Airlines cancel Venezuela flights amid US warnings and military buildup

After the United States warned major carriers about a “potentially hazardous situation” due to “heightened military activity” around the South American nation, six international airlines have suspended flights to Venezuela.

According to Marisela de Loaiza, president of the Venezuelan Airlines Association, flights to the nation were all suspended on Saturday, along with Portugal’s TAP, Chile’s LATAM, Colombia’s Avianca, Brazil’s GOL, and Trinidad and Tobago’s Caribbean.

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Iberia announced it would be suspending flights to the Venezuelan capital, Caracas, until further notice, while TAP announced it would cancel its flights for Saturday and the following Tuesday.

TAP informed Reuters news agency that its decision was influenced by the US notice, which stated that Venezuelan airspace’s safety is not guaranteed.

For the time being, Venezuela’s LASER, Spain’s Air Europa and PlusUltra, Panama’s Copa Airlines, Turkish Airlines, and Spain’s Air Europa and PlusUltra will continue to fly.

As tensions between the US and Venezuela soar, with Washington sending troops and the largest aircraft carrier in the world to the Caribbean as part of what it refers to as an anti-narcotics operation. However, Caracas claims that the operation is an attempt to remove Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro from power.

At least 83 people have been killed in at least 21 attacks on alleged drug boats carried out by the US military in the Caribbean and the Pacific.

The campaign began after President Donald Trump’s administration increased its reward for information leading to Maduro’s arrest or conviction to $50 million, describing him as the “global terrorist leader of the Cartel de los Soles” and calling him the “global terrorist leader of the Cartel de los Soles.”

Meanwhile, President Trump has reportedly expressed doubts about whether Venezuela might be a target for military action, saying in a CBS interview earlier this month that he doesn’t believe Caracas was going to start a war.

When asked if Maduro’s time as president was up, he responded, “I would say yes.

Then, on Sunday, he said the US might meet with Maduro, and on Monday, he said, “I don’t rule out that.” Nothing is ruled out by me. Venezuela needs to be looked after only.

Days later, on Friday, the US Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) advised all flights in the area to “exercise caution” because of the threats that “at all altitudes, including during overflight, the arrival and departure phases of flight, and/or airports and aircraft on the ground” (at all altitudes).

Since Hugo Chavez’s rise in power in the early 2000s, tensions have dominated relations between Washington and Caracas.

Following Chavez’s passing in 2013, the relationship deteriorated even more.

In response to accusations of corruption, authoritarianism, and election fraud, successive US administrations have rejected Maduro’s legitimacy and imposed severe sanctions on Venezuela’s economy.

The US position has been weakened by the Trump administration. It accused Maduro of leading the Venezuelan drug cartel Cartel de los Soles (Cartel of the Suns), but without providing any supporting evidence, last week.

Conservative US hawks have been calling on Trump to oust the Maduro government in recent weeks.

Maduro has repeatedly stated his desire to talk with Washington and accuses the US of creating “pretexts” for war. However, he warned that his nation would exert pressure to defend itself.

According to the Venezuelan outlet Telesur, “No foreign power will impose its will on our sovereign homeland.”

They will face a great surprise, however, if they break the peace and continue to pursue their neocolonial goals. They will receive a truly monumental surprise, I repeat, so I ask that it doesn’t happen.

Maria Corina Machado, the president’s opposition leader in Venezuela, claimed that the election resulted from rigging the results and that overthrowing Maduro would not lead to regime change.

We don’t want a new regime, we say. We’re requesting that the people’s wishes be respected, and that this transition be peaceful, orderly, and irreversible, she told The Washington Post on Friday.

Machado, 58, has urged foreign investments and privatization of Venezuela’s oil industry.

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,368

On Sunday, November 23, 2018, this is how things are going.

Trump’s strategy

    In Geneva, representatives from Ukraine, the United States, and the European Union are scheduled to meet to discuss US President Donald Trump’s proposed 28-point strategy for ending the conflict with Russia.

