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Christopher Dembik vous répond : Comment adapter son portefeuille en période de hausse de l'aversion au risque ? - 03/04

Christopher Dembik vous répond : Comment adapter son portefeuille en période de hausse de l'aversion au risque ? - 03/04

Christopher DembikLaurent LamagnereAlexandre LaingJean-François BayAlphaValue
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9h ago
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         Rescatan al conductor de un patinete atrapado debajo de un coche en Torrent
4h ago

Rescatan al conductor de un patinete atrapado debajo de un coche en Torrent

Los bomberos han tenido que rescatar al conductor de un patinete eléctrico que se quedó atrapado debajo de un coche tras un choque accidental entre ambos vehículos en la localidad valenciana de Torrent. El siniestro se ha producido sobre las 10.30 horas de este viernes en una rotonda de Torrent. Bomberos de Torrent y Catarroja han intervenido para sacar al conductor del patinete eléctrico, que se quedó debajo del coche, tal y como ha informado el Consorcio Provincial. Los efectivos han estabilizado el turismo para una extracción segura de la víctima de debajo . El conductor ha tenido que ser atendido por medios sanitarios posteriormente.

patinete eléctricoaccidenterescate

         Detenido un hombre en Cabra tras increpar a Juanma Moreno y oponer resistencia policial
4h ago

Detenido un hombre en Cabra tras increpar a Juanma Moreno y oponer resistencia policial

La Policía Nacional ha detenido durante la noche de este jueves a un hombre por "increpar" y aproximarse "con una actitud agresiva" y "vociferando" al presidente de la Junta de Andalucía, Juanma Moreno , mientras realizaba una visita al municipio cordobés de Cabra. El arrestado ha pasado este viernes a disposición judicial, a la espera de la decisión del juzgado de guardia. Fuentes policiales han confirmado a Europa Press que los agentes "invitaron al individuo" a abandonar el lugar. Sin embargo, el mismo comenzó a "empujar a los policías" e hizo "caso omiso" a sus indicaciones. Finalmente, fue detenido por un presunto delito de resistencia a la autoridad. El hombre habría "reprendido" a los agentes de la Policía Nacional mientras estos intentaban "velar por la seguridad" de los allí presentes, dado el estado "alterado" de este individuo. Moreno se encontraba en este municipio cordobés durante una visita al Ayuntamiento, en la que mantuvo una reunión con su alcalde, Fernando Priego. Además, visitó la hermandad de la Piedad y asistió a la salida de la hermandad de Nuestro Padre Jesús Preso.

resistencia a la autoridaddetenciónjuanma moreno

         El exseleccionador rumano Lucescu sufre un infarto horas después de dimitir
4h ago

El exseleccionador rumano Lucescu sufre un infarto horas después de dimitir

Mircea Lucescu, que anunció este jueves su dimisión como seleccionador de Rumanía por problemas de salud, ha sufrido este viernes un infarto en el hospital en el que fue operado el pasado martes de una dolencia cardíaca, han informado a EFE fuentes del centro, que señalan que su estado es estable "El paciente sufrió un infarto agudo de miocardio durante la mañana" , han señalado a esas fuentes, que indican que el técnico, de 80 años, está bajo vigilancia en la unidad de cardiología. La Federación Rumana de Fútbol (FRF) anunció este jueves que Lucescu había dimitido como seleccionador de Rumanía , cargo que ocupaba desde agosto de 2024. En su anterior etapa como técnico, en la década de 1980, Lucescu logró que Rumanía participara por primera vez, en 1984, en la Eurocopa . El pasado día 26, Rumanía perdió contra Turquía en la repesca para participar en el Mundial y quedó fuera de esa competición. Tres días después, el domingo, Lucescu fue ingresado con problemas cardíacos tras sentirse indispuesto durante un entrenamiento , y el martes pasado fue sometido a una operación. La prensa local señala que la derrota ante Turquía significó un gran disgusto para el veterano entrenador. La FRF ha anunciado el inicio del procedimiento para elegir a su sucesor y la prensa local especula con que podría ser Gheorge Hagi, exjugador del Real Madrid y del Barcelona.

infartomircea lucescudimisión

Al Jazeera

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What we know about the US fighter jet shot down in Iran
1h ago

What we know about the US fighter jet shot down in Iran

The White House has confirmed Donald Trump has been briefed on the shooting down of a US fighter jet in Iran.

French-owned container ship transits Hormuz Strait in first since Iran war
2h ago

French-owned container ship transits Hormuz Strait in first since Iran war

CMA CGM's vessel becomes the first French-owned ship to traverse Hormuz since the US–Israel war on Iran began.

Drone footage shows a factory in Israel damaged by Iranian missile debris
3h ago

Drone footage shows a factory in Israel damaged by Iranian missile debris

Drone footage from Israel shows damage to a factory in Petah Tikva from debris from an intercepted Iranian missile.

Associated Press (AP)

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What to know about Tiger Woods’ rollover crash in Florida and the aftermath
2h ago

What to know about Tiger Woods’ rollover crash in Florida and the aftermath

In this image from police body camera video released by the Martin County, Fla., Sheriff's Office, golfer Tiger Woods hangs up his cellphone and tells a sheriff deputy “I was just talking to the president" following a car crash in Jupiter Island, Fla., Friday, March 27, 2026. (Martin County Sheriff's Office via AP) 2026-04-03T16:28:11Z For Tiger Woods , another arrest on charges of driving under the influence has put golf on hold . There will be no chance of a return to the Masters next week. No Ryder Cup captaincy in 2027. Golf is being pushed to the side while Woods seeks treatment following his crash a week ago in Florida. Authorities say Woods had pain pills in his pocket and showed signs of impairment following the crash — his fourth since 2009 . Here’s what to know about the events of the past week: AP AUDIO: What to know about Tiger Woods’ rollover crash in Florida and the aftermath New body camera footage from Tigers Woods’ car crash and arrest show a possible name drop of President Trump. Correspondent Gethin Coolbaugh reports. Traveling at ‘high speeds’ when Woods crashed SUV Woods was driving at “high speeds” on March 27 along a beachside, residential road in Jupiter Island not far from his home, when he clipped the trailer of a pressure cleaning truck, authorities said. His Land Rover rolled onto its side, but he managed to crawl out without any injuries. Woods told a deputy that he was looking down at his phone and changing the radio station when he hit the trailer. Woods denied drinking alcohol or taking any illegal substances, a deputy said. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Showing signs of impairment after crash A Martin County Sheriff’s deputy wrote that Woods was sweating profusely and moving lethargically and that his eyes were bloodshot and glassy. The deputy said she had to repeat instructions to Woods several times while conducting field sobriety tests, and that he didn’t perform some of the exercises correctly. She wrote that he was not in a condition to drive. Woods told the deputy he takes a few prescription medications and that he had seven back surgeries and more than 20 operations on his leg. Talking ‘to the president’ before being handcuffed Shortly after the crash, body camera footage shows Woods telling a deputy, “I was just talking to the president.” It wasn’t clear if Woods was referring to President Donald Trump, whose former daughter-in-law, Vanessa Trump, is dating Woods. Trump said on the day of the golfer’s arrest that he considers Woods a close friend. The White House did not say whether Trump spoke to Woods that day. The footage released Thursday also shows that Woods appeared to be astonished as he was handcuffed. In a video from the back of a patrol car, he could be seen hiccupping, yawning and nodding off while handcuffed during the ride to jail. /* Desktop-first: fully collapse by default */ #ap-readmore-embed { display: none; margin: 0; padding: 0; height: 0; min-height: 0; overflow: hidden; text-align: center; position: relative; z-index: 2; } /* Only show on mobile */ @media (max-width: 767px) { #ap-readmore-embed { display: block; margin: 28px 0; height: auto; overflow: visible; } } #ap-readmore-embed .ap-readmore-btn { appearance: none; -webkit-appearance: none; border: 0; background: #000; color: #fff; cursor: pointer; display: inline-flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; gap: 10px; padding: 14px 22px; border-radius: 999px; font-family: inherit, "AP Sans", -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, "Helvetica Neue", Arial, sans-serif; font-weight: 700; font-size: 16px; letter-spacing: 0.2px; line-height: 1; box-shadow: 0 10px 18px rgba(0,0,0,0.12); transition: transform 120ms ease, box-shadow 120ms ease, opacity 120ms ease; 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} else { fn(); } } APRM_onReady(function () { var APRM_embedEl = document.getElementById(APRM_EMBED_ID); if (!APRM_embedEl) return; // 🚨 DESKTOP: remove entire module wrapper and bail early if (!window.matchMedia(APRM_MOBILE_MQ).matches) { var APRM_rootModule = APRM_embedEl.closest(".HTMLModuleEnhancement") || APRM_embedEl.closest(".HtmlModule"); if (APRM_rootModule && APRM_rootModule.parentNode) { APRM_rootModule.parentNode.removeChild(APRM_rootModule); } else if (APRM_embedEl.parentNode) { APRM_embedEl.parentNode.removeChild(APRM_embedEl); } return; // stop the rest of the script from running } }); })(); (function () { var EMBED_ID = "ap-readmore-embed"; var BTN_ID = "apReadMoreBtn"; var FADE_ID = "apReadMoreFade"; var STOP_SELECTOR = ".Page-below"; var SIGN_IN_GATE_SELECTOR = ".sign-in-gate-content"; var HIDDEN_ATTR = "data-ap-readmore-hidden"; var MOBILE_MQ = "(max-width: 767px)"; function ready(fn) { if (document.readyState === "loading") { document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", fn); } else { fn(); } } function isElementNode(n) { return n && n.nodeType === 1; } function cancelEvent(e) { if (!e) return; if (typeof e.preventDefault === "function") e.preventDefault(); if (typeof e.stopPropagation === "function") e.stopPropagation(); if (typeof e.stopImmediatePropagation === "function") e.stopImmediatePropagation(); e.cancelBubble = true; e.returnValue = false; } function collapseDesktopEmbed(embed) { if (!embed) return true; if (!window.matchMedia(MOBILE_MQ).matches) { var maybeWrappers = [ embed.parentElement, embed.closest(".html-embed"), embed.closest("[data-type='htmlembed']"), embed.closest("[class*='embed']"), embed.closest("[class*='Embed']") ].filter(Boolean); embed.style.display = "none"; embed.style.margin = "0"; embed.style.padding = "0"; embed.style.height = "0"; embed.style.minHeight = "0"; embed.style.overflow = "hidden"; maybeWrappers.forEach(function (el) { el.style.margin = "0"; el.style.padding = "0"; el.style.height = "0"; el.style.minHeight = "0"; el.style.overflow = "hidden"; }); if (embed.parentNode) { embed.parentNode.removeChild(embed); } return true; } return false; } ready(function () { var embed = document.getElementById(EMBED_ID); var btn = document.getElementById(BTN_ID); var fade = document.getElementById(FADE_ID); if (!embed || !btn) return; if (collapseDesktopEmbed(embed)) return; var signInGate = document.querySelector(SIGN_IN_GATE_SELECTOR); if (signInGate) { embed.innerHTML = ""; return; } var stopEl = document.querySelector(STOP_SELECTOR); if (!stopEl) return; var rootCandidates = [ embed.closest(".Page"), embed.closest("article"), embed.closest("main"), document.body ].filter(Boolean); var root = rootCandidates.find(function (c) { return c.contains(stopEl); }) || document.body; var all = root.getElementsByTagName("*"); var hidden = []; for (var i = 0; i Pleading not guilty after being released from jail Woods was released from jail on bail hours after the crash and pleaded not guilty on Tuesday. He took a breath test that showed no signs of alcohol but declined to submit to a urine test, according to the sheriff’s office. His refusal can be prosecuted under Florida law. A legal expert told the AP that lab results aren’t needed to build a DUI case against Woods. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Stepping away from golf to seek treatment outside the U.S. Woods announced in social media posts on Tuesday that he was putting golf on hold to “prioritize my well-being and work toward lasting recovery.” A Florida judge approved his request to leave the country to seek treatment. Woods’ attorney said the golfer would begin “comprehensive inpatient treatment” and that it needed to take place outside the U.S. to protect his privacy. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Missing the Masters for a second straight year Woods has not played an official event since the 2024 British Open, but he remains one of golf’s most influential figures. While it was unlikely he would be in shape for this year’s Masters before the crash, he said just days earlier that he had hopes of playing even though his body doesn’t recover like it once did. Woods also won’t be joining Masters chairman Fred Ridley to celebrate the opening of a refurbished municipal course that involved Woods, or for the prestigious Masters Club dinner for champions. On Wednesday, Woods formally turned down the Ryder Cup captaincy for 2027. JOHN SEEWER Seewer covers state and national news for The Associated Press and is based in Toledo, Ohio. twitter mailto

Duke freshman forward Cameron Boozer named The Associated Press men’s national player of the year
2h ago

Duke freshman forward Cameron Boozer named The Associated Press men’s national player of the year

