World
Philippines, China spat escalates over ‘misguided’ South China Sea claims as Blinken visits region
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is set to touch down in the Philippines Monday as tensions between Beijing and Manila continue to escalate over territorial claims in the South China Sea.
The Philippines Department of Foreign Affairs on Sunday clapped back at “baseless and misleading” statements issued by China last week that suggested it had “historic rights” to the international waters after a spokesperson for its foreign ministry said China was the “first country to discover, name, explore and exploit” the international waters.
“The Philippines maintains a firm stand against misguided claims and irresponsible actions that violate Philippine sovereignty, sovereign rights, and jurisdiction in its own maritime domain,” the department said in a statement.
In this handout photo provided by the Philippine Coast Guard, a Chinese Coast Guard ship uses water cannons on Philippine navy-operated supply boat M/L Kalayaan as it approaches Second Thomas Shoal, locally known as Ayungin Shoal, in the disputed South China Sea on Dec. 10, 2023. (Philippine Coast Guard via AP)
LAWMAKERS TO PROPOSE GREATER OVERSIGHT OF CHINESE LAND ACQUISITIONS IN AMERICA
China in recent years has repeatedly looked to assert control over hundreds of miles of the South China Sea despite internationally recognized Exclusive Economic Zones maintained by nations like the Philippines, Vietnam and Malaysia.
Beijing’s increasingly aggressive posture is set to be a leading issue amid Blinken’s trip Monday.
“It’s inevitable that anytime you are going to talk with partners in the region you have to talk about China,” a senior State Department official told reporters.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken waves as he boards an airplane to depart for the Philippines from Osan Air Base, in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, Monday, March 18, 2024. (Evelyn Hockstein/Pool Photo via AP)
US CAREFULLY MONITORS CHIP EXPORTS TO CHINA, DEEPENS INVESTMENTS IN PHILIPPINES
Blinken, who first stopped in South Korea over the weekend, will reiterate the Biden administration’s “ironclad” commitments to regional partners as security concerns continue to mount in the Indo-Pacific.
“Our focus is on maintaining peace and stability and respect for international law,” the senior official said.
Philippine soldiers look at Philippine Coast Guard vessels near Thitu Island in the disputed South China Sea on Dec. 1, 2023. (Jam Sta Rosa/AFP via Getty Images)
“We are concerned any time you see these tensions in the maritime domain,” they added. “There is the risk of a miscalculation, there’s no doubt about it. “
“We’ve called in particular for China to show restraint and most importantly for China to respect international law,” the senior official added.
Fox News Digital could not immediately reach the Chinese embassy in Manila for comment.
World
North Korea says it is not bound by any treaty on nuclear non-proliferation
Pyongyang says its status as nuclear-armed state ‘will not change based on external rhetorical claims’.
Published On 7 May 2026
North Korea’s envoy to the United Nations has declared that Pyongyang will not be bound by any treaty on atomic weapons and that no external pressure will change its status as a nuclear-armed state.
Ambassador Kim Song’s statement – carried by state media on Thursday – came as the United States and other countries criticised North Korea’s nuclear programme at the ongoing UN conference reviewing the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
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Pyongyang withdrew from the NPT in 2003 and has since conducted six nuclear tests, promoting multiple UN Security Council sanctions.
The country is believed to hold dozens of nuclear warheads.
“At the 11th NPT Review Conference currently under way at UN headquarters, the United States and certain countries following its lead are groundlessly calling into question the current status and exercise of sovereign rights,” Kim said, according to the official Korean Central News Agency.
“The status of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea as a nuclear-armed state will not change based on external rhetorical claims or unilateral desires,” he added.
“To make it clear once again, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea will not be bound by the Non-Proliferation Treaty under any circumstances whatsoever.”
He continued that the country’s status as a nuclear-armed state has been “enshrined in the constitution, transparently declaring the principles of nuclear weapons use”.
North Korea has long insisted that it will not give up its nuclear arsenal, describing its path as “irreversible” and pledging to strengthen its capabilities.
It has sent ground troops and artillery shells to support Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and observers say Pyongyang is receiving military technology assistance from Moscow in return.
The nine nuclear-armed states – Russia, the US, France, the United Kingdom, China, India, Pakistan, Israel and North Korea – possessed 12,241 nuclear warheads in January 2025, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) reported.
