Lithuania to shoot down smuggler balloons, shut Belarus border crossings

UK journalist Sami Hamdi detained in US after pro-Israel pressure

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Sami Hamdi, a journalist in the UK, has had his visa suspended by US immigration officials, allegedly for ‘national security’ reasons. After US far-right activists and pro-Israel influencers called for his deportation, civil rights organizations claim that his criticism of Israel’s occupation of Gaza is the result of his deportation.

Fact check: Do quarter of US’s ‘drug boat’ searches find nothing?

According to President Donald Trump, US military strikes on eight vessels in the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean, which mostly targeted Venezuelan vessels, were legal because they carried drugs that were being delivered to the country.

However, Republican Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, who is also the chairman of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, claimed maritime law enforcement statistics show that not all boats are actually loaded with drugs. He claimed that US military actions were against routine.

When you stop people at sea in international waters or in your own waters, you announce that you’re going to board the ship and that you’re looking for drugs, smuggling, or contraband. On NBC’s “Meet the Press” program, Paul remarked on October 19 that this occurs every day off of Miami. According to the Coast Guard, about 25% of the time the Coast Guard boarded a ship had no drugs on it. So, if our current policy is to bomb every ship we suspect or accuse of drug trafficking, we would have a bizarre world where 25% of the population might be innocent.

In an interview from October 12th, Paul made a similar statement.

The Trump administration has not provided any proof that the vessels contained drugs, despite the fact that more than 30 have already died as a result of the strikes. Trump’s recent claim that “25, 000 American lives were saved by each strike was deemed false by us.

According to Paul’s office, the US Coast Guard’s 2024 fiscal year report was referenced by PolitiFact, which stated that the agency intercepted drugs in about 73% of cases when they boarded boats, with about 27% of vessel interceptions resulting in no drugs.

Experts said Paul’s claim is supported by the data, but it’s unclear how the Coast Guard defines the term “a drug disruption” as being used to describe the intercepting of drugs.

Does “drug disruption” mean “does that includes the (Coast Guard) board of a vessel and discovers a known drug trafficker but no drugs, and that person is detained and found guilty? “Does that include “drug disruption”?” Dr. Jonathan Caulkins, a researcher on drug policy at Carnegie Mellon University, said. “Or suppose they approach the vessel, and the Coast Guard seizes it after the drugs have vanished into the water but the drugs have been jettisoning overboard.” Is that a successful disruption?

According to experts, Paul’s figure might not have been directly related to the recent boat strikes because the US might have been aware of those specific vessels’ information.

The Coast Guard was contacted by PolitiFact regarding its data collection procedures, but they did not respond.

A Coast Guard report provides information on the agency’s drug interceptions.

The Department of Homeland Security is informed by the Coast Guard about its frequent drug intercepts. The organization’s performance in various programs is summarized in its 2024 fiscal year report, which covers October 2023 to September 2024.

According to the report, the Coast Guard conducted drug searches in 91 out of 125 boat interdictions during that time, which was a rate of about 73%.

According to the report, “the Coast Guard boarding teams’ searches are of high quality,” adding that the agency’s metrics are influenced by the agency’s level of intelligence and timeliness.

In recent years, the rate has changed. According to the report, the agency began disclosing data on drug interception in fiscal year 2021, which indicates a 59 percent drug disruption rate that year, which translated to 41 percent of the boats searched for finding no drugs.

In 2022 and 2023, the intercept rate increased to 64 percent, respectively. The Coast Guard’s highest interception rate since it began collecting the data in 2024 is 73 percent, which is above the highest rate since then. It lists an annual goal of 80% interception rate.

What constitutes a drug disruption, the Coast Guard did not respond to our inquiries about how its data collection procedure was conducted. A&nbsp, 2025 Coast Guard report&nbsp, analyzing agency data from fiscal years 2021 through 2023, found that some reports didn’t provide the necessary documentation or results for drug seizures.

According to experts, it’s unclear whether the recent attacks in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean correspond directly to the Coast Guard’s 2024 statistic.

Caulkins argued that “people who have their fingers on the trigger” might want a much higher level of certainty before shooting. That doesn’t mean that the senator’s figure applies to Venezuela’s unique case of boats, even if the senator’s figure were accurate when looking through all the numerous, very diverse operations over the course of a year. It might, but perhaps not.

It is impossible to know whether any of the boats contained lethal drugs, or if they were en route to the US because the Trump administration is adamant about the type or quantity of information it claims was on.