Duke forward Cameron Boozer (12) shoots over St. John's forward Bryce Hopkins (23) during the first half in the Sweet 16 of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Friday, March 27, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough) 2026-04-03T16:05:19Z Cameron Boozer was at the center of everything for Duke this season. The 6-foot-9, 250-pound forward proved tough enough to score through physical play. Rangy enough to space the floor and shoot from outside. Deft enough as a passer to find teammates, whether against constant double teams coming for him as the top name on every scouting report or while running the entire offense from up top. “You just want to affect winning in whatever way you can,” Boozer said. The high-end NBA prospect did that all season for a team that won 35 games, reached No. 1 in the AP Top 25 poll , claimed the top overall seed for March Madness and reached the NCAA Tournament’s Elite Eight. Now he’s The Associated Press men’s college basketball national player of the year, only the fifth freshman to earn the honor and the second in a row for a Duke program that keeps adding to the longest list of winners in the country. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); “It just goes to show more about what our team has done, just because I think that really helps awards like this, having great team success,” Boozer told the AP. “It’s really just not me.” Boozer, named unanimous first-team AP all-American last month , received 59 of 61 votes from AP Top 25 voters in results released Friday. BYU freshman AJ Dybantsa, another potential top NBA pick, received the other two votes after averaging a national-best 25.5 points per game. A short list Boozer, son of Duke and longtime NBA player Carlos Boozer, ranked averaged 22.5 points (ninth in Division I) and 10.2 rebounds (12th) while finishing tied for the national lead with 22 double-doubles. He also averaged 4.1 assists while posting efficient shooting numbers at 55.6% overall and 39.1% from 3-point range. He joins fellow Blue Devils star Cooper Flagg last year , another Duke player in Zion Williamson (2019) , Kentucky’s Anthony Davis (2012) and Texas star Kevin Durant (2007) as freshmen to win the AP award. Each went No. 1 or No. 2 in the NBA draft that year. “I’m very grateful just that I’m even in those (NBA) conversations,” Boozer said. “I think a lot of people dream of being where I am. Sometimes you’ve got to take a step back and just remember that once upon a time, you were a kid dreaming to be here. So I think it’s very special.” /* Desktop-first: fully collapse by default */ #ap-readmore-embed { display: none; margin: 0; padding: 0; height: 0; min-height: 0; overflow: hidden; text-align: center; position: relative; z-index: 2; } /* Only show on mobile */ @media (max-width: 767px) { #ap-readmore-embed { display: block; margin: 28px 0; height: auto; overflow: visible; } } #ap-readmore-embed .ap-readmore-btn { appearance: none; -webkit-appearance: none; border: 0; background: #000; color: #fff; cursor: pointer; display: inline-flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; gap: 10px; padding: 14px 22px; border-radius: 999px; font-family: inherit, "AP Sans", -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, "Helvetica Neue", Arial, sans-serif; font-weight: 700; font-size: 16px; letter-spacing: 0.2px; line-height: 1; box-shadow: 0 10px 18px rgba(0,0,0,0.12); transition: transform 120ms ease, box-shadow 120ms ease, opacity 120ms ease; touch-action: manipulation; -webkit-tap-highlight-color: transparent; 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} else { fn(); } } APRM_onReady(function () { var APRM_embedEl = document.getElementById(APRM_EMBED_ID); if (!APRM_embedEl) return; // 🚨 DESKTOP: remove entire module wrapper and bail early if (!window.matchMedia(APRM_MOBILE_MQ).matches) { var APRM_rootModule = APRM_embedEl.closest(".HTMLModuleEnhancement") || APRM_embedEl.closest(".HtmlModule"); if (APRM_rootModule && APRM_rootModule.parentNode) { APRM_rootModule.parentNode.removeChild(APRM_rootModule); } else if (APRM_embedEl.parentNode) { APRM_embedEl.parentNode.removeChild(APRM_embedEl); } return; // stop the rest of the script from running } }); })(); (function () { var EMBED_ID = "ap-readmore-embed"; var BTN_ID = "apReadMoreBtn"; var FADE_ID = "apReadMoreFade"; var STOP_SELECTOR = ".Page-below"; var SIGN_IN_GATE_SELECTOR = ".sign-in-gate-content"; var HIDDEN_ATTR = "data-ap-readmore-hidden"; var MOBILE_MQ = "(max-width: 767px)"; function ready(fn) { if (document.readyState === "loading") { document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", fn); } else { fn(); } } function isElementNode(n) { return n && n.nodeType === 1; } function cancelEvent(e) { if (!e) return; if (typeof e.preventDefault === "function") e.preventDefault(); if (typeof e.stopPropagation === "function") e.stopPropagation(); if (typeof e.stopImmediatePropagation === "function") e.stopImmediatePropagation(); e.cancelBubble = true; e.returnValue = false; } function collapseDesktopEmbed(embed) { if (!embed) return true; if (!window.matchMedia(MOBILE_MQ).matches) { var maybeWrappers = [ embed.parentElement, embed.closest(".html-embed"), embed.closest("[data-type='htmlembed']"), embed.closest("[class*='embed']"), embed.closest("[class*='Embed']") ].filter(Boolean); embed.style.display = "none"; embed.style.margin = "0"; embed.style.padding = "0"; embed.style.height = "0"; embed.style.minHeight = "0"; embed.style.overflow = "hidden"; maybeWrappers.forEach(function (el) { el.style.margin = "0"; el.style.padding = "0"; el.style.height = "0"; el.style.minHeight = "0"; el.style.overflow = "hidden"; }); if (embed.parentNode) { embed.parentNode.removeChild(embed); } return true; } return false; } ready(function () { var embed = document.getElementById(EMBED_ID); var btn = document.getElementById(BTN_ID); var fade = document.getElementById(FADE_ID); if (!embed || !btn) return; if (collapseDesktopEmbed(embed)) return; var signInGate = document.querySelector(SIGN_IN_GATE_SELECTOR); if (signInGate) { embed.innerHTML = ""; return; } var stopEl = document.querySelector(STOP_SELECTOR); if (!stopEl) return; var rootCandidates = [ embed.closest(".Page"), embed.closest("article"), embed.closest("main"), document.body ].filter(Boolean); var root = rootCandidates.find(function (c) { return c.contains(stopEl); }) || document.body; var all = root.getElementsByTagName("*"); var hidden = []; for (var i = 0; i His coaches think the same of him. ▶ View and download the men’s NCAA tournament bracket “We’ve been fortunate enough the last two years to have two of the best freshmen to ever play in college basketball back to back,” Duke associate head coach and former Blue Devils player Chris Carrawell said. “And Cam is right up there. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Boozer is Duke’s ninth AP winner, each coming from a different player. UCLA is the next closest with five winners, though that included Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (1967 and 1969) and Bill Walton (1972 and 1973) as two-time selections. UCLA, Ohio State and Duke rival North Carolina are the only other programs with as many as three different players to win the award. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Big-game successes Boozer arrived at Duke alongside twin brother Cayden after the two led Miami’s Columbus High to four straight state championships . By late February, the Blue Devils were starting a four-week reign atop the AP Top 25 that would carry to March Madness. Boozer — who said he looks at winning as a skill — routinely posted top performances in Duke’s biggest games, including during a rugged nonconference slate. He matched a season high with 35 points in a November win against Arkansas . He followed with 29 points against defending national champion Florida. He also had big performances at Michigan State (18 points, 15 rebounds) and flirted with a triple-double (18 points, 10 rebounds, seven assists) in a February win against Michigan . Along the way, he pushed through bumps and shoves. He closed Sunday’s season-ending loss to UConn with 27 points and his right eye swollen from a first-half blow. “There’s no agenda other than figuring out a way to win,” Wolverines coach Dusty May said. “I’ve seen him play a number of times this year where there’s six guys in the paint, and it’s not as if he’s jumping 40, 50 inches off the floor. His desire to rebound the ball, to set physical screens, to play to his advantages, is as impressive as any freshman that I can recall.” freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Managing pressure The other challenge was managing the scrutiny that comes from expectations for greatness. A missed shot. A turnover. The 3-for-17 shooting while battling rising frustration and Virginia shot-blocker Ugonna Onyenso in the ACC title game. “He does a great job of flushing it and not letting it dwell on him too much,” Cayden said. “That’s something he’s always been able to do since we were younger. Obviously I talk to him when he needs me to. And I sometimes just understood that, hey, he’s going through something, give him some space for a little bit and he’ll figure it out.” Cameron said getting away for time alone and putting down the phone helps. He points to prayer and even a recent effort to read more. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); The rest of the time, though, he’ll throw himself into becoming a better player. There’s comfort in that routine, the results yet to fail him. “I think just being prepared alleviates pressure,” Cameron said. “Being ready for a game, watching film, working out, knowing you put your time in, being confident in yourself — I think all that takes away a lot of the pressure that people talk about. At the end of the day, pressure really is what you put on yourself.” ___ AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness AARON BEARD Beard covers sports in North Carolina for The Associated Press with an emphasis on college basketball. His coverage includes ACC sports and the NHL’s Carolina Hurricanes. twitter mailto 获取更多RSS: https://feedx.net https://feedx.site

Bondi struggled to prosecute Trump foes. But will a new attorney general make a difference?
2h ago

Bondi struggled to prosecute Trump foes. But will a new attorney general make a difference?

Attorney General Pam Bondi, left, listens as President Donald Trump, right, speaks during a cabinet meeting at the White House, July 8, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File) 2026-04-03T15:54:23Z WASHINGTON (AP) — Pam Bondi is out of her job after failing to deliver criminal cases against President Donald Trump’s political enemies. But there’s no guarantee her successor will have any better success at placating the president. Over the last year, Bondi’s Justice Department has encountered resistance from judges, grand jurors and its own workforce in trying to establish criminal conduct by one Trump foe after another. A new attorney general will confront not only Trump’s demand for political prosecutions — a constant dating back to his first term in the White House — but also the same skeptical court system, and factual and legal hurdles, that have impeded efforts to deliver the sought-after results. “At the end of the day, it’s not like there were some magic steps that Pam Bondi could have taken to make bad cases look good to grand juries or judges,” Peter Keisler, a former acting attorney general in President George W. Bush’s administration, said in an email. “The problem is that the president is demanding that prosecutions be brought when there’s no evidence and no valid legal theory. A new Attorney General won’t change that.” freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Bondi was just the latest Trump attorney general pressed to meet the president’s demands of loyalty and desire for retribution. Trump in his first term called for Jeff Sessions to investigate Democrat Hillary Clinton and ultimately pushed him out over his recusal from the Russia election interference investigation. He berated another attorney general, William Barr, over Barr’s refusal to back his false claims of election fraud in the 2020 contest. Barr resigned soon after. Bondi arrived at the Justice Department 14 months ago seemingly determined to remain in Trump’s good graces unlike her predecessors had, heaping praise on him, offering unflinching support and embarking on investigations into Democrats and the president’s adversaries — even amid concerns from career prosecutors about the sufficiency of evidence. /* Desktop-first: fully collapse by default */ #ap-readmore-embed { display: none; margin: 0; padding: 0; height: 0; min-height: 0; overflow: hidden; text-align: center; position: relative; z-index: 2; } /* Only show on mobile */ @media (max-width: 767px) { #ap-readmore-embed { display: block; margin: 28px 0; height: auto; overflow: visible; } } #ap-readmore-embed .ap-readmore-btn { appearance: none; -webkit-appearance: none; border: 0; background: #000; color: #fff; cursor: pointer; display: inline-flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; gap: 10px; padding: 14px 22px; border-radius: 999px; font-family: inherit, "AP Sans", -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, "Helvetica Neue", Arial, sans-serif; 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var hidden = []; for (var i = 0; i Days after Trump implored Bondi via social media last September to prosecute former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James, the Justice Department did just that, securing indictments in Virginia. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); But the win was short-lived: a judge weeks later dismissed the cases after finding that the prosecutor who filed them, Lindsey Halligan, was illegally appointed. Grand juries have since refused to bring new mortgage fraud charges against James and the Comey case is mired in a thorny evidentiary dispute and statute of limitations concerns. Both Comey and James have vigorously denied any wrongdoing and called the cases against them politically motivated. Since then, a federal grand jury in Washington refused to return an indictment against Democratic lawmakers in connection with a video in which they urged U.S. military members to resist “illegal orders.” And a federal judge has quashed Justice Department subpoenas issued to the Federal Reserve as part of an investigation into testimony last June by Chair Jerome Powell about a $2.5 billion building renovation. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); The judge, James Boasberg, said that the government has “produced essentially zero evidence to suspect Chair Powell of a crime” and called its justifications for the subpoenas a “thin and unsubstantiated” pretext to force Powell to cut interest rates. A prosecutor on the case subsequently conceded in court that the investigation had not found evidence of a crime. An additional investigation into a Trump enemy remains underway with prosecutors in Florida scrutinizing former CIA Director John Brennan over testimony to Congress related to Russian interference in the 2016 election. That investigation has been open for months, but has not produced charges and it’s not clear that it will. Brennan’s lawyers have similarly called the investigation baseless. One high-profile Trump critic who could face trial in the years ahead is his former national security adviser, John Bolton, though the investigation that produced that indictment and examined Bolton’s handling of classified documents began before Trump took office. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); For now, the Justice Department will be led by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche , who has a longstanding relationship with Trump after having served as one of his personal lawyers. Several people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press on Thursday that Lee Zeldin, a Trump loyalist and head of the Environmental Protection Agency, has been privately mentioned by Trump as a possible pick. Whoever holds the job in the long term will almost certainly be expected to carry out Trump’s retribution campaign with more success, said Jimmy Gurule, a former Justice Department official and law professor at Notre Dame. Blanche appeared to acknowledge as much in a Thursday evening interview with Fox News, saying “I think the president is frustrated, everybody is frustrated ” and that “what we saw happen for the past four years is unforgivable and can never happen again.” “If she was fired because Trump did not think that she was moving quickly enough in bringing criminal cases against his political enemies, then you would expect that the person that would replace her would probably agree to escalate those efforts,” Gurule said. ERIC TUCKER Tucker covers national security in Washington for The Associated Press, with a focus on the FBI and Justice Department. twitter mailto

BBC Mundo

Center
global
“Se ven increíbles, se ven hermosos”: los astronautas de Artemis II envían su primer mensaje a la Tierra
1h ago

“Se ven increíbles, se ven hermosos”: los astronautas de Artemis II envían su primer mensaje a la Tierra

La tripulación de Artemis II habló sobre las impresionantes vistas de la Tierra durante una transmisión en vivo desde el espacio.

