Archive December 13, 2025

Myanmar military says armed groups used hospital it bombed, killing dozens

Myanmar’s military has acknowledged it conducted an air strike on a hospital in the western state of Rakhine that killed 33 people, whom it accused of being armed members of opposition groups and their supporters, but not civilians.

Witnesses, aid workers, rebel groups and the United Nations have said the victims were civilians at the hospital.

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In a statement published by the state-run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper on Saturday, the military’s information office said armed groups, including the ethnic Arakan Army and the People’s Defence Force, used the hospital as their base.

It said the military carried out necessary security measures and launched a counterterrorism operation against the general hospital in Mrauk-U township on Wednesday.

However, the United Nations on Thursday condemned the attack on the facility providing emergency care, obstetrics and surgical services in the area, saying that it was part of a broader pattern of strikes causing harm to civilians and civilian objects that are devastating communities across the country.

UN rights chief Volker Turk condemned the attacks “in [the] strongest possible terms” and demanded an investigation. “Such attacks may amount to a war crime. I call for investigations and those responsible to be held to account. The fighting must stop now,” he wrote on X.

World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he was “appalled”. “At least 33 people have been killed … including health workers, patients and family members. Hospital infrastructure was severely damaged, with operating rooms and the main inpatient ward completely destroyed,” he wrote on X.

Myanmar has been gripped by attritional fighting in a raging civil war.

Mrauk-U, located 530km (326 miles) northwest of Yangon, the country’s largest city, was captured by the Arakan Army in February 2024.

The Arakan Army is the well-trained and well-armed military wing of the Rakhine ethnic minority movement, which seeks autonomy from Myanmar’s central government. It began its offensive in Rakhine in November 2023 and has seized a strategically important regional army headquarters and 14 of Rakhine’s 17 townships.

Rakhine, formerly known as Arakan, was the site of a brutal army counterinsurgency operation in 2017 that drove about 740,000 Muslim-majority Rohingya to seek safety across the border in Bangladesh. There is still ethnic tension between the Buddhist Rakhine and the Rohingya.

The Arakan Army pledged in a statement on Thursday to pursue accountability for the air strike in cooperation with global organisations to ensure justice and take “strong and decisive action” against the military.

The military government has stepped up air strikes ahead of planned December 28 elections. Opponents of military rule charge that the polls will be neither free nor fair and are mainly an effort to legitimise the army retaining power.

Russian drone hits Turkish ships in Ukraine

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A Russian drone strike hit a Turkish-owned commercial vessel at Ukraine’s Chornomorsk port. Ukraine said Odessa port was also hit and a total of three Turkish ships were damaged. Kyiv said Russian attacks on Black Sea shipping showed it wasn’t serious about ending the war.

Child of Dust: A man’s search for his father after the Vietnam War

Everything changes for 55-year old Sang, a child of the Vietnam war, when he miraculously discovers his American father.

Sang is one of hundreds of thousands of unwanted and discriminated children left behind by the US soldiers after the Vietnam War. When his lifelong dream of finding his father comes true, Sang’s only mission is to race against time to meet his ailing dad and break the cycle of war trauma that has plagued generations.

After a long and challenging journey, Sang can finally go to the US, but without his wife, daughter, and beloved grandson. Reuniting with his father is a healing experience for both, but far from easy. Even though 50 years have passed since the last US soldier left Vietnam, many wounds remain open.

James Martin says ‘I didn’t give a s***’ as he addresses brutal criticism

In a recent podcast episode, celebrity chef James Martin opened up about his culinary origins and explained why he “didn’t give a s***” when he received some savage criticism

James Martin has explained why he “didn’t give a s***” when he received criticism over what was described as the “disappointing” volume of work he produced as a boy. In a recent episode of Good Housekeeping UK’s My Life in a Biscuit Tin podcast, in which host Liz Moseley invites guests to stash various personal items in a metaphorical biscuit tin, James opened up about his culinary origins.

His first item was a small stack of school exercise books from his childhood, including his “most treasured possession”, a book from his primary school, around the time he started his career in the kitchen as a pot washer aged nine.

James explained that he worked at the Castle Howard estate in North Yorkshire, and once he found himself in the kitchen, he “felt it was my home.” However, as he continued with his schooling, he evidently left one person feeling somewhat disappointed.

