logo
Israel-Iran live: Trump swears live on camera as he rages at Israel and Iran over faltering ceasefire

Israel-Iran live: Trump swears live on camera as he rages at Israel and Iran over faltering ceasefire

Sky News9 hours ago

Iran says it launched 14 missiles at Israel 'minutes' before ceasefire
Iran's Revolutionary Guards says its final wave of attacks on Israel were launched minutes before the ceasefire went into effect.
In a statement reported by the semi-official Tasnim news agency, the IRGC said it fired 14 missiles at Israeli military centres this morning.
Trump insists ceasefire is in effect
Donald Trump says all Israeli planes heading to Iran "will turn around and head home" and that the ceasefire "is in effect".
It comes as the US president told reporters at the White House that he was "very unhappy" with both Israel and Iran after multiple claims of ceasefire violations this morning (see 12.05 post).
Israeli media reported afterwards that Trump was speaking with Benjamin Netanyahu.
Analysis: Why ceasefires that are suddenly declared tend to be so fragile
By Michael Clarke, military analyst
Ceasefires that are suddenly declared tend to be pretty fragile.
Stable ceasefires usually require a lot of preparation, so that everyone on both sides knows what is supposed to happen, and - more importantly - when.
And they normally agree how it will be monitored so that one side cannot seize a quick advantage by breaking it suddenly.
Without such preparations, and sometimes even with them, ceasefires will tend to be breached - perhaps by accident, perhaps because one side does not exercise full control over its own forces, perhaps as a result of false alarms, or even because a third party - a guerrilla group or a militia, say - choose that moment to launch an attack of their own.
The important question is whether a ceasefire breach is just random and unfortunate, or else deliberate and systemic, where someone is actively trying to break it.
Either way, ceasefires have to be politically reinforced all the time if they are to hold.
All sides may need to re-dedicate themselves to it at regular intervals, mainly because as genuine enemies, they won't trust each other and will remain naturally suspicious at every twitch and utterance from the other side.
Washington has key role to play
This is where an external power like the United States plays a critical part.
If enemies like Israel and Iran naturally distrust each other and need little incentive to 'hit back' in some way at every provocation, it will take US pressure to make them abide by a ceasefire that may be breaking down.
Appeals to good nature are hardly relevant in this respect. An external arbiter has to make the continuance of a ceasefire a matter of hard national interest to both sides.
And that often requires as much bullying as persuasion. It may be true that 'blessed are the peacemakers', but it sure helps if their blessings include a fair amount of muscle.
'We want ceasefire to continue,' Starmer says
After Donald Trump's extraordinary comments on his way to a two-day NATO summit, the prime minister has just landed in the Netherlands for the discussions.
While on the way, he told journalists he wants the ceasefire between Israel and Iran to continue.
"The sooner we get back to that, the better," he said. "And that's the message that I'm discussing with other leaders today.
"We need to get back to that ceasefire, which is consistent with what I've been saying about de-escalation for quite some time now."
Trump: Israel and Iran 'don't know what the f*** they're doing'
In extraordinary comments, Donald Trump tells reporters Israel and Iran "don't know what the f*** they're doing" as he leaves the White House for the NATO summit.
"We have to have Israel to calm down because they went on a mission this morning," he says.
"I've got to get Israel to calm down."
On reports that both Israel and Iran violated the ceasefire, Trump says: "I'm not sure they did it intentionally. They couldn't rein people back.
"I don't like the fact that Israel went out this morning, and I'm going to see if I can stop it.
"As soon as I get away from you, I'm going to see if I can stop it."
"As soon as we made the deal, they came out and they dropped a load of bombs," he adds.
"The likes of which I've never seen before. The biggest load that we've seen. I'm not happy with Israel.
"We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don't know what the f*** they're doing."
Trump: Israel and Iran both violated ceasefire
Donald Trump says both Israel and Iran have violated the ceasefire in the Middle East.
Speaking to reporters before leaving for the NATO summit in The Hague, he says he's "not happy" with Israel and Iran, before adding he is "really unhappy" with Israel.
Trump adds that Iran's nuclear capacities are "gone" and says Tehran will never rebuild its nuclear programme.
In a subsequent Truth Social post, Trump says it would be a "major violation" if Israel were to drop bombs on Iran now, telling Israel to "bring your pilots home, now".
Kremlin: Russia supported Iran with 'clear position' condemning US and Israeli strikes
The Kremlin says Russia has supported Tehran with its "clear position" condemning US and Israeli strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities.
Responding to a question about criticism from some commentators who have suggested Russia did not do enough to support Iran, spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that Moscow intended to further develop its ties with Tehran.
He said that "many people are trying to spoil relations between Moscow and Tehran by adding fuel to the fire."
Peskov also noted that Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi, who held talks with Vladimir Putin in Moscow yesterday,
had said he highly valued Russia's role.
Following this, our Moscow correspondent Ivor Bennett says Russia would welcome a ceasefire between Iran and Israel if it holds because the Kremlin has a lot at stake.
"Iran is a very important strategic ally for Russia," he says.
"The question I have is what kind of role does Vladimir Putin play behind the scenes here? Donald Trump is the one making all the noise.
"But behind the scenes Putin has been working the phones and calling all the main protagonists and having conversations with a lot of leaders in the region.
"If he has played a part in this, then not only will he have preserved Russia's interests in the region, but he would have gained leverage with Trump and done him a favour which potentially he could cash in and use in another arena - Ukraine."
Qatar PM warns against 'outrageous attacks'
Qatar's prime minister is holding a news conference after Iran launched an attack against a US military base in Qatar yesterday.
The attack was in response to America's own strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities a day prior.
Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani says he and regional partners were "surprised" with regards to the attack from a "neighbourly and brotherly country".
The prime minister says Qatar's armed forces have deterred attacks.
"There are many outrageous attacks on various countries," he says. "These irresponsible behaviours could lead the region to a more difficult situation."
He says Qatar encourages both the Americans and Iranians to "go to the negotiating table".
Iran reports Israeli strikes before ceasefire
Israeli strikes hit Iran in three stages up until 5.30am UK time, before the ceasefire came into place, the spokesperson of Iran's central military headquarters has said, according to state TV.
Today, Iranian state TV said a ceasefire would take place in Iran from 7.30am local time.
It came as Iran's Supreme National Security Council, its top security body, said its armed forces were prepared to "decisively respond" to renewed attacks.
Below: Recorded Israeli strikes on Iran from 12 June to midnight last night
As we have been reporting today, Israel and Iran have accepted a ceasefire plan to end their 12-day war.
The shaky agreement was announced by Donald Trump after Tehran launched a limited retaliatory missile attack on a US military base in Qatar, following the US strikes against Iranian nuclear facilities during the weekend.
Israel locates 'Iranian rocket'
Israel has released an image of what it says is an Iranian rocket fired during the ceasefire.
"Iran continues to show its true nature as a terror state and a regional threat," the caption reads.
Iranian state TV says Tehran denies reports that it violated the ceasefire (see 9.37am post).

