Massive fire rips through Hong Kong high-rise complex, killing several

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At least 14 people were killed and dozens hurt in a massive fire that was burning through several high-rise buildings in Hong Kong’s Wang Fuk Court, according to video. While firefighters battled the flames, some residents remained trapped. The cause is being investigated by authorities.

Georgia judge drops election interference case against Trump

BREAKING,

Donald Trump is no longer facing charges against him as a result of allegations that the president and his allies interfered with the US presidential election in 2020.

The prosecution’s request was granted on Wednesday, putting an end to the most recent criminal case brought against Trump.

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According to McAfee, “This case is hereby dismissed in its entirety.”

According to Peter Skandalakis, any allegations of Trump misconduct should be brought federally and not stately.

Skandalakis claimed that while contesting the election is not illegal, Trump’s supporters’ desire to thwart former president Joe Biden’s victory “quickly shifted from a legitimate legal effort to a campaign that ultimately culminated in an attack on the Capitol” on January 6, 2021.

However, he made note in his dismissal filing that the state’s indictment “includes a significant number of overt acts… many of which occurred outside the state of Georgia,” adding to my opinion that this case should be pursued at the federal level rather than by an individual state.

In 2024, Trump was indicted four times while he was in office. In New York, only one of the cases ever went to trial.

He was spared any fines, probation, or jail time after being found guilty of falsifying business records in relation to an adult film actress who received a fake money payment.

After Trump was re-elected president in November of last year, two sets of federal charges against him were dropped. One was a case involving allegations of election meddling, and the other was a case involving mishandling of secret government documents.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis was expelled from the case because she had a romantic relationship with one of her top deputies, which had already caused a setback for the prosecution in Georgia.

Trump only became a suspect after turning himself in to the Fulton County Jail after the state charges were brought against him in Georgia. Although the then-current president never spent time in a prison cell, he had his mugshot taken, which he later used to sell as cell merchandise for his 2024 presidential campaign.

Following the 2020 election, Trump called the state’s top election official, Brad Raffensperger, to request that he “find 11, 780 votes” to overturn the election.

Trump falsely claimed that Biden’s victory was the result of widespread voter fraud and that the results were the result of widespread voter fraud.

Trump in a mugshot of a police officer from the Fulton County Sheriff’s Office on August 24, 2023 [File: Fulton County Sheriff’s Office/Handout via Reuters]

Willis and 16 of his allies who contest the state’s election result were charged with racketeering and a number of crimes connected to the vote in 2023.

The US president has always denied any wrongdoing in the cases against him, calling them a politically motivated “witch hunt,” and made a stunning return to the White House earlier this year.

Skandalakis acknowledged that some of Trump’s opponents may be offended by his decision to drop the charges.

According to him, “the role of a prosecutor is not to satisfy public opinion or to win universal support,” but such a goal is both unattainable and unrelated to the proper exercise of prosecutorial discretion.

US ranchers whiplashed by Trump’s beef policies

The American rancher, one of Donald Trump’s most steadfast voting blocs, has had a whiplash-inducing month.

Ranchers have found themselves caught between the president’s desires to appease both them and the American consumer in the wake of high beef prices, starting with Trump’s quip on October 19 that the US would increase beef imports from Argentina and the ensuing rancher backlash following the announcement of an investigation into the hyperconsolidated US meatpacking industry and the removal of tariffs on Brazilian beef.

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The lowest herd size for beef cattle since the 1950s has led to higher cattle prices for US ranchers. Other factors that limit supply include the Mexican border’s closure due to concerns about screwworms and high tariffs on imported beef.

Cattle prices paid to ranchers are distinct from those for consumer beef, which were $6.32 for a pound (453 grams) of ground beef in September, an 11 percent increase from $ 5.67 per pound in September 2024. Due to the government shutdown, the Bureau of Labor Statistics did not release economic data, including the consumer price index for the month before.

Trump’s plan to import more Argentinian beef was met with opposition from his typically devoted ranchers, who they perceived as a threat to their recent economic successes.

