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Trump aims for ‘fantastic relationship’ during meeting with Xi

At the start of the meeting, Trump called Xi “a friend of mine” and described him as a “very distinguished and respected.”

“President Xi is a great leader of a great country. I think we will have a fantastic relationship for a long period of time,” Trump said.

Xi said that despite their differences, bilateral relations have remained “stable.”

“We do not always see eye to eye, and it is normal for the two leading economies of the world to have friction now and then,” Xi told Trump through an interpreter.

“I have always believed that China’s development goes hand in hand with your vision to make America great again,” he added.

While shaking Xi’s hand in front of reporters, Trump quipped, “He’s a very tough negotiator. That’s not good.”

As part of his Asia tour, Trump visited Japan, where he met for the first time with the country’s new prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, and signed a deal aimed at countering China’s dominance in the rare-earth and critical minerals market.

Iran’s U18 girls’ volleyball team wins gold at Asian Youth Games in Bahrain

The Iranian squad, coached by Lee Do-hee, overcame a challenging match with set scores of 28-26, 20-25, 18-25, 25-17, and 16-14, securing their first-ever gold medal in the Asian Youth Games for volleyball.

Throughout the tournament, Iran defeated several strong teams, including Qatar, Bahrain, Chinese Taipei, Indonesia, Hong Kong, and the Philippines, showcasing the team’s depth, skill, and determination.

Report: Almost 280 Israeli soldiers attempted suicide since onset of 2024

Israeli Army

The findings, released by the Knesset Research and Information Center on Tuesday, indicate that for every soldier who died by suicide, seven others attempted to take their own lives.

The report further highlighted a significant shift in the composition of cases, noting that in 2024, combat soldiers accounted for 78% of all military suicides, a steep increase from the 42–45% recorded between 2017 and 2022.

Analysts have linked this rise partly to the mass mobilization of reservists following the October 7, 2023 attacks, when tens of thousands of troops were recalled to active duty.

The majority of the data utilized in the report was sourced from the Israeli military Medical Corps’ mental health center and discussions held in various Knesset committees.

The report clarified that the figures only pertain to soldiers who were on active or reserve duty at the time of their death or suicide attempt, and exclude veterans who took their own lives after completing their service.

Since October 7, 2023, the report estimates that approximately 50 Israeli soldiers have died by suicide.

There have been previous reports of Israeli soldiers committing suicide.

In July, Israeli media outlets revealed that nearly four dozen soldiers have taken their own lives in recent months due to profound psychological trauma and exposure to unspeakable violence during the regime’s genocide in the besieged enclave.

Despite attempts by the Israeli military to censor reports of soldier suicides and the surrounding circumstances, evidence continues to surface of a sharp increase in such cases.

The army has reportedly been burying some of these soldiers without military funerals or public announcements, in a desperate effort to conceal the extent of the crisis.

Romania says US to cut some military forces on NATO’s eastern flank

The move comes as part of a broader reassessment of the U.S. military’s global presence and reflects Washington’s foreign policy U-turn as its alliances faces their most dire security challenge since the Cold War, with Russia’s all-out war against Ukraine fueling concerns about direct attacks on Europe.

“The American decision involves halting the rotation in Europe of a brigade that had units in several NATO countries,” the statement read.

The Romanian ministry described the decision as expected, saying that the U.S. had previously communicated its plans to allied countries.

Some of the troops affected were scheduled to be stationed at Romania’s Mihail Kogalniceanu Air Base, a major NATO hub on the Black Sea. Around 1,000 American soldiers will remain deployed on Romanian soil.

It remains unclear how many U.S. troops will be withdrawn.

“The decision also took into account the fact that NATO has consolidated its presence and activity on the eastern flank, allowing the United States to adjust its military posture in the region,” the ministry said.

In April, NBC News reported, citing American and European officials, that the U.S. is considering to withdraw up to 10,000 troops from Eastern Europe. This would scale back the temporary surge of 20,000 U.S. troops deployed in 2022 to bolster NATO’s eastern flank following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

U.S. forces are currently stationed across Poland, Romania, and the Baltic states to deter further Russian aggression and reassure allies bordering in the region.

As Russian escalation toward NATO countries has intensified in recent months, with around 20 Russian drones entering Polish airspace in September, Trump promised to help defend the eastern flank’s countries if the tensions continue.

Last month, he also proposed sending additional American troops to Poland.

 

Abolfazl Zandi ends Iran’s 10-year wait for world Taekwondo gold

Until the fifth day of competition, Iran had only claimed one silver medal. On the sixth day of the 27th World Taekwondo Championships, held on Wednesday, two Iranian taekwondo athletes competed, with Zandi earning a valuable gold medal.

