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Thailand and Cambodia agree immediate ceasefire following months of tension

Thailand and Cambodia agree immediate ceasefire following months of tension

Independent13 hours ago
Thailand and Cambodia have agreed to an immediate and unconditional ceasefire to resolve deadly border clashes, effective from midnight on 28 July.
The agreement was reached during talks in Kuala Lumpur, chaired by Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, who leads the ASEAN regional bloc.
The conflict, which had entered its fifth day, resulted in at least 35 fatalities and displaced over 260,000 people on both sides of the frontier.
Fighting escalated after a land mine explosion wounded Thai soldiers, with both nations blaming each other for initiating the hostilities.
The peace talks followed international pressure, including from US President Donald Trump, and concerns expressed by ASEAN foreign ministers.
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All the flashpoints of Trump's meeting with Starmer: From awkwardly slating the PM's 'pal' Sadiq Khan, and blasting UK's 'ugly' wind farms to claiming he 'never had the privilege' of visiting Jeffrey Epstein's infamous island
All the flashpoints of Trump's meeting with Starmer: From awkwardly slating the PM's 'pal' Sadiq Khan, and blasting UK's 'ugly' wind farms to claiming he 'never had the privilege' of visiting Jeffrey Epstein's infamous island

Daily Mail​

time13 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

All the flashpoints of Trump's meeting with Starmer: From awkwardly slating the PM's 'pal' Sadiq Khan, and blasting UK's 'ugly' wind farms to claiming he 'never had the privilege' of visiting Jeffrey Epstein's infamous island

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He has long been outspoken about his dislike of wind power and strongly opposed an offshore development which is visible from his Aberdeenshire golf course. He said: 'Wind is the most expensive form of energy and it destroys the beauty of your fields, your plains and your waterways. Wind needs massive subsidy, and you are paying in Scotland and in the UK, and all over the place, massive subsidies to have these ugly monsters all over the place.' He urged the UK to exploit North Sea oil and gas. The Royals The President heaped praise on the Royal Family as 'really great people'. Mr Trump, who is known to admire the monarchy, said the UK is 'very lucky' to have the royals, before adding: 'You could have people that weren't great people.' Despite Mr Trump's 'drill, baby, drill' slogan aimed at ramping up fossil fuel extraction, he applauded the King's environmentalism. 'King Charles is an environmentalist, I will tell you. I say that in a positive way, not a negative way. 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We've got some measures which are there to protect children, in particular, from sites like suicide sites.' He added: 'I don't see that as a free speech issue - I see that as child protection.' Love of Scotland Mr Trump spoke of his 'great love' for Scotland, as he vowed to return to the country 'once a year' for a visit. Mr Trump's mother, Mary Anne, was born in the Outer Hebrides on the Isle of Lewis. He said: 'It gives me a feeling, you know it's different, you go to another country, you have no relationship to it... but it's different when your mother was born here.' Mr Trump was asked about Scottish trade with the US, and whether there could be a different deal for products such as whisky. He replied: 'I was very particular, this is a part of the world I want to see thrive.'

Trump reveals 'inappropriate' reason Jeffrey Epstein was thrown out of Mar-a-Lago
Trump reveals 'inappropriate' reason Jeffrey Epstein was thrown out of Mar-a-Lago

Daily Mail​

time15 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump reveals 'inappropriate' reason Jeffrey Epstein was thrown out of Mar-a-Lago