Irán derriba un avión de combate de EE.UU., según medios
3h ago

Irán derriba un avión de combate de EE.UU., según medios

De acuerdo con reportes de prensa, EE.UU. estaría llevando adelante una operación de búsqueda y rescate en el sur de Irán.

¿Por qué los astronautas de Artemis II no pisarán la Luna como en las misiones Apolo a pesar de los enormes avances tecnológicos de los últimos 50 años?
8h ago

¿Por qué los astronautas de Artemis II no pisarán la Luna como en las misiones Apolo a pesar de los enormes avances tecnológicos de los últimos 50 años?

Dicen que un celular "tiene más potencia computacional que toda la NASA en 1969". Entonces, ¿por qué ninguno de los astronautas de Artemis II descenderán a la Luna como en aquel entonces?

misiones apoloartemis iinasa

BBC News - World

Center
UK
Trump seeks massive $1.5tn for defence alongside cuts in domestic spending
3h ago

Trump seeks massive $1.5tn for defence alongside cuts in domestic spending

The president's new budget would cut non-defence spending by 10%, partly by slashing domestic programmes.

defense budgetmilitary spendingdomestic spending cuts
Italy's famed Uffizi admits cyber-attack but denies security breach
4h ago

Italy's famed Uffizi admits cyber-attack but denies security breach

Hackers were reported to have infiltrated IT systems - but the gallery says its works are safe.

US jobs surge unexpectedly in March despite Iran war
5h ago

US jobs surge unexpectedly in March despite Iran war

Employers added 178,000 jobs, far more than had expected, the Labor Department says.

us jobsiran waroil prices

BFM TV Economie

Center-Right
europe
Dragon Ball, Mario, Tamagotchi... La folie des distributeurs de jouets japonais Bandai débarque à Paris (et les adultes sont les principales cibles)
5h ago

Dragon Ball, Mario, Tamagotchi... La folie des distributeurs de jouets japonais Bandai débarque à Paris (et les adultes sont les principales cibles)

Bandai, le numéro deux mondial du jouet, inaugure sa première boutique de "gashapon" en France, située rue de Rivoli à Paris. En partenariat avec King Jouet, le groupe japonais déploie 300 machines de figurines en capsules pour séduire les enfants mais aussi les "kidultes", un segment devenu stratégique pour compenser la baisse de natalité en France.

jouetsgashaponbandai
Elle reste pour le moment hermétique à la guerre en Iran: l'économie américaine a créé 178.000 emplois en mars, soit 3 fois plus que prévu
5h ago

Elle reste pour le moment hermétique à la guerre en Iran: l'économie américaine a créé 178.000 emplois en mars, soit 3 fois plus que prévu

Les dernières données du département américain du Travail montrent que 178.000 emplois ont été créés aux Etats-Unis en mars, alors que 133.000 ont été détruits en février. Le taux de chômage, lui, a reflué, passant de 4,4 à 4,3% le mois dernier.

créations d'emploiséconomie américainetaux de chômage
+4% pour le blé, +5% pour les huiles, +7% pour le sucre: les prix alimentaires sont en hausse dans le monde, tirés par le coût de l'énergie
5h ago

+4% pour le blé, +5% pour les huiles, +7% pour le sucre: les prix alimentaires sont en hausse dans le monde, tirés par le coût de l'énergie

Selon l'Organisation des Nations unies pour l'alimentation et l'agriculture (FAO), les prix des denrées alimentaires ont augmenté en mars de 2,4% sur un mois, notamment à cause du conflit au Moyen-Orient.

prix alimentairescoût de l'énergiefao

Der Spiegel

Center-Left
europe
»Tatort« aus München: »Unvergänglich« mit Batic und Leitmayr
3h ago

»Tatort« aus München: »Unvergänglich« mit Batic und Leitmayr

In einer finalen Doppelfolge gehen die beiden ewigen »Tatort«-Junggesellen Batic und Leitmayr ihrer schwierigen Männerfreundschaft auf den Grund. Und der Fall? Völlig egal.

batic und leitmayrtatortmännerfreundschaft
Trumps Rausschmisse: Wer ist nach Pam Bondi und Kristi Noem dran?
4h ago

Trumps Rausschmisse: Wer ist nach Pam Bondi und Kristi Noem dran?

Trumps Zustimmungswerte sinken, der US-Präsident sucht offenbar Sündenböcke. Nach der Entlassung von Justizministerin Pam Bondi fragt sich jetzt: Wer ist als Nächstes dran? Über eine Kandidatin wird bereits gemunkelt.

trumps rausschmissekristi noempam bondi
Alpine Divorce: Debatte über Männer, die Frauen zurücklassen, spaltet Bergsport-Community
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Alpine Divorce: Debatte über Männer, die Frauen zurücklassen, spaltet Bergsport-Community

Unter dem Begriff »Alpine Divorce« berichten Frauen in den sozialen Medien, wie sie von ihren Partnern am Berg im Stich gelassen werden. Das klingt nach Machtmissbrauch im Alpinsport. Doch so einfach ist es nicht.

alpine divorcebergsport-communitydebatte

Deutsche Welle (DE)

Center
europe
Wird der Irak in den Iran-Krieg hineingezogen?
3h ago

Wird der Irak in den Iran-Krieg hineingezogen?

Teherans "Achse des Widerstands" ist auch im Irak aktiv. Milizen greifen Ölfelder, Hotels sowie militärische US-Einrichtungen im Land an. Die USA bomben zurück. Einblicke in Bagdads Sicherheitsdilemma.

iran-kriegirakiranische miliz
Explosionen im ICE: Ermittler prüfen politisches Motiv
5h ago

Explosionen im ICE: Ermittler prüfen politisches Motiv

Ein 20-Jähriger soll in einem Schnellzug auf dem Weg nach Frankfurt Sprengvorrichtungen gezündet und dabei Reisende verletzt haben. Der Verdächtige wurde festgenommen, die Hintergründe der Tat sind weiterhin unklar.

explosionensprengvorrichtungenice-schnellzug
Uffizien bringen nach Hackerangriff Kunstwerke in Sicherheit
7h ago

Uffizien bringen nach Hackerangriff Kunstwerke in Sicherheit

Nach einem Cyberangriff auf die Uffizien in Florenz wächst die Angst vor einem Überfall: Täter erbeuten sensible Daten zu Alarmanlagen und Lageplänen. Italiens berühmte Galerie verstärkt ihre Schutzmaßnahmen.

uffizienhackerangriffkunstwerke

Die Welt

Center-Right
europe
„Es wird noch viel mehr folgen!“ – USA bombardieren größte Autobahnbrücke im Iran
12h ago

„Es wird noch viel mehr folgen!“ – USA bombardieren größte Autobahnbrücke im Iran

Die USA haben eine Autobahnbrücke im Iran bombardiert. Donald Trump kündigt weitere Angriffe auf die Infrastruktur an. Dutzende Staaten erhöhen den Druck auf den Iran: Die strategisch zentrale Straße von Hormus soll „sofort und bedingungslos“ geöffnet werden. Mehr im Liveticker.

iranusaautobahnbrücke
Krankenkassen und Verbände laufen Sturm gegen mögliches Ende der kostenlosen Mitversicherung
25.3.2026

Krankenkassen und Verbände laufen Sturm gegen mögliches Ende der kostenlosen Mitversicherung

Die Regierung erwägt laut Medienberichten das Aus für die kostenlose Mitversicherung von Ehepartnern bei der Krankenversicherung. Sozialverbände und Opposition schlagen Alarm.

kostenlose mitversicherungfamilienversicherungkrankenkassen
US-Kampfjet über Iran abgeschossen – ein Besatzungsmitglied von US-Soldaten gerettet
1h ago

US-Kampfjet über Iran abgeschossen – ein Besatzungsmitglied von US-Soldaten gerettet

Im Südwesten des Iran ist ein amerikanischer Kampfjet abgeschossen worden. Ein Besatzungsmitglied konnte gerettet werden, die Suche nach dem zweiten dauert an. Dutzende Staaten erhöhen derweil den Druck auf den Iran wegen der Straße von Hormus. Mehr im Liveticker.

El Confidencial

Center
europe
He convertido el reloj Casio de toda la vida en un 'smartwatch' que vas a querer tener
3h ago

He convertido el reloj Casio de toda la vida en un 'smartwatch' que vas a querer tener

Aunque los relojes inteligentes han logrado hacerse con un hueco en el mercado, son muchos los que no terminan de encontrar el atractivo a un dispositivo que abruma con tantas funciones y que necesita estar recargándose prácticamente todos los días. Los relojes clásicos siguen teniendo su público , y su estilo atemporal y autonomía casi infinita suelen ser los puntos clave que los siguen manteniendo vivos en unos tiempos donde las modas determinan el éxito y el fracaso de un producto. Pero entre tanto Apple Watch, Huawei Watch o Galaxy Watch, siempre estará el Casio F-91W, el Casio de toda la vida . Recuerdo perfectamente ver a mi abuelo llegar de trabajar del campo, con las manos llenas de tierra y lavárselas enérgicamente, al mismo tiempo que enjuagaba su indestructible reloj de faenas. Era el F-91W, un reloj simple, eficaz, que no fallaba en dar la hora y que le avisaba para la hora del café. Es un reloj extremadamente sencillo, que marcó una época en la década de los 90 por su fiabilidad y su increíble duración de batería, ya que podía durar sin problemas entre 7 y 10 años perfectamente . A día de hoy sigue siendo un reloj que se vende muchísimo, especialmente desde que en 2012 la marca presentó versiones de otros colores y acabados. Era el reloj básico por excelencia. ¿Y si pudiéramos convertir ese Casio en un modelo conectado? ¿Y si contara pasos y enviara los registros a tu teléfono móvil? Pues justo eso es lo que hace mi Casio tras modificarlo con mis propias manos. Una manualidad entretenida que dará una segunda vida a tu viejo reloj de los 90. Un clásico inteligente Este no es el primer Casio inteligente . La marca cuenta con muchos modelos en su catálogo con conexión Bluetooth, capaces de enviar datos al teléfono y registrar eventos. Pero entre ellos no se encuentra el F-91W. Para ese caso tendremos que hacer uso de los servicios de Ollee, una pequeña placa controladora con la que sustituiremos la original del reloj, para así poder dar estos poderes al dispositivo. Placa Ollee para CASIO F-91W (Foto: Carlos Martínez) Es prácticamente cambiar las tripas del reloj por unas nuevas, aunque todo el exterior queda intacto. Es un proceso bastante sencillo que Ollee detalla perfectamente paso a paso, por lo que cualquier persona podría completar sin problemas. Seguiremos usando la caja original del reloj, la pila original y una pequeña pletina metálica que se encarga de conectar la pila con la placa. He tardado menos de 10 minutos en montar todo, ya que en un visto y no visto ya tenía el reloj funcionando de nuevo. Con la placa ya instalada, una breve pulsación mantenida activará el Bluetooth para poder conectar el reloj con la aplicación oficial instalada en mi teléfono. Desde ahí, se ha sincronizado la hora local y he empezado a ver las diferentes funciones que se ofrecen. Como una smartband de las primeras Desmontando el CASIO F-91W (Foto: Carlos Martínez) Debo decir que las funciones distan mucho de un reloj inteligente de los de ahora. Para que lo entiendas, la placa Ollee no ofrece lector de ritmo cardíaco , sencillamente porque no cuenta con pulsómetro ni ningún tipo de sensor parecido . En su lugar, incluye una función que te obliga a mantener un botón pulsado mientras tú mismo cuentas 20 pulsaciones (tocandote el pecho o la muñeca, por ejemplo), ya que una vez llegada a la número 20, si sueltas el botón el reloj calcula automáticamente tus pulsaciones por minuto. Es decir, es una simple calculadora que requiere conteo manual y no un sensor inteligente que te monitoriza en todo momento. Esto me hace ver al F-91W como una de esas primeras smartbands que llegaron al mercado, que ofrecían conteo de pasos, alarmas y poco más. Eran simples, pero lograron introducir el concepto de cuantificación de manera muy exitosa. Esta modificación del Casio ofrece básicamente eso, algo de cuantificación y un pequeño enlace con tu teléfono , de manera que sientas que el reloj aporta algo en tu móvil. De todas formas, no esperes demasiadas funciones inteligentes . Las más llamativas podrían ser el conteo de pasos o la información de las horas de amanecer y atardecer, encontrando también algunas curiosas como dos sencillos juegos (una especie de pinball y un Blackjack ) o un contador manual. El creador ha asegurado que anda trabajando en futuras mejoras que llegarán con actualizaciones de software, como es la posibilidad de leer notificaciones (esto sería ya muy interesante) o la posibilidad de conectar servicios de otras aplicaciones como las relacionadas con información climatológica, controles musicales, etc. Casio F-91W (Foto: Carlos Martínez) Lo interesante aquí es que todo eso se ajusta para que funcione con los tres botones originales del reloj y su diminuta pantalla LCD. La hazaña es digna de elogiar, y el resultado es cuanto menos curioso. Un trabajo que necesita mejorar La idea de Ollee es bastante buena, pero falla en algunas ejecuciones. Como comentaba anteriormente, el único atisbo de smartwatch puro y duro que vemos entre las funciones es la de contar los pasos , pero el problema es que no lo hace especialmente bien. Comparado con otros relojes actuales, el conteo de pasos falla bastante, y he podido comprobar que un simple movimiento de la mano se contabiliza como paso ejecutado, lo que desvirtúa enormemente los registros tomados a lo largo del día. La ausencia de notificaciones y conexión directa con el teléfono resta también en la experiencia que podrías esperar en un smartwatch, mucho más si tenemos en cuenta el precio que tiene el accesorio. Y es que los 55 dólares que hay que pagar por la placa Ollee nos parece un tanto elevado comparado con las funciones ofrecidas. Probablemente, muchos usuarios prefieran invertir esos 50 euros en un Redmi Watch 5 Lite antes que destripar su querido Casio, ya que todo lo que se puede obtener con la propuesta de Xiaomi supera con creces a las de Ollee. Por otro lado, se estima que la batería podría aguantar unos 10 meses de vida, algo completamente imposible de conseguir con un reloj moderno con pantalla. Pero, por si fuera poco, si ajustamos algunos parámetros en la aplicación oficial y desactivamos algunas cosas como tener siempre activado el Bluetooth o los segundos que se mantiene activada la luz de iluminación, se podría llegar a alcanzar los 3 años de vida de la batería. Ahí es nada. ¿Merece la pena esta modificación? Casio F-91W (Foto: Carlos Martínez) Aquellos coleccionistas de relojes probablemente vean un sacrilegio hacer pasar por quirófano a este Casio, pero hay que tener en cuenta que el reloj se puede comprar por 19 euros en Amazon, por lo que no supone demasiado adquirir uno nuevo si se necesita. El problema está en que los 55 dólares de la placa Ollee me parecen algo desproporcionados para lo que ofrece, y quizás necesitaríamos ver en acción la supuesta llegada de las notificaciones, algo que sí transformaría el viejo F-91W en algo más propio del 2026. Configurar varias alarmas desde la aplicación oficial ya dan un toque de modernidad en cuanto a funcionalidades, y poder disponer de una segunda configuración horaria o poder cambiar el color del LED de iluminación son detalles que mejorar el F-91W en cuestión de segundos. Pero el concepto smartwatch es algo más, y será ahí donde Ollee tenga que demostrar todo lo que puede llegar a hacer. ___________________ El Confidencial elabora estas reviews, comparativas y guías siguiendo un criterio estrictamente editorial. El equipo detrás de ¿Me Lo Compro? tiene en cuenta tendencias, actualidad del sector, interés de la audiencia, así como criterios de calidad y precio para la elección de los productos y servicios que analiza. Las muestras han sido facilitadas por las compañías de manera temporal, sin ningún tipo de contrapartida, compromiso de publicación o beneficio de cualquier otra naturaleza. El texto incluye una selección de botones/enlaces para comprar el producto al menor precio posible. El Confidencial puede generar ingresos por las ventas de estos productos, pero la inclusión de estos enlaces cumple una mera función de servicio al lector dentro de un contenido periodístico. El sistema de afiliación y la publicidad programática son las únicas vías de monetización de la sección ¿Me Lo Compro?, además de las suscripciones al periódico que generan estos contenidos. En ningún caso se publican contenidos o análisis patrocinados.

