4 C
New York
Monday, December 8, 2025
Home Blog

Reports indicate Nigeria successfully secures release of 100 kidnapped children | Child Rights News

0

At least 153 students and 12 teachers taken from a Catholic school last month remain in captivity.

Nigerian authorities have secured the release of 100 children who were among hundreds kidnapped from a Catholic school in northern Nigeria last month, officials and local media have reported.

The 100 children arrived in Nigeria’s capital, Abuja, and are set to be handed over to local government officials in Niger State on Monday, an unnamed United Nations source told the AFP news agency.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

“They are going to be handed over to Niger State government tomorrow,” the source told the AFP news agency.

Nigeria’s The Guardian newspaper reported on Sunday that the rescued children were receiving medical evaluations and would be reunited with their families after a debriefing.

Presidential spokesman Sunday Dare also confirmed reports to the AFP that 100 children were being freed.

Armed gunmen kidnapped 303 students and 12 teachers from St Mary’s School in the Papiri community of Niger State’s Agwara district on November 21.

They included both male and female students aged between 10 to 18 years, according to the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN).

Fifty of the students escaped captivity in the days after they were kidnapped, returning home to their families. Following the release of 100 students on Sunday, 153 students and 12 teachers are believed to remain in captivity.

Days earlier, gunmen abducted 25 schoolgirls from the Government Girls Comprehensive Secondary School in the neighbouring Kebbi State’s Maga town,170km (106 miles) away.

“We have been praying and waiting for their return. If it is true, then it is a cheering news,” said Daniel Atori, spokesman for Bishop Bulus Yohanna of the Kontagora diocese, which runs the school.

“However, we are not officially aware and have not been duly notified by the federal government.”

The latest abductions are the worst seen in Nigeria since more than 270 girls from Chibok town were snatched from their school in 2014.

In total, more than 1,400 Nigerian students have been kidnapped since 2014, in almost a dozen separate incidents.

The most recent kidnappings came soon after United States President Donald Trump said that Nigeria’s Christians are facing genocide, a claim that has been questioned by local officials and Christian groups, who say that people from different faiths have been caught up in ongoing violence in parts of the country.

Kimiebi Imomotimi Ebienfa, a spokesman for Nigeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told Al Jazeera last month that people of all faiths have been affected by the ongoing violence.

“We’ve continuously made our point clear that we acknowledge the fact that there are killings that have taken place in Nigeria, but those killings were not restricted to Christians alone. Muslims are being killed. Traditional worshippers are being killed,” Ebienfa said.

“The majority is not the Christian population.”

Trump has threatened military intervention in Nigeria, alleging that the country is failing to protect Christians from persecution. He has also threatened to cut aid to Nigeria.

Nigeria, a country of more than 200 million people, is divided between the largely Muslim north and mostly Christian south.

According to Pew Research Center estimates, Muslims make up 56 percent of Nigeria’s population, while Christians make up just more than 43 percent.

Armed groups have been engaged in a conflict that has been largely confined to the northeast of the country, which is majority Muslim, and has dragged on for more than 15 years.

Challenge from the Client

0



Client Challenge



JavaScript is disabled in your browser.

Please enable JavaScript to proceed.

A required part of this site couldn’t load. This may be due to a browser
extension, network issues, or browser settings. Please check your
connection, disable any ad blockers, or try using a different browser.

Can technology aid Japan in addressing its dementia crisis?

0

Suranjana TewariAsia Business Correspondent, Tokyo

BBC AIREC robot turning over a person at Waseda University in TokyoBBC

Scientists at Waseda University in Tokyo are developing caregiving robots

Last year, more than 18,000 older people living with dementia left their homes and wandered off in Japan. Almost 500 were later found dead.

Police say such cases have doubled since 2012.

Elderly people aged 65 and over now make up nearly 30% of Japan’s population – the second-highest proportion in the world after Monaco, according to the World Bank.

The crisis is further compounded by a shrinking workforce and tight limits on foreign workers coming in to provide care.

Japan’s government has identified dementia as one of its most urgent policy challenges, with the Health Ministry estimating that dementia-related health and social care costs will reach 14 trillion yen ($90bn; £67bn) by 2030 – up from nine trillion yen in 2025.

