Who got the nod? The complete list of 2025 Oscar nominations

The nominees for the 97th Academy Awards have finally been revealed, after two delays due to the devastating wildfires raging across southern California in the United States.

The wildfires have yet to abate, with a new conflagration, the Hughes Fire, erupting north of Los Angeles this week.

But the nominations continued as scheduled on Thursday, with the divisive, experimental musical Emilia Perez grabbing the most nods.

One of its 13 nominations was a history-maker: Karla Sofia Gascon has become the first transgender woman ever honoured in the Best Actress category.

In the film, she plays a former cartel boss who secretly undergoes gender-affirming surgery and reinvents herself as a humanitarian in modern-day Mexico.

But her category will be one of the hottest to watch, with fierce competition from The Substance’s Demi Moore and Brazilian actress Fernanda Torres of the historical drama I’m Still Here.

Earning another 10 Oscars nods was the Broadway blockbuster Wicked, signalling a strong year for Hollywood musicals. The Brutalist, a period drama about an architect surviving the Holocaust and moving to the US, also racked up 10 nominations.

Other favourites from the Academy this year were the Vatican drama Conclave and the Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown, both of which scooped up eight nods.

Another six nominations went to the zany comedy-drama Anora, about a stripper who gets married to a Russian oligarch’s son.

Some of the biggest snubs came in the crowded Best Actress category, with Maria’s Angelina Jolie, Babygirl’s Nicole Kidman and Emilia Perez’s Selena Gomez all left in the cold.

But a surprise came in the form of a nomination for Romanian American actor Sebastian Stan, who earned recognition for his portrayal of United States President Donald Trump in the film The Apprentice, a cutting portrait of ambition and ego.

Best Picture

  • Anora
  • The Brutalist
  • A Complete Unknown
  • Conclave
  • Dune: Part Two
  • Emilia Perez
  • I’m Still Here
  • Nickel Boys
  • The Substance
  • Wicked

Actor in a Leading Role

  • Adrien Brody, The Brutalist
  • Timothee Chalamet, A Complete Unknown
  • Colman Domingo, Sing Sing
  • Ralph Fiennes, Conclave
  • Sebastian Stan, The Apprentice

Actor in a Supporting Role

  • Yura Borisov, Anora
  • Kieran Culkin, A Real Pain
  • Edward Norton, A Complete Unknown
  • Guy Pearce, The Brutalist
  • Jeremy Strong, The Apprentice

Actress in a Leading Role

  • Cynthia Erivo, Wicked
  • Karla Sofia Gascon, Emilia Perez
  • Mikey Madison, Anora
  • Demi Moore, The Substance
  • Fernanda Torres, I’m Still Here

Actress in a Supporting Role

  • Monica Barbaro, A Complete Unknown
  • Ariana Grande, Wicked
  • Felicity Jones, The Brutalist
  • Isabella Rossellini, Conclave
  • Zoe Saldana, Emilia Perez

Animated Feature Film

  • Flow
  • Inside Out 2
  • Memoir of a Snail
  • Wallace and Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl
  • The Wild Robot

Animated Short Film

  • Beautiful Men
  • In the Shadow of the Cypress
  • Magic Candies
  • Wander to Wonder
  • Yuck!

Cinematography

  • The Brutalist
  • Dune: Part Two
  • Emilia Perez
  • Maria
  • Nosferatu

Costume Design

  • A Complete Unknown
  • Conclave
  • Gladiator II
  • Nosferatu
  • Wicked

Directing

  • Sean Baker, Anora
  • Brady Corbet, The Brutalist
  • James Mangold, A Complete Unknown
  • Jacques Audiard, Emilia Perez
  • Coralie Fargeat, The Substance

Documentary Feature Film

  • Black Box Diaries
  • No Other Land
  • Porcelain War
  • Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat
  • Sugarcane

Documentary Short Film

  • Death by Numbers
  • I Am Ready, Warden
  • Incident
  • Instruments of a Beating Heart
  • The Only Girl in the Orchestra

Film Editing

  • Sean Baker, Anora
  • David Jancso, The Brutalist
  • Nick Emerson, Conclave
  • Juliette Welfling, Emilia Perez
  • Myron Kerstein, Wicked

International Feature Film

  • I’m Still Here, Brazil
  • The Girl with the Needle, Denmark
  • Emilia Perez, France
  • The Seed of the Sacred Fig, Germany
  • Flow, Latvia

