Category: News

  • Russian officials meet US counterparts as Moscow denies aiding Iran

    Russian officials meet US counterparts as Moscow denies aiding Iran

    Kremlin spokesperson says talks are part of ‘​necessary dialogue’ with Washington as war in Ukraine continues for a fifth year.

    A delegation of Russian officials has arrived in ‌the United States for meetings with their American counterparts.

    The visit, which began on Thursday, marks the first such trip since ⁠relations strained over Moscow’s war in Ukraine.

    Recommended Stories

    list of 3 itemsend of list

    Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said, “We hope that these first tentative steps will, of course, make their contribution to the further revival of our bilateral engagement.”

    He said President Vladimir Putin had set the “main directives” for the trip and would be “thoroughly briefed” on the meeting.

    The visit comes as US-brokered talks seeking a deal to end the war in Ukraine are in effect frozen.

    Several rounds of negotiations since US President Donald Trump returned to the White House last year have failed to break the deadlock, with the Kremlin ruling out compromises to halt its years-long offensive.

    Russia, a close ally of Iran, has also been cited by Western intelligence officials as one of the backers of the Iranian government, as Tehran fights a war launched by the US and Israel.

    A report in the United Kingdom-based Financial Times newspaper on Wednesday alleged that Russia was close to completing a shipment of drones to Iran.

    Responding to questions about the report, Peskov said, “There are so many lies being spread by the media … Do not pay attention to them.”

    Russia this week carried out one of the largest aerial attacks since the start of its war on Ukraine, launching 948 drones in 24 hours as it moved troops and equipment to the front line.

    Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy issued a new appeal for allies to supply Kyiv with air defence munitions, warning that Kyiv, which relies on the US for air defence systems against ballistic missiles, will face a deficit of missiles while Washington is focused on the US-Israeli war on Iran.

    Talks between Ukraine and the US that opened in the US state of Florida on Saturday again failed to produce a security guarantee that Kyiv has long sought from Washington.

  • Venezuela’s Maduro set to again appear in US court: How strong is the case?

    Venezuela’s Maduro set to again appear in US court: How strong is the case?

    Nicolas Maduro, the former leader of Venezuela who was removed by United States forces on January 3, is set to appear in a US court for only the second time.

    In the weeks since he was abducted to the US, Maduro’s defence has offered only a preview of how it will approach the extraordinary case on Thursday. In his first court appearance, in January, Maduro maintained he was not a traditional defendant but a “prisoner of war” and “kidnapped” president.

    Recommended Stories

    list of 3 itemsend of list

    Many questions surrounding Maduro’s prosecution remain unanswered in the run-up to Thursday’s hearing: how Maduro may deploy a carousel of legal arguments to challenge the case; what evidence prosecutors will present to support their claims of “narco-terrorism” and drug trafficking; and ultimately, what would happen in the event federal prosecutors prove unsuccessful.

    While the US has a history of enforcing its domestic law against foreign individuals, the prosecution of sitting and former heads of state has been exceedingly rare.

    The most recent examples include the prosecution of Manuel Antonio Noriega, then the leader of Panama, in 1989, and more recently, the prosecution of former Honduran leader Juan Orlando Hernandez in 2024, explained Renato Stabile, who served as the court-appointed defence lawyer for Orlando Hernandez.

    “We’re in largely uncharted territory,” Stabile told Al Jazeera.

    Will the case get thrown out?

    Legal experts have pointed to a range of challenges Maduro’s team could mount to get the case thrown out before a trial begins. The defence has already argued that the case should be null, pointing to Maduro’s role in Venezuela at the time of his abduction and maintaining that Maduro was taken into custody illegally.

    The US deployed 150 military aircraft in its raid to abduct Maduro, knocking out the country’s air defence as it created a massive power cut across the capital, Caracas. Both an FBI unit and the US Army’s specialised Delta Force were deployed to storm Maduro’s compound. Venezuela has said at least 75 people were killed in the operation.

    The Trump administration has maintained that the goals were purely domestic law enforcement, and unrelated to its explicit calls for regime change or access to Venezuela’s state-controlled oil industry that accompanied a weeks-long military build-up and oil embargo.

    Trump, however, has since pledged to “run” Venezuela with his administration continuing to assert influence over the government of interim-President Delcy Rodriguez.

    The US executive branch has long held the position that the federal government can pursue domestic law enforcement arrests abroad. But according to a panel of federal prosecution experts writing on the LawFare nonprofit website in January, “Maduro will undoubtedly argue that even if such authority exists, it is limited – and that his arrest falls outside the bounds of what’s permitted.”

    Maduro could chart several courses in making the case, including arguing that continuing with the case would make the court itself complicit in the government’s actions, an apparent blatant violation of international law. A form of that argument proved unsuccessful in the Norriega case, the panel noted, although Maduro will likely try to argue the details of the US military operation in Panama in 1989 and the January raid in Venezuela are markedly different.

    Maduro’s team could also argue that the government misused the US military in domestic law enforcement, although experts noted that the government has, for decades, maintained that the military can be used to “protect federal functions”.

    The panel assessed that all options available to Maduro will likely face an “uphill battle”.

    Finally, Maduro’s team could invoke the so-called “head of state” immunity doctrine, arguing he remains the head of state of Venezuela and therefore is protected from prosecution under US common law.

    The US government has, since 2019, maintained that Maduro is not the legitimate head of state of Venezuela, pointing to a string of disputed elections, the most recent in 2024.

