Trump to send top envoy to Russia in push to finalise Ukraine plan

Russia says it supports a “essence” of a US strategy to end its conflict with Russia, as Donald Trump claimed that progress was being made toward reaching a deal and that he would send his special representative to Russia for talks with President Vladimir Putin.

After US and Ukrainian negotiators met in Geneva two days earlier to discuss Trump’s initial peace plan, which had been perceived by Ukrainians as a Russian wish list for Kyiv to cede territory to Moscow, impose its military, and renounce its commitment to NATO, diplomatic activity erupted on Tuesday.

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The proposed proposal, which appears to address concerns of Ukraine and its allies in Europe, has since been modified.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy addressed “sensitive points” at a video conference of the so-called coalition of the willing, a group of 30 countries supporting Ukraine.

A Ukrainian official earlier claimed Kyiv was “the framework’s essence” and that the official was backing it. Andriy Yermak, Zelenskyy’s chief of staff, who led the Geneva negotiations, added that the security guarantees Ukraine was seeking appeared “very solid” in response to that feeling of momentum.

Trump acknowledged at the White House that the Ukraine war was “not easy,” but he added that “we’re close to reaching a deal.”

He said, “I expected that to be a simpler [deal], but I believe we are progressing.”

Later, he stated on his Truth Social platform that he would send envoy Steve Witkoff to Moscow to resolve “a few” remaining issues with the agreement.

He stated that he would like to meet with Putin and Zelenskyy “soon,” but only when the deal to end the conflict is done, or at least in its final stages.

Russia appeared unconvinced of progress after firing a deadly barrage of missiles at Kiev’s capital the previous night.

The modified plan, which is still unpublished, should reflect the “spirit and letter” of an agreement reached between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin at their Alaska summit earlier this year, according to Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.

Lavrov warned that “if the spirit and letter of Anchorage are lost in comparison to the fundamental agreements we have established, then the situation [for Russia] will fundamentally change.”

According to Al Jazeera’s Yulia Shapovalova, who is a journalist from Moscow, there was a lot of “uncertainty” at the Kremlin despite alleged “behind-the-scenes interactions” between US counterpart Steve Witkoff and Russian envoy Kirill Dmitriev, who reportedly worked on Trump’s plan’s initial stage.

She claimed that the revisions to the peace plan did not make the Russian side happy.

The so-called European version, according to Shapovalova, allows Kyiv to join NATO and doesn’t restrict the size of its armed forces, in contrast to the 28-point initial American plan presented by Donald Trump, which included 28 points.

However, US Army Secretary Dan Driscoll had earlier expressed his satisfaction at a meeting with Russian officials in Abu Dhabi, the country’s capital, by stating that “the discussions are going well and we are still optimistic.”

There are “a few delicate, but not insurmountable, details that need to be resolved,” according to White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, who spoke to X on X.

According to Kimberly Halkett, a reporter for Al Jazeera from Washington, DC, “it’s unclear when those discussions will take place, who will be involved, and what they will look like.” Given the upcoming November 27th American Thanksgiving holiday, she continued, it was obvious that they would not be coming soon.

Macron urges “pressure” on Putin.

Leaders of the coalition of the willing, who have pledged to guarantee any ceasefire, quickly adopted security guarantees and a reconstruction plan for Ukraine as the US struggled to close the stalemate between Ukraine and Russia.

The leaders of the US and coalition nations convened a task force to “solidify” security guarantees at the video meeting co-chaired by French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Zelenskyy and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in attendance.

Trump hasn’t stated whether he will provide support for Ukraine’s post-ceasefire “reassurance force.” Although the force’s formation would rely on US military muscle, the plan would involve European allies who would train Ukrainian troops and provide sea and air support.

Macron claimed in a statement following the video call that, contrary to what had been stated in the US plan’s initial draft, discussions in Geneva had established that there should be no limitations on the Ukrainian army.

A political and legal impasse in a Europe seeking funding for Ukraine’s reconstruction, according to him, will be “finalized in the coming days” with the European Commission.

There isn’t a consensus on how to proceed despite the fact that Western nations froze about $300 billion in Russian assets in 2022, primarily in Belgium. Some people support the asset’s seizing, but others, like Belgium, remain cautious due to legal concerns.

According to reports, Trump’s strategy would divide the assets between US-Russian investments and reconstruction.

