Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Trump may have just helped Putin cover up war crimes involving children: report

Jennifer Bowers Bahney
March 18, 2025 

FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin shake hands as they meet in Helsinki, Finland, July 16, 2018. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo

The Washington Post reported Tuesday that the U.S. could be inadvertently helping Russian President Vladimir Putin cover up alleged Russian war crimes involving children.

The controversy revolves around a now terminated, U.S.-funded initiative that contained "a sensitive database detailing the mass deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia," The Post reported. The project was headed up by Yale University’s Humanitarian Research Lab, but that contract was recently scrapped by Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency.

When the it abruptly ended, researchers reported losing "access to a trove of information, including satellite imagery and biometric data tracking the identities and locations of as many as 35,000 children from Ukraine."

National security reporter John Hudson wrote that the researchers were no longer able to transmit "evidence to prosecutors pursuing multiple criminal cases, including the International Criminal Court’s landmark indictment of Russian President Vladimir Putin for what it has called the 'unlawful transfer' of children from occupied areas of Ukraine."

Hudson quoted a group of lawmakers led by Rep. Greg Landsman (D-OH) in a letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent: “We have reason to believe that the data from the repository has been permanently deleted. If true, this would have devastating consequences. This vital resource cannot be lost."

One anonymous researcher told The Post, "The Trump administration, through either its incompetence or its intent, has now cast doubt on the validity of three years and $26 million of taxpayer-funded war crimes evidence."

According to the report, "Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said any agreement to stop the fighting must include Russia’s return of missing Ukrainian children and accountability for those responsible for their abduction." The Post reported that the State Department didn't comment on whether the data has been compromised or deleted.

President Donald Trump held a phone call Tuesday with Putin to discuss a pending ceasefire agreement with Ukraine.
'None of our jobs are safe': US Postal workers union sounds alarm amid fears of privatization

Sarah K. Burris
March 18, 2025 
RAW STORY

A U.S. Postal Service letter carrier makes a delivery in Fullerton, Calif. in August 2020 (Shutterstock/Matt Gush)

American Postal Workers Union President Miriam Bell is sending warning letters to carriers and other U.S. Postal Service workers amid concerns that Elon Musk and Postmaster General Louis DeJoy will privatize their operations.

Reporter Amee Vanderpool wrote on Tuesday that Bell's email was a response to a letter from DeJoy that was also sent to House and Senate leaders last week, which said that the new administration's team would "assist" the service in addressing the “mismanagement of the agency’s retirement assets and Worker’s Compensation Program.”

When he came into office, President Donald Trump created the "Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)" by executive order and tasked tech billionaire Elon Musk with navigating it. That initiative has been behind the upheaval and dismantling of government agencies. Websites, grants, programs, and employees have been cut or frozen under the promise that Trump will save taxpayers trillions.

ALSO READ: ‘Cracked under the pressure’: Alarm sounded as postal worker suicides quadruple

DeJoy sent another letter to officials on Monday, saying that he's received a "great deal of inquiry" from officials asking if the postal service was being privatized.

DeJoy didn't answer. Instead, he claimed, "the Postal Service is engaging in a historic level of transformational change.”


Bell told union members, "None of our jobs are safe at this point. Our collective bargaining rights are not safe. Please don't think it's no big deal. There has been no rationale utilized with past mass firings, and we have no reason to believe this would be different."

What has been different, she continued, is that the agency falls under Congress' purview.

Bell also announced the union was set to hold a nationwide rally on March 20 in 150 locations. The goal is to "educate the public on why privatization is bad business."

"An increase in postage rates up to 140%, reduced delivery areas, and more detrimental changes need to be shared with the public so they can contact their representatives and urge them to oppose privatization," the email continued.

DeJoy crafted a 10-year strategic plan that pledged to solve delivery problems and ensure the postal service would "break-even" by 2023. The net loss that year was $6.5 billion. The previous year, however, the USPS made a net income of $56 billion, wrote Vanderpool.

Read the full report here.




Democrats Demand Hearing on 'Backroom Agreement' Between DOGE and DeJoy

"Any potential deal that would give Elon Musk and his DOGE associates unilateral authority to manipulate the most critical, expansive national mail network on the planet is deeply troubling," wrote a group of House Democrats.



U.S. Postal Service Postmaster General Louis DeJoy speaks during a House Oversight and Reform Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., on February 24, 2021.
(Photo: Graeme Jennings/POOL/AFP)

Eloise Goldsmith
Mar 17, 2025
COMMONDREAMS


A group of House Democrats is demanding that the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform conduct a public hearing on the Trump administration and the so-called Department of Government Efficiency's plans for the U.S. Postal Service, in light of recent reporting that U.S. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy says he signed an agreement with DOGE to assist the nation's mail service "in identifying and achieving further efficiencies."

The news follows Washington Post coverage from February, when the outlet reported that U.S. President Donald Trump is considering putting the Postal Service under the control of the Commerce Department. In December, the Post also reported that Trump was eyeing privatizing the Postal Service. Elon Musk, a GOP megadonor who is playing a core role in Trump's efforts to slash federal spending and personnel, has also said the Postal Service should be privatized.

Postal workers unions are fiercely opposed to any effort to privatize the Postal Service.

"The Trump administration... is now subjecting the USPS, America's most trusted federal institution, to the chainsaw approach of Elon Musk and DOGE. This broad assault on the independence of the USPS demands congressional oversight, especially from the committee with jurisdiction over the USPS," according to the letter, which was signed by 20 House Democrats.

In a March 13 letter to congressional leaders, U.S. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy told Congress he signed an agreement with representatives from Elon Musk's DOGE and the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) so that DOGE could help the U.S. Postal Service, which has experienced billions in financial losses in recent years, work to address "big problems."

The Postal Service plans to cut 10,000 employees in the next 30 days through a voluntary early retirement program, according to DeJoy's letter.

DeJoy cited challenges facing the Postal Service, such as "mismanagement of our self-funded retirement assets," "burdensome regulatory requirements restricting normal business practice," and "unfunded mandates imposed on us by legislation."