In its most recent strategy, the government has signalled a stronger pivot toward technology to ease the pressure.

Across the country, people are adopting GPS-based systems to keep track of those who wander.

Some regions offer wearable GPS tags that can alert authorities the moment a person leaves a designated area.

In some towns, convenience-store workers receive real-time notifications – a kind of community safety net that can locate a missing person within hours.

Robot caregivers and AI

Other technologies aim to detect dementia earlier.

Fujitsu’s aiGait uses AI to analyse posture and walking patterns, picking up early signs of dementia – shuffling while walking, slower turns or difficulty standing – generating skeletal outlines clinicians can review during routine check-ups.

“Early detection of age-related diseases is key,” says Hidenori Fujiwara, a Fujitsu spokesperson. “If doctors can use motion-capture data, they can intervene earlier and help people remain active for longer.”

Meanwhile, researchers at Waseda University are developing AIREC, a 150kg humanoid robot designed to be a “future” caregiver.

It can help a person put on socks, scramble eggs and fold laundry. The scientists at Waseda University hope that in the future, AIREC will be able to change diapers and prevent bedsores in patients.

Toshio Morita and his wife sitting at the Restaurant for Mistaken Orders before the start of his shift

Toshio Morita (R) works at the Restaurant of Mistaken Orders

Similar robots are already being used in care homes to play music to residents or guide them in simple stretching exercises.

They are also monitoring patients at night – placed under mattresses to track sleep and conditions – and cutting back on the need for humans doing the rounds.

Although humanoid robots are being developed for the near future, Assistant Professor Tamon Miyake says the level of precision and intelligence required will take at last five years before they are safely able to interact with humans.

“It requires full-body sensing and adaptive understanding – how to adjust for each person and situation,” he says.

Emotional support is also part of the innovation drive.

Poketomo, a 12cm tall robot, can be carried around in a bag or can fit into a pocket. It reminds users to take medication, tells you how to prepare in real time for the weather outside and offers conversation for those living alone, which its creators say helps to ease social isolation.

“We’re focusing on social issues… and to use new technology to help solve those problems,” Miho Kagei, development manager from Sharp told the BBC.

While devices and robots offer new ways to assist, human connection remains irreplaceable.

“Robots should supplement, not substitute, human caregivers,” Mr Miyake, the Waseda University scientist said. “While they may take over some tasks, their main role is to assist both caregivers and patients.”

At the Restaurant of Mistaken Orders in Sengawa, Tokyo, founded by Akiko Kanna, people stream in to be served by patients suffering from dementia.

Inspired by her father’s experience with the condition, Ms Kanna wanted a place where people could remain engaged and feel purposeful.

Toshio Morita, one of the café’s servers, uses flowers to remember which table ordered what.

Despite his cognitive decline, Mr Morita enjoys the interaction. For his wife, the café provides respite and helps keep him engaged.

Kanna’s café illustrates why social interventions and community support remain essential. Technology can provide tools and relief, but meaningful engagement and human connection are what truly sustain people living with dementia.

“Honestly? I wanted a little pocket money. I like meeting all sorts of people,” Mr Morita says. “Everyone’s different – that’s what makes it fun.”

Getty Images Lineup of Sharp Poketomo robots at Ceatec in Chiba, JapanGetty Images

Sharp’s Poketomo robot has been designed to give companionship to patients

Additional reporting by Jaltson Akkanath Chummar

US Congress mulls over ‘crucial’ defense policy bill that surpasses Trump’s spending proposal

0

US Congress considers 'must-pass' defense policy bill that would top Trump’s spending request

Celta Vigo stun Real Madrid with 2-0 victory at the Bernabeu as hosts crumble | Football News

0

Substitute Williot Swedberg scores brace to defeat Real Madrid, who ended game with nine players after two red cards.

Real Madrid suffered a shock 2-0 loss and finished with nine men against Celta Vigo in their La Liga clash after Williot Swedberg scored an audacious goal with his heel and a second in stoppage time to leave the hosts four points off leaders Barcelona.