The US and Russia hold nearly 90 percent of nuclear weapons globally and have carried out major programmes to modernise them in recent years, according to SIPRI.
The nuclear issue has been at the heart of the US and Israel’s war on Iran, with US President Donald Trump saying that Tehran – a signatory to the NPT – can never have a nuclear weapon.
Iran denies seeking an atomic weapon and has long demanded Washington acknowledge its right to enrich uranium.
World
Ted Turner, TV Mogul and Philanthropist, Dies at 87
Ted Turner, the charismatic, larger-than-life figure who conquered the world of media, sports and philanthropy, has died, according to a release by Turner Enterprises obtained by CNN. He was 87.
Turner disclosed in September 2018 that he was suffering from Lewy body dementia, a brain disorder that affects memory and other cognitive functions.
Turner, Time Magazine’s Man of the Year in 1991, transformed the world of television, inventing 24-hour news with CNN and pioneering national basic cable. To feed his “superstation,” he made deals that rewrote the rules of sports broadcasting. He was also a sports figure himself, winning the America’s Cup and owning the Atlanta Braves when they won the World Series.
Turner helped change the idea of philanthropy by being one of the first individuals to give away huge sums while still alive, rather than bequeathing them in a will; he donated a record $1 billion to create the United Nations Foundation. “Everybody could be doing more! Nobody’s doing enough. I could be doing more!” he told Variety in a 2012 interview about his passion to make the world a safer and healthier place.
No fiction writer could dream up a character with so many high-stakes gambles that usually paid off, whose life took so many turns and who was present at so many key late-20th-century moments in various fields. In his 2008 autobiography “Call Me Ted,” Turner, who was the grandson of sharecroppers, said his father advised him, “Be sure to set your goals so high that you can’t possibly accomplish them in one lifetime. That way you’ll always have something ahead of you.” He clearly followed that advice.
His first step in media was inheriting his father’s billboard business. He then shifted to television, taking a money-losing UHF television station in Atlanta and transforming it into WTRS, then Turner Broadcasting System. It entered the homes of 2 million cable subscribers as “superstation” TBS via satellite delivery, which led to the blossoming of satellite and cable TV in the mid-’70s. He decided that his channels needed new shows, so he invented TNT and helped pioneer the concept of original programming on basic cable. He also owned MGM for a time, selling the studio and name but retaining the massive library.
He started CNN, as well as other cablers like the Cartoon Network, and invented “Captain Planet and the Planeteers,” a TV toon with an environmental message. Overpopulation and nuclear disarmament were other passionate causes for which he worked and donated tirelessly.
He often joked that his formula for success was “Early to bed, early to rise, work like hell and advertise.”
When he sold the Turner system to Time Warner, he added $1 billion to his income within nine months. In 1997, after receiving an award from the United Nations, he decided to donate the billion — one-third of his wealth — to the org. He gave the U.N. the money just in time. When Time Warner merged with AOL in 2000, the stock plummeted, and he lost 80% of his wealth within two years.
He said later he had voted to approve the merger against his better judgment and he soon lost even more when he was unceremoniously ousted from the company.
He continued with philanthropy and activism, fighting nuclear weapons, climate change, fossil fuels and overpopulation.
In 2002, he started a chain of eco-friendly restaurants, Ted’s Montana Grill, whose flagship dish is the bison burger from meat raised on the land he owned spread across six states. By 2010, he owned 2 million acres. He was the largest single landowner in the U.S. for years until he was surpassed by Liberty Media founder and chief John Malone. He spent a good portion of his final years after leaving Time Warner on his 113,000-acre ranch near Bozeman, Mont.
Then there were his sports achievements: He won the America’s Cup and Fastnet, becoming the first person to be named yachtsman of the year four times, and bought the Atlanta Braves, who won the World Series in 1995. He bought the baseball team in a calculated move to boost the ratings of his local station.
He was also married three times, including a 10-year marriage to Jane Fonda, and had five children.
In person he could be gregarious and aw-shucks friendly but was also outspoken and confrontational, which earned him the nickname the Mouth of the South. His feud with Rupert Murdoch, which began over a yachting accident, led Turner to challenge him to fistfights; in 2003, he asserted that Murdoch had helped start the Iraq War through advocacy of the military campaign on Fox News and other outlets, and in 2011, he declared that Murdoch ought to resign from News Corp. in the wake of the phone hacking scandal.
