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  • Canada to remove many retaliatory tariffs on US goods: Mark Carney

    Canada to remove many retaliatory tariffs on US goods: Mark Carney

    OTTAWA: Canada will remove many retaliatory import tariffs on U.S. goods and intensify contacts with the United States on striking a new trade and security relationship, Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Friday.

    Canadian tariffs on U.S. autos, steel and aluminum will remain for now, he told a press conference in Ottawa.

    Carney noted that the United States had recently made clear that it would not impose tariffs on Canadian goods that were compliant with the three-nation U.S.-Mexico-Canada free trade agreement, something he called a positive development.

    “In this context and consistent with Canada’s commitment to USMCA, I am announcing today that the Canadian government will now match the United States by removing all of Canada’s tariffs on U.S. goods specifically covered under USMCA,” he said.

    “Canada and the U.S. have now re-established free trade for the vast majority of our goods,” he added, reiterating that compared with its trading partners, Canadian exports were still subject overall to a low level of U.S. tariffs.

    The news helped the Canadian dollar extend its gains and by 12:40 pm. it was up 0.5% at C$1.3837 to the U.S. dollar, or 72.27 U.S. cents.

    Canada has been holding talks with the United States on a new economic and security relationship for months but the two sides are not close to a deal.

    Canada and China are the only nations to strike back at the United States with counter tariffs, much to the irritation of the U.S. administration.

    “We welcome this move by Canada, which is long overdue. We look forward to continuing our discussions with Canada on the Administration’s trade and national security concerns,” a White House official said.

    Carney spoke to Donald Trump on Thursday. Asked whether the U.S. president had told him that lifting the tariffs would kick start the talks, Carney responded “Yes.”

    Carney won an April election on the back of a promise to stand up to Trump’s tariffs but since then has gradually taken a softer tone.

    In late June, Carney scrapped a proposed digital services tax that U.S. companies strongly disliked and in July dropped talk of further sanctions if the two sides could not reach a deal by August 1.

    Traders are expecting the pile will indicate that policymakers will begin cutting rates again next month.

    Carney, using an ice hockey analogy, said the time had come for a more moderate approach rather than continuing to take an aggressive stance.

    “Let’s be clear, we have the best deal of anyone in the world right now,” he said. “Nobody has a deal with the United States that they used to have.”

    The news could be a political challenge for Carney, whose ruling Liberals only have a minority of seats in the House of Commons elected chamber and rely on opposition parties to survive votes of confidence.

    The leader of the Conservatives, the largest opposition party, this week accused Carney of taking too soft an approach with the United States.

    Carney’s predecessor as prime minister, Justin Trudeau, imposed 25% tariffs on C$30 billion ($21 billion) in goods imported annually from the U.S. on March 6 in response to Trump’s initial duties.

     

     

     

  • Kennedy Center to host FIFA World Cup 2026 draw, Trump announces

    Kennedy Center to host FIFA World Cup 2026 draw, Trump announces

    WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump announced on Friday that Washington’s John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington will host the World Cup 2026 draw on December 5.

    “It’s a tremendous honour to bring this global event and this incredible group of people and these unbelievable athletes – the best athletes in the world – to the cultural centre of our nation’s capital,” Trump said in the Oval Office flanked by Vice President JD Vance, FIFA President Gianni Infantino and Homeland Security Secretary Kristy Noem.

    “We are uniting the world, Mr. President, uniting the world, here in America, and we are very proud of that,” Infantino said before letting Trump hold the World Cup trophy.

    Earlier on Friday, Trump announced that the World Cup 2026 will have its primary office in the Kennedy Center.

    Trump’s announcement comes as he oversees a $257 million renovation at the Kennedy Center, which Trump has said will be a centerpiece of the 250th US anniversary celebrations next year.

    Read more: Saudi Arabia to host 2023 FIFA Club World Cup

    “We’re spending a lot of money, wisely, on making it really beautiful. It’s going to be beautiful again,” Trump said.

    The World Cup 2026 being co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico will be the first with 48 teams and will feature 104 matches.

    Canada will host 13 games, including 10 in the group stage split evenly between Toronto and Vancouver. Mexico will also get 13 games, including 10 during the group stage in Mexico City, Guadalajara and Monterrey.

    The rest of tournament will be held in 11 cities across the United States.

    FIFA, global soccer’s governing body, has already put boots on the ground in the United States in preparation for the quadrennial spectacle having set up field offices in Miami and at New York’s Trump Tower.

