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US intelligence chief sees ‘protracted’ fighting in Sudan

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US intelligence chief sees ‘protracted’ fighting in Sudan

Nationwide intelligence head Avril Haines says preventing will seemingly not cease as neither facet has incentive to hunt peace.

America expects the preventing between two army chiefs in Sudan to proceed as neither has an incentive to hunt peace, US Director of Nationwide Intelligence Avril Haines has stated.

“The preventing in Sudan between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Fast Assist Forces (RSF) is, we assess, more likely to be protracted as either side consider that they will win militarily and have few incentives to return to the negotiating desk,” Haines informed a US Senate listening to on Thursday.

“Each side are in search of exterior sources of assist, which, if profitable, is more likely to intensify the battle and create a higher potential for spillover challenges within the area,” she stated.

Haines, the highest US intelligence official, stated the preventing has exacerbated already-dire humanitarian situations, “elevating the spectre of large refugee flows and support wants within the area”.

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Combating continued in Khartoum for the twentieth straight day Thursday after the most recent ceasefire between the 2 sides failed. Fierce preventing may very well be heard in central Khartoum as the military tried to push again the RSF from areas across the presidential palace and armed forces headquarters.

Both sides seems to be battling for management of territory within the capital forward of any attainable negotiations, although the leaders of each factions have proven little public willingness to carry talks after greater than two weeks of preventing.

Avril Haines says the battle is more likely to be protracted as either side consider that they will win militarily [Will Oliver/EPA]

Reporting from Khartoum, Al Jazeera’s Hiba Morgan stated a number of the preventing was concentrated across the presidential palace on Thursday.

“Fighter jets have been flying overhead across the neighborhood of the presidential palace and the overall command of the military headquarters. There have been heavy artillery being fired across the presidential palace,” she stated.

“We are able to see plumes of smoke rising on the common command of the military. The final command is below the management of the army, however many areas round it are below the management of the Fast Assist Forces together with the presidential palace, which since Wednesday the Sudanese military has been making an attempt to regain management of. Individuals say they weren’t capable of go away their houses due to the continued preventing.”

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Heavy bombardments additionally rang out within the adjoining cities of Omdurman and Bahri. Each side had agreed to a seven-day ceasefire, which has been violated.

“Since yesterday night, and this morning, there are air strikes and the sounds of clashes,” Al-Sadiq Ahmed, a 49-year-old engineer talking to Reuters from Khartoum, stated.

“We’ve bought right into a state of everlasting terror as a result of the battles are across the centres of residential neighbourhoods. We don’t know when this nightmare and the worry will finish,” he stated.

Sudan evacuation
A Sudanese evacuee carries her son as they go away the USNS Brunswick at Jeddah port, Saudi Arabia [Amr Nabil/AP Photo]

The United Nations, in the meantime, pressed the warring factions to ensure secure passage of support after six vehicles have been looted. UN support chief Martin Griffiths stated he hoped to have face-to-face conferences with either side inside two to 3 days to safe ensures from them for support convoys.

The UN has warned that preventing between the military and RSF, which erupted on April 15, dangers inflicting a humanitarian disaster that might spill into different nations. The UN Excessive Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) stated it was making ready for an outflow of 860,000 individuals from the North African nation, including $445m can be wanted to assist them simply by means of October.

“We urgently want well timed, new funding to answer the mounting wants,” stated Raouf Mazou, the UNHCR’s assistant chief of operations.

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“The wants are huge, and the challenges are quite a few. If the disaster continues, peace and stability throughout the area may very well be at stake,” Mazou added.

Sudan stated on Tuesday that 550 individuals had died and 4,926 individuals been wounded to this point within the battle.

About 100,000 individuals have fled Sudan with little meals or water to neighbouring nations, in response to the UN.

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ExxonMobil sues California over climate disclosure laws

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ExxonMobil sues California over climate disclosure laws

Exxon Mobil Corporation is suing the state of California over a pair of 2023 climate disclosure laws that the company says infringe upon its free speech rights, namely by forcing it to embrace the message that large companies are uniquely to blame for climate change.

The oil and gas corporation based in Texas filed its complaint Friday in the U.S. Eastern District Court for California. It asks the court to prevent the laws from going into effect next year.

In its complaint, ExxonMobil says it has for years publicly disclosed its greenhouse gas emissions and climate-related business risks, but it fundamentally disagrees with the state’s new reporting requirements.

The company would have to use “frameworks that place disproportionate blame on large companies like ExxonMobil” for the purpose of shaming such companies, the complaint states.

Under Senate Bill 253, large businesses will have to disclose a wide range of planet-warming emissions, including both direct and indirect emissions such as the costs of employee business travel and product transport.

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ExxonMobil takes issue with the methodology required by the state, which would focus on a company’s emissions worldwide and therefore fault businesses just for being large as opposed to being efficient, the complaint states.

The second law, Senate Bill 261, requires companies making more than $500 million annually to disclose the financial risks that climate change poses to their businesses and how they plan to address them.

The company said in its complaint that the law would require it to speculate “about unknowable future developments” and post such speculations on its website.

A spokesperson for the office of California Gov. Gavin Newsom said in an email that it was “truly shocking that one of the biggest polluters on the planet would be opposed to transparency.”

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German chancellor defends remarks on migrants suggesting citizens ‘afraid to move around in public spaces’

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German chancellor defends remarks on migrants suggesting citizens ‘afraid to move around in public spaces’

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German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has doubled down on comments he made about migration, saying many Germans and Europeans are “afraid to move around in public spaces.”

Merz has rejected criticism from some German political circles over his government’s tough stance on illegal immigration.

“But we still have this problem in the cityscape, of course, and that’s why the federal interior minister is facilitating and carrying out large-scale deportations,” he said during a visit to Potsdam last week.

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German Chancellor Friedrich Merz sparked backlash while remarking about the country’s migration policies.  (Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix via AP)

The statement prompted backlash, some accusing the German leader of being racist. He rejected the criticism while on the sidelines of a summit on the Western Balkans in London, saying migrants were “an indispensable part of our labor market,” German-based DW News reported.

He also claimed that many people in Germany and across Europe are nonetheless “afraid to move around in public spaces” because of migrants “who do not have permanent residence status, do not work and do not abide by our rules,” the outlet reported.

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A protest over remarks made by German German Chancellor Friedrich Merz about migration.

Numerous demonstrators gather for a demonstration in Berlin Oct. 19, 2025, with the slogan “Brandmauer hoch!” (“We are the cityscape”), referring to a statement made by Chancellor Merz in reference to migration policy.   (Annette Riedl/picture alliance via Getty Images)

“I don’t know whether you have children. If you do, and there are daughters among them, ask your daughters what I might have meant. I suspect you’ll get a pretty clear and unambiguous answer. There’s nothing I need to retract,” he said when asked if he would withdraw his earlier remarks.

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Some have signed a petition disputing Merz’s comments. The signees include actor Marie Nasemann and environmental activist Luisa Neubauer.

“There are approximately 40 million daughters in this country. We have a genuine interest in ensuring that our safety is taken seriously,” Neubauer wrote on Instagram. “What we are not interested in is being misused as a pretext or justification for statements that were ultimately discriminatory, racist and deeply hurtful.”

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Slovakia's Robert Fico in talks with Viktor Orbán about his Smer party joining Patriots for Europe

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Viktor Orbán’s political advisor, Balázs Orbán, told Euronews that the two Prime Ministers are discussing his Smer party joining the Patriots for Europe. If Fico joins, the Patriots could add two new prime ministers, including the Czech Republic Andrej Babiš.

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