Though Turner suffered the occasional gambler’s setback, his was a life marked mainly by triumphs and staggering successes. “It was,” fellow media mogul John Malone once said, “as if God were on his side.”
He was a complex person who fought at all times to protect his vulnerable self. As an aide warned an interviewer once, “If he doesn’t want to answer a question, you’ll know it. He’ll just give one or two-word answers and you can’t go back to that topic.” He described himself as having bipolar depression, but he avoided psychiatry and too much self-analysis.
In Turner’s 2008 memoir “Call Me Ted,” Jane Fonda described Turner’s childhood, with beatings and psychological manipulations, as “complete toxicity.” She said Turner couldn’t understand why she cried when he described his youth and said, “There’s a fear of abandonment that is deeper than with anyone I’ve ever known. As a result, he needs constant companionship, and keeping up with him can be exhausting.” She said he couldn’t sit still and his nervous energy “almost crackles in the air.”
In the same book, Dick Parsons, president of Time Warner in 1995, when it bought Turner’s company, recalled his first meeting with the exec. Turner was talking about overcoming adversity and told Parsons, “You were born black — bad break! But you know, you worked hard and you overcame it.” Parsons said he nearly fell out of his chair but concluded that Turner didn’t possess the self-censorship mechanism that prevents most people from blurting out inappropriate ideas. “But because he’s such a fundamentally guileless and genuine guy, he gets away with it.”
Robert Edward Turner III was born in Cincinnati. His family moved to Atlanta when Turner was 9 and his father, Ed, struggled in vain to succeed with his small billboard company. When his father committed suicide in 1963, Ted inherited the business and was determined to make it a success. Under his direction, the company earned enough money to allow Turner in 1970 to buy Atlanta-based UHF station Channel 17, which was losing upward of $500,000 annually.
He started counterprogramming network fare by showing movies, old series like “The Andy Griffith Show” and Atlanta Braves games. By 1972, the station was breaking even. Looking to expand, he embraced CATV (community antenna TV, as cable television was called). By December 1976, WTCG had a satellite transmission and was renamed the WTBS “superstation.”
In the early days, it reached 2 million cable subscribers’ homes. By 1986, 34 million additional viewers had been added, and the network’s annual profits had soared to more than $70 million.
In the intervening years, Turner had dabbled in other interests. Making use of the yachting expertise he had acquired while attending Brown U., Turner gained worldwide recognition for winning the 1977 America’s Cup on his yacht Courageous. He was, he later admitted, “a little tipsy” as he accepted the trophy, and in press coverage he earned the nickname “Captain Outrageous.” He also won the Fastnet race and was named yachtsman of the year in 1970, ’73, ’77 and ’79.
He also began snapping up Atlanta’s sports teams, purchasing the baseball Braves and the basketball Hawks in 1976 and ’77, respectively. Turner even managed the Braves personally for one game during a particularly bad season early in his ownership.
Turner’s biggest gamble of all, perhaps, came in 1980, when he launched the first 24-hour all-news cable channel, CNN. Cable carriers declined to help with the startup costs, so Turner was left to go it alone, coming up with $21 million from the sale of one of his independent stations, in Charlotte, N.C., to start the channel.
As he said in his book, “I’m often asked if we ever did any formal research on the viability of a 24-hour cable news, and my answer is no. I had spent over five years thinking about it, and it was time to get going.”
Despite its relatively low-budget startup, CNN caught on quickly. Turner helped the network in its early years by using profits from WTBS. He started up sister channel Headline News in 1982, and by 1985, the two were earning their own keep. CNN would grow in both profits and reputation in later years with its impressive up-to-the-minute coverage of the 1986 Challenger disaster and, more significantly, the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
CNN was later challenged by rivals like Fox News and MSNBC. It lost its biggest advocate when Turner was pushed out and it struggled to toe a nonpartisan political line between right and left.
“If I’d been running CNN it would have stayed more with international news coverage than it has today,” Turner said in a 2012 interview with Variety. “It would have stuck with more series news. Be damned with ratings! Biggest isn’t always best. Best is what’s best.”
In 1985, at a time when world tensions had crippled the Olympics with back-to-back Games marred by U.S.- and U.S.S.R.-led boycotts, Turner helped set up the Goodwill Games as an alternate means for international amateur athletes to compete, without the interference of politics.
