After being asked why the Biden administration is to blame for the shooting that occurred in Washington DC, where an Afghan evacuee is accused of killing a National Guard member, US President Donald Trump slammed into a reporter. Trump called him a “stupid person” when the reporter cited federal vetting.
A disaster official reported that 174 people have died as a result of the heavy monsoon rains and floods that have occurred on the western Indonesian island of Sumatra this week. About 80 more have already been killed.
According to National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB) chief Suharyanto, “We have recorded that 42 people are still being sought for the entire North Sumatra province as of this afternoon,” according to BNPB’s (BNPB) chief Suharyanto.
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He claimed that West Sumatra and the island’s Aceh province had the highest murder rates and that another 35 had been reported.
He continued, noting that 79 people were still missing and that thousands of families had been displaced even though the rain had stopped.
Residents of Sumatra’s Padang Pariaman region, where 22 people died, were left without access to water levels of at least 1 meter (3. 3 ft) on Friday, despite the fact that search and rescue personnel had already reached them.
Residents of the northern Sumatra town of Batang Toru laid flowers in a mass grave on Friday for seven unclaimed victims. As onlookers covered their noses, the decomposing bodies, which were being lifted from a truck onto a large plot of land, were being transported by crane.
Authorities were restoring power and clearing roads blocked by landslides, according to Abdul Muhari, a spokesman for Indonesia’s national disaster mitigation agency, as communications remained shaky in some areas of the island.
He added that Indonesia would continue to airlift aid and rescue personnel to devastated areas on Friday.
Misniati, 53, described a terrifying battle with rising floodwaters in Indonesia’s West Sumatra province to reach her husband at home.
After beginning her morning prayers at a mosque, she observed that the street was flooded.
The water was already reaching my waist when I attempted to return to my house, she told the AFP news agency, adding that by the time she reached home, she had already told her husband.
A bridge on a major highway in Meureudu, Pidie Jaya district of Indonesia’s Aceh province, was damaged by flash floods on Friday.
Other Asian countries have experienced flooding disasters.
In Thailand, the government reported that floods in eight southern provinces had claimed the lives of 145 people. More than 3.5 million people were affected overall, according to the report.
The rain in Hat Yai, Thailand’s hardest-hit region, finally stopped on Friday, but many residents were still ankle-deep in floodwaters as they assessed the damage to their homes over the past week.
Some residents claimed they were spared the worst of the floods but still experienced their effects.
Tropical storm Senyar made landfall in neighboring Malaysia at midnight, which has since weakened, causing two confirmed fatalities.
Weather-related authorities have warned that rough seas could pose a risk to small boats, and are still preparing themselves for heavy rain and wind.
More than 34, 000 evacuees were still in shelters on Thursday, compared to a total of 30 000.
The Malaysian Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced on Friday that it had already evacuated 1,459 Malaysian nationals staying in more than 25 hotels in Thailand while working to rescue the 300 who are still engulfed in flood zones.
More than 100 people were killed in Songkhla province alone, according to the government, making the death toll from devastating floods in southern Thailand to 145.
This week, devastating flooding has swept southern Thailand, particularly in the Hat Yai district, which is close to the Malaysian border.
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According to government spokesman Siripong Angkasakulkiat, who updated earlier figures to “total deaths across the southern provinces is 145,” Songkhla will be responsible for 110.
He claimed that as floodwaters started to recede further, search and rescue efforts have increased.
According to reports in the news, rescuers gained more access to residential areas that had previously been submerged in high water and recovered more bodies, particularly in Hat Yai, the largest city in the south.
After flooding started to subside, the death toll in the Songkhla province quickly increased.
Numerous people were left stranded as a result of the flooding, making the streets impossible to cross and submerged in low-rise buildings and vehicles.
The Meteorological Department noted a decrease in rainfall in the south but warned of thunderstorms in some places.
On Friday, footage and photos from the affected areas showed debris, fallen power poles, household items, and damaged roads.
Mohammed Ibrahim, 16, is recovering after allegedly throwing rocks in an Israeli prison for nine months. The Israeli occupation of the West Bank caused a wide outcry and condemnation for the Palestinian American boy’s situation.
