Sudan's latest tragedy counts a village wiped out by a landslideNew Foto - Sudan's latest tragedy counts a village wiped out by a landslide

CAIRO (AP) — A devastatinglandslide that killed an estimated 1,000 peoplein Sudan's Darfur region struck as the northeastern African nationreels from a civil warthat pushed some of its parts into famine. The nation of over 50 million peoplehas a long history of conflicts, including the one that created South Sudan in 2011. It's also known for its seasonal flooding that kills hundreds of people every year. Climate change has made the rainfall and flooding more deadly and destructive in recent years. The landslide After days of heavy rainfall, a landslide on Sunday wiped out the village of Tarasin in the Marrah Mountains area, more than 900 kilometers (560 miles) west of the capital, Khartoum. At least 1,000 people were killed, and only one of the residents survived, according to the Sudan Liberation Movement-Army, a rebel group that controls the area. The group's spokesman Mohamed Abdel-Rahman al-Nair said search efforts were underway and that about 100 bodies were recovered as of Tuesday evening. The U.N. humanitarian coordinator in Sudan, Luca Renda, said "between 300-1,000 people may have lost their lives," citing local sources. Marrah Mountains, where the village is located, are hard to reach. The UNESCO World Heritage site is located in a volcanic area with a summit of 3,000 meters (9,840 feet). The landslide happened in the peak of Sudan's flooding season, which runs from July to October. Widespread damage have been reported in other areas in Sudan in recent weeks, including Sofia village in South Darfur province where 100 houses were destroyed also on Sunday, according to the International Organization for Migration. The civil war Sudan plunged into chaos when simmering tensions between the military and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces exploded into street fighting in April 2023 in the capital, Khartoum and elsewhere in the country. The war has turned into a regional proxy conflict in which each side is backed by foreign governments. Darfur, which has suffered from decades of conflict and witnessed the first genocide in the 21st century, was among the worst hit areas in the ongoing war. The front lines have shifted following the military's capture of Khartoum and its sister city of Omdurman, in a major setback to the paramilitaries.Most of the fightinghave occurred in Darfur and the south-central region of Kordofan. The war was marked by atrocities including mass killings and rapes, which the International Criminal Court says it is investigating as potential war crimes and crimes against humanity, especially in Darfur. The RSF was blamed for most of the atrocities, and the former Biden administration accused the militia of committing genocide. The military was also accused of violating international law. The RSF grew out of the notorious Janjaweed militias, which were accused of genocide in the 2000s Darfur conflict. Famine and disease The war has killed tens of thousands of peopleand forced 14 million others to flee, including over 4 million who crossed into neighboring countries, some of which have suffered from conflicts or economic crises. The war created the world's largest humanitarian crisis. It made Sudan one of four areas where famine was detected in the last 15 years, along with South Sudan, Somalia and the Gaza Strip. The five famine-stricken areas are in Darfur and Kordofan, and other areas are expected to join the fold, according to the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC). Many areas, including Marrah Mountains and other parts of Darfur and Kordofan, have been inaccessible due to clashes, blockade and looting. At least 25 million — half the country's population — have been facing acute hunger, including over 3.6 million children who are acutely malnourished, the U.N. says. There have also been deadly disease outbreaks, including cholera, malaria and dengue in the past two years. An ongoing cholera outbreak in Darfur killed about 400 people and sickened over 9,000, according to a local aid group. A March outbreak in the White Nile province killed about 100 people and sickened over 2,700 others, according to the Health Ministry.

Sudan's latest tragedy counts a village wiped out by a landslide

Sudan's latest tragedy counts a village wiped out by a landslide CAIRO (AP) — A devastatinglandslide that killed an estimated 1,000 peop...
UAE official warns West Bank settlement plans 'red line' for Abu DhabiNew Foto - UAE official warns West Bank settlement plans 'red line' for Abu Dhabi

DUBAI (Reuters) -The United Arab Emirates warned Israel on Wednesday that any annexation of the West Bank would constitute a red line for Abu Dhabi that would severely undermine the spirit of the Abraham Accords that normalised relations between the two countries. "From the very beginning, we viewed the Accords as a way to enable our continued support for the Palestinian people and their legitimate aspiration for an independent state," Lana Nusseibeh, Assistant Minister for Political Affairs and Envoy of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the UAE, told Reuters. "That was our position in 2020, and it remains our position today." The comments marked the UAE's strongest criticism of Israel's conduct since the start of the Gaza war in 2023. The Abraham Accords, signed during President Donald Trump's first term in office, saw the UAE, Bahrain and Morocco normalise diplomatic relations with Israel after U.S. mediation. ""We call on the Israeli government to suspend these plans. Extremists, of any kind, cannot be allowed to dictate the region's trajectory. Peace requires courage, persistence, and a refusal to let violence define our choices," said Nusseibeh. (Reporting by Maha El Dahan; Editing by Michael Georgy and Ros Russell)