    How strong is the indictment?

    If challenges related to Maduro’s position and how he was arrested prove unsuccessful, Orlando Hernandez’s defence lawyer, Stabile, argued the current indictment laid out by federal prosecutors is far from a slam dunk.

    Maduro is charged with one count of conspiracy to commit “narco-terrorism”, with the indictment saying he was involved in drug and arms trafficking in support of the FARC, the ELN and other groups designated “foreign terrorist organisations” by the US.

    But notably, the Department of Justice has largely backed away from a pillar of its initial 2020 indictment against Maduro: claims that he was the leader of the “Cartel de los Soles”, which it, at the time, described as “drug-trafficking organisation” that “prioritised using cocaine as a weapon against America and importing as much cocaine as possible into the United States”.

    The new indictment, unsealed shortly after Maduro’s abduction, instead describes the Cartel de los Soles as a system of “patronage” within Venezuela’s government, and removes any reference to a coordinated effort by the Cartel de Soles to use drugs as a weapon against the US. The original indictment referenced the Cartel de los Soles 33 times, reduced to only two mentions in the new version.

    The second charge focuses on drug trafficking, pointing to various instances where Maduro, his wife and other officials allegedly used their positions and resources – including the use of private planes under diplomatic cover – to directly support and benefit from drug trafficking. The third and fourth charges are largely seen as hinging on the first two: illegal possession and conspiracy to possess automatic machineguns.

    While more evidence could be presented in the weeks, months and possibly years ahead, Stabile said prosecutors appear to be building a case largely built on informants, in what he described as a “snitch indictment”.

    Notably, the indictment details the involvement of former Venezuelan General Hugo Carvajal in several of the alleged crimes. Carvajal has already pleaded guilty to “narcoterrorism”, drug trafficking and weapons charges in the US.

    Last year, in a letter addressed to the “American people”, Carvajal, who has yet to be sentenced, promised to “provide additional details” that would further reveal the Maduro government’s alleged crimes.

    Stabile argued the prosecution will “look very weak” if its case relies on witnesses who have already struck cooperation deals with the US government.

    That feeds the perception that “they’re going to say whatever they need to say to get out of jail.”

    He also pointed to the difficulty prosecutors face in empanelling a jury unaware of the case’s broader political landscape and the contradictory messaging from the Trump administration.

    “Any of the jurors will likely know the story. They will know how the US went in and took him out of Venezuela,” Stabile said.

    “In a typical criminal case, you’re not really able to argue the political aspects of the case. In other words, typically, you can’t argue the motivations of the prosecution team in bringing the charges … [The defence] benefit here.”

    “I could very easily see – if you get the right juror to be a holdout – a hung jury here,” he said, referring to situations where a jury is unable to reach a verdict, and prosecutors are confronted with needing to retry the case, strike a deal or abandon prosecution.

    Long road ahead

    In the short term, the case against Maduro has stalled largely due to the ongoing funding battle.

    In late February, Maduro’s lawyers said the US government was blocking Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, from receiving legal funding from the government of Venezuela.

    Maduro’s lawyer, Barry Pollack, argued in court filings that the move deprived Maduro of his “constitutional right to counsel of his choice”.

    Earlier this month, federal prosecutors shot back that “both defendants…surely knew that the US Government did not consider them to hold legitimate positions”, maintaining that the couple were still free to use their personal funds for a lawyer.

    In response, lawyers for Maduro and Flores have called for the case to be thrown out. The issue will likely be addressed at Thursday’s hearing.

    It remains unclear what would happen if the case against Maduro were, in fact, to be thrown out, or if he were eventually acquitted.

    Typically, in those circumstances, an individual would be free. But because Maduro is not a US citizen, he could theoretically be detained by immigration enforcement agents upon his release.

    Argentina has also requested Maduro’s extradition from the US on charges of committing crimes against humanity in his government’s crackdown on protesters and political dissidents. The case was brought by Venezuelans who suffered under the alleged abuses.

    Stabile predicted a long road before clarity emerges on Maduro’s case.

    “We probably have six to nine months of motions … just to resolve the legal issues around his arrest and prosecution. Then there will be discovery,” he said, referencing the period when both sides will gather and exchange evidence.

    “I don’t expect the case to go to trial for at least a couple of years,” he said.

  • Jury finds Meta, YouTube liable for social media addiction: What we know

    A Los Angeles jury has found Alphabet’s Google and Meta liable for damages in a landmark civil trial over youth social media addiction. Campaigners and parents who say social media use has harmed their children, in some cases causing eating disorders, self-harm or deaths by suicide, welcomed the jury’s decision outside the court.

    The jury’s decision on Wednesday came at the end of a case in which the plaintiff’s legal team argued the companies are legally responsible for the addictive design of their platforms.

    Here is more about the jury’s verdict and the trial.

    A 20-year old woman was the plaintiff in this case and was identified by the California Superior Court in Los Angeles County documents only by her initials, KGM. The plaintiff’s lawyers referred to her as Kaley.

    KGM testified in February, saying her early use of social media triggered her addiction to the technology and exacerbated depression and suicidal thoughts. She said she had developed body dysmorphia – a clinical condition diagnosed by doctors – as a result of her social media use.

    Opening statements for the trial started on February 9, and deliberations lasted more than 40 hours.

    Google and Meta, which is the parent company of social media platforms Facebook and Instagram, were the two remaining defendants in the case.