And, in 1990, he launched SportsSouth, providing coverage of his Braves and Hawks as well as college football, auto racing, golf and other sporting events throughout Georgia and six other Southern states.
In one of his few career defeats, Turner failed in a bid to purchase CBS in 1986, but he consoled himself the same year by paying what was generally considered to be a generous $1.6 billion for the MGM/UA Entertainment Co.
With the studio came some 4,000 films, which included classics from MGM, RKO and pre-1950 Warner Bros. films. Making use of that impressive library, Turner launched Turner Network Television (TNT) in 1988. In 1993, he created yet another outlet for vintage cinema with the launch of Turner Classic Movies.
While he did bring a significant number of classic movies to viewers, Turner caused a considerable stir among some old-time movie buffs, film historians and social critics for his decision to “colorize” many of the films in his library in an attempt to make them more popular with later generations of TV viewers.
In 1990, Saddam Hussein’s Iraqi army invaded Kuwait, and most networks and news orgs began evacuating news teams as the U.S. began building toward Operation Desert Storm. The CNN newsies opted to stay. On Jan. 16, 1991, a CNN team was covering Baghdad as bombs began to fall — and a war was televised live from behind the lines. It was a precedent-setting move that seemed to cap Turner’s career as the reigning monarch of cable, if not TV in general. Time magazine crowned him Man of the Year in ’91, praising him for turning “viewers in 150 countries into instant witnesses of history.” Further, the magazine credited Turner as having basically reinvented the news, changing it “from something that has happened to something that is happening at the very moment you are hearing it.”
His global view was firmly in place by this point. He banned the use of the word “foreign” within any Turner Broadcasting company, believing it was pejorative, and preferring “international.”
In 1993, Turner turned toward the business of new feature films by purchasing Castle Rock Entertainment and New Line Cinema. The latter handled Turner’s made-for-TNT Civil War epic, “Gettysburg,” featuring Turner in a cameo as a Confederate colonel killed in the battle.
Turner found himself at the vanguard of yet another movement — the intra-cable-company merger mania —when he sold Turner Broadcasting to Time Warner for $7.5 billion. After the deal was OK’d by the Federal Trade Commission in ’96, Turner took a seemingly subservient role as vice chairman of Time Warner, though he remained the company’s largest shareholder.
He remained the largest shareholder after the acquisition of Time Warner for almost $200 billion by AOL in 2000. But the pairing of those two companies proved disastrous for everyone, including Turner. The dot-com mania of the late-20th century meant that Wall Street was overly optimistic about growth potential: Though Time Warner’s revenue was five times as large as AOL’s, its capitalization was only half that of the Internet giant.
After the merger, AOL TW stock plunged, and Turner was forced out of the company. In 30 months, Turner’s net worth plummeted from $10 billion to $2 billion. Or, as he calculated, he was losing nearly $10 million each day for 2½ years.
The end of his role at Time Warner essentially ended his connection to showbiz. However, he still had his restaurants and, more important, his philanthropy and causes. Over the years, he had created the Goodwill Games, the Better World Society, the Nuclear Threat Initiative (in 2001) and the Turner Foundation. But his biggest single contribution was his creation of the United Nations Foundation, focusing on decreasing child mortality, boosting technology for health, empowering females, charting new energy, World Heritage and a stronger U.N.
Nothing But Nets, only one of the many campaigns financed by the foundation, has helped cut malaria nearly in half by distributing 1 million mosquito nets in Africa, Asia and other stricken regions since its 2006 launch.
When he decided to give the U.N. $1 billion, or one third of his personal wealth, in 1997, he challenged others of wealth to give away their money more freely. “All the money is in the hands of these few rich people and none of them give any money away,” he said in an interview. “It’s dangerous for them and the country.”
Ted Turner received the 2015 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Lifetime Achievement, as part of the 36th Annual News & Documentary Emmy Awards.
Turner’s three marriages all ended in divorce. He had two children with his first wife, Judy Nye: Laura Lee and Robert Edward IV; and three with his second wife, Jane Smith: Rhett, Beauregard and Jennie.
He and Fonda were married in 1991 and divorced in 2001. He is survived by his five children, 14 grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.