Macron criticised Russia, arguing that Moscow should be subject to “continued pressure.” He made reference to Russia’s overnight attacks on Ukraine’s capital Kyiv, which resulted in seven fatalities and damaged the heating and power systems, saying “on the ground, the reality is quite the opposite of a willingness for peace.”

Trump administration to retroactively vet refugees already resettled in US

Immigrant rights organizations are concerned that the administration of US President Donald Trump will retroactively vet refugees who have already been admitted into the nation.

According to Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security, “Corrective action is now being taken to ensure those who are present in the United States deserve to be here.”

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More than 230, 000 refugees who were formally resettled in the nation under former president Joe Biden were informed by the Associated Press and Reuters on Monday that they had received a government memo.

According to the memo, USCIS Director Joseph Edlow said that if a refugee is found to have violated the requirements for resettlement, their legal status will be revoked.

According to the memo, “USCIS has determined that a thorough examination and re-interview of all refugees admitted from January 20, 2021, to February 20, 2025” is appropriate.

“USCIS will also periodically review and re-interview refugees who have been admitted after this time frame.”

In 2024, the US admitted more than 100, 000 refugees. The Democratic Republic of the Congo, Afghanistan, Venezuela, and Syria were the main countries of refugee origin.

Refugees file for legal status while they are outside the country, in contrast to asylum seekers who seek protection once they enter the country.

They are permitted to enter the US under the presumption that they will remain fugitives in their home countries and protected from persecution.

A year after entering the country, newcomers can apply for legal permanent residency through refugee admission, which also provides a pathway to becoming US citizens.

Multiple stages of screening and interviews are conducted on applicants for refugee admission. The United Nations is frequently the first step in the process, which refers the applicant to the US refugee admissions program.

The applicants are then subject to a rigorous screening process by US immigration authorities, who must demonstrate that they faced persecution for their race, religion, nationality, political beliefs, or social affiliation.

The International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP), which is led by Sharif Aly, claimed that refugees are the country’s most thoroughly screened immigrants.

Aly said in a statement that “this order is one more in a long line of efforts to bully some of our communities’ most vulnerable members,” “by threatening their legal status, making them vulnerable to the egregious conduct of immigration enforcement agencies, and placing them through a laborious and potentially re-traumatizing process.”

The Trump administration’s action was “unnecessary, cruel, and wasteful,” according to Mark Hetfield, president of the humanitarian organization HIAS. His organization assists newcomers to the US.

Hetfield told Reuters that “refugees have already been thoroughly checked out than any other group of immigrants.”

Trump drastically reduced refugee admission during his first term, but the program was completely eliminated once he returned to the White House in January.

The refugee admission cap for the following year was set at a historic low of 7,500 by the second Trump administration.

The president also gave the order to “primarily” resettle white South Africans, who he claims are subject to discrimination from their own government.

Colombian court sentences Alvaro Uribe’s brother to 28 years in prison

Santiago Uribe, the brother of former Colombian president Alvaro Uribe, was given a 28-year prison sentence and three-month prison term for aggravated homicide and conspiracy to commit a crime while leading a paramilitary group.

A three-judge panel in Antioquia’s northwestern province on Tuesday declared that Uribe “formed and led an illegal armed group” in the wake of the verdict.

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Under Uribe’s leadership, the organization allegedly carried out a “plan to systematic murder and extermination people who were unfavorable.”

Uribe has denied having any connections to paramilitary organizations. His team of attorneys intends to file an appeal.

The lower court was cleared last year, but the decision was overturned. The Supreme Court of Colombia will now decide the case in its entirety.

The Uribe family’s alleged paramilitary ties are the latest twist in a long-running criminal investigation.

Alvaro Uribe, the former president, has also been the subject of an AP photo investigation.

During Colombia’s six-decade-long internal conflict, critics have accused Uribe and his brother, the former president, of maintaining ties to organizations that committed grave human rights violations.

Activities that occurred on and around the La Carolina cattle ranch owned by the Uribe family in Antioquia were the subject of Tuesday’s conviction.

The 12 Apostles, a far-right paramilitary group formed by ranchers in the early 1990s to combat leftist rebels, specifically the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), were well-known in their 307-page ruling.