Swedish substitute Swedberg cleverly diverted a cross from Bryan Zaragoza past Thibaut Courtois in the 53rd minute to put Celta ahead, and had an easy finish three minutes into added time, going around the goalkeeper to wrap up the points on Sunday.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

Celta jumped from 14th to 10th, while the defeat ended Real’s 100 percent home league record this season after six successive wins.

Xabi Alonso’s stuttering Real team have now won only one of their last five league games as they await the midweek arrival of Manchester City in the Champions League.

Alonso chose to rest centre-back Antonio Rudiger, starting with Alvaro Carreras in the heart of defence, but Rudiger’s break did not last long, with the German defender coming on midway through the first half after Eder Militao pulled up injured.

Celta Vigo goalkeeper Ionut Radu made a handful of good saves in the first half, keeping out a Jude Bellingham header and Arda Guler’s drive from range.

Radu punches clear for Celta Vigo [Thomas Coex/AFP]

Madrid struggled to create serious danger as Celta set up in a tough-to-crack low defensive block, denying dangerous forwards Kylian Mbappe and Vinicius Junior space.

Guler missed Madrid’s best chance of the first half, with the Turkish playmaker sending a shot wide on the swivel after Mbappe teed him up.

Radu also thwarted Vinicius Junior after Aurelien Tchouameni chopped a ball in behind the defence for the Brazilian to run onto, a rare crack in Celta’s armour.

Celta’s Romanian goalkeeper turned away a fierce Fede Valverde effort from distance early in the second half, before Celta stunned the hosts.

Bryan Zaragoza crossed from the left for Swedberg, who produced a gorgeous flicked finish to beat Thibaut Courtois to send the Galicians ahead.

MADRID, SPAIN - DECEMBER 07: Williot Swedberg of Celta Vigo celebrates scoring his team's first goal with teammate Bryan Zaragoza during the LaLiga EA Sports match between Real Madrid CF and RC Celta de Vigo at Estadio Santiago Bernabeu on December 07, 2025 in Madrid, Spain. (Photo by Angel Martinez/Getty Images)
Swedberg, right, celebrates scoring the opener with teammate Bryan Zaragoza [Angel Martinez/Getty Images]

Madrid were wounded, literally in the case of Bellingham, with blood running down his face from a cut sustained in a tussle with Celta target man Borja Iglesias.

Adding insult to injury, Fran Garcia earned two yellow cards inside a minute, the second for a clumsy foul on Swedberg, to leave Los Blancos with 10 men for the final third of the match.

Mbappe sent a lob over Radu but down onto the roof of the net, and substitute Gonzalo Garcia headed just wide as Madrid searched for an equaliser, which did not come.

Carreras was dismissed in stoppage time as Madrid lost their heads, receiving a second yellow for dissent as he protested a decision by referee Alejandro Quintero.

With Madrid down to nine and in disarray, Celta wrapped up their win as Swedberg rounded Courtois and ran the ball home.

Speaking to the media after the game, Iglesias praised his side’s defensive resilience to win a game with a “strange” ending.

“They have got a lot of quality. It is difficult to play against them. We defended very well,” he said.

“The end of the game was pretty strange. There were a lot of situations, and then there were stoppages, and then some fouls. They then got a bit desperate.

“We are doing well on the road [as it is Celta Vigo’s fourth away win this season]. It is difficult to explain.”

Alonso criticised his team’s “disappointing” effort and intensity, as well as the decisions of the referee.

“We were better with 10 men than with 11 tonight. Simply because with 10 men, at least we started running and working hard,” Alonso said in comments to the media after the game.

“We have to try to turn the page as quickly as possible. It’s just three points – there’s still a lot of the league games left.”

He added: “The referee’s decisions have driven us crazy. The referee was itching to give the card to Alvaro Carreras. The refereeing has been very poor.”

OpenAI’s transition from stock market savior to burden as AI risks increase

0

Wall Street’s sentiment toward companies associated with artificial intelligence is shifting, and it’s all about two companies: OpenAI is down, and Alphabet Inc. is up.