The letter demanding a public hearing, which was addressed to House Oversight Committee Chair Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.), was spearheaded by Oversight Committee Ranking Member Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.), Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.), and Rep. Kweisi Mfume (D-Md.)

"This backroom agreement between the billionaire-led DOGE and Postmaster DeJoy sets off alarm bells about this administration's plans for the Postal Service's role as a cornerstone public institution," according to the letter. "The Postal Service facilitates the delivery of more than 115 billion pieces of mail each year, a significant portion of which is delivered to rural, low-income, and hard-to-reach areas that would not otherwise receive service if not for the universal service obligation, which has received bipartisan support in Congress and is integral to the mission of Postal Service."

"We agree that there are steps Congress could take to strengthen the financial sustainability of the Postal Service, but any potential deal that would give Elon Musk and his DOGE associates unilateral authority to manipulate the most critical, expansive national mail network on the planet is deeply troubling," they continued.

The group is urging that the committee hold a hearing and wrote that they have prepared a letter to send to DeJoy asking that he furnish any signed agreements he made with the GSA and DOGE. The group is urging that Comer also sign on to that letter.
Elon Musk cries 'terrorism' after multiple vehicles ablaze at Las Vegas Tesla center


David Edwards
March 18, 2025 
RAW STORY

Vehicles on fire at Tesla center in Las Vegas (KLAS/screen grab)

Tesla CEO Elon Musk blamed "terrorism" after multiple vehicles reportedly burned at one of his facilities in Las Vegas.

KLAS reported that the FBI and local authorities were investigating the blaze at a Tesla Collision Center on Tuesday.

Posting on X, Musk referred to the incident as "terrorism."


“This level of violence is insane and deeply wrong,” he added. “Tesla just makes electric cars and has done nothing to deserve these evil attacks.”


'Totally destroyed': Investors rake in billions by 'causing huge damage' to Tesla


Carl Gibson,
 AlterNet
March 18, 2025 

FILE PHOTO: People protest against Tesla and Elon Musk outside of a Tesla dealership in Palo Alto, California, U.S., March 8, 2025. REUTERS/Laure Andrillon/File Photo

The stock price for Tesla — South African centibillionaire Elon Musk's electric vehicle company — has continued to tank in financial markets. And some investors are raking in huge windfalls at Tesla's expense.

The Guardian recently reported that while Musk's net worth is still in excess of $300 billion, his stake in Tesla is no longer his most prized asset, given the precipitous drop in the company's share price. As of closing time Tuesday, Tesla is trading at just over $225 per share. That's a decline of more than 50% in trading value over just the last three months. Musk's stake in SpaceX has since overtaken his Tesla holdings in value, with the Guardian reporting that the former is now worth about $20 billion more than his Tesla shares.

But at the same time, Musk's electric vehicle company has plummeted in value, investors known as "short sellers" — who effectively bet on a company's stock to tank — have hit it big. The Financial Times reported that hedge funds that have taken short positions on $TSLA are now $16.2 billion richer over the past 90 days.

"Tesla had a very strong brand value and Elon has managed to totally destroy it," said hedge fund manager Per Lekander, who runs a $1.5 billion hedge fund focused on clean energy. "[Musk] is on the wrong side of his buyership. It’s not people with cowboy boots who buy Teslas."

The company's slide is projected to accelerate, with JPMorgan predicting a late December share price of just $120. Investors have been bearish on the electric vehicle company after Tesla sales flatlined in Europe following Musk's endorsement of a far-right German political party. The Tesla CEO has also had to contend with a wave of Tesla Takedown protests at dealerships across the country as Americans outraged over his mass firings of federal workers take to the streets.

Musk's electric vehicle company has experienced a rollercoaster of volatility in its share price, rocketing from approximately $150 per share in the first quarter of 2024 to more than $400 per share after the election as investors hoped to cash in on Musk's proximity to President Donald Trump. But as public outrage over Musk's political activity intensifies, the number of Tesla shares being shorted has spiked by more than 16% compared to last month, according to the Financial Times.

"A lot of these momentum stocks [like Tesla] have become glorified memecoins," short seller Marc Cohodes (who does not have a position on Tesla) told the outlet. "When they went up, everyone buying thought they were smart. Now they’re falling, they’re causing huge damage."
Op-Ed: Trump tells DOJ that opposition should be illegal while the ship goes down


By Paul Wallis
March 15, 2025
DIGITAL JOURNAL


Trump boards Air Force One at Palm Beach International Airport in Florida. — © AFP ROBERTO SCHMIDT

In a tangled speech, Trump has said that opposition and negative media should be illegal. It seems that everyone is corrupt scum, and that it’s not nice.

According to Politico, the speech was a series of mood shifts ranging from gloating to defamatory to blatantly accusing the DOJ of doing its job.

He also called himself the “chief law enforcement officer” of the USA.

Nobody else had noticed that.

The rest of the speech seems to have involved treading on as many DOJ toes as possible. From the language usage, it seems he spends a lot of time catching up on old Bilderberg commentary and Breitbart articles from about 10 years ago.

As an example of democratic, judicial, and legal illiteracy, it was pretty comprehensive. It also looks pretty smug for a guy with his vast library of ongoing statutory and civil legal issues. Does he really think people will let millions of dollars go based on a speech to the DOJ?

He’s misreading his audience badly and perhaps fatally in this case. When he stops being “president,” he’ll notice that. The Countdown to Goodbye Forever Donald is counting down, and he’s not scoring points with anyone anywhere.

People care about their own interests in the future, not about him in the next four years. He’s a lame duck this term, he’s on the way out, and everyone but him knows it.

The negative media comments are never any sort of surprise. The guy reacts so badly to criticism of any kind. The media mainly just reports what’s happening, with a few pitiful exceptions.

Many of the negative headlines are mainly about Musk and DOGE. What’s not to criticize? It’s a miserable attempt at management on any level. Even the White House has monotonously had to contradict Musk’s actions.

Just to update from 1776:

The First Amendment allows criticism and it’s not going anywhere.

There are no laws, as in precisely none, against political opposition.