The 12 Apostles, which the court called a “death squad,” killed “undesirables” including sex workers, drug users, people with mental illnesses, and suspected leftist sympathisers, according to the court’s description of The 12 Apostles as a “death squad.”

According to the ruling, the paramilitary group held meetings at La Carolina as well as training and distribution of weapons on-site.

According to the judges, those were “acts that led to crimes against humanity.”

The court found Uribe responsible for ordering the murder of Camilo Barrientos, a bus driver who was fatally shot near La Carolina in 1994 for being a suspected rebel collaborator, and describing him as the leader of The 12 Apostles.

The militia “enjoyed the cooperation of agents of the State, both through action and inaction,” according to the ruling on Tuesday.

In the late 1990s, Uribe was first questioned about his involvement with The 12 Apostles, but the investigation was canceled in 1999 because there was no conclusive proof.

In 2010, Colombian authorities detained Uribe on suspicion of homicide, and they opened an investigation in 2016.

Alvaro Uribe speaks to reporting scrum
Santiago’s arrest was addressed by former president Alvaro Uribe at a press conference on March 6, 2016.

The lower court’s decision was announced years later, in November 2024, despite the trial’s conclusion coming out in 2020. Jaime Herrera Nino, the judge who was in charge of the case at the time, ruled that there was insufficient evidence and acquitted Uribe.

That conclusion is overturned by Tuesday’s decision. Even at the highest levels of power, human rights advocates applauded the ruling as a step toward accountability.

The sentence is very significant, according to Laura Bonilla, a Peace and Reconciliation Foundation (Pares) deputy director in Colombia. It illustrates the extent of paramilitarism’s influence on Colombian society.

The complexity of the case, according to Gerson Arias, a conflict and security investigator at the Colombian think tank Ideas for Peace, reflects the various power structures involved.

He claimed that because paramilitarism was deeply rooted in society’s upper echelons, it would take years to fully understand what transpired.

Therefore, it is likely that many of our collective paramilitarism-related knowledge is still awaiting clarification and discovery.

Former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, the defendant’s brother, served there from 2002 to 2010.

The former president was found guilty earlier this year of paying former paramilitary officers to cover up his involvement with them.

Following a court’s ruling in October, the court overturned the evidence’s finding that it had been gathered through an unlawful wiretap. In the prosecution’s arguments, it also cited “structural deficiencies.”

In Colombia, the former president has pledged to form a coalition to oppose a left-wing government in the 2026 elections. He continues to be a powerful figure in right-wing politics.

International funding cuts disrupted global response to HIV, UN report says

Millions of people are without access to care because of global funding cuts for treatment and prevention programs, according to the UN agency for combating AIDS.

After the United States stopped funding when President Donald Trump took office in January, UNAIDS claimed in a report released on Tuesday that the world’s response to the disease “immediatly entered crisis mode.”

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On January 25, the Trump administration had stopped providing military assistance to Israel and Egypt.

Some HIV funding was restored in the second half of the year, but some programs haven’t since Trump’s decision to abolish the US Agency for International Development (USAID).

According to UNAIDS, the cuts were made because “many low and middle-income nations are experiencing more pressing economic and financial pressures.”

According to the statement, funding gaps are “having profound, lasting effects” on people’s lives all over the world.

More than 2 million adolescent girls and young women have been denied essential health services, and community-led organizations have been devastated, with many of them forced to close their doors, according to the report, “people living with HIV have died due to service disruptions, millions of people at high risk of acquiring HIV have lost access to the most effective prevention tools available.”

Due to the funding cuts, Burundi’s population used the preventive HIV medication PrEP, which is known as PrEP, decreased by 64 percent, in Uganda by 38 percent, and Vietnam by 21 percent. Nigeria’s domestic distribution decreased by 55%.

The UNAIDS executive director, Winnie Byanyima, said the funding crisis has revealed how fragile the progress we’ve worked so hard to achieve.

People are hidden behind every statistic in this report, including missing newborns for HIV testing, preventing support for young women, and communities that have been abruptly evacuated from their homes. We can’t let them go.

UNAIDS reported that there were some positive trends emerging, including national and regional initiatives to support health programs and treat the disease, despite the financial crisis.

“Communities are uniting to support the AIDS response and one another.” Governments have taken swift action to increase domestic funding where possible, the report stated, even though the most affected nations are also some of the richest, which limits their ability to invest in HIV.

