Mayor welcomes confirmation of All-Ireland Pipe Band Championships
23 May 2025
The Mayor of Derry City and Strabane District Council, Councillor Lilian Seenoi Barr, has welcomed the launch of the prestigious All-Ireland Pipe Band Championships which will take place in Ebrington Square on 5th July.
The event was officially launched this week by the First Minister Michelle O’Neill and deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly, when The Executive Office unveiled plans for the Championships during a visit to Ebrington Square.
The event is part-funded by Derry City and Strabane District Council’s Community Festival Fund and the Ulster-Scots Agency, with support from The Executive Office. There will be an additional six events in the week leading up to the Championships to promote music, dance, culture and heritage across the district.
Last hosted during the successful 2013 UK City of Culture celebrations, the event is expected to draw thousands of visitors to the city, providing a major boost for local businesses and tourism.
Welcoming the announcement, Mayor Barr said: “It is with immense pride that we welcome the All-Ireland Pipe Band Championships to our historic city on July 5th, 2025. Hosting this prestigious event at Ebrington Square represents a wonderful opportunity to showcase our rich cultural heritage and our city’s growing reputation as a premier events destination.
“The championships will not only bring the stirring sounds of world-class pipe bands to our city but will also deliver significant economic benefits to our local businesses and hospitality sector. We anticipate welcoming over 50 bands and 35 drum majors, along with their supporters, to experience the warm welcome our city is famous for.
“I would like to extend my sincere thanks to the Joint Association Committee, comprising the Royal Scottish Pipe Band Association Northern Ireland Branch and the Irish Pipe Band Association, for choosing Ebrington Square as the venue for the 2025 championships. Their confidence in our city is a testament to our proven track record of hosting major cultural events.
“I encourage everyone to mark July 5th, 2025, in their calendars and join us for what promises to be an unforgettable day of music, pageantry, and community spirit in the heart of our city.”
Andrew Graham, Chairperson of The Royal Scottish Pipe Band Association Northern Ireland Branch added: “I am pleased to have been present at the official launch of the 78th All Ireland Championships, which this year will take place in the wonderful surroundings of Ebrington Square in Derry/Londonderry. This flagship event in our pipe band calendar is always a highlight every two years when our Branch hosts it within Northern Ireland and I am very much looking forward to welcoming the Bands, Drum Majors, Highland Dancers and of course, our spectators back to the city for the first time since 2013. I am also excited this year to see the inclusion of a number of fringe events across the district during the week leading up to the main day’s competition.
“It is great to see a sizeable number of our bands and Drum Majors from across Northern Ireland and IPBA members from Ireland entered to compete this year. We are also very pleased to welcome bands and Drum Majors from Scotland and the USA who are also journeying to the province for this year’s Championships.
“On behalf of the RSPBA Northern Ireland Branch, I give my sincere gratitude to all our funders who are supporting this event. The First Minister and deputy First Minister and The Executive Office; The Mayor, Cllr Seenoi Barr and Derry City and Strabane District Council; and Ian Crozier and the Ulster-Scots Agency. I want to pledge thanks to our wonderful Branch team who have worked so hard over the last six months to bring this event to a reality this year. I also extend my continued appreciation to our colleagues within the Irish Pipe Band Association for their continued partnership and friendship with our Branch as part of the Joint Association Council. While there is still some more work to do, rest assured, the sound of pipes and drums, and the visual spectacle of Drum Majors and Highland Dancers at Ebrington Square will be very much alive on the first Saturday in July this year”.
City of York Council is celebrating the success of its UK Shared Prosperity Fund (UKSPF) investment programme, which has delivered significant benefits to businesses, communities, and residents.
The funding has added £6.30 to York’s economy for every £1 invested – a total of £39 million.
City of York Council invested £5,507,510 from the Government through the UK Shared Prosperity Fund, in addition to £384,817 from the Rural England Prosperity Fund. The funds aimed to boost productivity and living standards, increase pride in place and build strong communities.
The funding has been invested through a wide-ranging programme of grant and support schemes, aimed at supporting businesses and local communities.
You can find out more about the achievements of the fund by watching our video.
Cllr Pete Kilbane, Executive Member at City of York Council for Economy and Culture, said:
The impacts of this investment have touched all parts of our city – from supporting entrepreneurs to turn their dreams into reality and enabling people to gain employable skills, to regenerating Acomb’s Front Street and bringing diverse cultural opportunities to York.
“I’m extremely proud to see that 125 jobs have been created or safeguarded as a direct result of this funding, with hundreds more people benefiting from opportunities to build the skills and confidence they need to secure rewarding, well-paid employment.
“The fact that this investment has contributed £39 million to York’s economy, is due in no small part to the energy and passion that I’ve seen demonstrated time and again by the people and organisations, who we’ve worked with throughout this programme and who have turned this funding into real change and opportunity for our people, places and communities.”
One of the 41 providers funded through the UKSPF programme was Next Door But One, which has delivered new and accessible performances for all ages, and offered free career development support for early-career creatives in York.
Matt Harper-Hardcastle, CEO and Artistic Director of Next Door But One, said:
As a small but rapidly growing theatre company in York, the UK Shared Prosperity Fund has been central to our ability to strengthen the infrastructure of our work, respond to local need and take brave steps forward with initiatives that make the arts accessible, meaningful and relevant to the diverse communities we serve.
“Through this funding, we’ve been able to reach new audiences and support early-career performing arts professionals to develop their businesses and practice.”
Since the launch of the programme in 2022, City of York Council has supported 41 programmes across three priority investment areas: Communities and Place, People and Skills and Supporting Local Businesses.
The Fund provided £2.6 billion of new funding for local investment between April 2022 and March 2025, and allowed Local Authorities to target funding where it was needed most, building pride in place, supporting high quality skills training, supporting pay, employment and productivity growth and increasing life chances.
A single-year UKSPF extension has been announced by Government, covering the 2025 to 2026 financial year. Due to changes in the way government funding is allocated, the UKSPF programme will now be delivered at the wider York and North Yorkshire level, via the York and North Yorkshire Combined Authority.
York and North Yorkshire Combined Authority will receive £8,782,899 (£2,914,393 capital and £5,868,506 revenue) of investment to be committed in the 2025 to 2026 financial year, and the Combined Authority is currently working to allocate the funding to projects spread across the region.
The findings, published in The Lancet Global Health, reveal that progress towards the global target of a 40% increase in eyeglasses coverage by 2030 set at the World Health Assembly in 2021 needs to be accelerated.
“Universal access to vision care is entirely achievable but only if we act with urgency and unity,” said Dr Stuart Keel, WHO Technical Officer. “Eyeglasses are among the most cost-effective tools in global health. It is unacceptable that millions still live with poor vision when a simple, affordable solution is within reach. We cannot allow another generation to be left behind.”
Uneven access to eyeglasses
The newly released data reveals that the burden of uncorrected vision loss is not equally shared — it weighs far more heavily on low-income countries, women, and older adults.
In low-income countries, two out of every three people who need eyeglasses are unable to get them — a crisis that directly undermines their ability to learn, work, stay safe, and live with dignity. This widespread lack of access to such a simple solution continues to limit opportunities and deepen cycles of poverty and exclusion.
Women and older people are consistently less likely to receive the vision correction they need, often sidelined by systemic barriers to access and affordability.
The situation is particularly severe in the African region, where around 70% of people with refractive errors do not have access to eyeglasses, leaving millions with avoidable vision impairment that impacts their education, livelihoods, and quality of life.
“In 2024, WHO included effective refractive error coverage in its monitoring framework for the 14th General Programme of Work, a clear signal that the world is beginning to recognize the critical importance of accessible, high-quality vision care,” said Professor Rupert Bourne, Principal Investigator from the Vision Loss Expert Group.
“Data from over 815 000 people across 76 countries shows that we are off track. Urgent global action is needed to reach the goal of a 40% increase in eyeglasses coverage by 2030,” added Professor Bourne.
Evidence of progress amidst persistent gaps
Despite the challenges, the data shows some encouraging trends. Between 2000 and 2023, there was a 50% improvement in the number of people receiving the correct prescription for eyeglasses — a meaningful step toward reducing avoidable vision loss.
While the global burden of refractive error has surged over the past two decades — largely driven by lifestyle-related risk factors, for example increased screen time and reduced outdoor activities during childhood — eyeglasses coverage has still risen by an average of 5% per decade, demonstrating steady progress despite the challenges.
