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Six people killed and dozens wounded in extensive overnight Russian assault on Ukraine

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Vast Russian overnight attack on Ukraine kills six, wounds dozens

Pope Leo makes historic visit to Blue Mosque in Istanbul, Turkey | Religious News

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The pope is visiting Turkiye until Sunday on his first overseas trip as pontiff, which also includes a visit to Lebanon.

Pope Leo XIV has visited Istanbul’s famed Blue Mosque on the third day of his trip to Turkiye, his first known visit as leader of the Catholic Church to a Muslim place of worship.

The first US pope bowed slightly before entering the mosque early on Saturday and was led on a tour of the expansive complex, able to hold 10,000 worshippers, by its imam and the mufti of Istanbul.

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Leo, walking in white socks, smiled during the 20-minute visit and joked with one of his guides, the mosque’s lead muezzin – the official who leads the daily calls to prayer.

“He wanted to see the mosque, he wanted to feel the atmosphere of the mosque, and he was very pleased,” Askin Tunca, the Blue Mosque’s muezzin who calls the faithful to prayer, told reporters.

Pope Leo XIV visits the Sultan Ahmed Mosque (Blue Mosque), in Istanbul on November 29, 2025 [AFP]

Tunca said after the mosque visit that he asked Leo during the tour if he wished to pray for a moment, but the pope said he preferred to just visit the mosque.

The Vatican said in a statement immediately after the visit that Leo undertook the tour “in a spirit of reflection and listening, with deep respect for the place and for the faith of those who gather there in prayer”.

While Leo did not appear to pray during the tour, he did joke with Tunca. As the group was leaving the building, the pope noticed he was being guided out a door that is usually an entryway, where a sign says: “No exit.”

“It says no exit,” Leo said, smiling. Tunca responded: “You don’t have to go out, you can stay here.”

The pope is visiting Turkiye until Sunday on his first overseas trip as pontiff, which also includes a visit to Lebanon.

Leo, a relative unknown on the world stage before becoming pope in May, is being closely watched as he makes his first speeches overseas and interacts for the first time with people outside mainly Catholic Italy.

The Blue Mosque is officially named for Sultan Ahmed I, leader of the Ottoman Empire from 1603 to 1617, who oversaw its construction. It is decorated with thousands of blue ceramic tiles, the basis of its popular name.

Unlike his predecessors, Leo did not visit the nearby Hagia Sophia, the legendary sixth-century basilica built during the Byzantine Empire, which was converted into a mosque under the Ottoman Empire, then became a museum under Turkiye’s newly established republic.

But in 2020, the UNESCO World Heritage site was converted back into a mosque in a move that drew international condemnation, including from the late Pope Francis who said he was “very saddened”.

According to a Wall Street strategist, the true poverty line should be $140,000

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The affordability crisis rippling through American politics saw voters dump Democrats for another Donald Trump presidency last year, while this year saw a democratic socialist elected as mayor of New York City.

That’s despite economic data showing cooler inflation, steady income gains, and resilient consumer spending.

But according to Michael Green, chief strategist and portfolio manager for Simplify Asset Management, conventional gauges don’t capture how much Americans are struggling with the cost of living, even households earning six figures.

In a viral Substack post last week, he took particular aim at the federal government’s poverty line, which traces back to the early 1960s and was calculated by tripling the cost of a minimum food diet at the time.

“But everything changed between 1963 and 2024,” Green wrote. “Housing costs exploded. Healthcare became the largest household expense for many families. Employer coverage shrank while deductibles grew. Childcare became a market, and that market became ruinously expensive. College went from affordable to crippling. Transportation costs rose as cities sprawled and public transit withered under government neglect.”

Meanwhile, a two-income household is now needed to maintain what one income once provided, but that incurs childcare costs and the need for two cars.

As a result, the poverty line’s narrow focus on food leaves out how much other expenses are now sucking up incomes and lowballing the minimum amount Americans need to get by.

