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US-backed strikes in Somalia; Bushfires rage in Western Australia; Belarus and Russia make their next chess move
85 Articles •
MIT Fusion Center Director Fatally Shot in Brookline Home
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What happened: Nuno F.G. Loureiro, 47, an MIT professor and director of the Plasma Science and Fusion Center, was shot multiple times Monday night at his Brookline apartment and died Tuesday morning. Police responded to gunshots around 8:30 p.m. on Gibbs Street, found him in the foyer, and transported him to Beth Israel Hospital where he underwent emergency surgery.
What's next: No suspects are in custody and authorities have released limited information about motive in this active homicide investigation. MIT is offering support services to students and colleagues grieving the loss of the internationally recognized fusion physicist who was advancing clean energy research and had received a Presidential Early Career Award.
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33 Articles •
UK Probes Foreign Interference After Ex-Reform UK Party Leader Jailed
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What happened: The UK government launched an independent review into foreign financial interference in politics after former MEP Nathan Gill was jailed for 10.5 years last month for accepting £40,000 in Russian bribes to make pro-Russia statements in the European Parliament. Former senior civil servant Philip Rycroft will lead the probe, examining political finance laws, cryptocurrency donations, and election safeguards, with findings due by end of March.
Why it matters: The review could reshape how UK political parties accept donations, including cryptocurrency, after Reform UK received a record £9 million crypto donation and announced it would accept Bitcoin. New safeguards may strengthen democracy protections against hostile foreign states like Russia and China, with findings informing the forthcoming Elections and Democracy bill that affects how future elections are secured.
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88% of sources are Original Reporting
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64% of sources are High Factuality
29 Articles •
Nigerian Gunmen Attack Church in Kogi, Kill 1, Abduct Up to 20
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What happened: Armed bandits attacked Evangelical Church Winning All in Aaaaz-Kiri during Sunday service, killing one worshipper and abducting at least 13 congregants. Simultaneously, gunmen raided Oke-Agi and Ilai communities in Mopamuro, killing three more and kidnapping additional residents in coordinated assaults lasting over an hour.
Why it matters: This marks the second church attack in two weeks in Kogi, with over 50 heavily-armed assailants operating for hours before authorities responded. Officials say military operations in neighboring Niger and Kwara states are displacing bandits into Kogi, forcing hundreds of terrified residents to flee their homes.
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15 Articles •
UK Proposes 'Anti-Muslim Hostility' Definition
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What happened: The UK government is consulting on a non-statutory definition of anti-Muslim hostility that replaces the term 'Islamophobia' with 'anti-Muslim hate' and removes references to 'Muslimness.' The draft, produced by a working group chaired by former attorney-general Dominic Grieve, defines prohibited conduct including violence, harassment, prejudicial stereotyping, and racialisation intended to disadvantage Muslims in public life.
Why it matters: Anti-Muslim hate crimes surged 19% last year to 3,866 incidents, representing nearly 40% of all religiously motivated offences, with monitoring group Tell Mama documenting over 6,300 cases in 2024. The new definition aims to help public bodies adopt behavior codes to combat discrimination while Communities Secretary Steve Reed emphasizes it will protect free speech and not introduce 'blasphemy laws by the back door.'
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58 Articles •
Study: 3,000 Glaciers to Vanish Yearly by 2040s
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What's happening: A Nature Climate Change study led by ETH Zurich finds annual glacier extinctions will peak mid-century — about 2,000 per year at 1.5°C, rising to roughly 4,000 at 4°C.
Why it matters: Mass glacier loss will cut water supplies, devastate tourism and ski industries, and erase cultural ties; current policy paths (~2.7°C) point to about 3,000 losses per year mid-century.
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Moscow Court Designates Pussy Riot as an Extremist Group
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What happened: Moscow's Tverskoy District Court designated feminist punk collective Pussy Riot an extremist organization yesterday, effectively banning its activities in Russia and criminalizing any association with the group. The closed-door ruling cited the group's 2012 cathedral protest and 2018 World Cup pitch invasion, following September sentences of up to 13 years in absentia for five members.
Why it matters: The extremist label criminalizes even minor interactions with Pussy Riot, including liking social media posts, owning their music, or searching their name online, with offenders facing prison sentences or fines up to 5,000 rubles. This designation exemplifies Russia's intensified crackdown on dissent since the 2022 Ukraine invasion, placing the art collective on the same list as terrorist organizations and chilling independent expression.
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76 Articles •
Ukraine and 34 Countries Establish Reparations Commission in The Hague
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What happened: Ukraine and 35 countries signed a treaty Tuesday establishing an International Claims Commission in The Hague to assess and decide reparations for damage from Russia's invasion. The commission will review over 80,000 existing claims from a Register of Damages created in 2023, with reconstruction costs estimated at $524 billion.
Why it matters: The commission creates a legal pathway for compensation but faces major uncertainty over funding, with debates over using frozen Russian assets worth hundreds of billions held in Europe. EU leaders face pressure at Thursday's summit to decide on frozen assets as peace negotiations intensify under US diplomatic efforts.
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