  • Raphael Graven’s online death wasn’t result of trauma: prosecutor

    Raphael Graven’s online death wasn’t result of trauma: prosecutor

    PARIS: A French video streamer who died during a livestream after days of abuse by other streamers did not die as a result of trauma or the intervention of a third party, court authorities said.

    France has been rocked by the death of 46-year-old Raphael Graven, known online as Jean Pormanove, who died during a livestream on Monday after enduring several days of violence and humiliation broadcast on platform Kick.

    The prosecutor of Nice in southern France, near where Graven died, said an autopsy showed no trace of traumatic injuries that could explain the death, and that the probable causes of death therefore appeared to be medical or toxicological in origin.

    Further analyses have been ordered to determine these causes, the prosecutor said, adding that Graven had cardiac issues and that he was undergoing medical treatment for his thyroid gland.

    In an interview with broadcaster franceinfo on Friday, Clara Chappaz, a junior minister for AI and digital technology, said that during some of the videos Graven can be heard saying that he wants the abuse to stop and that he wants to call the police.

    “The entire country is in shock about what has happened … We live in a world where reality has surpassed fiction, where we can see someone dying on a TV channel and people can watch this type of video with hours and hours of humiliation,” she said.

    She denounced what she called a “digital Wild West” and lashed out at Australian-owned Kick for insufficient content moderation.

    “This three-year-old platform is clearly very disconnected with what is really going on,” she said, adding that if inquiries show Kick fell short of online content standards, there would be “sanctions”, which she did not specify.

    Kick Francais has said it will cooperate with authorities and is undertaking a review of its French content.

    Chappaz said that French digital and audiovisual communication regulator Arcom had launched an investigation into the case and if it became clear that France’s regulatory framework was insufficient, regulations would be tightened.

    On Friday, Arcom said Kick had lifted the block on the channel “jeanpormanove” that the platform put in place after Graven died, saying it had done so to access its contents.

    The regulator condemned the move, which also allows the public to see videos on the channel again, and warned Kick it would consider taking action if the block was not reinstated.

    Read More: Raphael Graven: French Influencer Dies After Torture on Live Stream

    “Making the recordings on the ‘jeanpormanove’ channel available to the authorities does not justify lifting the channel’s block for the entire public,” Arcom said.

    Kick confirmed that the channel has been unblocked and that it was now available, with the exception of the final livestream, which Kick said it had provided to law enforcement separately.

    The output of the people who were livestreaming with Graven when he died remained banned, it added.

     

     

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  • Adidas visits small town to apologize for sandal design

    Adidas visits small town to apologize for sandal design

    VILLA HIDALGO YALALAG, Mexico: Adidas executives visited a small Indigenous town in the mountains of southern Mexico on Thursday to offer an apology over a sandal-inspired shoe design that Mexico’s government had blasted as cultural appropriation.

    The German sportswear company sent representatives from its Mexican unit to Villa Hidalgo Yalalag, a town in Oaxaca state, to deliver the comments in person after issuing a written apology last week.

    The issue related to the “Oaxaca Slip On,” designed by Mexican-American designer Willy Chavarria, which locals say closely resembles their traditional handmade huarache sandals.

    “We understand this situation may have caused discomfort, and for that reason, we offer a public apology,” Karen Gonzalez, head of Legal and Compliance at Adidas Mexico, told a few dozen people gathered at an outdoor sports field.

    The event included traditional music and attendees in Indigenous attire.

    Read More Eenie Meanie Movie Review: A Hidden Streaming Gem That Deserves Your Friday Night

    Gonzalez said Adidas would in future seek collaboration with Villa Hidalgo Yalalag to ensure respect for its cultural heritage. The community is home to fewer than 2,000 people.

    “Thank you very much for keeping your word,” said Mayor Eric Fabian. “(Our cultural heritage) is something we safeguard very carefully. Yalalag lives from its crafts,” he added.

    The controversy drew national attention earlier this month when Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum criticized Adidas and announced plans to explore legal avenues to protect Indigenous communities from alleged cultural appropriation by big companies.

    Mexico has previously accused other big-name global fashion players of exploiting Indigenous designs without consent.

     

  • UK government to take over Liberty Steel division after collapse

    UK government to take over Liberty Steel division after collapse

    LONDON: The British government said it will take control of a part of Liberty Steel, owned by commodities tycoon Sanjeev Gupta, after the business was placed into liquidation following a petition from its creditors on Thursday.

    A judge at London’s High Court approved the petition for Yorkshire-based Speciality Steel UK, one of Britain’s largest steelworks, to be placed into compulsory liquidation, describing the business as “hopelessly insolvent”, the BBC reported.

