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More than 800 killed after strong quake hits Afghanistan

EPA An injured victim wearing a burgundy dress, lying down in a hospital bed, with a drip in their right arm, the head bandaged, and the face showing injuriesEPA
Hospitals - already under strain - are reported to be overwhelmed

More than 800 people have been killed - and nearly 3,000 injured - after a magnitude-six earthquake struck eastern Afghanistan just before midnight on Sunday, the United Nations' humanitarian agency has said.

Most of the deaths are in Kunar province, officials say, warning that the death toll may rise significantly as entire villages have been destroyed by the quake.

The epicentre is in a remote mountainous area, making it difficult for rescue operations to be carried out. "The scale of devastation is unimaginable," a Taliban official said.

The disaster comes as Afghanistan reels from a severe drought, aid cuts and what the World Food Programme describes as an unprecedented crisis of hunger.

The earthquake hit at 23:47 (19:47 GMT) on Sunday, some 27km (17 miles) east of Jalalabad - the country's fifth-largest city, in eastern Nangarhar province.

Faridullah Fazli was fast asleep at home in Asadabad, on the banks of the Kunar river, and the tremor jolted him awake.

"There was a very strong earthquake, accompanied by sounds that were very scary," he told the BBC.

"We didn't sleep until morning. After the earthquake, there were small tremors, and there are still."

Fazli said he went to the clinic in town, helping transport the dead and wounded into ambulances to be taken to a hospital further south in Nangarhar province.

"It was a very scary situation, just an atmosphere of fear and terror," Fazli said.

A resident of Mazar Dara, in the Nurgal region, said 95% of the village had been destroyed - and there were five to 10 injured people in every household.

Watch: Helicopters are a 'key lifeline' for those trapped in rubble reports our South Asia and Afghanistan correspondent

The worst damage was in Kunar - a rugged, mountainous region with limited farmland.

Roads in the area are often mud tracks winding around mountains - homes are made of clay, stones and mud.

The region has also seen massive flooding and landslides in the past few days blocking access to many areas.

With roads blocked, rescue operations can only be carried out by air, and teams were unable to reach the area until the morning as helicopters could not land in the mountains at night.

However, more than 100 flights have since been conducted in clear weather since.

"Entire villages are flattened, roads to deep mountainous areas are still closed. So now, for us, the priority is not finding dead under the rubble, but rather reaching out to those injured," a Taliban official in Kunar province said.

"Most of the dead are under rubble. We are doing everything, but it doesn't seem possible soon," he said.

There are cases of people trapped under the rubble for hours and reportedly dying as they awaited rescuers.

Syed Raheem - one of those taking part in the rescue - says even though many have been saved, there are fears for other still trapped.

"Some people sent us messages that there are houses that are destroyed, and some people are still under the rocks," he told the BBC.

Jalalabad's main hospital was already overwhelmed, being right at the centre of the crossing point for the tens of thousand Afghans being deported from bordering Pakistan.

On Monday, it was quite chaotic - with the injured, helpless relatives looking for their loved ones, volunteers and rescue teams still running around the place.

An inconsolable woman said she had lost family members in the quake, while an old man was dazed and lost - and unable to speak to anyone.

A doctor said around 460 victims had been brought in since the earthquake - 250 admitted, the others treated and discharged.

Internet connectivity in those areas is very limited, making communication and co-ordination difficult.

Map of the areas affected by the quake

Since August 2021, Afghanistan has been under the control of the Taliban, whose government is only recognised by Russia.

Several aid agencies and non-governmental organisations suspended their work in Afghanistan with the arrival of the hardline Islamist group to power.

Most foreign donations to Afghanistan have been suspended and international sanctions, which date back to when the Taliban were first in power in the 1990s, are still in place - although exemptions have been made for humanitarian relief.

The Taliban government has launched an appeal.

Afghanistan is no stranger to earthquakes as it sits on a number of fault lines.

In 2023, a series of quakes in the Herat province killed more than 1,000 people, a year after a similar number were killed in Paktika province.

The latest earthquake was so deadly because it was so shallow - it struck at a depth of 8km (5 miles) - and was felt 140km away in the capital, Kabul, as well as in neighbouring Pakistan. To be classed as a shallow, an earthquake must happen at fewer than 70km below the surface.

Shallow earthquakes are common in Afghanistan, particularly in the foothills of the Himalayas where tectonic plates are sliding past each other.

North Korea's Kim leaves for China in armoured train

Getty Images Kim Jong Un clutching the railing as he walks down train steps - a green train can be seen in the background. Getty Images
Kim can be seen here making a trip to Russia by train in 2023

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has left Pyongyang for China, where he will be attending a military parade in the capital Beijing, media reports say.

The "Victory Day" parade, which takes place on Wednesday, will see Kim rub shoulders with China's President Xi Jinping, Russia's Vladimir Putin and other world leaders - making it his first multilateral international meeting.

Kim left the North Korean capital on Monday evening onboard his armoured train, which is said to include a restaurant car serving fine French wines and dishes like fresh lobster.

The train's heavy protection means it travels slowly, and Kim's journey is expected to take up to 24 hours, according to South Korea's Yonhap agency.

Kim's attendance marks the first time a North Korean leader has attended a Chinese military parade since 1959. He will be among 26 other heads of states - including leaders from Myanmar, Iran and Cuba - in attendance.

His attendance is an upgrade from China's last Victory Day parade in 2015, when Pyongyang sent one of its top officials, Choe Ryong-hae.

The reclusive leader rarely travels abroad, with his recent contact with world leaders limited to Putin, who he's met twice since Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

He last visited Beijing in 2019 for an event marking the 70th anniversary of diplomatic ties between the countries. That trip also saw him travel by train.

The tradition of travelling via train was started by Kim's grandfather Kim Il Sung - who took his own train trips to Vietnam and Eastern Europe.

Kim's father, Kim Jong Il, travelled by train as well as he was reportedly afraid of flying.

According to one South Korean news outlet, the armoured train has around 90 carriages, including conference rooms, audience chambers and bedrooms.

Tens of thousands of military personnel will march in formation through Beijing's historic Tiananmen Square on the day of the parade, which will mark the 80th anniversary of Japan's surrender in World War Two and the end of the conflict.

The 70-minute parade is likely to feature China's latest weaponry, including hundreds of aircraft, tanks and anti-drone systems - the first time its military's new force structure is being fully showcased in a parade.

Most Western leaders are not expected to attend the parade, due to their opposition to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which has driven the sanctions against Putin's regime.

But it will see leaders from Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar and Vietnam in attendance - further proof of Beijing's concerted efforts to ramp up ties with neighbouring South East Asia.

Just one EU leader will be attending - Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico - while Bulgaria and Hungary will send representatives.

Guyana blames Venezuela for attack on election officials ahead of vote

JOAQUIN SARMIENTO/AFP via Getty Images A woman wearing a white T-shirt puts her ballot paper into a ballot box while an election official looks on and another one sits at a table looking at papers. JOAQUIN SARMIENTO/AFP via Getty Images
The incident happened just hours before polls opened in the general election

Security forces in Guyana say a boat carrying election officials and ballot boxes was shot at "from the Venezuelan shore" in the contested Essequibo region.

Police and the Guyana defence force said in a joint statement that the incident occurred on Sunday, ahead of the South American nation's general election on Monday.

The patrol that had been escorting the officials "immediately returned fire" and no one was injured, Guyana's security forces said.

Venezuela has not commented on the incident, which comes amid a territorial dispute between the two nations over the oil-rich Essequibo region.

The 159,500-sq-km (61,600-square-mile) area has been administered by Guyana, and British Guiana before it, for over a century.

But Venezuela lays claim to the area and, in December 2023, President Nicolás Maduro's government held a referendum in which more than 95% of Venezuelans who voted backed its claim.

Guyana has taken the matter to the International Court of Justice, but Venezuela has disputed the court's authority to rule on it.

The statement from the Guyanese security forces did not say who may have been behind the shooting, but they insisted the shots had been fired from Venezuelan territory.

It added that the ballot boxes onboard the boat had been delivered safely to the remote polling stations they were destined for.

Voters in Guyana are choosing a president for the next five years, as well as members of its parliament.

The incumbent, President Irfaan Ali of the People's Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C), is running for a second term and polls suggest he is the frontrunner.

He is being challenged for the top post by Aubrey Norton of the A Partnership for National Unity (APNU) coalition and by Azruddin Mohamed, a billionaire trying to disrupt Guyana's two-party system.

Polls conducted before the voting started had President Ali as the favourite, buoyed by the revenue from the economic boom Guyana is experiencing following the discovery of massive offshore oil deposits.

The country of 800,000 inhabitants saw its GDP almost quintuple in the five years since 2020, according to IMF figures.

President Ali used the revenue to improve Guyana's infrastructure, investing in road-building and education, including making attendance at state universities free of charge.

But his critics say oil revenues have been channelled disproportionally to benefit groups which traditionally support Ali's party, an accusation the president has denied.

