US consumer confidence tumbles to lowest level since April

Turkish authorities arrest three defence executives accused of spying

According to the prosecution, three top defense industry executives have been detained by Turkish authorities on suspicion of spying for foreign powers.

The Istanbul public prosecutor’s office announced in a statement on Tuesday that an operation was conducted on November 25, 2025, to apprehend four individuals who had been linked to the conspiracy.

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“Through the operation, three people were apprehended, and one person’s arrest warrant was issued for being a foreigner.”

The suspects “occur in senior positions within important defense organizations that are active in our country,” the statement read.

They are accused of trying to send employees to foreign countries with “biographical” information.

The prosecutor’s office initially stated that the suspects worked for the United Arab Emirates’ intelligence services before deleting that statement and publishing a significantly revised version on X without mentioning the UAE.

US imposes visa sanctions against Haitian official on governing council

An unnamed Haitian government official has been subject to visa restrictions after he allegedly has ties to the country’s gangs.

However, a member of Haiti’s transitional presidential council, Fritz Alphonse Jean, has since come forward, despite the US’s failure to identify the official.

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Jean disputed the claims made by the US government and claimed that he was subject to visa restrictions in an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday.

He also accused the US and Canada of pressuring the council during its vote-rigging process for the upcoming national elections.

Members of the council began receiving threats of visa cancellation and other sanctions from the US Embassy representative and the Canadian ambassador when we began looking into the possibility of changing the head of government, according to Jean.

According to Jean, the message was that “if we don’t desist, we will be subject to sanctions and the cancellation of our visas.” On Jean’s assertions, the US government has not yet made any changes.

a crackdown on organized crime

The US State Department announced the visa restrictions on the unnamed official in a statement released late on Monday night.

A Haitian government official is being blocked from entering the country because he supports gangs and other criminal organizations, and because he is obstructing Haiti’s efforts to fight terrorist gangs that are designated as foreign terrorist organizations, according to the statement.

The official’s entry into the US would be prohibited, as well as any current valid visas that may be issued, according to the statement.

Trump’s administration has taken a tougher stance against gangs and other criminal networks in Latin America, including Haiti.

In line with its wider crackdown on illegal drug trafficking and immigration into the US, it has spearheaded a campaign to name the criminal organizations in the area as “foreign terrorist organizations” since January.

The Trump administration has already referred to Haitian gangs like Viv Ansanm and Gran Grif as “foreign terrorist” organizations.

In August, a well-known gang leader, Jimmy “Barbecue” Cherizier, was charged with conspiracy in the US. For information leading to his arrest, a $5 million reward has been offered.

A gang leader and former police officer associated with Viv Ansamn also faced sanctions from the US government in October.

In Haiti, where about 90 percent of Port-au-Prince, the capital, is now controlled by criminal organizations, gang violence is a major issue.

The Centre and the Artibonite departments in the west have seen increased gang activity this year, according to the United Nations and other organizations.

One of the world’s poorest nations has experienced a severe humanitarian crisis as a result.

The International Organization for Migration discovered a record-breaking number of Haitians who had been displaced from their homes in October.

More than 5,600 people were killed in the violence last year, an increase of nearly 1, 000 over the same period in 2023.

The UN estimates that 1, 617 people died and 580 were injured in the three-month period that followed, which is roughly between April and June of this year.

Upheaval in the government

According to experts, Haiti’s government’s instability contributed to allowing the gangs to spread their territory. No president has come after Jovenel Moise, the president of Haiti, who was killed in his home in 2021.

The government’s elections scheduled for 2019 have also been repeatedly postponed, which has caused a crisis of withering public confidence in the government.

Mandats for the last democratically elected members of the national government came to an end in 2023. The final 10 senators left the country without any elected representatives.

The officials who remained in their posts have long been plagued by questions of corruption and legitimacy, leading to the resignation of Ariel Henry, a political appointee, in 2024.

In April of that year, a transitional presidential council was established to address the issue. As planned for February 7, 2026, it was established to serve as Haiti’s governing body until a new president was elected or its mandate expired.

The country’s primary objective was to hold national elections. Initial plans for a multi-round election cycle to begin in November and run until February 2026 were postponed, though those elections are now over.

The council has set a tentative deadline of March 1 for beginning election campaigns and holding votes in August and December of this year.

However, questions have been posed for a while about whether council members will actually resign in February.

After being charged by investigators with demanding bribes, several members of the nine-seat council have become involved in a corruption investigation.

The council as a whole has been criticized for its internal disagreements and criticism that its members only represent the elite of Haiti.

The council is currently led by Laurent Saint-Cyr, a leader in the insurance sector. From March to August, Jean previously held the position.

Jean, a former Haitian prime minister and head of the Bank of the Republic of Haiti, is a well-known economist.

He assured The Associated Press that the council would continue to fight gang violence and that there would be no wrongdoing from his part.

US-backed GHF ‘aid mission’ in Gaza ends – a timeline of violence

Following a US-brokered ceasefire agreement, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), supported by Israel and the US, announced it is ending its contentious “mission” and closing aid distribution locations.

