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  • China says delegation to visit US for trade talks this week

    China says delegation to visit US for trade talks this week

    BEIJING: A top Chinese official will lead a delegation to Washington for trade talks this week, Beijing said on Thursday, as the two countries navigate a truce after months of friction.

    Li Chenggang, China’s International Trade Representative and vice minister of commerce, “will travel to Washington to meet with relevant US officials”, commerce ministry spokeswoman He Yongqian said.

    Tensions between the world’s two largest economies have simmered this year, but have significantly cooled since April, when both countries slapped escalating tariffs on each other’s exports.

    At one point, the tit-for-tat duties reached triple digits on both sides, snarling supply chains as many importers halted shipments to try and wait for the governments to work things out.

    Since then, Washington and Beijing have reached an agreement to de-escalate tensions, temporarily lowering tariffs to 30 percent on the United States’ side and 10 percent on China’s part.

    Spokeswoman He said China was willing to work with the United States to “resolve issues through equal dialogue and consultation”.

    Li’s trip to Washington comes days after US President Donald Trump said he expects to visit China this year or soon after.

    “We’re going to have a great relationship with China,” Trump told reporters on Monday.

    The US-China truce has been an uneasy one, with Washington previously accusing Beijing of violating their agreement and slow-walking export license approvals for rare earths.

    China is the world’s leading producer of rare earths, used to make magnets essential to the automotive, electronics and defence industries.

    The countries have since agreed to move forward.

    This month, they delayed the threatened reimposition of higher tariffs on each other’s exports for another 90 days — meaning the pause on steeper duties will be in place until November 10.

    And Bloomberg reported this month that US plane manufacturer Boeing is in talks to sell up to 500 aircraft to Chinese companies — a deal likely to be contingent on Washington and Beijing coming to a longer-term trade agreement.

  • Russia hits Kyiv with deadly overnight strikes

    Russia hits Kyiv with deadly overnight strikes

    KYIV, Ukraine: Russian forces launched a “massive” attack on Kyiv on Thursday, hitting the Ukrainian capital with strikes that killed at least four people and wounded around 30 others, Ukrainian officials said.

    The attack came as Moscow and Kyiv traded blame over an impasse in diplomatic efforts towards a peace deal spearheaded by US President Donald Trump.

    AFP journalists in Kyiv witnessed powerful explosions that illuminated the night sky and left behind a column of smoke.

    Ukraine’s Interior Minister Igor Klymenko said the strikes killed four people and wounded “about 30 people”.

    Those killed included a 14-year-old girl, while five children aged seven to 17 were among those who sustained “injuries of varying severity”, Tymur Tkachenko, the head of the city’s military administration, said.

    Mayor Vitali Klitschko described the strikes as a “massive attack” that caused damage in several districts of the capital.

    Tkachenko said Moscow had fired ballistic and cruise missiles as well as Iranian-designed Shahed drones from different directions to “systematically” target residential buildings.

    Red tracer bullets sailed through the night sky in an effort to intercept drones above the city centre, an AFP journalist saw. At least one missile appeared to be shot down.

    Around 100 people took refuge in a subway station, with some lying in sleeping bags and others holding their pets.

    A five-storey building in the Darnytsky district had collapsed, and a shopping mall was hit in the city centre, Klitschko reported.

    Ukrainian attacks on Russia

    Ukrainian officials also reported a Russian strike in the southeastern Zaporizhzhia region on Thursday.

    Russian authorities said they destroyed over 100 Ukrainian drones overnight. A Ukrainian attack sparked a fire at an oil refinery in the Krasnodar region but caused no casualties, according to local officials.

    Russian forces have been slowly but steadily gaining ground in Ukraine in recent months, as diplomatic efforts have accelerated.

    Trump held a high-profile summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska this month, followed by a meeting with his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky and European allies.

    But there has been little progress since then.

    Before concluding any peace agreement, Ukraine wants security guarantees from the West to deter any future Russian attacks.

    Moscow has cast Kyiv’s demands as unrealistic and has raised particular objection to the notion of stationing Western peacekeeping troops in Ukraine.

    Zelensky said on Wednesday that members of his administration would meet with US officials in New York on Friday.

    The Ukrainian leader said he saw “very arrogant and negative signals from Moscow regarding the negotiations”, urging extra “pressure” to “force Russia to take real steps”.

