on the safety and effectiveness of a number of vaccines
The panel also delayed a vote on whether newborns whose mothers have tested negative for hepatitis B during pregnancy should automatically receive a jab for the liver virus.
The Acip has cast doubt on the hepatitis B vaccine for months, even though scientists say it is safe and effective at preventing the infection.
In June, the panel's new chairman Dr Martin Kulldorff questioned whether it was "wise" to give the hepatitis B vaccine to newborns.
The CDC has advised that children receive the hepatitis B vaccine at birth since 1991.
Since then, the number of cases of the potentially fatal disease have decreased among people aged 19 and younger, which experts and the CDC credit to the implementation of the hepatitis B vaccine.
Robert F Kennedy Jr's posture on vaccinations has been under scrutiny since he took office in January.
Kennedy has overhauled the CDC during his tenure. He replaced the members of the vaccine advisory panel in June, and fired its chief Susan Monarez in late August, provoking a group of senior staff to resign in protest.
On Wednesday, Dr Monarez told the Senate she was fired for refusing to sign off on changes to vaccine policy "regardless of the scientific evidence".
Earlier this month, Kennedy said he dismissed Dr Monarez because he felt their interactions demonstrated she was not trustworthy.
Doctors and health experts have criticised the health secretary's longstanding questioning of the safety and efficacy of a number of vaccines, although in his Senate confirmation hearing he said he was "not going to take them away".
Russian warplanes have violated Estonian airspace, the foreign ministry in Tallinn has said, condemning the incursion as "brazen".
It said three Russian MiG-31 fighter jets "entered Estonian airspace without permission and remained there for a total of 12 minutes" on Friday over the Gulf of Finland.
The ministry says it summoned the Russian chargé d'affaires "to lodge a protest". EU top diplomat Kaja Kallas described the incursion as "an extremely dangerous provocation".
Estonian media are reporting the Russian jets had their transponders switched off in the airspace of a Nato member.
The Russian military has not publicly commented on the issue.
In a statement, Estonian Foreign Minister Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna said Friday's incursion was "unprecedentedly brazen".
He continued: "Russia's increasingly extensive testing of boundaries and growing aggressiveness must be met with a swift increase in political and economic pressure."
The minister added Russia had already violated Estonia's airspace four times in 2025.
Watch: Jimmy Fallon among US talk show hosts sharing on-air reactions to Kimmel's exit
America's late-night TV hosts have rallied behind fellow comedian Jimmy Kimmel after he was suspended by ABC in a row over comments he made about the killing of Charlie Kirk.
Stephen Colbert began his show by saying "we are all Jimmy Kimmel", and said the star's removal was a "blatant assault on freedom of speech".
Seth Meyers declared it was "a privilege and honour to call Jimmy Kimmel my friend", while Jon Stewart and Jimmy Fallon tackled the free speech issue by doing satirical sketches in which they were apparently forced to praise Donald Trump.
Their broadcasts came shortly after the US president said the main networks were overwhelmingly negative about him and could have their licences "taken away".
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Placards supporting Jimmy Kimmel have been left outside his studio in Los Angeles
The row started after Kimmel said in his monologue on Monday that the "Maga gang" were "desperately trying to characterise this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them" and trying to "score political points from it".
He also likened Trump's reaction to the conservative political activist's death to "how a four-year-old mourns a goldfish".
Meyers, the host of NBC's Late Night, began his show on Thursday by saying Trump's administration was "pursuing a crackdown on free speech", before adding sarcastically: "And completely unrelated, I just want to say before we get started here that I've always admired and respected Mr Trump."
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Seth Meyers has been hosting NBC's Late Night since 2014
To audience laughter, Meyers continued: "I've always believed he was a visionary, an innovator, a great president and an even better golfer."
The host went on to play a succession of clips of Trump declaring he had banned government censorship and brought back free speech in America.
After playing further clips about the Kimmel situation, Meyers said: "It is a privilege and honour to call Jimmy Kimmel my friend, in the same way it's a privilege and honour to do this show every night.
"I wake up every day and I count my blessings to live in a country that at least purports to value freedom of speech.
"And we're going to keep doing our show the way we've always done it - with enthusiasm and integrity..." That was followed by a fart noise, calling back to a previous joke about a horse defecating in front of Trump during his state visit to the UK.