President Donald Trump admitted that his falling out with Jeffrey Epstein took place after the billionaire pedophile 'stole workers' from his Mar-a-Lago club in the early 2000s. Virginia Guiffre was recruited from the club at around the same time but The White House would not clarify whether Trump was specifically referring to the deceased Epstein victim. Trump banned Epstein from his Mar-a-Lago Club in 2004 but, before that time, both Epstein and Maxwell were photographed partying at the Palm Beach social club While speaking to the press during his trip to Scotland, the president said the fallout stemmed from Epstein poaching his staff. 'He did something that was inappropriate,' Trump told Daily Mail during a Q&A with reporters on Monday. 'He stole people that work for me. I said, Don't ever do that again. He did it again, and I threw him out of the place persona non grata, I threw him out, and that was it. I'm glad I did, if you want to know the truth.' One of those employees was the late Virginia Giuffre, who Maxwell met when Giuffre was just 16 and working as a spa attendant at Mar-a-Lago. Maxwell saw her reading a book about massage therapy and offered her a position as Epstein's masseuse, Giuffre claimed. Before her death earlier this year, Giuffre was one of the most prominent and vocal accusers of Epstein and Maxwell. When reached out to the White House to clarify if Giuffre was the kind of worker Epstein typically stole, they deferred to what the president said earlier Monday. It was reported previously Trump and Epstein fell out over an oceanfront Palm Beach property that was being sold out of bankruptcy that each man wanted. Trump also sought to try to turn spotlight on other prominent men who have been spotted with Epstein, including former President Bill Clinton. On Monday he declared he 'never went to the island' – referring to Epstein's private Caribbean island where many young girls claimed they experienced abuse. 'I never had the privilege of going to his island, and I did turn it down,' he said. 'But a lot of people in Palm Beach were invited to his island. In one of my very good moments, I turned it down.' He did allege: 'Bill Clinton went there, supposedly, 28 times ... And many other people that are very big people. Nobody ever talks about them.' The allegations about Clinton are not new. The former president wrote in his memoir 'Citizen' that he'd never gone to the island and that he wished he'd never even met Epstein in the first place. Clinton made some trips on Epstein's private jet, but that in service to the Clinton Foundation and involved a trip to Africa. Trump's MAGA loyalists have long believed there is a list of rich and powerful people for whom Epstein is alleged to have trafficked young girls and it's fueled their feverish calls for the Department of Justice to release files around the case. Trump also suggested - but offered no proof - that Democrats could have planted his name in files associated with the Epstein investigation. 'They ran the files. I was running against somebody that ran the files,' Trump said. 'If they had something, they would have released it. Now they can easily put something in the files that's a phony.' Attorney General Pam Bondi briefed Trump during a May 2025 meeting that his name was found in the Epstein documents 'multiple times,' according to reports, which have been denied by the president. Even if the president is named in the files, it does not mean he's implicated in any wrongdoing related to Epstein's child sex trafficking. Trump finished his rant on Monday by claiming his poll ratings have increased by 4.5 points since this 'ridiculous Epstein stuff' has been in the news. 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A growing fringe effort to get Trump to pardon Maxwell has unfolded after the Justice Department rejected her effort to have her conviction on child sex trafficking charges thrown out. Questions about Epstein and queries about his relationship with the notorious financer followed Trump from the United States to his meeting with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer. He again denied ever making a controversial doodle for Epstein's 50th birthday and claimed he'd never been to the financier's private island in the Caribbean. 'I don't do drawings,' Trump said when asked about a Wall Street Journal report that had reviewed a typewritten birthday letter bearing Trump´s signature, framed by the seemingly hand-drawn outline of a naked woman. 'Sometimes people say, would you draw a building? And I'll draw four lines and a little roof, you know, for a charity stuff, but, but I'm not a drawing person,' Trump said. The president is suing the Journal and owner Rupert Murdoch for $10 billion in a defamation suit tied to the publication of that article.

Trump hits Brazil with a 50 percent import tariff
Trump hits Brazil with a 50 percent import tariff

Daily Mail​

time19 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump hits Brazil with a 50 percent import tariff