  • Sabalenka eyes Fernandez revenge in US Open third round

    Sabalenka eyes Fernandez revenge in US Open third round

    Defending US Open champion Aryna Sabalenka says she is “a better player and person” than the one who lost to Leylah Fernandez four years ago as they prepare for a re-run of their 2021 semi-final. (more…)

  • NGO says starving Gaza children too weak to cry

    NGO says starving Gaza children too weak to cry

    United Nations: The head of Save the Children described in horrific detail Wednesday the slow agony of starving children in Gaza, saying they are so weak they do not cry.

    Addressing a UN Security Council meeting on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the president of the international charity, Inger Ashing, said famine — declared by the UN last week to be happening in Gaza — is not just a dry technical term.

    “When there is not enough food, children become acutely malnourished, and then they die slowly and painfully. This, in simple terms, is what famine is,” said Ashing.

    She went on to describe what happens when children die of hunger over the course of several weeks, as the body first consumes its own fat to survive and when that is gone, literally consumes itself as it eats muscles and vital organs.

    “Yet our clinics are almost silent. Now, children do not have the strength to speak or even cry out in agony. They lie there, emaciated, quite literally wasting away,” said Ashing.

    She said aid groups have been warning loudly that famine was coming as Israel prevented food and other essentials from entering Gaza over the course of two years of war.

    “Everyone in this room has a legal and moral responsibility to act to stop this atrocity,” said Ashing.

    The United Nations officially declared famine in Gaza on Friday, blaming what it called systematic obstruction of aid by Israel during more than 22 months of war.

    A UN-backed hunger monitor called the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification Initiative (IPC) said famine was affecting 500,000 people in the Gaza governorate, which covers about a fifth of the Palestinian territory including Gaza City.

    The IPC projected that the famine would expand to cover around two-thirds of Gaza by the end of September.

    After Wednesday’s Security Council meeting 14 members — all but the United States, Israel’s main ally — issued a joint declaration expressing “profound alarm and distress” over the declaration of famine and saying they trusted the IPC’s work and methodology.

    “The use of starvation as a weapon of war is clearly prohibited under international humanitarian law. Famine in Gaza must be stopped immediately,” the declaration says.

     

  • Rising star of the left in NY tests water for divided Democrats

    Rising star of the left in NY tests water for divided Democrats

    NEW YORK: A young, Muslim self-proclaimed socialist who has established himself as one of Donald Trump’s fiercest critics, fixing himself firmly in the president’s crosshairs, is on track to become New York mayor.

    In mere months, Zohran Mamdani has become a star of the US left as he has mounted an unprecedentedly socialist-inspired campaign to take the big chair in the Big Apple.

    Following his surprise June win in a Democratic primary, the 33-year-old has held a lead over his main rival in nine out of 11 polls — with an advantage of between three and 28 points.

    His leading opponents are the independent Andrew Cuomo, 67, the ex-New York governor who retreated from politics when he was engulfed by sexual assault claims, and current mayor Eric Adams, 64, who is mired in corruption scandals.

    New York’s mayoral election on November 4 is “a political litmus test of sorts for the Democratic Party that is working to regain its footing after the 2024 election,” said pollster Mary Snow.

    The party has been left bloodied, divided and directionless after its defeat at Trump’s hands last year.

    In the staunchly Democratic megacity where inequality is rampant and life is unaffordable for many, Mamdani has zeroed in on the high cost of living promising regulated rents, free bus travel and daycare to cement his appeal.

    “If NYC wants to remain the interesting, inspiring and dynamic city of lore that is beloved by the world, we need to at least try policies that combat the inequality, comically absurd cost of living, housing and basic services here,” said Mamdani superfan Sandy Dalal, a designer and Brooklyn-based business owner.

    Eye on presidential race

    The young state lawmaker has run a strong ground campaign, with his supporters going door-to-door while also staying hyperactive on social media.

    “He talks about feminism, he talks about politics (but) he talks about the price of the halal food carts… even if you’re not Muslim, everyone eats from those carts because they’re everywhere,” said political pundit Lincoln Mitchell.

    Mamdani “really seems real in a way that Cuomo just seems like he’s coming from another era.”

    While the Democratic Party, and those on the right of it like Cuomo, are accused of going soft on Trump, Mamdani has not.

    Mamdani, born in Uganda to Indian parents, has slammed Trump for victimizing the weakest in society — the poor and migrants.

    “What the voters want is not just the kind of ‘left-of-center’ economic redistributive policies… but somebody who is unequivocal in standing up to Trump,” said Mitchell.

    Republicans have come out swinging against what they call the “nut job” and “communist,” with Trump threatening to cut off federal funds to the city if he wins.