Green estimated that food comprises just 5%-7% of household spending, but put housing at 35%-45%, childcare at 20%-40%, and healthcare at 15%-25%.

“If the crisis threshold—the floor below which families cannot function—is honestly updated to current spending patterns, it lands at $140,000,” he added. “What does that tell you about the $31,200 line we still use? It tells you we are measuring starvation.”

‘The Valley of Death’

At the same time, Americans who are below Green’s version of the poverty threshold are still falling behind, even as they climb the income ladder.

That sets up a perverse disincentive as the poorest, by contrast, aren’t penalized with mounting burdens when support is taken away.

“Our entire safety net is designed to catch people at the very bottom, but it sets a trap for anyone trying to climb out,” he explained. “As income rises from $40,000 to $100,000, benefits disappear faster than wages increase. I call this The Valley of Death.”

Lockdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic offered a respite for many families because working parents didn’t pay for childcare or gas to commute while working from home. Stimulus checks also added to their incomes.

But after the economy reopened, those costs came back and inflation surged. And while it has come down drastically since 2022, overall price levels didn’t come down and remain high.

“This mathematical valley explains the rage we see in the American electorate, specifically the animosity the ‘working poor’ (the middle class) feel toward the ‘actual poor’ and immigrants,” Green said.

The anger doesn’t stem from racism or lack of empathy, he added. Instead, it’s more about resentment at the government.

“When you are drowning, and you see the lifeguard throw a life vest to the person treading water next to you—a person who isn’t swimming as hard as you are—you don’t feel happiness for them,” he said. “You feel a homicidal rage at the lifeguard. We have created a system where the only way to survive is to be destitute enough to qualify for aid, or rich enough to ignore the cost. Everyone in the middle is being cannibalized.”

Life is expensive

To be sure, Green acknowledged his calculations are based on costs in suburban New Jersey. His threshold is also above the median household income for a family of four in 37 states, according to the Washington Post.

But Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Living Wage Calculator and the Economic Policy Institute have also put family expenses in some states at more than $100,000 a year.

Meanwhile, financial strains from the higher cost of living also help explain why discount retailers like Walmart have reported seeing more upper-income customers shopping at their stores.

In Green’s view, the point is that food is relatively affordable, notwithstanding higher grocery prices lately. Life overall is what’s expensive.

“The real poverty line—the threshold where a family can afford housing, healthcare, childcare, and transportation without relying on means-tested benefits—isn’t $31,200. It’s ~$140,000,” he wrote.

His Substack post also echoed a recent survey from the Harris Poll that showed many Americans earning six figures, even $200,000 a year, are privately struggling.

Among the findings was that 64% of six-figure earners said their income isn’t a milestone for success but merely the bare minimum for staying afloat.

“Our data shows that even high earners are financially anxious—they’re living the illusion of affluence while privately juggling credit cards, debt, and survival strategies,” Libby Rodney, the Harris Poll’s chief strategy officer and futurist, said in a statement.

600 people dead due to flooding in South East Asia

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Getty Images A rescue team evacuates women and children in a rubber boat, in West Sumatra, IndonesiaGetty Images

Search and rescue operations are ongoing across Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia and Sri Lanka, with hundreds still missing

Torrential rains have triggered floods and landslides across parts of southern Asia, killing about 600 people.

Monsoon rain exacerbated by tropical storms caused some of the region’s worst flooding in years, with millions affected in Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Sri Lanka.

Intense rainfall began on the Indonesian island of Sumatra on Wednesday. “During the flood, everything was gone,” a resident of Bireuen in Sumatra’s Aceh province told Reuters news agency. “I wanted to save my clothes, but my house came down.”

With hundreds still missing, the death toll is likely to rise. Thousands remain stranded, some awaiting rescue on rooftops.

As of Saturday more than 300 people had died in Indonesia and 160 in Thailand. There were also several deaths reported in Malaysia.

In Sri Lanka, which has been battered by Cyclone Ditwah, more than 130 people are dead and some 170 missing, officials said.