Makeup and Hairstyling

  • Mike Marino, David Presto and Crystal Jurado: A Different Man
  • Julia Floch Carbonel, Emmanuel Janvier and Jean-Christophe Spadaccini: Emilia Perez
  • David White, Traci Loader and Suzanne Storkes-Munton: Nosferatu
  • Pierre-Olivier Persin, Stephanie Guillon and Marilyne Scarselli: The Substance
  • Frances Hannon, Laura Blount and Sarah Nuth: Wicked

Music (Original Score)

  • Daniel Blumberg, The Brutalist
  • Volker Bertelmann, Conclave
  • Clement Ducol and Camille, Emilia Perez
  • John Powell and Stephan Schwartz, Wicked
  • Kris Bowers, The Wild Robot

Music (Original Song)

  • El Mal from Emilia Perez
    • Music by Clement Ducol and Camille
    • Lyrics by Clement Ducol, Camille and Jacques Audiard
  • The Journey from The Six Triple Eight
    • Music and lyrics by Diane Warren
  • Like a Bird from Sing Sing
    • Music and lyrics by Abraham Alexander and Adrian Quesada
  • Mi Camino from Emilia Perez
    • Music and lyrics by Camille and Clement Ducol
  • Never Too Late from Elton John: Never Too Late
    • Music and lyrics by Elton John, Brandi Carlisle, Andrew Watt and Bernie Taupin

Production Design

  • The Brutalist
    • Production Design: Judy Becker
    • Set Decoration: Patricia Cuccia
  • Conclave
    • Production Design: Suzie Davies
    • Set Decoration: Cynthia Sleiter
  • Dune: Part Two
    • Production Design: Patrice Vermette
    • Set Decoration: Shane Vieau
  • Nosferatu
    • Production Design: Craig Lathrop
    • Set Decoration: Beatrice Brentnerova
  • Wicked
    • Production Design: Nathan Crowley
    • Set Decoration: Lee Sandales

Live Action Short Film

  • A Lien
  • Anuja
  • I’m Not a Robot
  • The Last Ranger
  • The Man Who Could Not Remain Silent

Sound

  • A Complete Unknown
    • Tod A Maitland, Donald Sylvester, Ted Caplan, Paul Massey and David Giammarco
  • Dune: Part Two
    • Gareth John, Richard King, Ron Bartlett and Doug Hemphill
  • Emilia Perez
    • Erwan Kerzanet, Aymeric Devoldere, Maxence Dussere, Cyril Holtz and Niels Barletta
  • Wicked
    • Simon Hayes, Nancy Nugent Title, Jack Dolman, Andy Nelson and John Marquis
  • The Wild Robot
    • Randy Thom, Brian Chumney, Gary A Rizzo and Leff Lefferts

Visual Effects

  • Alien: Romulus
  • Better Man
  • Dune: Part Two
  • Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes
  • Wicked

Writing (Adapted Screenplay)

  • James Mangold and Jay Cocks for A Complete Unknown
  • Peter Straughan for Conclave
  • Jacques Audiard for Emilia Perez
    • In collaboration with Thomas Bidegain, Lea Mysius and Nicolas Livecchi
  • RaMell Ross and Joslyn Barnes for Nickel Boys
  • Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar for Sing Sing
    • Story by Clint Bentley, Greg Kwedar, Clarence Maclin and John “Divine G” Whitfield

Writing (Original Screenplay)

  • Sean Baker for Anora
  • Brady Corbet and Mona Fastvold for The Brutalist
  • Jesse Eisenberg for A Real Pain
  • Moritz Binder and Tim Fehlbaum for September 5, co-written with Alex David
  • Coralie Fargeat for The Substance

ICC prosecutor seeks warrants for Taliban leaders over persecution of women

The top prosecutor at the International Criminal Court (ICC) has applied for arrest warrants for two Taliban leaders in Afghanistan including supreme spiritual leader Haibatullah Akhundzada, accusing them of the persecution of women and girls.

A statement issued by the office of ICC Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan on Thursday said investigators found reasonable grounds to believe that Akhundzada and Abdul Hakim Haqqani, who has served as chief justice since 2021, “bear criminal responsibility for the crime against humanity of persecution on gender grounds”.

They are “criminally responsible for persecuting Afghan girls and women … and persons whom the Taliban perceived as allies of girls and women”, the statement said.

There was no immediate comment by Taliban leaders on the prosecutor’s statement.