Returning to his point, Meyers continued: "This is a pivotal... this is a big moment in our democracy and we must all stand up for freedom of expression.
"There is a reason free speech is in the very First Amendment. It stands above all others."
Watch: Ros Atkins on… What Jimmy Kimmel being taken off air means for free speech in the US
He said Kimmel's suspension was "blatant censorship" and the "latest and boldest action in a long campaign against media critics".
Colbert has had his own show cancelled, which CBS said in July was "purely a financial decision", but which some observers have linked to a looming federal decision on a merger involving CBS's parent company Paramount.
Kimmel's removal came after Nexstar Media, one of America's largest TV station owners, said it would not air Kimmel's show "for the foreseeable future" because his remarks had been "offensive and insensitive". Nexstar is also currently awaiting federal approval for a separate takeover deal.
"So a company apparently capitulating to the whims of the president in order to ensure their merger goes through - has that ever happened before?" Colbert joked.
"Everything is about corporate relationships."
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Stephen Colbert won the Emmy Award for outstanding talk series last weekend
Following his state visit, Trump told reporters of late night shows and networks: "All they do is hit Trump... They are licensed. They are not allowed to do that."
Colbert responded: "Yes they are! Since the beginning... these shows have always talked about the current president, and that happens to be you."
He added: "So no matter what they claim, this is not entirely about what Jimmy said on Monday, this was part of a plan. How do I know that? Two months ago, when the president was tastefully celebrating my cancellation, he posted 'Jimmy Kimmel is next to go'."
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A voiceover cut in during Jimmy Fallon's opening monologue to make him appear to praise Trump
On NBC's The Tonight Show, Fallon told viewers: "I don't know what's going on and no-one does. But I do know Jimmy Kimmel and he's a decent, funny and loving guy and I hope he comes back."
He continued: "A lot of people are worried that we won't keep saying what we want to say or that we'll be censored. But I'm going to cover the president's trip to the UK just like I normally would.
"Here we go. Well guys, President Trump just wrapped up his three-day trip to the UK and he..."
A voiceover then cut in to dub Kimmel with the words: "...looked incredibly handsome."
He reluctantly lavished praise on the "perfectly-tinted Trump", known for his "charm, elegance and an undeniable sexual charisma".
Stewart later asked the show's seven correspondents if the "naysayers and critics" were right. "Is Donald Trump stifling free speech?"
"Of course not Jon," they replied in unison in robotic voices. "Americans are free to express any opinion we want. To suggest otherwise is laughable. Ha ha ha."
Meanwhile, Former long-serving late-night host David Letterman spoke about Kimmel's suspension at The Atlantic Festival in New York on Thursday.
"I feel bad about this, because we all see where see this is going, correct?" he said. "It's managed media. It's no good. It's silly. It's ridiculous."
Limits to free speech
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Greg Gutfeld is Fox News's late-night host
But not all late-night hosts were in agreement.
Fox News's Greg Gutfeld said: "People come up to me and go, 'If you're a comedian and you're on TV, you should be upset by this'. I'm not really."
Gutfeld's panel of guests criticised Kimmel's comments and argued there were limits to free speech on network TV.
The host also said people who are now defending Kimmel had previously tried to silence right-wing outlets and commentators. "The only way they were going to stop that is if they know it can happen to them," Gutfeld said. "But is that actually fair thinking? I don't know."
Elsewhere, former CNN presenter Piers Morgan said Kimmel had caused "understandable outrage all over America", adding: "Why is he being heralded as some kind of free speech martyr?"
US president Donald Trump said he plans to meet Chinese Premier Xi Jinping in South Korea next month following a phone call in which the Chinese leader also approved of a deal to take control of TikTok's US operations.
Trump wrote on Truth Social the call was "productive" and the approval was "appreciated", adding that he would travel to China next year after the two meet.
TikTok, which is run by Chinese firm Bytedance, was previously told it had to sell its US operations or risk being shut down.
Trump, however, delayed implementing the ban four times since it was first announced in January, and earlier this week extended the deadline again to December.
In his post, Trump wrote the two "made progress" on trade issues and would meet at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in South Korea, scheduled to begin at the end of October.
That, he said, would be followed by a visit to China and a subsequent visit by Xi to the US.
The president provided no further details on the TikTok deal, which he said earlier this week that the call would confirm.