    In late January, TikTok and Snapchat’s parent company, Snap Inc, settled their parts in the case. Details of these settlements are not known.

    Google trial
    Parents who say they have lost their children due to social media hold up a banner with their names and ages outside the court after the jury found Meta and Google liable in a key test case, accusing Meta and Google’s YouTube of harming children’s mental health through addictive social media platforms, in Los Angeles, California, US, on March 25, 2026 [Mike Blake/Reuters]

    What did the plaintiff tell the court?

    In February, KGM told the trial she had started using YouTube at the age of 6 and Instagram at age of 9. By the time she finished elementary school, she had posted 284 videos on YouTube.

    The plaintiff told the court: “I stopped engaging with family because I was spending all my time on social media.” She added that she began to suffer anxiety and depression at the age of 10 – and was later diagnosed with both.

    She said she would also “buy” likes through a platform on which she could “like” other people’s photos and receive a slew of likes in return. “It made me look popular,” she said.

    KGM said several features, which lawyers argued are deliberately designed to be addictive, such as notifications, would give her a “rush”. She said she would sometimes go to the toilet during school just to check her notifications.

    The plaintiff also said she used Instagram filters, which alter cosmetic appearance, on almost all her photos. She said she had not experienced the negative feelings associated with her body dysmorphia diagnosis before she began using social media and filters.

    Victoria Burke, a former therapist the plaintiff worked with in 2019 for six months, also testified in February. Burke said that KGM’s social media and sense of self were intertwined, and what was happening online would influence the plaintiff’s mental health.

    Meta case
    Juliana Arnold, Mary Rodee, and Lori Schott embrace after hearing the jury’s verdict outside the Los Angeles Superior Court during a lawsuit alleging that Meta and YouTube are designed to hook young users and cause them a variety of negative mental health effects and behaviours, including strangling themselves and developing eating disorders, on Wednesday, March 25, 2026 in Los Angeles, US [Kayla Bartkowski/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images]

    While KGM’s lawyers claim she was preyed upon as a vulnerable user, lawyers representing Meta and Google-owned YouTube argued that KGM turned to their platforms as a coping mechanism or a means of escaping her already existing mental health struggles.

    Meta argued that KGM’s challenges began before her social media use.

    In February, Meta’s lawyer Paul Schmidt told the court that the core question in the case was whether the company’s social media platforms were a substantial factor in KGM’s mental health struggles.

    During the trial, Meta lawyer Phyllis Jones showed jurors text exchanges and Instagram posts in which KGM discussed her mental health and her turbulent relationship with her mother, and played videos KGM had recorded of her mother yelling at her. The plaintiff acknowledged that their relationship was difficult. She currently lives with her mother and works as a personal shopper at Walmart.

    What did the jury find?

    The jury found that Meta had been negligent in designing or operating Instagram.

    In the case of Meta, the jury found that the group’s negligence was a “substantial factor” in harm to the plaintiff and said it was liable for failing to adequately warn users about the dangers of using Instagram.

    The jury also found Google had been negligent in designing or operating YouTube and that this negligence was a “substantial factor” in harming the plaintiff. It also found Google liable for failing to adequately warn users about the dangers of using YouTube.

    A majority of jurors agreed to the findings and awarded the plaintiff $3m in compensatory damages.

    Jurors later recommended an additional $3m in punitive damages after deciding the companies acted with malice, oppression or fraud in harming children using their platforms.

    Meta will be liable for 70 percent of the total, while Google will be liable for the remainder.

    The judge will have final say about how much damage is awarded. The judge has yet to enter a final judgement in the case, and it is not yet known when the formal ruling will be made.

    Meta, the parent of Instagram and Facebook, and Google-owned YouTube issued statements disagreeing with the verdict. They said they would explore their legal options, which include making an appeal.

    Google spokesperson Jose Castaneda said the verdict misrepresents YouTube “which is a responsibly built streaming platform, not a social media site”. A Meta spokesperson said teen mental health is “profoundly complex and cannot be linked to a single app”.

    The day before the jury’s decision in the KGM trial, a separate jury in New Mexico determined that Meta had knowingly harmed children’s mental health and concealed what it knew about child sexual exploitation on its social media platforms.

    The lawsuit was the first jury trial to find Meta liable for activities on its platform. It was brought by New Mexico’s attorney general office in December 2023.

    Jurors found there had been thousands of violations carrying a penalty of $5,000, each counting separately towards a penalty of $375m. This was less than one-fifth of what prosecutors were seeking, however.

    More than 40 state attorneys general in the US have filed both federal and state lawsuits in recent years against Meta, claiming the company is contributing to a mental health crisis among young people by deliberately designing Instagram and Facebook features that are addictive.

  • US jury finds Meta, Alphabet liable in landmark social media addiction case

    US jury finds Meta, Alphabet liable in landmark social media addiction case

    A California jury found ⁠Alphabet’s Google and Meta liable for $3m in damages in a landmark social media addiction lawsuit that accused the companies of being legally responsible for the addictive design of their platforms.

    The decision was handed down by a Los Angeles-based jury on Wednesday after more than 40 hours of deliberation across nine days, and more than a month after jurors heard opening statements in the trial.

    Recommended Stories

    list of 4 itemsend of list

    Among those who testified in the case were Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Instagram head Adam Mosseri, although YouTube chief executive Neal Mohan was not called to testify.