Dr Keel added “These improvements demonstrate that progress is possible when vision care is prioritized. Meeting global vision targets will require coordinated action across governments, global organizations, donors, and the private sector. WHO calls on all actors to join forces to ensure that everyone, everywhere, gets the vision care they need.”
Note to Editors In response to the continued unmet need, WHO launched SPECS 2030 in 2024. This initiative aims at supporting countries to meet the 2030 target by scaling up access to affordable and quality refractive error services focused on five key strategic pillars: Service design, Personnel development, public Education, Costing, Surveillance and research.
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Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region
Attention TV and radio duty announcers:
Please broadcast the following special announcement as soon as possible, and repeat it at suitable intervals:
Fire broke out at a tin-sheeted warehouse storing a large amount of plastic waste, in Nga Yiu Ha Village, Ta Kwu Ling, at 4.54pm today (May 23). The Fire Services Department is conducting a firefighting operation.
Members of the public who are being affected by the smoke and an unusual odour carried by the wind are advised to close their doors and windows and stay calm.
The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government today said that Fitch recognised Hong Kong’s strong credit fundamentals, including large fiscal buffers, robust external finances and a low level of fiscal debt.
The statement was made in response to the Fitch report today on maintaining Hong Kong’s AA- credit rating and stable outlook.
The Hong Kong SAR Government pointed out that the city’s banking sector is resilient, with solid funding and liquidity.
Hong Kong’s financial system remains robust, with a consistently healthy level of overall asset quality in the banking sector according to international standards. Bank deposits have continued to grow.
As of the end of March this year, the total amount of bank deposits in Hong Kong was near $18 trillion, marking an 11% year-on-year increase.
The capital markets in the city are active. For the stock market, the Hang Seng Index rose 18% last year and has increased by over 15% since the beginning of this year.
The total market capitalisation of Hong Kong stocks has exceeded $41 trillion. The average daily turnover in the first four months of 2025 surpassed $250 billion, representing a 144% increase compared to the same period last year.
The initial public offering (IPO) market is also thriving, with cumulative funds raised exceeding $60 billion. This week, Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing welcomed the world’s largest IPO activity so far this year.
The fiscal situation of the Hong Kong SAR Government has remained robust. In the 2025-26 Budget, reinforced fiscal consolidation was set out.
The Operating Account is expected to be largely balanced in this financial year and will return to surplus in the next financial year, ie 2026-27.
The Capital Account mainly involves capital works expenditure, which represents investments for the future, such as the development of the Northern Metropolis. Therefore, the Government will make flexible use of market resources, including increasing the scale of bond issuance, to fast-track the related projects.
Even if so, the level of deficit in the Capital Account will gradually decrease starting from the 2026-27 financial year.
Overall, after counting the proceeds from bond issuance, the Consolidated Accounts will return to surplus in the 2028-29 financial year.
The tariff war has increased global economic uncertainty and the world economy is facing broad challenges. However, international trade tensions have recently eased to a certain extent, and the Mainland’s economy has continued to grow steadily, supported by more proactive fiscal policies and moderate expansionary monetary policies. These will benefit the trade performance in Hong Kong and the region.
Meanwhile, the Mainland’s high-level two-way opening up, as well as its pursuit of green transition, innovation and technology, and digital economy, will continue to create business and investment opportunities for Hong Kong.
Leveraging its unique advantages of connecting with both the Mainland and the rest of the world under the “one country, two systems” arrangement, Hong Kong attracted more Mainland and international companies to establish international headquarters, research and development centres and regional offices in the city to expand their global business. In 2024, the number of companies in Hong Kong with parent companies located outside the city increased to nearly 10,000, reaching a new historical high.
As a “super connector” and “super value-adder”, Hong Kong will continue to actively link the Mainland with the world. While reinforcing connections with traditional markets, Hong Kong will also forge more economic and investment networks with new markets, particularly those in the Global South.
Furthermore, Hong Kong will deepen integration with the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, enabling the city to open up new growth points and inject greater impetus into its economy.
The exhibition, scheduled to last for three years, will be open free of charge to the public starting tomorrow.
Deputy Chief Secretary Cheuk Wing-hing, Deputy Financial Secretary Michael Wong and Secretary for Culture, Sports & Tourism Rosanna Law officiated at the ceremony.
Mr Cheuk expressed hope that the exhibition, along with other attractions in Kowloon City, will draw local, Mainland and overseas visitors to experience Hong Kong culture and cuisine, thereby generating economic benefits.
Following on the well-received exhibitions previously held at Hong Kong International Airport and Kai Tak, the “Kowloon Walled City: A Cinematic Journey” Movie Set Exhibition is the largest of its kind and will last the longest.
Displayed in the show are more classic movie sets with elements of local traditional craftsmanship and large-scale projection incorporated.
Additionally, visitors can gain an immersive experience of the Walled City back in time, while being able to appreciate the ingenious creativity and dedication to exquisite craftsmanship of Hong Kong’s film professionals.
SAINT PAUL – U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement removed a dangerous foreign fugitive and illegal alien wanted by law enforcement authorities in Honduras for rape and preparation for use of aggravated child pornography May 16.
Felipe Nery Casco Murillo, first came to the attention of immigration authorities, May 13, 2023, when he applied for admission to the United States at the Hildago Port of Entry in Hidalgo, Texas. On the same date, U.S. Customs and Border Protection issued Casco a notice to appear and paroled him into the U.S., pending immigration proceedings.
On Nov. 5, 2024, ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations received notice that Casco was wanted in Honduras for the crime of rape and preparation and use of aggravated child pornography. ICE ERO arrested him on Jan. 28, 2025, and an immigration judge with the Justice Department’s Executive Office for Immigration Review ordered him removed April 17.
ICE ERO St. Paul removed Casco and turned him over to Honduran authorities May 16.
Members of the public who have information about foreign fugitives are urged to contact ICE by calling the ICE Tip Line at 866-347-2423 or internationally at 001-1802-872-6199. They can also file a tip online by completing ICE’s online tip form.
For more news and information on how the ERO field office in the Twin Cities carries out its immigration enforcement mission follow us on X at @EROSaintPaul
The European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) organised the inaugural meeting of the Waste Shipment Enforcement Group (WSEG) on 22-23 May in Warsaw, Poland. The event brought together over 50 stakeholders from across the EU and beyond – including environmental, customs and police authorities, carriers and judicial authorities – in a joint effort to thwart the growing threat of illicit trade of waste.
The discussion in Warsaw, held with the support of the Chief Inspectorate of Environmental Protection of Poland, focused on the latest trends, international flows of illicit trade, strengthening inspections and enforcement measures as well as the use of IT tools to collect information and alert partners. Participants shared practical experience from inspections, outlined common challenges and analysed the modus operandi detected in the illicit trade of waste.
Illegal shipments of waste pose a serious risk to the public health, legitimate businesses and global security. Hazardous or improperly managed waste can contaminate the soil, water and air and its unchecked movement across borders undermines EU’s transition toward greener, more sustainable economy. Furthermore, waste trafficking distorts fair competition and burdens compliant businesses.
Ernesto Bianchi, OLAF’s Director for Revenue and international Operations – Investigations and Strategy, welcomed the group’s launch by saying: “The Waste Shipment Enforcement Group is a practical platform for action, dialogue and cooperation. OLAF is proud to support this effort, helping to turn shared intelligence into concrete investigations.”
The Waste Shipment Enforcement Group was set up by the recently adopted Regulation on waste shipments with a mandate to improve enforcement and operational cooperation within the EU and with third countries. The regulation empowers OLAF to support Member States in uncovering and investigating illegal waste shipments and to coordinate joint actions.
Speaking on OLAF’s wider role, the Director-General of OLAF Ville Itälä said: “Environmental crime knows no borders. Waste trafficking harms our environment, our health and our economy – and it undermines the rules that protect European citizens. By supporting this enforcement group, OLAF aims to unite operational minds to turn information into action and stop this crime at its source.”
Background
OLAF exchanges real-time information on suspicious waste shipments with customs and environmental authorities of EU countries of origin and non-EU countries of destination. OLAF monitors both the original shipments and the returns of refused containers to make sure they are not diverted on their way back to the EU source country.
OLAF mission, mandate and competences: OLAF’s mission is to detect, investigate and stop fraud with EU funds.