That deal will reportedly see a group of US firms- said to include Oracle - that would enable TikTok to continue operating in the US, using algorithm technology licensed from ByteDance.
Xinhua reported that China's position on TikTok is "very clear" and that it welcomed firms to "conduct commercial negotiations based on market rules and reach solutions that comply with Chinese laws and regulations and a balance of interests".
"We hope that the US will provide an open, fair and non-discriminatory business environment for Chinese companies to invest in the United States," it added.
Speaking alongside British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer in the UK on Thursday, Trump said he believes TikTok has "tremendous value" to the US.
"The people that are investing it are among the greatest investors in the world," he said. "And they'll do a great job - and we're doing it in conjunction with China."
Still, many US lawmakers - including some from within Trump's own party - have expressed unease with the deal, citing ongoing concerns about ByteDance's links with the Chinese Communist Party, or CCP.
"I am concerned the reported licensing deal may involve ongoing reliance by the new TikTok on a ByteDance algorithm that could allow continued CCP control or influence," Michigan Republican representative John Moolenar, chair of the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party, said in a statement.
While Trump initially called for TikTok to be banned during his first term, he has changed course, and on Thursday said he viewed the platform as a key part of his 2024 electoral campaign.
In January, the US Supreme Court upheld a law first passed in early 2024, banning the app unless ByteDance divested from its US operations. The app went "dark" only briefly at the time, before the ban was delayed.
The US Justice Department had previously expressed concerns that TikTok's access to the data of US users posed a national security threat of "immense depth and scale".
The call between Xi and Trump is the second so far this year.
In June, the two leaders spoke to discuss China's export of rare earth minerals, resulting in China agreeing to approve a "certain number" of export permits to US companies, as well as the magnets made from them.
Chinese and US officials have held four rounds of talks in recent months, and so far held off on implementing extremely high tariffs and strict export controls.
The US has already imposed 20% tariffs on some Chinese goods it says are linked to fentanyl trafficking.
Other thorny issues - including tech export restrictions and Chinese purchases of US agricultural products - so far remain unresolved.
Donald Trump accused the New York Times of lying and defaming him "for far too long."
A US federal judge has struck down Donald Trump's $15bn defamation lawsuit against the New York Times newspaper on Friday, citing issues with its contents.
US District Judge Steven Merryday said Trump violated a federal rule requiring applicants to outline in a short and plain statement on why they deserve relief from the court.
A legal complaint, the judge said, is not "a protected platform to rage against an adversary". He gave Trump 28 days to file an amended complaint.
Trump signalled he would sue the New York Times earlier this week in a post on Truth Social, claiming the newspaper has been "allowed to freely lie, smear and defame me for far too long".
Russian warplanes have violated Estonian airspace, the foreign ministry in Tallinn has said, condemning the incursion as "brazen".
It said three Russian MiG-31 fighter jets "entered Estonian airspace without permission and remained there for a total of 12 minutes" on Friday over the Gulf of Finland.
The ministry says it summoned the Russian chargé d'affaires "to lodge a protest". EU top diplomat Kaja Kallas described the incursion as "an extremely dangerous provocation".
Estonian media are reporting the Russian jets had their transponders switched off in the airspace of a Nato member.
The Russian military has not publicly commented on the issue.
In a statement, Estonian Foreign Minister Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna said Friday's incursion was "unprecedentedly brazen".
He continued: "Russia's increasingly extensive testing of boundaries and growing aggressiveness must be met with a swift increase in political and economic pressure."
The minister added Russia had already violated Estonia's airspace four times in 2025.
US president Donald Trump said he plans to meet Chinese Premier Xi Jinping in South Korea next month following a phone call in which the Chinese leader also approved of a deal to take control of TikTok's US operations.
Trump wrote on Truth Social the call was "productive" and the approval was "appreciated", adding that he would travel to China next year after the two meet.
TikTok, which is run by Chinese firm Bytedance, was previously told it had to sell its US operations or risk being shut down.
Trump, however, delayed implementing the ban four times since it was first announced in January, and earlier this week extended the deadline again to December.
In his post, Trump wrote the two "made progress" on trade issues and would meet at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in South Korea, scheduled to begin at the end of October.
That, he said, would be followed by a visit to China and a subsequent visit by Xi to the US.
The president provided no further details on the TikTok deal, which he said earlier this week that the call would confirm.