    The plaintiff in the case, referred to as KGM or Kaley, was awarded $3m in damages. The 20-year-old said she became addicted to social media at a young age, which exacerbated her mental health issues. She began using YouTube at age six and Meta-owned Instagram at age nine.

    Kaley’s legal team alleged that the social media giants used designed features intended to hook young users, including notifications and autoplay features.

    “Today’s verdict is a historic moment — for Kaley and for the thousands of children and families who have been waiting for this day. She showed extraordinary courage in bringing this case and telling her story in open court. A jury of Kaley’s peers heard the evidence, heard what Meta and YouTube knew and when they knew it, and held them accountable for their conduct. Today’s verdict belongs to Kaley,” lawyers for the plaintiff said in a statement shared with Al Jazeera.

    Jurors were instructed not to consider the content of the posts and videos Kaley saw on the platforms. That is because tech companies are shielded from legal responsibility for user-posted content under Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act.

    Meta consistently argued that Kaley had struggled with her mental health separate from her social media use, often pointing to her turbulent home life. Meta also said, “not one of her therapists identified social media as the cause” of her mental health issues in a statement following closing arguments. But the plaintiffs did not have to prove that social media caused Kaley’s struggles — only that it was a “substantial factor” in causing her harm.

    YouTube focused less on Kaley’s medical records and mental health history and more on her use of the platform itself. The company argued that YouTube is not a form of social media, but rather a video platform, akin to television, and pointed to her declining use as she got older.

    According to company data, she spent about one minute per day on average watching YouTube Shorts since its inception. YouTube Shorts, which launched in 2020, is the platform’s section for short-form, vertical videos that include the “infinite scroll” feature that the plaintiffs argued was addictive.

    “We disagree with the verdict and plan to appeal. This case misunderstands YouTube, which is a responsibly built streaming platform, not a social media site,” Jose Castaneda, a spokesperson for Google, told Al Jazeera.

    Meta did not respond to Al Jazeera’s request for comment.

    Snap and TikTok were previously named in the suit but settled with the plaintiff for undisclosed terms before the trial began.

    Shifting momentum

    The verdict is the latest in a wave of lawsuits targeting social media companies. There is a looming federal social media addiction case slated to begin in June in Oakland, California.

    On Tuesday in New Mexico, a jury found that Meta violated state law by misleading users about the safety of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, and by enabling child sexual exploitation on those platforms.

    This case has been closely watched by legal experts, who say the verdict will shape future litigation.

    “The fact the jury found Meta and Google liable represents that these cases have real exposure to the social media giants, and are going to frame how future litigation will proceed. Although this case will certainly be appealed, I would not be surprised if Meta and Google are already making changes within their platform to reflect the real exposure, and hopefully, the states will start to enact laws regulating social media in a manner congruent with the ruling,” entertainment lawyer Tre Lovell told Al Jazeera.

    Professor Eric Goldman, associate dean for research at the Santa Clara University School of Law, echoed Lovell’s assessment.

    “The Los Angeles jury verdict is the first of three bellwether trials in Los Angeles, with more bellwether trials to follow in summer, in the federal case. As such, today’s verdict is just one datapoint about liability and damages. The other trials could reach divergent outcomes, so this jury verdict isn’t the final word on any matter.”

    Despite the ruling, Meta’s stock has not taken a hit, as it came the same day CEO Mark Zuckerberg was appointed to a new White House advisory council. The stock is up 0.7 percent. Alphabet’s stock, however, is trending downward in midday trading on the heels of the verdict, down 1 percent.

  • Mohamed Salah: Is Liverpool exit the end? Can World Cup spur Egypt star?

    Mohamed Salah: Is Liverpool exit the end? Can World Cup spur Egypt star?

    Mohamed Salah’s Liverpool exit may not be the greatest footballing surprise, but it does leave many questions about the future of one of the Premier League’s greatest – and undoubtedly Africa’s best.

    The Egypt international has risen to the top of club football with the Merseysiders, a sleeping giant before Salah was the star of two Premier League titles and a UEFA Champions League crown.

    Recommended Stories

    list of 4 itemsend of list

    The public fallout with Reds’ manager Arne Slot this season meant the end of his time at Anfield was inevitable – even after a PR patch-up and return from a club-imposed exile following his own criticism of the season and the club’s handling of him.

    Al Jazeera Sport takes a look at what future options and inspirations the 33-year-old has ahead of him, or whether this is the end of the Egyptian king’s reign.

    The end of a Premier League era for Salah

    A further stint in the English top flight with a move to another Premier League club is surely off the table for any number of reasons, despite Salah’s stats suggesting the Egyptian star would have no problem maintaining his performance levels in the number one league in the world.

    Sentimentality and loyalty will be at the forefront of Salah’s thinking. His farewell message on social media to the Liverpool fans, on announcing on Tuesday his departure at the end of the season, confirms the fact that it would be very difficult to line up for a domestic rival.

    Only a very limited number of Premier League teams would be able to afford Salah, mainly the clubs regularly in and around the UEFA Champions League qualifying spots. Almost instantly ruled out are Arsenal, Manchester City and Manchester United – the latter for even more obvious reasons, as Liverpool’s greatest adversaries, than just jostling for positions.

    Newcastle United, Aston Villa and Tottenham Hotspur – albeit a club facing potential relegation this season – could be considered options without the fall from grace appearing too deep for a player, who was one of Europe’s hottest properties as recently as a season ago.