Guyana's political landscape has for decades been largely split along ethnic lines, with members of the Indo-Guyanese community traditionally supporting the PPP/C and Afro-Guyanese voters mainly backing the People's National Congress, which forms part of the coalition led by Aubrey Norton.

The party or coalition which wins the most votes gets to put forward the president.

While President Ali said he was confident of re-election, his party had only a one-seat majority in the outgoing legislature.

Analysts have pointed out that the campaign by third-party candidate Azruddin Mohamed could break open established voting patterns and produce a surprise result.

Ballots close at 18:00 local time (22:00 GMT).

CEO who snatched boy's hat at US Open says he made 'huge mistake'

Getty Images Kamil Majchrzak pictured wearing a blue t-shirt, black shorts and a black cap. He holds a tennis racket in his hand.Getty Images
The man said he was "convinced" tennis star Kamil Majchrzak, pictured above, was passing the hat in his direction

The man who was caught on camera snatching a hat off a young boy at the US Open has said he made a "huge mistake" after footage of the incident went viral.

Piotr Szczerek, a Polish chief executive of a paving firm, said he was "convinced" tennis star Kamil Majchrzak had been "passing his hat in my direction".

"I know I did something that seemed like consciously collecting a memento from a child," he wrote in a statement. "This wasn't my intention, but it doesn't change the fact that I hurt the boy and disappointed the fans."

The video, taken during Majchrzak's match on Thursday, showed the tennis player offering his cap to a child, before Mr Szczerek appears to take it.

Versions of the clip were shared widely on social media and prompted criticism of Mr Szczerek's actions.

The 50-year-old wrote on social media on Monday: "I would like to unequivocally apologise to the injured boy, his family, as well as all the fans and the player himself."

He added that he had given the hat back to the boy, and hoped that it had "at least partially repaired the damage that was done".

Majchrzak, 29, who had just won his match against Russian ninth seed Karen Khachanov when the incident unfolded, told the New York Post on Saturday that "obviously it was some kind of confusion".

"I was pointing, giving the hat, but I had a lot going on after my match, after being super tired and super excited for the win," he said.

"I just missed it. I had like a dead look, if you know what I mean. I'm sure the guy was also acting in the moment of heat, in the moment of emotions."

The tennis star reunited with the boy over the weekend, sharing clips of him giving the young fan a cap and other merchandise on Instagram.

"Today after warm up, I had a nice meeting," the tennis star wrote, adding: "Do you recognise [the cap]?"

Majchrzak, ranked 76th in the world in men's singles, came back from two sets down to beat Khachanov in a second-round match at Flushing Meadows, but was forced to retire injured during the first set of his third-round tie against Switzerland's Leandro Riedi on Saturday.

He later confirmed he had torn an intercostal muscle.

Mr Szczerek and his wife Anna founded his paving company Drogbruk in 1999, polish outlet Tenis Magazyn reported. The company sponsors sporting events and Polish athletes.

The couple and their two sons are amateur tennis players who compete in local leagues, and have hosted Polish tennis pro Urszula Radwańska on their home court, according to Tenis Magazyn.

EU chief von der Leyen's plane hit by suspected Russian GPS jamming

Getty Images European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen speaking into a microphone. She has short blonde hair and wears a bright blue blazer about a light blue t-shirt. Behind her is a folded European flag.Getty Images

The navigation system of a plane carrying Ursula von der Leyen was disrupted due to suspected Russian interference, the European Commission said.

A spokesperson said the "GPS jamming" happened while the Commission president was about to arrive in Bulgaria on Sunday, but she still landed safely.

They added: "We have received information from the Bulgarian authorities that they suspect that this was due to blatant interference by Russia."

The Financial Times, citing unnamed officials, reported that von der Leyen had to land at Plovdiv Airport using paper maps.

The Bulgarian government confirmed that during the flight, "the satellite signal transmitting information to the plane's GPS navigation system was neutralised".

The statement continued: "To ensure the flight's safety, air control services immediately offered an alternative landing method using terrestrial navigation tools."

Bulgaria's Air Traffic Services Authority told the paper that there had been a "notable increase" in navigation jamming since January 2022.

The Kremlin told the FT that its information was "incorrect".

Mob burns Nigerian woman to death for alleged blasphemy

AFP via Getty Images The emblem of the Nigerian Police at a gate of a police stationAFP via Getty Images
Police have vowed to bring the perpetrators to justice

A woman has been burnt to death by a mob in northern Nigeria's Niger state after she was accused of blaspheming against Prophet Muhammad, police have said.

Police condemned the killing of the woman - identified in local media as a food vendor named Amaye - as "jungle justice", saying that an investigation was under way to arrest and prosecute the perpetrators.

Local media quoted eyewitnesses as saying a man jokingly proposed marriage to the vendor, and her response was considered blasphemous by some people in the area.

"Unfortunately, it led to a mob attack, and [she] was set ablaze before a reinforcement of security teams could arrive at the scene," state police spokesman Wasiu Abiodun said.

He appealed to members of the public to remain calm and not to take the law into their own hands following the killing on Saturday in Kasuwan-Garba town.

Such killings are not uncommon in northern Nigeria, where blasphemy is regarded as a criminal offence under Islamic (Sharia) law, which operates alongside secular law in 12 mainly Muslim states.

At least two other people have been lynched over such accusations in the last three years, with critics pointing out that not enough is being done to prevent the killings that have targeted both Muslims and Christians.

In 2022, student Deborah Samuel was beaten and burned alive in Sokoto state after being accused of making blasphemous comments.

Last year, a butcher, Usman Buda, was stoned to death in the same state under similar circumstances.

Though Nigeria's constitution upholds freedom of speech, the country remains deeply divided on matters of faith and justice.

Nigeria's Supreme Court has in the past ruled that blasphemy allegations must be proven in a court of law.

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UN chief demands release of 11 staff arrested in Yemen

EPA A Houthi soldier stands in foreground, with a second Houthi soldier behindEPA
The Iran-backed Houthis have been in control of Yemen's capital since 2014

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres has called for the "immediate and unconditional release" of 11 UN staff arrested by Houthi authorities in Yemen.

The workers were detained by security forces in raids on the World Food Programme (WFP), children's charity Unicef and the World Health Organization (WHO), news agencies and the UN said.

Sunday's raids took place in the capital, Sanaa, and port city of Hudaydah, UN Special Envoy for Yemen Hans Grundberg said.

Grundberg said the Houthis had already been holding 23 other UN workers arrested since 2021.

Houthi authorities have not commented on Sunday's arrests.

In a statement on Sunday, Guterres said he "strongly condemn[s] the arbitrary detentions of at least 11 UN personnel" by the Houthis. He also condemned what he said was the forced entry into WFP and other UN premises, as well as the seizure of property.

It is not clear why the Houthis targeted UN workers. The organisation's staff and aid workers have provided a crucial lifeline for ordinary Yemenis whose country has for years been suffering one of the world's worst humanitarian crises.

One of those previously arrested died in detention earlier this year, Grundberg said.

The Houthis have also detained some 20 Yemeni employees of the US embassy for the past three years.

"Despite sustained engagement and assurances sought over the last year, the arbitrary detention of UN staff, NGO workers and civil society has continued," Grundberg said.

"These actions severely hinder broader efforts to deliver assistance and advance peace in Yemen."

Earlier this year, the UN suspended all movement in Houthi-held areas of Yemen after a number of its personnel were detained.

The latest arrests come amid heightened tension after an Israeli attack killed the Houthi prime minister and other high-ranking officials on Thursday.

The attack was the biggest blow to the Houthis by Israel since it started retaliating a year ago against missile attacks by Houthis. The movement has been firing at Israel since November 2023 in support of the Palestinians in Gaza, where Israel is fighting a war with Hamas.

The Iran-backed group has controlled the capital and the north-west of Yemen since ousting the internationally recognised government in 2015 during a civil war.

The fighting has reportedly left more than 150,000 people dead and triggered a humanitarian disaster. Some 4.8 million people have been displaced and 19.5 million - half of the population - are in need of some form of aid.

Man found dead at Burning Man festival

Getty Images A crowd of people watch a tall structure being set alight at night at the Burning Man festival.Getty Images
Burning Man takes place in Nevada's Black Rock Desert

A murder investigation has been launched at the Burning Man festival in the US state of Nevada after a man was found "lying in a pool of blood" on Saturday night, police say.

A festival-goer stopped a police officer at around 21:14 (04:14 GMT) to alert him about the incident and the man was found "lying on the ground, obviously deceased" at a campsite, Nevada's Pershing County Sheriff's office said.

The body was discovered as the Man - a towering structure which lends the festival its name - was beginning to burn. The victim's identity is not known.

Burning Man Project said it was co-operating with law enforcement and urged those at the festival not to interfere with the investigation.

Part of the site in the Black Rock Desert was cordoned off as on-site police began investigating alongside a forensics team.

Sheriff Jerry Allen said "several participants in the immediate area" were interviewed.

"Although this act appears to be a singular crime, all participants should always be vigilant of their surroundings and acquaintances," Sheriff Allen warned.

A significant police presence was to remain at the scene as the investigation continued.