The resignations of BBC Director General Tim Davie and Director of News Deborah Turness over a Panorama edit of a 2021 speech by United States President Donald Trump have plunged the United Kingdom’s national broadcaster into one of the deepest crises in its history.
But the scandal did not begin with a single programme or a single misjudgement. Close to the centre of this crisis is Robbie Gibb, a man who has spent more than a decade shaping the BBC’s political coverage, zig-zagging between the BBC and the Conservative government while advancing his own partisan project that has distorted the corporation’s journalism on Brexit, Trump and,  , eventually, Gaza.
I saw the effects of that influence myself when the BBC delayed and then dropped our film on Gaza’s doctors. What is unfolding today is simply the moment when a long-running pattern of interference has burst into full public view.
Gibb has been such a huge figure in the wings of public life in the UK for so long that it is a relief he is now being publicly named and discussed. Until the Panorama scandal and the resignations it triggered, he was rarely scrutinised outside political and media circles. Now he is suddenly in headlines and the subject of fierce debate across social media, as people try to understand how one unelected figure came to wield such influence.
It is hard to think of anyone who has had a more pervasive influence on British public life without any accountability, from within both No 10 and the BBC. Gibb has been arguably the most influential yet hidden helping hand to Brexit politics, the Conservative Party and Israel, while bestriding two of the nation’s most important institutions as, variously, the head of the BBC’s Westminster team, the head of press at No 10, and then a pivotal BBC board member influencing BBC News. There has been little change in his guiding motivations or modus operandi between these roles, just a strong belief that only he could hold the line against an overwhelmingly liberal and left-leaning BBC “wokerati” and ensure impartiality. But in so doing, he has destroyed any notion of it, leading to the present crisis in the BBC, a $1bn battle with Trump and a collapse in the credibility of its coverage of Gaza.
As the editor of Channel 4 News from 2012 to 2022, I had experience of Gibb from the moment he was appointed press secretary at No 10 in 2017. His instinct to manage political reporting in ways that advanced his own political project was evident from the start. From the outset, he severely restricted Channel 4 News’s access to government ministers, access that remained freely available to the BBC and reflected the close relationships he had built during his years overseeing parts of its political output. Gibb was well known inside the BBC for his longstanding support for Brexit, a cause he had championed since working for the Conservative Party from 1997 to 2002. His conduct at No 10 with the BBC seemed little different from his BBC years, his direct control of the output was swapped for bargaining over access, helping him to continue to shape British politics. And he had all the BBC’s political staff on speed dial.
Relations worsened in 2018 when Channel 4 News became the first broadcaster to cover the Windrush scandal. It had emerged that hundreds of Black British citizens, most of whom had arrived from the Caribbean more than 50 years earlier, had been wrongly detained, deported and denied legal rights. The scandal resulted from policies implemented by Theresa May in her previous role as home secretary. As we continued to report on the growing number of older victims, Gibb reacted furiously. He barred Channel 4 News from interviews with the prime minister and other ministers, reportedly telling aides we were “banging on and on about something no one else cares about”.
He then extended that ban to the Conservative Party conference, excluding us from the traditional round of prime ministerial interviews that had been granted for decades. Every other broadcaster, including the BBC, signed a letter warning that the ban set a dangerous precedent. A former BBC colleague of Gibb later approached me at the conference to say he was “hopping mad, he’s absolutely livid”.
Multiple BBC journalists told me at the time that Gibb was still effectively directing parts of the BBC’s political coverage from No 10, using his influence and longstanding relationships to shape what was reported and who gained access. Many said they struggled to distinguish between Gibb at the BBC and Gibb at No 10 because he continued to exert influence over key decisions. One of the major advantages for No 10 was Gibb’s sway over the BBC’s post-Brexit coverage. The BBC chose not to look back and investigate what had happened during the referendum, unlike Channel 4 News, which pursued the Vote Leave and Cambridge Analytica investigations. Several BBC colleagues later told me this reluctance to scrutinise the referendum was not new but reflected how Gibb had operated in real time when he oversaw BBC political output during the campaign itself.