For a guy totally dependent on the theory of immunity, he just stuck his neck out a long way. There is no such thing as immunity from the law by statute. The Supreme Court gave an opinion, not a ruling. There’s a big difference.

Meanwhile, back in that unfashionable thing called reality and somewhat more importantly:

The world has been saying nothing but an unequivocal “No!” to Trump for two months on an increasingly turgid range of critical subjects. Negotiations don’t deserve the name and have gone nowhere.

America’s future finances aren’t looking at all healthy. Destroying trade didn’t do much for Brexit, and it won’t do America any good.

The projected US Federal budget isn’t impressing anyone at all. Cuts vs spending look utterly absurd.

Opposition to Trump’s every move comes from a very broad bandwidth of parties within America. You’d have to deport the whole population to stop negative commentary.

This constant defensive monologue from Trump isn’t a good look.

“The strong man” is now making himself look very much like “the wrong man.”

________________________________________________________

Disclaimer
The opinions expressed in this Op-Ed are those of the author. They do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of the Digital Journal or its members.
‘Impossible’: US breweries buffeted by Trump tariffs


By AFP
March 16, 2025


US President Donald Trump's 25 percent tariffs on steel and aluminum imports fuel material costs for beer cans - Copyright AFP/File SAUL LOEB


Beiyi SEOW

For US craft brewer Bill Butcher, President Donald Trump’s expanding range of tariffs have sparked an unexpected impact — a shortage of bottles to package his beer — while uncertainty looms over his business costs.

From Canadian malted barley to aluminum beer cans, Trump’s tariffs have hit multiple products that American craft breweries need, buffeting businesses in the world’s biggest economy.

Turbulence in supplies could ultimately translate to higher beer prices for consumers, brewers warn, even as importers and breweries try to absorb additional costs triggered by the levies and their consequent supply shocks.

Similar conditions are playing out in various industries across the country, including construction and appliance production.

In Trump’s latest salvo, 25 percent levies on US steel and aluminum imports took effect this week.

“As the aluminum tariffs have kicked in, the major beer suppliers in the country are switching a lot of their production back to bottles,” said Butcher, founder of Port City Brewing Company in the state of Virginia.

As a result, his provider can no longer supply bottles to him after shipments through March. Aluminum levies also raise the cost of producing cans, threatening higher prices down the line.

“There’s a lot of uncertainty. There’s a lot of chaos that’s been injected into our supply chain,” Butcher told AFP.

He typically goes through 90,000 bottles per month or so — forming 70 percent of his packaged products — and the rest goes into cans.

But in the absence of bottle supplies he expects to use more aluminum cans anyway, or sell more beer in kegs.

Atlas Brew Works founder Justin Cox, who packages his beers in aluminum cans, estimates their price form about a third of the total cost for a case of 24 beers.

Aluminum tariffs add to packaging costs “in what’s already a small-margin product going into the wholesale market,” Cox said.

“All of this ends up with a higher price of our beer on the shelf,” added Cox, who has facilities in Washington and Virginia.

“On average, about 10 percent of every can in the US is Canadian aluminum,” said Bart Watson, president of the Brewers Association, a trade group.

This piles further cost pressures on American craft brewers, he said.



– ‘Impossible’ –



For Butcher, uncertainty also lingers over costs of the Canadian pilsner malt that forms the base of his beers — and the bottle caps he imports from Mexico.

While both products were hit by Trump’s blanket tariffs on Canadian and Mexican goods this month, the president’s partial rollback of them within days has allowed him temporary relief.

But it remains unclear if duties will return from April 2, when Trump has promised a new wave of “reciprocal tariffs” to tackle trade deemed as unfair. These will be tailored to each country, taking into consideration their tariff levels on US goods and other factors.

Watson estimates the United States imported about $230 million of malt last year, much of it ending up with craft brewers.

“Most of the barley in the US is contracted for by large brewers or for export to Mexico,” he said.

Craft brewers therefore end up using malt containing some portion of imports, he added.

Tariffs are paid by US importers of foreign goods, and breweries expect duties would filter to them over time.

Butcher told AFP it has become “impossible for us to plan out our business, our production, if we don’t know what the price of our supplies are going to be.”



– ‘Sit and watch’ –



Brendan Chaney, Port City’s logistics manager, noted that tariffs can be an economic tool when used in a targeted manner.

But he cautioned that blanket levies create an atmosphere of fear “akin to five years ago, when Covid happened” and threw supply chains into disarray.

Butcher and Cox warned that smaller businesses like theirs have limited capacity for storage — and less cashflow — making it harder to stockpile inventory to cushion the blow from tariffs.

“We can only hold so much in our small space, and a minimum order on aluminum cans is a full truckload,” Cox of Atlas Brew Works said.

The pricing of cans is also subject to flux, Cox noted. Breweries are billed for the final product after production, which can be weeks after orders are placed.

“We’re having to just sit and watch, and hope that things get better before it’s time for us to order (more),” he said.


Experts break down potential tariff impacts


By Dr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL JOURNAL
March 16, 2025


New US tariffs against China come in force prompting Beijing to vow counter-measures. - © AFP STR

Tariffs are taking center stage as President Donald Trump proposes additional tariffs on goods imported from Canada, China, and Mexico. Two Virginia Tech professors explain tariffs to Digital Journal, and proceed to break down arguments for and against them, and discuss how they may impact consumers, markets, and other nations.

Dimitris Tsarouhas is a visiting associate professor and expert on international affairs. Jason Grant is a professor and agricultural economist specializing in trade. The two experts have provided a guide to what the tariff imposition means and the economic implications. These thoughts are considered from the U.S. perspective,as explained to Digital Journal.

What are tariffs?

Grant: Tariffs are a tax or surcharge on imports coming into a country. In most countries, tariffs are collected at the ports of entry either as a percentage of the import value of the goods entering the importing country or as a per unit surcharge collected on the volume or number of products imported — dollars or cents per unit imported.

Why are tariffs a big push for the Trump administration?

