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UK facial recognition goes wide in retail; U.S. drone down over Iran; South Africa's large-scale deportations
14 Articles •
Launch of New Facial Recognition in UK Shops Prompts Backlash
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What's happening: Facewatch is rolling out live facial recognition across more than 100 UK shops, including Sainsbury's, B&M and Spar, that scans shoppers against watchlists and can automatically call police within four seconds. The system flagged known offenders nearly 300,000 times in the first half of this year, with Sainsbury's expanding from 55 stores to over 200 by year's end.
Why it matters: Your face is now scanned and matched against private watchlists each time you shop, with a private company deciding who counts as a threat and potentially summoning police automatically. Campaigners warn the biometric data is processed through Amazon's AWS infrastructure also used by the Israeli military, while facial recognition systems show higher error rates for women and people of color, raising privacy and civil liberties concerns as the technology expands faster than regulations.
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23 Articles •
Iran Says It Shot Down U.S. Drone Over Bandar Abbas
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What happened: US Central Command used one-way attack aerial and sea drones against Iranian targets on Sunday, marking the first reported use of these systems in strikes against Iran. The aerial drones include LUCAS systems modeled after Iran's Shahed design, while Fleet-class unmanned surface vessels were adapted from mine-countermeasure craft for suicide strikes.
Why it matters: This escalation introduces new attack methods that complicate regional defenses, as these platforms cost over $2 million each but are difficult to stop. The deployment of both aerial and sea-based one-way drones expands threat types and increases potential for further US-Iran conflict escalation.
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14 Articles •
White House UFO Adviser Says Government is 'Baffled' by Sightings
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What happened: The White House appointed Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb to head a new UAP Science Advisory Council this week, working with the Pentagon, ODNI, and FBI. The multidisciplinary council will study unidentified anomalous phenomena across air, space, and underwater domains using rigorous scientific methods and high-quality data collection standards.
Why it matters: This council could fundamentally change how government agencies collect and analyze UAP data, directly informing national security decisions through the UAP Governing Board. The emphasis on scientific rigor and new evidence over unverifiable older claims may reshape public understanding of anomalous phenomena and their potential implications.
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34 Articles •
South Africa Says Over 53K Deported in Migration Campaign
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What happened: South Africa has processed over 53,000 foreign nationals for deportation or voluntary repatriation since launching a migration crackdown five weeks ago, following anti-migrant protests that began in late June. Most processed migrants are from Malawi, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique, with 38,000 passing through a temporary repatriation center established near Musina on June 26.
Why it matters: Tens of thousands of migrants have abandoned possessions accumulated over years and fled under threat of violence, with protesters demanding mass deportations and blaming foreigners for unemployment and crime. Authorities have registered 205 criminal cases and made 350 arrests related to intimidation and illegal vigilante searches, while warning citizens against taking the law into their own hands.
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302 Articles •
Zelenskyy Replaces PM, Flags Law Enforcement Overhaul
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What happened: President Zelenskyy announced yesterday he would replace Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko after one year in office, alongside changes to law enforcement leadership. Parliament must approve the reshuffle, which would trigger resignation of the entire government and mark Zelenskyy's fourth major reorganization since Russia's invasion.
Why it matters: The reshuffle aims to refocus Ukraine's wartime government on EU membership, US relations including licensed Patriot production, and winter preparedness. It comes amid Ukraine's largest corruption scandal involving a $100 million kickback scheme that has implicated figures close to Zelenskyy, potentially affecting Western confidence in Kyiv's governance.
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44 Articles •
UK Unveils £250M Plan to Strengthen Protection for Jewish Communities
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The details: The UK government announced over £250 million in funding over three years to protect Jewish communities across England and Wales, deploying more than 500 additional police officers. The Metropolitan Police will receive £86 million to recruit approximately 300 officers, while Greater Manchester Police gets £22 million following last October's deadly synagogue attack that killed two worshippers.
Why it matters: This funding responds to a sharp rise in antisemitic attacks, including recent stabbings and arson targeting synagogues and Jewish sites, which prompted authorities to raise the national terror threat level to severe last April. The investment will increase visible patrols around synagogues, Jewish schools, and community centers, while funding antisemitism training for all officers in England and Wales to deter hate crimes and reassure communities.
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