In 2019, we obtained emails between Arron Banks, the major Brexit donor, and Gibb sent in the run-up to the referendum. The emails showed that Banks complained to Gibb about a BBC inquiry into Leave. The European Union’s attempts to build support within far-right online communities and asked Gibb to intervene. After Banks raised his concerns with Gibb, the investigation was dropped. The BBC said the story did not meet editorial standards, but weeks later, the same investigation was published by The Sunday Times. Banks also told Gibb that Nigel Farage did not appear often enough on the BBC. In the months leading up to the referendum, Farage then appeared repeatedly across the broadcaster’s output.
In 2019, after Gibb left No 10 with Theresa May, Boris Johnson appointed him to the BBC board, an influential position from which he was not meant to interfere in day-to-day editorial decisions. Despite this, multiple allegations emerged that he continued to do so, including attempts to block appointments, visits to newsrooms and repeated involvement in editorial matters. In 2020, he took a controlling interest in the Jewish Chronicle – the world’s oldest Jewish newspaper, a paper long regarded as the voice of Britain’s Jewish community – on behalf of undisclosed backers, and the paper then shifted sharply to the right. Several of its most respected journalists resigned amid allegations that Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was influencing its coverage. All of this occurred while Gibb, as the most experienced editorial voice on the BBC board, was allegedly exerting an increasingly dominant influence, despite the board’s rules prohibiting direct editorial involvement. In Gibb’s case, old habits clearly died hard.
After the horrific Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, and Israel’s unrelenting two-year assault on Gaza, which flattened much of the Palestinian enclave and killed more than 70, 000 people, including 20, 000 children, I was told by multiple sources that Gibb, as the strongest editorial voice on the BBC board, was placing BBC News under pressure over its Israel coverage from the very start. The pressure came to a head in February, when the BBC broadcast and then withdrew the film Gaza: How to Survive a Warzone.
The film had been produced externally and failed to disclose that its 13-year-old narrator’s father was a deputy agriculture minister in Gaza’s Hamas-run government. In the aftermath, the BBC delayed our investigation into Israel’s destruction of Gaza’s healthcare system and the killing of more than 1, 500 medics, offering a series of excuses until eventually admitting they would not run it while they examined the other film. It was an extraordinary and unprecedented decision that effectively silenced and blunted their coverage. Only after we went public was Gaza: Doctors Under Attack finally broadcast, not on the BBC but on Channel 4.
I was told that the board, under Gibb’s influence, effectively pushed Tim Davie and Deborah Turness to first obscure their position on our film, then ask us to make significant changes, before finally saying they would run only three one-minute clips from our 65-minute investigation on their news outlets. This was a film about hospitals being bombed and evacuated, about doctors and medics and their families being targeted and killed, and about hundreds of others detained and tortured. It had already been approved by the BBC and later ran on Channel 4 – and Mehdi Hasan’s new media platform, Zeteo – without any complaints. It has since been nominated for many awards and is now beginning to win them.
In the end, it seems Davie and Turness did not fall because they stood up to Gibb, but because they reacted too slowly to the crisis his world helped create. After years of pressure over Gaza and mounting complaints about bias, the misleading Panorama edit of Trump’s speech and their hesitant response to his legal and political onslaught became the final straw. Only Gibb knows whether he intended to push the BBC into a position where it is now facing a potential billion-dollar lawsuit from a sitting US president, but his influence and alliances were central to the chain of decisions that led there. And now, hiding in plain sight, Gibb’s decades-long mission to reshape the national broadcaster around his own political agenda, dressed up as a defence of impartiality, can finally be seen for what it is: an absolute disaster for the BBC and for the public it is meant to serve.
Venezuela has revoked operating permits for six international airlines after they suspended flights to the country following a United States warning of airspace risk, in the latest point of tension between the two countries.
Last week, the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) warned of a “potentially hazardous situation” in Venezuelan airspace due to a “worsening security situation and heightened military activity”.
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While Caracas said the FAA had no jurisdiction over its airspace, the decision led some airlines to indefinitely suspend flights to the South American country from November 24 to 28, Marisela de Loaiza, president of the Airlines Association in Venezuela, said.