Getty Images A man sits by the side of a body of moving water on a road on Batipuh Village, West Sumatra, Indonesia, with homes submergedGetty Images

In Indonesia hundreds are still missing after heavy rains wreaked havoc on the island of Sumatra

An exceptionally rare tropical cyclone, named Cyclone Senyar, caused catastrophic landslides and flooding in Indonesia, with homes swept away and thousands of buildings submerged.

Indonesia’s disaster agency said on Saturday that nearly 300 people were still missing after flooding devastated Sumatra.

“The current was very fast, in a matter of seconds it reached the streets, entered the houses,” a resident in Aceh Province, Arini Amalia, told the BBC.

She and her grandmother raced to a relative’s house on higher terrain. On returning the following day to retrieve some belongings, she said the flood had completely swallowed the house: “It’s already sunk.”

After waters rapidly rose in West Sumatra and submerged his home, Meri Osman said he was “swept away by the current” and clung onto a clothesline until he was rescued.

The bad weather has hampered rescue operations, and while tens of thousands of people have been evacuated, hundreds are still stranded, the Indonesian disaster agency said.

Getty Images A man transports a woman on an orange plastic board through flood waters in Hat Yai in Thailand's southern Songkhla provinceGetty Images

Tens of thousands of people have taken refuge in shelters in Thailand

In Thailand’s southern Songkhla province, water rose 3m (10ft) and at least 145 people died in one of the worst floods in a decade.

Across the 10 provinces hit by flooding, more than 160 people have been killed, the government said on Saturday. More than 3.8 million people have been affected.

The city of Hat Yai experienced 335mm of rainfall in a single day, the heaviest in 300 years. As waters receded, officials recorded a sharp rise in the death toll.

At one hospital in Hat Yai, employees were forced to move bodies to refrigerated trucks after the morgue became overwhelmed, news agency AFP reported.

“We were stuck in the water for seven days and no agency came to help,” Hat Yai resident Thanita Khiawhom told BBC Thai.

The government has promised relief measures, including compensation of up to two million baht ($62,000) for households that lost family members.

Getty Images People wade through a flooded road, a man and a woman holding cats in their arms, after heavy rainfall in Wellampitiya on the outskirts of Colombo, Sri LankaGetty Images

Sri Lanka’s government has declared a state of emergency and appealed for international assistance

In neighbouring Malaysia, the death toll is far lower, but the damage is just as devastating.

Flooding has wreaked havoc and left parts of northern Perlis state under water, with two people dead and tens of thousands forced into shelters.

Sri Lanka is also grappling with one of its worst weather disasters in recent years, and the government has declared a state of emergency.

More than 15,000 homes have been destroyed and some 78,000 people forced into temporary shelters, officials said. They added that about a third of the country was without electricity or running water.

Meteorologists have said the extreme weather in South East Asia may have been caused by the interaction of Typhoon Koto in the Philippines and the rare formation of Cyclone Senyar in the Malacca Strait.

The region’s annual monsoon season, typically between June and September, often brings heavy rain.

Climate change has altered storm patterns, including the intensity and duration of the season, resulting in heavier rainfall, flash flooding and stronger winds.

Reporting setlists is not a mere add-on, but a crucial component of the live music industry.

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MBW Views is a series of op-eds from eminent music industry people… with something to say. The following MBW op/ed comes from Crispin Hunt, President of the PRS Members’ Council.


With summer and the festival season now drawn to a close, we have once again seen that the appetite for live music is greater than ever.

The LIVE Annual Report, using our setlist data, shows there was one gig every 137 seconds across the UK in 2024.

In the same year, PRS for Music paid out 20% more in live royalties, the strongest growth we’ve seen in years, led mostly by large stadium and arena tours. A massive £68.5m was paid to more than 39,000 songwriters whose works were performed live.

We’re hugely proud of this. We want to ensure that every creator is being paid their royalties as quickly and as accurately as possible, reinforcing our long-term commitment to greater transparency.

