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Japan says ‘every option’ on table against Donald Trump’s 25% car tariffs

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Japan says ‘every option’ on table against Donald Trump’s 25% car tariffs

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Japan’s prime minister said “every option” was under consideration and South Korea promised an emergency response after Donald Trump stepped up his trade war by unveiling 25 per cent tariffs on car imports to the US.

Shigeru Ishiba’s comments in Japan’s parliament came after Trump’s latest trade salvo, which he said would go into effect on April 2. Washington is expected to apply a range of reciprocal tariffs against US partners and allies on the same day.

Asian carmakers are expected to be among the worst affected. Shares of Japanese automakers tumbled between 2 per cent and 5 per cent on Thursday, while those of South Korea’s largest carmakers Hyundai and its affiliate Kia dropped about 4 per cent.

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“We need to think about the best option for Japan’s national interest,” said Ishiba. “We are considering every option in order to reach the most appropriate response.”

His comments came after European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said the EU was also assessing its options.

Japan’s top spokesperson Yoshimasa Hayashi described the tariffs, which would hit an industry widely seen as the driving force of the economy, as “extremely regrettable”. He added that the Trump administration’s emerging trade policy could have a major impact on bilateral ties, the global economy and the multilateral trading system.

Ishiba’s February meeting with Trump in Washington had initially been hailed as a success for reasserting the strength of the US-Japan alliance.

But traders in Tokyo said the bluntness of Ishiba’s tone — along with the “every option” language — hinted at rising panic in Japan over the solidity of the relationship.

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Japan has in recent weeks lobbied Washington for an exemption from tariffs, highlighting its status as the biggest supplier of foreign direct investment into the US.

The country’s economy and trade minister visited Washington this month, but the efforts have not secured the exemptions Japan had hoped for.

“Japan is the biggest investor into the United States, so we wonder if it makes sense for [the Trump administration] to apply uniform tariffs to all countries. That is a point we’ve been raising and will continue to do so,” said Ishiba.

Japanese carmakers have built significant production facilities in the US but their supply chains are heavily reliant on Canada and Mexico.

Japan is the largest exporter of finished vehicles to the US after Mexico, where Japanese companies are the dominant manufacturers. Japan sent $40bn worth of cars to the US in 2024, representing 28.3 per cent of its overall exports to the US.

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Goldman Sachs analysts said the impact on Japanese exports could be “large” because cars and parts account for such a large proportion of exports to the US.

But they said the overall economic impact would be “somewhat limited” as Japan would not lose competitiveness against other car imports, estimating the hit to GDP at 0.1 percentage points.

Masanori Katayama, chair of the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association, a lobby group, had previously warned that “significant production adjustment” would be required if US tariffs were introduced against vehicle imports from Japan, Mexico and Canada.

But Julie Boote, an analyst at Pelham Smithers, said tariff pressure could “ironically” force Japan’s fragmented carmaking industry to consolidate as smaller groups would need support.

South Korea’s industry minister Ahn Duk-geun said Korean carmakers would experience “considerable difficulties” due to the tariffs and promised to announce emergency measures next month, following a meeting on Thursday with industry executives.

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Hyundai, whose $7.6bn hybrid and electric vehicle factory in Georgia began operations on Thursday, has also unveiled plans to expand US production capacity in anticipation of the Trump tariffs.

The carmaker on Tuesday announced $21bn of investment in the US, including a $5.8bn steel plant in Louisiana, as well as a target of producing 1.2mn vehicles annually in the country, up from 700,000 currently.

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Watch: Chaos as Mexican Navy ship collides with Brooklyn Bridge, sailors seen dangling – Times of India

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Watch: Chaos as Mexican Navy ship collides with Brooklyn Bridge, sailors seen dangling – Times of India

Chaos as Mexican Navy ship collides with Brooklyn Bridge, sailors left dangling

Two people have died and 17 others were injured when the Mexican Navy’s training vessel Cuauhtémoc crashed into the Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday night, creating a harrowing scene as sailors were seen dangling from damaged masts high above the deck.The incident occurred around 8:30 PM local time when the three-masted ship, measuring nearly 300 feet in length, apparently lost power and drifted backwards into the historic bridge. The collision caused the vessel’s towering masts, some exceeding 150 feet in height, to strike the bridge’s underside and snap in succession.“Sailors were seen aloft in the rigging on the damaged masts but, remarkably, no one fell into the water,” news agency AP reported quoting officials.

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Do you believe the Mexican Navy’s training vessel Cuauhtémoc should continue its voyage after the accident?

New York City Mayor Eric Adams confirmed on Sunday that of the 277 people aboard, 19 sustained injuries, with two fatalities and two others in critical condition. “Earlier tonight, the Mexican Navy tall ship Cuauhtémoc lost power and crashed into the Brooklyn Bridge,” Adams posted on social media platform X.Eyewitnesses described dramatic scenes as sailors clung to ropes, unable to descend for several minutes after the impact. “We saw someone just hanging there,” recalled witness Lily Katz. “He was dangling from a harness near the top for like 15 minutes before help got to him.”The Cuauhtémoc, launched in 1982, was on a global goodwill voyage and had just completed a stop in Manhattan. The vessel, primarily carrying naval cadets, was scheduled to visit 22 ports across 15 countries before returning home in December. Prior to the accident, the ship had welcomed visitors at Pier 17 from May 13-17.