Burning Man draws tens of thousands of attendees to Black Rock City - which the organisers describe as "a temporary metropolis" put up in the desert annually to host the festival, which this year ends on Monday.

Fatalities have been reported at the festival in the past, including a death during torrential rain in 2023 and a man who ran into the Man while it was on fire in 2017.

Putin says he reached 'understandings' with Trump over end of Ukraine war

AFP via Getty Images Vladimir Putin, wearing a dark suit and black and white tie, sits at a desk at a summit speaking into a microphone. A sign in front of him at the desk states the word "Russia" in Chinese, Russian and English.AFP via Getty Images
Vladimir Putin was speaking at the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit held in Tianjin, China

Russian President Vladimir Putin says he reached "understandings" with US President Donald Trump over the end of the Ukraine war, at their meeting in Alaska last month.

But he did not say whether he would agree to peace talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky brokered by Trump, who had apparently given Monday as a deadline for Putin's response.

Speaking during a summit in China, Putin continued to defend his decision to invade Ukraine, once again blaming the war on the West.

Following the Alaska meeting, US special envoy Steve Witkoff said Putin had agreed to security guarantees for Ukraine as part of a potential future peace deal, though Moscow has yet to confirm this.

Putin was speaking in Tianjin at the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit, where he met Xi Jinping and Narendra Modi.

He thanked the Chinese and Indian leaders for their support and their efforts to "facilitate the resolution of the Ukrainian crisis".

China and Russia are the biggest buyers of Russian crude oil, attracting criticism from the West that they are propping up the Russian economy which has been battered by the war effort.

In his speech, Putin also said that the "understandings reached" at his meeting with Trump in Alaska are "I hope, moving in this direction, opening the way to peace in Ukraine".

At the same time, he reiterated his view that "this crisis wasn't triggered by Russia's attack on Ukraine, but was a result of a coup in Ukraine, which was supported and provoked by the West".

He also attributed the war to "the West's constant attempts to drag Ukraine into Nato".

The Russian president has consistently opposed the idea of Ukraine joining the Western military alliance.

It was in 2014 that Putin seized Crimea and Russian proxies grabbed part of eastern Ukraine. Years later, in February 2022, Putin then ordered Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Putin's comments come days after Russia launched its second biggest aerial attack on Ukraine in the war.

On Friday, French President Emmanuel Macron said that Putin faced a Monday deadline set by Trump to agree to peace talks with Zelensky.

If the Russian leader does not agree, "it will show again President Putin has played President Trump", said Macron.

But in an interview with CNN, on 22 August, Trump himself again gave Putin "a couple of weeks" to give a response before the US takes action, in the latest of a series of ultimatums and deadlines he has issued to the Russian leader.

Trump had previously said he could solve the Ukraine war in one day.

Following his meeting with Putin last month, Trump dropped a demand for a ceasefire and called instead for a permanent peace deal.

He also met Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky along with top European leaders who paid an urgent visit to Washington DC.

Trump insisted there would be "no going into Nato by Ukraine" as part of a peace deal.

But he also hinted there would be security guarantees, saying Europe was the "first line of defence" and that the US would be involved.

"We'll give them good protection," he said, though he clarified it would not mean sending US troops to Ukraine.

The president's special envoy Steve Witkoff also told CNN that Putin had agreed to security guarantees.

He said this would see the US and Europe "effectively offer Article 5-like language to cover a security guarantee", referring to the Nato clause which states that member states should defend another member that has come under attack.

Zelensky said he expected a framework for security guarantees to be set out on paper as soon as this week.

But last Friday Russia criticised Western proposals as "one-sided and clearly designed to contain Russia", adding that it turned Kyiv into a "strategic provocateur".

Russian attacks have also continued. Last Thursday Moscow fired 629 drones and missiles at Kyiv, killing 23 people in one of the biggest aerial assaults of the war so far that prompted outrage from European leaders.

Germany and France have since pledged to put pressure on Russia to agree to a deal.

Meanwhile, Zelensky has rejected proposals for a buffer zone with Russia as part of a peace deal.

He has accused Russia of not being ready for diplomacy and seeking ways to postpone the end of the war.

Fugitive wanted over Australia police killings being helped, police say

Nine/A Current Affair Dezi Freeman, who has short brown hair and is wearing a grey shirt, with a garden in the backgroundNine/A Current Affair
Dezi Freeman had a well-documented hatred of authority

A fugitive who allegedly murdered two officers in a small rural town in Australia's Victoria is being helped by some members of the community, police have said.

Dezi Freeman has been on the run since last Tuesday, when police arrived at his Porepunkah property to execute a search warrant, reportedly relating to a sex crimes investigation.

Mr Freeman, a known conspiracy theorist, escaped into thick bushland bordering the property, with a massive manhunt for him now in its seventh day.

His wife, Amalia Freeman, had earlier urged him to turn himself in and offered her condolences to the families of the officers he is alleged to have killed.

Victoria Police - which has previously appealed for Mr Freeman to surrender - say there had still been no sighting of the 56-year-old.

"People know the whereabouts of the person who has killed two cops," Superintendent Brett Kahan said in an update on Monday.

"You are committing an extremely serious crime by harbouring or assisting in the escape of Dezi Freeman."

He declined to specify how many people police suspected, or whether they were locals in the town of Porepunkah or nearby areas.

Police had arrested and promptly released Ms Freeman and a 15-year-old when raiding another Porepunkah property on Thursday night, but have not provided any additional information.

Ms Freeman said her and her children "respected the important work of Victoria Police and do not hold anti-authority views," in a statement released by her lawyers.

Heavily armed police, helicopters and armoured vehicles have now been searching the area where Mr Freeman disappeared for almost a week.

The killings have revived questions over how Australian authorities deal with the threat of conspiracy theorists - three years after a hauntingly similar ambush of police in Queensland.

Mr Freeman had long espoused "sovereign citizen" views and had a well-documented hatred of authority.

Victoria Police say a thorough risk assessment was conducted before 10 officers had travelled to his property, but specialist police support had not been requested.

Trump is sending a 'great friend' to India. Some see him as a 'slap in the face'

Getty Images Assistant to the President Sergio Gor (R), accompanied by Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) (L), waits before U.S. President Donald Trump arrives for an event at the Kennedy Center on August 13, 2025 in Washington, DC. Trump announced the first nominees of the annual Kennedy Center Honors since taking control of the center's board earlier this year. Getty Images
Sergio Gor shares a close relationship with US President Donald Trump and his family

He's published books authored by Donald Trump, raised millions for his 2024 campaign, and helped him staff Washington with loyalists during the US president's second term.

Now Sergio Gor is set to become Trump's man in India, while also overseeing US relations with other South and Central Asian countries.

Last week, Trump announced that he was promoting Gor, his personnel chief, to be the next US Ambassador to India. He called Gor a "great friend" and someone he could "fully trust" to deliver on the agenda.

The 38-year-old's appointment comes at a time when relations between the two countries have become strained due to Trump's punishing tariffs on India.

Gor's appointment has evoked mixed reactions in India, with some observers saying that having a close Trump aide in the post is a positive sign for India-US ties. But others have questioned Trump's decision to share his India envoy with South and Central Asian countries, which includes Pakistan, with whom India shares a tense relationship.

Getty Images WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 19: (L-R) Donald Trump Jr., Bettina Anderson, U.S. Vice President-elect JD Vance, and Sergio Gor dance on stage as The Village People perform YMCA during the Turning Point USA Inaugural-Eve Ball at the Salamander Hotel on January 19, 2025 in Washington, DC. Donald Trump will be sworn in as the 47th U.S. president on January 20. Getty Images
Left to right: Jared Kushner, JD Vance and Sergio Gor celebrate Trump's Presidential win

Experts say that Gor's broad regional mandate threatens to expose India to an overreach by Washington in its affairs with Pakistan, including on the Kashmir issue - a red line for India.

"The special envoy's additional designation will likely create some challenges, at least in India. India typically prefers not to be "hyphenated" with Pakistan," says Alyssa Ayres from the Council of Foreign Relations, an American think-tank focussed on US foreign policy.

Lawrence Haas, a former senior White House official and senior fellow at the American Foreign Policy Council, says that it could also be Trump's way of signalling to Delhi that he doesn't think the role of ambassador to India needs to be a full-time job.

"I imagine that India's leaders will feel slighted and insulted, which will further strain US-India relations," Mr Haas told the BBC.

India found itself in a similar situation in 2009, when the Obama administration reportedly considered appointing Richard Holbrooke as special envoy to Pakistan, Afghanistan and India.

Delhi reportedly lobbied against the move, leading to Holbrooke being appointed envoy to Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Trump, however, is no Obama.

Unlike his predecessor's caution, Trump openly claimed credit for brokering an end to a recent four-day conflict between India and Pakistan - a claim India flatly denied, insisting no outside power played a role in the ceasefire.

The Trump administration has also been bullish in its demands from India in a prospective trade deal, seeking greater access to dairy and farming, sectors India has been keen to protect.

It remains to be seen if Gor's presence in India will help smooth out such bumps and strengthen Washington-Delhi ties, or if he is here to crack the whip on Trump's biddings.