UAE official warns West Bank settlement plans 'red line' for Abu Dhabi

UAE official warns West Bank settlement plans 'red line' for Abu Dhabi DUBAI (Reuters) -The United Arab Emirates warned Israel on We...
Bird, Fowles and Moore: The most dominant Hall of Fame class in women's basketball history?New Foto - Bird, Fowles and Moore: The most dominant Hall of Fame class in women's basketball history?

The trio of Sue Bird, Sylvia Fowles and Maya Moore will be the most dominant class of women's basketball players to ever enter the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame when they are enshrined this weekend. Count them up: 11 Olympic gold medals and 10 WNBA championships. Add their record-setting milestones, and this group has no equal. "I think that would be fair to say that they would have the title of best class ever," Minnesota coach Cheryl Reeve said. "They are each Hall of Famers and are terrific in their own right to the extent they impacted their sport." Their 11 Olympic gold medals are more than any other group ever to enter the Hall of Fame. They teamed up to help the U.S. win the 2012 and 2016 Games with Bird also winning golds in 2004, 2008 and 2020. Fowles played with Bird on the 2008 and 2020 teams. "Put us on a 3x3 team you'd have some problems, we'd be pretty good," Bird said laughing. "It is pretty special to go in with people who aren't just amazing players, having impact on and off the court, but these are players that I got to experience life with." Moore echoed her Olympic teammate's sentiments. "That's absolutely one of my highlights, going in with Syl and Sue," Moore said. "Just players that I had so many positive moments with, but also I know what it's like to grind things out with them as well. We've been battle-tested with each other as well." In the WNBA, the trio was part of 10 WNBA championships: Bird walked away with four in Seattle and Moore captured four in Minnesota. Fowles was a big part of Moore's last two with the Lynx. Bird's career spanned more than two decades as she played 19 seasons as an active player. The WNBA's career assist leader, the 5-foot-9 floor general also finished atop the career list in minutes played, games played and All-Star appearances. She helped the Storm win championships (2004, 2010, 2018, 2020) after being part of two NCAA titles at UConn. She recently became the firstWNBA player ever honored with a statueby her former team. "To be immortalized with the basketball greats, men and women is really exciting," said the 44-year-old Bird. "I don't think I started playing sports to get to this point, but also it's something you're aware of going through your career. You meet people who are introduced as Hall of Famer. Now to finally get to this point where it's happening, in a way that is permanent, with these names forever, is really special." Fowles finished her career as the WNBA's leading career rebounder before being passed by Tina Charles last season. The 6-foot-6 Fowles was an intimidating force and was a four-time Defensive Player of the Year in the league and earned WNBA Finals MVP honors twice in 2015 and 2017. That same year she also was the league's MVP. "Relentless," was how Fowles described her game. "I didn't talk a lot, but I knew how to get the job done, and it's not too many people who's going to stop me at doing that. So I can definitely say I want to be remembered as somebody who's just relentless." Moore remembers how great her teammate was on Minnesota and that Fowles, 39, never seemed to receive the recognition she deserved. "I want the greater community to be able to honor and to see Syl for who she is and to appreciate how easy she made hard things look," Moore said. "How long she played at a high level and how just ridiculously unstoppable she was." Moore, 36, left the game while she was on top, stepping away before the 2019 season. She packed quite a career into her eight seasons with the Lynx before walking away to focus on social justice issues and help overturn thewrongful convictionof her now-husband, Jonathan Irons. She helped the Lynx win four championships, earning a league MVP in 2014 and Finals MVP the season before. At 6-foot and blessed with great athletic ability, Moore was a matchup nightmare. She was first-team all-WNBA for five straight seasons and also is one of two players ever to earn AP All-America honors four times. Like Bird, Moore won two titles in college at UConn before heading to the WNBA. "I was always going to try to give them my best and just be present and focused and locked in to give you all that I had," Moore said. The three will be happy to see each other again this weekend and share in the moment to be honored among the best. "This obviously is an amazing class. Each of them would be in consideration for the best to ever play their position in the era of the WNBA," ESPN analyst and Hall of Famer Rebecca Lobo said. "Sue without question is one of the best point guards, if not the best. Sylvia is in the conversation for one of the best centers and Maya is one of the best ever as well." It's the first time three WNBA players will enter the Hall of Fame in the same year. Though that might become the norm moving forward, it will be hard for any group to match the accolades of this class. As a group entering the Hall of Fame, the titles, medals and milestones held by Bird, Moore and Fowles may never be matched. ___ AP WNBA:https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball

Bird, Fowles and Moore: The most dominant Hall of Fame class in women's basketball history?