    The government would cover the ongoing costs of the business while it tries to find a buyer, the report added.

    The business, which employs 1,450 people and produces steel used in aerospace, defence and power generation, will be placed under a government-appointed liquidator and managers from consultancy Teneo, the government’s Insolvency Service said.

    The government’s takeover of the business marks its second intervention in the industry following its move to take control of British Steel’s loss-making Scunthorpe plant in April.

    Liberty Steel is part of Gupta’s family conglomerate, GFG Alliance, which has been refinancing its businesses in steel, aluminium and energy after its backer, supply chain finance firm Greensill, filed for insolvency in 2021. It also has operations in other parts of Europe, Australia and the United States.

    The company said the court’s decision was “irrational” and that the plan it had presented would have secured new investment into the steel industry.

    “Liquidation will now impose prolonged uncertainty and significant costs on UK taxpayers,” Liberty Steel Chief Transformation Officer Jeffrey Kabel said in an emailed statement.

    The government said it was committed to supporting the steel industry.

    “We know this will be a deeply worrying time for staff and their families, but we remain committed to a bright and sustainable future for steelmaking and steel making jobs in the UK,” a government spokesperson said.

    UK government take over liberty steel division after collapse
    uk-government-take-over-liberty-steel-division-after-collapse-2025-08-21/

  • INR to USD: Indian Rupee Rate against US Dollar Today

    INR to USD: Indian Rupee Rate against US Dollar Today

    MUMBAI: The Indian rupee weakened further on Friday against a stronger dollar ahead of a speech by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, capping a volatile week for the Asian currency that has been pressured by U.S. tariff-related uncertainties.

    Currency Rates in Pakistan Today- Latest Updates

    The currency closed 0.3% lower on Friday at 87.5300, against its close of 87.27 in the previous session. It was down 0.02% for the week.

    The local unit, which opened at 87.4575 on Monday, saw sharp swings through the week due to domestic and geopolitical developments.

    Talks between the U.S. President Donald Trump and the Russian and Ukrainian presidents, coupled with the Indian government’s proposed tax cuts, pushed the rupee above the 87 handle for the first time this month on Tuesday.

    However, concerns over tariffs on Indian goods, which are set to take effect on August 27, and importers’ demand for the greenback weighed on the currency on Thursday when it posted its biggest single-day decline in a month.

    “Looming U.S. tariffs on Indian goods and criticism over Russian oil purchases kept sentiment weak, with continued downside risk (expected in) the rupee through September,” said Jigar Trivedi, senior currency analyst at Reliance Securities.

    Meanwhile, the dollar index was up 0.14% at 98.742, as of 3:37 p.m. IST, and inched towards the 99-mark ahead of Powell’s speech at the Jackson Hole symposium later in the day.

    His comments will be scrutinised for clues on a September rate cut and the policy trajectory for the rest of the year.

    Investors are pricing in an over 80% chance of a cut next month, but the question is whether Powell will push back against such aggressive expectations.

    While his recent comments have leaned hawkish, they came before the weaker July jobs report.

    Most Asian currencies traded lower on Friday, with the Taiwan dollar and Indonesian rupiah falling sharply against the dollar and leading losses, while the Korean won and Philippine peso climbed in intraday trade.

    DOLLAR RATE TODAY IN PAKISTAN- LIVE

  • FBI agents search ex-Trump adviser John Bolton’s home, source says

    FBI agents search ex-Trump adviser John Bolton’s home, source says

    WASHINGTON: FBI agents searched the home of John Bolton, a former adviser to U.S. President Donald Trump turned persistent critic, on Friday as part of a national security probe, a source briefed on the matter said.

    Federal Bureau of Investigation agents began searching his house in the Washington suburb of Bethesda, Maryland, at 7 a.m. as part of a probe ordered by FBI Director Kash Patel, according to the New York Post, which first reported the raid.

    An FBI spokesperson confirmed “court authorized activity” in the area of Bolton’s home.
    “NO ONE is above the law… @FBI agents on mission,” Patel wrote, without mentioning Bolton, in an X post shortly after 7 a.m.

    Bolton could not immediately be reached for comment. CNN reported that he said he was unaware of the law enforcement activity and was looking into it further.

    Bolton served as the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and as the White House national security adviser during Trump’s first term in office.

    He has since become a critic of the Republican president, calling him unfit to serve and writing a scathing book about his time in Trump’s first administration.

    Trump has repeatedly moved to wield the levers of presidential power against his perceived enemies since taking office in January, following his campaign promise of political retribution.