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

News live: 119 stranded Australians flown out of Israel; Marles plays down chance of Trump meeting at Nato summit
News live: 119 stranded Australians flown out of Israel; Marles plays down chance of Trump meeting at Nato summit

The Guardian

time26 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

News live: 119 stranded Australians flown out of Israel; Marles plays down chance of Trump meeting at Nato summit

Update: Date: 2025-06-24T20:21:50.000Z Title: Australians stranded in Israel on their way home on special ADF flight Content: A special Australian Defence Force flight has left Tel Aviv with 119 Australians and their family members on board after they became stranded by the suspension of flights out of Israel amid its conflict with Iran. The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said late on Tuesday night that Australian defence personnel and diplomats 'have supported an Australian Defence Force assisted departure flight' out of the Israeli city. Photographs posted on social media by the foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, showed people being taken by bus to the airport. An Australian Government assisted-departure flight has safely transported 119 Australians and family members from Tel flights from Israel have resumed with some officers remain at the Iran-Azerbaijan border to help Australians to leave Iran. Dfat added that commercial flights out of Israel resumed last night with some restrictions after a ceasefire was agreed between Israel and Iran. A Dfat statement said: Israeli commercial airlines have resumed operation for anyone wanting to leave Israel. Limitations and restrictions apply. Travellers with existing tickets for cancelled flights are encouraged to keep speaking with airlines. This may be the fastest way for travellers to reach their final destination. We will continue to communicate directly with registered Australians who wish to depart Israel about any further plans for assisted departures. Consular officers remain positioned at the Iran-Azerbaijan border to assist departing Australians. Update: Date: 2025-06-24T20:17:27.000Z Title: Welcome Content: Good morning and welcome to our live news blog. I'm Martin Farrer with the top overnight stories and then it'll be Nick Visser with the main action. Richard Marles has joined Nato leaders at their summit in The Hague where the main discussion will focus on European nations increasing their defence spending and how the west can help Ukraine to repel Russia. Donald Trump has landed in the Netherlands but Marles has played down the idea that he might have a meeting with the US president to discuss the Aukus submarine pact. More details soon. The judgment in Antoinette Lattouf's unlawful dismissal case against the ABC is expected this morning at 11.30am at the federal court in Sydney. Justice Darryl Rangiah will hand down his ruling in the highly charged case which centres around whether the ABC acted unlawfully when the casual radio presenter Antoinette Lattouf was abruptly taken off air in December 2023. More coming up. A special Australian Defence Force flight is on its way back to Australia from Tel Aviv with 119 Australians and their family members on board after they became stranded by the suspension of flights out of Israel amid its conflict with Iran. The foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, revealed the news last night. More details coming up.

