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Archive April 30, 2025

British teenager Brennan wins Romandie opening stage

Images courtesy of Getty

In the Tour de Romandie’s opening stage, British teenager Matthew Brennan won by a sprint.

The 19-year-old Visma-Lease a Bike rider won his fourth professional title on Wednesday in Fribourg, taking home the yellow jersey.

Prior to this, Brennan had won the Volta a Catalunya and the Grand Prix de Denain.

Despite the efforts of team-mate and former Tour de France champion Geraint Thomas, Britain’s Samuel Watson of Ineos Grenadiers was unable to recapture his victory from victory in Tuesday’s opening act.

Remco Evenepoel, a favorite in Belgium, came in ninth place, seven seconds clear of Brennan.

In the race’s longest stage, which included four categorised climbs, Brennan produced an impressive ride to win clear of the peloton in spite of the warm April weather.

Stage One of the Romandie Tour

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Columbia protest leader Mohsen Mahdawi released from US custody

As the case aims to challenge Mohsen Mahdawi’s deportation, a judge in the United States has ordered his release.

US District Judge Geoffrey Crawford issued a ruling on Wednesday that Mahdawi could leave the Northwest State Correctional Facility, where he had been detained since being detained by immigration authorities earlier this month.

As supporters greeted him with cheers and with both hands in the air, Mahdawi flashed peace signs as he left the court.

He addressed President Donald Trump, whose administration has repressed student protesters who have criticized Israel’s occupation of Gaza.

Mahdawi addressed Trump, “I’m not afraid of you.” He addressed the Palestinian people and tried to dispel the myths that the student protest movement was peaceful.

“We support peace and oppose war,” Mahdawi said. To my Palestinian neighbors, “I see freedom, I feel your pain, and I see your suffering.”

Mahdawi, a legal resident of the US and a participant in the Columbia University protests, was detained on April 14 while undergoing a citizenship interview. Social media users quickly saw a video of him being escorted away in handcuffs.

His arrest was a part of the Trump administration’s wider campaign to target permanent residents and visa holders for their pro-Palestine advocacy. Trump has also pressed top universities to halt pro-Palestine demonstrations in an effort to combat anti-Semitism.

Critics, however, claim that rationale is an excuse to stifle opposing viewpoints and exert greater control over academia.

What exactly is in the ruling?

Judge Crawford ruled that the student activist posed no risk of flight and could be let go to his New York City graduation the following month.

Mahdawi’s release may be subject to an appeal by the US government, but the judge’s ruling allows him to leave Vermont and contest his deportation from a detention facility.

However, his release was opposed by the Trump administration. According to its attorneys, Mahdawi’s detention was a “constitutionally acceptable component of the deportation process.”

Mahdawi’s attorneys have argued that his arrest violates his right to free speech under the Constitution.

Mahdawi’s lawyer, Lia Ernst, who represents him in the American Civil Liberties Union, stated in a statement following his release that “Mohsen has committed no crime, and the government’s only supposed justification for holding him in prison is his speech.”

The US Supreme Court may decide in the end, however, that the Trump administration has taken the general position that only US citizens are protected by constitutional speech protections.

Government lawyers have cited the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 as the legal justification for Mahdawi’s deportation in court filings.

The secretary of state has “reasonable grounds to believe]they would have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences” under a rarely used section of the law that allows the US to deport foreign nationals.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio has sought to deport Mahdawi and other pro-Palestinian student protesters using that provision. Israel plays a significant role in the Middle East for the US.

[File: Jeenah Moon/Reuters] Demonstrators in New York City carry placards that read “Free Mohsen” to urge Mohsen Mahdawi’s release.

advocacy is under attack.

Mahdawi was detained a few weeks after Mahmoud Khalil, a fellow permanent resident of the US, was detained.

Immigration officials detained Khalil at the beginning of March. At the prestigious Ivy League university, the pair co-founded the Palestinian Student Union.

Since his arrest outside of his apartment, Khalil has been held in immigration custody in Louisiana. A judge in immigration court earlier this month upheld Khalil’s deportation, supporting government attorneys.

Secretary of State Rubio ordered the 30-year-old to be kicked out of the US for “his role in antisemitic protests and disruptive activities, which create a hostile environment for Jewish students in the United States,” according to a two-page letter from the court.

In what critics have called an effort to silence freedom of speech, the Trump administration has generally described nearly all pro-Palestine advocacy as “anti-Semitic.”

Rubio’s accusations against Khalil are unsupported, and the student leader has been indicted for a crime. Even though a permanent resident’s beliefs, associations, or statements are “otherwise legal,” Rubio’s letter asserted that his department could revoke them.