Tsarouhas: There are two reasons. First, the president likes them. He thinks tariffs have the potential to restore America’s industrial prowess, and he is therefore keen to use them to achieve a set of policy objectives, which may not be linked to industrial or trade policy. Two, the president has campaigned on imposing tariffs, and he wants to stick to his pre-election promises to the American people.

How can tariffs be beneficial?

Tsarouhas: Tariffs can shield domestic production in the U.S. from foreign competition and allow for higher demand for U.S. products at the expense of imported goods, boosting employment in key economic sectors. This can then reduce the country’s large trade deficit and assist U.S. efforts to introduce fairer trade practices by discouraging dumping.

Q:How can tariffs be harmful?

Grant: So much depends on a variety of factors and questions: current policy objectives, at what levels the new tariffs will be set; do they apply to all countries or just some; how foreign countries react; how governments use or distribute tax revenues; are tariffs long term or short term.

Can tariffs impact U.S. consumers and the economy?

Tsarouhas: Tariffs are likely to hurt the U.S. consumer by making certain items more expensive. They can also discourage innovation and competition, stifling the U.S. economy. Given America’s weight in global economic affairs, tariffs can also be a signal to international markets and turn positive economic sentiment into bad if other states retaliate and a trade war ensues.

How could higher tariffs make a difference for farmers when it comes to market demand?

Grant: A key question around any new tariff announcement is how foreign countries will react. The U.S. is a highly competitive and major agricultural exporting country that depends on foreign market demand for the sale of its farm output.

How could higher tariffs impact the U.S. and its relationship with other countries going forward?

Tsarouhas: Tariffs can concentrate minds and make all sides, the U.S. and other states, more focused on solving problems above and beyond trade. The U.S.-Mexico agreement seems to indicate that this positive spillover effect may be taking place already.

On the other hand, tariffs could undermine U.S. capacity to advance its policy agenda through persuasion and raise suspicions among partners and allies as to the reliability of the U.S. and the legitimacy of its global reach. Tariffs are also likely to undermine global economic prospects, hurting the U.S. and other countries around the world.

Amid tensions, Canada says reviewing purchase of US jets

F35 BOONDOGGLE


By AFP
March 15, 2025


Donald Trump has rattled America's northern neighbor with tariffs threats and talk of annexation - Copyright POOL/AFP JULIAN SIMMONDS

Canada is reviewing a major purchase of US-made F-35 combat planes amid serious tensions with the Trump administration, a spokesperson for the Canadian defense ministry told AFP on Saturday.

That announcement came two days after Portugal said it too was reexamining a possible purchase of American F-35 fighter jets amid rising international anger over the tariff war President Donald Trump has launched and his wavering support for the Atlantic alliance.

Trump rattled America’s northern neighbor by imposing 25 percent tariffs on all Canadian products before agreeing to suspend levies on Canadian exports covered by a North American trade pact.

And he has regularly infuriated Canadians by suggesting their country become the 51st US state.

In one of his first official acts since taking office Friday, Prime Minister Mark Carney has asked the defense ministry “to determine if the F-35 contract, as it stands, is the best investment for Canada, and if there are other options that could better meet Canada’s needs,” according to an email from Laurent de Casanove, the ministry spokesperson.

The Canadian government in January 2023 signed a contract with giant US defense company Lockheed Martin to purchase 88 F-35s for a total of Can$19 billion ($13.2 billion).

It has already paid for a first shipment of 16, set for delivery early next year.

The deal has not been canceled, but “we need to do our homework given the changing environment, and make sure that the contract in its current form is in the best interests of Canadians and the Canadian Armed Forces,” the statement said.

Portugal indicated Thursday that it was studying both American F-35s and European aircraft as it looks to replace its air force’s aging F-16s.

Outgoing defense minister Nuno Melo raised those options in an interview Thursday in the daily Publico, referring to the “predictability of our allies” and “the recent position of the United States, in the context of NATO and on the level of international geostrategy.”
UN chief meets rival Cyprus leaders ahead of talks


By AFP
March 17, 2025


UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres flew to Geneva after visiting Bangladesh - Copyright NASA/AFP -

Robin MILLARD

UN chief Antonio Guterres met the rival Cypriot leaders for dinner on Monday ahead of informal talks aimed at finding a “way forward” on the divided island’s future.

Guterres sat down to dine in Geneva with President Nikos Christodoulides of the Greek-speaking, internationally recognised Republic of Cyprus and Turkish Cypriot leader Ersin Tatar, a UN spokeswoman said.

On Tuesday the three will meet for talks at the United Nations, alongside Britain, Greece and Turkey — the three guarantors of the Mediterranean island’s security since 1960.

“This meeting is being held in the context of the secretary-general’s good offices’ efforts on the Cyprus issue,” the UN spokeswoman told AFP.

“The informal meeting will provide an opportunity for a meaningful discussion on the way forward.”

All five convened delegations were at Monday’s dinner, she said.

Since a 1974 invasion by Turkey triggered by an Athens-backed coup, the island has been divided between the Greek-speaking south and the Turkish Cypriot north, which unilaterally declared independence in 1983 but is recognised only by Ankara.

The Republic of Cyprus is an EU member state. The Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus covers about a third of island, including parts of the capital Nicosia.

Decades of UN-backed talks have failed to reunify the island.

Greek Cypriots in 2004 overwhelmingly rejected a UN-backed reunification plan in a referendum.

The last round of full-on peace talks, in Crans-Montana, Switzerland, collapsed in 2017.



– ‘Absolute seriousness’ –



In a televised address on Saturday, Christodoulides said he was heading to Geneva “with absolute seriousness and with the aim of conducting a substantive discussion that will pave the way for the resumption of negotiations for the resolution of the Cyprus issue”.

“We are ready and well prepared to be constructive… to engage in meaningful discussions, and to achieve an outcome that will keep the process active,” he said.

Christodoulides held a national council meeting of Greek Cypriot political party leaders in Geneva on Monday.

“There is consensus, a constructive spirit of unity, and a shared goal: to ensure that this multilateral conference serves as a springboard toward breaking the deadlock and restarting negotiations,” Cyprus government spokesperson Konstantinos Letymbiotis told reporters afterwards.