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Brooklyn Bridge hit by Mexican navy training ship, injuring several

While the iconic Brooklyn Bridge, dating back to 1883, was struck during the incident, preliminary inspections revealed no significant structural damage. Though traffic was temporarily suspended, the bridge has since reopened. City officials have initiated a comprehensive inspection by the department of transportation.Also Read: Brooklyn Bridge crash: NYPD explains why Mexican Navy Ship collided with Brooklyn BridgeThe ship’s next destination was to be Iceland as part of its extended training mission, which included planned stops in France, Scotland, Cuba, and Jamaica.

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Israel expands Gaza ground offensive after days of air strikes

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Israel expands Gaza ground offensive after days of air strikes

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Israel said on Saturday that it was expanding a new ground offensive in Gaza, with troops closing in on the enclave after days of air strikes that have killed hundreds of Palestinians.

Defence minister Israel Katz said the renewed fighting was forcing Hamas to soften its stance in talks being held in Qatar to secure the release of the remaining hostages being held in captivity in Gaza — part of an Israeli strategy of “negotiations under fire”.

A Hamas official told Reuters that a new round of talks was under way on Saturday.

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Palestinians fear the new offensive is the precursor to a plan approved on May 5 by Israel’s security cabinet, under which most of the besieged enclave would be occupied by the Israeli military and 2.1mn Palestinians would be forced into a small area by the border with Egypt.

“The Palestinian cause is navigating one of its gravest and most perilous junctures,” Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi told an Arab League summit. Israel is engaged in a “deliberate endeavour to forcibly displace [Gaza’s] inhabitants under untold horrors of war”, he said.

Egypt fears an exodus of Palestinians into its territory. NBC News reported that the US is negotiating with Libya to take in as many as 1mn Palestinian refugees.

At least 250 Palestinians have been killed in the last two days, health officials in Gaza said, with hundreds more wounded.

Israel has blocked any food, medicine or fresh water from entering Gaza for the last two and half months, pushing hundreds of thousands of Palestinians into starvation, a UN panel said earlier this week.

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The full extent of the offensive was unclear on Saturday. Residents reported machine gun fire in parts of Gaza and Israeli media said tanks had been massed on the border. Israeli warplanes dropped flyers over some parts of Gaza with a reference to the biblical story about Moses parting the sea.

“The Israeli army is coming,” the flyer, shared widely on social media, said.

Israel stepped up the intensity of its air strikes earlier this week as US President Donald Trump wrapped up his Gulf tour.

Israeli officials had earlier referred to his trip as a “window of opportunity” to broker a swap of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners that would be acceptable to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his far-right allies.

In the event, Trump only negotiated the release of a single Israeli soldier, who is also an American national.

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An estimated 20 hostages and the bodies of as many as 38 more are still being held by Hamas, which has refused to release them without a complete ceasefire and the full withdrawal of Israeli forces.

Katz said Hamas’s return to negotiations was evidence that neither a ceasefire nor the resumption of humanitarian assistance to Gaza was necessary for negotiations to succeed.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres warned that Israel’s siege was “beyond description, beyond atrocious and beyond inhumane”.

“A policy of siege & starvation makes a mockery of international law,” he said on X.

His remarks came days after UN Under-Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs Tom Fletcher warned of a looming “genocide” in Gaza — the first time a senior UN official has publicly used such language.

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Israel rejects Fletcher’s characterisation. It says it has blocked the aid to prevent it from being stolen by Hamas.

More than 53,000 Palestinians have been killed since the war began, most of them women and children, according to local health officials.

At least 1,200 people were killed in Israel in Hamas’s cross-border attack on October 7 2023 and 250 taken hostage, according to Israeli officials.

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More than 20 dead after tornadoes sweep through Kentucky and Missouri

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More than 20 dead after tornadoes sweep through Kentucky and Missouri

Storm damage is surveyed in Laurel County, Ky., after tornadoes brought destruction to the region Friday night.

Laurel County, Ky. Fiscal Court/Facebook/Screenshot by NPR


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Laurel County, Ky. Fiscal Court/Facebook/Screenshot by NPR

Powerful storms and tornadoes tore through several Midwestern and Southern states overnight Friday, leaving carnage and flattened buildings in their wake.

In Kentucky at least 24 people have died. Authorities say 23 of those deaths occurred in London, Ky., in the southeastern part of the state, with some people still unaccounted for.

A message shortly after 8 a.m. ET from Gov. Andy Beshear called for prayers for the affected families. But less than an hour later, the number of known deaths had already risen by 10.

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In Missouri, there are at least seven dead — five in the St. Louis area and two others in a more rural part of the state, south of the capital.

Responders there are still searching homes and buildings for survivors, and officials are asking people to stay out of the impacted areas to allow crews to do their work.

According to PowerOutage.us, the storms left nearly a half million customers without power in dozens of states from Missouri to Maryland.

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This is a developing story and will be updated.

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