reloj casiosmartwatchcasio f-91w
Detenido un hombre de 45 años por asesinar presuntamente a su pareja en Basauri (Vizcaya)
9h ago

Detenido un hombre de 45 años por asesinar presuntamente a su pareja en Basauri (Vizcaya)

La Ertzaintza ha detenido este viernes a un hombre de 45 años por su presunta implicación en la muerte violenta de su pareja, una mujer de 44 años, que se produjo este miércoles en una vivienda de la localidad vizcaína de Basauri, en un caso que se investiga como violencia de género . Según ha informado el Departamento vasco de Seguridad , una mujer de 44 años falleció este miércoles por la mañana en una vivienda de Basauri (Vizcaya), tras haber sufrido, al parecer, "una supuesta indisposición", y después de todos los intentos "infructuosos" por salvar su vida de los servicios sanitarios desplazados al lugar. Tras el análisis forense realizado en las horas posteriores para esclarecer las causas del fallecimiento se determinó que pudiera tratarse de una muerte violenta. La Ertzaintza inició entonces una investigación en relación a este suceso , y como resultado de la misma, durante la mañana de este viernes, se ha procedido a la detención de la pareja de la víctima, un hombre de 45 años, acusado de un presunto delito de homicidio en el ámbito de la violencia de género.

violencia de géneromuerte violentahomicidio
Detenido un hombre en Cabra (Córdoba) tras increpar a Juanma Moreno y oponer resistencia policial
11h ago

Detenido un hombre en Cabra (Córdoba) tras increpar a Juanma Moreno y oponer resistencia policial

Un individuo ha sido detenido durante la noche de este jueves, 2 de abril, por "increpar" al presidente de la Junta de Andalucía, Juanma Moreno, mientras realizaba una visita institucional al municipio de Cabra (Córdoba). Según han confirmado fuentes policiales a Europa Press, tras lo mismo, agentes de la Policía Nacional "invitaron al individuo" a abandonar el lugar. No obstante, el mismo opuso resistencia y, finalmente, fue detenido por un presunto delito de atentado a agentes de la Autoridad . Este varón habría "reprendido" a los agentes mientras los mismos intentaban "velar por la seguridad " de los allí presentes, dado el estado "alterado" de este individuo. Detenido un hombre en Granada buscado por un delito de agresión sexual a un menor EFE El instituto armado arresta en Albaicín a un fugitivo de 45 años, que cambiaba de domicilio y ocupaba cuevas. Además, tenía otra requisitoria por seguridad vial y ya ingresó en prisión Moreno se encontraba en el referido municipio cordobés durante una visita al Ayuntamiento, en la que mantuvo una reunión con su alcalde, Fernando Priego. Además, visitó la hermandad de la Piedad y asistió a la salida de la hermandad de Nuestro Padre Jesús Preso .

detenciónincreparresistencia policial

El Mundo

Center-Right
europe
Carrera contrarreloj entre Teherán y EEUU para encontrar a dos tripulantes de un F15 abatido por Irán
3h ago

Carrera contrarreloj entre Teherán y EEUU para encontrar a dos tripulantes de un F15 abatido por Irán

Según el Canal 12 de Israel uno de ellos ha sido rescatado y el otro se desconoce su paradero. Ha sido en un área montañosa al sur del país  Leer

f15 abatidooperaciones de rescatecarrera contrarreloj
Podemos se integra en Por Andalucía tras una negociación contrarreloj y concurrirá junto a IU y Sumar en las elecciones andaluzas del 17-M
7h ago

Podemos se integra en Por Andalucía tras una negociación contrarreloj y concurrirá junto a IU y Sumar en las elecciones andaluzas del 17-M

Los partidos estuvieron más de diez horas reunidos este Jueves Santo  Leer

por andalucíaelecciones andaluzaspodemos
Videojuegos, chats, apuestas e inteligencia artificial: dentro de la primera guerra interactiva de la historia
7h ago

Videojuegos, chats, apuestas e inteligencia artificial: dentro de la primera guerra interactiva de la historia

La tecnología y las redes sociales han convertido el conflicto en Irán en una experiencia participativa que recuerda inquietantemente a la lógica de los juegos, difuminando los límites entre guerra y espectáculo  Leer

guerra interactivavideojuegosinteligencia artificial

El Pais

Center-Left
europe
La Casa Blanca pide aumentar un 40% el presupuesto para defensa al récord histórico de 1,5 billones de dólares
3h ago

La Casa Blanca pide aumentar un 40% el presupuesto para defensa al récord histórico de 1,5 billones de dólares

La Casa Blanca pedirá al Congreso un presupuesto de unos 1,5 billones de dólares (unos 1,3 billones de euros) para gasto de defensa para el próximo año fiscal, que comienza en octubre. La cifra representa una escalada de cerca del 40% con respecto al gasto actual y dispararía la inversión militar a su mayor nivel en la historia moderna, en momentos en los que Estados Unidos libra, junto a Israel, una guerra contra Irán . Seguir leyendo

Estados Unidos suma inesperadamente 178.000 puestos de trabajo en marzo
3h ago

Estados Unidos suma inesperadamente 178.000 puestos de trabajo en marzo

Las empresas estadounidenses sumaron 178.000 nuevos empleos en marzo, en un repunte notable después de un febrero decepcionante. De acuerdo al informe mensual del Departamento del Trabajo (DOL, por sus siglas en inglés) publicado este viernes, la contratación se recuperó luego de la pérdida de 133.000 puestos el mes anterior. En medio del comienzo de la guerra con Irán y los impactos económicos que está teniendo, la creación de empleo superó con creces las previsiones, triplicando lo estimado por los analistas, aunque advierten que es probable que las repercusiones del conflicto se noten en las contrataciones más adelante. Seguir leyendo

Primeras imágenes de la Tierra de Artemis 2 en su histórico viaje a la Luna: auroras, reflejos del Sol y “la península Ibérica centelleando”
3h ago

Primeras imágenes de la Tierra de Artemis 2 en su histórico viaje a la Luna: auroras, reflejos del Sol y “la península Ibérica centelleando”

La misión Artemis 2 apenas acaba de comenzar su histórico viaje a la Luna, pero ya ha empezado a agasajar al mundo con imágenes memorables de la Tierra vista desde el espacio. A ojos de la nave Orion, el planeta se asoma como una esfera perfectamente iluminada, de una nitidez extraordinaria, solo tintada por suaves brochazos de nubes que tapan trocitos de continente y el brillo de auroras escapándose por el horizonte. “Somos nosotros, juntos, mirando a los astronautas en su viaje a la Luna, para toda la humanidad”, escribe la NASA en la publicación de estas imágenes. El comandante de la misión, Reid Wiseman , es el artífice de estas primeras instantáneas captadas desde la ventana de la nave espacial Orion después de que la cápsula completase la maniobra decisiva que llevará a la humanidad de vuelta al satélite por primera vez en medio siglo. Seguir leyendo

artemis 2viaje a la lunaimágenes de la tierra

FAZ

Center-Right
europe
„Sicherheitszone“: Israel zerstört Dörfer im Süden Libanons
2h ago

„Sicherheitszone“: Israel zerstört Dörfer im Süden Libanons

Israel will im Süden Libanons eine „Sicherheitszone“ errichten. Die Armee hat längst mit Abrissarbeiten begonnen.

Frankfurter Kommunalpolitik: SPD wählt Fraktionschefin ab
3h ago

Frankfurter Kommunalpolitik: SPD wählt Fraktionschefin ab

Die Frankfurter SPD-Fraktion wählt einen Vertrauten des Oberbürgermeisters zum Vorsitzenden. Was bedeutet das für die anstehenden Koalitionsgespräche?

spd-fraktionfrankfurter spdfraktionsvorsitz
F.A.Z.-Serie Schneller Schlau: „Eier sind wieder trendy“
3h ago

F.A.Z.-Serie Schneller Schlau: „Eier sind wieder trendy“

Von der „Cholesterinbombe“ zum Proteinlieferanten: Die Nachfrage nach Hühnereiern steigt, die Produktion kommt kaum hinterher – und das nicht nur um Ostern herum.

eiertrendyf.a.z.-serie

Fox News - World

Center-Right
US
Nepal probe exposes $20M fraudulent rescue scheme involving lacing Mt Everest hikers' food: report
Yesterday

Nepal probe exposes $20M fraudulent rescue scheme involving lacing Mt Everest hikers' food: report

An investigation has exposed a nearly $20 million insurance scam in Nepal involving guides who allegedly fake or induce mountainside rescues, including by lacing the food of some hikers near Mt. Everest, according to a report by The Kathmandu Post. Kathmandu is the capital of Nepal, where some adventurous individuals go to climb Mount Everest , the world's highest peak. The mountain sits on the border of Nepal and the Tibet Autonomous Region of China . MIKE TOBIN DOCUMENTS DARING MOUNT EVEREST CLIMB IN NEW FOX NATION SPECIAL The Kathmandu Post reported that after it highlighted the fraud in 2018, the government established a fact-finding committee, issued a 700-page report and declared reforms. But last year, the Nepal Police’s Central Investigation Bureau (CIB) reopened the matter and discovered that the fraud was increasing. The outlet indicated that the CIB probe points out two main fraudulent scenarios. One involves guides suggesting to tired adventurers who do not want to walk back that if they feign illness, a chopper will pick them up, according to The Kathmandu Post. The outlet reported that, in the other scenario, guides and hotel staff, according to the CIB probe, have been coached to scare trekkers at high altitude, where altitude sickness can occur. They allegedly claim that the trekkers are in danger of dying and that only immediate evacuation will spare them. In some instances, investigators discovered that Diamox (acetazolamide) tablets, utilized to prevent altitude sickness, were given in conjunction with excessive water intake to cause the symptoms that would give grounds for a rescue, the outlet reported. In at least one instance noted in the investigation, guides allegedly laced food with baking powder to cause people to be unwell, the outlet stated. AMERICAN JIM MORRISON MAKES HISTORY SKIING DOWN MOUNT EVEREST, DEDICATES RUN TO LATE PARTNER Police recorded a case in which four individuals were picked up on one chopper flight, but insurance claims were filed as more than one separate rescue, the report noted. The framework tying the system of mass fraud together was detailed in police interrogations, according to the outlet, which reported that hospitals shell out 20% to 25% of the insurance money to trekking businesses and 20% to 25% to chopper rescue operators in return for patient referrals. Trekking guides and their businesses get a boost from inflated invoices, the outlet suggested. In some instances, tourists are offered money to join in the scam, The Kathmandu Post added. In the period between 2022 and 2025, investigators found a whopping 4,782 foreign patients serviced at implicated hospitals, with 171 cases verified as fraudulent rescues, the outlet reported. During that span, Era International Hospital raked in deposits of over $15.87 million for such activities and Shreedhi International Hospital got more than $1.22 million, the outlet reported. Mountain Rescue Service carried out 171 fake rescues from an overall 1,248 charter flights, scoring around $10.31 million from insurers, the outlet reported, adding that Nepal Charter Service executed 75 fake rescues out of 471 flights, claiming $8.2 million. Everest Experience and Assistance was allegedly tied to 71 suspicious rescues out of 601 flights, with claims of $11.04 million. HELICOPTER CRASHES INTO OCEAN OFF HAWAII COAST, LEAVING MULTIPLE DEAD AND INJURED CIB charged 32 people last month with offenses against the state and organized crime, the outlet reported, noting that nine individuals were arrested while others were said to be absconding. Individuals from Mountain Helicopters, Altitude Air and Manang Air, which was rebranded as Basecamp Helicopters, as well as physicians and administrators with Swacon International Hospital, Shreedhi International Hospital and Era International Hospital were among the individuals who have been charged, the outlet indicated.