Bill Drexel, a fellow at the Center for Strategy and American Statecraft at the Hudson Institute, says that because decision-making is largely driven by Trump, having an India envoy who's close to him could be a major asset to India-US ties.

"But there may be a steep learning curve given his [Gor's] limited diplomatic and regional experience," Mr Drexel says.

Ms Ayres echoes a similar view. She says that Gor's closeness with the president could help "break through" potential policy logjams.

Mr Haas, however, says that Gor's lack of diplomatic experience could pose a problem in an already strained relationship and that the US should have picked an envoy who could help improve the situation.

"Instead, I suspect that Delhi will interpret this appointment as a slap in the face and further evidence that Trump doesn't care about the relationship," he says.

Getty Images US President Donald Trump speaks with the press as he meets with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on February 13, 2025. Getty Images
India-US ties have become strained due to Trump's steep tariffs

Gor is said to get along not just with Trump but the entire Trump clan, including Ivanka Trump, Jared Kushner and Donald Trump Jr.

Kushner has called Gor "easygoing" and "trusted". Former congressman Matt Gaetz recalled his fun-loving side, noting he once DJed at MAGA parties in Palm Beach during Trump's exile. Western media, however, largely cast him as one of Trump's most reliable foot soldiers - someone who gets the job done.

Gor is known for vetting presidential appointees for loyalty to Trump. In June, Elon Musk branded him a "snake" after The New York Post reported that Gor had not filed the paperwork for his own permanent security clearance. The White House insisted Gor held an active clearance and is "fully compliant" with requirements.

Gor's origins are both unclear and interesting. Though he has been known to describe himself as being Maltese, he was born in 1986 in Uzbekistan when it was still a part of the Soviet Union. He reportedly spent much of his childhood in Malta before moving to the US at 12.

Gor is reported to have been interested in Republican politics from his school and college days, when he went by the name Gorokhovsky, which he later shortened to Gor.

In 2008, he became a junior staffer at the Republican National Committee and one of his jobs included wearing a squirrel costume at events to highlight Barack Obama's ties to an organisation Republicans accused of indulging in voter fraud.

After two years at Fox News, Gor worked with several Republican politicians before joining Trump's fundraising team in 2020.

A year later, he co-founded Winning Team Publishing with Donald Trump Jr., which has since released multiple Trump books, including the photobook Save America. Since 2022, he has owned a house in Florida, a short drive from Mar-a-Lago, where he is a frequent visitor.

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Arrest after fatal shooting of Ukrainian politician Andriy Parubiy

Getty Images Andriy Parubiy pictured speaking in the Ukrainian parliament.Getty Images
Andriy Parubiy was shot dead in the street on Saturday, sparking a police manhunt

A suspect in the fatal shooting of prominent Ukrainian politician Andriy Parubiy has been apprehended, the country's President Volodymyr Zelensky has said.

The 54-year-old parliamentarian was killed by an assailant posing as a courier in the western city of Lviv on Saturday, sparking a manhunt.

Ukraine's interior minister Igor Klymenko said in a statement issued in the early hours of Monday morning that the suspect had been detained in the western Khmelnytskyi region.

Parubiy rose to prominence during Ukraine's Euromaidan mass protests, which advocated closer ties with the EU and brought down pro-Russian former President Viktor Yanukovych in 2014.

Klymenko said the preliminary investigation had found the killing had been "carefully prepared" with Parubiy's travel schedule and route mapped out, as well as an escape plan.

He added that Ukraine's national police force would provide further details later.

Unverified footage, purportedly of the shooting, appeared to show a gunman dressed as a courier approaching Parubiy on the street and holding up a weapon as he walked behind him.

At a news briefing on Saturday, Lviv police chief Oleksandr Shliakhovskyi said the gunman had "fired about eight shots from a firearm".

Sources inside Ukraine's law enforcement agencies told the BBC that the attacker had dressed to look like a courier for delivery company Glovo. The company said it was "deeply shocked" by the crime.

Parubiy, a member of the current Ukrainian parliament, had played a pivotal role in the Euromaidan movement, organising its "self-defence" teams who guarded the sprawling tent camp in the heart of the capital Kyiv during the protest.

Sergio Gor: Trump's 'great friend' and the new India envoy

Getty Images Assistant to the President Sergio Gor (R), accompanied by Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) (L), waits before U.S. President Donald Trump arrives for an event at the Kennedy Center on August 13, 2025 in Washington, DC. Trump announced the first nominees of the annual Kennedy Center Honors since taking control of the center's board earlier this year. Getty Images
Sergio Gor shares a close relationship with US President Donald Trump and his family

He's published books authored by Donald Trump, raised millions for his 2024 campaign, and helped him staff Washington with loyalists during the US president's second term.

Now Sergio Gor is set to become Trump's man in India, while also overseeing US relations with other South and Central Asian countries.

Last week, Trump announced that he was promoting Gor, his personnel chief, to be the next US Ambassador to India. He called Gor a "great friend" and someone he could "fully trust" to deliver on the agenda.

The 38-year-old's appointment comes at a time when relations between the two countries have become strained due to Trump's punishing tariffs on India.

Gor's appointment has evoked mixed reactions in India, with some observers saying that having a close Trump aide in the post is a positive sign for India-US ties. But others have questioned Trump's decision to share his India envoy with South and Central Asian countries, which includes Pakistan, with whom India shares a tense relationship.

Getty Images WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 19: (L-R) Donald Trump Jr., Bettina Anderson, U.S. Vice President-elect JD Vance, and Sergio Gor dance on stage as The Village People perform YMCA during the Turning Point USA Inaugural-Eve Ball at the Salamander Hotel on January 19, 2025 in Washington, DC. Donald Trump will be sworn in as the 47th U.S. president on January 20. Getty Images
Left to right: Jared Kushner, JD Vance and Sergio Gor celebrate Trump's Presidential win

Experts say that Gor's broad regional mandate threatens to expose India to an overreach by Washington in its affairs with Pakistan, including on the Kashmir issue - a red line for India.

"The special envoy's additional designation will likely create some challenges, at least in India. India typically prefers not to be "hyphenated" with Pakistan," says Alyssa Ayres from the Council of Foreign Relations, an American think-tank focussed on US foreign policy.

Lawrence Haas, a former senior White House official and senior fellow at the American Foreign Policy Council, says that it could also be Trump's way of signalling to Delhi that he doesn't think the role of ambassador to India needs to be a full-time job.

"I imagine that India's leaders will feel slighted and insulted, which will further strain US-India relations," Mr Haas told the BBC.

India found itself in a similar situation in 2009, when the Obama administration reportedly considered appointing Richard Holbrooke as special envoy to Pakistan, Afghanistan and India.

Delhi reportedly lobbied against the move, leading to Holbrooke being appointed envoy to Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Trump, however, is no Obama.

Unlike his predecessor's caution, Trump openly claimed credit for brokering an end to a recent four-day conflict between India and Pakistan - a claim India flatly denied, insisting no outside power played a role in the ceasefire.

The Trump administration has also been bullish in its demands from India in a prospective trade deal, seeking greater access to dairy and farming, sectors India has been keen to protect.

It remains to be seen if Gor's presence in India will help smooth out such bumps and strengthen Washington-Delhi ties, or if he is here to crack the whip on Trump's biddings.

Bill Drexel, a fellow at the Center for Strategy and American Statecraft at the Hudson Institute, says that because decision-making is largely driven by Trump, having an India envoy who's close to him could be a major asset to India-US ties.

"But there may be a steep learning curve given his [Gor's] limited diplomatic and regional experience," Mr Drexel says.

Ms Ayres echoes a similar view. She says that Gor's closeness with the president could help "break through" potential policy logjams.

Mr Haas, however, says that Gor's lack of diplomatic experience could pose a problem in an already strained relationship and that the US should have picked an envoy who could help improve the situation.

"Instead, I suspect that Delhi will interpret this appointment as a slap in the face and further evidence that Trump doesn't care about the relationship," he says.

Getty Images US President Donald Trump speaks with the press as he meets with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on February 13, 2025. Getty Images
India-US ties have become strained due to Trump's steep tariffs

Gor is said to get along not just with Trump but the entire Trump clan, including Ivanka Trump, Jared Kushner and Donald Trump Jr.

Kushner has called Gor "easygoing" and "trusted". Former congressman Matt Gaetz recalled his fun-loving side, noting he once DJed at MAGA parties in Palm Beach during Trump's exile. Western media, however, largely cast him as one of Trump's most reliable foot soldiers - someone who gets the job done.

Gor is known for vetting presidential appointees for loyalty to Trump. In June, Elon Musk branded him a "snake" after The New York Post reported that Gor had not filed the paperwork for his own permanent security clearance. The White House insisted Gor held an active clearance and is "fully compliant" with requirements.

Gor's origins are both unclear and interesting. Though he has been known to describe himself as being Maltese, he was born in 1986 in Uzbekistan when it was still a part of the Soviet Union. He reportedly spent much of his childhood in Malta before moving to the US at 12.

