
India says international court lacks authority to rule on Pakistan water treaty
A ruling from the Court of Arbitration last week backed Pakistan by saying that India must adhere to the Indus Waters Treaty in the design of new hydro-electric power stations on rivers that flow west into Pakistan.

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Reuters
14 minutes ago
- Reuters
UK council wins bid to move asylum seekers from hotel amid anti-immigration protests
LONDON, Aug 19 (Reuters) - A British district council on Tuesday won its bid to have asylum seekers temporarily removed from a hotel that has become the focal point for protests after a resident was charged with sexual assault. Epping Forest District Council took legal action to stop asylum seekers from being housed in the Bell Hotel in Epping, in the county of Essex, about 20 miles (32.19 km) north of London. Anti-immigration protesters and pro-immigration groups have gathered outside the hotel since an Ethiopian asylum seeker was charged in July with sexual assault and other offences. He has denied the charges and is due to stand trial next week. Judge Stephen Eyre granted the council an interim injunction against the owner of the hotel, ruling that asylum seekers should be removed by September 12. The hotel's owner said it would seek to appeal the ruling. Eyre also dismissed a last-minute attempt on Tuesday by the Home Office, Britain's interior ministry, to intervene in the case in support of the hotel owner. The Home Office's lawyer, Edward Brown, had argued the injunction would have a "substantial impact" on the government's ability to comply with its legal duty to provide accommodation, describing the hotel as "a key part of national asylum accommodation infrastructure." Border Security Minister Angela Eagle said in a statement: "We will continue working with local authorities and communities to address legitimate concerns. Our work continues to close all asylum hotels by the end of this Parliament (2029)." Hundreds of people have protested outside the Bell Hotel since two asylum seekers were charged over separate incidents, with 16 people also having been charged in relation to what Essex Police described as criminal disorder in Epping. Care4Calais, a charity supporting asylum seekers and refugees, said some residents have felt frightened and frustrated after being threatened, chased, and had objects thrown at them since the protests in Epping began. Local police have been on high alert after nationwide rioting last summer, when racist unrest involving far-right supporters broke out after misinformation that the murderer of three girls in Southport was a radical Islamist migrant. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has pledged to stop thousands of migrants arriving in Britain via small boats, but his government is struggling to do so and faces mounting pressure to show voters he can counter illegal immigration, with support rising for Nigel Farage's right-wing Reform UK party.


Daily Mail
16 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
A key part of the Trump coalition begins to crumble as the president hits his lowest approval rating
Support for Donald Trump has tumbled as his term has progressed, with the latest poll showing his approval rating at its lowest point all year. The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll of nearly 4,500 Americans found that the president is carrying a 40 percent approval rating. That level of support, the lowest of the president's second term, ties Trump's approval rating from the same pollsters just weeks ago in late July. Trump's disapproval rating ticked slightly down in the latest survey to 54 percent. The 79-year-old president's disapproval stood at 56 percent as of July 27. It is a seven-point drop in support for the president from the beginning of his term, when Trump had a 47 percent approval rating. At this point in his term, former President Joe Biden maintained a 50 percent approval rating, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll taken in August 2021. The slumping approval rating comes amid signs that the U.S. economy is weakening and high-stakes diplomatic negotiations with Russia and Ukraine to end their ongoing war continue. Over half of the respondents, 54 percent, including a quarter of Republicans, said they believe Trump is too closely aligned with Russia. A man shouts at Rep. Chuck Edwards (R-NC) during a congressional town hall meeting on March 13, 2025 in Asheville, North Carolina. The event came as Republicans have faced protestors at town halls critical of the Trump administration slashing federal jobs Notably, Trump bled support among Hispanics as he oversees a sweeping nationwide immigration crackdown that has led to at least 300,00 repatriations. Just 32 percent of Hispanics in the latest Reuters/Ipsos survey approved of the president's performance. Support for Trump came predominantly from registered Republicans. Only 42 percent of respondents voiced support for the president's performance on crime, and 43 percent said he is doing a good job on immigration. When it comes to the economy, just 37 percent approved of Trump's job. The survey was administered the same week Trump announced he was federalizing the Washington, D.C., police force and deploying additional National Guard troops to the district. Other recent polls, meanwhile, have shown more support for the president's job performance. According to the RealClearPolitics polling average, Trump's approval sits at 46 percent while his disapproval rating is 51 percent. An Insider Advantage poll also taken last week showed Trump with a 54 percent approval and a 44 percent disapproval. The latest poll from the Daily Mail/J.L. Partners similarly found higher support for the president in late July. Forty-nine percent of voters signaled approval of Trump's job performance as president, up one point from the tracking survey conducted earlier in July. But he was underwater as 51 percent disapprove of Trump's job performance, down one point from earlier in the month.


Reuters
4 hours ago
- Reuters
Killing of aid workers surges to record high during Gaza war, UN says
GENEVA, Aug 19 (Reuters) - Aid worker killings rose nearly a third to almost 400 last year, the most deadly year since records began in 1997, and the conflict in Gaza is continuing to cause high death rates for humanitarian staff in 2025, U.N. and other data showed. In 2024, 383 aid workers were killed, nearly half of them in Gaza and the occupied Palestinian territories, the U.N. said on Tuesday, citing a database. "Attacks on this scale, with zero accountability, are a shameful indictment of international inaction and apathy," said Tom Fletcher, U.N. Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs in a statement. So far this year, 265 aid workers have been killed, according to provisional data from the Aid Worker Security Database, a U.S-funded platform that compiles reports on major security incidents affecting aid workers. Of those, 173 were in Gaza in Israel's near two-year offensive against Hamas militants, launched after the deadly Oct. 7, 2023 cross-border attacks by Hamas-led militants, the provisional data showed. This year, 36 aid workers have so far been killed in Sudan and three in Ukraine, the database showed. In one incident in Gaza that drew international condemnation, 15 emergency and aid workers were killed by Israeli fire in three separate shootings in March, before being buried in a shallow grave. Israel's military said in April that the incidents resulted from an "operational misunderstanding" and a "breach of orders". There had been "several professional failures" and a commander would be dismissed, it said. Aid workers enjoy protection under international humanitarian law but experts cite few precedents for such cases going to trial, with concerns about ensuring future access for aid groups and difficulty proving intent cited as impediments. "It is catastrophic, and the trend is going in right the opposite direction of what it should," said Jens Laerke, U.N. humanitarian office spokesperson.