“We are preparing for multiple scenarios, ensuring that in every case, the president has concrete initiatives and proposals.”



– Nameplates set out –



Following the dinner, the talks proper are set to begin on Tuesday at the UN Palais des Nations.

Nameplates had been set out, with Guterres on one side of the central table, opposite the two Cypriot leaders, who will sit next to each other.

Flanking Guterres, nameplates were set out for Greek Foreign Minister Giorgos Gerapetritis and Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, and for Britain’s Europe minister Stephen Doughty.

In October last year, Guterres hosted an informal dinner with Christodoulides and Tatar in New York.

The rival Cypriot leaders also met in January to discuss opening more crossing points across the divided island as part of trust-building efforts.

They met in the buffer zone that has split the island for decades.
SPACE/COSMOS


You’ve heard of the Big Bang. Now astronomers have discovered the Big Wheel

The Big Wheel alongside some of its neighbors. 
Weichen Wang et al.

 March 17, 2025

Deep observations from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) have revealed an exceptionally large galaxy in the early universe. It’s a cosmic giant whose light has travelled over 12 billion years to reach us. We’ve dubbed it the Big Wheel, with our findings published today in Nature Astronomy.


This giant disk galaxy existed within the first two billion years after the Big Bang, meaning it formed when the universe was just 15% of its current age. It challenges what we know about how galaxies form.

What is a disk galaxy?

Picture a galaxy like our own Milky Way: a flat, rotating structure made up of stars, gas and dust, often surrounded by an extensive halo of unseen dark matter.

Disk galaxies typically have clear spiral arms extending outward from a dense central region. Our Milky Way itself is a disk galaxy, characterised by beautiful spiral arms that wrap around its centre.




An artist impression of the Milky Way showcasing the dusty spiral structures similar to The Big Wheel.

Studying disk galaxies, like the Milky Way and the newly discovered Big Wheel, helps us uncover how galaxies form, grow and evolve across billions of years.

These studies are especially significant, as understanding galaxies similar to our own can provide deeper insights into the cosmic history of our galactic home.

A giant surprise

We previously thought galaxy disks form gradually over a long period: either through gas smoothly flowing into galaxies from surrounding space, or by merging with smaller galaxies.

Usually, rapid mergers between galaxies would disrupt the delicate spiral structures, turning them into more chaotic shapes. However, the Big Wheel managed to quickly grow to a surprisingly large size without losing its distinctive spiral form. This challenges long-held ideas about the growth of giant galaxies.

Our detailed JWST observations show that the Big Wheel is comparable in size and rotational speed to the largest “super-spiral” galaxies in today’s universe. It is three times as big in size as comparable galaxies at that epoch and is one of the most massive galaxies observed in the early cosmos.

In fact, its rotation speed places it among galaxies at the high end of what’s called the Tully-Fisher relation, a well-known link between a galaxy’s stellar mass and how fast it spins.

Remarkably, even though it’s unusually large, the Big Wheel is actively growing at a rate similar to other galaxies at the same cosmic age.

The Big Wheel galaxy is seen at the centre. In striking contrast, the bright blue galaxy (upper right) is only about 1.5 billion light years away, making the Big Wheel roughly 50 times farther away. Although both appear a similar size, the enormous distance of the Big Wheel reveals its truly colossal physical scale.JWST


Unusually crowded part of space

What makes this even more fascinating is the environment in which the Big Wheel formed.

It’s located in an unusually crowded region of space, where galaxies are packed closely together, ten times denser than typical areas of the universe. This dense environment likely provided ideal conditions for the galaxy to grow quickly. It probably experienced mergers that were gentle enough to let the galaxy maintain its spiral disk shape.

Additionally, the gas flowing into the galaxy must have aligned well with its rotation, allowing the disk to grow quickly without being disrupted. So, a perfect combination.


An illustration of how a massive spiral galaxy forms and evolves over billions of years. This evolutionary path is similar to real-world galaxies like Andromeda, our closest spiral galaxy neighbour, which also developed distinct spiral arms similar to the Big Wheel.


A fortunate finding


Discovering a galaxy like the Big Wheel was incredibly unlikely. We had less than a 2% chance to find this in our survey, according to current galaxy formation models.

So, our finding was fortunate, probably because we observed it within an exceptionally dense region, quite different from typical cosmic environments.

Besides its mysterious formation, the ultimate fate of the Big Wheel is another intriguing question. Given the dense environment, future mergers might significantly alter its structure, potentially transforming it into a galaxy comparable in mass to the largest ones observed in nearby clusters, such as Virgo.

The Big Wheel’s discovery has revealed yet another mystery of the early universe, showing that our current models of galaxy evolution still need refinement.

With more observations and discoveries of massive, early galaxies like the Big Wheel, astronomers will be able to unlock more secrets about how the universe built the structures we see today.

Themiya Nanayakkara, Lead Astronomer at the James Webb Australian Data Centre, Swinburne University of Technology

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Astronauts finally to return after unexpected 9-month ISS stay

COPRESIDENTSMUSKTRUMP BLAME BIDEN FOR ABANDONING ASTRONAUTS

By AFP
March 17, 2025


SpaceX Dragon Crew-10 members greet International Space Station crew members including NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore (L) and Suni Williams (3R) on March 16, 2025 -
 Copyright NASA/AFP -


Issam AHMED

After more than nine months aboard the International Space Station, a pair of astronauts are finally set to depart for Earth early Tuesday, ending a prolonged mission that has captivated global attention.

Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams flew to the orbital lab in June last year, on what was supposed to be a days-long roundtrip to test out Boeing’s Starliner on its first crewed flight.

But the spaceship developed propulsion problems and was deemed unfit to fly them back, instead returning empty without more major problems.

Ex-Navy pilots Wilmore and Williams, 62 and 59 respectively, were instead re-assigned to the NASA-SpaceX Crew-9 mission, which saw a Dragon spacecraft fly to the ISS last September with a team of two, rather than the usual four, to make room for the “stranded” pair.