Gor is reported to have been interested in Republican politics from his school and college days, when he went by the name Gorokhovsky, which he later shortened to Gor.

In 2008, he became a junior staffer at the Republican National Committee and one of his jobs included wearing a squirrel costume at events to highlight Barack Obama's ties to an organisation Republicans accused of indulging in voter fraud.

After two years at Fox News, Gor worked with several Republican politicians before joining Trump's fundraising team in 2020.

A year later, he co-founded Winning Team Publishing with Donald Trump Jr., which has since released multiple Trump books, including the photobook Save America. Since 2022, he has owned a house in Florida, a short drive from Mar-a-Lago, where he is a frequent visitor.

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Enforcing Australia's social media ban on kids is possible but contains risks, report says

Getty Images A girl wearing a pink striped top and jeans sits on the floor, looking at her phone which is plugged into the wall behind herGetty Images
Australia's landmark ban takes effect from December

Australia could use a range of technologies to implement its social media ban for under-16s but all have risks or shortcomings, a report has found.

The government says its ban, which comes into effect in December, is designed to limit the harmful impacts of social media. The policy has been touted as a world-first and is being watched closely by leaders globally.

Under the new laws, platforms must take "reasonable steps" to prevent Australian children from creating accounts on their sites, and deactivate existing ones.

Though the move is popular with many parents, experts have raised concerns over data privacy and the accuracy of age verification technology.

The federal government commissioned the UK-based Age Check Certification Scheme to test the ways Australia could enforce the ban, and its final report was published on Sunday.

It looked at a variety of methods - including formal verification using government documents, parental approval, or technologies to determine age based on facial structure, gestures, or behaviours - and found all were technically possible.

"But we did not find a single ubiquitous solution that would suit all use cases, nor did we find solutions that were guaranteed to be effective in all deployments," it said.

Verification using identity documents was cited as the most accurate method, but the report identified concerns that platforms may keep this data longer than required and was anticipating sharing it with regulators, both of which would leave users' privacy at risk.

Australia - like much of the world - has in recent years seen a series of high-profile data breaches, including several where sensitive personal information was stolen and sold or published.

Facial assessment technology was 92% accurate for people aged 18 or over, but there is a "buffer zone" - about two to three years either side of 16 - in which is it is less accurate. The report said this would lead to false positives, clearing children for accounts, and false negatives, barring users who should be allowed.

There are also privacy and accuracy concerns with parental approval methods, it said.

It recommended that the methods should be "layered" to create the most robust system, and highlighted that many of the technology providers were looking at ways to address circumvention, through things like document forgeries and VPNs (virtual private networks) which obscure the user's country.

Communications Minister Anika Wells said there was "no one-size-fits-all solution", that the report showed age checks could be "private, efficient and effective".

"These are some of the world's richest companies. They are at the forefront of AI. They use the data that we give them for a bevy of commercial purposes. I think it is reasonable to ask them to use that same data and tech to keep kids safe online," she told reporters on Monday.

"There is no excuse for social media platforms not to have a combination of age assurance methods in their platforms ready for 10 December."

Under the ban, tech companies can fined up to A$50m ($32.5m; £25.7m) if they do not take "reasonable steps" to bar those aged under 16 from holding accounts. These steps are still to be defined.

Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and YouTube are among the platforms affected.

Polling indicates most Australian adults support banning social media for children under 16.

However some mental health advocates say the policy has the potential to cut kids off from connection, and others say it could push children under 16 to even-less-regulated corners of the internet.

They suggest the government should instead focus on better policing of harmful content on social media platforms and preparing children for the reality of life on the web.

Judge blocks Trump administration move to deport Guatemalan children

Getty Images A plan with US Air Force on the sideGetty Images
Officials undertaking deportation operations in Texas earlier this year

A US judge has temporarily blocked an attempt by the Trump administration to deport dozens of unaccompanied Guatemalan children back to their home country.

District Court Judge Sparkle Sooknanan's order on Sunday was in response to reports children had been put onto planes and were about to be sent to Guatemala, where lawyers argued they would be at risk of abuse and persecution.

The children arrived in the US alone and are in government custody while their immigration claims are assessed.

Lawyers for the US justice department said the children were not being deported, but rather repatriated so they could be reunited with family.

The legal proceedings were sparked early on Sunday when immigrant advocacy groups asked for an emergency injunction, claiming around 600 children could be put on planes in Texas and deported.

Judge Sooknanan then issued a temporary restraining order barring officials from sending a group of 10 migrant children between the ages of 10 and 17 to Guatemala.

At a hastily arranged hearing on Sunday afternoon, Judge Sooknanan, who was nominated by former President Joe Biden, expanded the order to cover all unaccompanied children said to be at risk of deportation. The order will be in place for 14 days.

At the hearing, Judge Sooknanan sought assurances from Trump administration lawyers that planes had not already departed with the children on board.

Deputy Assistant Attorney General Drew Ensign said all planes were "on the ground" in the US. He told the judge one plane may have taken off but had returned.

Ensign said the flights were not part of a deportation effort but for family reunifications with parents and other relatives in Guatemala.

He also said the Guatemalan government and the children's relatives had requested the reunifications. Advocacy groups said that was untrue in at least some cases.

In court filings, lawyers for the children argued the action was in violation of federal laws designed to protect children who arrive in the US alone. They said some of the children had pending cases before immigration judges and expressed credible fears about being returned.

"In the dead of night on a holiday weekend, the Trump administration ripped vulnerable, frightened children from their beds and attempted to return them to danger in Guatemala," Efrén C Olivares of the National Immigration Law Center, which filed the suit, said in a statement.

"We are heartened the court prevented this injustice from occurring before hundreds of children suffered irreparable harm."

White House immigration advisor Stephen Miller criticised the judge for blocking the flights.

"The minors have all self-reported that their parents are back home in Guatemala," he wrote on X. "But a Democrat judge is refusing to let them reunify with their parents."

Since the start of his second term, Trump has embarked on sweeping efforts to remove undocumented migrants - a key election promise that drew mass support during this campaign.

In June, the US Supreme Court cleared the way for Trump to resume deportations of migrants to countries other than their homeland without giving them the chance to raise the risks they might face.

Man arrested after crashing car into Russian consulate in Australia

Getty Images A tall brick building with lots of windowsGetty Images
A police operation has unfolded at the Russian consulate in Sydney

A man has been arrested after driving a car through the gates of the Russian consulate in Sydney.

Police were called to the consulate in the suburb of Woollahra around 08:00 local time, following reports that an unauthorised vehicle was parked in the driveway.

They attempted to speak to the driver, before he allegedly crashed through the gates at the property's entrance.

The 39-year-old was arrested at the scene and is assisting police with their inquiries, police said. One officer suffered an injury to his hand, but there were no other reports of injuries.

Police have revealed no further information about the driver or their motivation, but say inquires are ongoing.

A witness told the Sydney Morning Herald that the man was arrested without an apparent struggle.

"I just saw the policemen draw their guns at the gentleman, asking the gentleman to come out of his car," a neighbour, who wished to remain anonymous, told the newspaper.

Former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani injured in car accident

Reuters Rudy Guiliani wears a blue suit and glassesReuters

Former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani has been injured in a car accident in the US state of New Hampshire, his security guard has said.

Giuliani's car was struck from behind at high speed while travelling on a highway, according to a statement posted on social media.

"He was diagnosed with a fractured thoracic vertebrae, multiple lacerations and contusions, as well as injuries to his left arm and lower leg," the statement from security guard Michael Ragusa says.

Giuliani, 81, became known as "America's Mayor" after leading New York through 9/11. He later became an adviser and then personal lawyer to Donald Trump, though the two have since parted ways.

Giuliani was taken to a nearby hospital for treatment, Mr Ragusa said.

The incident happened shortly after Giuliani had helped an alleged victim of domestic violence who had flagged him down on a road, his statement added.

"Mayor Giuliani immediately rendered assistance and contacted 911."

The BBC has approached local police for comment.

The thoracic vertebrae form the middle section of the spine, while lascerations and contusions are deep cuts and bruises, respectively.

First elected New York City mayor in 1993, Giuliani was in charge at the time of the 11 September attack on the World Trade Center in 2001.

In 2008, he made an unsuccessful run for US president, and later became one of Trump's adviser during the latter's 2016 campaign. He joined Trump's personal legal team in 2018 and remained a part of it through to the 2020 election.

In the aftermath of Joe Biden's 2020 election victory over Trump, Giuliani spread baseless claims the election was stolen.

Earlier this year, he reached a tentative settlement with two former election workers who won $148m (£120m) in damages after they successfully sued him for defamation over false election fraud claims.

Rudy Giuliani injured in car accident, security guard says

Reuters Rudy Guiliani wears a blue suit and glassesReuters

Former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani has been injured in a car accident in the US state of New Hampshire, his security guard has said.

Giuliani's car was struck from behind at high speed while travelling on a highway, according to a statement posted on social media.

"He was diagnosed with a fractured thoracic vertebrae, multiple lacerations and contusions, as well as injuries to his left arm and lower leg," the statement from security guard Michael Ragusa says.