A federal judge ruled on Tuesday that Khalil can file a lawsuit against his arrest and detention based on the allegations that he was targeted for his political views.

Both Mahdawi and Khalil have separate court cases, one challenging the justification for their arrests and the other seeking deportation.

Democrat Senator Peter Welch, a US senator, visited Mahdawi while he was detained, who had previously called the arrest of the student “unjust” and anti-democratic.

According to a video posted on Welch’s X account, Mahdawi said at the time, “I’m staying positive by reassuring myself of the ability of justice and the deep belief of democracy.”

With song and seed, Brazil’s Indigenous Maxakali confront climate change

At least three sizable valleys in the Atlantic Forest were once the territory of the Maxakalis. The forest served as a home for the ymxop, which are fundamental to Maxakali beliefs, as well as providing food, medicine, and construction materials for the village’s residents.

Damásio remarked, “There were medicines in the forest for us.” We would use the bark from the trees to relieve our stomachaches. It’s just grass now, though. Everything was burned by the farmers.

Less than 17 percent of the original vegetation is still present in the four remaining Maxakali reservations, which have been reduced to 6, 434 hectares (15, 900 acres) of pasture. Some experts believe that the Atlantic Forest is a regional wilderness.

Many Maxakali leaders are turning to reforestation because they believe in their musical traditions an ecological blueprint from the past.

In Minas Gerais, Brazil, Manuel Damásio Maxakali tends to banana trees [Sara Van Horn/Al Jazeera]

In Maxakali villages, singing organizes life: for example, it helps treat illness, teach history, or instruct people on things like how to make bags and make fishing nets.

The coordinator of the Hmhi project, who is also a musicologist at the Federal University of Minas Gerais, said de Tugny, a musician who is also a musicologist, that “songs connect the entire Tikma’n social structure.” “No one writes songs,” said one. They are musical.

She continued, “having a song means being able to care for the spirit that is the song’s creator.”

Ancestral songs also provide a detailed history of local ecology. There are roughly 360 hours of song in total, which includes twelve musical canons that are distinct in terms of grammar and lexicon. The lyrics contain hundreds of flora and fauna that are now extinct in the area.

Manuel Kelé, the village leader of Gua Boa, said, “We sing about everything: the saplings, the bananas, ourselves.” Within our religion, even dogs have a song.

A Maxakali woman uses a hoe to tend to crops
[Sara Van Horn/Al Jazeera] Caretakers at the Hmhi nursery take care of the plants and trees that are growing.

One song, for instance, lists 33 different bee species, some of which are not known in Brazil’s native tongue, Portuguese, and only two of them are still present in the area today. Many Maxakali have never personally witnessed bee behavior, but the lyrics provide it.

De Tugny remarked, “The songs are snapshots.” The names of insects, birds, plants, and instances of animal-to-leaf relationships are like pictures of every detail in the Atlantic Forest. These are all registered.

Ritual songs are essential for the Maxakali to help the forest regenerate. In Hmhi’s tree nurseries, singing is a daily activity.

As part of the regular rhythms of harvesting and cultivation, nursery caretakers also play music while burying seeds. Caretakers sing in concert with one another as they divide into groups and circle the nursery. The lyrics to the song aid in the recall of ancestors’ ecological knowledge.

The project’s leaders believe that reforestation is essential to reducing the region’s fire risks, despite the fact that some of the work at Hmhi is focused on planting fruit trees and other crops.

A woman leans on a wooden gardening implement outdoors in Minas Gerais
[Sara Van Horn/Al Jazeera] Song plays a significant role in the Maxakali culture’s growth cycle.

The Hmhi project has planted 155 hectares (383 acres) of Atlantic Forest vegetation and over 60 hectares (148 acres) of fruit trees since its inception in 2023. A nearly twice as large area as it was previously planted has been in mind.

Participants in the program have also formed their own provisional fire brigade and even constructed natural fire barriers by utilizing traditional techniques, such as planting fire-resistant vegetation species.

Automakers suspend financial guidance amid tariff uncertainty

In response to growing tariff uncertainty, several global automakers, including Stellantis and Mercedes-Benz, have suspended their respective annual financial guidance reports for investors in addition to those from Michigan’s General Motors and Volvo.

The announcements on Wednesday came as US President Donald Trump eased the impact of his earlier this month’s executive order on Tuesday by signing an executive order.

We look forward to working with the US administration to advance the impact of the tariff policies on our North American operations and encourage exports, according to Stellantis board chairman John Elkann in a statement.

Due to changing tariff policies, as well as the difficulty predicting potential effects on market volumes and the competitive landscape, Stellantis stated that it was “suspending its 2025 financial guidance.”

