Wednesday, May 28, 2025

EU lifts most Syria sanctions but slaps new ones on alleged culprits in attacks on Alawite civiliansNew Foto - EU lifts most Syria sanctions but slaps new ones on alleged culprits in attacks on Alawite civilians

PARIS (AP) — The European Union lifted a wide range of sanctions on Syria on Wednesday, but slapped new ones on people and groups it says participated in attacks on civilians during a wave of violence in the Syrian coastal region in March. The move lifted most sanctions that had been imposed on the country, including on its financial system, while keeping them in place on individuals and organizations in Syria it says violated human rights or for "security grounds," like the extended family of former President Bashar Assad or its chemical weapons program, according to the text of the European Council on the decision. The EU's foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas had announced plans to lift the sanctions last week. She said the move was "conditional" and that sanctions could be resumed if the new government of Ahmad al-Sharaa - a former rebel commander who led the charge that unseated Assad in December - doesn't keep the peace. Kallas said in a statement Wednesday that removing sanctions "is simply the right thing to do, at this historic time, for the EU to genuinely support Syria's recovery and a political transition that fulfils the aspirations of all Syrians." Wednesday's decision slapped "restrictive measures" on two people and three armed groups that were accused of "targeting civilians and especially the Alawite community" - referring to the religious minority to which Assad belongs - during violence in March on the coast and of torture and "arbitrary killings of civilians." Clashes erupted at the time after a group of Assad loyalists attacked security forces near the coastal city of Latakia. Rights groups reported widespread revenge killings as militants from Syria's Sunni majority - some of them officially affiliated with the new government's security forces - targeted Alawites, regardless of whether they were involved in the insurgency. Hundreds of civilians were killed. The new government in Damascus has promised to hold perpetrators accountable, but a body formed to investigate the violence has yet to release its findings. While there have not been large-scale attacks on Alawites since March, members of the communityremain fearfuland say that individual incidents of kidnappings and killing continue to take place. The two people targeted by the new sanctions are Mohammad Hussein al-Jasim, leader of the Sultan Suleiman Shah Brigade, and Sayf Boulad Abu Bakr, leader of the Hamza Division, both armed groups that the EU said had taken part in the attacks. The militias were also slapped with new sanctions, as was another armed group, the Sultan Murad Division. Since seizing power, al-Sharaa's government has struggled to weld a patchwork of undisciplined former rebel factions together into a national army. The lifting of the broader sanctions on Syria comes days after the United States granted Syria sweeping exemptions from sanctions in a first step toward fulfillingPresident Donald Trump's pledge to lift a half-century of penalties on a country shattered by 13 years of civil war. A measure by the U.S. State Department waived for six months a tough set of sanctions imposed by Congress in 2019. The easing of sanctions removes one of the major barriers to reconstruction of the country, which the United Nations in 2017 estimated would cost at least $250 billion. Some experts now say that number could reach at least $400 billion. The United Nations estimates that 90% of Syrians live in poverty and state-supplied electricity comes as little as two hours every day. ———— Sewell reported from Beirut.

EU lifts most Syria sanctions but slaps new ones on alleged culprits in attacks on Alawite civilians

EU lifts most Syria sanctions but slaps new ones on alleged culprits in attacks on Alawite civilians PARIS (AP) — The European Union lifted ...
Gov. DeSantis signs law imposing tougher penalties for abandoning pets during disastersNew Foto - Gov. DeSantis signs law imposing tougher penalties for abandoning pets during disasters

ROYAL PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Legislation signed into law Wednesday by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis will impose tougher penalties on people who abandon pets during natural disasters, a measure inspired by the rescue of a dog left in floodwatersduring Hurricane Milton. With the2025 hurricane season starting next week, the governor also signed a bill that enhances criminal penalties for severe cruelty to dogs and other pets. The bull terrier found during Hurricane Milton was left chained to a fence along Interstate 75 near Tampa. A state trooper rescued the dog — now named Trooper — and he was adopted by a couple in Broward County, DeSantis said during an event at Big Dog Ranch Rescue outside Royal Palm Beach. The owner of that dog was charged with animal cruelty. Under the new law taking effect Oct. 1, violations taking place during hurricanes or other disasters will be punishable by up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. "Florida will not tolerate cruelty toward animals, especially in times of crisis," said the governor, who signed the bills while cradling a puppy. The second measure was inspired by a St. Petersburg-area case involving a dog named Dexter that was found decapitated at a park. This bill taking effect July 1 allows for a range of enhanced penalties in cases of severe animal abuse.