    The financial options for those clubs are limited, though, and attracting Salah with a financial offer of the size required to match other suitors will be beyond those three, without breaking their own wage structures.

    Will the Saudi Pro League renew its interest in Salah?

    The most likely option for Salah has to be a move to Saudi Arabia. When the fallout between Salah and Liverpool hit the headlines this season, the Saudi Pro League (SPL) wasted no time in rolling out the red carpet for an immediate move.

    Having signed superstar names like Cristiano Ronaldo and Neymar, while missing out on Lionel Messi, only the signing of the greatest Arab player to feature in the top league in the region could outdo what has already been achieved.

    The switch to the SPL has long been touted for this reason, well before this season’s rumblings at Anfield, and a move for Salah has appeared an obvious progression for him once his time in European football was up.

    The speed of Salah’s exit from Liverpool, with this season’s unrest, has perhaps been the only shock.

    Can the MLS muscle in on Salah?

    The other most likely option for Salah is a move to Major League Soccer. From David Beckham to Lionel Messi, the United States’ top flight has sought to build its name on star names from the global game long before the SPL threw its hat into the ring as a challenger to European domination of club competitions.

    The MLS not only want domestic success but they see their branding as a global aspiration – to bring the world’s game to the US. Snapping Salah from under Saudi noses is possible, but it would be an astonishing coup.

    To snatch the best African and Arabic football from a region that would covet the signing so highly would be a hammer blow in the battle between the two best-paying leagues outside of Europe.

    Should the MLS make a move for Salah, then surely their most compelling selling point would be to capitalise on the uncertainty in the Middle East.

    A move for Salah and his young family to the US would also bring the glitz and glamour that MLS has offered to the likes of Messi, and also dined out on with the help of a global brand icon like Beckham, who co-owns the club Messi plays for, Inter Miami.

    Could a move to Spain, Italy, France, or Germany keep Salah in Europe?

    There is little doubt that Salah’s stats will still attract the interest of some of Europe’s top clubs. Domestically, Salah will have a field day in any of the continent’s top flights, outside the Premier League.

    Wages would again limit the pool of contenders, though. From Paris Saint-Germain to Bayern Munich, the money would be there to pay for Salah, while outside Real Madrid and Barcelona, it is unlikely anyone else in Spain, or indeed all of Italy, could push the budgets too far.

    Sealing two years of an elite player, not far from the top of his game, could be a possibility, although it seems a longer shot than mega deals likely to be tabled from Saudi Arabia and the US.

    Egypt's Mohamed Salah leaves the field after sustaining an injury during the African Cup of Nations Group B soccer match between Egypt and Ghana in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, Thursday, Jan.18, 2024. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
    Mohamed Salah is yet to win a trophy with Egypt, despite his success at the club level [Themba Hadebe]

    Could this be the end, or will Egypt’s glory at the World Cup and AFCON spur Salah?

    While Salah’s days in the best league in the world appear to be coming to a close, and with it the top table of European competition too, that does not mean this has to be the end of the road.

    While club glory is unlikely to offer the dizzying heights of previous glories again, Salah will not want his story and illustrious career to wane in this fashion – and there are other matters for Salah to settle.

    No matter where Salah ends up now, it is likely to be a step down. Only Real Madrid and Barcelona could offer a similar level of club exposure for the forward.

    There are two great matters – one of them an enormous itch – that will still spur Salah.

    Although regarded, quite rightly, as an Egyptian king by his home nation and as Africa’s greatest by the wider audience, Salah has not led Egypt to international glory – most especially at the Africa Cup of Nations.

    Egypt were knocked out in the semifinals in the last edition by Senegal in January. Many speculated that Salah’s last chance at AFCON glory may have passed.

    A downgrade in club football may well elongate Salah’s international career, though, and with another AFCON coming in 2027, the forward will surely not have given up on finally lifting his continent’s greatest prize – one that his nation has claimed a record seven times overall.

    First, however, is the FIFA World Cup 2026. Indeed, upon exiting AFCON, the Egypt manager said he hoped that pain could inspire even greater glory.

    “It has been very good preparation for us, we’ve tried several systems of play throughout the tournament and played against different types of opponents,” Hossam Hassan said of the 1-0 loss to Segenal.

    “We came close to the final, but that’s football.

    “I’m satisfied with all that happened and what we achieved. ⁠We have a good team.”

    Fellow North African nation, Morocco, proved at Qatar 2022 what can be achieved when they became the first country from the continent to reach the last four of a World Cup.

    Egypt will not set their sights any lower than taking their record haul of AFCON titles – although not having won one since 2010 – to the global stage. Surpassing the feat achieved by the Atlas Lions in Qatar will now be at the forefront of all African nations moving forward.

    Along with finally getting his hands on an AFCON title, a sign-off on the showpiece event of world football will be a far more fitting finale for an award and trophy-laden career than a dispute with the club where he is adored, a backdoor exit to the domestic game.

  • Democrat captures Florida House seat in Trump’s Mar-a-Lago district

    Democrat captures Florida House seat in Trump’s Mar-a-Lago district

    Emily Gregory’s victory in the previously GOP-held district is the latest Democratic upset before the November midterms.

    Democratic candidate Emily Gregory is projected to win a special election for a Florida state House of Representatives seat that includes United States President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort, in the latest sign of strain for Trump’s Republican Party.

