Death toll from Hurricane Melissa climbs to 49, with many still missing

49 people have already been killed by Hurricane Melissa, but that number is expected to rise as search and rescue efforts continue to traverse the northern Caribbean’s trail of destruction.

At least 30 people died and 20 were missing, according to Haitian authorities on Thursday. The lumbering storm caused days of torrential rains to the impoverished country, which was not directly affected. The Reuters news agency reports 19 fatalities in Jamaica, according to Reuters. Before the hurricane made landfall elsewhere, one death has been reported in the Dominican Republic.

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One of the strongest Atlantic storms ever, Melissa, made landfall in Jamaica on Tuesday as a Category 5 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of up to 295 kilometres per hour (183 miles per hour). According to government officials, the hurricane did not directly hit Kingston, but it did strike Jamaica’s western side, causing “devastation.”

Melissa then made contact with Cuba, moving along a Category 3 hurricane, before cutting off its path on Wednesday night. According to the US National Hurricane Center, it will pass close to Bermuda and be within 60 kilometers (37 miles).

Even though the storm’s strength has steadily decreased over the past week, it has caused destructive winds, rain, and flooding in the Caribbean.

Although neither the island of Hispaniola and Haiti, which share it, were directly hit, neither country’s island nor the Dominican Republic, reported heavy flooding.

On Wednesday, October 29, 2025, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, people are residing inside a shelter for families who have been displaced by gang violence and the flooding brought by Hurricane Melissa.

Although the eastern half of Cuba was heavily impacted by strong winds, Reuters reported no deaths in Cuba as of yet.

According to the newswire, hundreds of thousands of people in the Caribbean are still without power, including 70% of Jamaica’s electricity users.

Local authorities are assessing the extent of the damage done to the infrastructure, including power lines and downed trees.

UN Resident Coordinator Dennis Zulu claims that the island has experienced “never before” devastation despite preliminary assessments for Jamaica, where UN agencies claim they are still calculating the damage caused by Melissa.

The US Disaster Assistance Response Team has been assigned by Secretary of State Marco Rubio to assist Jamaica, Haiti, the Bahamas, and Cuba, according to a statement released by the US State Department on Thursday.

Trump calls for Senate to scrap filibuster tactic to end the gov’t shutdown

In order for Republicans to end a week-long federal government shutdown, President Donald Trump has requested that the Senate vote to end the filibuster rule.

The US leader criticized “Crazed Lunatics” in a post on his Truth Social platform on Thursday.

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“It is now time for the Republicans to play their “TRUMP CARD” and choose the “Get rid of the Filibuster, and get rid of it, NOW” mantra. Trump authored .

“We are in power, and if we did what we should be doing to [end the filibuster], it would IMMEDIATELY end this ridiculous, country-destroying “SHUT DOWN,” he continued.

A seasoned Senate practice that delays or blocks votes on legislation by keeping debate open is known as the filibuster. To pass the majority of legislation, the Senate requires a supermajority of 60 of the chamber’s 100 members.

Senate rules, including the filibuster, can be changed at any time by simple majority vote. A 53-47 majority in the Senate is currently held by Republicans.

Senate Democrats have voted against passing a government bill that would provide funding for federal agencies since October 1st, the start of the new fiscal year.

Democrats have urged Republicans to reverse the proposed sweeping cuts to Medicaid, which would allow tens of millions of low-income Americans to receive healthcare coverage, and lower premiums for those who don’t.

Friday marked the end of the deadlock’s 31st day. If it surpasses the 35-day gap that occurred during the first Trump administration, it will lead to the longest deadlock in history.

Federal employees who are “essential” continue to be paid until their pay is paid off during government shutdowns.

Concerned that the already understaffed staff members who manage thousands of flights each day may be subject to increased financial stress, the most recent news was on Tuesday when US air traffic controllers were informed they would not receive their paychecks this month.

The US economy could lose between $7 billion and $ 14 billion, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office’s report on Wednesday.

Trump recently flew back to the US after a major summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Qatar, Malaysia, Japan, and South Korea.

The US leader claimed in his Truth Social post that despite the success of the trip, conversations had taken the filibuster issue into consideration.

However, the question that kept surfacing was “how the Democrats SHUT DOWN the United States of America, and why did the powerful Republicans permit them to do so?” In fact, I had a lot of thought about the question, “WHY?” when I flew back. he wrote.

Iran condemns Trump’s call to resume US nuclear testing

Abbas Araghchi, the country’s foreign minister, has condemned President Trump’s request for the Pentagon to resume testing nuclear weapons, calling it both “regressive” and irresponsible.

A nuclear-armed bully is resuming testing of atomic weapons, according to Araghchi in a post on X late on Thursday.

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He claimed that the same bully has publicly demonized Iran’s peaceful nuclear program and threatened further strikes on our secure nuclear facilities, all in flagrant violation of international law.