World
200,000 small boat arrivals loom amid UK raising threat level to ‘severe’ following recent terror attack
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As the United Kingdom raised its national terror threat level to “severe,” meaning an attack is considered “highly likely,” security experts are warning that Britain’s separate illegal migration crisis is adding to broader concerns over border control and vetting, with small boat crossings now nearing 200,000 arrivals since 2018.
The U.K.’s Joint Terrorism Analysis Center raised the national threat level from “substantial” to “severe” last week following a stabbing attack in Golders Green in North London, warning that the broader Islamist and extreme right-wing terror threat in Britain has been increasing “for some time.”
At the same time, official figures cited by GB News and The Sun show small boat arrivals across the English Channel are approaching the 200,000 mark, intensifying political debate over illegal immigration, deportations and national security.
UK TO TIGHTEN IMMIGRATION RULES OVER VOTER FRUSTRATION WITH HIGH IMMIGRATION NUMBERS: ‘FAILED EXPERIMENT’
A small boat carrying migrants heads into the English Channel near Gravelines, France, on July 2, 2025. The boat was full of migrants who boarded further down the coast. (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)
Nigel Farage, leader of the Reform UK Party, said in a Facebook video Tuesday that “most of them are unidentified, young males of fighting age” and warned the crossings pose “a risk not only to women and girls in this country but a risk to our national security.”
Security analysts say the combination of elevated terror concerns and mass illegal migration is adding pressure on Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government to demonstrate greater control over Britain’s borders.
“Channel migrants pose a potential security threat,” Dr. Michael McManus, director of research at the Henry Jackson Society, told Fox News Digital.
“Minimal vetting of the migrants means we have no way to know who is really coming to the country. The vast majority are combat-aged males from war zones and regions associated with terrorism.”
McManus added that “the current government is failing to read the mood in the country, which overwhelmingly wants action to deter and deport those who pose a threat.”
Police officers block protesters as trouble flares during an anti-immigration demonstration outside the Holiday Inn Express in Rotherham, England, Sunday Aug. 4, 2024. (Danny Lawson/PA via AP)
“So long as the immigration system fails to deter crossings, and the system makes deportation almost impossible, we will only see more,” he said.
According to The Sun, 7,612 migrants have been deported or removed since the crisis began, representing less than 4% of total arrivals.
The debate intensified this week after British Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood outlined plans to expand “safe and legal” refugee pathways once the government regains greater control over the asylum system, according to GB News reporting.
FARAGE SLAMS SECRET AFGHAN REFUGEE RESETTLEMENT TO UK, CLAIMS SEX OFFENDERS AMONG ARRIVALS
Migrants packed tightly on a small inflatable boat bail water as they attempt to cross the English Channel near the Dover Strait off the coast of Dover, England, on Sept. 7, 2020. More than 400 migrants made the journey from France to England by sea last Wednesday, either intercepted by U.K. border forces or arriving on shore in small boats. (Luke Dray/Getty Images)
Speaking to GB News, Work and Pensions Secretary Pat McFadden defended the government’s broader migration policy and said Mahmood was doing a “very good job.”
“We want to make sure that it’s a level that is good for the economy, that can be absorbed by the country, and that is done under proper rules,” McFadden said.
The Home Office has argued the government is increasing enforcement efforts against trafficking gangs and strengthening cooperation with France. A Home Office spokesperson said that the government had signed a “landmark new deal” with France aimed at boosting enforcement operations on beaches and disrupting smuggling routes.
Police officers face protesters during an anti-immigration demonstration outside the Holiday Inn Express in Rotherham, England, Sunday Aug. 4, 2024. (Danny Lawson/PA via AP)
The crossings themselves remain dangerous. Over the weekend, two Sudanese women reportedly died attempting to cross the Channel after a boat carrying dozens of migrants encountered problems off the French coast, according to British media reports.
According to the Refugee Council, many of those arriving by small boat originate from countries experiencing war, persecution or political instability, including Afghanistan, Syria, Eritrea, Iran and Sudan. The group says the vast majority of small-boat arrivals go on to apply for asylum in the UK.
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A small boat carrying migrants heads into the English Channel near Gravelines, France, on July 2, 2025. The boat was already full when it picked up more migrants further down the coast. (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)
The small boat crisis first escalated in 2018 after tighter security reduced attempts to enter Britain hidden in trucks and ferries. Since then, the crossings have become one of the most politically explosive issues in British politics, fueling growing pressure on both Labour and Conservative leaders to demonstrate control over the border.
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