Gov. DeSantis signs law imposing tougher penalties for abandoning pets during disasters

Gov. DeSantis signs law imposing tougher penalties for abandoning pets during disasters ROYAL PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Legislation signed int...
Timeline: Trump administration's actions against Harvard UniversityNew Foto - Timeline: Trump administration's actions against Harvard University

A judge has set a Thursday hearing to address the Trump administration's attempt to revoke Harvard University's ability toenroll international students-- the latest salvo in what Harvard calls the administration's "escalating campaign of retaliation" against the school. Here is a timeline of what Harvard administrators say are the Trump administration's efforts to tighten the screws on the university. The Trump administration sends a letter to Harvard's president saying that the school has "failed to live up to both the intellectual and civil rights conditions that justify federal investment" and demanding that the university change its governance, adopt merit-based hiring, shutter any DEI programs and allow "audits" to ensure "viewpoint diversity." After Harvard refuses to comply with the Trump administration's demands, the administration responds byfreezing more than $2.2 billion in grantsand $60 million in contracts to the school. Trump posts on Truth Social that "Harvard should lose its Tax-Exempt Status." U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem sends a letter to Harvarddemanding informationon every international student with an F1 visa, warning that failing to comply with the request will result in the withdrawal of the school's Student and Exchange Visitor Program certification. DHS also cancels two grants to Harvard totaling $2.7 million. Harvardfiles a lawsuitagainst the Trump administration over the funding freeze. MORE: Trump administration bars Harvard from enrolling international students Harvard says it has given DHS "thousands of data points concerning its entire F-1 visa student population." U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon says that Harvard willno longer receiveany grants from the federal government. Harvard says it has begun to receive grant termination notices from the federal government, including from the National Institutes of Health. DHS tells Harvard that the school's initial production of information on its international students is insufficient, and asks for more details. Harvard redoes its search and produces more information for DHS. The U.S. Department of Agriculture terminates its grants with Harvard. MORE: Trump to push for end to all federal agencies' Harvard contracts The U.S. Department of Energy, the Department of Defense, the National Science Foundation, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development all cancel their grants with Harvard. Harvard amends its lawsuit against the Trump administration to cover additional funding cuts. A hearing in the case is set for July. Noem says she hasordered the cancellationof Harvard's Student and Exchange Visitor Program certification, which would bar the school from enrolling foreign students. Harvard sues the Trump administration over its attempt to cancel its Student and Exchange Visitor Program certification, and U.S. District Judge Allison Dale Burroughs grants atemporary orderblocking the move. MORE: Judge temporarily blocks Trump's move to bar Harvard from enrolling international students Trump, in a social media post, demands alist of the namesof international students enrolled at Harvard. The Trump administrationasks federal agenciesto "identify any contracts with Harvard, and whether they can be canceled or redirected elsewhere," according to a senior administration official. The development comes as Judge Burroughs sets a May 29 hearing to consider extending his order barring the Trump administration from revoking the Harvard's Student and Exchange Visitor Program certification. Timeline: Trump administration's actions against Harvard Universityoriginally appeared onabcnews.go.com

Timeline: Trump administration's actions against Harvard University

Timeline: Trump administration's actions against Harvard University A judge has set a Thursday hearing to address the Trump administrati...
US senator calls for AI competition in Pentagon contractingNew Foto - US senator calls for AI competition in Pentagon contracting