This comes as a result of layoffs at Stellantis, a car company that operates 14 brands, including Maserati, Jeep, RAM, Dodge, and Fiat. It temporarily laid off 900 workers for two weeks in April, claiming that the delay was caused by uncertainty about how Trump-imposed tariffs would impact the company.

In a company-wide email, Antonio Filosa, Stellantis’ chief operating officer for the Americas, stated that the company has “decided to take some immediate actions” in addition to the medium- and long-term effects of these tariffs on its operations.

In its first-quarter earnings report on Wednesday, the business reported a 14-percent decline in sales for the quarter, reaching $ 40.78 billion (35.8 billion euros).

Before the US tariffs began, Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen, two of Europe’s biggest car manufacturers, both reported significant declines in their net profits.

Mercedes cited “volatility with regard to tariff policies,” which meant predicting business growth couldn’t be accurately predicted. In the first three months of the year, Mercedes’ net profit decreased by almost 43 percent to $1.9 billion (1.73 billion euros).

Finance chief Harald Wilhelm praised Mercedes’ continued position as a leader because of what he claimed was a strong position in high-end, profitable vehicles.

A strong foundation can be built upon this, he said, adding that a strong balance sheet and a stable balance sheet will help us navigate our business during a turbulent time of geopolitical uncertainty.

“Towards the lower end”

According to an analysis conducted by the news agency Reuters, about 40 businesses across all industries have cut or lowered their forward guidance during the first two weeks of the first-quarter earnings season. Snap, a social media company, declined on Tuesday to provide forecasts for the future, citing a slowdown in ad spending decline that had raised doubts about advertising budgets as a result of the impact of the tariffs, sending its stock down 15% on Wednesday.

Before the tariffs, European automakers already faced declining sales of electric vehicles and fierce competition from Chinese electric vehicles, which is a significant market. Volkswagen, a 10-brand group that includes Porsche, Skoda, and Audi, reported a net loss of 40.6 percent to $ 2.49 billion (2.19 billion euros).

The carmaker stated for the rest of the year that it anticipated business to be “to the lower end” of its guidance, citing difficulties like increased competition, stricter emissions standards, and trade tensions.

Volkswagen’s finance director Arno Antlitz said it was “too early to say” if Volkswagen would start ramping up production in the US to avoid any tariffs during a conference call for analysts and investors.

Volkswagen’s guidance does not account for changeable American tariffs, but it anticipates a profit margin of 5.5 to 6.5 percent for the upcoming year.

Giving a projection for the entire year is extremely challenging, according to Antlitz.

The German group’s outlook did not “include any impact of US tariffs,” according to UBS analyst Patrick Hummel, who wrote in a client note, calling it “essentially a withdrawal of guidance.”

Luxury car manufacturer Aston Martin Lagonda announced that it would restrict shipments to the United States, but it kept up its annual target despite reporting a 13% decline in revenue for the first quarter.

easing some tariffs

Trump’s 25-percent tariff on steel and aluminum has also had an impact on the industry, along with a 25-percent tariff on finished imported cars.

Additionally, foreign auto parts are set to be subject to new tariffs, which are anticipated to go into effect on May 3.

With Trump’s new policy, a business would not have to pay a 25% levy on imported vehicles and a 25% duty on steel or aluminum. A representative from the US Commerce Department said the importer would pay the higher levies, but not both.

The second change is that businesses that import parts from US-made vehicles can cover 3.75 percent of the list price for the first year and 2.5 percent for the second year.

However, according to analysts, this reprieve won’t always work in practice because automakers will be faced with business disruption from tariffs.

Galopin Des Champs wins first Punchestown Gold Cup

Images courtesy of Getty

A dominant performance was Galopin Des Champs’ first Punchestown Gold Cup victory.

The two-time Cheltenham Gold Cup champion, Spillane’s Tower, won by 22 lengths under the guidance of jockey Paul Townend.

The Willie Mullins-trained 5-6 favorite, who had twice finished second behind Fastorslow in Punchestown the previous two years, came out third and won third.

He was “he was back to his best, he was jumping at his comfort,” Mullins said.

Paul had no doubt in him at all. It was amazing to win that race by 22 lengths. Still, to me, it was awesome.

He is a very good horse, he says. Without a doubt, he has to be one of the best chasers we have ever had.

In the day’s other Grade One contests, Mullins added two victories to his already two on Tuesday.

In a thrilling finale, Cheltenham victor and 13-8 favorite Jasmin De Vaux defeated Aintree champion Honesty Policy by half a length.

Townend’s riding partner Jasmin De Vaux overcame a fall at the final hurdle to advance past the line.

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