Giuliani, 81, became known as "America's Mayor" after leading New York through 9/11. He later became an adviser and then personal lawyer to Donald Trump, though the two have since parted ways.

Giuliani was taken to a nearby hospital for treatment, Mr Ragusa said.

The incident happened shortly after Giuliani had helped an alleged victim of domestic violence who had flagged him down on a road, his statement added.

"Mayor Giuliani immediately rendered assistance and contacted 911."

The BBC has approached local police for comment.

The thoracic vertebrae form the middle section of the spine, while lascerations and contusions are deep cuts and bruises, respectively.

First elected New York City mayor in 1993, Giuliani was in charge at the time of the 11 September attack on the World Trade Center in 2001.

In 2008, he made an unsuccessful run for US president, and later became one of Trump's adviser during the latter's 2016 campaign. He joined Trump's personal legal team in 2018 and remained a part of it through to the 2020 election.

In the aftermath of Joe Biden's 2020 election victory over Trump, Giuliani spread baseless claims the election was stolen.

Earlier this year, he reached a tentative settlement with two former election workers who won $148m (£120m) in damages after they successfully sued him for defamation over false election fraud claims.

UK closes embassy in Cairo amid row over activist's arrest

EPA/Shutterstock A man in a black suit and blue spotted tie stands in front of a cream wall next to the Egyptian flag, with microphones from a podium in front of him.EPA/Shutterstock
Egyptian Minister of Foreign Affairs Badr Abdelatty has reportedly raised cases of arrests outside Egypt's embassy in London with the UK

The British embassy in Cairo has been closed temporarily after security barriers were removed from outside the building.

Barriers in the city's Garden City district "were removed by the Egyptian authorities" on Sunday, the Foreign Office said in a statement.

The embassy remains operational but "the main embassy building will be closed while the impact of these changes is reviewed", it added.

The decision follows growing calls in the country for a retaliatory response to the UK's handling of protests outside Egypt's embassy in London, reports say.

Last week a prominent pro-Egyptian government activist was arrested in London, and later released, after apparently confronting protesters outside Egypt's embassy, Daily News Egypt reported.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty reportedly called British National Security Adviser Jonathan Powell last week to ask for an explanation for the arrest.

Abdelatty has previously said Egypt has the "right to respond and reciprocity" against countries that "failed to provide protection for Egyptian embassies in accordance with the Vienna Convention".

The arrest also sparked a row in Egypt, with some political figures urging Egyptian authorities to remove barriers from Britain's embassy in Cairo.

BBC News understands the UK government is continuing to engage with Egyptian counterparts over the security of the embassy in Cairo and the safety of staff.

The Foreign Office has provided phone numbers on the Egypt travel advice tab of its website for those in need of consular assistance. The page does not advise against travel to Cairo, but does advise against travel to certain parts of Egypt.

Large barriers have been installed around the UK and US embassies in Cairo for decades, which critics in Egypt say have disrupted traffic on streets in the area.

The British embassy in Cairo previously closed temporarily in 2013 and 2014 in relation to separate security concerns.

'I fear for my sons': Mother awaits DNA results on remains linked to Kenya's starvation cult

Carolyne Odour Carolyne Odour's sons - 12-year-old Daniel on the right in a yellow T-shirt and on the left, nine-year-old Elijah. They are standing outside in front of a window with a white curtain drawn.Carolyne Odour
Elijah, aged nine, and Daniel, aged 12, went missing after leaving on a bus on 28 June

Carolyne Odour has told the BBC she desperately fears for fate of her two young sons who went missing two months ago with their father - a follower of the teachings of a notorious starvation cult leader.

Ms Odour says that amid an ongoing investigation into more deaths linked to the cult she has identified her husband's body at a mortuary in the coastal town of Malindi.

His corpse was found in July in the village of Kwa Binzaro, inland from Malindi and near the remote Shakahola Forest, where more than 400 bodies were found in 2023 in one of the worst ever cases of cult-related mass deaths.

Ms Odour is now awaiting the results of DNA tests being carried out on more than 30 recently unearthed bodies.

"I felt pain. I barely recognised him. His body was badly decomposing," Ms Odour, 40, said about her husband Samuel Owino Owoyo.

She believes her sons, 12-year-old Daniel and nine-year-old Elijah, travelled with their 45-year-old father to Kwa Binzaro at the end of June.

Self-proclaimed pastor Paul Mackenzie is currently on trial over the so-called "Shakahola Forest Massacre" - and has pleaded not guilty to manslaughter.

He is alleged to have told his followers they would get to heaven more quickly if they stopped eating - and there have been concerns he has been in touch with his followers from jail.

Ms Odour says her husband started listening to the teachings of Mr Mackenzie four or five years ago.

"He changed and he didn't want the kids to go to school," she said. "When the kids would fall ill he'd say that God would heal them. He really believed those teachings."

Carolyne Odour in a blue and white horizontal striped T-shirt standing outside a wooden plank house.
Carolyne Odour's concerns grew when she realised her husband had not gone to his home village but to the coastal area where the Shakahola Forest is located

His change in opinion on formal education and medical interventions caused friction between the couple, who had six children together at their home in Mudulusia in Busia county, western Kenya, near Lake Victoria.

"The teachings didn't make sense to me," Ms Odour said. "When a child is sick, yes I believe God can heal them, but I also know that when a child is sick you take them to hospital."

Two months ago on 28 June, the situation took a turn for the worse when her husband went off with their two youngest sons.

"He told me he was going to his home village [of birth]," Ms Odour said. "The last phone call we had he told me, 'We have gone, God be with you.' And I told him, 'Have a safe trip.'"

But Ms Odour started to get suspicious when he did not contact her again.

She later found he had not gone to his parents' village in Homa Bay county, which is also near Lake Victoria, around 200km (125 miles) south of Mudulusia.

Retracing his steps, she discovered that he had taken a bus from their home in Busia county and travelled with the boys more than 900km east to Kwa Binzaro in Kenya's Kilifi county.

She informed the police and urgently put out word through various networks in an attempt to find them.

A few weeks ago she got a call saying someone who matched her husband's description was in the Malindi mortuary.

It was a devastating blow.

Ms Odour travelled to coastal area on 19 August to confirm her husband's death for herself.

She was told his body had been found in Kwa Binzaro village on 19 July during a police raid organised because of reports of suspicious disappearances.

Police said he had been discovered in bushes near a house suspected to be linked to the starvation cult and appeared to have died by strangulation.

It is alleged that some victims of the massacre were strangled if they took too long to starve to death.

Following an investigation by Kenya's Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions, 11 people were arrested in connection with the case, including three who were followers of Mr Mackenzie.

A search for more bodies began on 21 August. So far, 32 bodies have been exhumed and more than 70 body parts found scattered in the forest.

For Ms Odour, it has been a horrifying process to witness.

"You see bodies being exhumed, and you don't even know the condition of your own children," she said. "It's very painful."

A photograph of a snapshot of Samuel Owino Owoyo. He looks serious in a dark suit jacket, white shirt and spotted tie.
Samuel Samuel Owino Owoyo is said by his wife to have become fascinated by Paul Mackenzie's ideas several years ago

Dr Raymond Omollo, a senior civil servant in the Ministry of Interior, told the BBC that the government intended to introduce tougher laws to tackle religious extremism and radicalisation in the country.

"We are working on a bill, the religious bill, to be able to at least have certain parameters for a religious organisation - does it have a constitution? Who are the leaders? What kind of qualifications do they have?" he said.

He believes this will help ensure such groups are more responsible.

The exhumations near Kwa Binzaro have been temporarily suspended as homicide and forensic experts prepare to examine the remains found so far.

For residents in the area, the most recent investigation has not only shocked them but made life difficult as the forest is a vital resource for them.

"We depend on the forest for firewood and charcoal," George Konde, from Kwa Binzaro, told the BBC. "Now because of what happened there were not allowed to go in. They need to comb the whole forest and put a stop to these cults once and for all."

Ms Odour continues her agonising wait to learn the whereabouts of her two sons.

"I was looking forward to one of my sons going to grade 7 and the other grade 4," she said. "Every time I see a child wearing uniform I feel pain because of their absence. I don't know how they are doing."

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Head-on crash between police van and prison bus kills 16 in Namibia

LightRocket/Getty Images Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah with head bowed wearing a purple outfit against a green background.LightRocket/Getty Images
The president expressed her condolences to the families and colleagues of those who had died

A head-on collision in Namibia involving vehicles belonging to the security services killed 14 people, including 11 members of the prison service, a police officer and two civilians.

The accident took place 270km (167 miles) south of the capital, Windhoek, outside the town of Mariental on Saturday.

"No words can truly capture the depth of this loss," President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah wrote on social media, praising "the souls of our fallen officers".

Namibia has one of the highest road traffic fatality rates in the world.

Home Affairs Minister Lucia Iipumbu also passed on her condolences and thanked those who attended the scene of the accident and the medical teams at Mariental State Hospital.

She asked that photos from the scene not be shared.