But we know there is also an opportunity to do more. There are still unclaimed royalties that we need to get to the songwriters who have earned them. Some are still waiting on royalties not because the performances didn’t happen, or because the music wasn’t loved by an audience, but because the most basic step in the process was never completed: too many setlists are simply not being submitted.

I’ve spent enough time in this business to know that paperwork is never seen as the glamorous part of music. The magic happens on stage, in the studio, and in the moments where a song connects with someone for the first time. But the reality is this: every setlist is a financial record. It is the mechanism that turns a live performance into a royalty payment.

We have a duty to provide the education and the tools to make setlist reporting easy, that’s why we’ve created AI tools that automatically turn photos of handwritten setlists – which are a common submission – into readable text.

That’s why we communicate to members time and time again, reminding them of distribution dates and encouraging them to submit their information.

However, here’s the point I want to say plainly and publicly: the responsibility for sourcing this missing element cannot sit with PRS or its members alone.

“I’ve spent enough time in this business to know that paperwork is not the glamorous part.”

There needs to be a culture shift. While the obligation to report setlists ultimately lies with venues and festivals, promoters, managers, agents and the artists themselves all have their part to play in ensuring the accuracy of these setlists.

The same professionalism that ensures the lights go up on time, the sound is checked, the box office is reconciled, and the crew are paid should extend to making sure the setlist is submitted. If the soundcheck is non-negotiable, submitting the setlist should be too.

There’s a persistent myth in some corners of the industry that PRS withholds money – that if a setlist goes missing, the royalties just sit somewhere unclaimed. Let’s be clear: all Tariff LP (Live Performance) royalties are paid out. PRS does not withhold money from songwriters and performers.

Here’s how it works: PRS collects licence fees from venues and promoters under the Tariff LP for the performance of music at concerts and festivals. We pay out that money to PRS members and rights-holders four times a year, based on the performance data we have.

If a setlist has been submitted for a show, we know exactly what was played and can allocate royalties directly to the right songwriters and their publishers. If you ask some artists, they’ll know that sometimes it’s even members of the PRS team, running around venues and festivals collecting setlists themselves.

If no setlist is submitted, we can’t include that performance in the allocation – we don’t know who to pay because we don’t know what music was played. Any unallocated revenue is paid out every year, proportionately, to the creators whose works were reported from other live performances that year.

If your performance data (setlist) isn’t submitted, you won’t see your royalty share this time around. The good news is that under Tariff LP, you have three years to submit a setlist for a past performance (seven years for classical music). So, if you realise you’ve missed out, there’s still time to put it right and get paid.

At PRS, we’ve invested heavily in making the process as seamless as possible. You can file a setlist from your phone backstage or from your laptop over breakfast the next morning. We’ve embedded the tools into member portals, improved the user experience, and made the reporting process quicker.

Our next few months will be dedicated to launching more educational initiatives, partnering with promoters to prompt submissions at the right moment and taking the message to venues, conferences and rehearsal rooms. But technology and education will only get us so far if we don’t also change the culture.

That cultural change starts with recognising that setlist reporting isn’t an optional extra – it’s a fundamental part of the live music economy. If you care about creators being paid, it should be as much a part of your routine as loading in your gear.

And for the industry, it should be built into every contract, every promoter agreement, every standard operating procedure. Our live tariffs even offer incentives for those who provide setlists. The truth is, we can’t pay what we can’t see.

I’ve seen first-hand the difference it makes when the system works. There’s the emerging songwriter who played a handful of support slots at small theatres and received a live performance royalty payment that helped invest in their next work or went towards the costs to hire a studio.

“What we need is the will to embed setlist reporting into the DNA of live music.”

There’s the veteran writer who co-wrote a track a decade ago and still receives payments because younger artists are covering the song on tour. Every single one of those performances was captured in a setlist. These aren’t abstract transactions; they’re moments where the system proves its worth, where the rights of creators are respected in a tangible way.