OLAF fulfils its mission by: • carrying out independent investigations into fraud and corruption involving EU funds, so as to ensure that all EU taxpayers’ money reaches projects that can create jobs and growth in Europe; • contributing to strengthening citizens’ trust in the EU Institutions by investigating serious misconduct by EU staff and members of the EU Institutions; • developing a sound EU anti-fraud policy.
In its independent investigative function, OLAF can investigate matters relating to fraud, corruption and other offences affecting the EU financial interests concerning: • all EU expenditure: the main spending categories are Structural Funds, agricultural policy and rural development funds, direct expenditure and external aid; • some areas of EU revenue, mainly customs duties; • suspicions of serious misconduct by EU staff and members of the EU institutions.
Once OLAF has completed its investigation, it is for the competent EU and national authorities to examine and decide on the follow-up of OLAF’s recommendations. All persons concerned are presumed to be innocent until proven guilty in a competent national or EU court of law.
For further details:
Pierluigi CATERINO Spokesperson European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) Phone: +32(0)2 29-52335 Email: olaf-mediaec [dot] europa [dot] eu(olaf-media[at]ec[dot]europa[dot]eu) https://anti-fraud.ec.europa.eu LinkedIn: European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) Bluesky: euantifraud.bsky.social
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Statement on behalf of the thirteenth Tata Steel / Port Talbot Transition Board
The thirteenth Tata Steel / Port Talbot Transition Board met on 22nd May 2025.
The Secretary of State for Wales, Rt Hon Jo Stevens MP, in her role as Chair of the Transition Board sought endorsement from the Board for three regeneration projects, which will be supported with over £21.2million of Transition Board funding. These projects include:
Advanced Manufacturing Production Facility/National Net Zero Centre of Excellence
Redevelopment of business premises at Metal Box and Sandfields Business Centre
Today’s release of money is the sixth announcement from the UK Government’s £80m Tata Steel / Port Talbot Transition Board fund and should support over 270 jobs and add a total of over £119m Gross Value Added to the local economy over the next decade. This latest major investment means more than £70 million has been announced by the Transition Board in the last nine months.
Investment from the Transition Board compliments UK Government’s action to secure new trade deals with the US and India, including seeking agreement to eradicate tariffs on core steel products imported into the US. This will protect tens of millions of pounds worth of steel exports from Wales every year.
The Board also received updates on:
Tata Steel UK’s decarbonisation programme;
The Department of Business and Trade’s plans for a steel strategy;
Mental health and well-being interventions;
The Transition Board funds that have already been announced, including applications received for the Supply Chain fund, and support being provided from the Employment and Skills fund.
Those in attendance included: Rt Hon Jo Stevens MP, Secretary of State for Wales; Rebecca Evans MS, Cabinet Secretary for Economy, Energy & Planning in the Welsh Government; Cllr Alun Llewelyn, Deputy Leader of Neath Port Talbot Council; Frances O’Brien, CEO of Neath Port Talbot Council; Stephen Kinnock, MP for Aberafan Maesteg; David Rees, MS for Aberavon; Anne Jessopp CBE & Katherine Bennett CBE, independent members of the Board; Alun Davies, National Officer for Steel & Metals, Community Union; Tom Hoyles, Politics, Press and Research Officer, GMB Wales & Jason Bartlett Regional Officer of Unite the Union Wales.
Source: People’s Republic of China – Ministry of National Defense
BEIJING, May 23 — Chinese Defense Minister Admiral Dong Jun met with the visiting General Songwit Noonpackdee, Chief of Defence Forces of the Royal Thai Armed Forces (RTARF), in Beijing on May 23, 2025.
Admiral Dong Jun said that the profound friendship of “China and Thailand being one family” has withstood the test of the volatile international situation. This year marks the “Golden Jubilee of China-Thailand Friendship” and the two heads of state have reached new important consensus on deepening the building of the China-Thailand community with a shared future.
Admiral Dong noted that the military cooperation between China and Thailand boasts a solid foundation and has achieved fruitful results. China is willing to work with Thailand to make good use of the existing cooperation mechanisms, further enhance the level of cooperation in such areas as joint exercises and personnel training, and contribute to the building of the China-Thailand community with a shared future.
General Songwit Noonpackdee said that Thailand and China are intimate friends and neighbors. Thailand has always adhered to the one-China principle and proactively worked with China to jointly promote the Belt and Road cooperation. Thailand attaches great importance to the relations between the two militaries and is willing to further strengthen practical exchanges and cooperation with the Chinese side at all levels and in various fields, closely coordinate in multilateral affairs, and jointly maintain regional security and stability.
Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News
NANJING, May 23 — In the early hours of last Saturday morning, the international express parcel supervision center at Wuxi Shuofang Airport in east China’s Jiangsu Province buzzed with activity, with customs officers swiftly clearing parcels bound for Mexico.
The cargo plane carrying these cross-border e-commerce parcels, packed with apparel and small furnishings, was the 164th trans-Pacific flight since the route’s launch in April last year. Over the past 12 months, the service has delivered Chinese goods worth around 2 billion yuan (about 278.1 million U.S. dollars) to Latin America.
The route epitomizes the deepening economic ties between China and Latin America. Surging demand for Chinese products is fueling a boom in cross-border e-commerce, which is now a new driver of foreign trade.
“The route offers three flights weekly and goods can arrive in Latin America within two days. It has established an ‘air bridge’ connecting Jiangsu to Latin America,” said Wang Weihua, a Wuxi Customs official.
China and Latin America are highly complementary in economy. China is Latin America’s second-largest trading partner and the top trading partner for countries like Chile, Brazil and Peru.
According to China’s Ministry of Commerce, the bilateral trade hit a record high of 518.47 billion U.S. dollars in 2024, surpassing China’s 10-year target of 500 billion U.S. dollars that was set a decade ago.
However, trade is only part of the story, with direct investment also growing as industrial collaboration booms.
In 2024, China’s direct investment in Latin America reached 14.71 billion U.S. dollars, while Latin American companies had established 37,000 enterprises in China as of March this year, according to the ministry. China and Latin America have strengthened industrial cooperation in sectors like high-end manufacturing and the green economy.
A prime example of industrial collaboration is the XCMG Brazil Industrial Park in the city of Pouso Alegre in Brazil, where rows of yellow engineering machinery vehicles stand out against the backdrop of the tropical rainforest.
As China’s first overseas economic and trade cooperation zone for engineering machinery, the park produces over 10,000 units of machinery annually and serves as a core supplier to global mining giant Vale.
“In recent years, we have invested heavily in R&D for new energy and smart equipment to meet local demand for green mining transformation,” said Gu Chong, chief culture officer of XCMG Brazil Industrial Park.
A leading Chinese heavy machinery manufacturer, XCMG established its wholly-owned Brazilian production base in Pouso Alegre in 2014, expanding it into an industrial park later in 2019.
“By strengthening localization, XCMG Brazil is accelerating green transformation and digital innovation to build high-value-added supply chains tailored to local demand,” said Gu.
He added that XCMG is forging an integrated industrial ecosystem spanning R&D, manufacturing, service and finance, aiming to deepen cooperation with the whole Latin America region with Brazil serving as the regional hub.
While Chinese firms go global, Latin American companies are also deepening their presence in China.
At the production facility of WEG (Jiangsu) Electric Equipment Co., Ltd., robotic arms deftly assemble motor equipment with precision on automated assembly lines, blending Chinese automation with Brazilian engineering.
The products will soon be transported to Europe and Oceania. “We invested over 2 million yuan in this robotic line, boosting per-worker productivity by about 40 percent,” said Zhang Pengfei, an engineer at WEG Jiangsu.
WEG Jiangsu, as a key China-based subsidiary of Brazilian company WEG, has rapidly expanded since its establishment in 2014.
“Our factory’s production capacity doubles every five years, making China a core of WEG’s global supply chain,” said Zong Xin, general manager of WEG Jiangsu, adding that WEG’s development in China has far exceeded expectations, with a total of six factories and about 3,000 employees.
Zong highlighted that amid global economic volatility, China’s stable market environment and healthy competition environment can help Latin American firms mitigate risks and strengthen innovation.
“China offers consistent policies, a skilled workforce, robust industrial chains and well-developed infrastructure,” he said, noting that WEG plans to invest an additional 1 billion yuan in new facilities to meet booming Chinese demand.