“Some nations have maintained or even increased the number of people receiving HIV treatment,” this may be a result.

In order to give lower-income nations’ international debt more room to grow, the report recommends restructuring and suspending payments until 2030.

In times of pandemics, it also advocated “inspiration with prizes rather than patents, and treating health innovations as global public goods.”

The report also highlighted “a growing human rights crisis” as a further obstacle to the fight against AIDS in addition to declining funding.

The number of nations criminalizing same-sex sexual activity and gender expression increased in 2025, according to UNAIDS, for the first time since it began monitoring punitive laws in 2008.

Brazil’s Supreme Court orders Jair Bolsonaro to begin prison sentence

After his defense team turned down a second appeal, Brazil’s Supreme Court has ordered former president Jair Bolsonaro to begin serving his 27-year prison sentence.

On Tuesday, Justice Alexandre de Moraes, a key witness in Bolsonaro’s case, made the announcement.

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Bolsonaro’s sentence was set to begin at the Federal Police’s current prison facility in Brasilia, where the court had previously stated.

After losing the 2022 presidential election, Bolsonaro was found guilty of plotting a coup in order to hold onto power.

He was found guilty of attempting a coup, supporting an armed conspiracy, causing damage to public property, and aggravating a listed national heritage site’s state of preservation.

He received a 27-year prison sentence and three-month prison term. However, that sentence did not allow for appeals right away.

Bolsonaro contests victory

Bolsonaro, a former army captain who served for nearly 27 years in the Chamber of Deputies before becoming president, was a member of Brazil’s far-right Liberal Party, also known as PL.

He led the country from 2019 to 2023. However, he was accused of swaying the electoral process in Brazil, and the country’s Supreme Electoral Court ruled in June 2023 that he had abused his position.

Bolsonaro ran for re-election in the 2022 election, but left-wing candidate Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva narrowly lost.

However, despite media reports suggesting that he might have conceded his defeat in private during a meeting with the Supreme Court, the right-wing leader refused to admit it publicly.

Bolsonaro and his supporters filed a legal challenge, contending that the election results contained “discrepancies.”

De Moraes at the time rejected the complaint, citing “bad faith” and “total absence of any evidence.” Bolsonaro’s team received a nearly $4.3 million fine as a result.

Bolsonaro’s supporters also staged protests in Brasilia, obstructing roads, and launching attacks on police headquarters.

One week after Lula was sworn in, the unrest reached its peak on January 8, 2023. Bolsonaro had briefly left the country, but supporters gathered at the Three Powers Plaza in Brasilia and stormed government buildings.

Numerous federal investigations were sparked by the riot. Additionally, the federal police released an 884-page report in November 2024 that detailed evidence they claimed Bolsonaro and his allies had conspired to overturn the election results.

According to testimony and testimony, Bolsonaro and his associates had hoped to stoke a military uprising to stop Lula from taking office and re-election.

According to the police, some military officers affiliated with Bolsonaro even suggested a plot to kill Lula and kill de Moraes.

A danger of flight

Bolsonaro was formally charged in February by the prosecution, who was later tried.

Bolsonaro’s defense has repeatedly portrayed the allegations as political maneuvers, and the ex-president has consistently maintained his innocence.

Donald Trump, the president of the United States, has also pressed the Brazilian government to drop the case, imposing 50 percent tariffs on some of its exports and calling the trial “witch hunt.”

Bolsonaro has been under house arrest since August because he fears he might try to flee to another country. He had already spent several nights in the Hungarian embassy in 2024, according to rumors that he might have sought diplomatic adolfaction from Prime Minister Viktor Orban.

A letter allegedly addressed to Argentine President Javier Milei in which Bolsonaro claimed he was being persecuted and sought political asylum was also recovered by police.

Bolsonaro’s request to overturn his prison sentence was rejected earlier this month.

Since then, his defense team has filed a petition for the 27-year prison term to be placed under house arrest for humanitarian reasons. Bolsonaro was stabbed while campaigning in 2018, and he still has abdominal issues.

He was later taken into custody by the police on Saturday after it was discovered that he had hacked into his ankle monitor.

Bolsonaro allegedly claimed to have had “hallucinatory” side effects from taking the medications he was taking. He denied that he was a danger of flying.