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Putin accelerates buffer zone; Iran protests grow; major bank heist in Germany
22 Articles •
UK Firm Launches 1,000°C Furnace in Orbit for Semiconductors
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What happened: UK startup Space Forge generated plasma at 1,000°C aboard its uncrewed satellite ForgeStar-1, demonstrating conditions needed to manufacture ultra-pure semiconductor materials in low Earth orbit. The microwave-sized orbital factory, launched in June, operates autonomously from Cardiff mission control without crew.
Why it matters: Space-manufactured semiconductors could be up to 4,000 times purer than Earth-made versions because microgravity and vacuum conditions eliminate defects and contamination. These materials would enhance power electronics, communications, computing, and defense applications, potentially complementing terrestrial supply chains with higher-performance components.
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100% of sources are Original Reporting
63 Articles •
Yemen Airport Shut Down Amid Saudi-UAE Rift
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What happened: Aden International Airport suspended all flights on Thursday after Saudi Arabia imposed new inspection requirements for UAE-bound flights, which Yemen's STC-aligned transport minister rejected by ordering a complete shutdown. Saudi Ambassador Mohammed Al-Jaber accused STC leader Aidarus Al-Zubaidi of refusing landing permission for a Saudi delegation attempting to resolve the crisis.
Why it matters: The airport closure disrupts one of Yemen's few functioning international links, stranding passengers and canceling commercial flights including Yemenia and Djiboutian Airlines services. The shutdown exposes a deepening rift between Saudi Arabia and the UAE over southern Yemen's oil-rich provinces near the Saudi border, threatening regional stability and the anti-Houthi coalition.
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67% of sources are Original Reporting
43 Articles •
Somalian Army Kills 29 Al-Shabaab Militants in Airstrikes
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What happened: Somalia's national army, backed by international partners, conducted overnight airstrikes in central Somalia's Middle Shabelle region yesterday, killing at least 29 Al-Shabaab fighters. The operations targeted suspected militant hideouts in Jabad-Godane, Alanleey, and Xawaadley as part of a week-long campaign that Somali intelligence claims killed up to 135 militants total.
The bigger picture: This operation is part of a record-breaking U.S.-backed air campaign in Somalia with at least 127 strikes this year, more than double the previous annual record. However, recent related operations have raised civilian casualty concerns, with local media reporting over 30 civilian deaths from a U.S.-trained Somali force attack near Mogadishu last week and 11 civilians killed in November airstrikes near Kismayo.
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86% of sources are Original Reporting
15 Articles •
UK Killer Wins £241K After Prison Rights Breach Ruling
 
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What happened: Fuad Awale, serving life for shooting two teenagers in 2011, was awarded £7,500 compensation after the High Court ruled his prolonged segregation from March 2023 breached Article 8 rights. Taxpayers must also cover £234,000 in legal costs following the September 2024 ruling.
Why it matters: The case has sparked political debate over ECHR application to national security decisions, with government now reviewing prison separation policies and terrorism legislation. Ministers are considering legal reforms to prevent similar payouts while maintaining essential tools to protect prison staff and public safety.
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93% of sources are Original Reporting
347 Articles •
Trump Discusses CT Scan and Health in WSJ Interview
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What happened: President Trump disclosed in a Wall Street Journal interview that he underwent a CT scan of his heart and abdomen last October at Walter Reed, not an MRI as initially stated, with results showing no abnormalities. His physician recommended the preventative screening to rule out cardiovascular issues, though Trump said he regretted it because it gave critics ammunition and raised health questions.
Why it matters: At 79, Trump takes 325 milligrams of aspirin daily—more than doctors recommend—which causes easy bruising he sometimes covers with makeup, and he refuses to lower the dose despite medical advice because he's superstitious after 25 years of use. The disclosure highlights ongoing scrutiny of presidential health and transparency, as Trump will become the oldest sitting president in history by 2028 at age 82.
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Genetic Variant Cuts Blood Cancer by 20%
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The discovery: Scientists identified an inherited genetic variant (rs17834140-T) in the MSI2 gene that reduces blood stem cell mutation expansion by 16-30%, lowering risk of clonal hematopoiesis and myeloid cancers including leukemia. Published yesterday in Science, the research analyzed over 640,000 genomes and found the protective variant is carried by about 4% of people, with frequency varying by ancestry.
Why it matters: This discovery reveals a natural protection mechanism against blood cancers and could lead to preventive therapies for clonal hematopoiesis, which affects 10% of people over 65 and increases blood cancer risk three to five times. The variant works by lowering MSI2 protein levels, effectively turning off harmful cell growth that can progress to leukemia at 1% per year.
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89% of sources are Original Reporting
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67% of sources are High Factuality
26 Articles •
Rogue Planet Mass and Distance Measured for First Time
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What happened: Subo Dong's team used simultaneous Earth and Gaia microlensing observations to measure a rogue planet's mass (~22% of Jupiter) and distance (~9,785 light‑years); the event was spotted 3 May 2024.
Why it matters: This first direct mass-and-distance measurement validates techniques to weigh rogue planets, constrains formation and ejection models, and suggests NASA's Roman telescope (launch 2027) could find many more.
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92% of sources are Original Reporting
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