“China will remain a pivotal hub for WEG’s production expansion, innovation and global competitiveness,” Zong added.
Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News
BEIJING, May 23 — China will send a record-sized squad in both athlete numbers and event participation to the 26th Asian Athletics Championships which will take place from May 27 to 31 in Gumi, South Korea.
According to the Chinese Athletics Association, 62 athletes – 30 men and 32 women – will compete in 43 events, making it the largest contingent the country has ever dispatched to the continental championships. The Chinese team has an average age of 24, with the oldest athlete aged 32 and the youngest just 17.
While the roster features many up-and-coming athletes, it also includes established stars such as 2020 Olympic silver medalist Zhu Yaming in the men’s triple jump, and 2024 Olympic runner-up Feng Bin in the women’s discus.
At a recent pre-event rally held by the Chinese Athletics Association at the national team’s training base at Beijing Sport University, sprinter Liang Xiaojing spoke on behalf of the athletes, emphasizing the team’s commitment to competing with integrity and determination.
“We will not shy away from challenges. We will give our all on the track and field to showcase the spirit and strength of Chinese athletics,” said Liang. “We are determined to bring glory to our country and stand firmly against doping.”
Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News
Xi says China hopes Germany will provide fair, transparent and non-discriminatory business environment for Chinese enterprises
BEIJING, May 23 — Chinese President Xi Jinping on Friday said that China hopes Germany will provide fair, transparent and non-discriminatory business environment for Chinese enterprises, and called on China and EU to send a positive signal of safeguarding multilateralism and free trade, and deepening open and mutually beneficial cooperation.
Xi made the remarks during his phone call with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.
Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News
Xi says sound, stable China-Germany relationship serves both countries’ interest, meets expectations of various sectors in China, Europe
BEIJING, May 23 — Chinese President Xi Jinping said on Friday that a sound and stable China-Germany relationship serves both countries’ interest, and meets the expectations of various sectors in China and Europe.
The two countries should expand cooperation in cutting-edge fields such as artificial intelligence and quantum technology, Xi said during his phone conversation with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.
Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News
China’s reservoirs and dams rank first globally in both number and installed capacity, according to the 28th Congress of the International Commission on Large Dams held in Chengdu City, the capital of southwest China’s Sichuan Province.
Congress attendees noted that China has developed a comprehensive, systematized approach to mitigating climate risks through water infrastructure, which is a replicable model for the world.
According to data from the National Energy Administration, China had constructed more than 94,000 dams by December 2024 — the largest number globally — and the country’s total installed hydropower capacity had reached 436 million kilowatts, including 377 million kilowatts of conventional hydropower.
Annual hydropower generation comes in at 1.42 trillion kilowatt-hours, accounting for 57 percent of China’s total renewable energy output, official figures show.
China’s total reservoir storage capacity is approaching 1 trillion cubic meters, including a flood control capacity of over 185.6 billion cubic meters. Reservoirs supply 270 billion cubic meters of water annually and support the cultivation of 532 million mu (about 35.5 million hectares) of farmland.
Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News
Online sales of digital products in China increased 8.4 percent year on year in the first four months of 2025, according to data released by the Ministry of Commerce on Friday.
Sales of smart robots and smart home systems rose by 87.6 percent and 16 percent year on year respectively, the data showed.
An official of the ministry’s e-commerce department attributed the growth to the e-commerce sector’s sound integration between domestic and foreign trade, as well as its strong global industrial and supply chain coordination capacity.
From January to April, online sales of 15 categories of home appliances and digital products covered by trade-in programs rose 11.5 percent year on year.
Services consumption also saw a notable increase, with online entertainment and travel sales rising 31.9 percent and 25.4 percent year on year.
Nairobi (Agenzia Fides) – “There is an ongoing investigation. Once the investigators have completed their investigation into Father Maina’s death, they will shed light on the matter and answer the questions we have all been asking ourselves over the past week,” said Joseph Ndembu Mbatia, Bishop of Nyahururu, on the death of Father John Ndegwa Maina, parish priest of St. Louis church in Igwamiti.The funeral ceremony took place yesterday, May 22, at the Catholic Priests’ Cemetery on Tabor Hill in Ol Joro Orok, in Nyandarua County, in the presence of hundreds of people. “I saw in the media that our priest had been killed, and I wondered where this information came from. We are still in contact with the Directorate of Criminal Investigation (DCI) to find out what actually happened. There is no reason for speculation. We want to know the truth, and that is why we are cooperating with investigators. We must be patient,” said Bishop Mbatia. On May 15, Father Maina was found with severe head injuries on the highway between Gilgil and Nairobi. He later died at St. Joseph’s Mission Hospital. The priest reportedly told the taxi driver who found him that he had been kidnapped in Nyahururu. According to the Directorate of Criminal Investigation, Father Maina may have been attacked by thieves demanding part of a donation the priest received from former Vice President Rigathi Gachagua during a church service on April 27. The priest had reportedly expressed concern about the threats to his safety but had not officially reported them to the authorities.Father Maina, the fourth son in a family of eleven, was born on March 13, 1982, and ordained a priest on March 25, 2017. (L.M.) (Agenzia Fides, 23/5/2025)
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Rome (Agenzia Fides) – “One particular trait stands out about the missionary Robert Francis Prevost, OSA, who became Pope Leo XIV. Those who knew him closely do not have any striking gestures to share, but they reiterate one quality: he is a man who knows how to listen.” This is what Father Andrea Mandonico, general archivist of the Society of African Missions, says when sharing his testimony about the figure of the new Pontiff, which he sees as “a particular challenge.”“For a missionary to become Pope is an unprecedented experience for the Catholic Church. Pope Leo is not the missionary who has experienced the most heroic adventures, he is not the one who has raised his voice the most, he is not the one who has built the most schools or dispensaries,” Father Mandonico notes. “Rather, he left his mark by opening his heart and mind to those he met.” Because truly, as he said in the first Mass with the cardinals in the Sistine Chapel, even those in authority “disappear so that Christ may remain.”The College of Cardinals, in electing Leo XIV, was fully aware that it was entrusting the Petrine ministry to a missionary.“We must seek together how to be a missionary Church, a Church that builds bridges, in dialogue, always open to receiving, like this square with open arms,” Father Andrea recalls, evoking the words of Pope Leo XIV in his first message from the central loggia of St. Peter’s Basilica. The Pontiff had invited each person to become a “bridge” of God’s love for all.“The missionary Pope is a particular challenge for us missionaries,” the archivist insists. “And in our Italy, perhaps, it is even more so today than in other regions of the world.” According to Father Mandonico, the figure of the new Pope recalls the urgency of the mission, precisely at a time when it might seem that “leaving for distant lands is a vocation already outdated.” His witness challenges all Christians “not to close themselves up in a fortress,” but to keep their gaze on the people, “ad gentes,” and to open their communities “to the breath of the world.” “Today he is Peter. And we too, missionaries in Italy and in every corner of the world, want to start again from here,” he concludes. (AP) (Agenzia Fides, 23/5/2025)
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Rome (Agenzia Fides) – The missionary work of the Church has its source in the wonder of those who encountered the Risen Jesus, “and were sent by Him”. And even today, the people and entities involved in missionary work can persevere and renew their zeal only through a personal encounter with the Risen Christ, “who changes lives”. Cardinal Luis Antonio Gokim Tagle reminded the National Directors of the Pontifical Mission Societies (PMS), gathered in Rome for their annual General Assembly, that the experience witnessed of the first disciples of Jesus during the early Church, remains the benchmark for every authentic missionary work and initiative.Who “animates” the “animators”The meeting between Cardinal Tagle and the National Directors of the PMS took place in the late afternoon of Wednesday, March 21, at the International Center of San Lorenzo da Brindisi. In his addres, the Cardinal began by defining the task and responsibilities entrusted to his interlocutors in the audience. He recalled that the PMS National Director can be seen as “the sign, symbol and instrument of the Church’s missionary identity, according to the teachings of the Second Vatican Council.”For this reason, the Mission Director is called to be “the face, voice, hands, feet and heart of a Church that makes mission and mission that makes the Church in his/her local Church”.Since their origin – the Cardinal recalled – the Pontifical Missionary Societies “have been expressions of the Catholic faithful’s fidelity to Christ, transformed into missionary co-responsibility, i.e. missionary discipleship”.However, apostolic zeal is never a self-generated impulse nor the result of the mechanical application of a “missionary method.””To animate others to mission,” the Cardinal repeated