Boeing evades MAX crash trial with last-minute settlement

Boeing has reached a settlement with a man whose family died in a 737 MAX crash in 2019, a law firm told AFP on Friday, meaning the US aviation giant will avoid a federal trial slated for Monday. Paul Njoroge, who lost his wife and three children in the Ethiopian Airlines disaster in which 157 people died, was to seek damages from Boeing in a case in Chicago.”The case has settled for a confidential amount,” said a spokesperson for Clifford Law, the firm representing Njoroge, whose mother-in-law also died in the crash. “The aviation team at Clifford Law Offices has been working round-the-clock in preparation for trial, but the mediator was able to help the parties come to an agreement on behalf of Paul Njoroge,” added Robert Clifford, a senior partner at Clifford, in a statement.Until now, Boeing has succeeded in avoiding civil trials connected to the 737 MAX crashes of 2018 and 2019, reaching a series of settlements, sometimes only hours before trials were set to begin.The crash of Ethiopian Airlines flight 302 on March 10, 2019 took place six minutes after departing Addis Ababa for Nairobi.Njoroge lost his wife Carolyne, who was 33, his mother-in-law Ann Karanja, and the couple’s three children: six-year-old Ryan; Kelli, who was four; and nine-month-old Rubi.Njoroge told a congressional panel in July 2019 he was haunted by ideas of the final moments of the flight, how his children “must have clung to their mother, crying, seeing the fright in her eyes.””It is difficult for me to think of anything else but the horror they must have felt,” he said. “I cannot get it out of my mind.”The trial set for Monday was expected to last five to seven days.Between April 2019 and March 2021, family members of 155 Boeing victims joined litigation charging the aviation giant with wrongful death and negligence.Boeing has accepted responsibility for the Ethiopian Airlines crash, blaming the design of the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS), a flight handling system that malfunctioned.That system was also implicated in the Lion Air crash in 2018, when the 737 MAX 8 fell into the sea after taking off from Jakarta, Indonesia, killing all 189 people on board. The Lion Air crash also spawned dozens of lawsuits in the United States. But as of July 2025, only one case remained open.Boeing has said it has reached out-of-court agreements with more than 90 percent of civil complainants in the MAX cases.The company also has a settlement pending that would resolve a long-running Department of Justice criminal probe connected to the MAX crashes.Some MAX families are contesting the Department of Justice’s accord with Boeing, arguing that the company should face federal prosecution. US District Judge Reed O’Connor, in Texas, has yet to make a final decision on the proposed accord.

“Fito”, le plus grand narcotrafiquant d’Equateur, sera extradé vers les Etats-Unis

Le plus grand narcotrafiquant d’Equateur, Adolfo Macias surnommé “Fito”, a accepté vendredi d’être extradé vers les Etats-Unis, où le parquet l’accuse de trafic de cocaïne et d’armes, a annoncé la Cour nationale de justice du pays sud-américain. Considéré comme l’un des plus dangereux criminels d’Equateur, “Fito” avait été arrêté fin juin dans sa ville natale de Manta, à 350 km au sud-ouest de Quito, après un an et demi de cavale.Il s’était évadé en janvier 2024 du centre pénitentiaire de Guayaquil (sud-ouest) qu’il contrôlait et où il purgeait depuis 2011 une peine de 34 ans de réclusion pour crime organisé, trafic de drogue et meurtre.Vêtu de l’uniforme orange des détenus et la barbe taillée, “Fito” a assisté vendredi à l’audience en visio-conférence, depuis sa cellule dans une prison de haute sécurité, et répondu au juge: “Oui, j’accepte” (l’extradition). Cette décision ouvre la voie à son transfert. “Une fois l’extradition (…) acceptée, la procédure pour son transfert vers les Etats-Unis suivra son cours”, a indiqué la Cour dans un communiqué. Le président équatorien Daniel Noboa devra ordonner la remise de “Fito” à la justice américaine. Ce dernier deviendra le premier Equatorien à être extradé depuis le rétablissement en Equateur de cette procédure par référendum en 2024, une mesure défendue par M. Noboa dans sa lutte contre le crime organisé.Parlant d’une possible extradition, le président Noboa avait déclaré lors de sa capture: “le plus tôt possible sera le mieux”.”Nous l’envoyons avec grand plaisir pour qu’il réponde devant la loi américaine”, avait-il affirmé lors d’une interview avec CNN.- “Impitoyable” -Le parquet américain a accusé en avril “Fito” de trafic de cocaïne et d’armes. John Durham, procureur d’un tribunal de Brooklyn, a alors décrit Adolfo Macia comme “un leader impitoyable et un narcotrafiquant prolifique pour le compte d’une violente organisation criminelle transnationale”.Chef d’un des principaux gangs du pays, les Choneros, qui règne notamment sur le trafic de cocaïne, “Fito” a été associé à l’assassinat en août 2023 de l’un des principaux candidats à l’élection présidentielle équatorienne, Fernando Villavicencio.Ancien chauffeur de taxi, il était devenu l’ennemi public numéro un en Equateur, les autorités le désignant comme un “criminel aux caractéristiques extrêmement dangereuses”.Son évasion début 2024 avait déclenché une vague de violences sans précédent dans le pays, faisant des dizaines de morts et générant des mutineries dans plusieurs prisons, des combats de rue déclenchés par les gangs et une prise d’otages sur un plateau de télévision.Daniel Noboa avait alors déclaré le pays en “conflit armé interne” et déployé l’armée pour tenter de neutraliser la vingtaine de groupes criminels impliqués.Du fait de sa situation entre la Colombie et le Pérou – les plus grands pays producteurs mondiaux de cocaïne – et ses ports stratégiques sur le Pacifique, l’Equateur est devenu ces dernières années le théâtre de violents affrontements pour le contrôle des territoires destinés à l’acheminement de la cocaïne vers les Etats-Unis et l’Europe.Le gang des Choneros a des liens avec le cartel de Sinaloa au Mexique, le Clan del Golfo en Colombie, plus grand exportateur de cocaïne au monde, et les mafias des Balkans, selon l’Observatoire équatorien du crime organisé.Plus de 70% de toute la cocaïne produite dans le monde transite désormais par les ports de l’Equateur. En 2024, le pays a saisi un record de 294 tonnes de drogues, principalement de la cocaïne.