    With almost all votes counted from the Tuesday election, Gregory led her Trump-endorsed opponent Jon Maples by 2.4 percentage points, reported the AP news agency.

    Recommended Stories

    list of 3 itemsend of list

    Democrats hailed the victory in the previously Republican-controlled House District 87 as a sign voters are turning against Republicans and Trump before November’s midterm elections. Democrats registered electoral gains in the November 2025 gubernatorial and mayoral elections, with the cost of living cited as a major issue on people’s minds.

    The US decision to join Israel in attacking Iran has driven up oil and gas prices, putting further inflationary pressures on Americans.

    “If Mar-a-Lago is vulnerable, imagine what’s possible this November,” said Heather Williams, president of the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee. She said Tuesday’s race was the 29th seat that Democrats have flipped from Republican control since Trump took office.

    “Gas prices are spiking, grocery costs are up, and families can’t get by – it’s clear voters at the polls are fed up with Republicans,” Williams said.

    Gregory grew up north of Palm Beach in Stuart. She’s the owner of a fitness company that works with pregnant and postpartum women, and she has never run for elected office before.

    Speaking to MSNOW after her victory, she said she was “pretty shocked” and “having a fairly out-of-body experience”.

    Gregory’s victory is the latest in a series of improbable special election outcomes across the country since Trump returned to the White House more than a year ago, including several notable Democratic wins in Republican-controlled Florida.

    In December, Eileen Higgins won the race for Miami mayor, the first time a Democrat had led the city in nearly three decades. She defeated a Trump-endorsed Republican in a campaign that leaned heavily into criticism of the president’s immigration crackdown, a message that resonated with the city’s large Hispanic population.

    Further west in Texas, Democrat Taylor Rehmet flipped a reliably Republican state Senate district in a special election in January.

    Trump immediately distanced himself from the loss in a district he’d won by 17 points in 2024, saying “I’m not involved in that” even though he had endorsed the Republican candidate.

    Trump, who keeps Mar-a-Lago as his official residence, voted by mail in the Tuesday election, and his ballot was counted, Palm Beach County voter records show. He chose a mail ballot despite publicly bashing the voting method as a source of fraud and pushing Congress to curtail the practice.

  • OpenAI pulls AI video app Sora as concerns grow on deepfake videos

    OpenAI pulls AI video app Sora as concerns grow on deepfake videos

    This is first big step by the ChatGPT maker to focus its business on potentially more lucrative areas, such as coding tools.

    OpenAI is shutting down its social media app Sora, which went viral towards the end of last year as a place to share short-form videos generated by artificial intelligence but also raised alarms in Hollywood and elsewhere.

    OpenAI said in a brief social media message on Tuesday that it was “saying goodbye to the Sora app” and that it would share more soon about how to preserve what users had already created on the app.

    Recommended Stories

    list of 4 itemsend of list

    “What you made with Sora mattered, and we know this news is disappointing,” it said.

    The company behind ChatGPT released Sora in September as an attempt to capture the attention, and potentially advertising dollars, that follow short-form videos on TikTok, YouTube or Meta-owned Instagram and Facebook.

    But a growing chorus of advocacy groups, academics and experts expressed concerns about the dangers of letting people create AI videos on just about anything they can type into a prompt, leading to the proliferation of nonconsensual images and realistic deepfakes in a sea of less harmful “AI slop”.

    OpenAI was forced to crack down on AI creations of public figures – among them, Michael Jackson, Martin Luther King Jr and Mister Rogers – doing outlandish things, but only after an outcry from family estates and an actors’ union.

    Disney, which made a deal with OpenAI last year to bring its characters to Sora, said in a statement on Tuesday that it respects “OpenAI’s decision to exit the video generation business and to shift its priorities elsewhere”.

    But Disney did not see the move coming, the Reuters news agency reported.

    On Monday evening, Walt Disney and OpenAI teams were working together on a project linked to Sora. Just 30 minutes after the meeting, the Disney team was blindsided with word that OpenAI was dropping the tool altogether, a person familiar with the matter said.

    OpenAI announced the move publicly on Tuesday.

    “It was a big rug-pull,” according to the person, who requested anonymity to discuss the matter.

    Messy process

    The move is the first big step by the ChatGPT maker to focus its business on potentially more lucrative areas, such as coding tools and corporate customers.

    But the abrupt cancellation of Sora illustrates how messy the streamlining process may become as OpenAI prepares for a stock market debut that could come as early as later this year.

    The Sora decision means the end of a blockbuster $1bn deal between Disney and the ChatGPT maker that was announced a little more than three months ago. As part of the three-year deal, Disney said it would invest $1bn in OpenAI and lend more than 200 of its iconic characters to be used in short, AI-generated videos.

    But the transaction between the companies never closed, two other people familiar with the matter said, and no money changed hands.

  • Trump keeps up claims of talks with ‘the right people’ in Iran

    Trump keeps up claims of talks with ‘the right people’ in Iran

    US reportedly engaged in backchannel efforts, though Israel is apparently not on the same page, and military buildup continues.

    United States President Donald Trump has maintained that negotiations to end the war on Iran are under way, claiming that Tehran wanted to make a deal “so badly” despite its previous denial that talks were happening.

    Speaking at the White House on Tuesday evening, Trump told reporters that the US, which joined Israel in attacking Iran at the end of last month, was talking to “the right people” to reach a deal, alluding to a “very big present” related to “oil and gas” having been gifted by Tehran.

