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US embassy in Riyadh evacuated; no new findings about Malaysian flight; Indonesia shuts down social media for under-16s
41 Articles •
FBI Opens Terrorism Probe After IEDs Ignited Outside NYC Mayor's Home
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What happened: Two Pennsylvania men, Emir Balat, 18, and Ibrahim Kayumi, 19, were arrested Saturday after a homemade explosive device containing nuts, bolts, and screws was thrown during clashes outside Gracie Mansion. The IED struck a barrier and extinguished itself feet from police, but authorities determined it could have caused serious injury or death.
Why it matters: The FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force has launched a federal terrorism investigation, with sources indicating investigators are examining whether suspects were inspired by ISIS messaging. The incident occurred when counter-protesters clashed with a 20-person anti-Islam demonstration organized by pardoned January 6 rioter Jake Lang outside Mayor Zohran Mamdani's residence, New York's first Muslim mayor.
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13 Articles •
U.S. Orders Diplomats Out of Saudi Arabia
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What happened: The State Department issued mandatory departure orders yesterday for American diplomats and families at the U.S. Embassy in Riyadh and consulates in Jeddah and Dhahran, the first such directive since U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran on Feb. 28. The order follows multiple Iranian drone attacks on U.S. embassies across the region over the past week, including strikes that hit the Riyadh embassy compound on Tuesday causing fire and minor damage.
Why it matters: This mandatory evacuation signals Washington views the threat as severe and marks a sharp escalation in regional security, falling just short of full suspension of diplomatic operations. Americans in Saudi Arabia face constrained consular services and limited travel options, while the State Department has faced criticism for not warning thousands of U.S. citizens to leave before strikes began, forcing evacuation of nearly two dozen charter flights in recent days.
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100% of sources are Original Reporting
125 Articles •
Renewed MH370 Search Yields No Findings 12 Years After Plane Vanished
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What happened: Ocean Infinity completed a 28-day deep-sea search across 7,571 square kilometers of the southern Indian Ocean in two phases (March 25-28, 2025 and December 31, 2025-January 23, 2026) but found no wreckage of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, which disappeared March 8, 2014 with 239 people aboard.
What's next: Families are urging Malaysia to extend Ocean Infinity's contract beyond June 2026, but winter weather may delay any resumption. Under the 'no-find, no-fee' agreement, Ocean Infinity receives $70 million only if wreckage is found, meaning taxpayers pay nothing for unsuccessful searches.
106 Articles •
Iran War Puts Gulf's Desalination Plants at Risk
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What happened: Since the Iran war began on February 28, fighting has moved dangerously close to Persian Gulf desalination plants. On March 2, Iranian strikes landed 12 miles from Dubai's largest plant, while damage was reported at facilities in the UAE and Kuwait from nearby attacks or intercepted drone debris.
Why it matters: More than 90% of Gulf desalinated water comes from just 56 vulnerable plants that supply drinking water to millions. If major facilities go offline, cities could lose most drinking water within days, potentially forcing mass evacuations like Riyadh's 8.5 million residents within a week if Jubail is disabled.
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12 Articles •
Washington Passes Ban on Mandatory Workplace Microchips
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What happened: Washington's legislature unanimously passed House Bill 2303 this week, prohibiting employers from requiring or coercing workers to receive subcutaneous microchip implants. The bill, which passed the House 87-6 last month, now awaits Gov. Bob Ferguson's signature and would make Washington the 14th state to preemptively ban the practice.
Why it matters: While no U.S. companies currently require employee microchipping, the law protects your bodily autonomy and right to refuse invasive workplace monitoring. If your employer violates the ban, you could sue for actual damages, punitive damages, and attorney fees, with companies facing fines starting at $10,000 per offense.
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75% of sources are High Factuality
105 Articles •
Indonesia Blocks Social Media Access for Under-16s
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The details: Indonesia will gradually deactivate accounts for users under 16 on high-risk platforms including YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, Threads, X, Bigo Live, and Roblox starting March 28. Communications Minister Meutya Hafid cited threats from pornography exposure, cyberbullying, online fraud, and addiction as reasons for the restrictions, with sanctions planned for non-compliant platforms.
What it means: With nearly 80% of Indonesian children actively using online platforms and internet penetration at 79.5% nationwide, tens of millions of young users will be affected. Parents may face initial confusion as children complain, though the government says enforcement targets platforms rather than families, and age verification challenges mean tech-savvy teens could potentially circumvent restrictions using VPNs or false ages.
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