The 12-day war that shook the world
The 12-day war that shook the world

Telegraph

time29 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

The 12-day war that shook the world

Benjamin Netanyahu knew full well he was about to embark on a legacy-defining operation. He had anticipated this moment for more than three decades, ever since his days as a Knesset backbencher in 1992 – the first time he gave warning that Iran was just years away from building a nuclear bomb. Over 17 years in office, Israel's longest-serving prime minister had repeatedly come close to ordering military action against Iran. But each time, he pulled back, under pressure from the United States, his generals, or perhaps even his own nerves. This time would be different. Military campaigns over the previous 18 months had severely degraded Tehran's regional proxies – Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon. Even Mr Netanyahu's most cautious generals agreed: there would never be a better moment to strike. Only one major obstacle remained – the White House. Donald Trump's re-election had sparked jubilation among Mr Netanyahu's supporters, who believed there was no greater friend of Israel. Yet Mr Trump was proving unexpectedly obdurate. In April, Mr Netanyahu presented the president with a detailed plan for military action. Mr Trump vetoed it. He wanted to give diplomacy another chance, and dispatched Steve Witkoff, his Middle East envoy and golfing buddy, to talk to the Iranians. Israeli officials held their counsel in public. In private, they were aghast. Rumours of a rift began to swirl. Israel no longer appeared central to Washington's Middle East strategy as Mr Trump toured the Gulf but skipped Jerusalem. Still, Mr Netanyahu kept working on the president, reminding him how Iran had plotted to assassinate him, building the case for war. Meanwhile, Mr Trump's patience was wearing thin with Iran, which appeared to be stalling for time. By late May, US intelligence agencies concluded that Mr Netanyahu had decided to seize the initiative. In a classified assessment shared with the White House, they warned that Israel was planning to strike Iran's nuclear programme imminently – with or without US support. President Trump frantically called Mr Netanyahu to dissuade him, according to the New York Times. But this time, it was the once risk-averse Israeli leader who would not be moved. As Mr Trump deliberated with his top military advisors, Mr Netanyahu gave the order. On Monday June 9, he told his military chiefs to proceed. The following day, he phoned Mr Trump. The president did not endorse the operation – but, unlike in April, he said he would no longer stand in Israel's way. The US began evacuating its embassies in the Gulf. Britain warned commercial shipping to exercise caution. Pentagon pizza orders soared. Launch day Late that night, nearly 200 aircraft – mostly F-35 stealth fighters and F-16s – took off from bases in southern Israel, flying through Jordanian and Syrian airspace. Just after midnight on Friday June 13, they struck more than 100 targets inside Iran. 'Operation Rising Lion', one of the most anticipated campaigns in the history of modern warfare, was underway. Israeli jets hit Iranian missile factories, air defence systems, military bases, and the Natanz uranium enrichment facility, 135 miles south-east of Tehran. But this was more than just an air campaign. A breathtaking covert intelligence operation was unfolding in tandem. Months earlier, Mossad agents had infiltrated deep into Iran, establishing a concealed drone base near Tehran. For weeks, operatives had smuggled in explosives and commercial quadcopter drones hidden in false-bottomed suitcases and civilian vehicles. As Israeli aircraft approached Iranian airspace, the teams launched their drones, targeting missile launchers and air defence batteries – an operation echoing Ukraine's recent 'Spider's Web' attack on Russia's strategic bomber fleet. The combined assault devastated both Iran's ability to defend itself and to strike back. Simultaneously, a mass-assassination campaign involving drones, airstrikes and sabotage, was underway, aiming to decapitate Iran's nuclear and military leadership. Within hours, four of Iran's most senior generals were dead, including Hossein Salami, commander of the elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and Mohammed Bagheri, the armed forces chief. So, too, were many top nuclear scientists. Believing Israel would delay its strike until after another round of talks in Oman, they had remained in their homes, rather than retreating to designated underground bunkers. Most were killed in their beds – victims of a separate covert mission reportedly codenamed 'Operation Narnia'. Within days, as many as 20 senior military officers and 14 nuclear scientists were confirmed dead. Those who survived received chilling telephone calls from Persian-speaking Mossad agents. 