That deal will reportedly see a group of US firms- said to include Oracle - that would enable TikTok to continue operating in the US, using algorithm technology licensed from ByteDance.
Xinhua reported that China's position on TikTok is "very clear" and that it welcomed firms to "conduct commercial negotiations based on market rules and reach solutions that comply with Chinese laws and regulations and a balance of interests".
"We hope that the US will provide an open, fair and non-discriminatory business environment for Chinese companies to invest in the United States," it added.
Speaking alongside British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer in the UK on Thursday, Trump said he believes TikTok has "tremendous value" to the US.
"The people that are investing it are among the greatest investors in the world," he said. "And they'll do a great job - and we're doing it in conjunction with China."
Still, many US lawmakers - including some from within Trump's own party - have expressed unease with the deal, citing ongoing concerns about ByteDance's links with the Chinese Communist Party, or CCP.
"I am concerned the reported licensing deal may involve ongoing reliance by the new TikTok on a ByteDance algorithm that could allow continued CCP control or influence," Michigan Republican representative John Moolenar, chair of the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party, said in a statement.
While Trump initially called for TikTok to be banned during his first term, he has changed course, and on Thursday said he viewed the platform as a key part of his 2024 electoral campaign.
In January, the US Supreme Court upheld a law first passed in early 2024, banning the app unless ByteDance divested from its US operations. The app went "dark" only briefly at the time, before the ban was delayed.
The US Justice Department had previously expressed concerns that TikTok's access to the data of US users posed a national security threat of "immense depth and scale".
The call between Xi and Trump is the second so far this year.
In June, the two leaders spoke to discuss China's export of rare earth minerals, resulting in China agreeing to approve a "certain number" of export permits to US companies, as well as the magnets made from them.
Chinese and US officials have held four rounds of talks in recent months, and so far held off on implementing extremely high tariffs and strict export controls.
The US has already imposed 20% tariffs on some Chinese goods it says are linked to fentanyl trafficking.
Other thorny issues - including tech export restrictions and Chinese purchases of US agricultural products - so far remain unresolved.
More than 70 people have been killed following a drone strike on a mosque in Sudan's Darfur region, a senior medical source has told the BBC.
Friday's attack in the city of el-Fasher has been blamed on the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), but the group has not taken responsibility.
The RSF and the army have been engaged in a ferocious civil war for more than two years.
The paramilitaries are gaining ground as they fight to seize complete control of el-Fasher - the last army stronghold in Darfur and home to more than 300,000 civilians who have been trapped by the fighting.
One resident told the BBC the drone struck during morning prayers, killing dozens of people instantly.
The medical source said 78 died and about 20 were injured, but the process of extracting the bodies from the rubble of the building was still ongoing.
BBC Verify has authenticated footage showing around 30 bodies wrapped in shrouds and blankets next to the mosque, which was located in the west of the city.
This week the RSF launched a renewed offensive on El Fasher, which it has besieged for more than a year. Reports say this included fierce attacks on Abu Shouk, a camp for displaced people near the city.
Satellite images suggest RSF units now control much of the camp, according to Yale University's Humanitarian Research Lab (HRL), which monitors wars.
According to the unit, satellite pictures also show the RSF has entered the headquarters of the Joint Forces, a collective of armed groups allied to the Sudanese army.
The headquarters is located in a former UN compound, considered to be a critical line of defence.
The BBC has verified footage showing RSF fighters inside the expansive complex, although it is not clear whether they have seized full control.
These apparent advances would place el-Fasher's airport and the army's division headquarters within direct RSF firing range.
The HRL says el-Fasher will fall to the RSF unless the Sudanese military receives immediate reinforcements.
A full RSF capture of the city would cement the group's control of the western part of the country and reinforce a de facto split, with the army in control of the north and east.
Sudan analysts and activists fear that the paramilitary group will target the civilians still in the city, most of whom belong to ethnic groups they see as its enemies.
On Friday, a United Nations report warned of the "increasing ethnicisation of the conflict," saying both sides were retaliating against people accused of collaborating with opposing parties.
But the UN and other international organizations have also documented a systematic RSF policy of ethnic cleansing against non-Arab communities in the territory they conquer.
In a recent report the medical charity Doctors Without Borders said RSF troops "spoke of plans to 'clean El Fasher' of its non-Arab...community".
The RSF have previously denied such accusations, saying they had nothing to do with "tribal conflicts".