Since the Taliban’s return to power in 2021, it has clamped down on women’s rights, including limits to schooling, work and general independence in daily life.

A three-judge panel at the ICC will now be expected to rule on the prosecution request, which has no set deadline. Such procedures take an average of three months.

This is the first time ICC prosecutors have publicly sought warrants in their investigation into potential war crimes in Afghanistan, which dates back to 2007 and once included alleged crimes by the US military there.

Khan said that his office was demonstrating its commitment to pursuing accountability for gender-based crimes and that the Taliban’s interpretation of Islamic sharia law could not be a justification for human rights abuses or crimes.

“Afghan women and girls as well as the LGBTQI+ community are facing an unprecedented, unconscionable and ongoing persecution by the Taliban. Our action signals that the status quo for women and girls in Afghanistan is not acceptable,” the prosecutor said.

Zalmai Nishat, founder of the United Kingdom-based charity Mosaic Afghanistan, said that if ICC warrants were issued, it may have little impact on Akhundzada, who rarely travels outside Afghanistan.

“But in terms of international reputation of the Taliban, this basically means a complete erosion of their international legitimacy, if they had any,” he said.

‘Existential crisis at the ICC? ’

Khan’s move came amid a crisis at the court, which opened in The Hague in 2002 to prosecute individuals accused of war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide and aggression.

The administration of US President Donald Trump is preparing new sanctions against the court after it issued an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for alleged war crimes in Gaza.

Moscow also struck back at the ICC for its 2023 warrant against Russian President Vladimir Putin for alleged war crimes in Ukraine by issuing a warrant of its own for Khan.

Despite the recent string of high-profile arrest warrants, courtrooms in The Hague are virtually empty and Khan is under investigation for alleged sexual misconduct in the workplace, which he denies.

The ICC also has no police force and relies on its 125 member states to make arrests.

UK teen who killed three girls at dance class sentenced to 52 years

A teenager who murdered three young girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport, the United Kingdom last year has been sentenced to more than 50 years in prison.

Judge Julian Goose said on Thursday that 18-year-old Axel Rudakubana “wanted to try and carry out mass murder of innocent, happy young girls”.

The judge said he couldn’t impose a sentence of life without parole, because Rudakubana was under 18 at the time of the crime.

But the judge said he must serve a minimum of 52 years before being considered for parole, and “it is likely he will never be released”.

Rudakubana was 17 when he attacked young children  in the seaside town of Southport last July.

He killed three girls – Bebe King, aged six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, – and wounded eight other children, as well as two adults.

On Monday, Rudakubana admitted to carrying out the killings. He also pleaded guilty to 10 charges of attempted murder, to producing the deadly poison ricin and to possessing an al-Qaeda training manual.

The prosecutor said Rudakubana had no political or religious cause, but had “a longstanding obsession with violence, killing, genocide”.

Rudakubana was not in court to hear the passing of his sentence. Earlier in the trial, he was removed for disruptive behaviour.

Riots

After Rudakubana’s attack, far-right activists seized on incorrect reports on social media that the attacker was an asylum seeker who had recently arrived in the UK.

The social media reports triggered weeks of anti-migrant clashes with police and crowds took to city streets across the UK to attack minorities and Muslims.

Rudakubana was born in Cardiff, Wales, to Christian parents from Rwanda. Investigators haven’t been able to pin down a cause for his crimes.

In the years before the attack, Rudakubana had been reported to multiple authorities over his violent interests and actions.

The government has ordered a public inquiry, saying there were grave questions to answer.

US President Trump threatens tariffs at 2025 Davos World Economic Forum

United States President Donald Trump has delivered the first international speech of his second term, appearing via livestream before the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Thursday’s remarks, however, took a combative approach to international diplomacy as he once again threatened tariffs against foreign competitors – and even allies like the European Union and Canada.

“My message to  every business in the world is very simple: Come make your product in America, and we will give you among the lowest taxes of any nation on earth,” Trump said.

“But if you don’t make your product in America, which is your prerogative, then very simply you will have to pay a tariff. Differing amounts, but a tariff. ”

Trump, a real estate magnate and former reality TV star, faced a largely friendly audience at the Davos forum, known for bringing together some of the biggest business leaders in the world.

Many of those who raised questions after his speech were introduced as people Trump knew well – or even self-identified as his friend.

The Republican’s speech came a mere three days after he was inaugurated in Washington, DC, and his remarks echoed many of the points he raised in his inaugural address, once again promising to bring a “golden age” to the US.