insurance fraudmountain rescuemt. everest
Iran regime uses war to mask 'brutal' execution surge against political opponents
Yesterday

Iran regime uses war to mask 'brutal' execution surge against political opponents

The Islamic Republic of Iran is on track to exceed the record number of executions it carried out against opponents in 2025, with 657 executions in the first three months of the year, according to the Iran Human Rights Society. Hiding behind the war with the U.S. and Israel, critics say the regime appears desperate to eliminate opposition, particularly following anti-regime demonstrations that shook the nation's rulers and resulted in tens of thousands being murdered by the country's security forces and militias. In March, the regime was met with condemnations, including from President Donald Trump, over the execution of 19-year-old wrestler Saleh Mohammadi. MOJTABA KHAMENEI REGIME EXECUTES CHAMPION WRESTLER AS IRAN INTENSIFIES BRUTAL CRACKDOWN DURING WAR On Iran's latest killing spree, a State Department spokesperson told Fox News Digital, "This latest barbaric act is more evidence of why the regime can never be allowed the advanced capabilities that we are destroying." The United Nations special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran, Mai Sato, said that since the start of the war at least six executions have taken place as of March 30 and noted on her X account that an additional two executions took place on March 31. Sato described the regime’s known victims as protesters, an accused spy for Israel, and individuals charged with "armed rebellion" against the regime. Sato said that "due to the internet blackout, it is unclear who else has been executed or are at risk of execution." She said, "What is clear is that the death penalty is being used as a tool for suppressing political opposition in wartime conditions." IRAN'S INTERNET BLACKOUT HIDING STRIKE DAMAGE AND SUPPRESSING DISSENT, ISRAELI OFFICIALS SAY The secretariat of the NCRI provided a written statement to Fox News Digital describing the recent executions of four members of the Iranian dissident organization People’s Mohahedin Organization of Iran (PMOE/MEK). The NCRI said members Mohammad Taghavi and Akbar Daneshvarkar were transferred from Ghezel Hesar prison on March 29 and executed the following morning. Four additional members of the group, Babak Alipour, Vahid Bani Amerian, Abolhassan Montazer and Pouya Ghobadi, were transferred as well. On March 31, the regime executed Alipour and Ghobadi. Ali Safavi, a member of the NCRI’s Foreign Affairs Committee, called for "urgent action" to save the lives of Amerian and Montazer. Maryam Rajavi, the president-elect of the NCRI, posted on X that the execution conducted on March 31 "reflects the clerical regime’s fear and desperation." She called on the United Nations and its member states to engage in "practical and effective measures, including the closure of embassies and the expulsion of the regime’s terrorist diplomats and agents." Before the Islamic Republic killed thousands of its own people during January protests, the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights stated that the Islamic Republic carried out "at least" 1,500 executions in 2025. According to the high commissioner, "the scale and pace of executions suggest a systematic use of capital punishment as a tool of State intimidation, with disproportionate impact on ethnic minorities and migrants." Amnesty International has raised similar concerns, and additionally noted that five "young protesters" now "face the imminent risk of execution," having been transferred from Ghezal Hesar "to an unidentified location" as of March 31.

executionsiran regimepolitical opposition
Israeli paramedic delivers baby, rushes it to bomb shelter during Iran attack
Yesterday

Israeli paramedic delivers baby, rushes it to bomb shelter during Iran attack

Dr. Gal Rosen is an Israeli paramedic who has saved lives under the threat of missile attacks. Racing from emergency to emergency, heart pounding, but calm under fire — "don't think, just act." He said he lost his mother when he was a child at the hands of a murderous terrorist. He saved lives as an army paramedic, but he continues to do it now as a civilian — defiantly choosing to live in Israel and work at Tel Aviv's Magen David Adom (MDA) while under threat and emergencies from multiple-front wars. He saves lives in the "dark" of war. He sees lives go, sometimes after making difficult split-second decisions. ARIZONA DEPUTIES SAVE CHOKING 2-WEEK-OLD BABY IN ROADSIDE RESCUE AFTER PARENTS' EMERGENCY CALL "We need to choose sometimes," he says, speaking to Fox News Digital during a rare moment off between emergencies. "And this is hard ." But, today, he is sharing a story of "light": a stark contrast from the stories he usually refuses to share with his family to spare them the horrifying realities of war — even if they live those themselves. Last Thursday, Rosen delivered a healthy baby boy into the world and, in sudden threat of a missile attack and blaring sirens, carried that son away from the mother in the ambulance as he and the father raced to reach a bomb shelter. This was his fifth emergency delivery of a newborn as a paramedic. It was his first under the threat of a missile attack and blaring sirens. "It was so surrealistic situation, in my opinion, never happened to me, something like this," he said, able to smile about the gravity of it all one week later, after finally finding sleep and time to reflect. "This is an amazing thing to share at home," Rosen said. "Most of my stories are not like this, most of our stories I share are really hard things for my family to hear. This is why, usually, I'm not sharing with my family stories from my work: 'Sorry, I'm not doing it.' "Car accidents or about the CPRs or about really difficult situations that I had to deal with." Just two days after bringing one life into the world, he saw five go. "I had, like last Saturday, five cases of death in the shift," he said. "I don't want to get home and tell about it in my family, right? But this story is amazing. UNSUNG HEROES OF 2025: FIRST RESPONDERS AND EVERYDAY AMERICANS WHO SAVED LIVES ACROSS US "I went to my grandma," he continued, "and said, 'You have to hear it.' "She was so proud of me and also my family and my father and my friends and my partner. Of course, this is a really nice story to tell to everyone. " The call came around 6:30 a.m. local Tel Aviv time on a Thursday morning: a woman was in labor, getting an assist on emergency delivery over the phone as if it was a movie. But this was real life, a new life and war. By the time the MDA paramedic team arrived, the baby was still inside and the husband was helping his wife through the final moments of delivery. Dr. Rosen stepped in for the last few minutes and helped safely deliver the boy. Then came the alert. Within moments, a warning sounded that a missile attack on Tel Aviv was expected in about 10 minutes. The paramedic suddenly had to balance the urgency of a wartime emergency with the delicate, critical first steps of childbirth. He quickly placed the newborn on the mother’s chest for skin-to-skin contact, a key step for bonding and early development. He had the father cut the umbilical cord and helped the mother nurse the baby for the first time. NYPD OFFICERS SAVE CHOKING 2-YEAR-OLD BOY, BODYCAM VIDEO SHOWS "I tried to do something as close as possible to reality for them," he said, wanting to preserve the intimacy of a normal birth even though they were far from a hospital delivery room. With the help of the father and her team, he then moved the family into the building’s shelter. There, in the middle of blaring alarms and the sounds of missile interceptions overhead, relatives from the apartment building — a grandmother, an aunt and others — came downstairs and saw the baby for the first time. "It was the first time they met the baby, while there were alarms," he said. "Adrenaline" and former army paramedic instinct took over. "I put the helmet, I put the vest and everything, I took the baby, and we stopped by the side and I ran with the baby to a public shelter," he recalled. "So, me and the father, we're running together, I'm taking the baby with me, running to a shelter and just a random building and there was no shelter there. "'OK, this is not good.' We need to go out. "And we're going out. There is still alarms; I know that we have like maybe 20 seconds left, going to another building, and then we're getting into a public shelter. There is 50 people there in the shelter and they closed the door. We were still there standing in the shelter, so I gave the father the baby. "I didn't want the idea for the father also — you know, in the future — to think about the situation that a stranger held his baby while there is a missile attack. " In the shelter, with the postpartum mother still in the ambulance under the Iron Dome, the unmistakable sound of war came with a shock. "We also heard the interception with the Iron Dome," Rosen said. The sound, he said, was impossible to ignore: "a boom," followed by a shock wave you could feel. The air was vibrating. The grateful father and mother, identified by MDA as Nikola and Violet, said the experience was frightening but that the emergency team helped keep them calm. ICE AGENT SAVES LIFE OF 'UNRESPONSIVE' 1-YEAR-OLD BOY IN JFK AIRPORT AS PANIC ENSUES IN TSA SECURITY LINE "It wasn’t a simple experience," they wrote in a joint statement, preferring to keep privacy but permitting Dr. Rosen to share the war story out of praise and thankfulness. "The labor started at home, and just minutes after the MDA team delivered the baby, the siren caught us, and we went down to a shelter. The team functioned amazingly, calmed us, and treated us in the best possible way. This isn’t the ideal experience, but we’re happy everything ended safely, and we’re grateful to the team who helped us so much." In that cramped shelter of about 50 huddling Israelis, surrounded by strangers and the threat of falling missiles, the room broke into applause. People congratulated the father and shouted "Mazal tov." Mother was still in the ambulance with members of the MDA team, still at risk postpartum, as the Iron Dome was busting missiles overhead. " And after 10 minutes that we sat there, we went out, and we walked in the street with a baby, 30 minutes old, crossing the intersection together, going to the ambulance," Rosen said. "They put a helmet on her and a vest on the mother, and one of my teammates stayed with her, because she couldn't come to the shelter. It was too much time, too risky for her. "And, you know, in these moments, I didn't think so much. So I just act. "I realized that it would be better to protect the son; it would better to go to find a shelter. And we didn't think about the idea that maybe we'll be in alarms, because we were in the situation, we were at the moment, we're with the family, with the delivery, with everything, and you can't imagine something like this — even though it's Israel, and now we can actually imagine everything. "Still, it was really, really, really exciting — excitement and happiness – and a good thing because most of our days right now are dark ." Despite losing his mother to a murderous terrorist and living under the threat of multiple-front wars and shrieking Iron Dome sirens and missile attacks, Rosen would choose no other life. MISSILES ABOVE, NEWBORNS BELOW: ISRAELI HOSPITALS SHIFT CRITICAL CARE UNDERGROUND "My mother was murdered in a terror attack when I was a kid, when I was a child, and to choose to still be here with my family, to live here: This is our home and to choose, going to a different path, not hate. "I will save lives, and I will do my best to help other families going through these situations, and I will do my best to make sure there are no other families that will need to suffer from a loss. "So I think this is the mentality of Israelis in general. But still, see, this is one of the only places in the world that people are getting rescued by a flight to come back to Israel. "In a war," he deadpanned. But, with everything happening under the stress of war, Rosen kept the calm, precision and resolve of an army paramedic, knowing the best medicine for a baby born under stress is skin-to-skin and mother's milk. "I learned in med school, I learned these two things are the most important: Put the baby on the skin, give them the bond, help her to nurse ," he said. "It also can help the mother a lot when she nursing the baby. It's also helping with postpartum bleeding. And a lot of things. "So this situation, it's hard to do when we are in this missile attack." But all is well that ended well and — in the case of Nikola and Violet's newborn — began as well as could be under the circumstances. "I was so excited I couldn't sleep for — like the delivery. It was something like 17 hours into my shift," he recalled. "So I worked 16 hours. It was after 17 hours shift. "Now and after 17 hours shift, I went back home, I tried to sleep, I couldn't sleep, and then I had to go to another shift. So I was awake for at least 24 hours. " One week later, the adrenaline and excitement have not worn off. And the baby boy, mother, father and MDA paramedic team live on to tell an all-timer.

paramedicsaving livesmissile attack

France Info

Center
europe
Le Haut Conseil pour le climat appelle les collectivités locales à investir massivement pour lutter contre le changement climatique
3h ago

Le Haut Conseil pour le climat appelle les collectivités locales à investir massivement pour lutter contre le changement climatique

Les transformations engagées à l'échelle locale ne sont pas à la hauteur des enjeux, estime ce groupe d'experts chargé d'évaluer les politiques climatiques en France, qui a publié un rapport, vendredi. Ils estiment que les collectivités ont pris du retard.

changement climatiquecollectivités localesinvestir massivement
Le personnel navigant de la compagnie aérienne EasyJet appelé à la grève en France le lundi de Pâques
4h ago

Le personnel navigant de la compagnie aérienne EasyJet appelé à la grève en France le lundi de Pâques

Le syndicat Unac, à l'origine de ce mouvement social, dénonce des conditions de travail dégradées. La compagnie se dit "très déçue" et promet de limiter les perturbations.

grèveeasyjetpersonnel navigant
L'Ukraine visée par près de 500 drones et missiles russes en plein jour en moins de 24 heures
4h ago

L'Ukraine visée par près de 500 drones et missiles russes en plein jour en moins de 24 heures

Il s'agit d'une attaque massive revendiquée par Kiev comme une réponse de Moscou à sa proposition de trêve pour Pâques, qui a fait au moins six morts et provoqué des coupures d'électricité.

ukrainerussieattaques

La Vanguardia

Center
europe

                                                                                              Hallan a un matrimonio muerto en el baño de su casa en València por un escape de gas
8h ago

Hallan a un matrimonio muerto en el baño de su casa en València por un escape de gas

Un matrimonio ha sido hallado sin vida la madrugada de este viernes en el interior de la ducha de su domicilio en València, en un suceso que la Policía Nacional atribuye a un accidente doméstico por la mala combustión de la caldera de gas. Seguir leyendo...

escape de gasmatrimonio muertovalència

                                                                                               El TSJA confirma once años de cárcel a un hombre de 45 años por agresiones sexuales continuada a una niña desde los cinco años
9h ago

El TSJA confirma once años de cárcel a un hombre de 45 años por agresiones sexuales continuada a una niña desde los cinco años

El Tribunal Superior de Justicia de Andalucía (TSJA) ha confirmado íntegramente la sentencia de la Audiencia de Jaén que en 2024 condenó a once años y ocho meses de cárcel a un hombre de 45 años por agredir sexualmente de forma continuada a su vecina, una niña de cinco años. Las agresiones se produjeron hasta que la menor tuvo ocho años, pero después, hasta que cumplió los 17, la estuvo espiando y acosando por la ventana sirviéndose de que las casas eran continguas. Seguir leyendo...

agresiones sexualesabuso infantilsentencia

                                       La reina Sofía y las infantas Elena y Cristina procesionan en Murcia y Cartagena
9h ago

La reina Sofía y las infantas Elena y Cristina procesionan en Murcia y Cartagena

De Murcia a Cartagena y de Cartagena a Murcia. La reina Sofía, acompañada por sus hijas, las infantas Elena y Cristina, ha procesionado estos Jueves y Viernes Santo entre las dos localidades para compartir con los fieles las tradiciones religiosas de estos días. La madre y las hermanas del Rey, aún tratándose de una actividad de carácter privado, han sido recibidas por las autoridades murcianas y, además, han disfrutado de un cálido recibimiento en la calle. Seguir leyendo...