'I can advise you now, you have 12 hours to escape with your wife and child. Otherwise you're on the list right now,' one spy told a senior general in a recording obtained by the Washington Post. 'We're closer to you than your own neck vein. Put this in your head. May God protect you.' Back in Jerusalem, Benjamin Netanyahu was jubilant. 'We are at a decisive moment in Israel's history,' he said in a national address. 'This operation will continue for as many days as it takes to remove this threat.' Iran strikes back Over the next few days, Israel hit further nuclear sites. Explosions rocked Tehran, a city of ten million people, killing more than 600 civilians, according to official figures. One missile struck state television, shattering windows as the on-air anchor denounced Israeli aggression. She fled mid-broadcast. As cars exploded mysteriously and attacks on energy infrastructure plunged parts of the capital into darkness, residents began to flee, choking motorways in hours-long traffic jams. With fuel rationed, many were stranded. Suitcase-clutching families stood on the roadside, pleading for taxis. Meanwhile, Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was in hiding, issuing defiant recorded statements from an undisclosed location. Mr Netanyahu had proposed assassinating him. Mr Trump vetoed the plan to kill him – but was otherwise deeply impressed by the scale and success of Israel's offensive. He began to consider whether the US should help finish the job by targeting Fordow, Iran's most fortified uranium-enrichment facility, buried deep inside a mountain. Iran, meanwhile, was fighting back – but in a more limited fashion than many had feared. For years, military analysts had warned that any attack on Iran's nuclear facilities would trigger region-wide retaliation: attacks on Israel for sure, but also on US bases in the Middle East, energy infrastructure and cities in the Gulf, even shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. But Tehran, wary of bringing the US directly into the conflict, concentrated its fire on Israel. Ballistic missiles rained down on cities including Tel Aviv and Haifa. Israel's multi-tiered air defences intercepted approximately 85 per cent of Iran's missiles. Some were always expected to get through, but the interception rate fell short of best-case projections, perhaps reflecting Iranian advances in countermeasures –ranging from more manoeuvrable re-entry vehicles and decoy warheads, to electronic jamming designed to confuse radar and disrupt missile tracking systems. The warheads that did penetrate – including one that struck a tower block near the IDF headquarters in Tel Aviv – landed with such force, and caused such extensive damage, that they sparked widespread consternation. Many Israelis had believed their air defences were so sophisticated they would fend off everything Iran had to throw at them. The attacks killed 28 people, injured more than 1,300, levelled apartment blocks, knocked out an oil refinery, and damaged a major hospital in the southern city of Beersheba. Israelis rushed to bomb shelters every few hours. Yet the damage fell far short of earlier projections. In 2011, Israeli generals estimated that war with Iran could kill more than 10,000 Israeli civilians. That toll never materialised. With Hezbollah unwilling to join the fight and Hamas degraded, Iran was left to rely on its 2,000-3,000 stockpile of ballistic missiles. Iran reportedly planned to launch 1,000 on the first night of retaliation, hoping to overwhelm Israel's defences. But so many of its launchers had been destroyed that fewer than 200 were fired. In subsequent nights, barrages fell to around 30 a night. The US joins the war Back in Washington, Mr Trump faced a dilemma. Just weeks earlier, in Riyadh, he had condemned US military entanglements in the region. He would never intervene in a Middle Eastern war, he vowed, and pledged to work towards a diplomatic solution with Iran. He even played his Saudi hosts a video of Ali Shamkhani, Khamenei's top nuclear advisor, proposing a new deal – evidence, he claimed, of Iran's sincerity. Yet Mr Shamkhani was now fighting for his life in a Tehran hospital after Israel had tried to kill him, and president Trump's diplomatic outreach lay in ruins. The case for US intervention was also growing. Israel had performed better on the battlefield than even the most