The maker of ChatGPT is no longer seen as being on the cutting edge of AI technology and is facing questions about its lack of profitability and the need to grow rapidly to pay for its massive spending commitments. Meanwhile, Google’s parent is emerging as a deep-pocketed competitor with tentacles in every part of the AI trade.

“OpenAI was the golden child earlier this year, and Alphabet was looked at in a very different light,” said Brett Ewing, chief market strategist at First Franklin Financial Services. “Now sentiment is much more tempered toward OpenAI.” 

As a result, the shares of companies in OpenAI’s orbit — principally Oracle Corp., CoreWeave Inc., and Advanced Micro Devices Inc., but also Microsoft Corp., Nvidia Corp. and SoftBank, which has an 11% stake in the company — are coming under heavy selling pressure. Meanwhile, Alphabet’s momentum is boosting not only its stock price, but also those it’s associated with like Broadcom Inc., Lumentum Holdings Inc., Celestica Inc., and TTM Technologies Inc.

Read More: Alphabet’s AI Strength Fuels Biggest Quarterly Jump Since 2005

The shift has been dramatic in magnitude and speed. Just a few weeks ago, OpenAI was sparking huge rallies in any company related to it. Now, those connections look more like an anchor. It’s a change that carries wide-ranging implications, given how central the closely held company has been to the AI mania that has driven the stock market’s three-year rally. 

“A light has been shined on the complexity of the financing, the circular deals, the debt issues,” Ewing said. “I’m sure this exists around the Alphabet ecosystem to a certain degree, but it was exposed as pretty extreme for OpenAI’s deals, and appreciating that was a game-changer for sentiment.”

A basket of companies connected to OpenAI has gained 74% in 2025, which is impressive but far shy of the 146% jump by Alphabet-exposed stocks. The technology-heavy Nasdaq 100 Index is up 22%. 

The skepticism surrounding OpenAI can be dated to August, when it unveiled GPT-5 to mixed reactions. It ramped up last month when Alphabet released the latest version of its Gemini AI model and got rave reviews. As a result, OpenAI Chief Executive Officer Sam Altman declared a “code red” effort to improve the quality of ChatGPT, delaying other projects until it gets its signature product in line.

‘All the Pieces’

Alphabet’s perceived strength goes beyond Gemini. The company has the third highest market capitalization in the S&P 500 and a ton of cash at its disposal. It also has a host of adjacent businesses, like Google Cloud and a semiconductor manufacturing operation that’s gaining traction. And that’s before you consider the company’s AI data, talent and distribution, or its successful subsidiaries like YouTube and Waymo.

“There’s a growing sense that Alphabet has all the pieces to emerge as the dominant AI model builder,” said Brian Colello, technology equity senior strategist at Morningstar. “Just a couple months ago, investors would’ve given that title to OpenAI. Now there’s more uncertainty, more competition, more risk that OpenAI isn’t the slam-dunk winner.”

Read More: Alphabet’s AI Chips Are a Potential $900 Billion ‘Secret Sauce’

Representatives for OpenAI and Alphabet didn’t respond to requests for comment.

The difference between being first or second place goes beyond bragging rights, it also has significant financial ramifications for the companies and their partners. For example, if users gravitating to Gemini slows ChatGPT’s growth, it will be harder for OpenAI to pay for cloud-computing capacity from Oracle or chips from AMD.

By contrast, Alphabet’s partners in building out its AI effort are thriving. Shares of Lumentum, which makes optical components for Alphabet’s data centers, have more than tripled this year, putting them among the 30 best performers in the Russell 3000 Index. Celestica provides the hardware for Alphabet’s AI buildout, and its stock is up 252% in 2025. Meanwhile Broadcom — which is building the tensor processing unit, or TPU, chips Alphabet uses — has seen its stock price leap 68% since the end of last year.

OpenAI has announced a number of ambitious deals in recent months. The flurry of activity “rightfully brought scrutiny and concern over whether OpenAI can fund all this, whether it is biting off more than it can chew,” Colello said. “The timing of its revenue growth is uncertain, and every improvement a competitor makes adds to the risk that it can’t reach its aspirations.”

In fairness, investors greeted many of these deals with excitement, because they appeared to mint the next generation of AI winners. But with the shift in sentiment, they’re suddenly taking a wait-and-see attitude.