Donald Trump has hit Brazil with a 50 percent import tariff on 'any and all' goods sent to the United States as punishment for the 'witch hunt' trial against former president Jair Bolsonaro. Trump fired off a furious letter to Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on Wednesday laying out the details of his new tariff. 'The way that Brazil has treated former President Bolsonaro, a Highly Respected Leader throughout the world... is an international disgrace,' Trump wrote in the letter, which he shared to Truth Social. Bolsonaro is on trial accused of trying to overturn his 2022 election loss. He testified in June before the country's Supreme Court over his alleged plot to remain in power despite losing the vote. The president said his whopping tariff was also in part a response to Brazil's 'insidious attacks on Free Elections and the Fundamental Free Speech rights of Americans.' He said a decision by Brazil's Supreme Court to fine and temporarily block US social media companies last year amounted to 'SECRET and UNLAWFUL Censorship Orders.' Trump said he is launching an investigation as a result under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, which applies to countries with trade practices that are deemed unfair to U.S. companies. 'Starting August 1, we will charge Brazil a tariff of 50 percent on any and all Brazilian products sent into the United States, separate from all Sectoral tariffs. 'Goods transshipped to evade this 50 percent tariff will be subject to that higher tariff,' he warned. Trump described the current trade relationship between America and Brazil as 'very unfair' and 'far from reciprocal.' 'Please understand that the 50 percent number is far less than what is needed to have the Level Playing Field we must have with your country.' Brazil's current president Lula responded with a forceful statement warning Trump's tariffs would trigger the country's economic reciprocity law, which allows trade, investment and intellectual property agreements to be suspended against countries that harm Brazil's competitiveness. He noted that the US has had a trade surplus of more than $410 billion with Brazil over the past 15 years. 'Brazil is a sovereign country with independent institutions that will not accept being taken for granted by anyone,' Lula said. Brazil's vice president, Geraldo Alckmin, said he sees 'no reason' for the US to hike tariffs on the South American nation. 'I think he has been misinformed,' he said. 'President Lula was jailed for almost two years. No one questioned the judiciary. No one questioned what the country had done. This is a matter for our judiciary branch.' Trump, too, was indicted in 2023 for his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 US presidential election. Pictured: President Donald Trump greets Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro at the West Wing of the White House prior to meetings in Washington, DC on March 19, 2019. He compared their situations in a Tuesday Truth Social post, writing: 'He is not guilty of anything, except having fought for THE PEOPLE. 'His Election was very close and now, he is leading in the Polls. This is nothing more, or less, than an attack on a Political Opponent — Something I know much about! It happened to me, times 10, and now our Country is the 'HOTTEST' in the World!' The tariffs starting August 1 would be a dramatic increase from the 10 percent rate that Trump levied on Brazil as part of his April 2 'Liberation Day' announcement . Brazil sells oil, orange juice, coffee, iron and steel to the US, among other products. The US ran a $6.8 billion trade surplus with Brazil last year, according to the Census Bureau. Trump initially announced his broad tariffs by declaring an economic emergency , arguing under a 1977 law that the US was at risk because of persistent trade imbalances. But that rationale becomes murky in this particular case, as Trump is linking his tariffs to the Bolsonaro trial and the US exports more to Brazil than it imports. Trump also sent letters Wednesday to the leaders of seven other nations - the Philippines, Brunei, Moldova, Algeria, Libya, Iraq and Sri Lanka. Most economic analyses say the tariffs will worsen inflationary pressures and subtract from economic growth, but Trump has used the taxes as a way to assert the diplomatic and financial power of the US on both rivals and allies. His administration argues the taxes will lower trade imbalances, offset some of the cost of the tax cuts he signed into law on Friday as part of the Big Beautiful Bill and bring factory jobs back to the United States. 'We really haven't had too many complaints because I'm keeping them at a very low number, very conservative as you would say,' Trump said. Officials for the European Union, a major trade partner and source of Trump's ire on trade, said Tuesday that they are not expecting to receive a letter from Trump listing tariff rates . The president started the process of announcing tariff rates on Monday by hitting two major US trading partners, Japan and South Korea, with import taxes of 25 percent. The letters were posted on Truth Social after the expiration of a 90-day negotiating period with a baseline levy of 10 percent. Trump is giving countries more time to negotiate with his August 1 deadline, but he has insisted there will be no extensions for the countries that receive letters. The president threatened additional tariffs on any country that attempts to retaliate.

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