I’ve also seen the flipside: the performance that’s never recorded, the missing setlist that means the money hasn’t flowed through yet. This is where the mistrust starts to creep in. When people don’t understand why they haven’t been paid, myths fill the gaps and confidence in the system is undermined. We must tackle that head-on, with facts, transparency, and a collective, industry-wide commitment to
do better.  

It’s time to reframe the conversation. Live royalties are not a mysterious process that happens behind closed doors, delivered by bots. They’re the result of a chain of actions, from the writing, then performance of a work, the licensing of the venue and prompt payment of the invoice, to the setlist submission and the payment of royalties to the songwriters. Every link in that chain matters. 

The solution lies in shared responsibility. Promoters should make setlist submission a standard part of their settlement process. Venues should provide a clear and easy way for performers to submit before they leave the building. And artists, whether playing The O2 arena or the back room of a pub, must see providing  the venue with a setlist as part of their professional practice.  

The live music sector is one of the most collaborative parts of our industry – it works because everyone pulls in the same direction to make the show happen.

Paying songwriters for that performance should be no different, and our collective priority should be making sure the people who create the music that fills our venues are recognised and rewarded.  

What we need is the will to embed setlist reporting into the DNA of live music. Live music is a collective triumph and paying the people whose songs the audience come to sing along to should be celebrated too.

The gap between the two is smaller than you might think — sometimes, it’s as small as a single unfiled setlist. Let’s build a live music economy that works for everyone.


This article originally appeared in the latest (Q3 2025) issue of MBW’s premium quarterly publication, Music Business UK, which is out now.

MBUK is available as part of a MBW+ subscription – details through here.

All physical subscribers will receive a complimentary digital edition with each issue.Music Business Worldwide

He Must Brave the Flames

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LeBron Details His Son’s Development

With the Los Angeles Lakers battling injuries, Bronny James has earned more opportunities to show growth early in his NBA career. On the latest episode of Mind the Game, Steve Nash asked LeBron James how he views Bronny’s development so far.

“It’s been great,” LeBron said. “Not only as a father, but just as a student of the game. To see someone kind of use what he was able to do last year in the G-League, use that, get more comfortable, then go into summer league and be even more comfortable. And when his time has been called this year, just continue to feel good about it.”

LeBron emphasized that young players improve most by gaining consistent minutes. “You get better with the speed, you get better with the strength, you get better with everything,” he said.

Proud Moments on the Court

LeBron highlighted a recent back-to-back stretch as a key milestone for Bronny. Against the Portland Trail Blazers on Nov. 3, Bronny scored five points and tied a career-high with six assists.

“I was just super proud of him,” LeBron said. “To not only play well at home and then have a back-to-back in a tough environment in Portland and then do it again. That’s what the NBA is all about.”

Bronny JamesBronny James
Mar 19, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Bronny James (9) inbound the ball in the second half against the Denver Nuggets at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

Balancing Fatherhood and Leadership

Nash asked how LeBron balances being a teammate and a parent. James admitted that the line is “fine,” but clear.

“When we’re in practice and in games … it’s the leadership,” he said. “We have our side time where I can tell him about what I’ve seen. But I just want him to—he has to walk his own journey.”

LeBron added that real experience will shape Bronny’s growth. “I want him to walk through the fire as well. It’s going to be the best teacher for him.”

Opportunity Ahead vs. Mavericks

Bronny’s season averages—1.9 points and 1.7 assists in 11 games—are modest, yet his impact has come through defensive energy and steady ball movement. With Marcus Smart doubtful due to back spasms and guard depth thin, Bronny may see meaningful minutes in tonight’s matchup against the Dallas Mavericks.

As LeBron noted, Bronny’s dedication stands out. “He loves the work,” James said. That commitment may give the rookie another chance to prove himself on a big stage.

What Volcanic Bubbles Reveal About the Future of Coral Reefs

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On a remote coral reef near Papua New Guinea, endless streams of bubbles rise from cracks in the seabed into the shallow water, fed by an underground volcanic system. For scientists, this natural phenomenon has become a kind of crystal ball, revealing how our changing oceans will shape the marine life within them.