"The ministry further strongly appeals to members of the public to refrain from circulating distressing and sensitive images and videos taken from the accident scene, out of respect for the deceased, the injured and their families," she is quoted by the Namibian newspaper as saying.

She explained that 19 people in total were travelling in the two vehicles.

The police van was carrying six passengers - five officers and a civilian - and the Namibian Correctional Service had 13 people on board.

President Nandi-Ndaitwah said three other prison officers remained critically injured.

"We wish them strength and a full recovery," she said.

Namibia's Motor Vehicle Accident Fund urged families affected to get in contact.

The government-sponsored vehicle insurance scheme, funded by a fuel levy, helps road injury victims to get access to health care, rehabilitation and social support.

Its CEO, Rosalia Martins-Hausiku, said the fund would assist with burials and medical care, talk radio station Eagle FM reported.

Road traffic crashes are a serious public health issue in Namibia, even though its population is relatively low - estimated at three million.

A comparison of the statistics from 2021 shows that Namibia had 22 road traffic fatalities per 100,000 compared to 2.3 per 100,000 in the UK that year.

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Hamas spokesman Abu Obeida killed in Gaza, Israel says

Getty Images Abu Obeida speaks behind a number of microphones with logos of world media while wearing a scarf over his face, flanked by two Hamas fighters.Getty Images
Abu Obeida (pictured in 2019) often delivered long diatribes against Israel, always masked in a Palestinian scarf

Abu Obeida, the spokesman for Hamas's armed wing, has been killed in an air strike in Gaza City, Israel has said.

Israel's Defence Minister Israel Katz congratulated the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and Israel's security agency, Shin Bet, for the "flawless execution" in a post on X.

He gave no detail on the time or location of the operation, but the IDF earlier said its aircraft attacked "a key terrorist" in the al-Rimal neighbourhood on Saturday, prompting reports in Israeli media that Obeida had been the target.

Hamas has not confirmed his death. The Palestinian armed group earlier said dozens of civilians were killed and injured in Israeli strikes on a residential building in the district.

Katz warned on Sunday that many more of Obeida's "criminal partners" would be targeted with "the intensification of the campaign in Gaza" - a reference to a recently approved Israeli plan to seize control of Gaza City.

Separately, the IDF and Shin Bet offered more details about Saturday's strikes that targeted the Hamas spokesman.

They said in a joint statement that the operation had been "made possible due to prior intelligence gathered by [Shin Bet] and the IDF's Intelligence Directorate" that had identified his hiding place.

Five missiles struck the second and third floor of the six-storey apartment building simultaneously from two different directions.

The targeted flat had been used as a dentist's surgery. Witnesses reported hundreds of thousands of dollars flying into the air because of the strike, with large sums stolen and later recovered by Hamas members.

Obeida was among the few remaining senior members of Hamas's military wing from before its deadly 7 October 2023 attack on southern Israel.

The joint statement said Obeida "served as the public face of the Hamas terrorist organization" and "disseminated Hamas' propaganda".

Over the past few years, Obeida - believed to be about 40 years old - delivered a number of long diatribes against Israel on behalf of Hamas's military wing, the al-Qassam Brigades.

Always masked in a Palestinian scarf, he became an idol to Hamas supporters throughout the Middle East.

In what may have been his final speech on Friday, Obeida said the fate of remaining Israeli hostages would be the same as that of Hamas fighters, warning Israel against its planned invasion of Gaza City.

EPA Palestinians flee as smoke is seen billowing over Gaza City following an Israeli air strike. Photo: 30 August 2025EPA
Palestinians flee as smoke is seen billowing over Gaza City following an Israeli air strike on Saturday

On Saturday, Hamas accused the IDF of hitting a residential building in the densely populated al-Rimal neighbourhood of Gaza City.

Local journalists reported that at least seven people had been killed and 20 injured in the strikes, with children among the casualties.

The IDF said that prior to the attack "many steps were taken to reduce the chance of harming civilians, including the use of precision weapons, aerial observations, and additional intelligence information".

BBC News has been unable to independently verify the claims of either the IDF or Hamas.

In early August, Israel's security cabinet approved a plan to seize control of Gaza City in a fresh offensive, with the stated aim of bringing the 22-month-long war to an end.

The UN has repeatedly warned that a complete military takeover would risk "catastrophic consequences" for Palestinian civilians and Israeli hostages held in Gaza. The UK's ambassador to Israel has said it would be "a huge mistake".

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to defeat Hamas and defied international criticism of his plans to expand the war.

Israel's military operation in Gaza began in response to the Hamas-led 7 October attack, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage. Since then, more than 63,000 Palestinians have been killed, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry.

While the operation to capture Gaza City has yet to begin in earnest, Israeli attacks on the city - where nearly a million people live - have been ongoing.

The Israeli military has said it plans to evacuate Gaza City's entire population and move it to shelters in the south before troops move in. Most of Gaza's population has already been displaced many times during the conflict.

More than 90% of the city's homes are estimated to be damaged or destroyed, and the healthcare, water, sanitation and hygiene systems have collapsed.

Last week, conditions of famine were confirmed in Gaza City and its surrounding areas for the first time.

US Open star gives boy cap after viral snatching video

EPA Kamil Majchrza focuses on the tennis ball which is slightly blurred in the image as he is about to hit it with his racket.EPA
Polish tennis player Kamil Majchrzak shared Instagram stories on Saturday showing him meeting with two young boys

Polish tennis player Kamil Majchrzak has met a young fan after a video appearing to show a man snatching his hat from a boy in the crowd at the US Open went viral.

Majchrzak shared two clips on his official Instagram account in which he shook hands with two boys and presented them with gifts - including a cap similar to one handed to the boy and then swiftly taken off him in the clip.

"Today after warm up, I had a nice meeting," the tennis pro wrote, adding: "Do you recognise [the cap]?"

The viral video, widely reported to be from Majchrzak's match on Thursday, showed the tennis player interacting with fans before offering a child the cap he had been wearing.

A man next to the child can then be seen taking the cap before the child had a chance to grab it himself. The boy can then be seen pleading to get it back.

Versions of the clip were subsequently shared on social media, with many users criticising the man - who multiple media outlets have since named as Piotr Szczerek, a Polish CEO of a paving company.

BBC News has approached Mr Szczerek through his company for comment.

Majchrzak also posted an image of him standing and smiling next to the boy wearing the cap.

"Hello World, together with Brock we wish you a great day!" the tennis player's caption said.

Majchrzak, 29, is ranked 76th in the world in men's singles.

He won Thursday's match at Flushing Meadows, New York against Russian player Karen Khachanov, ranked ninth in the world, but retired from a later match - saying he had torn an intercostal muscle.

Indonesian politicians to have perks cut in bid to quell unrest

Getty Images Protesters clash with police who hold up riot shields during a protest in front of a police station in Denpasar, Bali, IndonesiaGetty Images

Indonesian political parties have agreed to reverse some state-funded perks their politicians receive in a bid to quell nationwide protests, the country's president has said.

Several cities in the southern Asian nation including the capital, Jakarta, have been gripped by anti-government demonstrations in the past week that have at times led to clashes between protesters and police.

While the protests have been fuelled by a wide range of issues - including the death of a ride-sharing driver - one core complaint concerns a new monthly allowance for lawmakers.

President Prabowo Subianto announced on Sunday that several perks would be reigned in, including the size of some allowances.

The Indonesian leader - who has already had to cancel a trip to China over the unrest - said some demonstrations had gone beyond what was considered peaceful and may amount to "treason and terrorism".

He added that he had ordered the police and armed forces to take strong action against looting and property damage.

The home of Indonesia's finance minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati was among several targeted by looters on Sunday, news agency AFP reports.

The protests have primarily centred on an increase of 50 million rupiah ($3,030; £2,250) in parliamentarians' allowances - almost 10 times the minimum wage in Jakarta.

But they escalated after Affan Kurniawan, a 21-year-old ride-sharing driver, was run over by a police vehicle during a demonstration in the capital on Thursday.

Three people were killed after protesters set fire to a regional parliament building on Friday evening.

Over the weekend, protests continued, with police in central Jakarta firing tear gas to disperse crowds on the streets, while some demonstrators throwing Molotov cocktails and firecrackers at a police compound.

Reuters A file photo of Indonesian President Prabowo SubiantoReuters
President Prabowo Subianto said some demonstrations may have amounted to "treason and terrorism"

Prabowo did not specify which lawmakers would have their allowances curtailed, but said a moratorium on overseas trips would also be imposed.

However, the concessions to the protesters may not quell the widespread dissent.

Muzammil Ihsan, head of the All Indonesian Students' Executives Body, the country's largest student group, told Reuters that the move was "not enough" and that further demonstrations were being considered.

"The government must resolve deep-rooted problems," he said. "The anger on the streets is not without cause."

Protesters have demanded higher wages, lower taxes, stronger anti-corruption measures, and have expressed objections to the heavy-handed way police have responded to some of the demonstrations.

