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24 dead after bus falls into river while boarding ferry in Bangladesh

At least 24 people died after a passenger bus carrying around ​40 passengers plunged into the Padma ‌River while attempting to board a ferry in Bangladesh, officials said on Thursday. The accident occurred ​on Wednesday when the bus lost ​control approaching a ferry at Daulatdia ⁠in Rajbari district, about 100 kilometres from Dhaka. The bus overturned and sank ​nearly nine metres into the river, according to police and the Fire Service and Civil ​Defence. Read More: Five teenage cousins killed in road crash Rescuers recovered 22 bodies from inside ​the submerged bus, including six men, 11 women ‌and ⁠five children, Fire Service official Talha Bin Zasim said. Twenty-four people have been confirmed dead so far, including two women who ​died after ​being rescued, ⁠he said. Four fire service units and 10 divers were leading ​the search and rescue efforts, supported ​by ⁠the army, police, coast guard and local authorities. Officials fear more passengers may still be ⁠missing. ​Hund...

Catholic League calls for Greene’s censure over post after Pope Francis’ death

A prominent religious rights organisation has called for the formal censure of U.S. Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene following a social media post many believe was a veiled reference to the death of Pope Francis. The Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights is urging Congress to take disciplinary action against Georgia Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene after a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, appeared to link global leadership changes to divine intervention. Greene wrote, “Today there were major shifts in global leaderships. Evil is being defeated by the hand of God,” in a post made shortly before 10:45 a.m. on Monday—just hours after the Vatican confirmed the death of Pope Francis. Today there were major shifts in global leaderships. Evil is being defeated by the hand of God. — Marjorie Taylor Greene 🇺🇸 (@mtgreenee) April 21, 2025 While the message did not name the pontiff directly, Catholic League President William Donohue said the implication was clear. “As Newsweek journalist Gabe Whisnant noted, the two major world leadership changes that were announced [Monday] were the death of Pope Francis and the resignation of Klaus Schwab as the head of the World Economic Forum,” Donohue said in a letter to the House Ethics Committee. “It is obvious that Greene’s remark about God defeating ‘evil’ was aimed at the Holy Father,” Donohue added. Calling Greene a former Catholic, Donohue argued that while she is entitled to express views about the Church, she crossed a line. “No sitting member of Congress has the right to denigrate the leader of a world religion,” he wrote. We are asking that Republicans and Democrats come together to censure Marjorie Taylor Greene for her bigoted remarks.https://t.co/o0HsbOwVCW pic.twitter.com/ixoLGWlX2a — Catholic League (@CatholicLeague) April 22, 2025 “To allow her to continue to smear Catholicism reflects badly on the Congress.” He urged both Republican and Democratic lawmakers to unite in censuring Greene for what he termed “bigoted remarks.” Public figures also reacted to Greene’s post. Clarence Blalock, a Democrat who is preparing for another attempt to challenge Greene in Georgia’s 14th Congressional District in 2026, condemned the comment, calling it “disturbing.” “Pope Francis deserves better than this,” Blalock said in a post on X. As of Tuesday, Greene had not responded to the criticism or clarified the intent of her post.

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