Bird, Fowles and Moore: The most dominant Hall of Fame class in women's basketball history? The trio of Sue Bird, Sylvia Fowles and Maya...
Alabama football was Mercedes under Nick Saban, it's a used car lot under Kalen DeBoerNew Foto - Alabama football was Mercedes under Nick Saban, it's a used car lot under Kalen DeBoer

As we all vicariously live through theugly undoingof thegreatest dynasty in college football history, one question looms above all else. Who feels worse:Alabamafans, or Ms. Terry? One is watching whateverthis isat Alabama play out in front of their collective eyes, the other has to hear about it from Nick Saban. Before we go further, let me stress that Saban's world revolves around his beautiful bride of more than 50 years, whom he loving calls "Ms. Terry." But my god, this can't be easy for her. "The good news," Saban awkwardly said Monday night on ESPN's "GameDay" broadcast, "Is every team has the best opportunity to improve from Week 1 to Week 2." Well, thanks for that update, TV Nick. Now tell us how you really feel. Because the mother trucker of a programyou meticulously built and sustained at Alabama for 17 seasons, now looks like a bag of cats headed to the river. Because Alabama in its second season under Kalen DeBoer looks like Alabama in its last season under Mike Shula. Because Alabama – holy mother of pigskin, big, bad Alabama – is absorbing punishment on the field instead of delivering it. And players are loafing. I can't believe I just wrote that: Alabama playersare loafing. A decade ago, Saban bought a Mercedes dealership in Birmingham, Alabama, and his Dream Motor Group has grown so much and been so sucessful, he recently acquired two Mercedes dealerships in Miami for $700 million. DeBoer, meanwhile, may as well now own a used car lot. Behind that shiny Crimson paint is an engine in disrepair. This is killing Saban, everyone. You don't win like he did, don't raise the bar of expectations and demand perfection every single play, and watch your beloved program lose four times as double-digit favorites in DeBoer's first 14 games. The first of those unthinkable losses was last season to SEC tomato can Vanderbilt, the last on Saturday to aFlorida Stateteam that won two flippin' games in 2024.Two. Since a win last season over Georgia – the high-water mark of the DeBoer era – Alabama is a lousy 5-5 in its last 10 games. Read that again. Now imagine Nick and Terry – his confidant of five-plus decades, and the one person who knows him better than any other – when they're alone and reflecting while trying to enjoy that 6,200-feet, $17.5 million retirement mansion in Jupiter Island, Florida. Saban left Alabama after the 2023 season because he said it was time. The game was drastically changing off the field, and frankly, he didn't want to hang around for it. But this wasn't part of the deal. Watching a completely rebuilt Florida State offensive line, which couldn't bust a grape in 2024, smash the Alabama front seven over and over and over again. BUCKEYES ON RISE:Ohio State is new No. 1 in US LBM Coaches Poll Watching the now listless Alabama program, this group of furloughed players from the unrelenting taskmaster of years past, is too much for one rare, megalomaniacal legend of a coach to bear. And that means the lovely Ms. Terry has to bear it, too. By proxy. The women who willingly choose to marry into the untenable profession with their husbands, who live and breathe it on a daily basis, are the last line of sanity. When everything else is up to a million, they modulate the turmoil down to one. Because right now Nick is looking at Terry and asking if they did the right thing. He feels guilty, he could've done more. He let down the players and the university. All coaches think this way. No matter the success, no matter the failure. But there's no way Saban could've seen this coming so quickly. Not the way he set up the program to continuing winning at a high level. No one recruited like Saban, stacking and packing the roster with four- and five-star recruits like game day traffic on McFarland Boulevard. If any program in the country was built to sustain losses in the transfer portal, much less a coaching change, it was Alabama. But Saban overlooked one key factor in his departure: his shadow and specter are no longer around. Saban ruled the program with an iron fist, a philosophy so detailed and distinct in its success, players fed off it. They not only wanted to play for Saban, theyneededto. If that meant busting ass every day in practice as a backup to push the first team ahead of you, so be it. Because eventually, your time would arrive — and when it did, heaven help the guy across from you. Alabama with DeBoer is like high school with a substitute teacher. Players know how to work and prepare, but that doesn't mean they're not trying to see what they can get away with. It began with the shocking loss at Vanderbilt, and then the loss at the worst Oklahoma team in three decades — with a spot in the College Football Playoff on the line. It continued in a New Year's Day bowl against Michigan, which couldn't complete a pass to save its life. Yet still bludgeoned Alabama at the point of attack, and won a rock fight. Then came Florida State, whose transfer quarterbackThomas Castellanos taunted Alabamaall offseason by saying Saban wasn't around to save the Tide. And you know what? Castellanos was right. Imagine Nick trying to explain that to Ms. Terry. A quarterback playing for his third team in four years brought Alabama to its knees. Or maybe it was the used car salesman. Matt Hayesis the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at@MattHayesCFB. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Alabama decline crushing Nick Saban, Kalen DeBoer as losses mount