They would be acting in a manner that they have for the past 20 years, which is Terrible! Trump stated in an October post on his Truth Social platform, “It would be nice if they understood that.”

Corbitt Wall, a commercial cattle manager and market analyst, is clear that he “totally supports Trump and everything he does,” but he also saw hubris and a misunderstanding of the president’s cattle industry.

He told Al Jazeera, “There was not a person in the cattle business on any level who was not insulted by that post.”

Since Trump’s announcement on October 21st, Wall has religiously followed prices across the cattle trade, from ranch to slaughterhouse, and has witnessed a decline in the futures market for cattle by more than 15%.

Futures prices affect cattle ranchers’ future sales prices, which will also affect future sales prices. Wall said he hopes Trump leaves the cattle market alone for the sake of ranchers.

He doesn’t understand the impact a statement can have on our business because he doesn’t live in this place, he said, and he does in fact do in this cattle world.

Years of challenging weather

Rancher in Oregon David Packham claimed that many ranchers are still struggling despite years of declining cattle prices.

Years of drought across the nation caused some ranchers to sell their cattle, raising feed costs for everyone. Additionally, tractor-to-pick-up truck prices have increased, especially as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, and are expected to increase even further as a result of Trump’s tariffs.

Packham said he has sold cattle at a loss frequently and doesn’t want consumers to believe that ranchers are raising livestock for the price.

Because I couldn’t afford $100, 000 for a new tractor, Packham said, “I’m looking at a 40-year-old tractor that I use on a daily basis just to keep putting it off replacing it, making repairs, even though it’s difficult to find parts for now, just to keep it limping along.” We have all this loss carryover, so when I say we’re not really making a lot of money, it’s because of it.

Cattle are sold at Fallon, Nevada’s Nevada Livestock Marketing [Courtesy of Corbitt Wall]

Up until Trump’s first term, Packham was a registered Republican. Ranchers who criticize Trump, he said, are in a minority in the community because of the president’s comments about Argentina and the subsequent chaos in the cattle industry.

“I’m noticing more and more of them [ranchers] who have been cautiously neutral and who are now kind of like me and who just say, “You know what?” No. This is bulls***. He’s a train wreck, Packham claimed.

The “Perennial issue”

However, Trump’s announcement on November 7 that the big four US meatpackers, Tyson, JBS, Cargill, and National Beef, will be subject to a Department of Justice investigation for “potential collusion, price fixing, and price manipulation,” is something that action ranchers can support.

Because the four companies, which own more than 80% of the market, have historically had little negotiating leverage on ranchers looking to sell cattle.

However, the first Trump administration’s investigation into meatpacker price fixing was initiated in 2020 as a result of a gulf caused by falling cattle prices and rising consumer beef prices. Under President Joe Biden’s administration, the investigation continued, but it never came to an end. Just before Trump announced the antitrust investigation in November, the investigation was quietly closed with no findings, according to Bloomberg News.

The administration’s announcement regarding the antitrust investigation is “entirely for political consumption,” according to James MacDonald, a research professor in agricultural and resource economics at the University of Maryland.

You can gain some political ground by attacking the packers, according to MacDonald, because it is a recurring problem that “p***es off ranchers.”

Packham said that because of the squeeze caused by the tight cattle market, packers are operating with slimmer margins and not from an absolute position of power.

More than 3, 000 people were employed at Tyson’s Nebraska beef-processing plant as of Friday. The decision, according to MacDonald, was “shock” because it showed how severe the US beef shortage is. Years of drought, which wiped out grazing lands and slowed herd rebuilding, contributed to the current low cattle inventory in the US. Years of work go into improving the cattle supply chain.

It’s a fundamental and kind of a fact, according to MacDonald, and it won’t change for a while.

MacDonald also doubts that Argentina’s increased imports will help to lessen this shortage or lower prices because the country primarily exports lower-grade, lean beef to the US, which accounts for only 2% of imports. He anticipated that while the import market will be impacted by the reintroduction of largely lean Brazilian beef, overall beef supply will be impacted less by it.