By Marisa Taylor and Alexandra Ulmer (Reuters) -Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren urged the U.S. Department of Defense to ensure competitive AI contracting, according to a letter seen by Reuters on Wednesday, as tech billionaire Elon Musk's artificial intelligence chatbot Grok gains ground in the federal government. Warren's letter comes on the heels of Reuters reporting last week that Musk's DOGE team is expanding use of Grok to analyze data, potentially violating conflict-of-interest laws and putting at risk sensitive information on millions of Americans. "I seek to ensure that the DoD's procurement decisions encourage competition and avoid consolidation that can lead to higher prices, concentration of risk, and the stifling of innovation," Warren, a senior member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, wrote in the letter to Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth on Wednesday. Warren asked the Pentagon to respond to her by June 9 on its AI acquisition practices, how it plans to avoid getting locked in with a particular contractor, and its safeguards for data collection. "How does DoD plan to ensure government data is not used to illegally train commercially available AI algorithms?" Warren wrote. The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The letter did not mention Grok, which was developed by xAI, or its competitors, which include OpenAI's ChatGPT and Anthropic's Claude. In a meeting first reported by Reuters, Hegseth met Musk and members of the xAI team at the Pentagon on May 21, officials said, the second known time the close ally of President Donald Trump has visited the department's headquarters. The White House's Office of Management and Budget released new guidance in April directing federal agencies to ensure that the government and "the public benefit from a competitive American AI marketplace." The guidance, however, exempted national security and defense systems. Warren of Massachusetts and Senator Eric Schmitt, a Republican senator for Missouri who also serves on the Armed Services Committee, recently reintroduced a bill that includes provisions that would also encourage AI competition in the Defense Department. The Department of Defense, with a budget approaching $1 trillion per year, accounted for over half of the federal government's contracting dollars in the fiscal year 2023, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office. (Reporting by Marisa Taylor and Alexandra Ulmer; Editing by Mark Porter)

US senator calls for AI competition in Pentagon contracting

US senator calls for AI competition in Pentagon contracting By Marisa Taylor and Alexandra Ulmer (Reuters) -Democratic Senator Elizabeth War...
Israeli airstrikes target Yemen airport as Netanyahu warns Houthis, IranNew Foto - Israeli airstrikes target Yemen airport as Netanyahu warns Houthis, Iran

Israel launched airstrikes on Sana'a International Airport in the Yemeni capital on Wednesday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, warning of the possibility of further attacks on the Iran-backed Houthi movement that controls the area. "We work according to a simple rule: Whoever harms us, we harm them," Netanyahu said in a statement posted to X by his office. "Whoever does not understand this with force, will now understand it with greater force." "But, as I have said more than once: The Houthis are only the symptom. The main driving force behind them is Iran, which is responsible for the aggression emanating from Yemen," Netanyahu continued. The Houthis have been attacking regional shipping and launching drones and missiles toward Israel since Hamas' deadly surprise attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. The Houthis say their attacks are a protest of Israel's war against Hamas in Gaza. In response, the Israel Defense Forces have attacked a range of targets in Houthi-controlled Yemen. The IDF has previously bombed the airport in Sana'a in December 2024 and earlier this month. The IDF said in a Wednesday statement that the latest attack targeted "the central airport in Sana'a and an aircraft belonging to the Houthi terrorist organization." MORE: Israel reports 3 Houthi missiles fired in 24 hours amid plans to expand Gaza offensive "The aircraft that were attacked were used by the Houthi terrorist regime to transport terrorists who promoted terrorist acts against the state of Israel," the IDF said. "The IDF is determined to continue to act and strike with force anyone who poses a threat to the residents of the state of Israel, at whatever distance is required," the IDF said. Yemenia Airlines condemned the strike. "Another Yemenia Airlines plane was directly and cowardly targeted this morning, just moments before the scheduled boarding of pilgrims," the airline said in a statement Wednesday. "The plane had received all necessary permits for landing, operation, and takeoff from all relevant authorities." "Accordingly, we announce to the Yemeni and international public opinion the complete (temporary) suspension of Yemenia Airlines flights from Sana'a International Airport until further notice," the statement continued. "This is a result of this cowardly terrorist act that targeted a Yemeni civilian aircraft, belonging to a national company that has distanced itself from all conflicts and is fully dedicated to serving all our noble people without discrimination." Last month, the Houthis agreed to end attacks on American commercial shipping in the region in exchange for an end to the intense U.S. airstrikes against them, a campaign President Donald Trump began in March. The Houthis have said that the agreement does not include stopping its attacks on Israel, and have since launched multiple drones and ballistic missiles toward the country. ABC News' Guy Davies contributed to this report. Israeli airstrikes target Yemen airport as Netanyahu warns Houthis, Iranoriginally appeared onabcnews.go.com

Israeli airstrikes target Yemen airport as Netanyahu warns Houthis, Iran

Israeli airstrikes target Yemen airport as Netanyahu warns Houthis, Iran Israel launched airstrikes on Sana'a International Airport in t...

 

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