Venezuela passes law enacting harsh penalties for supporters of US blockade

Trump administration to resume wage garnishment for student loan defaulters

The administration of US President Donald Trump announced that some borrowers who have defaulted on their student loans will begin receiving wages garnishes. This is the first time the government has done this since the COVID-19 pandemic started.

A Department of Education spokesman told Al Jazeera on Tuesday that affected borrowers would start receiving notices on January 7.

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Around 1, 000 borrowers are anticipated to be affected by the policy initially, and this number will increase over time.

The spokesperson stated that “the notices will grow in size from month to month.”

Al Jazeera contacted the department for clarification on the selection of borrowers for the initial round of garnishments, the number of potential victims, and the justification behind those choices.

The organization did not provide more details, but it stated that collections are only conducted after student and parent borrowers have been given enough time to pay their loans.

As long as the borrower is paid at least 30 times the weekly minimum wage, the government is permitted to garnish up to 15% of the borrower’s take-home pay. The hourly rate has remained constant since July 2009, and the federal minimum wage is currently $7.25 per hour.

Student loan debt totaling about $1.6 trillion is held by roughly one in six Americans. More than 5 million borrowers, according to the Education Department, had not made a payment in at least a year as of April.

The garnishments are intended to relieve many Americans’ economic strain from rising prices and a sluggish labor market. More than 1.1 million people lost their jobs in 2025 as job growth slowed, according to consulting firm Challenger, Gray &amp, Christmas. Employment trends in recent months were mixed, according to federal data, with modest increases in November and job losses reported in October.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the US Department of Labor, the unemployment rate increased to 4.6% in the months of October and November, which is the highest rate since 2021.

Families are being forced to choose between putting food on the table or paying their bills. According to Julie Margetta Morgan, a former deputy undersecretary at the Education Department under former President Joe Biden, the Trump administration’s decision to begin garnishing wages, “the Trump administration has taken even that meager decision away from student loan borrowers who are living on the brink.”

The president is further punishing families and making them resent the very basics, in addition to addressing the affordability crisis that is making Americans incapable of making student loans payments.

Hindutva protest at Bangladesh High Commission over lynching of Hindu man

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As they staged a demonstration against the neighboring country for failing to protect its Hindu minorities, Hindutva activists attempted to storm the Bangladesh High Commission in New Delhi, India. A 25-year-old Hindu man was publicly burned and lynched following accusations of blasphemy during the demonstration.

Wasteful Nigeria edge past Tanzania to make winning start to AFCON 2025

In their opening Africa Cup of Nations match, Ademola Lookman won 2-1 against Tanzania in Fez, Morocco.

Given the chances his team gave up on Tuesday, Nigeria coach Eric Chelle would have hoped for more goals than they would have hoped given their disappointment of not being selected for the 2026 World Cup.

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Victor Osimhen, a star striker, was one of the culprits. He couldn’t have scored, but with better finishing, he could have a hat-trick.

Semi Ajayi, a centre-half of Nigeria, opened the scoring early in the second half before Charles M’Mombwa equalized shortly after half-time.

However, Lookman’s equalizing goal shortly after spared Nigeria’s blushes was struck by the Atalanta attacker.

Three-time champions Nigeria and Tanzania both struggled to find a footing in the first half, which was a predictable pattern as they pressed for a win in three of their previous AFCON matches.

After advancing off his line to block Akor Adams’ shot, Tanzania goalkeeper Zuberi Masudi injured his facial muscles.

Adams’ near-post header hit the top of the crossbar from the resultant corner, which Sevilla striker came close to doing.

On 14 minutes, Saimon Msuva’s acrobatic shot, which Stanley Nwabali comfortably saved, made the East Africans’ first-ever threat.

Nigerian frustrations started to show as the rain started to fall in Fez, with Ibrahim Hamad throwing a fist at 2023 African player of the year Osimhen out.

Victor Osimhen of Nigeria’s forward team plays for Tanzania in the Africa Cup of Nations [Abdel Majid Bziouat/AFP]

Osimhen then became the heart of the Nigerian attacks, threatening to score twice before Bakari Nondo’s off-balanced attempt was saved.

The Super Eagles took the lead after that set-piece when Alex Iwobi’s cross was tapped into the net by Ajayi for his second international goal.

Just before half-time, Samuel Chukwueze had a chance to increase the lead, but Masudi tipped his close-range effort over.

An Osimhen goal was declared offside in the opening seven minutes of the second period, before M’Mombwa equalized on 50 minutes. The following year, Lookman, the 2024 African player of the year, restored Nigeria’s lead with a rising shot from just outside the box.

In the vain attempt to increase Adams’ lead before their most difficult Group C game against Tunisia on Saturday, Chelle accidentally switched Moses Simon to them in the name of tradition.