McDonald also cited heifer retention figures, which indicate how many female cattle ranchers hold back to produce future herds, which are still low.

These figures were likely taken into account when Tyson made the decision to shut down its plant in Nebraska, and McDonald asserted that the industry doesn’t anticipate a rebound in herd numbers either.

Tyson claims that he doesn’t believe cattle supplies will soon rebound, according to MacDonald.

Trump’s recent policies’ actual mechanisms may not temporarily alter consumers’ bottom lines or alter the cattle market, but Wall is more concerned about the effects of the news cycle, claiming ranchers are “live and die” by the cattle markets. Despite Wall’s shaken faith, he still believes that ranchers will support Trump in spite of the election results.

There is no way for people to choose that option, according to Wall, when you consider what the other side has to offer. They will stick with him in the long run, they say.

Guinea-Bissau army officers say they have seized power; president deposed

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A group of military officers in Guinea-Bissau declared “total control” of the nation the day after two of the country’s most popular presidential candidates each won.

The officers, who identified themselves as the “High Military Command for the Restoration of Order,” read out a statement on Wednesday that stated they had ordered the immediate suspension of the electoral process “until further notice.”

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Additionally, they mandated an overnight curfew and the closure of all land, air, and sea borders.

The election commission’s headquarters, the presidential palace, and the Bissau-based Ministry of Interior were all immediately opened to the public shortly after sustained gunfire was earmarked.

The West African nation’s presidential election results, in which President Umaro Sisoco Embalo and his main rival Fernando Dias faced off, were anticipated to be announced on Thursday.

Embalo, who added that he was “currently at the general staff headquarters,” was deposed during a phone call with French broadcaster France24.

Embalo was reportedly under arrest, according to Al Jazeera’s Nicolas Haque, who was a reporter from neighboring Senegal on Wednesday afternoon.

According to Haque, Domingos Simoes Pereira, the head of the main opposition party PAIGC, has also been detained. Additionally, we just learned that the military is attempting to shut down the Internet. There is a curfew in place.

He added that Denis N’Canha, an army officer in charge of the coup, was the president’s guard’s leader. According to Haque, “the man who was supposed to protect the president has arrested him.”

[Photo by Patrick Meinhardt/AFP] A soldier halts a car close to the presidential palace in Bissau.

Disputed vote

Since gaining its independence from Portugal in 1974, Guinea-Bissau has gone through numerous coups and attempted coups.

Civil society organizations and other observers questioned the legitimacy of this week’s election after the PAIGC was prohibited from running for president, according to Haque.

The military intervened because there was a deadlock in the race to win this week’s election, he said.

Embalo and Dias already had victories, but their claims had not been disproven.

Embalo’s campaign spokesman Oscar Barbosa stated to the AFP news agency on Tuesday that there won’t be a second round, adding that the president “will have a second mandate.”

Dias also declared victory, saying, “This election has been won. In the first round, it was won.

Officials from the National Electoral Commission (CNE) collect documents accompanying ballot boxes received from different polling stations at their headquarters in Bissau, on November 24, 2025, the day after Guinea-Bissau’s presidential and legislative elections. (Photo by PATRICK MEINHARDT / AFP)
On November 24, 2025, Bissau-based National Electoral Commission officials gather ballot box documentation. [File: Patrick Meinhardt/AFP]

calls for restraint

According to spokesperson Stephane Dujarric, the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has been closely monitoring the situation in Guinea-Bissau for the time being.

Dujarric urged “to all national stakeholders in Guinea Bissau to exercise restraint, exercise, and respect the rule of law,” according to Dujarric during a press conference in New York.

The secretary-general added that he will continue to watch closely the country’s current state.

The Portuguese government also urged all parties to abstain from “any act of institutional or civic violence.”

The state institutions in Guinea-Bissau must be allowed to continue operating, according to a statement.