A team led by researchers from the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) has found that these volcanic bubbles – made up of almost pure carbon dioxide (CO2) – create a kind of localized change in the environment, due to the increased acidification of the water.

As the gas rises, it forms visible streams of bubbles, which dissolve into the surrounding seawater and change its chemistry. And because this is occurring near coral reefs in Papua New Guinea’s Milne Bay, the scientists are able to see what elevated CO2 in the water does to the ocean life exposed to it. Essentially, it’s a living, natural model that can’t be replicated in the lab.

Scientists find that in areas of high CO2 concentration, only certain corals were doing well

Katharina Fabricius/Australian Institute of Marine Science

“These unique natural laboratories are like a time machine,” said senior author Dr Katharina Fabricius, a coral ecologist at AIMS. “The CO2 seeps have allowed us to study the reefs’ tolerance limits and make predictions. How will coral reefs cope if emissions align with Paris Agreement targets? And what happens if they don’t?”

Fabricius first encountered the volcanic bubbles streaming up through the coral gardens there in 2000, when she was conducting a diversity survey. Many years later, she returned with a team of scientists to analyze the gas – which was then identified as almost pure CO2. This was the start of a decade of research looking at how tropical marine ecosystems adapt – or fail to adjust – to increasingly acidic environments.

They established 37 stations across this gradient – from bubble-free areas that reflect today’s ocean chemistry to heavily bubbling patches that mimic conditions expected later this century. What makes the site so valuable is that nothing else changes – temperatures, currents, light and salinity stay the same – so the researchers could look a the effects of acidification on its own.

Instrument used around volcanic seeps to measure pH
Instrument used around volcanic seeps to measure pH

Katharina Fabricius/Australian Institute of Marine Science

At each station, they measured how friendly the water was to calcium carbonate formation – the material that corals and some algae use to build their skeletal structures. They also photographed the seafloor, counted juvenile corals, assessed habitat structure and collected algae to weigh and identify. All of this allowed them to build a continuous picture of how reef life changes as the water becomes less favourable to building and maintaining skeletons.

What they found wasn’t what some people predict – a sudden tipping point where life ceases to exist after a certain concentration of CO2 in the water is reached. Instead, they observed a steady, progressive reshaping of the reef’s coral community – and a change that was evident even when there were only slightly elevated levels of CO2 in surrounding water.

The first signs of change appeared with only small drops in pH, within the range already recorded on many reefs around the world. Diversity of both adult and juvenile hard corals dropped quickly, and the most sensitive species – the branching and plate-like corals, which form much of the shelter for fish and invertebrates – were hardest hit. These began to disappear after only modest declines in pH and were almost completely absent in the most acidified zones.

Meanwhile, one group of corals – the large, round stony Porites species – showed surprising resilience, but this in turn masked the actual decline in coral cover, giving the false impression that the community was holding up better than it was. When scientists excluded these corals, the scene was grim.

“These Papua New Guinea reefs are telling us that with every bit of increase in CO2, we will see fewer corals and more fleshy algae,” said first author Dr. Sam Noonan from AIMS. “Importantly, we also found far fewer baby corals, which means reefs won’t be able to grow and recover quickly. That has implications for all the species that depend on them, including humans. Many coastal communities depend on fish that start their lives using coral reefs for shelter and food.”

High structural complexity, abundant branching and soft corals, and many small young corals are seen furthest from the CO2 seeps
High structural complexity, abundant branching and soft corals, and many small young corals are seen furthest from the CO2 seeps

Katharina Fabricius/Australian Institute of Marine Science

The algae that help cement and build reef framework also declined rapidly as CO2 increased and eventually disappeared altogether. These algae normally help baby corals settle and grow, so their loss compounds the decline. Non-calcareous algae expanded as water became more acidic, with brown and red algae spread across the seafloor, enjoying the space and reduced competition. Sponges also increased in abundance. Overall, the reef shifted from a complex, coral-built environment toward a simpler, flatter, more algae-dominated space.