several times, “we must be animated for mission, just like the first disciples.” He added, “we often forget that only the encounter with the Risen One made them missionaries. The gift of the Holy Spirit sealed their missionary zeal, their courage and creativity in proclaiming the good things God had done in Jesus Christ”. Therefore, insisted the Pro Prefect of the Missionary Dicastery “missionary animation is not just a task but a spiritual encounter with the Risen Lord that transforms one’s life, making one search for people with whom to share the Good News”. In this regard, the Cardinal suggested that valuable insights could be drawn from the readings proposed by the Church’s liturgy during the Easter season, the “time of the Risen One.”The apostolic foundations of missionary cooperationIn the accounts of the beginning of missionary work, the inherent nature and genetic traits of missionary work are revealed: the universal destination of the Gospel’s message of liberation, care for the poor, and the solicitude for cooperation and sharing of goods, gifts, charisms, and ministries. Cardinal Tagle highlighted these aspects through suggestive examples. For instance – the Cardinal reminded the National Directors of the PMS gathered in Assembly – when disputes arose over the requirement for non-Jews converting to Christianity to undergo circumcision, Paul and Barnabas went to Jerusalem and “convened an assembly with the apostles and elders.” This became the first Council, the Council of Jerusalem, where they held a “conversation in the Holy Spirit,” involving the apostles and elders, listening to God’s Word and discerning the movements of the Spirit. “Thus, an ‘organization’ of universal scope but deeply spiritual in nature was taking shape.”From those early steps of the nascent Church – noted Cardinal Tagle – it emerges that prayer, listening to the Word of God, discernment, mutual respect are distinctive traits that characterize every form of organized universal missionary cooperation. This – added the Cardinal – is “the ‘soul’ of the ‘organization.’”The Apostle – continued the Cardinal Pro-Prefect, choosing other events of the first Christian communities immediately linked to the mission of the PMS – also initiated a fundraising campaign among the new Gentile Churches in Macedonia and Achaia to support the poor Church in Jerusalem. The Apostle of the Gentiles praised the Churches of Macedonia for sharing what they could, despite their poverty, testifying to the “circulation of love” between young and older Churches, which also drives the activities of the PMS. “Whoever sows sparingly,” as stated in the Second Letter of Saint Paul to the Corinthians, “will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully…for God loves a cheerful giver.”Common prayer, sharing of the Eucharist and also of material goods accompanied the life of the early Christian communities. The community sold their possessions and laid the proceeds at the apostles’ feet, who distributed them according to the need of each. In this regard, Cardinal Tagle recalled the story of Ananias and Sapphira, narrated in the Acts of the Apostles. They sold a piece of land but kept part of the proceeds for themselves. Peter rebuked them, saying, “You have not lied to men but to God.” After this, both Ananias and Sapphira died. In the Church of Christ, the Cardinal remarked, such events occurred “even shortly after the Resurrection and Pentecost.” However, the essential traits accompanying and characterizing the first apostolic work were those of prayer, mutual respect, listening, and sharing. These are all elements that today characterize and make every authentic missionary cooperation recognizable.The Cardinal reiterated that even the Pontifical Mission Societies draw “from this first Easter experience.” The work of the PMS National Directors can also be seen and lived as an extension of that of the first Apostles. “We too,” the Cardinal concluded, “can animate mission and animate our organization by learning from them who had encountered the Risen Lord and had been sent by Him in the power of the Holy Spirit.” (GV) (Agenzia Fides, 23/5/2025)
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Rome (Agenzia Fides) – “After the 2025 midterm elections, we can say that there is still much to be done to create an authentic political consciousness in the nation. We use the word ‘politics’ in the noblest and highest sense of the word, namely, as the administration and care of the common good,” Father Esteban Lo, a priest from Manila and National Director of the Pontifical Mission Societies (PMS) in the Philippines, one of the participants in the General Assembly of the Pontifical Mission Societies currently taking place in Rome, told Fides. “When it comes to political elections, the phenomena of vote-buying, corruption, political dynasties, and factionalism affect the entire people, which is, of course, predominantly Catholic. From this, it can be deduced that in these moments, the Catholic conscience, illuminated by faith, struggles to emerge,” the National Director added.”Today, the Filipino people demonstrate great popular piety, but when it comes to issues and practices such as politics, a dichotomy arises. Therefore, we must deepen and assimilate the vision of the Church’s social teaching, which we know is a focus of the apostolic ministry of Pope Leo XIV. We must embody faith in political action,” he notes.In the May 12 elections, with a record turnout of nearly 69 million voters, more than 18,000 public offices at all levels of government were filled: Of the 354 seats in the lower house of parliament, the majority went to the coalition formed by the Lakas Party and other parties supporting incumbent President Ferdinand Marcos. In particular, the 12 Senate seats up for grabs (half of the 24 seats that make up the assembly) attracted political and media attention, and at least five went to candidates supporting the Duterte family. The Philippine political system is dominated by two political dynasties, which also faced each other in this election. They are the families of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. (son of the former dictator of the same name) and his Vice President Sara Duterte (daughter of former President Rodrigo Duterte). The two clans, which had formed an alliance with a view to the 2022 presidential elections, are now in open conflict, and in this context, the midterm elections have become a kind of “referendum” on the dominance of one side or the other. Meanwhile, Rodrigo Duterte has been arrested and is on trial before the International Criminal Court in The Hague for “crimes against humanity” committed during the “war on drugs” launched during his presidency. And his daughter, Sara, the current Vice President, was impeached by the House of Representatives on February 7, which must be confirmed or overturned by the Senate. Five candidates close to the Marcos alliance won seats in the Senate, five other elected candidates are close to Duterte, while two “independents” received the support of the Duterte clan in the final stages of the campaign, thus being considered part of the opposition. After the election, President Marcos Jr. admitted – also based on polls that showed a significant decline in his popularity and public approval – that people were dissatisfied with the government’s performance. “The scenarios are open, and we will see how the political situation evolves,” the National Director of the Pontifical Mission Societies told Fides. “Surely, we are in a time when even the Catholic Church, as a historic institution, no longer has the influence on the conscience of citizens that it had in the past: just think of the non-violent revolution of 1986. The context and culture have changed rapidly.” “Our hope,” Father Lo concluded, “remains firm because it is anchored in Christ. Our commitment and our mission in society will continue. Ultimately, we can say that everything depends on the Christian witness of our lives.” (PA) (Agenzia Fides, 23/5/2025)
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The officials discussed intensifying cooperation to combat the continent’s most powerful organized crime groups.
LYON, France: Senior police leaders from eleven South American countries met in Brasilia on Thursday to address the growing threat posed by transnational organized crime groups.
The fourth INTERPOL Chiefs of Police meeting for South America allowed the officials to share insights into their respective efforts against organized crime and contribute to a regional plan to combat specific crime groups.
In his remarks to the police leaders, INTERPOL Secretary General Valdecy Urquiza said:
“Criminal groups from South America are continually expanding their reach throughout and beyond the region, where one in every three INTERPOL Notices is related to organized crime.
“This meeting offers a dedicated space to reinforce regional police cooperation and fight organized crime effectively on a global scale.”
Representatives at the meeting will include seven police chiefs and four deputy police chiefs from the eleven countries.
The first INTERPOL Chiefs of Police meeting for South America took place in 2018 to strengthen ties between law enforcement within the region and to foster greater information-sharing.
INTERPOL’s Regional Bureau in Buenos Aires, Argentina helps coordinate operational work in the region, tackling crimes such as child sexual abuse, corruption, cybercrime, human trafficking, money laundering and terrorism.
Police leaders from the following countries participated in the fourth INTERPOL Chiefs of Police meeting: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela.
In this week’s look Around the Air Force, the newest hub for allied fighter training reaches initial operational capability, a milestone in monitoring space between Earth and the moon, and federal installations now require all visitors seeking base access to possess a REAL ID.
TORONTO, May 23, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — MINT Income Fund (the “Fund”) (TSX: MID.UN) announced that it has filed a notice with the Toronto Stock Exchange (the “TSX”) and received its approval to make a normal course issuer bid (“NCIB”). Purchases pursuant to the NCIB will be made in the open market through the facilities of the TSX and Alternative Canadian Trading Systems. This NCIB will commence on May 27, 2025 and will terminate on May 26, 2026. In accordance with the Declaration of Trust by which the Fund is governed, market purchases pursuant to its NCIB may be effected by the Fund.