    The other Democrats challenging Mamdani deride him too, with Adams accusing him of “false promises” and insisting he is “competing against him because this is not a socialist city.”

    Cuomo has repeatedly attacked Mamdani for occupying a coveted rent-controlled apartment with increases regulated by the city, saying his legislative salary means he could move.

    But their attacks have done little to bloody the rising star of the left.

    “Mamdani’s ability to connect with voters and his focus on affordability, for one, has resonated with voters,” said Snow.

    “It would not be surprising if Democrats took a page from Mamdani’s campaign playbook as they look toward the midterm elections — and the next presidential race.”

  • Gunman kills two children in Minneapolis church, injures 17

    Gunman kills two children in Minneapolis church, injures 17

    A gunman opened fire Wednesday on school children attending a church service in Minneapolis, killing two pupils and wounding 17 children and adults, police said, in the latest violent tragedy to jolt the United States.

    City police chief Brian O’Hara told a media briefing that the shooter sprayed bullets into the Annunciation Church as dozens of students were at a Mass marking their first week back to school.

    The church sits next to an affiliated Catholic school in southern Minneapolis, the largest city in the Midwestern state of Minnesota.

    “Two young children, ages eight and 10, were killed where they sat in the pews,” O’Hara said, adding that 17 people were injured, including 14 children.

    Two were in critical condition, he said.

    The gunman fired a rifle, shotgun and pistol before he took his own life in the parking lot, according to the police chief.

    He said the shooter was in his early twenties, did not have an extensive criminal history and was believed to have acted alone.

    Investigators were probing “information left behind” to try and determine a possible motive, O’Hara said.

    Two adults and nine children, aged six to 14, were being treated at the Hennepin County Medical Center, doctors told reporters, with at least four people requiring immediate surgery.

    “Minnesota is heartbroken,” Governor Tim Walz wrote on X.

    “From the officers responding, to the clergy and teachers providing comfort, to the hospital staff saving lives, we will get through this together,” he said, adding: “Hug your kids close.”

    Video footage from outside a police cordon showed panicked parents hurrying away with their young children dressed in a school uniform of green polo shirts.

    Wednesday’s tragedy comes just over two months after a top Democratic lawmaker and her husband were killed outside Minneapolis, prompting a major manhunt across the state.

    Pope ‘profoundly saddened’ by deadly shooting in US church

    Pope Leo XIV said Wednesday he was “profoundly saddened” by a shooting in a US church that killed two children and wounded 17 people.

    The pontiff — the first American to head the Catholic Church — sent his condolences to “those affected by this terrible tragedy, especially the families now grieving the loss of a child”, according to a statement put out by the Vatican.

    A country of school shootings

    O’Hara called the church attack a “deliberate act of violence against innocent children and other people worshiping.”

    “The sheer cruelty and cowardice of firing into a church full of children is absolutely incomprehensible,” he said.

    The mass shooting is the latest in a long line of deadly school attacks in the United States, where guns outnumber people and attempts to restrict access to firearms face perennial political deadlock.

    This year, there have been at least 287 mass shootings — defined as a shooting involving at least four victims, dead or wounded — across the country, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

    At least 16,700 people were killed in US firearms violence last year, not including suicides.

    Among the many shocking school shootings was a rampage in 2022 when an 18-year-old gunman stormed a Uvalde, Texas elementary school and opened fire, killing 19 students and two teachers.

    ‘Don’t just say… thoughts and prayers’

    “Don’t just say this is about thoughts and prayers right now. These kids were literally praying. It was the first week of school. They were in a church. These are kids that should be learning with their friends,” Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey told reporters.

    “They should be playing on the playground. They should be able to go to school or church in peace without the fear or risk of violence.”

    President Donald Trump said he had been briefed on the “tragic shooting” and that the FBI was responding.

    “The White House will continue to monitor this terrible situation. Please join me in praying for everyone involved!” he wrote on his Truth Social platform.

    A White House official later said Trump had quickly spoken with Walz, something he pointedly did not do after the assassination of a Minnesota lawmaker in June.

    Walz was the Democratic vice presidential nominee in last year’s election.

    Wednesday’s shooting also comes amid a wave of false reports of active shooters that have provoked panic at several US college campuses as students return from summer break.

  • Jennifer Lawrence to get San Sebastian Festival award

    Jennifer Lawrence to get San Sebastian Festival award

    Oscar-winning actor and producer Jennifer Lawrence will receive a lifetime achievement award at the San Sebastian Film Festival in Spain next month, organisers said Tuesday.