Competing in the men’s 58kg division, Zandi defeated Adem Bilron of Kosovo, Vito Dell’Aquila of Italy, Jesus Rodriguez of Spain, Maksym Manenkov of Ukraine, and Qifen Hang of China to reach the final.

In the gold medal match, he faced Georgy Gurtsev of Russia and triumphed 2–0 in rounds, breaking Iran’s 10-year drought in men’s world championship golds.

In the women’s 62kg category, Kosar Esasah beat Antrina Achelios of Cyprus 2–0 but was later eliminated after a 2–1 loss to Chen of China.

On the final day, Iran will have two remaining fighters: Mobina Ne’matzadeh in the women’s 53kg division, which features 48 athletes, and Amir Sina Bakhtiari in the men’s 74kg category with 68 participants.

Report discloses rising heat kills one person a minute worldwide

It says the world’s addiction to fossil fuels also causes toxic air pollution, wildfires and the spread of diseases such as dengue fever, and millions each year are dying owing to the failure to tackle global heating.

The report, the most comprehensive to date, adds the damage to health will get worse with leaders such as Donald Trump ripping up climate policies and oil companies continuing to exploit new reserves.

Governments gave out $2.5bn a day in direct subsidies to fossil fuels companies in 2023, the researchers found, while people lost about the same amount because of high temperatures preventing them from working on farms and building sites.

Reduced coal burning has saved about 400 lives a day in the last decade, the report says, and renewable energy production is rising fast. But the experts say a healthy future is impossible if fossil fuels continue to be financed at current rates.

Dr Marina Romanello, of University College London (UCL), who led the analysis, stated: “This [report] paints a bleak and undeniable picture of the devastating health harms reaching all corners of the world. The destruction to lives and livelihoods will continue to escalate until we end our fossil fuel addiction.”

“We’re seeing millions of deaths occurring needlessly every year because of our delay in mitigating climate change and our delay in adapting to the climate change that cannot be avoided. We’re seeing key leaders, governments and corporations backsliding on climate commitments and putting people increasingly in harm’s way.”

The report says the rate of heat-related deaths has surged by 23% since the 1990s, even after accounting for increases in populations, to an average of 546,000 a year between 2012 and 2021.

“That is approximately one heat-related death every minute throughout the year,” said Prof Ollie Jay, of the University of Sydney, Australia, who was part of the analysis team.

“It is a really startling number and the numbers are going up.”

Jay stated: “We constantly emphasise to people that heat stress can affect everybody and it can be deadly – I think a lot of people don’t understand that – and that every heat-related death is preventable.”

Laura Clarke, the chief executive of the environmental law firm ClientEarth, noted, “We are living through the era of climate consequences. Heatwaves, floods, drought and disease are no longer distant warnings – they’re here now. But as attribution science, climate litigation and grassroots activism grow, accountability for climate impacts is no longer a question of if but when.”

The 2025 edition of the Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change was led by UCL in collaboration with the World Health Organization and produced by 128 experts from more than 70 academic institutions and UN agencies.

In the past four years, the average person has been exposed to 19 days a year of life-threatening heat and 16 of those days would not have happened without human-caused global heating, the report says. Overall, exposure to high temperatures resulted in a record 639bn hours of lost labour in 2024, which caused losses of 6% of national GDP in the least developed nations.

The continued burning of fossil fuels not only heats the planet but also produces air pollution, causing millions of deaths a year. Wildfires, stoked by increasingly hot and dry conditions, are adding to the deaths caused by smoke, with a record 154,000 deaths recorded in 2024, the report says. Droughts and heatwaves damage crops and livestock and 123 million more people endured food insecurity in 2023, compared with the annual average between 1981 and 2010.

Despite the harm, the world’s governments provided $956bn in direct fossil fuel subsidies in 2023, which was the world’s hottest year on record until it was surpassed by 2024. The researchers said this dwarfed the $300bn a year pledged at the UN climate summit Cop29 in 2024 to support the most climate-vulnerable countries.

The report adds the UK provided $28bn in fossil fuel subsidies in 2023 and Australia allocated $11bn. Fifteen countries including Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Venezuela and Algeria spent more on fossil fuel subsidies than on their national health budgets.

The world’s 100 largest fossil fuel companies increased their projected production in the year up to March 2025, which would lead to carbon dioxide emissions three times those compatible with the Paris climate agreement target of limiting heating to 1.5C above preindustrial levels, the report says. Commercial banks are supporting this expansion, with the top 40 lenders to the fossil fuel sector collectively investing a five-year high of $611bn in 2024. Their green sector lending was lower at $532bn.

Romanello said: “If we keep on financing fossil fuels and enabling this expansion of fossil fuels, we know that a healthy future is not possible.”

She stated the solutions to avoid a climate catastrophe and protect lives existed, from clean energy to city adaptation to healthier, climate-friendly diets.

