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Fire destroys dozens of homes in Malaysia's Sabah state

A fire destroyed at least 30 makeshift wooden homes in Malaysia's Sabah state early Wednesday, officials said, in the second reported blaze in the area in fewer than two weeks. The Sabah Fire and Rescue Department said the pre-dawn blaze swept through a settlement in Sandakan district in Sabah's northeast, where some of Malaysia's poorest residents, including indigenous and stateless communities, live in closely packed, wooden houses. No injuries or fatalities were reported, it said. It was the second such fire in Sandakan since April 19, when a massive fire razed 1,000 homes and displaced thousands of people in a coastal village. "It is estimated that about 186 residents are affected. We're still investigating the cause of the fire," Sandakan Fire and Rescue station chief Jimmy Lagung told AFP by telephone from Sandakan on Wednesday. In a statement, the fire department said 21 firefighters were deployed to put out the blaze, managing to prevent the flames fro...
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Israeli strikes on Gaza kill three, including 9-year-old boy

Israeli strikes killed three Palestinians, including a nine-year-old boy, in the Gaza Strip on Tuesday, health officials said. Medics said an Israeli drone killed ​the child, Adel Al‑Najjar, in eastern Khan Younis in the south of ‌the enclave, while an Israeli airstrike targeted a vehicle in Gaza City, killing two people and wounding several others. At Nasser Hospital’s ​morgue, relatives arrived to bid farewell to the small, white‑shrouded body of ​Najjar. Women cried next to the body, lying on a medical ⁠stretcher on the floor, and men held a special prayer before carrying him ​to the cemetery for burial. The boy was collecting cardboard that the family uses ​in cooking, relatives said. There has been no electricity in Gaza since the fighting began in October 2023, and Palestinians have complained of Israeli restrictions on the entry of cooking gas. Read More: New wave of Israeli strikes kills 4 Palestinians in Gaza "We ​don't have gas. We collect cardboard to bake, they wan...

The Hormuz digital chokepoint: How does the Iran war threaten subsea cables?

Iran warned last week that submarine cables in the Strait of Hormuz were a vulnerable point for the region's digital economy, raising concerns about potential attacks on critical infrastructure. The narrow waterway, already a chokepoint for global oil shipments, is equally vital for the digital world. Several fibre-optic cables snake across the seabed of the strait, connecting countries from ​India and Southeast Asia to Europe via the Gulf states and Egypt. What makes undersea cables important? Subsea cables are fibre-optic or electrical cables laid on the ‌sea floor to transmit data and power. They carry around 99% of the world's internet traffic, according to the ITU, the United Nations specialized agency for digital technologies. They also carry telecommunications and electricity between countries, and are essential for cloud services and online communications. "Damaged cables mean the internet slowing down or outages, e-commerce disruptions, delayed financial transacti...

King Charles to urge Trump to 'come together' with Britain

Britain's King Charles III will receive a full ceremonial welcome from United States President Donald Trump at the White House and make a rare address to Congress on Tuesday as he seeks to mend a transatlantic rift over the Iran war. On the second day of a four-day state visit, Charles is expected to call in his speech for "reconciliation and renewal," with the so-called special relationship between Washington and London under strain. Much of the day will be given over to pomp and ceremony, with King Charles and Queen Camilla receiving a traditional arrival ceremony that's expected to feature a 21-gun salute and an inspection of troops. The US leader and First Lady Melania Trump will then host the royals in the Oval Office behind closed doors. In the evening, they will return to the White House for a grand state dinner. Read: King Charles jets to US for trip overshadowed by Iran quarrel and shooting The first day of the trip featured a more informal welcome, with the ...

Fact check: Viral photos of White House dinner shooter's alleged Indian wife and her passport are fake

Multiple accounts on social media platform X have been sharing images since Sunday, allegedly showing White House dinner shooter Cole Tomas Allen with his Indian wife and her Indian passport. However, both images are AI-generated. A lone gunman fired shots in the hotel hosting the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner on Saturday, causing United States President Donald Trump and his cabinet to be rushed out before the suspect was taken into custody. The suspect arrested in the shooting was identified by a law enforcement official as Cole Tomas Allen, a Los Angeles-area man who appears from social media sites to be a Caltech graduate working as a part-time teacher and game developer. The official said Allen, approximately 31 years of age, was a resident of Torrance, California. How it started On Sunday, a person, who appeared to be sharing anti-India content in the past, shared two images on X showing the shooter with his alleged Indian wife, Priyanka Rao, and her Indian passpo...

Suspect in shooting at Trump press dinner to appear in court

A California man accused of storming a gala dinner attended by US President Donald Trump was set to appear in court on Monday over a shooting that marks the latest spasm of political violence in a deeply divided America. Administration officials said the suspect in Saturday night’s attack appeared to have aimed to kill Trump and senior officials at the press dinner in a Washington hotel, in what would be the third attempt on the president’s life in two years. Trump, who was rushed out of the ballroom by Secret Service agents, posted surveillance footage showing the gunman attempting to sprint past a checkpoint one floor above the room where the dinner was held. After a brief exchange of gunfire with agents, the suspect was detained at the scene. Trump shared images of the suspect handcuffed on the hotel floor, lying shirtless and face down. In an interview aired Sunday on CBS programme 60 Minutes, Trump said he was not concerned about casualties as the chaotic scene unfolded. “I wasn’t...

King Charles jets to US for trip overshadowed by Iran quarrel and shooting

Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla arrive in the United States later on Monday for a four-day trip, a tour ​which has taken on even greater prominence after the White House Correspondents' dinner shooting and amid acrimony between the close allies. The state ‌visit, by far the most high-profile and consequential of Charles's reign, marks the 250th anniversary of the US declaration of independence from British rule, and is the first visit to the country by a British monarch for two decades. It begins with a private meeting with self-proclaimed royal fan US President Donald Trump, and includes an address to Congress and a lavish dinner at ​the White House. Press dinner shooting just days before visit But the long-planned trip has become enmeshed in the political spat between the two ​countries over the US-Israeli war on Iran, which led Trump to voice deep displeasure with the British government for failing to support ⁠the offensive. The shooting on Saturday at the White...