“When people thought it could generate revenue and become profitable, those big deal numbers seemed possible,” said Brian Kersmanc, portfolio manager at GQG Partners, which has about $160 billion in assets. “Now we’re at a point where people have stopped believing and started questioning.”

Kersmanc sees the AI euphoria as the “dot-com era on steroids,” and said his firm has gone from being heavily overweight tech to highly skeptical.

Self-Inflicted Wounds 

“We’re trying to avoid areas of over-hype and a lot of those were fueled by OpenAI,” he said. “Since a lot of places have been touched by this, it will be a painful unwind. It isn’t just a few tech names that need to come down, though they’re a huge part of the index. All these bets have parallel trades, like utilities, with high correlations. That’s the fear we have, not just that OpenAI spun up this narrative, but that so many things were lifted on the hype.”

OpenAI’s public-relations flaps haven’t helped. The startup’s Chief Financial Officer Sarah Friar recently suggested the US government “backstop the guarantee that allows the financing to happen,” which raised some eyebrows. But she and Altman later clarified that the company hasn’t requested such guarantees. 

Then there was Altman’s appearance on the “Bg2 Pod,” where he was asked how the company can make spending commitments that far exceed its revenue. “If you want to sell your shares, I’ll find you a buyer — I just, enough,” was the CEO’s response.

Read More: Sam Altman’s Business Buddies Are Getting Stung

Altman’s dismissal was problematic because the gap between OpenAI’s revenue and its spending plans between now and 2033 is about $207 billion, according to HSBC estimates.

“Closing the gap would need one or a combination of factors, including higher revenue than in our central case forecasts, better cost management, incremental capital injections, or debt issuance,” analyst Nicolas Cote-Colisson wrote in a research note on Nov. 24. Considering that OpenAI is expected to generate revenue of more than $12 billion in 2025, its compute cost “compounds investor nervousness about associated returns,” not only for the company itself, but also “for the interlaced AI chain,” he wrote. 

To be sure, companies like Oracle and AMD aren’t solely reliant on OpenAI. They operate in areas that continue to see a lot of demand, and their products could find customers even without OpenAI. Furthermore, the weakness in the stocks could represent a buying opportunity, as companies tied to ChatGPT and the chips that power it are trading at a discount to those exposed to Gemini and its chips for the first time since 2016, according to a recent Wells Fargo analysis. 

“I see a lot of untapped demand and penetration across industries, and that will ultimately underpin growth,” said Kieran Osborne, chief investment officer at Mission Wealth, which has about $13 billion in assets under management. “Monetization is the end goal for these companies, and so long as they work toward that, that will underpin the investment case.”

Stephan Steverink Clocks 7:55.84 in 800m as Minas Tênis Clube Emerges Victorious at Brazil Open

0

By Will Baxley on SwimSwam

2025 Brazil Open

The first Brazil Open in eight years has wrapped up, leaving Belo Horizonte’s Minas Tênis Clube as the meet and season champions in both the junior and the senior category.

The premiere swim club of Brazil’s biggest closed off a dominant 2025 with the year’s biggest win. Minas Tênis Clube had also previously won the Maria Lenk trophy in April and José Finkel in November. Rio de Janeiro-based Flamengo ended the season in second place. SESI of Rio Grande do Norte rounded out the season’s top three.

Though the Minas Gerais team had the most depth, meet host Flamengo boasted the top male and female performers in Stephan Steverink and Gabrielle Assis

Steverink, who won six golds at the Junior Pan American games, closed his year out on top. The 21-year-old mid-d powerhouse claimed the 800 free final in 7:55.84. This is Steverink’s second fastest mark ever in the event, trailing only the 7:54.49 he won Junior Pan-Ams with. The Brazilian/Dutch dual national enters 2026 only a hair out of the world’s top ten in the event. He had previously won silver in a trio of 3:47 400 freestyles at the start of the meet.