Then, early Sunday, a relief team called Crew-10 docked with the station, their arrival met with broad smiles and hugs as they floated through the hatch.

Crew-10’s arrival clears the way for Wilmore and Williams to depart, along with American Nick Hague and Russian cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov.

Hatch closure is set for 10:45 pm (0245 GMT), followed by final checks and undocking at 1:05 am.

If all goes smoothly, the Dragon craft will deploy its parachutes off the coast of Florida for an ocean splashdown, where a recovery vessel will retrieve the crew.



– ‘Unbelievable resilience’ –



Wilmore and Williams’ stay surpasses the standard six-month ISS rotation but ranks only sixth among US records for single-mission duration.

Frank Rubio holds the top spot at 371 days in 2023, while the world record remains with Russian cosmonaut Valeri Polyakov, who spent 437 consecutive days aboard the Mir station.

That makes it “par for the course” in terms of health risks, according to Rihana Bokhari of the Center for Space Medicine at Baylor College.

Challenges such as muscle and bone loss, fluid shifts, and readjusting to gravity are well understood and well managed.

“Folks like Suni Williams are actually known for their interest in exercise, and so I believe she exercises beyond what is even her normal prescription,” Bokhari told AFP.

Still, the unexpected nature of their extended stay — away from their families and initially without enough packed supplies — has drawn public interest and sympathy.

“If you found out you went to work today and were going to be stuck in your office for the next nine months, you might have a panic attack,” Joseph Keebler, a psychologist at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, told AFP.

“These individuals have shown unbelievable resilience.”



– Trump weighs in –



Their unexpected stint also became a political lightning rod, with President Donald Trump and his close advisor, Elon Musk — who leads SpaceX — repeatedly suggesting former president Joe Biden abandoned the astronauts and refused an earlier rescue plan.

“They shamefully forgot about the Astronauts, because they considered it to be a very embarrassing event for them,” Trump posted on Truth Social on Monday.

Such accusations have prompted an outcry in the space community, especially as Musk offered no specifics and NASA’s plan for the astronauts’ return has remained unchanged since their Crew-9 reassignment.

Trump has also drawn attention for his bizarre remarks, referring to Williams, a decorated former naval captain, as “the woman with the wild hair” and speculating about the personal dynamic between the two.

“They’ve been left up there — I hope they like each other, maybe they love each other, I don’t know,” he said during a recent White House press conference.


What happens to the human body in deep space?


By AFP
March 18, 2025


As astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams prepare to return home after nine months aboard the International Space Station (ISS), some of the health risks they've faced are well-documented and managed, while others remain a mystery 
- Copyright NASA/AFP/File -



Issam AHMED

Bone and muscle deterioration, radiation exposure, vision impairment — these are just a few of the challenges space travelers face on long-duration missions, even before considering the psychological toll of isolation.

As US astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams prepare to return home after nine months aboard the International Space Station (ISS), some of the health risks they’ve faced are well-documented and managed, while others remain a mystery.

These dangers will only grow as humanity pushes deeper into the solar system, including to Mars, demanding innovative solutions to safeguard the future of space exploration.

– Exercise key –

Despite the attention their mission has received, Wilmore and Williams’ nine-month stay is “par for the course,” said Rihana Bokhari, an assistant professor at the Center for Space Medicine at Baylor College.

ISS missions typically last six months, but some astronauts stay up to a year, and researchers are confident in their ability to maintain astronaut health for that duration.

Most people know that lifting weights builds muscle and strengthens bones, but even basic movement on Earth resists gravity, an element missing in orbit.

To counteract this, astronauts use three exercise machines on the ISS, including a 2009-installed resistance device that simulates free weights using vacuum tubes and flywheel cables.

A two-hour daily workout keeps them in shape. “The best results that we have to show that we’re being very effective is that we don’t really have a fracture problem in astronauts when they return to the ground,” though bone loss is still detectable on scans, Bokhari told AFP.

Balance disruption is another issue, added Emmanuel Urquieta, vice chair of Aerospace Medicine at the University of Central Florida.

“This happens to every single astronaut, even those who go into space just for a few days,” he told AFP, as they work to rebuild trust in their inner ear.

Astronauts must retrain their bodies during NASA’s 45-day post-mission rehabilitation program.

Another challenge is “fluid shift” — the redistribution of bodily fluids toward the head in microgravity. This can increase calcium levels in urine, raising the risk of kidney stones.

Fluid shifts might also contribute to increased intracranial pressure, altering the shape of the eyeball and causing spaceflight-associated neuro-ocular syndrome (SANS), causing mild-to-moderate vision impairment. Another theory suggests raised carbon dioxide levels are the cause.

But in at least one case, the effects have been beneficial. “I had a pretty severe case of SANS,” NASA astronaut Jessica Meir said before the latest launch.

“When I launched, I wore glasses and contacts, but due to globe flattening, I now have 20/15 vision — most expensive corrective surgery possible. Thank you, taxpayers.”

– Managing radiation –

Radiation levels aboard the ISS are higher than on the ground, as it passes through through the Van Allen radiation belt, but Earth’s magnetic field still provides significant protection.

The shielding is crucial, as NASA aims to limit astronauts’ increased lifetime cancer risk to within three percent.

However, missions to the Moon and Mars will give astronauts far greater exposure, explained astrophysicist Siegfried Eggl.

Future space probes could provide some warning time for high-radiation events, such coronal mass ejections — plasma clouds from the Sun — but cosmic radiation remains unpredictable.

“Shielding is best done with heavy materials like lead or water, but you need vast quantities of it,” said Eggl, of University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

Artificial gravity, created by rotating spacecraft frames, could help astronauts stay functional upon arrival after a nine-month journey to Mars.

Alternatively, a spacecraft could use powerful acceleration and deceleration that matches the force of Earth’s gravity.

That approach would be speedier — reducing radiation exposure risks — but requires nuclear propulsion technologies that don’t yet exist.

Preventing infighting among teams will be critical, said Joseph Keebler, a psychologist at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.

“Imagine being stuck in a van with anybody for three years: these vessels aren’t that big, there’s no privacy, there’s no backyard to go to,” he said.