    It was not immediately clear why the FBI was searching the property.

    The Justice Department during Trump’s first term sued and started a criminal investigation into Bolton over allegations that the book, “The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir,” contained classified information.

    A judge rejected the administration’s bid to block publication of the book in 2020. Both the criminal investigation and lawsuit were dropped in 2021 during the Biden administration.

    The president previously stripped Bolton of protective Secret Service detail that had been assigned after the U.S. Justice Department said Iran had threatened his life.

    Bolton has continued his criticism of Trump since he returned to office. After Trump’s meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska last week, Bolton told CNN that Putin “clearly won” the summit and while Trump “did not lose” he looked “very tired” and there was no meaningful progress on ending the war in Ukraine.

    Bolton has also been critical of Trump-nominated FBI Director Kash Patel, telling NBC’s “Meet The Press” in December that the Senate should reject his nomination “100-0.” Patel was later confirmed.

  • Gaza City officially in famine, says global hunger monitor

    Gaza City officially in famine, says global hunger monitor

    UNITED NATIONS: Gaza City and surrounding areas are officially suffering from famine, and it will likely spread, a global hunger monitor determined on Friday, an assessment that will escalate pressure on Israel to allow more aid into the Palestinian enclave.

    The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification system said 514,000 people – nearly a quarter of Palestinians in Gaza – are experiencing famine, with the number due to rise to 641,000 by the end of September.

    Some 280,000 of those people are in a northern region covering Gaza City – known as Gaza governorate – which the IPC said was in famine following nearly two years of war between Israel and Palestinian militants Hamas.

    It was the first time the IPC has recorded famine outside of Africa, and the global group predicted that famine conditions would spread to the central and southern areas of Deir al-Balah and Khan Younis by the end of next month.

    It added that the situation further north could be even worse than in Gaza City, but said limited data prevented any precise classification.

    Israel dismissed the report as false and biased, saying the IPC had based its survey on partial data largely provided by Hamas, which did not take into account a recent influx of food.

    “There is no famine in Gaza,” the Israeli foreign ministry said in a statement.

    For a region to be classified as in famine at least 20% of people must be suffering extreme food shortages, with one in three children acutely malnourished and two people out of every 10,000 dying daily from starvation or malnutrition and disease.

    Previously, the IPC has only registered famines in Somalia, South Sudan and Sudan.

    Even if a region has not yet been classified as in famine because those thresholds have not been met, the IPC can determine that households there are suffering famine conditions, which it describes as starvation, destitution and death.

    U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a statement that the Gaza famine was a “man-made disaster, a moral indictment, and a failure of humanity itself”.

    He called for an immediate ceasefire, the release of all hostages still held by Hamas and unfettered humanitarian access.

    “People are starving. Children are dying. And those with the duty to act are failing … We cannot allow this situation to continue with impunity.”

    U.N. human rights chief Volker Türk said that famine in Gaza was the direct result of Israeli government actions, and warned that deaths from starvation could amount to a war crime.

    The IPC analysis comes after Britain, Canada, Australia and many European states said the humanitarian crisis had reached “unimaginable levels”.

    U.S. President Donald Trump last month said many people there were starving, putting him at odds with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has repeatedly said there was no starvation and blamed Hamas for creating food shortages.

    Israel controls all access to Gaza. COGAT, the arm of the Israeli military that oversees aid flows, said the IPC report ignored Israeli data on aid deliveries and was part of an international campaign aimed at denigrating Israel.

    “The IPC report is not only biased but also serves Hamas’ propaganda campaign,” the agency said.

    The U.N. has long complained of obstacles to getting aid into Gaza and distributing it throughout the war zone, blaming impediments on Israel and lawlessness.

    Israel has been critical of the U.N.-led operation and accuses Hamas of stealing aid, which the militants deny.

    The IPC said the analysis released on Friday only covered people living in Gaza, Deir al-Balah and Khan Younis governorates.

    It was unable to classify North Gaza governorate due to access restrictions and a lack of data and it excluded any remaining population in the southern Rafah region as it is largely uninhabited.

    It is the fifth time in the past 14 years that a famine has been determined by the IPC – an initiative involving 21 aid groups, United Nations agencies and regional organizations that is funded by the European Union, Germany, Britain and Canada.

    The IPC has previously assessed that there was famine in areas of Somalia in 2011, South Sudan in 2017 and 2020, and Sudan in 2024. The IPC says it does not declare famine, but instead provides analysis for governments and others to do so.