    35-year-old Jennifer Lawrence will get a special ‘Donostia’ award at the festival, where her latest movie ‘Die, My Love’ will be shown.

    The festival described Lawrence as ‘one of the most influential actors of our time’ in announcing the award.

    The new movie, which Lawrence also produced, will be shown on September 26, the same day as she receives the award.

    The Spanish festival, which runs from September 19 to 27, will also give a lifetime achievement award to Esther Garcia, a producer closely linked to many of the films of Pedro Almodovar and other top Spanish directors.

    Also Read: ‘Jennifer Lawrence is the last movie star,’ says Sean Penn

  • China says will not participate in denuclearisation talks with US, Russia

    China says will not participate in denuclearisation talks with US, Russia

    BEIJING: China said Wednesday that it would not participate in denuclearisation talks with the United States and Russia, after President Donald Trump said he hoped to include Beijing in negotiations.

    Trump on Monday said the United States was trying to pursue denuclearisation with both countries.

    “I think the denuclearisation is a very — it’s a big aim. But Russia’s willing to do it and I think China is going to be willing to do it too,” Trump told reporters at the White House.

    “We can’t let nuclear weapons proliferate. We have to stop nuclear weapons,” he added.

    Russia and the United States — former Cold War rivals — possess almost 90 percent of the world’s nuclear weapons between them, but Moscow pulled out of the last remaining arms control agreement with Washington in 2023.

    When asked about Trump’s comments, Beijing’s foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said Wednesday it was “neither reasonable nor realistic” to expect China to participate in trilateral nuclear disarmament negotiations with the United States and Russia.

    “China and the United States are not at the same level at all in terms of nuclear capabilities,” Guo told reporters.

    “The countries with the largest nuclear arsenal should earnestly fulfil their special and primary responsibility for nuclear disarmament,” he said.

    Beijing says it favours disarmament in principle but has regularly rejected Washington’s invitations to join US-Russian talks on reducing their nuclear arsenals.

    According to 2024 estimates by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, the United States has 3,708 nuclear warheads and Russia 4,380, excluding retired warheads.

    China had 500, 90 more than in 2023. Behind them were France (290) and Britain (225).

    Beijing said on Wednesday it maintains its nuclear forces “at the minimum level required for national security, and does not engage in an arms race with any country”.

  • Russia rejects EU troops in Ukraine and speedy Zelensky meeting

    Russia rejects EU troops in Ukraine and speedy Zelensky meeting

    MOSCOW: The Kremlin on Wednesday said it was against European countries sending peacekeeping troops to Ukraine and pushed back against the idea of a speedy meeting between presidents Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelensky.

    “We view such discussions negatively,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters when asked for Moscow’s view on a possible European peacekeeping force as part of any deal to end the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

    He said Russia’s desire to prevent NATO countries from having a military presence in Ukraine was one of the initial reasons behind the conflict, which Moscow launched in February 2022 with its offensive.

    Ukraine is pushing for Western-backed security guarantees as a part of any agreement to ensure Russia does not attack again, while Moscow is demanding Kyiv cedes more territory in its east.

    The security guarantees for Ukraine are “one of the most important topics” in talks over a settlement, Peskov said, adding Moscow would not discuss specifics of what they could look like publicly.

    The Kremlin also further pushed back on the idea that a summit between President Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart Zelensky was likely to take place soon.

    “Any high-level or top-level contact must be well-prepared in order to be effective,” Peskov told reporters, including AFP, in a briefing call.

    He also said the heads of Russian and Ukrainian negotiating teams were “in touch” but no date had been set for future talks.

  • Taiwan prosecutors charge three with stealing TSMC trade secrets

    Taiwan prosecutors charge three with stealing TSMC trade secrets

    TAIPEI, Taiwan: Taiwanese prosecutors charged on Wednesday three people with stealing trade secrets from TSMC, the world’s biggest maker of semiconductor chips.

    “This case involves critical national core technologies vital to Taiwan’s industrial lifeline, gravely threatening the international competitiveness of Taiwan’s semiconductor sector,” the High Prosecutors Office’s Intellectual Property Branch said in a statement.

    The three people — including a former TSMC engineer and two staff working for the chipmaker at the time of the alleged theft — were charged under the National Security Act and the Trade Secrets Act.

    In a previous statement, TSMC said it had taken “strict disciplinary actions against the personnel involved” in the “potential trade secret leaks”.

    TSMC did not provide details about the technology involved in the suspected leaks.