The Fund had 10,052,580 units issued and outstanding as at May 13, 2025, including 10,031,982 units in the public float. The Fund may, during the 12 month period commencing May 27, 2025 purchase on the TSX up to 1,003,198 units, being 10% of the public float and may not, in any 30 day period, purchase more than 201,051 units, being 2% of the units issued and outstanding. The Fund will hold in treasury for resale all units purchased pursuant to the bid. As at May 13, 2025 the Fund had purchased 18,700 units on the TSX and Alternative Canadian Trading Systems at an average price of $6.96 per unit under its previously approved normal course issuer bid. The Fund had the ability to purchase up to 1,089,755 units under its last NCIB. The manager of the Fund believes that such purchases are in the best interest of the Fund and are a desirable use of its available funds.
The Fund trades on the Toronto Stock Exchange under the symbol “MID.UN”.
For further information visit our website at www.middlefield.com or contact the undersigned:
Nancy Tham Managing Director, Sales and Marketing (416) 847-5349
May 23, 2025
This press release may contain forward-looking information, including with respect to future purchases of Units by the Fund. The forward-looking information contained in this press release constitutes current expectations, as of the date of this press release, with respect to the matters covered hereby. Investors and others should not assume that any forward-looking statement contained in this press release represents an estimate as of any date other than the date of this press release.
I am a scholar who studies the Sun, as well as an entrepreneur who is working to harness its power here on Earth by creating new designs for generating solar electricity. As part of that effort, I’ve studied market trends and manufacturing capabilities in the U.S. and abroad. Right now, U.S. manufacturers do not produce enough solar panels to meet the nation’s demand, but industry investments and federal tax incentives have been making progress, though recent federal moves have created uncertainty.
U.S. manufacturers made only a small fraction of that – 4.2 GW of solar modules in the first half of 2024. That was a big boost, though – a 75% increase compared with the same period in 2023. And the prices were roughly three times the cost of imports.
The effects of proposed U.S. trade policies on the solar industry remain unclear. Through 2024, manufacturing continued a yearslong ramp-up to take advantage of government policies favoring domestic manufacturing. And imported panels seem slated to suffer from ever-increasing tariffs, which drive up costs.
Domestic production rises
Since 2010, U.S. solar panel production has increasedabout eightfold. But U.S.-made panels are more expensive than imported alternatives. In 2024, U.S.-made panels typically cost 31 cents per watt, but imported panels, even including tariffs that existed before President Donald Trump’s second term, cost about one-third of that: 11 cents per watt.
But domestic manufacturers are bringing costs down by ramping up production while relying on the government to maintain or increase tariffs on imports, which may make U.S. panels more competitive domestically in the future.
But those tariffs and falling global prices made solar installations more costly in the U.S. than in the rest of the world. The average global cost of installed solar systems dropped from $1.15 per watt in 2012 to $0.72 per watt in 2016, nearly half that of U.S. installations.
The 2018 tariffs, as well as earlier rounds in 2012 and 2014, have shifted the source of U.S. imports of solar panels – from China and Taiwan to Malaysia and South Korea. Manufacturers are also building solar panels in Singapore and Germany to maintain access to the U.S. market. And Chinese companies are even investing in U.S. solar manufacturers to take advantage of federal incentives and avoid tariffs.
New tariffs emerge
Trump’s proposal for new tariffs on foreign-made solar goods, including panels and components, particularly target Chinese-owned companies in Southeast Asia.
Due in large part to the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act, enacted in 2022, the U.S. solar panel industry has seen significant investments.
Since the law’s enactment, more than 95 GW of manufacturing capability have been added across the solar supply chain in the U.S., including new facilities that in a year can construct enough solar panels to produce nearly 42 GW, beyond existing manufacturing levels. This growth in manufacturing capabilities is largely located in Texas and Georgia.
Still, the new administration’s shifting priorities and trade policies make the landscape uncertain. Before Trump began discussing various solar-related trade policies, the industry projected it would install an average of 45 GW of solar panels every year for the next decade.
Mojtaba Akhavan-Tafti owns shares in APT Solar Solutions Inc. in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He receives funding from public and private organizations to develop and commercialize three-dimensional solar modules.
A deadly tornado hit London, Ky., on May 16, 2025, just a few weeks after another tornado outbreak in the state.Allison Joyce/AFP/Getty Images
Violent tornado outbreaks, like the storms that tore through parts of St. Louis and London, Kentucky, on May 16, have made 2025 seem like an especially active, deadly and destructive year for tornadoes.
The U.S. has had more reported tornadoes than normal – over 960 as of May 22, according to the National Weather Service’s preliminary count.
That’s well above the national average of around 660 tornadoes reported by that point over the past 15 years, and it’s similar to 2024 – the second-most active year over that same period.
The National Weather Service tracks reported tornadoes based on local storm reports, allowing for comparisons throughout the year. The red line shows 2025 through May 22. NOAA National Storm Prediction Center
I’m an atmospheric scientist who studies natural hazards. What stands out about 2025 so far isn’t just the number of tornadoes, but how Tornado Alley has encompassed just about everything east of the Rockies, and how tornado season is becoming all year.
Why has 2025 been so active?
The high tornado count in 2025 has a lot to do with the weather in March, which broke records with 299 reported tornadoes – far exceeding the average of 80 for that month over the past three decades.
March’s numbers were driven by two large tornado outbreaks: about 115 tornadoes swept across more than a dozen states March 14-16, stretching from Arkansas to Pennsylvania; and 145 tornadoes hit March 31 to April 1, primarily in a swath from Arkansas to Iowa and eastward. The 2025 numbers are preliminary pending final analyses.
While meteorologists don’t know for sure why March was so active, there were a couple of ingredients that favor tornadoes:
April and May also produced tornado outbreaks, but the preliminary count over most of this period, since the March 31-April 1 outbreak, has actually been close to the average, though things could still change.
What has stood out in April and May is persistence: The jet stream has remained wavy, bringing with it the normal ebb and flow of stormy low-pressure weather systems mixed with sunny high-pressure systems. In May alone, tornadoes were reported in Colorado, Minnesota, Delaware, Florida and just about every state in between.
Years with fewer tornadoes often have calm periods of a couple of weeks or longer when a sunny high-pressure system is parked over the central U.S. However, the U.S. didn’t really get one of those calm periods in spring 2025.
Tornado Alley shifts eastward
The locations of these storms have also been notable: The 2025 tornadoes through May have been widespread but clustered near the lower and central Mississippi Valley, stretching from Illinois to Mississippi.
That’s well to the east of traditional Tornado Alley, typically seen as stretching from Texas through Nebraska, and farther east than normal. April through May is still peak season for the Mississippi Valley, though it is usually on the eastern edge of activity rather than at the epicenter. The normal seasonal cycle of tornadoes moves inland from near the Gulf Coast in winter to the upper Midwest and Great Plains by summer.
Where local forecast centers reported tornadoes in 2025, through May 22. Data is preliminary, pending final analysis. NOAA Storm Prediction Center
Winter tornadoes have become more frequent over the eastern U.S., from the southeast, dubbed Dixie Alley for its tornado activity in recent years, to the Midwest, particularly Kentucky, Illinois and Indiana.
The shift toward more winter tornadoes has also left people more vulnerable. Since they may not expect tornadoes at that time of year, they are likely to be less prepared. Tornado detection and forecasting is rapidly improving and has saved thousands of lives over the past 50-plus years, but forecasts can save lives only if people are able to receive them.
Average number of tornadoes by month, 2000-2024. Source: NOAA
This shift in tornadoes to the east and earlier in the year is very similar to how scientists expect severe thunderstorms to change as the world warms. However, researchers don’t know whether the overall downward trend in tornadoes is driven by warming or will continue into the future. Field campaigns studying how tornadoes form may help us better answer this question.
Remember that it only takes one
For safety, it’s time to stop focusing on spring as tornado season and the Great Plains as Tornado Alley.
Listen to your local meteorologists so you will know when your region is facing a tornado risk. And if you hear sirens or are under a tornado warning, immediately go to your safe space. A tornado may already be on the ground, and you may have only seconds to protect yourself.
Daniel Chavas receives funding from the National Science Foundation, NASA, and NOAA. He is a member of the American Geophysical Union and American Meteorological Society.