 

2025-2026 LCM Men 800 FREE

Zhang CHN
Zhanshuo

11/13
7:46.69
2 Luka
Mijatovic
USA 7:48.28 12/06
3 Benjamin
Goedemans
AUS 7:48.44 11/30
4 KAZUSHI
IMAFUKU
JPN 7:49.53 11/30
5 Fei
Liwei
CHN 7:51.42 11/13
6 Ilia
Sibirtsev
UZB 7:51.85 12/06
7 Liu
Peixin
CHN 7:53.00 11/13
8 Luke
Whitlock
USA 7:54.66 12/06
9 Carson
Foster
USA 7:55.51 12/06
10 KAITO
TABUCHI
JPN 7:55.80 11/30
11 Li
Chengyu
CHN 7:56.55 11/13

View Top 26»

Steverink stood alongside his Flamengo team mate Assis as the male and female senior high point winners. After her day 1 2:26.76 200 breast victory, the 26-year-old stepped on to the podium twice more with a 32.27 50 breast bronze and 1:09.56 100 breast gold.

Junior high point awards went to Joice Otero (Flamengo), Davi Valim (Minas TC), Mariana Oliveira (Minas TC), and Artur Macedo Teixeiro (Flamengo).

Three new championship records arose from the 2025 iteration of this meet: Steverink’s 800, Asiss’ 200 breast, and Eduardo Moraes’ 3:47.31 400 free.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Stephan Steverink Posts 7:55.84 800 As Minas Tênis Clube Wins Brazil Open

The SPHYDA Project: Enhancing the Stealth of Robotic Submarines

0

Robotic submarines are poised to become a major addition to the fleets of the world’s major navies and as the technology matures more attention is being paid by the likes of the European Defence Agency (EDA) to making them quieter and stealthier.

If you look at policy proposals that will shape what future navies will look like, they are a far cry from the old days of battleships and vast numbers of patrolling frigates. The Royal Navy’s Atlantic Bastion plan, for example, aims at monitoring the security of the North Atlantic with eight Type 26 frigates commanding a much larger fleet of autonomous underwater vehicles (AUV).

That requires some pretty heavy technology. Not only do you need to build robotic submarines that can operate for months without human supervision, you need some sophisticated artificial intelligence systems as well. Then you have the same problem that every naval submarine engineer has had since the Turtle took to sea during the American Revolution – how to make the sub stealthy enough to keep the hunter from becoming the hunted.

And stealth for a submarine means quiet. The goal is to make a boat that is so silent that it can cruise undetected or sit and wait in ambush like a barracuda.

That’s the goal of the EDA’s €4.8-million (US$5.6-million) Submarine Hull/Rudder/Propeller Hydrodynamics Interaction and Hydroacoustics (SPHYDA) project. This four-year endeavor will look at how to reduce the acoustic noise of robotic submarines, both to protect them from hostile forces and to protect sea life from them.

SPHYDA is working on modeling submarine noise

EDA

Part of the project concentrates on studying how noises are generated by the robotic sub. These can be caused by the flow of water over the hull and control surfaces, the propulsion system, machinery inside the craft, and even the flow of water through pipes. By gathering detailed information about these in regard to UAVs, it will be possible to build digital models to better predict and control these effects.

The other side of the sopping wet coin is how to counter these noises. The good news is that engineers have been working on this problem for over a century. The bad news is that it’s been an arms race between more stealth and better sonar, which is why you should never buy a secondhand Cold War Russian submarine. You can almost hear them through the bottom of a rowboat.

One of the most complex problems is dealing with hydrodynamic noise. That is, the interaction of hull, rudders, and propellers, which is extremely complicated and requires advanced numerical models. Propulsion systems are the worst because they not only generate turbulence but cavitation, which is tiny vacuum bubbles that collapse with an extremely loud pop. This can be countered with skewed propeller blades to distribute pressure evenly, pump jets where a rotor is set inside a shroud to muffle noises, or low-RPM, high-torque designs to cut down on vibrations. Or you can go for more exotic designs like robotic subs that use changes in buoyancy by shifting oil between a set of bladders to move forward by rising and sinking.