  • Trump, who had initially demanded that Ukraine accept his proposal by Thursday, said the proposal was not his final offer, according to Trump’s press release on Saturday. We want to find peace, they say. We’ll eventually have it ended, he said.
  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the president of Ukraine, announced on Saturday that he had approved the composition of Kyiv’s delegation.
  • In a social media post, he wrote, “Our representatives know how to defend Ukraine’s national interests, and exactly what needs to be done to stop Russia from starting a third invasion,” noting that Russia’s “crimes” shouldn’t be “rewarded.”
  • European and Western leaders welcomed Trump’s strategy in a statement on Saturday, but said the draft requires “additional work”.
  • Additionally, they criticized some of its provisions, including the Ukrainian military’s size and the ceding of territory to Russia. They stated that “we are clear on the principle that borders must not be altered by force.”
  • German Chancellor Friedrich Merz emphasized the need for Ukraine to decide its own fate and participate in any conflict resolution. He told reporters that “wars cannot be ended by major powers over the heads of the affected nations.”
  • In a separate statement, the leaders of eight Nordic-Baltic nations reiterated their commitment to Ukraine, including by extending its military support. They remarked that “we have stood by Ukraine’s side from the beginning of Russia’s war of aggression” and that they will continue to do so.
  • Democrats and some Republican hawks in Congress remained opposed to Trump’s proposal in Washington, DC. Senator Angus King described it as one of the worst “geopolitical mistakes” he has ever witnessed.

Fighting

  • According to local officials, Russian forces carried out more than 60 strikes in the Ukrainian Dnipropetrovsk region’s Nikopol district, killing at least one person and injuring five others.
  • Five people were hurt in a subsequent Russian attack on a store in Zaporizhia, and two women died in Kherson as a result of Russian shelling, according to officials.
  • Following the deadly Russian missile attack in Ternopil, Ukraine’s west on November 19, the State Emergency Service announced it had ended its search and rescue operation.
  • The organization reported that there were 33 fatalities, of which six were children. Additionally, 94 people received wounds.
  • Zvanivka in Donetsk and Nove Zaporizhzhia in the Zaporizhia region, according to the Russian Ministry of Defense.
  • The claim was made in response to a report from the Ukrainian newspaper Kyiv Independent that claimed more than 15 Zaporizhia villages had been allegedly taken over by Russian forces. The Black Bird Group, a Finnish open-intelligence organization, was mentioned in the article.
  • Russian troops “encircled Ukrainian units” in several neighborhoods of Pokrovsk in Donetsk, according to Russia’s TASS news agency, which reported that the battle for the town of Pokrovsk and Donetsk continued for months.
  • The Ukrainian military claimed that its forces were preventing Russian attacks on the town’s center and that its forces were occupying northern Pokrovsk’s design lines.

Is the global public tuning out the climate change debate?

The Brazilian city of Belem, where the UN climate summit is wrapping up, is divided into divisions.

Brazil’s COP30 climate summit was marked by division as nations struggled to agree on several issues, including the push to eliminate fossil fuels.

Experts claim that scientists, politicians, the media, and business all have a role to play in keeping the public informed as the world attempts to address the climate crisis.

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Are they actually successful?

Presenter: Neave Barker

Guests:

Professor John Sweeney contributed to the Nobel Peace Prize-winning assessment report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

Professor Allam Ahmed is a renowned authority on knowledge economy and sustainable development.

Air traffic suspended at Netherlands airport after drone sightings

World leaders, rights groups react to COP30 climate deal

A resolution at the UN climate conference that calls for action to stop global warming is reached, but it falls short of supporting a complete transition from fossil fuels.

World leaders on Saturday reached a deal that calls for nations to “significantly accelerate and scale up climate action globally,” following two weeks of contentious debates, gatherings, and negotiations at the COP30 summit in Belem, Brazil.

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No mention of a phase-out of fossil fuel is made in the text, which includes a request for developed countries to triple their funding to aid poorer nations in coping with the crisis.

Numerous states had been calling for a framework to be established for the COP30 agreement to reduce their reliance on oil, gas, and coal, which are the main contributors to the climate crisis, but several nations had resisted.

While some claim that COP30 was unrealistic, while others claim that the agreement represents a significant advance in global efforts to address climate change.

How have some global leaders and climate advocates responded to the agreement, in this case?

Andre Aranha Correa, president of COP30, is in charge.

Some of you may have had higher goals for some of the issues at hand, we are aware of. I am aware that civil society will demand that we do more to combat climate change. During Saturday’s closing session, he said, “I want to reaffirm that I will try to not disappoint you during my presidency.”