“If there’s any optimism it comes from the action by local communities and authorities, and by the health sector – those that are really in contact with people on the ground,” she continued.

“They are seeing the impacts with their own eyes and are stepping up because they just become undeniable, but we must keep up the momentum.”

 

Iran starts test flights of home-made cargo plane

Iran transport plane Simorgh

Simorgh’s test flights began in an airfield in the city of Shahin Shahr in central Iran on Tuesday after a ceremony attended by deputy heads of Iran’s ministries of defense and transportation.

The plane has to carry out 100 hours of test flights in various circumstances to get a final permit to join Iran’s aviation fleet, according to a statement from Iran’s Civil Aviation Organization (CAA).

CAA chief Hossein Pourfarzaneh said on Tuesday that Simorgh, whose indigenization process has taken more than 15 years, ranks Iran among fewer than 20 countries in the world that have the capability to design and manufacture aircraft.

Simorgh, named after a mythical bird in Persian mythology and literature, is equipped with two 2,500-horsepower engines that can carry 6 metric tons (mt) of cargo over a distance of 3,900 kilometers, while its maximum takeoff weight is 21.5 mt.

The plane carried out a fast-taxi test in May 2022, a year before it conducted its maiden flight.

Since then, the Iranian defense ministry, which is in charge of manufacturing Simorgh, has been trying to receive a test certificate for the plane from the CAA, a process that has involved obtaining a type certificate, a document that signifies the plane’s airworthiness.

Experts say Simorgh is a modified version of IrAn-140, an Iranian-Ukrainian joint project which is itself based Antonov An-140. However, former CAA officials have disputed that view, saying it is quite a different plane as it enjoys a modified engine and fuselage.

Simorgh has been described as an agile, light, and quick plane with a high cargo carriage capacity that is compatible with Iran’s weather conditions, making it a perfect choice for critical services like medical flights.

Authorities say the aircraft will boost the capacity of Iranian ground and navy forces to transport troops or equipment between their bases across the country.

They also believe that Simorgh can join Iran’s fleet of short-haul passenger jets in the future.

Reports in recent years have pointed to major achievements in Iran’s aircraft production and maintenance industry.

That has come against the backdrop of sanctions imposed on Iran, which prevent airlines in the country from purchasing new planes or aircraft parts.

 

Trump says ‘timing’ didn’t work out To meet N. Korea’s leader

Trump said on Wednesday he would aim to “straighten out” tensions between North Korea and South Korea as he met Seoul’s President Lee Jae Myung for a summit.

“I know Kim Jong Un very well… we really weren’t able to work out, timing,” Trump added.

Trump met Kim three times during his previous term as president but failed to reach accord on ending Pyongyang’s nuclear program because of differences on lifting sanctions and over how to scrap the North’s nuclear facilities.

US govt. shutdown could threaten American nuclear weapons production: CNN

Hundreds of thousands of federal employees have been furloughed after the US government shut down on October 1. The Democrats have reportedly said they will not greenlight a new spending bill in the Senate unless the Republicans fulfill all their demands, including extending subsidies under the Affordable Care Act.

The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), which makes nuclear weapons and safeguards the existing stockpile, had asked the White House to take money from previously passed spending bills to keep the agency running during the shutdown, but the request has not been fulfilled, CNN reported on Monday, citing informed sources.

Last week, the NNSA announced it had to furlough most of its full-time staff, some 1,400 people, engaged in supervising the development of weapons and nuclear non-proliferation activities. The administration of US President Donald Trump was only able to keep the NNSA’s key weapons labs and plants operating by using contractors.

According to CNN, NNSA officials fear the shutdown could significantly undermine the output of nuclear weapons in the US. Even a brief pause in production could lead to lengthy delays as safely stopping work on nuclear materials is a complicated process that takes weeks, the sources explained.

The report comes on top of existing concerns about the depletion of US arsenals of conventional weapons.

Trump earlier complained that the administration of his predecessor, Joe Biden, had “emptied out our whole country” by giving weapons to Ukraine during the conflict with Russia.

 

Iran offers online education to Afghan students who returned home

Nader Yarahmadi, head of the Bureau for Foreign Nationals and Immigrants’ Affairs at the Ministry of Interior, said that around 280,000 Afghan students left Iran after the enforcement of new migration regulations earlier this year.

“We are fully prepared to offer distance education to those who have returned to Afghanistan and can even provide our registration platform free of charge,” he stated, adding that families would only need to cover internet costs.

Yarahmadi noted that about 300,000 legally registered Afghan students have already enrolled for the new academic year in Iran.

He attributed the lack of response to the distance-learning initiative to families’ preference to keep their children studying in Iran rather than returning home.

He emphasized that Iran remains committed to ensuring that Afghan children who have returned to their country do not miss out on education and is ready to cooperate with private and international organizations to support the program.