If reefs are the rainforests of the ocean, CO2 essentially turns a lush, diverse landscape into an open grassland – which is also bad news for an estimated 25% of the world’s fish that rely on corals for shelter, mating, rearing young and finding food.

“By studying organisms at 37 sites along a 500-meter (1,640-ft) gradient of CO2 exposure, we were able to see what happens as CO2 increases,” said Fabricius. “There was no sudden collapse or tipping point, instead, as the CO2 increased, we saw fleshy algae became dominant, replacing and smothering coral and calciferous algae.”

The research is important for predicting how reefs around the world will change as ocean acidification increases this century and beyond. While coral bleaching – which is due to water temperature rises – has been well documented, there’s less data on what acidification is doing to these vulnerable species and how those changes will then impact reef-dependent fish and invertebrates.

“We have observed coral reefs starting to change in response to CO2 gradients in the Great Barrier Reef,” Fabricius said. “The Papua New Guinea reefs tell us what will happen next. The more CO2 we emit into the atmosphere, the greater the changes will be to coral reefs and the coastal communities which depend on them. This is on top of the impact of global warming and sea level rise.

“Ocean acidification is a massive global problem, which has been understudied and underreported to date,” she added. “This research is a first of its kind, presenting unique field data and allowing us to assess how whole communities change in the real world.”

The research was published in the journal Communications Biology.

Source: Australian Institute of Marine Science

Three killed in Russian airstrikes on Kyiv as Ukrainian diplomats head to US for negotiations | Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine conflict

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Two people were killed in the strikes on the capital, and a woman died in a combined missile and drone attack on the broader Kyiv region, officials said.

Russian drone and missile strikes in and around Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, have killed at least three people and wounded dozens of others, officials said, as Ukrainian representatives travelled to the United States for talks on a renewed push to end the war.

“Russia shot dozens of cruise and ballistic missiles and over 500 drones at ordinary homes, the energy grid, and critical infrastructure,” Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha wrote on X on Saturday.

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“While everyone is discussing points of peace plans, Russia continues to pursue its ‘war plan’ of two points: to kill and destroy,” he added.

The Kyiv City Military Administration said two people were killed in the strikes on the capital in Kyiv. A woman died, and eight people were wounded in a combined missile and drone attack on the broader Kyiv region, according to the regional police.

Vehicles burn after being damaged during a Russian missile and drone attack on Kyiv, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, November 29, 2025 [Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters]

Mayor Vitali Klitschko said 29 people were wounded in Kyiv, noting that falling debris from intercepted Russian drones hit residential buildings. He also said the western part of Kyiv had lost power.

Kyiv’s military administration head, Tymur Tkachenko, said in a social media post that a 42-year-old man was killed by a drone, while the man’s 10-year-old son was taken to hospital with “burns and other injuries”.

“The world should know that Russia is targeting entire families,” Tkachenko said, adding that the son was the only child recorded among the injured so far.

Following the attacks on Kyiv, EU Ambassador Katarina Mathernova cast doubt on Russia’s stated interest in a peace deal.

“While the world discusses a possible peace deal. Moscow answers with missiles, not diplomacy,” Mathernova said in a post on X.

Ukraine team heads to US

On the diplomatic front, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that his negotiators had left for Washington to seek a “dignified peace” and a rapid end to the war begun by Russia in 2022.

Zelenskyy is under growing pressure from Washington to agree to a US proposal to end the war that critics say heavily favours Moscow.

The Ukrainian team is being led by former defence chief Rustem Umerov, following the resignation on Friday of his chief of staff Andriy Yermak amid a corruption probe.

“The task is clear: to swiftly and substantively work out the steps needed to end the war,” he posted on X.

“Ukraine continues to work with the United States in the most constructive way possible, and we expect that the results of the meetings in Geneva will now be hammered out in the United States.”