Tennis star meets fan after US Open hat snatching viral video

EPA Kamil Majchrza focuses on the tennis ball which is slightly blurred in the image as he is about to hit it with his racket.EPA
Polish tennis player Kamil Majchrzak shared Instagram stories on Saturday showing him meeting with two young boys

Polish tennis player Kamil Majchrzak has met a young fan after a video appearing to show a man snatching his hat from a boy in the crowd at the US Open went viral.

Majchrzak shared two clips on his official Instagram account in which he shook hands with two boys and presented them with gifts - including a cap similar to one handed to the boy and then swiftly taken off him in the clip.

"Today after warm up, I had a nice meeting," the tennis pro wrote, adding: "Do you recognise [the cap]?"

The viral video, widely reported to be from Majchrzak's match on Thursday, showed the tennis player interacting with fans before offering a child the cap he had been wearing.

A man next to the child can then be seen taking the cap before the child had a chance to grab it himself. The boy can then be seen pleading to get it back.

Versions of the clip were subsequently shared on social media, with many users criticising the man - who multiple media outlets have since named as Piotr Szczerek, a Polish CEO of a paving company.

BBC News has approached Mr Szczerek through his company for comment.

Majchrzak also posted an image of him standing and smiling next to the boy wearing the cap.

"Hello World, together with Brock we wish you a great day!" the tennis player's caption said.

Majchrzak, 29, is ranked 76th in the world in men's singles.

He won Thursday's match at Flushing Meadows, New York against Russian player Karen Khachanov, ranked ninth in the world, but retired from a later match - saying he had torn an intercostal muscle.

Australian state to ban iconic fish-shaped soy sauce bottles

Getty Images A close-view of hands holding several fish-shaped soy sauce dispensers with a green cap. Getty Images

An Australian state will ban fish-shaped soy sauce containers, under a wider ban on single-use plastics.

The iconic containers have become a staple in many Asian restaurants and takeaways around the world.

"Each fish-shaped container is used for just seconds, yet remains in the environment for decades or centuries if littered," Environment Minister and Deputy Premier for South Australia, Susan Close, said earlier this month.

From 1 September, shops and business in South Australia will no longer be able to sell or distribute pre-filled 30ml soy sauce containers that have a lid, cap or stopper.

The move builds on previous environmental legislation from 2023 that banned supermarket carrier bags, plastic straws, drinks stirrers, cotton buds, and confetti, among other things.

The South Australia government says it implemented the policy to "reduce pollution, cut carbon emissions and protect marine life".

Although soy sauce containers are made of a recyclable plastic - polyethylene - their small size means they struggle to be processed by machines properly. This means they often don't get recycled.

Fish shaped soy sauce containers were invented in Japan in 1954 by Teruo Watanabe. They were first made of ceramic or glass before becoming plastic - and quickly became a popular way to squeeze soy sauce onto takeaway sushi.

People will still be able to have soy sauce with their sushi, as large soy sauce bottles and sachets haven't been affected.

Australian officials said without action the annual flow of plastic into the ocean will triple by 2040 to 29 million metric tonnes per year.

A global comparison of plastics waste management placed Australia 7th among 25 nations for its overall efforts to control plastic pollution.

Thousands attend Australia anti-immigration rallies

Getty Images Anti-immigration protesters hold flags and chant during speeches at Victoria Park on August 31, 2025 in Sydney, Australia.Getty Images

Thousands of Australians have turned out for anti-immigration rallies across the country that were condemned by the government as having far-right links and "spreading hate".

March for Australia rallies took place in Sydney, Melbourne and other major cities - and several clashes took place as marchers were met with counter demonstrations.

A number of opposition politicians joined the marches, including One Nation senator Pauline Hanson and federal MP Bob Katter.

Australia has faced a recent rise in right-wing extremism and made the Nazi salute punishable by a mandatory prison term earlier this year.

Up to 8,000 people assembled for the Sydney rally, according to ABC Australia. Police said hundreds of officers were deployed across the city but saw "no significant incidents".

In Melbourne, protesters clashed with attendees of a separate pro-Palestine rally. Among the speakers was Thomas Sewell, a known neo-Nazi who addressed crowds from the steps of Parliament House.

In Adelaide, police estimated that 15,000 people were present at both a rally and counter-demonstration, and said that crowds were "generally well-behaved", according to local media.

One demonstrator was seen with a placard expressing support for Dezi Freeman, a conspiracy theorist and self-described "sovereign citizen" who is accused shooting dead two police officers on his property earlier this week. A large-scale manhunt is now underway for Freeman, 56.

The marches were promoted by several opposition politicians, neo-Nazi figures, and some anti-lockdown campaigners that rose to prominence during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The March for Australia website says "Australia's unity and shared values have been eroded by policies and movements that divide us," adding that "mass migration has torn at the bonds that held our communities together".

The group also says it is also concerned about culture, wages, traffic, housing and water supply, environmental destruction, infrastructure, hospitals, crime and loss of community.

Earlier this week, the government said it stood against the rallies, warning "there is no place for any type of hate in Australia."

Home affairs minister, Tony Burke, said: "There is no place in our country for people who seek to divide and undermine our social cohesion.

"We stand with modern Australia against these rallies – nothing could be less Australian."

Dr Anne Aly, the minister for multicultural affairs, said: "We stand with all Australians, no matter where they were born, against those who seek to divide us and who seek to intimidate migrant communities. We will not be intimidated.

"This brand of far-right activism grounded in racism and ethnocentrism has no place in modern Australia."

Head-on crash between police van and prison bus kills 14 in Namibia

LightRocket/Getty Images Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah with head bowed wearing a purple outfit against a green background.LightRocket/Getty Images
The president expressed her condolences to the families and colleagues of those who had died

A head-on collision in Namibia involving vehicles belonging to the security services killed 14 people, including 11 members of the prison service, a police officer and two civilians.

The accident took place 270km (167 miles) south of the capital, Windhoek, outside the town of Mariental on Saturday.

"No words can truly capture the depth of this loss," President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah wrote on social media, praising "the souls of our fallen officers".

Namibia has one of the highest road traffic fatality rates in the world.

Home Affairs Minister Lucia Iipumbu also passed on her condolences and thanked those who attended the scene of the accident and the medical teams at Mariental State Hospital.

She asked that photos from the scene not be shared.

"The ministry further strongly appeals to members of the public to refrain from circulating distressing and sensitive images and videos taken from the accident scene, out of respect for the deceased, the injured and their families," she is quoted by the Namibian newspaper as saying.

She explained that 19 people in total were travelling in the two vehicles.

The police van was carrying six passengers - five officers and a civilian - and the Namibian Correctional Service had 13 people on board.

President Nandi-Ndaitwah said three other prison officers remained critically injured.

"We wish them strength and a full recovery," she said.

Namibia's Motor Vehicle Accident Fund urged families affected to get in contact.

The government-sponsored vehicle insurance scheme, funded by a fuel levy, helps road injury victims to get access to health care, rehabilitation and social support.

Its CEO, Rosalia Martins-Hausiku, said the fund would assist with burials and medical care, talk radio station Eagle FM reported.

Road traffic crashes are a serious public health issue in Namibia, even though its population is relatively low - estimated at three million.

A comparison of the statistics from 2021 shows that Namibia had 22 road traffic fatalities per 100,000 compared to 2.3 per 100,000 in the UK that year.

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China and India pledge to be 'partners not rivals'

Reuters Russian leader Vladimir Putin shakes hands with officials during a welcoming ceremony. A man wearing green military uniform and hat looks at him from the side. Putin is wearing a dark suit, with a dark tie and light blue shirt. Reuters

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Indian PM Narendra Modi have arrived in China to red carpet welcomes, joining more than 20 leaders at a regional security summit.

The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) in the port of Tianjin comes days before a major military parade in Beijing marking 80 years since the end of World War II.

Modi - visiting China for the first time in seven years - had talks with Xi ahead of the opening of the summit and said Delhi was keen to improve ties with its neighbour.

The gathering comes with steep US tariffs imposed on Indian goods as punishment for Delhi's continued purchase of Russian oil, and with Putin facing threats of sanctions over the war on Ukraine.

Modi told Xi that India pledged to take "forward our ties on the basis of mutual trust, dignity and sensitivity", according to a video Modi posted on X.

"The interests of 2.8 billion people of both countries are linked to our cooperation. This will also pave the way for the welfare of the entire humanity," Modi told Xi.

Reeling from Trump's tariffs, India and China seek a business reboot

There are 10 member states in the Beijing backed SCO - including Pakistan, Iran and Belarus - as well as 16 dialogue partners and observers.

The summit itself is largely symbolic but will allow leaders to air common grievances and shared interests – and this year the gathering will be overshadowed by trade wars with the US.

President Trump's decision to impose 50 per cent tariffs on India last week appears to have helped improve relations between New Delhi and Beijing, which had plummeted in 2020 over a deadly skirmish between border forces in the Himalayas.

The SCO organisation was created by China, Russia and four Central Asian countries in 2001 as a countermeasure to limit the influence of Western alliances such as Nato.

This year's gathering is the largest since the organisation was founded.

The meeting comes days before the massive military parade that will mark 80 years since the end of World War II.

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