With three minutes left, Tanzania wasted a chance to equalize when Mohamed Hussein’s cross scurried past Nwabali, but substitute Kelvin John was unable to get the ball in the net.

On December 30th, Nigeria will face Uganda in their final group match.

Tanzania will face Uganda on Saturday, and Tunisia will meet them in December for the final group meeting.

UK police say comedian Russell Brand charged with two more sex offences

Russell Brand, a comedian, is already facing similar rape and sexual assault charges involving four other women, according to new evidence from British authorities.

The new rape and sexual assault charges against Brand were brought against two more women, according to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) in the United Kingdom on Tuesday. According to the CPS, the alleged crimes occurred in 2009.

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Brand, 50, was already facing charges in April for two counts of rape, two of sexual assault, and one of indecent assault. Four women alleged they had been assaulted by the comedian, and four months later, the charges were brought.

These crimes, according to the prosecution, occurred between 1999 and 2005, with the third one occurring in London and the English seaside town of Bournemouth.

In a court in London, Brand entered a not-guilty plea to those accusations.

In relation to the two new accusations, he is scheduled to show up at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on January 20. On June 16, a trial is scheduled, and it should last four to five weeks.

In recent years, the Get Him to the Greek actor, who is renowned for risky stand-up routines and drug and alcohol battles, has left the mainstream. He created a sizable following online through videos that combine religion, conspiracy theories, and wellness.

Brand claimed he was pleased to be able to prove his innocence when the first group of charges was revealed in April.

In a social media video, he said, “I was a fool before I lived in the light of the Lord.” I had sex, drug, and impure tendencies. But I was never involved in rape. I’ve never engaged in illicit behavior. I ask that you observe me with my eyes so that you can see that.

The women involved in the case continue to receive support from specially trained officers, according to Detective Chief Inspector Tariq Farooqi.

Libyan army chief killed in plane crash near Turkiye’s capital Ankara

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Libya’s army ​chief of staff, Mohammed ‍Ali Ahmed al-Haddad, and four other Libyan officials have been killed in an air crash near&nbsp, the Turkish capital, ‍Ankara, Libya’s prime minister has said.

Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah said in a statement that the crash on Tuesday was a “tragic accident” that occurred while the officials while returning from a trip from Ankara.

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“This great tragedy is a great loss for the nation, the military establishment, and all the people, as we have lost men who served their country with sincerity and dedication and were an example of discipline, responsibility, and national commitment”, he said in a statement.

Turkiye its gendarmerie had found the wreckage of the plane carrying the Libyan chief of staff, which disappeared shortly after taking off from the Turkish capital.

“The wreckage of the business jet that departed Ankara’s Esenboga airport for Tripoli has been located by Turkish gendarmerie approximately two kilometres]1.2 miles] south of Kesikkavak village in the Haymana district” 74km (45 miles) from Ankara, Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said on X.

Yerlikaya said earlier on X that the Falcon 50 business jet had taken ​off at ‌8: 10pm (17: 10 GMT) on Tuesday and radio contact was lost at 8: 52pm (17: 52 GMT).

He said the flight ‌had made a request ⁠for an emergency landing while over the Haymana district ‌but no contact was established ‍afterwards.

Several Turkish media outlets broadcast images showing the sky lit up by an explosion not far from the location where the aircraft sent a signal.

Turkish Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc said the Ankara chief prosecutor’s office has launched an investigation into the incident.

Al Jazeera’s Sinem Koseoglu, reporting from Istanbul, said the delegation had arrived in “a private jet that was rented by the Libyan government from an outside company”.

“According to reports and according to official statements from Libya, the initial findings suggest a technical error”, Koseoglu said.

She said people are “speculations” as tensions in the region are high.

Turkiye’s ‌Ministry of Defence had announced the Libyan chief of staff’s visit ‌to Ankara this ‌week, saying ⁠he had met his Turkish counterpart and other military commanders.

Al Jazeera’s Malik Traina, reporting from Tripoli, said he knew al-Haddad personally and that his death would be a “huge loss” to the Libyan military.

“He was a career military man, someone that everybody respected, and he went by the book”, Traina said.

“He was someone that people here in Western Libya really respected, someone who always adhered to the law and followed the rules and he didn’t take side with any militias no matter how powerful they were.

The Libyan military institution has suffered a colossal loss.

Traina claimed that al-Haddad, who had served in the military for decades, was a prominent figure during the uprising against Muammar Gaddafi.

The parliament of Turkiye approved extending the mandate of Turkish soldiers’ deployment in Libya by two more years following Tuesday’s crash.

The United Nations-backed Tripoli government receives economic and military support from Ankara in close cooperation with the country’s regional government.

It later reached a maritime demarcation agreement and sent military personnel there in 2020 to support and train its government.

A preliminary agreement on energy exploration was also signed by Tripoli and Ankara in 2022.