optimistic assessments. Yet only America's 30,000 lb, bunker-busting Massive Ordnance Penetrator had a real chance of destroying Fordow. At the G7 summit in Canada last week, Western leaders believed Mr Trump remained committed to diplomacy. But on Monday June 16, he abruptly left the summit and began issuing stark ultimatums, demanding the regime's 'unconditional surrender' and warning Khamenei that the US knew where he was hiding. By then, the decision had already been made. In the early hours of Sunday morning, Mr Trump gave the final go-ahead. Operation Midnight Hammer was underway. Concerned that the president's increasingly bellicose public pronouncements might alert Iran to an impending strike, US military strategists devised a ruse to try to throw Iran off the scent. Two groups of B-2 stealth bombers departed simultaneously from the Whiteman Airbase in Missouri. One headed west over the Pacific with its transponders switched – allowing it to be tracked by commercial satellite services. It quickly garnered international attention. But it was a decoy. The real strike force, a formation of seven B-2s, flew unnoticed across the Atlantic, their transponders off. Escorted by a fleet of fourth-and-fifth fighter jets, they crossed into Iranian airspace undetected. Moments later, they dropped 12 bunker-busters on Fordow and another two on Natanz. A converted Ohio-class submarine in the Arabian Sea fired 30 Tomahawk missiles at Natanz and a nuclear complex near the ancient city of Isfahan. Mr Trump quickly declared victory: Iran's nuclear programme had been ' completely and utterly obliterated '. Satellite images of Fordow soon emerged, showing precise strike points at tunnel entrances and ventilation shafts – the site's most vulnerable spots struck by the bombs, whose reinforced steel alloy casings allowed them to burrow into the rock before detonating more than 100 feet below the surface. Each B-2 dropped two bombs in succession on the same coordinates, a tactic designed to maximise damage and increase the likelihood of reaching Fordow's deeply buried centrifuge halls. But while the imagery confirmed where the bombs had landed, it revealed little about the extent of the internal damage. Earlier satellite photos showing convoys of trucks leaving the site in the days before the attacks suggest that Iran may have removed stockpiles of highly enriched uranium and other sensitive equipment in anticipation. Iran retaliates and path to peace After the strikes, the region held its breath. Would Iran escalate or was it too damaged to continue. For 36 hours there was silence. Then, on Monday evening, Western embassies in Qatar issued urgent warnings to their citizens to 'shelter in place'. The Gulf kingdom closed its airspace. Iran's retaliation was on its way in the form of 14 missiles – one for each bunker-buster dropped – aimed at Al Udeid, the largest US airbase in the Middle East. But the airbase had been evacuated. Iran had quietly passed warnings through intermediaries, giving the US time to pull personnel and Qatar to activate its air defences. All 14 missiles were intercepted. Iran's retaliation, a show purely for domestic consumption, was over. Iran's promises to 'shock and awe' its enemies once again fell short. Tehran's message was received and understood in the White House. Mr Trump wanted out, too, anxious to avoid entanglement in the kind of 'forever war' he had once campaigned against. He announced a 'complete and total' ceasefire, congratulating both sides for their 'stamina, courage and intelligence' to end what he dubbed 'the 12-day war'. Each side would remain 'peaceful' and 'respectful', he insisted, before boarding Air Force One bound for a Nato summit at The Hague. Yet the ceasefire quickly came under strain. Hours later, Israel struck an Iranian radar after accusing Tehran of firing three missiles in breach of the truce. There are reasons for both sides to stop fighting. Iran's military is reeling, its leadership tottering. It may well prefer to live to fight another day. Israel, having reportedly struck most of the targets on its initial list, may well have been about to declare victory anyway. And Mr Netanyahu may prefer not to defy president Trump. The ceasefire may therefore hold. Whether a long-term peace proves durable depends on a single question: how badly has Iran's nuclear programme been hurt? It is a question no-one can yet answer. Humiliated and weakened, Iran may decide it needs a nuclear bomb more than ever. If it still has the capacity, it may now race to build one. The first phase of Israel's confrontation with Iran may be over. But greater trouble could lie ahead.