At Kyiv’s insistence, US President Donald Trump’s initial 28-point plan to end the war was revised during talks in Geneva with European and US officials. However, many contentious issues remain unresolved.

Black Sea attacks

Separately on Saturday, an official from the SBU security service said that Ukraine had hit two tankers used by Russia to export oil while skirting Western sanctions with marine drones in the Black Sea.

The joint operation to hit the so-called “shadow fleet” vessels was run by the SBU and Ukraine’s navy, the official told the Reuters news agency on condition of anonymity.

Turkish authorities have said that blasts rocked two shadow fleet tankers near Turkiye’s Bosphorus Strait on Friday, causing fires on the vessels, and rescue operations were launched for those on board.

This video grab taken from images released by the Security service of Ukraine (SBU) on November 29, 2025, shows smoke rising from a cargo ship on fire in the Black Sea off the Turkish coast, amid the ongoing Russian-Ukrainian conflict.
This video grab taken from images released by the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) shows smoke rising from a cargo ship on fire in the Black Sea off the Turkish coast, amid the ongoing Russian-Ukrainian conflict [AFP]

The SBU official said both tankers – identified as the Kairos and Virat – were empty and on their way to the port of Novorossiysk, a major Russian oil terminal.

“Video [footage] shows that after being hit, both tankers sustained critical damage and were effectively taken out of service. This will deal a significant blow to Russian oil transportation,” the official said. They did not say when the strikes took place.

Ukraine has consistently called for tougher international measures for Russia’s “shadow fleet”, which it says is helping Moscow export vast quantities of oil and fund its war in Ukraine despite Western sanctions.

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Hong Kong apartment fire prompts three days of mourning

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Hong Kong officials mark beginning of official mourning period with moment of silence

Hong Kong officials have held a moment of silence at the start of a three-day mourning period to remember those killed after the city’s deadliest fire in nearly 80 years.

At least 128 people are now known to have died in the fire, which engulfed seven tower blocks on Wednesday. A further 83 were injured and 150 remain unaccounted for.

Eight people have been arrested on suspicion of corruption over the renovation works the blocks had been undergoing. Three others were detained earlier on manslaughter charges.

The cause of the fire has yet to be determined, but officials have said it spread up and between the blocks rapidly because of flammable materials placed on their exterior.

Saturday morning’s ceremony was held outside government headquarters, and saw city leader John Lee joined by other Hong Kong officials to observe three minutes of silence.

The flags of China and Hong Kong were flown at half mast.

The government has also set up memorial points across the city, where the public can pay their respects and sign condolence books.

Once the fire started, it spread quickly to seven of the eight towers in Wang Fuk Court, in Hong Kong’s northerly suburban Tai Po distric.

It then took more than 2,000 firefighters almost two days to bring the blaze under control.

The cause of the fire remains unclear, though authorities have said that polystyrene placed on the outside of the windows and plastic netting around the scaffolding on the buildings facilitated its spread.

The tower blocks were also covered in bamboo scaffolding, which is commonly used for construction and renovation work in Hong Kong. The fire has sparked a debate on whether it should still be used.

Reuters A student places a flower bouquet at the scene after a deadly fire at the Wang Fuk Court housing complex.Reuters

Officials have confirmed that an investigation will be taking place over the next few weeks, with police already gathering evidence from the scene.

The fire has caused anger throughout Hong Kong – which is known for its high-rise buildings – as questions about who should be held accountable grow.

Residents of Wang Fuk Court have reported broken fire alarms and negligence from the company carrying out the renovations on the Wang Fuk Court, while Hong Kong’s fire service has said fire alarms in all eight blocks were not working effectively.

The Independent Commission Against Corruption (Icac) said those arrested in the corruption probe on Friday included directors at an engineering company and scaffolding subcontractors.

Hong Kong’s Labour and Welfare Secretary, Chris Sun, told reporters that his department had made 16 checks on the works at Wang Fuk Court since July last year.

The housing estate was built in 1983 and had provided 1,984 apartments for some 4,600 residents, according to a 2021 government census.