Abortion policy in the U.S. often focuses on fetal viability and fails to address the concerns of actual pregnant people.John Fedele/Tetra Images via GettyImages
During the 2024 presidential campaign, politicians and their surrogates repeatedly raised concerns about abortion later in pregnancy. The topic grabbed media attention and continues to inspire strong emotions, but most of the discussions include numerous misunderstandings.
These debates tend to focus almost exclusively on the status of a presumed healthy fetus: Does it have a heartbeat? Can it feel pain? Can it survive outside of the pregnant person’s body? Laws in the U.S. routinely use these fetal development markers to restrict abortion rights.
The problem with this framing, however, is that the preoccupation with these fetal development markers originated in law and politics, not in science or medicine. And, most importantly, not from the lives, needs and experiences of pregnant people.
We are medicalsociologists who specialize in research on abortion. We noticed that fetal development markers shape the experience of pregnant patients. But that doesn’t mean these markers feel meaningful to people who get abortions.
We wanted to understand how patients who have abortions later in pregnancy, including from states with laws banning abortion after specified markers like “viability,” thought about their pregnancy and abortion. Do they think about abortion in terms of the development of their fetus? We analyzed interviews with 30 women who obtained abortions later in pregnancy to answer this question.
A history of limitations
Long before the 2022 U.S. Supreme Court’s Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision overturned the constitutional right to abortion, thousands of people each year in the U.S. were denied abortion services. Often, this was because they were beyond the pregnancy gestational limit imposed by their state’s abortion laws.
These limits were rooted in fetal development markers. For instance, some states such as Maine and Washington allow abortion until a particular developmental point, such as presumed fetal viability. This is the point in pregnancy when the fetus might survive outside the uterus. Even in states considered supportive of abortion rights, such as California and Illinois, limits based on fetal development are still in force today.
Since the Dobbs ruling, more abortion seekers are being denied the chance to get the procedure or facing long delays because of laws based on ideas about fetal development markers. But in fact, laws focused on fetal markers often end up jeopardizing the life and health of pregnant patients and furthering suffering, our study shows.
Fetal development markers explained
Fetal development markers sound like they are established clinical terms, but they aren’t. Some, like “potential fetal viability,” are concepts that started in legal thinking in the early 1970s. Then, when they were incorporated into limits on legal abortion, clinicians had to figure out how to apply them in a health care setting.
Laws premised on fetal development markers around the U.S. have led to a host of lawsuits and general confusion among medical practitioners, as the language they use often doesn’t translate into medical contexts.
Only about half of infants born at 24 weeks of gestation will even survive long enough to be discharged from the hospital. Among infants born at 28 weeks, that rises to more than 90%. And of course, just looking at whether a baby was discharged from the hospital does not capture the acute impairments that babies born this prematurely experience and ongoing medical care they will require for much, if not all, of their lives.
Focusing on the fetus’s viability overlooks the baby’s viability
When we interviewed women who had abortions after 24 weeks of pregnancy, it became evident that these legal definitions were entirely irrelevant to the realities of their fetuses’ health.
Some described carrying a fetus with a serious health issue that doctors told them would lead to its death soon after birth, just not during pregnancy. For instance, one woman we interviewed learned that a child with her fetus’s diagnosis would be born alive but would have regular seizures, cognitive disabilities and an inability to control its own movement.
“I couldn’t imagine bringing a child into this world who would suffer and not have cognition of why, or be able to understand a good day from a bad day,” she said. To her, having an abortion was a way to protect her son: “I can’t give him that life of pain if I have a choice.”
Women in similar situations struggled with the way their states’ laws focused on fetal viability but ignored the fact that the life their baby would have would be very brief and characterized by deep, sometimes constant pain. To them, the law reduced “viability” to the ability to survive birth, without consideration of the quality of their child’s life and the degree of its suffering.
Overlooking women’s health
Research and journalism have documented harrowing obstetric emergencies and their physical consequences in states where abortion has been banned. These traumatic events are often directly linked to laws that, in effect, leave little to no room to protect the pregnant patient’s life and health. The women in our study repeatedly highlighted that when a state’s law emphasizes “fetal viability” at the time an abortion is sought, the pregnant patient’s future health – both emotional and physical – takes a back seat.
One woman we interviewed explained that she was so desperate not to be pregnant that she considered suicide because the fetal development-based law in her state meant she would not have access to a needed abortion. She had to travel out of state for her abortion. In her interview, she said the staff at the abortion clinic “saved my life. They definitely did. If it wasn’t for them, I probably wouldn’t be here.”
We also interviewed a woman who had a medical condition that made pregnancy and laboring very dangerous for her, but she decided to take that risk to start a family. Once it was clear that her fetus had a serious health issue and would die in utero or shortly after birth, she no longer wanted to risk her own health.
“Never mind the suffering, like needless suffering for the baby — I would also have to go through a cesarean surgery for that,” she said. But in her state, a fetal development-based law prohibited her from receiving an abortion. She, too, had to travel in order to get one.
Ultimately, the women we interviewed found the laws based in fetal development markers to be nonsensical and cruel when applied to their pregnancies. One woman we interviewed, whose fetus’s severe medical condition was only diagnosable by doctors after her state’s 24-week viability cutoff, put the issue in stark terms.
She was denied an abortion even after multiple specialists told her there was “100% certainty” her baby would have a bad outcome – an outcome that one specialist gently told her “no parent wants.” She had to fly halfway across the country to get the abortion she needed, far away from her support system.
She said, “What sense does that make? I can’t imagine anybody looking at that and saying, ‘Yes, that was the desired outcome of this policy.’”
Katrina Kimport receives funding from the Society of Family Planning and an anonymous private foundation.
Tracy A. Weitz receives funding from the Society of Family Planning, Education Foundation of America, and William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. She is affiliated with Cambridge Reproductive Health Consultants, Fund Access Forward, Democracy Forward, Abortion Bridge Collaborative (Women’s Donors Network), Breast Cancer Action.
The front entrance of the E. Barrett Prettyman United States Court House, the workplace of Judge James Boasberg, along with other federal and appeals court judges, is seen in Washington, D.C. Philip Yabut/Getty Images
Federal judges and at times Supreme Court justices have repeatedly challenged – and blocked – President Donald Trump’s attempts to reshape fundamental aspects of American government.
When a majority of Supreme Court justices ruled on May 16, 2025, that the Trump administration could not deport a group of Venezuelan immigrants without first giving them the right to due process in court, Trump attacked the court.
“The Supreme Court of the United States is not allowing me to do what I was elected to do,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “This is a bad and dangerous day for America!” he continued in the post.
As the Trump administration faces other orders blocking its plans, the president and his team are framing judges not just as political opponents but as enemies of democracy.
Trump, for example, has called for the impeachment of James Boasberg, a federal judge who also issued orders blocking the deportation of immigrants in the U.S. to El Salvador. Attorney General Pam Bondi has said that Boasberg was “trying to protect terrorists who invaded our country over American citizens,” and Trump has also called Boasberg and other judges who ruled against him or his administration “left-wing activists.”
“We cannot allow a handful of communist, radical-left judges to obstruct the enforcement of our laws and assume the duties that belong solely to the president of the United States,” Trump said at a rally in April 2025. “Judges are trying to take away the power given to the president to keep our country safe.”
As a scholar of legal and political theory, I believe this kind of talk about judges and the judicial system is not just misleading, it’s dangerous. It mirrors a pattern seen across many populist movements worldwide, where leaders cast independent courts and judges as illegitimate obstacles to what they see as the will of the people.
President Donald Trump shakes hands with Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts at his inauguration on Jan. 20, 2025, in Washington, D.C. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Yet these rulings are merely a reflection of the rule of law.
Trump and supporters such as Elon Musk have characterized the rulings as a sign that a group of elite judges are abusing their power and acting against the will of the American people. The rulings that enforce the law, according to this argument, stand in opposition to the popular mandate American voters give to elected officials like the president.
“If ANY judge ANYWHERE can stop EVERY Presidential action EVERYWHERE, we do NOT live in a democracy,” Elon Musk posted on X in February 2025. “When judges egregiously undermine the democratic will of the people, they must be fired,” Musk added.
And U.S. Rep. Mike Johnson, the Republican speaker of the House of Representatives, said in March 2025, “We do have the authority over the federal courts, as you know. We can eliminate an entire district court.”