    A Reuters/Ipsos poll released this week found that 65% of Americans believe the U.S. should help those starving in Gaza.

    Israel has long counted on the U.S., its most powerful ally, for military aid and diplomatic support. An erosion of U.S. public support would be a worrisome sign for Israel as it faces not only Hamas militants in Gaza but unresolved conflict with Iran, its regional arch-foe.

    The war in Gaza was triggered on October 7, 2023, when Hamas killed 1,200 people in southern Israel and took some 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies. Since then, Israel’s military campaign has killed more than 62,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health authorities.

    The United States, Qatar and Egypt have been trying to brokeran an end to the conflict.

     

  • Helen Mirren says it’s great to see older people’s life experiences in ‘The Thursday Murder Club’

    Helen Mirren says it’s great to see older people’s life experiences in ‘The Thursday Murder Club’

    LONDON: Actor Helen Mirren, one of the stars of ‘The Thursday Murder Club,’ a movie about a group of retirees who enjoy cracking unresolved murder cases, said it’s great to see older people’s life experiences celebrated on screen.

    Eighty-year-old Mirren plays former spy Elizabeth Best in the new Netflix mystery, who along with her other impressive retired friends – played by Pierce Brosnan, Ben Kingsley and Celia Imrie – find themselves with a real murder to solve.

    “We underestimate older people. I did it when I was 25,” Helen Mirren said at the film’s premiere in London on Thursday.

    “It’s absolutely right that young people feel as if the world is theirs and nobody’s ever done what they’re doing before, you know, but the reality is, of course, every generation has done everything that they’re doing.”

    Directed by Chris Columbus, ‘The Thursday Murder Club’ is based on Richard Osman’s 2020 best-selling novel by the same name.

    “I don’t plot at all,” Osman said of his writing process. “I literally have a rough idea of what might happen. I have a little twist somewhere, but I literally write a chapter at a time and see what happens,” he said.

    Read more: Helen Mirren reveals why she believes next James Bond should be male

    Describing the movie, one of the screenplay writers, Katy Brand, said it mixes “serious, heartfelt warmth” and moments of silliness, humour and satire.

    “This whole sort of genre that we have in this country of the sort of Sunday night crime drama … where amateur sleuthing goes on but it’s also got mischief to it.”

    As for the future, with three more novels in the series already out and a fifth instalment from Osman planned for autumn, he hopes there will be more films.

    “Certainly if it does well,” he said. “I think the cast had such an amazing time last summer filming this. So I think they’d like to spend next summer filming another one as well. Fingers crossed.” Osman said.

    Netflix will begin streaming ‘The Thursday Murder Club’ on August 28.

  • India’s top court revises stray dog policy after public outcry

    India’s top court revises stray dog policy after public outcry

    NEW DELHI: India’s Supreme Court modified its order on stray dogs on Friday, directing that those picked up from streets in and around Delhi be released after sterilisation and immunisation, after a storm of protests from animal lovers.

    Earlier this month, the court ruled that all stray dogs in Delhi and its suburbs be moved to shelters following a surge in dog bites and cases of rabies.

    Critics of the ruling had said it could not be implemented because there were not enough shelters.

    Many animal lovers took to the streets to protest against the order. Animal rights activists signed online petitions asking the court to revoke its decision.

    The court ruling also drew criticism from politicians and celebrities. India’s opposition leader Rahul Gandhi called it a “step back from decades of humane, science-backed policy”.

    On Friday, the court said that dogs picked up in the past few weeks in Delhi and its suburbs would be released after sterilisation and immunisation, barring those showing aggressive behaviour or signs of rabies infection.

    Former federal minister and animal rights activist Maneka Gandhi told ANI news agency that she was happy with the “scientific decision” of relocating dogs back to their area.

    The court has not clarified what “an aggressive dog” is and this remains a grey area, she added.

    In April, the government said nearly 430,000 cases of dog bites were reported nationwide in January, against 3.7 million cases in all of 2024.

    India has 52.5 million stray dogs, a survey of homeless pets by Mars Petcare has shown, with 8 million canines in shelters.

    Media reports suggest Delhi alone has 1 million stray dogs. Reuters could not independently verify the figure.
    To curb public feeding of stray dogs, the court also directed the setting-up of designated zones.

    A three-judge panel of the court said the scope of the case would be expanded across India and the court would formulate a uniform policy for all stray dogs soon.

    “On behalf of the community dogs we serve, we thank the three-judge bench for its decision,” animal rights group PETA India said on Friday, urging people to adopt dogs and support sterilisation efforts.