The action comes amid worsening tensions between the US and Venezuela over President Donald Trump’s battle against what he calls ‘narco-terrorism’ in the Caribbean.
Since September, the US has carried out at least 21 strikes on vessels it accuses of trafficking drugs, killing at least 83 people. Venezuela has said the strikes amount to murder.
Which airlines has Venezuela banned and why?
On Wednesday night, Venezuela’s civil aviation authority announced that Spain’s Iberia, Portugal’s TAP, Colombia’s Avianca, Chile’s and Brazil’s LATAM, Brazil’s Gol and Turkish Airlines would have their permits revoked.
The authority said the decision was taken against the carriers for joining “the actions of state terrorism promoted by the United States government”.
Before the revocation, Venezuela’s government had issued a 48-hour deadline on Monday for airlines to resume their cancelled flights or risk losing their permits.
Airline carrier Iberia had said it plans to restart flights to Venezuela as soon as full safety conditions are met.
At the same time, Avianca announced in a statement on Wednesday its intention to reschedule cancelled flights to the Venezuelan capital by December 5.
But Portuguese Foreign Minister Paulo Rangel called the decision to revoke permits “disproportionate”.
“What we have to do is, through our embassy, make the Venezuelan authorities aware that this measure is disproportionate, that we have no intention of cancelling our routes to Venezuela, and that we only did this for security reasons,” he said.
What about other airlines operating in Venezuela?
Spain’s Air Europa and Plus Ultra have also suspended flights to Venezuela, but their permits have not been revoked, with no reason given for the exemption.
Panama’s Copa and its low-cost airline, Wingo, are continuing to operate to Venezuela. Domestic airlines, including the flag-carrier, Conviasa, flying from Venezuela to Colombia, Panama and Cuba are also still in operation.
What is behind US-Venezuela tensions?
Since US President Donald Trump’s return to office in January, tensions between his administration and Venezuela’s government have ramped up.
The US has built up a large military presence off the coast of Venezuela – its most significant military deployment to the Caribbean in decades – to combat what it claims is the trafficking of drugs.
The Trump administration has frequently claimed that Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro is behind the drug trade, without providing any evidence to support this.
In August, the US government raised its reward for information leading to Maduro’s arrest from $25m to $50m.
Maduro denies that he is involved in the drug trade.
This week, the US designated the Cartel de los Soles (Cartel of the Suns) a foreign “terrorist” organisation. It also claims the group is headed by Maduro and a senior figure in his government.
Venezuela’s foreign ministry said it “categorically, firmly and absolutely rejected” the designation, describing it as a “new and ridiculous lie”.
Moreover, the US has long rejected Maduro’s government, calling his election win last year “rigged”. In November 2024, the US recognised Venezuela’s opposition leader, Edmundo Gonzalez, as the country’s rightful president.
The Venezuelan government has suggested that the drug operation in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific is a cover for the US’s real aim of deposing Maduro from government – something some observers also believe.
Since September, the US has conducted at least 21 strikes on Venezuelan vessels in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific, claiming they are drug boats. More than 80 people have been killed, but the Trump administration has provided no evidence for its claims.
Last month, the US military conducted bomber flights up to the coast of Venezuela as part of a training exercise to simulate an attack, and sent the world’s largest aircraft carrier, USS Gerald R Ford, into the region.
However, in recent days, Trump has shown a willingness to hold direct talks.
On Wednesday, Trump told reporters on board his presidential plane, Air Force One, that he “might talk” to Maduro but warned “we can do things the easy way, that’s fine, and if we have to do it the hard way, that’s fine, too”.
(Al Jazeera)
What has Trump said about anti-drug land operations in Venezuela?
On Thursday, Trump warned that land operations to combat drug trafficking by land could begin “very soon”.
“You probably noticed that people aren’t wanting to be delivering by sea, and we’ll be starting to stop them by land also,” Trump said in remarks to troops stationed around the globe to mark the US holiday, Thanksgiving.
“The land is easier, but that’s going to start very soon.”