Alabama football was Mercedes under Nick Saban, it's a used car lot under Kalen DeBoer

Alabama football was Mercedes under Nick Saban, it's a used car lot under Kalen DeBoer As we all vicariously live through theugly undoin...
Trump reacts as Putin, Kim Jong Un and Xi appear together at China's military paradeNew Foto - Trump reacts as Putin, Kim Jong Un and Xi appear together at China's military parade

President Donald Trump took to his social media platform as Chinese President Xi Jinping, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin appeared together in Beijing for China's largest-ever military parade on Wednesday. Trump accused Xi of "conspiring against" the United States as they attended the parade, which marked the 80th anniversary of Japan's surrender in World War II. "May President Xi and the wonderful people of China have a great and lasting day of celebration. Please give my warmest regards to Vladimir Putin, and Kim Jong Un, as you conspire against The United States of America," Trump wrote on social media as the parade was underway. MORE: North Korea's Kim crosses into China to meet Xi, Putin for Beijing military parade Trump referenced America's involvement in World War II in his post on, saying, "The big question to be answered is whether or not President Xi of China will mention the massive amount of support and 'blood' that The United States of America gave to China in order to help it to secure its FREEDOM from a very unfriendly foreign invader." "Many Americans died in China's quest for Victory and Glory. I hope that they are rightfully Honored and Remembered for their Bravery and Sacrifice!" the president wrote. In his remarks at the parade, held in front of the Tiananmen Gate, Xi hailed the Chinese People's Liberation Army as a "heroic force" and spoke of nations and treating each other as equals. "The Chinese nation is a great nation that does not fear violence, and that stands independent and strong," Xi said. "In the past, when confronted with a life-or-death struggle between justice and evil, light and darkness, progress and reaction, the Chinese people stood united, rose up in resistance, and fought for the survival of the country, the rejuvenation of the nation and the cause of human justice." Yuri Ushakov, a top aide to Putin, dismissed Trump's conspiracy allegations. "I want to say that no one organized any conspiracies, no one was weaving anything, no conspiracies," Ushakov told Russian journalist Pavel Zarubin, who is close to the Kremlin and has previously interviewed Putin. "Moreover, no one even had that in their minds, none of these three leaders had that," Ushakov said. MORE: 'They do not surrender': Ukraine commander details fight with North Koreans in Russia "Everyone understands the role that the United States, the current administration of President Trump and President Trump personally play in the current international arrangements," Ushakov said in a video posted by Zarubin to his Telegram channel. Kim, Xi and Putin gathered for the military parade amid Ukrainian and Western concerns over the collaboration of the three nations in bolstering Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, ongoing since February 2022. Putin sent an invitation to meet with Kim on the sidelines of the military parade, according to Putin's top foreign policy aide. The North Korean Foreign Ministry said in a Wednesday statement that Kim was "enveloped in an atmosphere of the warmest friendship and enthusiastic welcome" on his arrival in Beijing. Ukrainian and Western governments have accused North Korea of supplying significant amounts of ammunition and troops to support Russia's war, while Kyiv and its NATO backers have identified China as Moscow's prime source of materiel and a vital economic lifeline. ABC News' Tanya Stukalova and Somayeh Malekian contributed to this report.

Trump reacts as Putin, Kim Jong Un and Xi appear together at China's military parade

Trump reacts as Putin, Kim Jong Un and Xi appear together at China's military parade President Donald Trump took to his social media pla...

 

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