Trump made the surprise announcement in a Truth Social post on Thursday before a meeting with Xi Jinping, the leader of China, in South Korea. on the sidelines Summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC).

Trump claimed that he had given the Pentagon an ultimatum to resume nuclear weapons testing “on an equal basis” with other nations like China and Russia, whose nuclear arsenal, according to Trump, will match that of the US in “five years.”

Instead of Trump’s decision, according to Ankit Panda, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a nuclear security expert, being a response to recent actions by Russia and China, as opposed to Washington’s ongoing nuclear dispute with Iran.

Russian President Vladimir Putin announced this week that Moscow had tested its Poseidon nuclear-powered super torpedo after testing new Burevestnik cruise missiles separately earlier this month, according to the Reuters news agency.

China also recently unveiled its nuclear prowess at a military parade in September, which featured both new and modified nuclear weapons, including the intercontinental ballistic missile (NCIS) capable of China.

The United Nations has not conducted a nuclear test, defined as a nuclear explosion above ground, underground, or underwater, in spite of these public displays of firepower, as the two countries have in decades.

The Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban-Treaty of 1996 forbids nuclear testing. The original treaty was signed by the US, China, and Iran, but Russia withdrew its ratification in 2023.

China conducted its final nuclear test in 1996, while Moscow was still the Soviet Union, according to the UN. The United Kingdom conducted its final nuclear test in 1991, followed by the US in 1992 and France in 1996. The only nation to have conducted nuclear tests in the last 20 years, with the most recent test being in 2017.

According to Trevor Findlay, a professor of nuclear security and honorary professor at the University of Melbourne, it was unclear what kind of testing Trump was referring to in his position.

He probably means missile launches of nuclear-capable missiles, as North Korea and Russia have done in a very public manner. He claimed that these don’t produce nuclear explosions nor do they actually have nuclear warheads (though they’re probably just a dummy).

The US regularly tests its own missiles, both current and developing ones, splashing down in the Pacific. Like North Korea and Russia, it does make a big deal of them, he said, but it does not tend to do so.

Trump, in contrast, has called for Iran’s nuclear program to be completely destroyed and says he doesn’t want Tehran to acquire nuclear weapons. Iranian military and nuclear facilities were targeted by US and Israeli air strikes in June, which in turn slowed its progress.

According to the Carnegie Endowment’s Panda, Tehran has maintained that its nuclear program is only for civilian purposes.

Radio Free Asia says halting news operations due to Trump admin cuts

On Friday, Radio Free Asia (RFA) announced that its news operations would be suspended due to the government-funded news outlet’s dire financial situation, which was brought on by funding cuts under President Donald Trump’s administration and the ongoing US government shutdown.

According to Bay Fang, president and CEO of RFA, the outlet has been “forced to suspend all remaining news content production.”

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RFA is taking additional steps to responsibly shrink its already diminuted footprint, she said on Wednesday in an effort to conserve the scarce resources on hand and prevent the possibility of restarting operations if consistent funding is available.

Fang added that RFA would officially start closing its overseas offices and will begin terminating its furloughed staff. She claimed that since March, numerous staff members have taken unpaid leave of absence due to the US Agency for Global Media’s (USAGM) unlawful termination of RFA’s Congressionally Apportioned Grant.

Aside from USAGM, an independent US government agency established in the mid-1990s to provide information to areas with weak press freedom records, Trump signed an executive order effective on March 14th.

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE) and Voice of America (VOA) are also featured on USAGM along with RFA.

RFA was forced to terminate most of its overseas contractors and put three-quarters of its US-based employees on unpaid leave following the executive order in March.

In May, a second round of widespread layoffs, as well as the termination of several RFA language services, including Tibetan, Burmese, and Uighur, were also announced.

In March, Trump signed another executive order authorizing the organization’s nearly 1,400 employees to take paid leave of absence, which he called the “total left-wing disaster” (total left-wing disaster) to go on. Since then, it has only been operating on a limited basis.

Trump has alleged that government agencies like RFA, RFE, and VOA are biased against his administration and that they are a waste of money.

RFA has provided English- and local-language online and broadcast services to residents of region’s most oppressive regimes since its founding in 1996.

Its main initiatives include the publication of events inside the hermit state, North Korea, and the world’s only independent Uyghur-language outlet covering the oppressed ethnic group in western China.

Make no mistake, authoritarian regimes are already ecstatic about the potential demise of RFA, according to an announcement penned by RFA executive editor Rosa Hwang, which was published on the outlet’s website on Wednesday.

RFA’s core values include independent reporting. That voice is in danger, according to Hwang for the first time since RFA’s founding almost 30 years ago.

“We still think strongly about the urgency of that task and the extraordinary journalists’ perseverance. We’ll return once our funding is secured, she continued.

RFE/Radio Liberty, which went through its own round of furloughs earlier this year, announced this week that its news services are currently in use and have received its final round of federal funding.

It stated that “we intend to continue providing our audiences with this service for a while.”