Previous reports from drug experts revealed that Venezuela only participates in the US’s drug trafficking. Mexico, not Venezuela, is the source of the majority of fentanyl in the US. It is mainly smuggled in by US citizens, primarily through the southern border at authorized ports of entry, and is mostly smuggled into the country.

Our decision

There are no drugs on board ships, according to Paul, who said that about 25% of the time.

According to a 2024 Coast Guard report, the agency boarded and intercepted boats carrying drugs 73 percent of the time, which means that 27 percent of the interceptions ended up being unintended.

However, experts speculate that this drug disruption statistic may not directly relate to recent boat strikes because we don’t know what kind of information the US has about those vessels.

NGOs note 28 new ‘carbon bomb’ projects since 2021

Over the past five years, 28 new “carbon bomb” projects have been launched across the globe, according to a report released by NGOs.

The report, which was released on Monday by a quartet of environmental nonprofits, details dozens of new fossil fuel extraction projects that have been launching since 2021, despite international efforts to stop using fossil fuels, which are known to have disastrous effects on the climate.

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In a study article titled “carbon bombs,” oil, gas, or coal facilities that could produce more than a billion tonnes of CO2 over their lifetime were defined.

425 such projects were recorded at the time by the NGOs Lingo, Data for Good, Reclaim Finance, and Eclaircies.

According to the report, some 365 projects still produce more than one billion tonnes, with the decline from the total for 2021 being caused by operations that have either decreased or been re-evaluated.

That is in contrast to the International Energy Agency’s claim that meeting Paris Agreement goals for climate change was impossible to achieve in 2021 when it was stated by the agency.

In the landmark agreement reached in 2015, the goal was to reduce global warming by 1.5 degrees Celsius (2. 7 degrees Fahrenheit) from the pre-industrial era.

Countries around the world agreed to start a phase-out of fossil fuels two years later at COP28.

The report notes that between 2021 and 2024, the 65 largest banks in the world provided more than $1.6 trillion to the businesses involved in the projects.

With $33.7 billion in funding 62 businesses, including Eni, ExxonMobil, and TotalEnergies, Barclays Bank is the most active in supporting the companies that make carbon bombs.

According to Louis-Maxence Delaporte, energy research manager at Reclaim Finance, one of the NGOs involved in the study, “major global banks are exacerbating climate change and future emissions by continuing to grant carte blanche to these fossil fuel companies that are destroying the planet.”

43% of “carbon bombs” are made up of China. Russia accounts for 9%, followed by the United States, who accounts for 5%.

The most of these projects are being carried out by Western oil majors, but CHN Energy and Aramco in China and Saudi Arabia produce the most total emissions.

More than 2,300 smaller extraction projects, approved or in operation since 2021, whose potential emissions exceed five million tonnes of CO2 each, making that figure equal to Paris’ annual emissions, are also included in the report.

Sudanese journalist Muammar Ibrahim detained by RSF in el-Fasher

The Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have been apprehended in El-Fasher, prompting questions about Muammar Ibrahim’s safety and a request for his release.

The reporter was taken into custody by the RSF on Sunday evening, shortly after the paramilitary force claimed control of North Darfur’s besieged capital.

In an effort to recapture the Sudanese army’s final stronghold in the vast western region of Darfur, the RSF has laid siege to El-Fasher for almost 18 months.

The freelance journalist who was captured and contributed to Al Jazeera Mubasher has received several videos.

In one, Ibrahim claims that the RSF was in custody and that he had been detained while trying to leave El-Fasher.

RSF fighters fight it out to appear and make comments in the video, which he is surrounded by. One masked fighter can be seen to the side.

Ibrahim claims to be a neutral journalist who has no ties to the RSF or the Sudanese army.

Another video shows Ibrahim being encircled by RSF fighters, who claim he is well-treated, while croucheing on the ground.

They cuff him on the head and point at some meat, saying, “You’ve been eating animal feed, and now you’ll get a meal with meat,” at one point.

The Sudanese Journalists Syndicate stated in a statement on Sunday night that it was “deeply concerned about the arrest” and demanded that he be immediately and unconditionally released.

In keeping with the current state of the city’s suffering during the siege, Ibrahim had previously covered the past two years of conflict in Sudan. The city has been plagued by severe hunger since that time.

In his most recent post on social media, Ibrahim read, “Pray for us, may God keep its people.”

In response to the fighting, 1, 070 people were displaced from El-Fasher in just two days, according to the most recent information from the International Organization for Migration, between October 19 and October 21.