We need roadmaps so that humanity can overcome its dependence on fossil fuels, stop and reverse deforestation, and mobilize resources for these purposes, according to [Brazilian] President [Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva] at the COP’s opening, he said.

As COP30 president, I will therefore develop two roadmaps: one for ending and reversing deforestation, and the other for ending fossil fuel use in a just, orderly, and equitable manner. ”

Antonio Guterres, UN Secretary-General,

According to Guterres, “COP30 has made progress,” including the recommendation to triple the funding for climate change and the recognition that the world will surpass it. 2 degrees Celsius) . The Paris Agreement sets a 7 degree Fahrenheit target for global warming.

Consensus is ever more difficult to come by in a time of geopolitical divisions, but COPs are consensus-based. I can’t deny that COP30 has provided everything that is required. According to the UN chief, the gap between what science demands and where we are still is dangerously wide.

I am aware that many people, particularly young people, indigenous peoples, and those who are experiencing climate chaos, may feel disappointed. We are approaching dangerous and irreversible tipping points, he continued.

[Andre Coelho/EPA] Guterres speaks during the opening session of COP30 in Belem on November 6, 2025.

European Union’s Commissioner for Climate Wopke Hoekstra

We won’t hide the fact that we would have preferred to have more ambition in everything, Hoekstra told reporters.

Although it isn’t perfect, it represents a significant step in the right direction. ”

Gustavo Petro, president of Colombia,

I reject the claim that the fossil fuels used by capital are the source of the climate crisis, as the COP30 declaration does.   Everything else is hypocrisy, Petro wrote on social media, if that is not stated.

Oil, coal, and natural gas serve as the only energy sources for life on Earth, including our own; This has been established by science, and I don’t consider myself blind.

A COP30 declaration that does not disclose the scientific truth is opposed by Colombia. ”

Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla, Cuba’s foreign minister,

The Belem COP strengthens and demonstrates the value of multilateralism in addressing significant global challenges, such as combating #climate change, he wrote on X.

The call for developed nations to provide climate finance for adaptation in developing nations, at least tripling current levels by 2035, is one of its key outcomes. the creation of a system to support our nations in fair transitions; and the willingness of developed nations to fulfill their obligations under the Paris Agreement. ”

China

Li Gao, the head of China’s delegation at COP30, expressed his satisfaction with the outcome to the AFP news agency.

This success, in which a very challenging situation, demonstrates that the international community would like to unite and work together to combat climate change. ”

Small Island States Alliance

The agreement was deemed “imperfect” by a group representing 39 small island and low-lying coastal states, but it was still a step in the right direction.

“Ultimately, this is the push and pull of multilateralism. The opportunity for all countries to be heard and to listen to each other’s perspectives, to collaborate, build bridges, and reach common ground,” the Small Island States Alliance said in a statement.

Amnesty International

According to Anne Harrison, an Amnesty International climate justice adviser, Brazil, the host country of the COP30, has made significant efforts to ensure that “every voice is heard and has made strenuous efforts to broaden participation, which should be replicated.

According to Harrison, the absence of open, inclusive, and transparent negotiations deprived both civil society and indigenous peoples, who frequently responded to the global mutirao call, of their true decision-making, according to Harrison in a statement.

She continued, claiming that “people power” had contributed to the development of “a commitment to develop a Just Transition mechanism that will streamline and coordinate ongoing and upcoming efforts to protect the rights of workers, other individuals, and communities affected by the phase out of fossil fuel.”

Oxfam

As global leaders’ ambitions continue to fall short of what is required for a liveable planet, according to Viviana Santiago, executive director of Oxfam Brasil.

To achieve a truly just transition, those who built their fortunes on fossil fuels must move first and move the first, and provide funding in the form of grants rather than loans so front-line communities can do the same. Instead, Santiago remarked, “The poorest countries are being told to transition more quickly and with less money.”

Gaza was ‘near and dear’ to Zohran Mamdani’s NYC mayoral bid, father says

NewsFeed

Mahmood Mamdani, a postcolonialist, claims that Zohran’s campaign for mayor of New York City was influenced by Palestinian rights. He claims Zohran didn’t anticipate winning, but instead entered the race “to make a point” and outperformed his rivals because he resisted making concessions on issues that are “near and dear” to him.