Alligator Alcatraz: ICE to detain migrants in middle of remote Florida swamp
Alligator Alcatraz: ICE to detain migrants in middle of remote Florida swamp

Telegraph

time29 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Alligator Alcatraz: ICE to detain migrants in middle of remote Florida swamp

In the fight to secure the US border, immigration and customs enforcement (ICE) has deployed an unexpected new line of defence. Construction has begun on an 1,000-bed detention centre for undocumented migrants in the middle of the Florida everglades national park that state officials have nicknamed 'Alligator Alcatraz'. The facility, built on the site of an abandoned runway, is designed to temporarily house migrants and has drawn comparisons to the infamous island prison because of the thousands of alligators and pythons living in the flooded grasslands that surround it. The detention centre is the brainchild of James Uthmeier, the state attorney general and Trump ally who last week shared a video suggesting the area's dangerous wildlife will function as natural security. 'Alligator Alcatraz: the one-stop shop to carry out president Trump's mass deportation agenda,' Mr Uthmeier said. 'People get out, there's not much waiting for them other than alligators and pythons. Nowhere to go, nowhere to hide.' Alligator Alcatraz: the one-stop shop to carry out President Trump's mass deportation agenda. — Attorney General James Uthmeier (@AGJamesUthmeier) June 19, 2025 Located at Dade-Collier training and transition airport, a former landing strip west of Miami, the 39-square-mile-square Everglades detention centre is one of several major new sites in Florida designed to house upwards of 5,000 detainees, according to the Department of Homeland Security. Touted as a 'cost-effective' way to support mass deportations, the new site follows proposals by the Trump administration to reopen the original Alcatraz prison in San Francisco and efforts to send illegal migrants to Guantanamo Bay. Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, said the facility will be funded in large part by the federal emergency management agency's shelter and services programme, which is designed to provide emergency housing for undocumented migrants. According to The Hill, a temporary site could open within days, while the facility is projected to cost around $450m a year once it is fully operational. Ron DeSantis, the Florida governor, has backed the project, with his office releasing a statement saying he 'will facilitate the federal government in enforcing immigration law'. 'Florida will continue to lead on immigration enforcement,' a spokesman for Mr DeSantis said. The new facility has drawn the ire of immigrant rights groups and environmentalists, who reacted furiously to the prospect of large tents being pitched in one of the country's most prized areas of natural beauty. The national park is home to dozens of threatened species including manatees, American crocodiles, American flamingo and wood storks. On Sunday, more than 300 protesters flocked to the Everglades to demonstrate against the new centre. The decision to build the site comes after the Trump administration's efforts to send migrants to Guantanamo Bay and to a migrant detention centre in Texas were thwarted. A contract for a vast tent city at the Fort Bliss military base in Texas was terminated in April, while courts have blocked attempts to send undocumented migrants to the Guantanamo military base in Cuba. In March, Mr Trump proposed reopening the original Alcatraz prison located in San Francisco bay in order to deter 'vicious' criminals. Addressing plans to build a detention centre in Florida, Ms Noem said: 'Under president Trump's leadership, we are working at turbo speed on cost-effective and innovative ways to deliver on the American people's mandate for mass deportations of criminal illegal aliens. 'We will expand facilities and bed space in just days, thanks to our partnership with Florida.'

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