He also repeated his usual list of grievances, including against his predecessor, former President Joe Biden, and members of Biden’s administration.

“They’ve allowed other nations to take advantage of the US. We can’t allow that to happen any more,” Trump said.

Here are five key takeaways from Trump’s speech:

Donald Trump revisits familiar themes in his speech to the Davos forum [Yves Herman/Reuters]

Trump uses carrot-and-stick approach

The Republican Party leader led his speech with a broad appeal to business leaders across the world, calling on them to move their industries to the US.

He touted plans to slash corporate taxes and lower interest rates to create a climate favourable to business growth.

“My administration has also begun the largest deregulation campaign in history, far exceeding even the record-setting efforts of my last term,” Trump said.

He offered a trickle-down vision of US prosperity as benefitting the whole world.

“They say that there’s light shining all over the world since the election, and even countries that we aren’t particularly friendly with are happy because they understand there is a future, how great the future will be,” he said.

“Under our leadership, America is back and open for business. ”

But, he warned, there would be tariffs imposed on businesses that refuse to invest in this vision of US success.

Already, in recent months, Trump has threatened to impose tariffs of up to 60 percent on Chinese goods and 25-percent tariffs on items from Mexico and Canada.

Trump criticises EU

The president, however, reserved special ire for the EU, which he accused of imposing cumbersome regulations and attacking US businesses.

He cited recent antitrust cases against US-based tech titans as examples.

“ They took court cases with Apple, and they supposedly won a case that most people didn’t think was much of a case,” Trump said. “They won billions from Google. I think they’re after Facebook for billions and billions. ”

He implied that the cases were motivated, in part, on the companies’ country of origin.

“These are American companies,” Trump said. “They shouldn’t be doing that. As far as I’m concerned, it’s a form of taxation. ”

The US is the EU’s top trading partner, and as of 2022, the US had a $131bn trade deficit with the 27-nation bloc. According to US government statistics, the US exported goods worth $592bn to the EU and imported $723bn.

Most economists believe deficits are not necessarily a sign of trouble: The imbalance in trade can be the result of numerous factors, including differences in currency value and consumer spending habits.

But Trump has zeroed in on trade deficits as a sign of economic weakness, and he has once again pledged to eliminate them, as he promised in his first term from 2017 to 2021.

He also compared Europe’s value-added taxes to a “non-economic or non-monetary tariff”.

“ From the standpoint of America, the EU treats us very, very unfairly. Very badly,” Trump said. “They essentially don’t take our farm products, and they don’t take our cars. Yet they send cars to us by the millions. They put tariffs on things that we want to do. ”

Canada: Become a state or face tariffs

In the weeks before the Davos conference, Trump made clear he hopes to expand US borders in the coming years, bringing the Panama Canal and Greenland under Washington’s control.

At a news conference this month, Trump even refused to rule out “military or economic coercion” in his pursuit of those two territories.

But at Davos on Thursday, Trump spoke briefly about another country he has in his crosshairs: Canada.

Trump has repeatedly said he would like to see Canada become the “51st state”, provoking anger from the northern US neighbour.

“We’re going to be demanding respect from other nations,” Trump said at Davos, immediately pivoting to Canada. “We have a tremendous deficit with Canada. We’re not going to have that any more. We can’t do it. ”

According to the US government, Canada was the largest buyer of US goods in 2022, accounting for $356. 5bn in purchases. An estimated $2. 7bn worth of goods and services crossed the US-Canada border each day in 2023.

But Trump has pledged to slap high tariffs on Canada as a means of forcing the country to address drug trafficking and irregular migration across the border.

At Davos, however, Trump teased another way to avoid the tariffs.

“As you probably know, I say: ‘You can always become a state. And then, if you are a state, we won’t have a deficit. We won’t have to tariff you,’” Trump said.

Economists, however, have warned that tariffs can backfire because other countries may respond to the US with tariffs of their own — the cost of which would likely be borne by consumers.

Trump decries Ukraine ‘killing fields’

Despite his aggressive posture towards tariffs and trade deficits, Trump once again touted his self-described role as a peacemaker, pointing to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

The war broke out in 2022, and at Davos, Trump once again took the opportunity to blame Biden for allowing the invasion to unfold.

But he also pointed a finger at another target: oil prices.

