logo
Maduro celebrates return of Venezuelans held in El Salvador maximum security prison

Maduro celebrates return of Venezuelans held in El Salvador maximum security prison

Yahoo19-07-2025
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro appeared triumphant on Friday, celebrating the return to Venezuela of migrants held in El Salvador after being deported from the U.S., after Venezuela released 10 jailed Americans on Friday in exchange. (AP video/Andry Rincon and Juan Arraez)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Angola's fuel price protests leave 4 dead and leads to hundreds of arrests
Angola's fuel price protests leave 4 dead and leads to hundreds of arrests

Yahoo

time5 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Angola's fuel price protests leave 4 dead and leads to hundreds of arrests

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — Four people have been killed and more than 500 arrested during two days of protests in the Angolan capital of Luanda sparked by a rise in fuel prices, police said Tuesday. The protests erupted Monday over the government's decision earlier this month to raise the price of diesel by more than 30%, which resulted in large price hikes by minibus taxis that are the preferred method of transport for many Angolans. A police statement said hundreds of arrests were made in connection with rioting, vandalism and looting of shops. Cars and buses were damaged and roads were blocked. Four people were killed in the unrest, police spokesperson Mateus de Lemos Rodrigues said Tuesday. The police statement said order had now been restored in most parts of the city. Similar protests against the fuel hikes were held earlier this month, when Human Rights Watch accused the police of excessive force against what was a largely peaceful demonstration. Security forces have often been accused of clamping down on protests in Angola, where the ruling People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola party has been in power for 50 years since the country gained independence from Portugal in 1975. ___ AP Africa news:

Anti-war demonstrators protest the arrival of an Israeli cruise ship on the Greek island of Crete
Anti-war demonstrators protest the arrival of an Israeli cruise ship on the Greek island of Crete

The Hill

time7 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Anti-war demonstrators protest the arrival of an Israeli cruise ship on the Greek island of Crete

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Demonstrators calling for an end to the war in Gaza protested the arrival of an Israeli cruise ship on another Greek island Tuesday – the third such protest on Greek islands in the last week. Protesters on the southern Greek island of Crete unfurled a huge Palestinian flag at the port of Agios Nikolaos and shouted 'Free, free Palestine' as the tourists on board the Crown Iris disembarked and left on buses for their tours of the island, according to images shown on local media outlets. Riot police kept the crowd away from the pier where the cruise ship was docked, while scuffles broke out between demonstrators and police. Local media reported that officers used pepper spray at one point to keep the crowd back. Four people were detained, local media said. Video showed police leading one man away, his arms cuffed behind his back, as he shouted 'Free, free Palestine.' Similar scenes unfolded the previous day when the Crown Iris docked in a port on the eastern Greek island of Rhodes, where clashes broke out between riot police and demonstrators calling for an end to the war in Gaza. There also, the cruise ship's passengers disembarked for tours of the island, and no violence was reported. Anti-war protesters on Greece's Cycladic island of Syros were the first to hold a demonstration against the docking of the Crown Iris, on July 22. The crowd of about 150 people chanted slogans and carried banners that read 'Stop the Genocide' and 'No a/c in hell' — a reference to the conditions Palestinians face in the Gaza Strip. On that occasion, the ship's roughly 1,700 passengers didn't disembark and the ship left the island earlier than planned, with the company operating the trip, Israel's Mano Cruise, saying it had 'decided in light of the situation in the city of Syros to now sail to another tourist destination.' Last week's incident had triggered a phone call by Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar to Greek counterpart George Gerapetritis. Greece is a popular tourist destination for Israelis on package tours and traveling independently, particularly in the summer months, and there are several flights per day between Tel Aviv and Athens, as well as from Israeli airports directly to Greek islands.

Press freedom group files ethics complaint against FCC chair
Press freedom group files ethics complaint against FCC chair

The Hill

time7 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Press freedom group files ethics complaint against FCC chair

The Freedom of the Press Foundation has filed an ethics complaint against Brendan Carr, the chairman of the FCC, arguing the close of ally of President Trump has 'engaged in egregious misconduct,' and calling for him to be disbarred. In the organization's complaint, filed with the District of Columbia Court of Appeals' Office of Disciplinary Counsel on Monday, cites Carr's public statements and actions in the weeks leading up to the agency's recent approval of the Paramount, Skydance merger. 'Everyone from U.S. senators to CBS employees to a dissenting FCC commissioner has said the settlement appears to have been a bribe to grease the wheels for Carr's FCC to approve the merger,' the complaint reads. 'Even putting Paramount aside, Carr has pursued numerous other frivolous and unconstitutional legal proceedings and threatened more of them in furtherance in his efforts to intimidate broadcast licensees to censor themselves and fall in line with Trump's agenda.' The organization's complaint was first reported in journalist Oliver Darcy's media newsletter Status. Carr had in the weeks leading up to the merger publicly blasted CBS News over its coverage of the Trump administration and indicated he believed the '60 Minutes' interview that sparked a lawsuit against the network from President Trump could hold up FCC approval of the $8 billion deal. Paramount, CBS's parent company, earlier this month agreed to pay Trump's foundation $16 million and its new parent company made several concessions as part of its merger agreement with Skydance. Carr praised those promises, including the appointing of an ombudsman to monitor CBS coverage for objectivity, in announcing the agency had approved the deal last week, saying 'Americans no longer trust the legacy national news media to report fully, accurately, and fairly. It is time for a change.' 'Carr's actions brazenly violate legal and ethical standards that govern the practice of law and public officials, undermining the First Amendment, the FCC's credibility and the laws he is trusted to administer,' the complaint said. 'His abuse of his office to force an unwarranted settlement of a private lawsuit, is shameful and warrants disbarment.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store