“I really commend astronauts that commit to this. It’s an unfathomable job.”


Webb telescope directly observes exoplanet CO2 for first time


By AFP
March 17, 2025


The James Webb Space Telescope separates from Arianespace's Ariane 5 rocket after launching from Europe’s Spaceport, the Guiana Space Center in Kourou, French Guiana. — © AFP/File
Daniel Lawler

The James Webb Space Telescope has directly observed the key chemical of carbon dioxide in planets outside of our solar system for the first time, scientists announced Monday.

The gas giants are not capable of hosting extraterrestrial life, but do offer clues in a lingering mystery about how distant planets form, according to a study in The Astrophysical Journal.

The HR 8799 system, 130 light years from Earth, is only 30 million years old — just a baby compared to our solar system’s 4.6 billion years.

A US-led team of researchers used Webb to directly detect carbon dioxide in the atmosphere of all four of the system’s known planets, according to the study.

They used Webb’s coronagraph instruments, which block the light from bright stars to get a better view of the planets revolving around them.

“It’s like putting your thumb up in front of the Sun when you’re looking up at the sky,” lead study author William Balmer, an astrophysicist at Johns Hopkins University, told AFP.

Normally, the Webb telescope only detects exoplanets by glimpsing them when they cross in front of their host star.

This “transiting method” was how Webb indirectly detected CO2 in the atmosphere of the gas giant WASP-39 in 2022.

But for latest discovery, “we’re actually seeing the light that is emitted from the planet itself, as opposed to the fingerprint of that light from the host star,” Balmer said.

This is not easy — Balmer compared the process to using a torch to spot fireflies next to a lighthouse.

While these gas giants may not be able to host life, it is possible that they had moons that could, he added.

There are missions currently under way to find out if there could be life in the vast oceans underneath the icy shells of several of Jupiter’s moons.

– ‘Key piece of proof’ –

Carbon dioxide (CO2) is essential for life on Earth, making it a key target in the search for life elsewhere.

Because CO2 condenses into little ice particles in the deep cold of space, its presence can shed light on planetary formation.

Jupiter and Saturn are believed to have first formed from a “bottom up” process in which a bunch of tiny, icy particles came together into a solid core which then sucked in gas to grow into giants, Balmer said.

So the new discovery is a “key piece of proof” that far-off planets can form in a similar way to those in our celestial backyard, Balmer said.

But how common this is throughout the universe remains unclear.

Astronomers have now discovered nearly 6,000 exoplanets, many of them massive — and none of them known to be habitable.

The “huge leap forward we need to make” is to focus on smaller Earth-sized worlds, Balmer said.

NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman space telescope will use a coronagraph to do that just after its planned launch in 2027.

Balmer hopes to use Webb to observe more four-planet systems, but added that future funding was now in question.

Last week the Trump administration announced that NASA’s chief scientist has been dismissed, indicating that more cuts were to come for the US space agency.


Musk says Starship to depart for Mars at end of 2026


By AFP
March 15, 2025


Starship (pictured during a test flight) -- the world's largest and most powerful rocket -- is key to Elon Musk's long-term vision of colonizing Mars - Copyright AFP/File CHANDAN KHANNA

SpaceX founder Elon Musk said Saturday its massive Starship rocket would leave for Mars at the end of 2026 with Tesla humanoid robot Optimus onboard, adding that human landings could follow “as soon as 2029.”

“Starship departs for Mars at the end of next year, carrying Optimus. If those landings go well, then human landings may start as soon as 2029, although 2031 is more likely,” Musk said on his X social network.

Musk, who is also the Tesla CEO, brought out the company’s Optimus robots at an event last year.

He said the dancing robots would one day be able to do menial tasks, as well as offer friendship, and expected them to retail for $20,000 to $30,000.

Starship — the world’s largest and most powerful rocket — is key to Musk’s long-term vision of colonizing Mars.

Standing 403 feet (123 meters) tall — about 100 feet taller than the Statue of Liberty — Starship is designed to eventually be fully reusable.

NASA is also awaiting a modified version of Starship as a lunar lander for its Artemis program, which aims to return astronauts to the Moon this decade.

But before SpaceX can carry out those missions, it must prove the vehicle is reliable, safe for crew, and capable of complex in-orbit refueling — critical for deep space missions.

– Setback –

SpaceX faced a setback this month when its latest test flight of the Starship prototype ended in a fiery explosion, even as the booster was successfully caught in its orbital test.

It was a near replay of the previous attempt.

Minutes after liftoff and booster separation, a live video feed showed the upper stage tumbling uncontrollably before the signal abruptly cut.

Dramatic footage circulating online showed red-hot debris raining down over the Bahamas.

It marked its eighth uncrewed orbital test.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said SpaceX will be required to conduct an investigation before it can fly again.

Despite the setback, SpaceX’s “fail fast, learn fast” approach has helped it become the world’s dominant launch services provider.

But Musk’s status as one of President Donald Trump’s closest advisors, and his influence over federal regulators, are raising concerns about potential conflicts of interest.

During Joe Biden’s presidency, Musk frequently clashed with the FAA, accusing it of over-regulating SpaceX over safety and environmental concerns.

Trump vowed in his inauguration speech in January “to plant the Stars and Stripes on the planet Mars.”
Armed groups covet cocoa in eastern DR Congo


By AFP
March 15, 2025


Judith Kahindo takes a risk every time she goes to her cocoa plantation in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo - Copyright AFP JOEL SAGET

Camille LAFFONT and Seros MUYISA

Despite the risks from deadly armed groups roaming the countryside, Judith Kahindo walks alone every day to her isolated cocoa plantation in the war-torn North Kivu region of the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

North Kivu is primarily rich in coltan and other minerals that have fuelled the fighting that has ravaged the region for the last three decades.

Vast areas have been seized by the M23 rebel group in a lightning offensive since January including the capital Goma.

But further north in Beni, cocoa, whose prices have soared on the world market in the last two years, also stokes the violence.