“If the price came down, the Russia-Ukraine war would end immediately,” Trump said. “Right now, the price is high enough that that war will continue. You’ve got to bring down the oil price. You’re going to end that war. ”

While the war has driven up energy prices, it is unclear how Trump envisioned the oil market ending the war in Ukraine. Sanctions due to the war have already placed significant strain on Russia’s economy.

Trump himself has threatened further sanctions and “high levels” of tariffs against Russia if it does not end its war on Ukraine swiftly.

At Davos, he bemoaned the hundreds of thousands of lives lost on the battlefields there.

“That is an absolute killing field. Millions of soldiers are being killed,” Trump said. “Nobody’s seen anything like it since World War II. They’re laying dead all over the flat fields. ”

But, he added,  efforts to secure a peace settlement “are now hopefully under way”. He also teased a possible deal with Russia to dismantle all or part of its nuclear arsenal.

“We’d like to see denuclearisation,” Trump said, citing conversations with Russian President Vladimir Putin during his first term.

“I will tell you that President Putin really liked the idea of cutting way back on nuclear, and I think the rest of the world, we would have gotten them to follow and China would’ve come along. ”

Trump mocks climate-change policies

As part of his push for deregulation, Trump  once again lashed out against environmental policies designed to reduce carbon emissions and mitigate the climate crisis.

The US is estimated to be the world’s second largest source of annual carbon emissions, behind China. Those emissions, largely from fossil fuels, enter the atmosphere as greenhouse gases that capture heat and cause temperatures to rise.

Still, on Monday, Trump once again withdrew from the Paris Agreement, an international climate accord designed to reduce emissions. He had previously pulled the US out of the deal in 2019 during his first term before Biden rejoined it four years later.

At Davos, Trump once again described the Paris climate accord as “one-sided”. And he repeated his pledge to “unlock” US fossil fuel reserves.

“The United States has the largest amount of oil and gas of any country on Earth, and we’re going to use it,” Trump said, promising “rapid approvals” for energy ventures.

Trump also mocked his political adversaries for advancing a “Green New Deal”, a slate of policy proposals in the US designed to bring down carbon emissions.

“It was conceived of by people that were average students, less-than-average students,” Trump said.

He accused the architects of carbon-cutting policies of peddling sensationalism.

“Remember the world was going to end in 12 years? Remember that? Well, the 12 years has come and gone. It was going to end. It was going to all foam into earth. ”

Still, climate change experts have noted that 2024 was the hottest year on record – and if current trends continue, extreme weather could intensify, leading to deadlier disasters.

How do Donald Trump’s pardons compare with other US presidents?

President Donald Trump began his second term by issuing “full, complete and unconditional” pardons to about 1,500 individuals involved in the January 6, 2021, attack on the United States Capitol.

He also commuted the sentences of 14 Proud Boys and Oath Keepers members who were convicted or charged with seditious conspiracy related to the violence.

The next day, Trump announced he had pardoned Ross Ulbricht, the founder of Silk Road, a dark web marketplace, who was jailed in connection with the sale of illegal drugs on the platform.

So how do presidents compare in the number of clemencies they have granted? Al Jazeera visualises presidential pardons in modern history, including some of the most controversial:

President Donald Trump signs executive orders and pardons for January 6 defendants in the Oval Office at the White House on Inauguration Day, January 20, 2025 [Carlos Barria//Reuters]

What is a presidential pardon?

Article II of the US Constitution grants a sitting president the power to forgive individuals for federal crimes, releasing them from further punishment or other legal consequences. However, it does not apply to impeachments.

Pardons are permanent once issued. A president cannot overturn or revoke a pardon that has been issued by a previous president.

A pardon may be issued before formal charges and after convictions. However, it cannot apply to future crimes that someone has not yet committed.

There are different acts of clemency, such as:

  • Pardons – granting full clemency for a conviction
  • Commutations  – reducing a sentence to a lesser one
  • Reprieves – delaying punishment
  • Remissions – reducing the effect of a sentence without changing its nature
  • Amnesties – granting a pardon to cover an entire group of individuals

INETRACTIVE-US- What is a presidential pardon -JAN23-2025 (1)-1737641829

Which president has granted the most pardons?

The first presidential pardon was issued by George Washington in 1795 to leaders of the Whiskey Rebellion, a violent tax protest.

In more modern history, 14 US presidents since 1945 have together issued more than 9,000 presidential pardons and 6,500 commutations.