Le Figaro

Center-Right
europe
«C’est catastrophique» : à Marseille, un policier corrompu condamné pour ses relations avec un narcotrafiquant
1h ago

«C’est catastrophique» : à Marseille, un policier corrompu condamné pour ses relations avec un narcotrafiquant

Ce fonctionnaire, un temps délégué syndical à Alliance, entretenait une relation amicale avec le malfrat, consultant des fichiers confidentiels et lui transmettant des informations sensibles. Il a été radié de l’institution.

Pourquoi le placement en garde à vue de Rima Hassan n’est pas «illégal», malgré son immunité parlementaire
2h ago

Pourquoi le placement en garde à vue de Rima Hassan n’est pas «illégal», malgré son immunité parlementaire

DÉCRYPTAGE - L’eurodéputée a été convoquée jeudi 2 avril au matin par la police judiciaire car elle est soupçonnée d’«apologie du terrorisme». L’immunité parlementaire dont elle peut se prévaloir en principe est néanmoins strictement encadrée.

La garde à vue de Rima Hassan jeudi était «parfaitement illégale», cingle son avocat
3h ago

La garde à vue de Rima Hassan jeudi était «parfaitement illégale», cingle son avocat

Rima Hassan avait été placée en garde à vue jeudi pour des accusations d’«apologie du terrorisme» puis est ressortie libre en fin de soirée, avant un procès le 7 juillet.

rima hassangarde à vueapologie du terrorisme

Le Monde

Center-Left
europe
Rima Hassan dénonce, après sa garde à vue, « un harcèlement judiciaire et politique »
2h ago

Rima Hassan dénonce, après sa garde à vue, « un harcèlement judiciaire et politique »

« La temporalité de cette dynamique de harcèlement a commencé dès mon entrée en politique » et « n’a pas cessé depuis », a estimé l’élue LFI lors d’une conférence de presse, au lendemain de sa garde à vue.

Grève chez EasyJet le lundi de Pâques : le syndicat qui a lancé le mouvement dénonce le « mépris » de la direction face à « l’épuisement » des hôtesses et stewards
3h ago

Grève chez EasyJet le lundi de Pâques : le syndicat qui a lancé le mouvement dénonce le « mépris » de la direction face à « l’épuisement » des hôtesses et stewards

L’UNAC appelle à la mobilisation sociale, lundi 6 avril, dans les six bases françaises de la compagnie low cost. Les revendications portent surtout sur les conditions de travail dégradées par l’instabilité des plannings et le manque de personnel.

easyjetstrikeflight attendants
Affaire Robert Boulin : un témoin-clé dans l’affaire, Elio Darmon, est mort
4h ago

Affaire Robert Boulin : un témoin-clé dans l’affaire, Elio Darmon, est mort

La disparition d’Elio Darmon intervient alors que son domicile avait récemment été la cible de tirs. Une enquête a été ouverte pour rechercher les causes de sa mort, selon une source proche du dossier.

robert boulin affairelio darmonwitness

Liberation

Center-Left
europe
Gilles de la Tourette : l’Ecossais John Davidson, symbole d’un syndrome mal compris
1.4.2026

Gilles de la Tourette : l’Ecossais John Davidson, symbole d’un syndrome mal compris

Diagnostiqué à l’adolescence dans les années 80 après des mois de dépression, l’homme au cœur du film de Kirk Jones s’attache depuis à faire connaître Gilles de la Tourette au-delà des clichés.

Vin et paléogénétique : «Notre pinot noir existait déjà à l’époque de Jeanne d’Arc !»
24.3.2026

Vin et paléogénétique : «Notre pinot noir existait déjà à l’époque de Jeanne d’Arc !»

L’humanité travaille la vigne depuis au moins 2 500 ans, révèle une étude scientifique française qui a séquencé le génome de pépins de raisin parfois vieux de 4 300 ans. Le directeur de recherche au CNRS Ludovic Orlando explique à «Libération» que ce travail viticole précoce a permis de faire émerger des cépages conservés à l’identique pendant des siècles.

vinpaléogénétiquevigne
1h ago

Cuba va libérer 2 000 détenus sans préciser si certains seront des prisonniers politiques

Le régime a présenté la mesure comme un geste humanitaire à l’occasion de Pâques. Les Etats-Unis, qui exercent un blocus sévère de l’île, exigent la libération des prisonniers pour «crimes contre l’autorité».

ProPublica

Center-Left
global
RFK Jr. May Reverse a Peptide Ban He Calls “Illegal.” Former FDA Officials Say He Mischaracterized Their Work.
10h ago

RFK Jr. May Reverse a Peptide Ban He Calls “Illegal.” Former FDA Officials Say He Mischaracterized Their Work.

Just under three years ago, the Food and Drug Administration deemed 19 peptide drugs too unsafe to be dispensed by compounding pharmacies, which mix components of approved drugs to create bespoke medication for people who have trouble taking commonly available products. Now, under Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the agency is poised to reverse itself. That’s despite few clinical studies supporting the effectiveness or safety of these peptides, which are amino acid chains meant to help regulate functions in the body and have become popular among fitness and longevity enthusiasts. In February, Kennedy said the FDA acted illegally in 2023 when it categorized 19 peptides as too unsafe for compounders, whose final products aren’t tested or approved by the FDA. Kennedy, who described himself as a “big fan” of peptides, has used the therapies himself. “It was illegal because they’re not supposed to do that unless there’s a safety signal,” Kennedy said on “The Joe Rogan Experience” podcast , referring to adverse events related to medications. “And they didn’t have a safety signal. They’re not allowed to look at efficacy. They’re not allowed to say, ‘Well, we don’t believe these are efficacious,’ or whatever. They can only look at safety.” But three former FDA officials closely familiar with how the agency created the criteria to assess the peptides in the first place say Kennedy has mischaracterized their work. The agency’s 2023 decision to ban certain peptides was supported by numerous documented safety concerns, they said. FDA regulations also require the agency to assess both safety and effectiveness before approving a substance for compounding. “It would be a disruption of the societal pact we have had since 1962 that drugs will be studied to see if they work before they are marketed in the U.S.,” said Janet Woodcock, a former FDA acting commissioner. If Kennedy justifies reversal of the previous work by suggesting there were no safety concerns, it would give a false imprimatur of safety to more than a dozen unapproved, untested drugs, the officials said. There’s been little new science on the 19 peptides since the FDA’s 2023 decision to categorize them as unsafe. But demand for the drugs has exploded as influencers have flooded social media with promises of sculpted physiques, glowing skin, luscious hair, rapidly healing injuries, youthful energy and blazing sex lives. Ads on Meta platforms claim peptide users can get a range of health benefits. Obtained by ProPublica The demand has given rise to a burgeoning gray market, where wellness spas, multilevel marketers and telehealth websites ply the public with vials of “research grade” peptides labeled “not for human use.” “More people want to use them,” said Lauren Colenso-Semple, a muscle physiology researcher and science communication specialist who follows scientific studies of peptides as part of her work. “That’s what’s changed.” FDA-approved peptide drugs such as insulin and oxytocin have been available for decades. Newer ones such as semaglutide and tirzepatide, broadly known as GLP-1s, have exploded in popularity for weight loss and have shown promise for treating other conditions , such as addictions and neurodegenerative and liver diseases. The popularity of these drugs has led the public to become more comfortable with injectables and has helped drive attention to other gray-market peptides. Last year, at a Las Vegas conference promising radical life extension, two women became critically ill after being injected with peptides the FDA had categorized as unsafe. Although Nevada regulators investigated and fined the health practitioners involved in administering the peptides, investigators weren’t able to determine the exact cause of the reaction. The doctor who ran the booth where the women became ill said he didn’t believe that the peptides caused their reactions but apologized for the incident and said he would review his practices. The Alliance for Pharmacy Compounding, one of the largest industry associations lobbying for the FDA to change its stance on peptides, acknowledges it knows little about the safety of individual peptides being sold to the public. (Its CEO says it is an advocacy organization, not a scientific one.) But the group argues the public would be safer if peptides were handled by regulated compounding pharmacies instead of the gray market. The FDA should forgo the usual human clinical trials in order to bring about this shift, a spokesperson for the alliance said. “Where we don’t have research, clinical trials, what we’ve got a ton of, is, shall we say, testimonials, patient affidavits, attesting to the wonders of the drug,” said Scott Brunner, the alliance’s chief executive officer. “And RFK Jr. is one of those testifiers.” On the Rogan podcast, Kennedy wasn’t clear on exactly how the FDA would let compounders start dispensing peptides, describing it only as “some kind of action” to make “about 14” peptides “more accessible.” Nor has he specified which peptides he wants to make available. (Neither the FDA nor HHS responded to ProPublica’s requests for more information.) But several regulatory shortcuts exist and, ultimately, Kennedy could simply declare the ingredients are legal. “He has all of the authority,” said Woodcock, likening such a declaration to former HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius’ unilateral 2011 reversal of the FDA’s decision to lift age restrictions on the emergency contraception Plan B. (A judge ultimately found Sebelius’ move to be arbitrary and capricious and nullified it.) “The secretary can do anything they want.” A commercial for a GLP-1 drug appeared on television screens at a bar in Los Angeles during the Super Bowl LX broadcast. The Food and Drug Administration has approved peptide drugs such as semaglutide and tirzepatide, known as GLP-1s, and they have exploded in popularity for weight loss and shown promise for treating other conditions. Jill Connelly/Bloomberg/Getty Images The Bulks List The FDA’s road to regulating compounding pharmacies — and by extension the peptides they seek to dispense — has been long and tedious. Much of the regulatory fight has focused on which ingredients compounders should be allowed to use. Under a 1997 law, the first passed by Congress to regulate the industry, compounders can only use ingredients that are a component of an approved drug, have what’s known as a USP monograph (essentially a third-party certified recipe for a drug used mainly by manufacturers of generics), or are listed as approved substances by the FDA. This FDA list, known as “the bulks list,” is at the center of the ongoing peptide debate. Litigation and pressure from the industry and lawmakers delayed for decades the creation of the bulks list, leaving compounders in limbo on scores of substances, not just peptides. “Everything was a fight. It was a huge fight,” said one former FDA official who has spent more than 30 years working on compounding policies. The former official asked not to be named to avoid a public debate with the industry. The need for the list took on new urgency in 2012, when more than 60 people died from fungal meningitis infections contracted from a drug produced at a compounding facility and dispensed to hundreds of people. Congress passed another law further regulating large compounders that sell medications to doctors’ offices and hospitals rather than individual patients. The new law also prompted the agency to move more quickly on establishing the bulks list. The FDA asked the industry to nominate substances for inclusion on the list. It did so, nominating thousands of ingredients, including, for example, purified water and asparagus. “They put in everything,” the official said. “Literally thousands of nominations with absolutely no justification for why it needed to be there.” Each substance would have to be reviewed individually before it could be added to the bulks list. The agency would have to solicit public comment and an advisory committee of health and pharmacy experts would have to review the FDA’s research. Reviewing them “was a massive effort. The agency proceeded glacially, but really we were speeding as fast as we could,” the official said. In 2017, under pressure to move more quickly, the FDA came up with an interim solution. It substantially narrowed the list of nominated ingredients, quickly reviewed each remaining substance and placed them into three categories. The first was substances with enough of a safety track record that the agency felt comfortable letting compounders use them while the final list was assembled. The second category included substances considered too risky for compounding. And the third included those without enough supporting information for the FDA to make an informed decision and therefore wouldn’t be used for compounding. This categorization didn’t constitute a formal regulation; rather the agency was using its discretion not to go after compounders who used ingredients it deemed safe — those from the first category. In 2023, the FDA placed 19 peptides in Category 2, which already included a handful of substances the agency considered to be dangerous. This is what Kennedy has called “the war on peptides.” In explaining its decisions, the FDA pointed to well-established research in peptide drug development that injectable peptides carry the risk of causing immune reactions. Such reactions can range from responses with “no clinical manifestations” to irritating rashes to life-threatening conditions such as anaphylactic shock, which constricts breathing and impairs motor function. Peptides occur naturally in the body but break down quickly after serving their purpose. Peptide drugs, on the other hand, are manufactured to last longer in the body to create a therapeutic response, such as controlling appetite or promoting the growth of new blood vessels, bone density or muscle. “Now that it’s been tweaked to make it something else, the immune system can recognize it as foreign and there’s the potential issue of having an unwanted immune response,” Colenso-Semple said. The manufacturing process can also introduce impurities — like bacteria or heavy metals — into peptide drugs. They also are sensitive to environmental conditions and can change chemical composition if stored at the wrong temperatures or shaken too vigorously, increasing the risk of an immune response or decreasing their effectiveness. And when a substance is injected, as opposed to taken orally, it bypasses most of the body’s natural defenses. The risk of an immune response is common to peptide drugs in general. But individual peptides also present specific potential risks. The FDA reviewed data to assess these risks and found limited human studies on a few peptide therapies; most have only been studied in animals or in clinical populations like HIV patients. What human data the FDA did find for individual peptides indicated the potential for harm. Subjects in studies of six individual peptides — growth hormone releasing peptide-2, ibutamoren mesylate, ipamorelin, CJC-1295, AOD-9604 and melanotan II — experienced adverse events, including death. (It wasn’t proven whether the deaths were caused by the peptides or by something else.) Ultimately, the FDA decided not enough data existed to allay the known safety concerns. “Of course any adverse event can be a flag,” said another former FDA official who worked in the compounding division when the peptides were categorized as unsafe. The former official asked not to be named because they work in public health and don’t want to antagonize the current administration. “Also, if there is no clinical data for a substance, and an awareness that the substance has the propensity for harm, that could make it an appropriate placement on the Category 2 list.” Attendees are taught how to draw blood during a “peptide rave” in San Francisco last year. Jason Henry/The New York Times/Redux Are They Safe? Putting the peptides on the unsafe list didn’t change much for compounders. Because those peptides aren’t components of an approved drug and don’t carry a USP monograph, compounders weren’t allowed to dispense them anyway. “All that did was put an exclamation point on it,” Brunner said. In the months after the FDA’s announcement, his organization repeatedly warned its members not to dispense peptides. But the listing prompted at least two peptide companies to sue the FDA, arguing it was dragging its feet on creating the bulks list of allowed compounding substances. To date, only six substances have made it through the process to be put on the list, none of which are peptides and none of which are injectables. As the lawsuit wound its way through federal court, the FDA agreed to accelerate the review of four peptides named in the lawsuit: CJC-1295, AOD-9604, thymosin-alpha and ipamorelin acetate. It also decided to move forward on two other peptides not listed in the complaint: kisspeptin and ibutamoren mesylate. Online marketing claims these peptides help with, among other things, weight loss, muscle-building, anti-aging, insomnia, tissue repair and sexual dysfunction. Marketers also claim thymosin-alpha, one of the more studied peptides, can help with immune function, Lyme disease and COVID-19. In the final months of the Biden administration, the FDA convened the expert advisory committee and presented its research on the six peptides. In reports up to 158 pages long, the agency detailed the science behind the immune response risk in synthetic peptides, listed documented adverse events associated with the drugs and summarized the limited research on human subjects. In each case, the FDA recommended against putting the peptide on the bulks list for compounders. “I can’t imagine anybody looking at this data and being comfortable” making these available to the public, Colenso-Semple said. The peptide industry was given just 10 minutes before the committee to present arguments that the six peptides were safe. Speakers offered anecdotal evidence from their own and others’ practices. Even though peptides can’t legally be used by compounders, many were dispensing the drugs because the FDA has been lax in enforcing its regulations. “Many of the peptides that have been placed on Category 2 have been used successfully by thousands of our practitioners treating hundreds of thousands of patients who utilize these compounds to energize cellular function and give the body what it needs to help address sickness and disease, including obesity, diabetes and addiction,” said Dan DeNeui, CEO of one of the peptide companies that sued the FDA. His wife, Terri DeNeui, a nurse practitioner and founder of their company Evexias Health Solutions, presented information from a survey of 508 patients treated with various peptides that said 19% reported uncomfortable side effects and less than 1% experienced an adverse event. They also contended peptides would be more safely dispensed by regulated compounders than on the gray market — the argument now being made by the Alliance for Compounding Pharmacies. The active ingredients in the drugs would be manufactured at an FDA-registered facility subject to inspection, and compounders are overseen by state boards of pharmacies to ensure sterile conditions. That’s “a heck of a lot better than what many consumers are doing,” getting advice in chat rooms and “ordering some substance that purports to be a peptide and may or may not be,” Brunner told ProPublica. While that argument addresses quality-control concerns associated with the gray market, it doesn’t confront the fundamental question of whether peptides are safe. “They’re totally unapproved drugs,” said one of the former FDA officials. “Would you let a pharmaceutical company do this? No. No way.” In the end, the advisory committee sided with the FDA and endorsed its initial decision that the six peptides were too risky to be dispensed to the public. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has vowed to end the “war on peptides.” Aaron Schwartz/CNP/Bloomberg/Getty Images What Happens Now? Unhappy with the advisory committee’s decision, the compounding industry has amplified its argument that the FDA review process for the bulks list is broken. The advisory committee had few working compounders on it and didn’t give those who opposed the decision on peptides enough time to present its arguments, industry advocates say. With a new administration, whose health secretary has used peptides himself and is trying to advance alternative health practices, they see an opportunity. They hope the FDA will appoint more members with compounding experience to the committee and ease enforcement on peptides while it continues the established regulatory process. “Given the scale of demand — demand that is going to be met, if not by a state licensed compounding pharmacy, then by the black and gray markets — we believe the lens that the FDA is using related to these peptides, at least some of the peptides, is the wrong lens,” Brunner said. “They’re wanting research, clinical trials. They’re wanting a certain amount of certitude that, frankly, is appropriate for most drugs, but not for this moment.” Regulatory shortcuts exist that would allow the FDA to skip the more laborious approval process. The FDA could simply remove the peptides from Category 2, those it considers unsafe. It could place them in Category 1, allowing them to be used in compounding. Or it could announce it’s changing its enforcement strategy and not going after compounders who work with these substances. None of that would be safe for the public, Woodcock contends. Congress intended for the FDA to “refer to a substantive body of evidence about the safety and effectiveness” of ingredients put on the bulks list, she said. “This wasn’t supposed to be a route for unapproved drugs to get into the market,” she said. “Not even Congress was thinking that.” The post RFK Jr. May Reverse a Peptide Ban He Calls “Illegal.” Former FDA Officials Say He Mischaracterized Their Work. appeared first on ProPublica .