Israel and the US supported the GHF as an independent agency to administer aid in the Gaza Strip, which was under increasing international pressure earlier this year. Since March this year, Israel has completely stopped providing humanitarian aid to the Strip, claiming that UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, is stealing donations from Hamas. UNRWA employees were also prohibited from entering the Strip from February because Israel did not provide any proof for this.

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The UNRWA network previously established about 400 sites across the Strip, but the GHF, which were guarded by armed US private security contractors, established only four “mega-sites” to distribute food and other aid to Gaza’s estimated two million Palestinians.

Additionally, Israeli forces and some US contractors have frequently opened fire on Palestinians who have arrived for aid since the organization started operations in Gaza in May. Large crowds have gathered around the sites as a result of the site’s disorganization, and some have died in stampedes or suffocated.

More than 2, 000 aid seekers have been killed or crushed by gunfire, according to UN figures, despite GHF Executive Director John Acree declaring in a statement on Monday that the organization was the “only aid operation that reliably and safely provided free meals to Palestinian people in Gaza.”

This is how this year’s GHF “mission” to Gaza came to an end:

May 26 – Hours after GHF’s executive director, Jake Wood, resigned, citing concerns about the agency’s independence, it issued a statement announcing it would begin direct aid delivery inside the battered enclave. The UN and other aid organizations object to working with GHF, warning that gathering Palestinians at a few central aid locations would put people at risk and thwart other aid efforts.

GHF will start operating in Gaza on May 27. At least 10 Palestinians were killed and dozens injured when Israeli forces opened fire on thousands of Palestinians trying to get food in the Rafah area in southern Gaza. Aid seekers are compelled to cross over fences and slog through crowds of people trying to get supplies that are needed. The chaos underscores the staggering level of hunger that is roiling Gaza, according to UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric, who calls the arrest of thousands of Palestinians “heartbreaking”&nbsp. The incident is described as a “deliberate massacre and a full-fledged war crime,” according to Gazi’s government media office.

On May 29, Israeli forces fire on a Gaza aid station, killing 10 people and injuring dozens. Multiple explosions are reported close to another aid facility along the Netzarim Corridor, which separates northern Gaza from the rest of the Strip, shortly after. There haven’t been any reports of injuries in the explosions, and it’s unclear what caused them.

At least 20 people were hurt when Israeli forces opened fire on civilians waiting to collect food at a GHF distribution point in central Gaza on May 30.

More than 200 others are injured as a result of Israeli tanks killing at least 32 Palestinians waiting to receive food at two Gaza-based aid distribution centers on June 1.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres calls for an independent investigation after Israeli forces fire on a Rafah aid distribution site after the killing and injuries of Palestinian aid seekers. According to the Gaza Health Ministry, 90 Palestinians were injured and at least 27 were killed.

June 8: At least 13 Palestinians are killed and more than 150 are hurt when Israeli troops and US security personnel fire on Palestinians waiting for food near two Gaza aid distribution centers, one east of Rafah and the other near the Wadi Gaza Bridge. Israel is accused of using distribution centers as “human slaughterhouses,” according to the government media office in Gaza.

At least 21 Palestinians have been killed at a GHF aid distribution center in southern Gaza on July 16. According to witness accounts, Israeli forces opened fire on the crowd, causing a stampede. At least 15 people were shot, while at least 15 died from suffocation. Mohammed Abedin, a survivor of the incident and age 24, claimed that they were “shot at like animals” on Al Jazeera.

July 22: According to the UN, more than 1, 000 Palestinians were killed while trying to access food in Gaza through GHF distribution points.

[Al Jazeera]

August 1 – Anthony Aguilar, a former GHF contractor, tells Al Jazeera about the brutal and unprofessional practices he first witnessed at Gaza’s aid distribution centers. This includes using heavy artillery to fire what the organization called “warning shots” at an unarmed population. He claimed that “they call that warning shots,” and that “I call it a war crime.”

August 2: At least 38 Palestinians are killed while visiting GHF distribution centers, despite Israel’s announcement on July 27 to start implementing “tactical pauses” in fighting to give Palestinians greater access to humanitarian aid.

August 5: Twenty-eight UN experts call for the dismantling of GHF, citing it as an “absolutely disturbing example” of aid exploitation for military purposes.

In response to international outcry, Israel allows some aid to be airdropped into Gaza by several nations, including Germany, Belgium, and Jordan, but a 15-year-old Palestinian boy was crushed to death by a falling pallet during an airdrop near the so-called Netzarim Corridor in central Gaza.

More than 2, 146 deaths have been reported in the vicinity of GHF-run sites and along aid convoy routes, according to the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR).

Following the announcement of a US-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, which took effect on October 10, GHF confirms that its operations have been suspended.

On the UK-based ITV network, Breaking Ranks: Inside Israel’s War, a documentary airs on November 10. Some of the witnesses describe how GHF guards “open fire, even if they don’t see a concrete threat,” while others include testimony from Israeli soldiers stationed in Gaza.