Liz proceeded to read a comment from his exercise book from 1983, when James, known for such shows as James Martin’s Saturday Morning, James Martin’s United Cakes of America and The Box, was 11 years old.

In the author’s words, she told the podcast: “James has often displayed enthusiasm for various projects, but at the end of the day, the amount of work forthcoming has been disappointing.”

She noted that the comments were “brutal” and asked the celebrity chef if he had been “sad”, to which he replied on the podcast: “Not really; I didn’t give a s***, to be honest with you.”

Laughing, he continued: “But I didn’t. I didn’t; I’m sorry to ask. I didn’t because I just knew I want… that’s what I wanted to do, I knew from the age of nine that hospitality was going to be my thing.”

In other news, James recently got in the festive spirit on ITV’s This Morning by sharing the recipe for a simple three-ingredient gravy for our Christmas dinners, urging people to buy ready-made stock before it sells out.

James said: “It’s veal stock or chicken stock – that’s what you want. You can’t really make it out of turkey stock, because it’s not gonna taste the same.”

James poured red wine into a saucepan (you will need roughly half a bottle if you’re having 10 guests). He added: “Doesn’t have to be anything fancy, in the pan. Then you put these stocks in there, about a litre and a half of this stock, so a decent amount.”

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He then advised adding a portion of butter (about a third of a block) prior to gently reducing it. James added: “Now, the butter will sit on the top. When the sauce is ready, it all emulsifies into a gravy, into a classic chef-style jus or a sauce.”

James places the cooled gravy into ice cube trays, freezes it, and later uses two cubes per guest (heating it up in a pan).

Kate Middleton reveals baffling she got for Christmas – and nobody could have guessed it

While on an official engagement in Scotland earlier this year, the Princess of Wales candidly shared her unusual Christmas present and how it helps with a bizarre hobby

Princess Kate revealed that she received a chainsaw as a Christmas present last year in a candid admission while on a royal engagement earlier this year. In April, the Prince and Princess of Wales travelled to the Isle of Mull in the Inner Hebrides, as they celebrated their 14th wedding anniversary.

Mucking in at the community hall in the village of Tobermory, Kate asked for tips on carpentry and beekeeping and revealed the strange Christmas present when the royal couple were shown some of the refurbishment work, meeting the painter, carpenter and volunteers before getting involved in the action themselves.

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Shown a small work station, where Tom Nelson was making a new ‘surround’ for the community food bank fridge with wooden tiles on its roof, the Prince and Princess agreed to use a nail gun to add their own.

He fired several nails successfully before handing it over to his wife, advising her not to pull the trigger then and there “otherwise our trip will be remembered for all the wrong reasons”.

Crouching down and adding her tiles matter-of-factly, the Princess was heard to say “I’ve been given a chainsaw” for Christmas. Banjo, a carpenter admiring her work, told William: “What can’t she do!”. William, acknowledging his wife’s prowess at trying things out on public engagements, replied: “That always happens.”

Later during the trip, Kate, who has previously told how nature became her family’s ‘sanctuary’ after her diagnosis and during chemotherapy last year, told a local beekeeper how she was “desperate for any tips” for her new hobby.

The princess spent so long speaking to Sheila Barnard at a pop up market in the village of Tobermory on the Isle of Mull in the Inner Hebrides, that her husband Prince William jokingly suggested he was going to stage an intervention.

Moving along several stall holders from local businesses, William and Kate – known as the Duke and Duchess of Rothesay when in Scotland, stopped to talk to Sheila and her husband Tim who have been keeping bees for more than 30 years.

Sheila told the princess how their nine colonies of the native black bee are the only variety that survive over 5 degrees during the harsh winters on the island.

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Kate said: “This is my summer project, I’ve only just started. At our home in Norfolk, I’m not there much during term time but during the summer I am hoping to really immerse myself in the process. I find it absolutely fascinating. I’ll have to take your number for some tips!”

As Kate asked Sheila “what sort of advice would you have for a novice, I’m desperate for any tips”, William leant in and joked to his wife: “This sounds like a conversation that could go on for a while so you’ll have to take Sheila’s number.”