In this 80-year period, Harry Truman, who served as president from 1945 to 1953, issued the most pardons – 1,913 – followed by Trump, who has issued at least 1,644 in both his terms so far. Dwight Eisenhower (1953-1961) issued the third most pardons at 1,110.

Joe Biden issued the highest number of commutations at 4,169, followed by Barack Obama at 1,715. Other presidents since 1945 trail far behind Obama and Biden with Lyndon Johnson issuing the third most during his 1963-69 term when he approved 226 commutations.

Trump compared with Biden

In his four years in office (2021-2025), Biden granted at least 80 pardons and 4,169 commutations. In comparison, Trump granted 144 pardons and 94 commutations during his first term (2017-2021).

While Trump’s second term is just a few days old, he has already made a sweeping 1,500 pardons and more than a dozen commutations.

Trump has pardoned people who have had personal or political connections to him, including his supporters. In his first term, this included individuals implicated in the Robert Mueller special counsel investigation, which examined Russian interference in the 2016 US election, ties between Trump associates and Russian officials, and potential obstruction of justice by Trump and his associates.

Those convicted included Paul Manafort, Trump’s campaign chairman; Michael Flynn, his former national security adviser; Roger Stone, political adviser; and George Papadopoulos, campaign adviser.

Paul Manafort
Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, centre, is escorted into court for his arraignment in New York Supreme Court in New York City [File: Lucas Jackson/Reuters]

Trump granted pardons and commutations to several of those implicated. Papadopoulos was pardoned in 2018 and Flynn in November 2020. Stone’s sentence was commuted in July 2020, and he granted a full pardon in December 2020 along with Manafort.

In his final hours in office in 2021, Trump pardoned Steve Bannon, who was charged with fraud related to a fundraising campaign for Trump’s US-Mexico border wall.

Trump has also granted clemency to rappers Lil Wayne and Kodak Black. The former was found guilty of carrying a gun on his private jet in December 2019 and received a pardon. Black was sentenced to four years in prison in 2019 for making false statements about carrying a gun. His sentence was later commuted.

Former White House strategist Steve Bannon arrives at the Manhattan district attorney's office to surrender himself to New York authorities, Thursday, Sept. 8, 2022, in New York. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez)
Former White House strategist Steve Bannon arrives at the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office to surrender himself to New York authorities on September 8, 2022 [Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/AP Photo]

Many of Biden’s pardons have been for nonviolent drug offenders, including almost 2,500 on Friday – the most in a single day, except for Jimmy Carter. He has also pardoned several members of his family, saying the measures were to protect them from politically motivated investigations by the Trump administration.

On his final day as president, Biden pardoned Dr Anthony Fauci, the former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and a prominent figure during the COVID-19 pandemic. He was widely criticised by political opponents, including Trump, for his stance on the outbreak. Biden said Fauci’s pardon was also meant to protect him from potential prosecution under the Trump administration.

Biden also commuted the sentence of Native American activist Leonard Peltier, who has spent nearly half a century behind bars after being imprisoned in 1975 for killing two FBI agents.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, speaks during the daily briefing at the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2021. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
Dr  Anthony Fauci, then-director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, speaks during the daily COVID-19 briefing at the White House on December 1, 2021 [Susan Walsh/AP Photo]

Controversial presidential pardons

Below are some of the most controversial acts of clemency granted by US presidents over the past 50 years:

1974: Gerald Ford pardons Richard Nixon

On September 8, 1974, President Gerald Ford pardoned former President Richard Nixon for any crimes committed during his presidency, in particular those related to the Watergate scandal.

Ford considered it a step necessary to move the country beyond Watergate; however, the pardon is cited as a key reason why Ford lost the 1976 election. Many felt that the pardon continued the Watergate cover-up by preventing the possible indictment of the former president, who had resigned before he could be impeached.

In 1974, Richard Nixon faced possible charges for a wide range of alleged wrongdoing, from bribery to obstruction of justice, when Gerald Ford pardoned him just weeks after he resigned. (AP Photo, File)
President Richard Nixon faced charges for a wide range of alleged wrongdoings related to the Watergate scandal, from bribery to obstruction of justice, when President Gerald Ford pardoned him just weeks after he resigned [File: AP Photo]

1977: Jimmy Carter pardons Vietnam War draft evaders

When Jimmy Carter was inaugurated in 1977, he pardoned those who had evaded the Vietnam War draft on his first day in office, less than two years after the end of the war.