Robotic submarines like this one from the Royal Navy need to be quieter and stealthier
Robotic submarines like this one from the Royal Navy need to be quieter and stealthier

Crown Copyright

Meanwhile, machinery noises can be dealt with by setting equipment on pallets separated from the hull by rubber mounts. Both listening and active sonar can be foiled by coating the boat with rubber tiles, which absorb noise coming from inside the hull and soak up sonar beams striking the vessel. Another machinery noise reducer involves cutting out the gurgling of flowing liquids by using special pipes that send the fluids on a tortuous path that minimizes turbulence.

Then there’s optimizing the hull design to cut down on drag and turbulence. This has been the mainstay of stealth since the Second World War and has advanced to the state where it’s often difficult to tell one generation of submarines from another. However, there’s always room for improvement, so SPHYDA wants to find ways to integrate hull, rudder, and propulsion into a single, smooth shape.

Currently, the project is focusing on models, but the next stages will go on to tank testing followed by sea trials.

“SPHYDA is a crucial step toward developing the capability to diagnose and predict the complex hydrodynamic mechanisms responsible for the generation and propagation of noise from underwater vehicles in real operating conditions,” said Riccardo Broglia, Research Director at the Institute of Marine Engineering of the Italian National Research Council, the project manager.

Source: EDA

Trump condemns Henry Cuellar for not changing party affiliation following pardon

0

Donald Trump has slammed Democrat Henry Cuellar’s “lack of loyalty” for not defecting to the Republican party after he was pardoned by the US president.

In issuing his pardon on Wednesday, Trump said the Texas representative – who was charged last year with bribery and money laundering – had been politically targeted by the Biden administration after he “bravely spoke out against Open Borders”.

Hours after he was pardoned, Cuellar filed for re-election as a Democrat, dashing Republicans’ hope that he might switch parties and pad their narrow majority in the House of Representatives.

“Such a lack of LOYALTY,” Trump wrote of Cuellar on social media. “Oh’ well, next time, no more Mr. Nice guy!”

The Justice Department, under the Biden administration, charged that Cuellar and his wife had accepted $600,000 (£450,600) from Azerbaijan’s state-owned oil company and an unnamed Mexican bank in exchange for advancing their interests in Congress.

The couple, who have maintained their innocence, were charged with 14 counts in 2024, including conspiracy, bribery, wire fraud, money laundering and violating a ban on acting as agents of a foreign organisation.

In his Sunday social media post, Trump accused “radical left” Democrats of “mercilessly” going after Cuellar – who is a moderate Democrat – in an “evil quest” to “destroy” him and his family “all because Henry strongly wanted, correctly, BORDER SECURITY!”

Trump said in the lengthy post that he had never spoken to the congressman or his family but “felt very good about fighting” for his family because they were “treated sooo BADLY!”

Trump added that despite his pardon, Cuellar decided to run again as a Democrat, “continuing to work with the same Radical Left Scum that just weeks before wanted him and his wife to spend the rest of their lives in Prison – And probably still do!”

And that “lack of loyalty”, Trump wrote, would not sit well with Texas voters or with Cuellar’s daughters, who had written a letter to the president urging him to pardon their parents.

Still, Cuellar doubled down on his intentions to remain in the Democratic party, telling Fox News on Sunday: “I’m an American, I’m a Texan and I’m a Democrat – in that order.”

When asked to respond to Trump’s social media post, Cuellar said: “I am a conservative Democrat, but I will work with the president.”

Cuellar added that Trump was on his mind while he attended church on Sunday morning.

“I prayed for the president,” he said. “I prayed for his family, and I prayed for the presidency because if the president succeeds, the country succeeds.”

Trump’s attack on Cuellar is the latest example of the president expecting loyalty from those he helps.

A group of federal labour unions filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration last month over what they called a “loyalty question” included in thousands of federal job applications. The question asks applicants to identify Trump policy initiatives that are significant to them, and to describe how they personally would advance Trump’s agenda.

Trump has long that said loyalty is the most important thing to him.

“I value loyalty above everything else – more than brains, more than drive, and more than energy,” he once said.

Challenging Client

0



Client Challenge



JavaScript is disabled in your browser.

Please enable JavaScript to proceed.

A required part of this site couldn’t load. This may be due to a browser
extension, network issues, or browser settings. Please check your
connection, disable any ad blockers, or try using a different browser.