peptide drugsfdacompounding pharmacies
Why We Went Looking for National Defense Areas Along the U.S. Southern Border
Yesterday

Why We Went Looking for National Defense Areas Along the U.S. Southern Border

Our reporting started, like much of our work, in a spreadsheet. As I parsed through federal court data, I noticed something odd: Within months of President Donald Trump’s inauguration in January 2025, prosecutors began filing obscure charges related to trespassing on military property — so many, in fact, that more cases were filed in 2025 than in the prior decade. Nearly all of these charges originated from cases along the U.S. southern border, where last spring, the White House designated large swaths of land as national defense areas. Putting them under military authority allowed troops to play an unprecedented role in apprehending undocumented immigrants; federal soldiers are generally barred from enforcing the law on domestic soil. If you were caught in one of these zones, the government could also now prosecute you for breaking federal laws, including one enacted in 1909 to keep spies away from arsenals. In an investigation we published recently, my co-reporters Perla Trevizo, Abe Streep, Pratheek Rebala and I dug into what experts say is a major flaw afflicting these prosecutions that threatens to ensnare people for crimes they did not commit: Migrants didn’t know the land they were crossing now belonged to the armed forces. And many judges have ruled that you can’t be guilty of trespassing on military land if you had no idea you were on it. Since April of last year, we found, at least 4,700 immigrants already charged with entering the country illegally faced these military trespass charges; at least one had to wait in jail for more than a month to stand trial. Most of the charges didn’t stick. In fact, we found that in 60% of the resolved cases, the trespass charges were dropped or dismissed. Yet prosecutors kept filing them. Download the full data used in our analysis on our GitHub page. Military Trespass Cases Under Trump Administration Skyrocket Note: Counts are of unique cases in which charges were filed under 50:797 (“Penalty for violation of security regulations and orders”) and 18:1382 (“Entering military, naval, or Coast Guard property”). Source: Federal Justice Center’s Integrated Database. Agnel Philip/ProPublica As we visited courtrooms in West Texas and New Mexico and pored through case records, it became clear how hard it would be to prove that someone knowingly trespassed on military land. Some couldn’t read. At least one person didn’t speak English or Spanish. The small signs are spaced far apart and easy to miss, and many migrants were arrested far away from them. A Justice Department spokesperson said the prosecutions have deterred unauthorized border crossings and cartel activity. And prosecutors have argued in court that illegally crossing is enough to prove criminal intent for the military trespassing charges. Senior officials in the U.S. attorney’s offices handling trespass cases declined repeated interview requests. In November, Perla, Abe and I set out to report throughout southern New Mexico and West Texas to see for ourselves what information we could gather about where the zones were and how they were marked. Abe and I arranged a ride-along with Doña Ana County Sheriff Kim Stewart, whose New Mexico agency shares jurisdiction with Border Patrol and the military in one of the zones.  A sergeant from her office drove us along a dirt road that parallels the border as she pointed out 12-by-18-inch red and white signs opposite the fence. She told us her office hadn’t received specific information about where the military zone boundaries were; all they had were the signs. Even in broad daylight, it was difficult to read the words on them unless we got within a few feet. Small signs like this are posted around the national defense areas, but their size and placement often make them difficult to see. Paul Ratje for ProPublica and The Texas Tribune On another outing in New Mexico — this time with the photographer Paul Ratje — I went to a spot in Sunland Park where Ratje said he’d previously taken photos of the border fence. The 2-acre dirt lot sat less than a mile from residential neighborhoods and a popular Italian restaurant. From the lot, we could see more red and white signs along the nearby border road. While we were taking pictures, a pickup truck with a Border Patrol livery approached us. I was surprised to see that inside, instead of Border Patrol agents, there were two Army soldiers. The soldier in the passenger seat pointed to the signage along the border road and told us not to go past there. The border road was part of the defense area, he told us, though the lot we were standing in wasn’t. The next day, Perla and I returned to the same location. This time, a Border Patrol agent drove up. The lot was part of the defense area, he told us. When I pointed out that I had been given conflicting information the previous day, the agent said he was told by the military that people couldn’t be in this area. We left. (An Army spokesperson said that the base responsible for the defense area in New Mexico published a map in December; the lot was not included in it.) My interactions with Border Patrol and the military had so far only added to our confusion about these areas. Later that day, Perla and I drove south to a stretch of border fence along the Rio Grande near Tornillo, Texas. We saw a Border Patrol van near a gate in the fence. We thought we’d try to ask where the defense area was. Before we could do that, another Border Patrol van pulled up to us. Soldiers, including one with a rifle strapped across his shoulder, emerged from both vehicles. Another soldier told us he was “not at liberty to discuss” the national defense area’s exact location.  Read More The Trump Administration’s “Disturbing” New Legal Strategy to Prosecute Border Crossers Is Taxing Courts and Testing the Law The response bewildered us. We asked him how we were supposed to know whether we were trespassing. He shrugged. (Spokespeople for U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the Department of Defense did not directly answer questions about these interactions.) As we got back into our rental SUV, Perla and I wondered: If we, as reporters who investigate things for a living, couldn’t get a straight answer on where these military zones were, how did the government expect people crossing the border to do better?  In the four months between our reporting trip and the publication of our investigation on March 16, the government continued to file military trespassing charges in more than 1,300 cases. And it’s established new military zones, too, in Arizona, California and Texas. The post Why We Went Looking for National Defense Areas Along the U.S. Southern Border appeared first on ProPublica .

national defense areasu.s. southern bordermilitary trespass charges
The Trump EPA Official in Charge of Methane Regulations Helped Write Oil Industry Argument Against Those Rules
1.4.2026

The Trump EPA Official in Charge of Methane Regulations Helped Write Oil Industry Argument Against Those Rules