With public sentiment running against the Vietnam War, many young men tried to avoid the draft. The pardon faced criticism from veterans and conservative politicians who had served in Vietnam while others such as the American Veterans Committee praised the order but said it should have included deserters too.

When Jimmy Carter was inaugurated in 1977, he pardoned those who evaded the Vietnam War draft. (AP Photo)
President Jimmy Carter, who died last month, had a much criticised presidency but won a Nobel Peace Prize for his post-presidential work, including as a peace negotiator, election monitor, disease fighter and building of homes for low-income families [File: AP Photo]

2017: Barack Obama commutes Chelsea Manning’s sentence 

Chelsea Manning, an army intelligence analyst, was convicted in 2010 of leaking classified government documents to WikiLeaks, which revealed American military and diplomatic activities across the world. Manning was serving a 35-year sentence, but it was commuted after seven years by Obama.

FILE PHOTO -- People hold signs calling for the release of imprisoned wikileaks whistleblower Chelsea Manning while marching in a gay pride parade in San Francisco, California
People hold signs calling for the release of imprisoned WikiLeaks whistleblower Chelsea Manning while marching at a gay pride parade in San Francisco, California, on June 28, 2015 [Elijah Nouvelage/Reuters]

Pardoning family members – Clinton, Trump and Biden 

On his last day in office in 2001, Bill Clinton pardoned his half-brother, Roger Clinton Jr, who had pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute cocaine after being caught trying to sell it to an undercover police officer in the 1980s. Clinton’s pardon cleared Roger’s criminal record.

In 2020, Trump pardoned his son-in-law’s father, Charles Kushner, who was serving two terms in prison for tax evasion.

In 2024, Biden pardoned his son Hunter despite previously saying he wouldn’t. Hunter was facing sentencing in two criminal cases. In September, he pleaded guilty to tax evasion and in June was found guilty of illegal drug use and possession of a gun. He became the first child of a sitting president to be convicted of a crime.

U.S. President Joe Biden, accompanied by Hunter Biden
President Joe Biden, left, is accompanied by Hunter Biden, centre, and Beau Biden Jr in downtown Nantucket, Massachusetts, on November 29, 2024 [Craig Hudson/Reuters]

Hezbollah demands Israeli forces complete withdrawal from Lebanon on time

The Lebanese group Hezbollah has demanded that Israeli forces complete a withdrawal from the country’s south in line with terms of the ceasefire deal agreed by the two sides, as the Israeli government said the agreement was not being implemented fast enough.

Israel and the Iran-aligned group agreed in November to a ceasefire mediated by France and the United States, bringing an end to more than a year of fighting.

Under the deal, Israeli forces were to withdraw from Lebanon and Hezbollah forces were to withdraw from southern Lebanon over a 60-day period ending on Monday.

“There have been positive movements where the Lebanese army and UNIFIL have taken the place of Hezbollah forces, as stipulated in the agreement,” Israeli government spokesmen David Mencer told reporters on Thursday, referring to United Nations peacekeepers in Lebanon.

“We’ve also made clear that these movements have not been fast enough, and there is much more work to do,” he said, affirming that Israel wanted the agreement to continue.

Mencer did not directly respond to questions about whether Israel had requested an extension of the deal or say whether Israeli forces would remain in Lebanon after the 60-day deadline.

Reporting from Beirut, Lebanon, Al Jazeera’s Zeina Khodr said that the Israeli ambassador to the US had said that Israel is in discussions with the administration of President Donald Trump to convince the US to extend the deadline for at least another month.

“Israeli officials are talking about staying in Lebanon, which would be in violation of the ceasefire agreement to pull out by January 26,” she said.

“Hezbollah is hinting that it’s going to resume military action. It says if Israeli soldiers remain, they will be an occupying force and there will be ‘resistance’,” Khodr noted.

“Whether those threats are serious – considering that Hezbollah has been severely weakened during Israel’s war – is open to question,” she added.

Hezbollah said on Thursday that Israel has to completely withdraw from Lebanon as the 60-day period in a ceasefire deal comes to an end and warned that any breach of the agreement would not be accepted.

“We need a total withdrawal of the Israeli army,” French President Emmanuel Macron said earlier this month, speaking alongside Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun in Beirut.

The Lebanese government has also told US mediators that Israel’s failure to withdraw on time could complicate the Lebanese army’s deployment, and this would be a blow to diplomatic efforts and the optimistic atmosphere in Lebanon since Aoun was elected president on January 9.