Skip to main content

Latest News

Topic not found. Showing all articles.

Belarus Pardons 123, Sanctions Lifted
International

Belarus Pardons 123, Sanctions Lifted

In a significant diplomatic breakthrough, Belarus has released 123 prisoners, including Nobel Peace Prize laureate Ales Bialiatski and opposition figure Maria Kalesnikava, on December 13, 2025, following direct negotiations with U.S. President Donald Trump. This mass pardon is directly tied to the lifting of U.S. sanctions on Belarus's vital potash fertilizer industry, signaling a potential shift in the long-strained relations between Washington and Minsk.

Knuckles Reserve Roads Banned
Environment

Knuckles Reserve Roads Banned

Sri Lanka's Ministry of Environment has definitively prohibited the construction of new roads and the repair of old ones within the World Heritage-listed Knuckles Reserve Forest, prioritizing the fragile ecosystem over immediate access concerns for villages cut off by recent landslides. This critical decision, announced by Environment Minister Dammika Patabendi, aims to prevent irreversible environmental damage and protect the forest's World Heritage status, a stance supported by environmental groups and UNESCO amidst allegations of tourism expansion pretexts.

Earth's Core: A Superionic State Discovered
Science

Earth's Core: A Superionic State Discovered

Scientists have made a groundbreaking discovery, revealing that Earth's inner core exists in a superionic state where carbon atoms flow freely within a solid iron lattice, making it unexpectedly soft. This new understanding, which challenges previous models and explains perplexing seismic observations, fundamentally reshapes our view of the planet's dynamic interior and has significant implications for understanding geological processes and other rocky planets.

Brown University Shooting: Manhunt Underway
General

Brown University Shooting: Manhunt Underway

A tragic active shooter incident at Brown University's Barus & Holley Engineering building on December 13, 2025, resulted in two fatalities and eight injuries during fall semester final examinations. The campus remains under a shelter-in-place order as law enforcement agencies conduct a massive manhunt for the male suspect, who is still at large.

UAH Student Leads Discovery of Record Gamma-Ray Burst
Science

UAH Student Leads Discovery of Record Gamma-Ray Burst

A University of Alabama in Huntsville student researcher led the groundbreaking discovery of GRB 230307A, identified as the fastest and second brightest gamma-ray burst ever recorded, offering unprecedented insights into the universe's most powerful explosions and the creation of heavy elements. This monumental event, observed on March 7, 2023, featured an ultrarelativistic jet reaching 99.99998 percent of the speed of light and revealed elements like tellurium, challenging established astronomical models with its long duration and neutron star merger origin.

Newsom Slams Trump's AI Order
Technology

Newsom Slams Trump's AI Order

California Governor Gavin Newsom sharply criticized President Donald Trump's recent executive order on artificial intelligence, arguing it promotes "grift and corruption" by preventing states from enacting their own regulations. Signed on December 11, 2025, Trump's directive aims to establish a unified national AI policy, a move seen as a win for major tech companies and setting the stage for a significant federal-state confrontation over AI governance.

US Vows Retaliation After Syria Attack
International

US Vows Retaliation After Syria Attack

An ambush in central Syria on December 13, 2025, tragically killed two U.S. service members and an American civilian, an attack swiftly attributed to the Islamic State group. This incident, marking the first U.S. troop fatalities in Syria since the fall of Bashar al-Assad, prompted President Trump to pledge "very serious retaliation" and underscored the persistent threat of ISIS.

UN Report: Indigenous Protectors Underfunded in Climate Fight
Environment

UN Report: Indigenous Protectors Underfunded in Climate Fight

A new United Nations report reveals a stark global imbalance: Indigenous Peoples, who comprise only six percent of the world's population, are custodians of an astonishing 80 percent of the planet's remaining biodiversity but receive less than one percent of international climate finance. This critical disparity highlights how their vital role in environmental stewardship is severely undermined by marginalization from climate decisions and "green solutions" often implemented without their consent.

Brain's Resilience Switch: New Mental Health Era
Science

Brain's Resilience Switch: New Mental Health Era

Groundbreaking research has unveiled profound molecular changes in the brain that influence behavior long after stressful events, alongside the discovery of natural resilience systems offering a fresh perspective on mental health treatment. This pivotal shift in psychiatric science aims to develop innovative therapies that build inherent strengths and enhance natural coping mechanisms, moving beyond traditional symptom-focused approaches.

NZ Resets 2050 Methane Target
Politics

NZ Resets 2050 Methane Target

New Zealand has officially enacted new legislation, passed on December 12, 2025, to significantly reduce its 2050 biogenic methane target to a 14-24 percent reduction below 2017 levels, aiming to balance climate goals with agricultural productivity. This legislative shift, which replaces a more ambitious 24-47 percent reduction target, has been lauded by agricultural groups as "long overdue" but fiercely condemned by environmental campaigners as "full-blown climate denial.

Ferrovial Joins Nasdaq-100, Boosting Global Growth
Business

Ferrovial Joins Nasdaq-100, Boosting Global Growth

Global infrastructure leader Ferrovial is set to join the prestigious Nasdaq-100 Index on December 22, 2025, a move announced on December 13, 2025, that significantly boosts its international visibility and investor appeal. This inclusion, occurring just over a year after its U.S. stock market debut, underscores market confidence in Ferrovial's integrated business model and is expected to attract a broader base of passive investment funds.

Iran Detains Nobel Laureate in 'Brutal' Arrest
International

Iran Detains Nobel Laureate in 'Brutal' Arrest

Iranian authorities have reportedly carried out a "brutal" arrest of an unnamed Nobel Peace Prize laureate, immediately drawing widespread international condemnation and highlighting severe human rights concerns. This detention, which strongly echoes the ongoing plight of 2023 laureate Narges Mohammadi, is expected to intensify diplomatic pressure on Tehran.

Accessibility Options

Font Size

100%

High Contrast

Reading Preferences

Data & Privacy