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Vance says US working to set up Putin-Zelenskiy talks

Vance says US working to set up Putin-Zelenskiy talks

The Star2 days ago
FILE PHOTO: U.S. Vice President JD Vance speaks during a meeting with British Foreign Secretary David Lammy at Chevening House in Sevenoaks, Kent, Britain August 8, 2025. Kin Cheung/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
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US VP Vance's Cotswolds visit sparks local protests in England
US VP Vance's Cotswolds visit sparks local protests in England

The Sun

time17 minutes ago

  • The Sun

US VP Vance's Cotswolds visit sparks local protests in England

CHARLBURY (England): U.S. Vice President JD Vance's working holiday in Britain was met with dismay by some locals on Tuesday, who gathered to register their disapproval of both his politics and the turmoil he has brought to their quiet corner of the English countryside. Vance has mixed work with leisure while in Britain, staying first with foreign minister David Lammy at the Chevening estate in Kent - where the two held a formal bilateral meeting after a spot of fishing - before moving on to the hamlet of Dean in Oxfordshire, in the picturesque Cotswolds. On Tuesday, several dozen people, including activists from the Stop Trump Coalition, gathered in the nearby town of Charlbury to stage what they called a 'Not Welcome Party'. They posed with cake and signs including pro-Palestinian slogans and messages saying 'Go Home.' A van showing an unflattering manipulated image of a bald Vance drove around Charlbury. 'We want to show our feelings, hopefully some of it will get through to Vance and the American press and to Ukraine, so people know what we stand for,' said Brian Murray, 65, a retired tour guide. 'The fact he is in our backyard gives us a great opportunity to have our voices heard.' Vance will meet on Tuesday evening with Robert Jenrick, a source in the opposition Conservative Party said. Jenrick was runner-up in the Conservative leadership contest last year, and is widely considered next in line for the job if it becomes available. The Telegraph newspaper said Vance would also meet Nigel Farage, the leader of the right-wing Reform UK party. Vance has developed a warm friendship with Labour's Lammy, officials said, with the two bonding over their difficult childhoods and shared Christian faith. Long a destination of the British elite - former British Prime Minister David Cameron lives in Dean - the Cotswolds is also becoming increasingly popular with wealthy Americans, some of whom moved to the region following the election win of President Donald Trump last year. TV personality Ellen DeGeneres has cited the election result as the reason behind her full-time relocation to the area. Around Charlbury, motorcades roared along the narrow country lanes and cordons blocked off roads to Dean, rendering it inaccessible. While Tuesday's protest was unlikely to disrupt the vice president's trip, for some locals, Vance's politics and the disruption were too much to swallow. 'It's a massive intrusion and it's not just the fact our lives are disrupted but it's who he is,' said Jonathan Mazower, the head of communications for NGO Survival International, who owns one of Dean's 15 homes. 'I feel and many others feel we can't allow someone like that to come into our village and not say something publicly against it.' - Reuters

Trump criticises Goldman Sachs CEO over tariff impact research
Trump criticises Goldman Sachs CEO over tariff impact research

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Trump criticises Goldman Sachs CEO over tariff impact research

U.S. President Donald Trump hit out at Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon on Tuesday, saying the bank had been wrong to predict tariffs would hurt the economy and questioning whether Solomon should lead the Wall Street institution. In a post on Truth Social, Trump said it was mostly foreign companies and governments absorbing the cost of his tariffs. 'But David Solomon and Goldman Sachs refuse to give credit where credit is due. They made a bad both the Market repercussion and the Tariffs themselves.' Trump said Solomon should maybe focus on being a DJ, a hobby Solomon abandoned some time ago, 'and not bother running a major Financial Institution.' The bank CEO is the latest corporate boss to become the target of Trump's ire. A Goldman Sachs spokesperson declined to comment. A spokesperson for the White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Since February 1, when Trump kicked off trade wars by slapping levies on imports from Mexico, Canada and China, at least 333 companies worldwide have reacted to the tariffs in some manner, as of August 12, according to a Reuters tracker. While Trump did not specify which Goldman research he was referring to, the Wall Street bank - like many of its peers - has taken a bearish stance on Trump's tariffs. In a note published on Sunday, Goldman Sachs analysts, led by chief economist Jan Hatzius, said U.S. consumers had absorbed 22% of tariff costs through June and that figure could rise to 67% if recent tariffs continue on the same trajectory. 'I think that David should go out and get himself a new economist,' Trump wrote. Hatzius declined to comment. In April, Goldman also warned sweeping U.S. tariffs would weigh on global growth and prompt the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates more aggressively than previously expected. Last week, the president demanded Intel CEO Lip Bu-Tan resign due to his ties to Chinese firms, and has repeatedly targeted Apple boss Tim Cook for making U.S.-sold iPhones outside the country. Trump has also taken aim at other Wall Street banks, alleging, without providing evidence, that JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America discriminated against him by refusing his deposits after his first term. Tariffs are taxes levied on imported goods to typically protect domestic industries or influence trade policies. Their cost can be distributed among manufacturers, retailers and consumers, depending on market conditions and supply-chain dynamics. As the second quarter earnings season progresses, companies have reported a combined financial hit of $13.6 billion to $15.2 billion between July 16 and August 8 for the full year from Trump's tariffs, according to Reuters' global tariff tracker. - Reuters

France admits role in Cameroon independence war repression
France admits role in Cameroon independence war repression

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

France admits role in Cameroon independence war repression

PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron formally acknowledged France's role in violent repression during Cameroon's struggle for independence in a letter signed on July 30 but only disclosed on Tuesday. The letter, addressed to Cameroonian President Paul Biya, follows the findings of a joint Franco-Cameroonian commission that investigated France's role and involvement against the fight for independence between 1945 and 1971. The Cameroon government did not immediately reply to a Reuters request for comment. Cameroon was a German colony until it was split between Britain and France after World War One. Under United Nations trusteeship, the French-administered area gained independence in 1960 while the southern British Cameroons voted to join French Cameroon in a federation in 1961. 'The commission's historians clearly established that a war took place in Cameroon, during which French colonial authorities and military forces committed various forms of violent repression in several regions of the country, a war that continued beyond 1960 with France's support for actions taken by the independent Cameroonian authorities,' Macron said in the letter. Macron also acknowledged France's responsibility in the deaths of independence leaders Ruben Um Nyobè, Paul Momo, Isaac Nyobè Pandjock and Jérémie Ndéléné, who were killed between 1958 and 1960 during military operations conducted under French command. The French president pledged to open archives, support historical initiatives, and create a joint working group to implement the commission's recommendations, aiming to reconcile historical memory and strengthen Franco-Cameroonian ties. Starting with 17th-century outposts and expanding in the 19th century, France built a vast colonial empire, notably in Africa, lasting until the 1960s decolonization. The letter follows previous steps by Macron to confront France's colonial legacy, including acknowledgments of French responsibility in the 1994 Rwandan genocide and the Algerian War. These gestures come amid shifting dynamics in France's relationships with African nations, at a time when its presence in parts of the continent, particularly the Sahel, is being increasingly contested. - Reuters

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