Framing judges as enemies of democracy or as obstacles to the people’s will departs sharply from the traditional view – held across political lines – that the judiciary is an essential, nonpartisan part of the American constitutional system.
Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson warned against the Trump administration’s charge that judges were actively undermining democracy. In late April 2025, she said during a conference for judges that “relentless attacks on judges are an attack on democracy.”
So, are judges obstructing democracy – or protecting it?
Are unelected judges a sign of democracy?
The U.S. Constitution established an independent judiciary as a coequal branch of government, alongside the legislative and executive branches. Federal judges are appointed for life and cannot be removed for political reasons. The country’s founders thought this protection could insulate judges from political pressures and ensure that courts uphold the Constitution, not the popularity of a given policy.
Other democratic theorists, however, say that federal judges can act as a check on elected leaders who may misuse or abuse their power, or pass laws that violate people’s legal rights. This indirectly strengthens democracy by giving people a meaningful way to have recourse against laws that go against their rights and what they actually voted for.
A common story across countries
The argument that judges are an enemy to democracy is not unique to the U.S.
Authoritarian leaders from across the world have used similar language to justify undermining the courts.
In the Philippines, then-President Rodrigo Duterte in 2018 told Maria Lourdes Sereno, a top judge who was an outspoken critic of Duterte’s war on drugs, “I am now your enemy.” Shortly after, the Philippines Supreme Court voted to oust Sereno from the court. These judges cited Sereno’s failure to disclose personal financial information when she was first appointed to the court as the reason for her removal.
Filipino protesters and outside critics alike viewed Sereno’s removal as politically motivated and said it undermined the country’s judicial independence.
El Salvador President Nayib Bukele’s allies in the legislative assembly similarly voted in May 2021 to remove the government’s attorney generalas well all five top judges for obstructing Bukele’s plans to imprison, without proper due process, large numbers of people. Bukele replaced the attorney general and judges with political loyalists, violating constitutional procedure.
Kamala Harris, then vice president of the U.S., was among the international observers who said the removal of judges in El Salvador made her concerned about El Salvador’s democracy. Bukele justified the judges’ removal by saying he was right and that he refused to “listen to the enemies of the people” who wanted him to do otherwise.
And in April 2024, a minister in Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Cabinet called Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara an “enemy of the people,” blaming her for protests outside Netanyahu’s home. This disparagement was part of Netanyahu’s broader efforts to weaken judges’ role and independence and to remove judicial constraints on executive power.
Judge James Boasberg is one example of a judge who was personally attacked by President Donald Trump for issuing various rulings on the administration’s plans to deport Venezuelan immigrants. Drew Angerer/AFP via Getty Images
Pushing against democracy
In the name of weakening what they call undemocratic institutions, these and other leaders try to discredit independent judges. This attempt helps these leaders gain power and silence dissent.
Their attempts to disparage and discredit judges misrepresent judges’ work by asserting that it is political in nature – and thus subject to political criticism and even intimidation. But in the U.S., judges’ constitutionally mandated work takes place in the realm of law, not politics.
Independent judges may not always make perfect decisions, and concerns about their interpretations or potential biases are legitimate. Judges sometimes make decisions that are objectionable from a moral and legal standpoint.
But when political leaders portray judges as the problem, I believe it’s crucial to ask: Who truly benefits from silencing judges?
Michael Gregory does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
It’s a common misconception that pathogens, such as SARS-CoV-2 or the flu, cause fevers. But as biologyprofessors, we know it’s not that simple. Pathogens cause fevers only indirectly.
When your immune system detects harmful microbes, your body raises its internal temperature to create a hostile environment. Turning up the heat suppresses the proliferation of invaders. In short, the fever is the body’s way of fighting back.
Although many people don’t understand fever’s purpose, animals certainly utilize it. Even so-called “simple creatures,” such as lizards, fish and insects, use fever to recover from illness.
The body’s response
Suppose you catch a virus. The immune system responds by releasing molecules called pyrogens, which induce fever. They signal the brain’s hypothalamus to raise the body’s set point temperature – like adjusting a thermostat.
When that happens, your muscles contract, causing shivers, and blood vessels constrict to retain heat. You’ll feel cold until your body reaches the new set point, often prompting you to add clothes or snuggle into blankets. When the infection subsides, pyrogens decrease and the hypothalamus resets the temperature. You sweat, your blood vessels dilate, and you cool off. You’re feeling better.
Humans are not special in this regard; all mammals are capable of generating fevers. Even without taking their temperature, you might recognize the signs in a familiar companion. When dogs have a fever, they often lose their appetite, become lethargic and may shiver − behaviors that closely resemble how people respond when they’re running a fever.
This adaptive response to infection is widespread in nature. Even cold-blooded animals, which rely on the environment for warmth, raise their temperature behaviorally.
Lizards move to warmer areas when sick. If they’re blocked from doing so − or given fever-reducing drugs − their survival rates drop. Zebrafish swim to warmer waters during infection; a rise of just 5.4 F (3 C) correlates with improved gene expression, stronger antiviral responses and higher survival. Naked mole rats – a social, subterranean cold-blooded mammal that looks like a hot dog with teeth – generate fevers in response to infection, despite their unusual physiology.
Insects, too, show remarkable responses. Desert locusts elevate their body temperature when infected, doing so in a dose-dependent manner: more pathogen, higher temperature. This behavior increases their chance of survival and reproduction.
Honeybees are among the most sophisticated. These social insects regulate brood temperature with extraordinary precision, keeping it between 90-95 F (32-35 C). They warm the hive by contracting flight muscles and cool it by fanning wings, sometimes spreading water on the comb to induce evaporative cooling.
If their larvae are exposed to heat-sensitive fungal spores, the colony raises the temperature − essentially giving itself a fever. The increased heat prevents spore germination and protects the next generation. Once the threat has passed, the bees restore their normal hive temperature.
If fevers don’t wind down within 24 to 36 hours, it’s time to see a doctor.
Treating a fever
These examples show that evolution has favored the fever response. Yet when humans get a fever, our instinct is often to bring it down – using aspirin, removing blankets or applying cold compresses. And sometimes that’s appropriate. Adults should seek medical attention if fever exceeds 103 F (39.4 C); children at 102 F (38.9 C); and infants younger than three months at 100.4 F (38 C).
But mild to moderate fevers often help more than they hurt. Reducing a fever too soon − via medication or environmental cooling − may interfere with the body’s natural defense, prolonging illness.
This isn’t a new idea. Nearly a century ago, Austrian physician Julius Wagner-Jauregg pioneered an extreme method called malariotherapy: infecting syphilis patients with malaria. The high fever induced by malaria killed the syphilis-causing bacteria. Once the bacteria was eliminated, doctors treated the malaria with quinine.
The approach was risky but effective enough to win Wagner-Jauregg the Nobel Prize in 1927. Although some patients died from the treatment, and many others relapsed, it remained in use for about two decades, until replaced by penicillin. Think of Wagner-Jauregg’s treatment like using a sledgehammer to drive a nail; it worked, though the wall didn’t always survive.
Much remains to be discovered about how fever affects the immune response. Still, the underlying message holds: Fever fights infection.
The fact that so many diverse creatures developed similar fever responses suggests a powerful pattern known as convergent evolution − when different species with enormously complex evolutionary histories converge on a similar solution. Despite different evolutionary paths, all these organisms faced the same challenge − infection − and arrived at the same solution: fever.
Phil Starks received past funding from the NSF for providing research experiences for undergraduates (REU).
Harry Bernheim had grants from the NIH in the 1980’s.
The Transport Department today said it is deeply saddened by the passing of an operator staff member in a traffic accident while working at Nam Wan Tunnel, and expressed its deepest condolences to the family of the deceased.
In the small hours of today, the staff member was conducting traffic management on the closed slow lane at the Kowloon-bound entrance to facilitate the recovery of a broken-down vehicle in the slow lane inside the tunnel.
The department said it attaches great importance to work safety and has long required operators to strictly comply with relevant work guidelines. Initial investigations revealed that all staff members at the scene were wearing reflective vests and were following the operator’s guidelines.
Police investigations into the cause of incident are underway. The department has requested that the operator render full assistance to the investigations and submit a detailed report on the case.
The department will follow up appropriately upon its findings and has requested the contractor to provide all practicable assistance to the family of the deceased.