    Recommended Stories

    list of 3 itemsend of list

    But, as fighting continued, including continued Iranian attacks on Israel and a strike near Iran’s Bushehr nuclear plant, uncertainty swirled around Trump’s claims, which had already been dismissed as “fake news” by Iran’s parliament speaker, Mohammad Baqer Ghalibaf, on Monday.

    Trump’s latest claims coincided with media reports that Washington had sent Iran a 15-point plan to end the war. Israel’s Channel 12 cited sources saying the plan would include the end of Iran’s nuclear programme and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran has throttled throughout the conflict.

    Reporting from Washington, DC, Al Jazeera’s Teresa Bo said the plan had apparently been handed over to Iran by Pakistan, noting that Trump was “under pressure” about a costly and unpopular war. A Reuters/Ipsos poll published on Tuesday found that 61 percent of people in the US disapproved of the attacks on Iran, compared with 59 percent last week. Some 35 percent approved them, down from ‌37 percent ‌in a survey conducted last week.

    Behind the scenes, Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs acknowledged that messages had been relayed by “friendly countries” indicating a “US request for negotiations”, according to the AFP news agency.

    ‘Establishing deterrence, economic gains’

    Negar Mortazavi, a senior non-resident fellow at the Center for International Policy, told Al Jazeera Iran would want to end the war imposed on it on its “own terms”.

    “One is to establish enough deterrence to make sure that once this war ends, it doesn’t come back like it did last year,” Mortazavi said. “That they don’t turn into the next Gaza or Lebanon or Syria, or [Benjamin] Netanyahu, potentially with US support, can go in and mow the grass, again and again,” she added, referring to the Israeli prime minister.

    In addition to establishing deterrence, Mortazavi said Iran would also need “some form of economic gain”.

    “This chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz is now giving them ideas. ‘Maybe we can charge passage fees like some other places in the world’ – there are those discussions in Iran”, she said, also citing sanctions relief and reparations to rebuild the country after the heavy damage inflicted by the US and Israeli attacks.

    Though Trump may be seeking a diplomatic off-ramp amid soaring energy prices and a teetering global economy, Israeli military spokesman Effie Defrin said his country’s war plan was “unchanged” and that it would continue “to deepen the damage and remove existential threats”.

    And in the backdrop, the US itself appeared to be readying itself for more war, with media reports suggesting that it was expected to send thousands of soldiers from the army’s elite 82nd Airborne Division to the Middle East, adding to the 50,000 US troops already in the region, and fuelling fears of a longer conflict.

    In Iran, where Trump’s comments provoked a “state of confusion and ambiguity”, according to Al Jazeera’s Mohamed Vall, the atomic energy organisation said a strike on Tuesday evening hit inside the compound of its Bushehr nuclear power plant, but caused no damage.

    In Israel, Iranian attacks on Tuesday wounded seven people, including an infant. Iran has kept up and indeed increased the pace of its launches, sending millions of Israelis into shelters multiple times a day. Recent failed interceptions have caused deaths and injuries.

  • NASA to spend $20bn on moon base, nuclear-powered Mars spacecraft

    NASA to spend $20bn on moon base, nuclear-powered Mars spacecraft

    The agency will increase robotic missions to the moon and launch a spacecraft called Space Reactor 1 Freedom.

    NASA has unveiled a major overhaul of its moon and Mars strategy, scrapping plans for a lunar-orbit space station and instead committing $20bn over the next seven years to build a base on the moon’s surface, while also advancing plans to send a nuclear-powered spacecraft to Mars.

    NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman outlined the changes on Tuesday during a meeting in Washington, DC, with partners, contractors and government officials involved in the Artemis programme, saying the agency will increase robotic missions to the moon and lay the groundwork for nuclear power on the lunar surface.

    Isaacman, appointed by US President Donald Trump and who took charge in December, said the changes form part of a broader overhaul of NASA’s long-term Moon-to-Mars strategy.

    The planned moon base is intended to support long-term human presence on the lunar surface, with robotic missions expected to help prepare the site, test technologies and begin building infrastructure before astronauts return later this decade.

    The agency also disclosed plans to launch a spacecraft called Space Reactor 1 Freedom before the end of 2028, a mission designed to demonstrate nuclear electric propulsion in deep space on the way to Mars.

    The spacecraft will deliver helicopters on the Red Planet, similar to the Ingenuity robotic test helicopter that flew with NASA’s Perseverance rover, a step the agency said would help move nuclear propulsion technology from laboratory testing to operational space missions.

    The Ingenuity helicopter was the first aircraft to achieve powered, controlled flight on another planet. It travelled to Mars attached to NASA’s Perseverance rover and landed in February 2021.

    Pausing the Lunar Gateway station

    The Lunar Gateway station, a planned space station in lunar orbit being developed with contractors including Northrop Grumman and international partners, was meant to serve as a base where astronauts could live and work before heading to the Moon’s surface.

    But NASA now plans to repurpose some Gateway components for use on the surface instead.

    Repurposing Lunar Gateway to create a base on the moon’s surface leaves uncertain the future roles of Japan, Canada and the ‌European Space ⁠Agency in the Artemis programme, three key NASA partners that had agreed to provide components for the orbital station.

    “It should not really surprise anyone that we are pausing Gateway in its current form and focusing on infrastructure that supports sustained operations on the lunar surface,” Isaacman said.