The Trump administration official leading an effort to loosen rules on methane pollution was an unnamed author of key industry arguments against those same rules just four years ago when he was an oil and gas lobbyist. Aaron Szabo, an assistant administrator at the Environmental Protection Agency, is listed in PDF metadata as the author of a January 2022 comment letter objecting to proposed controls on methane emissions in the oil and gas industry. The letter was submitted to the EPA by the American Exploration and Production Council, which represents some of the industry’s largest emitters of the planet-warming gas, including ConocoPhillips, Diversified Energy and Hilcorp. Szabo’s name does not appear in the document itself, but it can be found in information embedded by the software used to create the PDF file. Szabo was registered as a lobbyist for one of the AXPC’s lesser-known members, Ovintiv, when he drafted the arguments against the restrictions, which were finalized later in the Biden administration. He has also lobbied for other clients in the oil and chemicals sectors. While he did not hide that work during his confirmation last year as head of the EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation, he described it in terms that avoided any mention of efforts to influence climate policy: “I learned how regulated entities comply with the federal government’s thousands of regulations and policies. I also saw firsthand that the people working in these companies want to ensure the environment is properly protected.” In his current role overseeing federal climate rules at the EPA, Szabo has been soliciting input and even specific regulatory language from oil industry groups that stand to gain from watered-down methane rules, according to internal emails, calendar entries and records of closed-door conversations reviewed by ProPublica. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., the ranking Democrat on the Senate’s Environment and Public Works Committee, pointed to Szabo’s previous lobbying as evidence that the EPA had effectively been captured by the oil and gas industry. “Now he can do Big Oil’s dirty work from inside the EPA,” Whitehouse told ProPublica in an email. As part of its plan to “unleash American energy,” the Trump administration has waged an unprecedented campaign against regulations on fossil fuels, the main cause of global warming. One of its biggest moves was to repeal the “endangerment finding” that classified greenhouse gases as pollutants — the basis for the EPA’s authority to limit emissions at all. Rather than throw out the methane rules entirely, however, Szabo’s office is working to revise them, emails and documents show. It has already delayed many of the compliance deadlines until next year. Methane, the main component of natural gas, is a climate superpollutant, responsible for one-third of the rise in global temperatures since preindustrial times, according to the United Nations Environment Programme. When it escapes into the atmosphere without being burned for energy, it can trap 80 times more heat than carbon dioxide, research shows. The oil and gas business is the largest industrial source of U.S. methane emissions, in part because of leaks from poorly maintained equipment. If it is uneconomical to collect the gas for sale, companies sometimes intentionally release it in a process known as venting. To cut down on methane discharges, President Joe Biden’s EPA imposed much stricter controls on oil and gas operations, including requiring increased monitoring for leaks and equipment upgrades. According to agency estimates, the new rules would have lowered the industry’s methane emissions by nearly 80%. And, given that the gas breaks down relatively quickly, this would have been one of the fastest ways to reduce global warming. Industry groups pushed back. In the January 2022 letter that Szabo helped to draft, the AXPC used the word “burdensome” 10 times to describe the new requirements and pushed for more “flexibility” to allow for less expensive leak-detection methods and less frequent monitoring, among other requests. The group also cast doubt on the rules’ expected climate and health benefits, highlighting what it called “the importance of communicating the significant uncertainties within the estimates.” The AXPC’s chief executive, Anne Bradbury, added in a later statement that the rules risked “undercutting US production in the near and long-term — which will lead to increased energy costs and reduced energy security.” Do you have any information we should know about Trump’s EPA, oil industry lobbying or methane pollution? Alex Cuadros can be reached by email at alex.cuadros@propublica.org and on Signal at alexcuadros.63. The AXPC failed to persuade the Biden administration to change its approach. But it renewed its push after President Donald Trump returned to office and ordered federal agencies to “suspend, revise, or rescind” any “undue burden” on domestic energy production. Szabo, after two years as a fellow at the Trump-aligned America First Policy Institute, joined the administration on Day 1 as an adviser to EPA chief Lee Zeldin. He immediately signaled that he planned to weaken the regulations he had argued against as a lobbyist. His staff met with AXPC representatives as early as Feb. 6, 2025, less than three weeks after Trump’s inauguration, to discuss its petition to “reconsider” the methane rules, according to emails and calendar entries obtained through public records requests and shared with ProPublica by Fieldnotes, a watchdog group that investigates the oil and gas industry. His staff went on to meet with them at least twice more, and Szabo himself was listed as a required attendee for a meeting with Bradbury last July. The AXPC didn’t respond to emails from ProPublica seeking comment. According to records of closed-door conversations reviewed by ProPublica, other oil industry representatives have described their meetings with Szabo and his staff as highly favorable to their interests. “Mr. Szabo assured us that the EPA is focused on these [methane] rules and doing everything that can be done to limit the damage they will cause,” the leadership of a major trade group wrote to its members last year in an internal newsletter. Lee Fuller, of the Independent Petroleum Association of America, also spoke glowingly about his meeting with Szabo’s office on a conference call with industry representatives last year. “It was one of the more fascinating meetings that we’ve ever had, just because they were suddenly willing to talk to us,” he said. “And they’re also suddenly willing to talk about things that we’ve been trying to get them to do for years, and they’ve never even let it kind of come onto the radar screen.” The IPAA declined to answer specific questions from ProPublica but linked to a September 2025 letter in which the group publicly asked the EPA for exceptions to the methane rules. Szabo’s office has even invited oil industry groups to offer specific wording for the revised rules. “We had a call several weeks back re. pneumatics on temporary equipment,” Mike O’Connor of the American Petroleum Institute wrote to an EPA official, referring to devices that are a major source of methane emissions. “EPA had informally requested input on this topic and any suggested reg. text language. We are providing the attached draft document as informal input to EPA’s inquiry.” The draft called for a number of exemptions. The shift in priorities under Szabo can also be seen in communications from the EPA itself. In a June 2025 email reviewed by ProPublica, an agency official asked O’Connor to meet and discuss alternative leak-detection methods. Echoing the language in the AXPC comment that Szabo helped to draft, the official spoke of “the additional flexibility we would like to pursue.” “I think their agenda was, from what I could tell, to do what industry wanted,” one former EPA official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe confidential discussions, said of Szabo and other Trump appointees at the agency. “Since when is it a bad thing for public officials to ask the public what they think?” the EPA said in an emailed statement, referring to Szabo’s interactions with oil industry representatives. Szabo “fulfilled all his ethical obligations to the letter. He met with EPA career ethics staff when he started at EPA to ensure he is aware of and complies with federal ethics requirements.” Szabo’s affinities are hardly a secret. He is thanked by name in the EPA chapter of Project 2025, the deregulatory blueprint for the second Trump administration. As part of the nomination process for his appointment at the EPA, he also submitted ethics disclosures listing oil, natural gas and chemicals companies he had lobbied for. Still, at his confirmation hearing on March 5 last year, he repeatedly declined to elaborate on his role in Project 2025, beyond saying he provided “general advice and thoughts” on the Clean Air Act. The post The Trump EPA Official in Charge of Methane Regulations Helped Write Oil Industry Argument Against Those Rules appeared first on ProPublica .

aaron szabomethane regulationsoil and gas industry

RFI

Center
global
Emmanuel Macron en Corée du Sud: une «coalition des indépendants» face aux Américains et aux Chinois
3h ago

Emmanuel Macron en Corée du Sud: une «coalition des indépendants» face aux Américains et aux Chinois

Le chef de l'État français Emmanuel Macron a essayé de faire passer un message en Corée du Sud : la France et l'Europe ont des atouts à faire valoir par rapport aux États-Unis de Donald Trump et à la Chine. Il a appelé à la formation d'une « coalition des indépendants » entre démocraties qui, dans son esprit, réunirait les pays européens, le Japon, la Corée du Sud, le Canada et quelques grands pays émergents comme l'Inde et le Brésil.

emmanuel macroncorée du sudcoalition des indépendants
Lutte sénégalaise: à Rufisque, sur le sable de l’école Kaay Baxx, les héritiers de Modou Lô
4h ago

Lutte sénégalaise: à Rufisque, sur le sable de l’école Kaay Baxx, les héritiers de Modou Lô

Ce dimanche 5 avril aura lieu l’événement sportif le plus attendu de l’année au Sénégal : le combat de lutte avec frappe entre le roi des arènes Modou Lô et son redoutable challenger Sa Thiès dans la banlieue de la capitale. RFI a profité de l’occasion pour rendre visite à une école de lutte non loin de Dakar, à Rufisque, où se forgent dans le sable les champions de demain.

lutte sénégalaiseécole de luttecombat de lutte
Guerre au Moyen-Orient: Greenpeace accuse les compagnies pétrolières de faire des «profits de guerre»
4h ago

Guerre au Moyen-Orient: Greenpeace accuse les compagnies pétrolières de faire des «profits de guerre»

Une étude commandée par Greenpeace a affirmé, mercredi 1er avril, que les compagnies pétrolières réalisent plus de 80 millions d'euros de « surprofits » par jour dans les pays de l'UE depuis le début de la guerre au Moyen-Orient, grâce à une augmentation de leurs marges.

surprofitsguerre au moyen-orientcompagnies pétrolières

South China Morning Post

Center-Right
global
8 die in Ukraine in Russian strikes as Kyiv holds door open for Easter truce
3h ago

8 die in Ukraine in Russian strikes as Kyiv holds door open for Easter truce

Russian strikes killed at least eight people across Ukraine on Friday, including in a “massive” missile and drone attack near the capital, local authorities reported. Ukrainian officials claim the Kremlin is changing its tactics to increase civilian suffering, shifting to daytime barrages and preparing to target more key infrastructure. President Volodymyr Zelensky has signalled Kyiv’s openness to a potential Easter truce. The holiday is celebrated on April 12 in Ukraine and Russia. Zelensky...

russian strikesukrainemissile and drone attack
Sri Lanka arrests 152 in alleged Chinese-run cyberscam
3h ago

Sri Lanka arrests 152 in alleged Chinese-run cyberscam

Police in Sri Lanka arrested 152 foreign nationals, mostly Chinese, on Friday for allegedly running a cyberscam operation out of a hotel in the island’s northwest, officials said. The raid took place in the coastal town of Chilaw, 80km (50 miles) north of Colombo, following a tip-off, said police spokesman Frederick Wootler. “Those involved in scamming will be dealt with under our criminal law, while others could be deported,” Wootler said. Local police sources said two Chinese men who tried to...

cyberscamarrestschinese
US adds 178,000 jobs in March, rebounding from February losses
4h ago

US adds 178,000 jobs in March, rebounding from February losses

American employers added a surprisingly strong 178,000 new jobs last month, rebounding from a dismal February, while the unemployment rate dipped to 4.3 per cent. The Labor Department reported on Friday that hiring marked a rebound from the loss of 133,000 jobs in February. The job gains were about three times what economists had forecast. The unemployment rate was down from 4.4 per cent in February. That is partly because the labour force – those working and looking for work – dropped by...

job growthunemployment ratelabor market

Sueddeutsche Zeitung

Center-Left
europe
Debatte: Über diesen Mann würde man gern mal ein Sachbuch lesen
2h ago

Debatte: Über diesen Mann würde man gern mal ein Sachbuch lesen

Der ARD-Literaturkritiker Denis Scheck bezeichnet Ildikó von Kürthys Bestseller „Alt genug“ als „Nachrichten aus der Schnatterzone der Damentoilette“. Das ist ja interessant.

Krieg in Nahost: Erstes US-Kampfflugzeug seit Kriegsbeginn über Iran abgeschossen
3h ago

Krieg in Nahost: Erstes US-Kampfflugzeug seit Kriegsbeginn über Iran abgeschossen

Die US-Streitkräfte suchen nach den beiden Besatzungsmitgliedern des „F-15“-Jets. Doch auch Iran sucht nach den Piloten.

us-kampfflugzeugirankrieg in nahost
Besuch in South Carolina: Söders Balanceakt zwischen Substanz und Show
4h ago

Besuch in South Carolina: Söders Balanceakt zwischen Substanz und Show

In South Carolina besichtigt der Ministerpräsident das weltgrößte BMW-Werk und umwirbt eine „Powerregion“, die Bayerns Hightech-Orientierung teilt – und die „starke regionale Identität“ noch dazu. Die Schmeicheleien kommen bei den Amerikanern gut an.

markus söderusa-reisesouth carolina

Tagesschau (ARD)

Center
europe
Warum US-Präsident Trump sein Kabinett umbaut
3h ago

Warum US-Präsident Trump sein Kabinett umbaut

Mitten im Krieg gegen Iran hat der US-Präsident mit Heimatschutzministerin Noem und Justizministerin Bondi zwei treue Gefolgsleute entlassen. Ein Ablenkungsmanöver? [ mehr ]

donald trumppam bondikabinett umbaut
Wenn ein Offizier im Klassenzimmer steht
3h ago

Wenn ein Offizier im Klassenzimmer steht

In Krisenzeiten sind Jugendoffiziere der Bundeswehr an Schulen gefragt. Dort treffen sie auf junge Menschen, die Fragen über Krieg, Wehrdienst und Moral umtreiben. Einblicke aus einem Klassenzimmer. Von Claudia Buckenmaier. [ mehr ]

bundeswehrjugendoffiziereschule
Versehrtensport in Butscha: Zurück ins Leben
4h ago

Versehrtensport in Butscha: Zurück ins Leben

Die Turnhalle von Butscha blieb während der russischen Besatzung unbeschadet. Heute spielen dort versehrte Kriegsveteranen Sitzvolleyball - auf der Suche nach Normalität. Von Florian Kellermann. [ mehr ]

versehrtensportsitzvolleyballkriegsveteranen

The Guardian - World News

Center-Left
UK
Harvard faculty to vote on proposal to limit number of A grades in each course
4h ago

Harvard faculty to vote on proposal to limit number of A grades in each course

Effort to curb grade inflation, by limiting top marks to 20% of students in a course, is opposed by most students Sign up for the Breaking News US email to get newsletter alerts in your inbox Harvard’s faculty is set to vote next week on a faculty committee proposal to cap the number of A grades per course in an effort to curb grade inflation. The proposal, which was first reported earlier this year by the Harvard Crimson , Harvard’s student newspaper, would cap A grades to 20% of students in a course, with an allowance for four additional As. It also would introduce a new internal “average percentile rank” system, which would rely on raw scores rather than grade point average (GPA) to determine honors and awards. Continue reading...

grade inflationa gradesgrading policies
US F-15E jet confirmed shot down over Iran as Tehran releases wreckage images
4h ago

US F-15E jet confirmed shot down over Iran as Tehran releases wreckage images

Downing of fighter plane – the first shot down over Iran since start of war – prompts frantic US rescue effort Middle East crisis – live updates A US F-15E fighter has been shot down over Iran, prompting a frantic US search and rescue effort for its two-strong crew, in the first such incident since the start of the war. Iranian state media released images of a tail fin and other debris early on Friday accompanied by an initial claim that a US F-35 had been hit by a new air defence system over central Iran and the pilot probably killed. Continue reading...

f-15eiranshot down
Northern Ireland leads surge in fuel prices since start of Iran war
5h ago

Northern Ireland leads surge in fuel prices since start of Iran war

Petrol has risen 19% and diesel 35%, while in England the north has had the sharpest increases Fuel prices have risen faster in Northern Ireland than in any other UK region since the beginning of the Iran war . Analysis of official data shows petrol has jumped by 19% in Northern Ireland since the end of February, and diesel is now 35% more expensive. The rises are among the largest in Europe. Continue reading...

fuel pricesnorthern irelandiran war

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