Massacres committed by the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) rebels, who have pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group, have left thousands dead and prevented cocoa farmers from accessing their plantations for years.

“We tend our fields with the fear of being massacred because cocoa is so coveted, whether by the rebels or even our soldiers,” said Kahindo, a widow with eight children, as she hacked her way through a tangled forest with a machete.

Cocoa production across the DRC remains relatively marginal, just over one percent of global production.



– Smuggling –



But that is still enough to attract the attention of various armed groups in Beni who fuel smuggling networks to neighbouring Uganda, according to those involved in the sector.

“If there wasn’t cocoa in abundance in Beni, the war would already have finished,” said Kahindo.

The ADF are not the only threat to people in the area.

“There are people who are taking advantage of the terror caused by the ADF to steal,” said Colonel Mak Hazukay, the Congolese army spokesman in the area.

Even before the emergence of the ADF in the 2000s, the region was already plagued by attacks from the “sangabalende” –- criminal groups that specialised in cocoa theft and smuggling, said Richard Kirumba, Beni civil society president.

Kirumba also said that some Congolese soldiers deployed to protect people from the ADF actually tax cocoa traders or loot abandoned fields.

Stolen cocoa is often trafficked through cross-border smuggling networks.

“The criminals sell the cocoa as it is. They just cut it, remove the husks that protect the beans and then sell it directly,” said Frank Ndinyoka Kabeya, a cocoa buyer and a member of the Union of Traders of Agricultural Products in Congo.

Unwary buyers risk being stopped by police. But checks are lax in a country where corruption is endemic, according to NGO Transparency International.

On Beni’s streets cocoa beans heaped on tarpaulins can be seen drying in the sun and are mainly sold to “small buyers”, circumventing certification processes, said Karim Sibenda, an agricultural engineer at a local chocolate factory.



– Organic –



At the National Office of Agricultural Products of Congo (ONAPAC), which is responsible for certifying the quality and origin of cocoa for export, there is a buzz of activity during the harvest season.

Tonnes of beans with a vinegary scent are piled up in the warehouse, where employees fill and stamp canvas bags destined for export.

Company employee Agee Mbughavinywa, who buys and certifies agricultural products, said cocoa producers are identified by a code to ensure traceability.

The bags of cocoa beans are then mainly exported to Uganda, like other agricultural goods in the region.

Since the end of 2021, the DRC authorised Ugandan troops to operate in the region and fight the ADF alongside the Congolese army.

Their presence has been vital in securing vital trade routes and increase exports, ONACAP said.

But this rapprochement between Kinshasa and Kampala has sparked fears in the cocoa market.

“Ugandan buyers are destabilising the sector, they come with cash in hand and impose their prices on producers,” said ONACAP’s Beni director.

“They don’t look at the quality, they take everything and export it under a Ugandan label, this is hampering the country’s economy,” she said.

In Beni, traditional farming methods and particularly fertile soil allow for the production of organic cocoa.

But the violence is also threatening its organic status. The European Union recently threatened to no longer recognise the label on local products, as insecurity prevents certification by inspectors.

Industry stakeholders fear that could encourage fraudulent exports of Congolese cocoa as Ugandan.
‘More and faster’: UN calls to shrink buildings’ carbon footprint


By AFP
March 17, 2025


The buildings sector consumes 32% of the world's energy and contributes 34% of CO2 emissions - Copyright AFP/File 

SAUL LOEB

Countries must move rapidly to slash CO2 emissions from homes, offices, shops and other buildings — a sector that accounts for a third of global greenhouse gas pollution, the United Nations said Monday.

Carbon dioxide emissions from the building sector rose around five percent in the last decade when they should have fallen 28 percent, according to a new report by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

It said emissions had plateaued since 2023 as climate policies began to have an impact, particularly green building standards, the use of renewable energy and electrified heating and cooling.

But the building sector still consumes 32 percent of the world’s energy and contributes 34 percent of CO2 emissions, the report found.

“The buildings where we work, shop and live account for a third of global emissions and a third of global waste,” said Inger Andersen, Executive Director of UNEP.

“The good news is that government actions are working. But we must do more and do it faster.”

She called on nations to include targets to “rapidly cut emissions from buildings and construction” in their climate plans.

The report said that while most of the countries that signed up to the 2015 Paris climate deal — nearly 200 have signed — mention the sector, so far only 19 countries have sufficiently detailed goals in their national carbon cutting plans.

The report said that as of 2023, important metrics like energy-related emissions and the adoption of renewable energy “remain well below required progress rates”.

That means that countries, businesses and homeowners now need to dramatically pick up the pace to meet the 2030 emissions reduction targets.



– ‘Critical challenge’ –



Direct and indirect CO2 emissions will now need to fall more than 10 percent per year, more than double the originally envisaged pace.

The rollout of renewables is a similar story.

The share of renewables like solar and wind in final energy consumption rose by only 4.5 percentage points since 2015, well behind the goal of nearly 18 percentage points.

That now needs to accelerate by a factor of seven to meet this decade’s goal of tripling renewable energy use worldwide, UNEP said.

The report urged countries to accelerate the roll-out of renewable technologies and increase the share of renewables in the final energy mix to 46 percent by 2030 — a rise of around 18 percent.

It also called on policymakers to increase energy efficiency retrofits to include better design, insulation and the use of renewables and heat pumps.

More work also needs to be done to improve the sustainability of materials like steel and cement, whose manufacture accounts for nearly a fifth of all emissions from the building sector.

But the report did say that circular construction practices were increasing in some areas, with recycled materials accounting for 18 percent of construction inputs in Europe.

The authors urged all major greenhouse gas emitters to take action by introducing zero-carbon building energy codes by 2028, and called on other countries to create and tighten their regulations within the next 10 years.

The report highlighted positive national policies from China, France, Germany, Mexico and South Africa among others.

But it said financing remained a “critical challenge”.

In 2023, it found that global investment in energy efficiency in buildings fell seven percent from a year earlier to $270 billion, driven by higher borrowing costs and the winding back of government support programmes, notably in Europe.

Those investments now need to double — to $522 billion — by 2030, it said.