    The changes to NASA’s flagship Artemis programme are reshaping billions of dollars’ worth of contracts and come as the United States faces growing competition from China, which is aiming to land astronauts on the moon by 2030.

    The Artemis programme, begun in 2017 during Trump’s first term as president, envisions regular lunar missions as NASA’s long-awaited follow-up to its first moon missions in the Apollo programme that ended in 1972.

  • Long lines, unpaid TSA workers: Experts say US air travel system in crisis

    Long lines, unpaid TSA workers: Experts say US air travel system in crisis

    For more than a month, employees of the US Transportation Security Administration (TSA), tasked with screening the millions of people who pass through airports across the United States each day, have not been paid.

    The result can be seen in videos that have spread across social media, showing frustrated travellers waiting in long lines at some of the country’s busiest airports, where hundreds of TSA employees have quit or declined to show up for work.

    Recommended Stories

    list of 3 itemsend of list

    Hours-long delays have snarled airports, and morale among agency employees has suffered amid the lack of pay, the result of a partial government shutdown affecting the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which oversees the TSA.

    The administration of US President Donald Trump has deployed federal agents from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to airports across the country to fill gaps. That step that has drawn criticism given their lack of relevant training and a record of aggressive methods.

    The delays also come at a time when the US-Israel war on Iran has resulted in additional complications when it comes to international travel, from cancelled or rerouted flights to heightened energy prices and concerns over security.

    Taken together, analysts warn that the situation has created an image of systemic dysfunction and called into question the safety and reliability of the country’s air travel system.

    “For years we’ve bragged about how the US has the best and safest aviation system in the world,” said William McGee, a researcher and consumer advocate at the American Economic Liberties Project.

    “I’m not sure that’s something we get to say anymore.”

    Exhausted workforce

    More than 450 TSA workers have quit since the partial shutdown began on February 14, according to a CNN report citing Lauren Bis, acting assistant secretary for public affairs at DHS.

    Call-out rates have also risen from an average of about two percent before the shutdown to around 10 percent last week. TSA did not respond to a request for updated figures.

    Frustration among TSA employees has been compounded by the fact that many also went without pay during a previous government shutdown during contentious budget negotiations in October and November, the longest in history.

    Everett Kelley, president of the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE), a labour union that represents workers from numerous government agencies, including TSA, says the growing exhaustion is a natural response to the professional and financial instability workers experience.

    “Across the country, TSA officers are once again being asked to report to work without a paycheck. They have families, mortgages and bills like everyone else,” Kelley said in a statement emailed to Al Jazeera.

    Statistics on call-outs also don’t capture the full story, with some airports functioning normally while others experience chaotic delays and higher rates. Major airports in cities such as New York, Atlanta, and Houston have seen rates of nearly 30 percent or higher.

    With conditions at each airport variable and hard to predict, McGee likens delays to a game of “Whac-A-Mole” that can occur at one location even as they ease at another.

    “The bottom line is that, if you have to travel right now, you need to be getting to the airport very early,” he said.

    Social media users have shared stories of showing up at the airport with ample time in advance and still missing their flights after waiting in line for several hours.

    A spokesperson for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which oversees operations at major airports such as John F Kennedy International and Newark International, told Al Jazeera in a statement that while the Port Authority does not rely on federal funds to operate, workers for federal agencies such as TSA still do.

    “Over the last several days, we’ve begun to see that translate into long wait times at security checkpoints during certain periods depending on passenger volumes, TSA shift changes and staff breaks, and the number of TSA staff who come to work for each shift,” the statement says.

    Armed federal agents at an airport
    US federal officers patrol around Washington Dulles International Airport, in Chantilly, Virginia, on Tuesday, March 24, 2026 [Manuel Balce/AP Photo]

    Political impasse

    The situation is the result of a political stalemate over continued funding for DHS, which was set aside during the last shutdown for separate negotiations over immigration enforcement agencies such as ICE and US Customs and Border Protection (CBP). The impasse comes amid continued demands from activists and Democratic lawmakers to rein in immigration agencies, fuelled in part by the high-profile killing of US citizens such as Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents during a crackdown in Minnesota in January.

    Widespread public anger over aggressive methods and what rights groups say are routine civil liberties violations during the Trump administration’s mass deportation raids led to calls to rein in agencies and implement reforms.

    But to pass a funding bill to reopen the government in November, both parties agreed to negotiate DHS funding at a later date. That impasse is behind the current partial shutdown, which began when funding lapsed on February 14.

    Several bills put forward by Democrats to fund TSA while a larger deal on DHS is worked out have failed to pass, with both sides blaming the other for chaos at airports across the country.

    “Democrats have offered to pay the salaries — fully fund, no conditions — for TSA,” Democratic Senator Sheldon Whitehouse said in a recent social media post. “It’s Republicans who keep blocking that.”

    “Democrats are holding American travellers hostage and denying federal workers their paychecks for political leverage,” the White House social media account said in a post on Friday, sharing a video of long lines at an airport.

    Media reports on Tuesday stated that the US Senate is moving to advance a bill that would fund much of DHS, including TSA, to address ongoing travel chaos, as an agreement focused on ICE reforms is worked out later.

    McGee says that the situation has created a sense of general dysfunction.

    “The US has launched a war against Iran, and because of that, there are heightened security concerns. That TSA is not being paid in that environment is kind of mind-boggling,” he said.

    “On top of that, you have flight changes, logistical concerns, and rising energy costs,” he added. “It’s all a hot mess right now.”