UN says hundreds killed in recent weeks while seeking aid in Gaza

Ten Palestinians were reported killed Friday while waiting for rations in Gaza, adding to nearly 800 similar deaths in the last six weeks, according to the UN, with Israel’s army saying it issued new instructions to troops following repeated reports of fatalities.Friday’s reported violence came as negotiators from Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas were locked in indirect talks in Qatar to try to agree on a temporary ceasefire in the more than 21-month conflict.Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday he hoped a deal for a 60-day pause in the war could be struck in the coming days, and that he would then be ready to negotiate a more permanent end to hostilities.Hamas has said the free flow of aid is a main sticking point in the talks, with Gaza’s more than two million residents facing a dire humanitarian crisis of hunger and disease amid the grinding conflict.Israel began easing a more than two-month total blockade of aid in late May. Since then, a new US- and Israel-backed organisation called the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) has effectively sidelined the territory’s vast UN-led aid delivery network.There are frequent reports of Israeli forces firing on people seeking aid, with Gaza’s civil defence agency saying 10 Palestinians were killed Friday while waiting at a distribution point near the southern city of Rafah.- ‘Unacceptable’ -The UN, which refuses to cooperate with GHF over concerns it was designed to cater to Israeli military objectives, said Friday that 798 people have been killed seeking aid between late May and July 7, including 615 “in the vicinity of the GHF sites”.”Where people are lining up for essential supplies such as food and medicine, and where… they have a choice between being shot or being fed, this is unacceptable,” UN rights office spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani told reporters in Geneva.Israel’s military did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Friday’s deaths, but has previously accused militants of firing at civilians in the vicinity of aid centres.Asked about the UN figures, the military said it had worked to minimise “possible friction” between aid seekers and soldiers, and that it conducted “thorough examinations” of incidents in which “harm to civilians who arrived at distribution facilities was reported”.”Instructions were issued to forces in the field following lessons learned,” it added in a statement.GHF called the UN report “false and misleading”, claiming that “most deadly attacks on aid sites have been linked to UN convoys”.Mahmud Bassal, spokesman for Gaza’s civil defence agency, told AFP that Israeli forces killed 45 people overall in the territory on Friday.Media restrictions in Gaza and difficulties accessing many areas mean AFP is unable to independently verify tolls and details provided by the agency and other parties.- Truce talks -In Gaza’s south, a witness said Israeli tanks were seen near Khan Yunis, reporting “intense gunfire, intermittent air strikes, artillery shelling, and ongoing bulldozing and destruction of displacement camps and agricultural land”.Israel’s military said troops were operating in the area against “terrorist infrastructure sites, both above and below ground”.Hamas has said that as part of a potential truce deal it was willing to release 10 of the hostages taken during its attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, which sparked the Gaza war.Netanyahu, who is under pressure to end the war after mounting military losses, said that would leave 10 living hostages still in captivity.”I hope we can complete it in a few days,” he said of the initial ceasefire agreement and hostage release in an interview with US outlet Newsmax.”We’ll probably have a 60-day ceasefire, get the first batch out, then use the 60-day ceasefire to negotiate an end to this.”Netanyahu has said that a key condition of any deal is that Hamas first gives up its weapons and its hold on Gaza, warning that failure to do so on Israel’s terms would lead to further conflict.Another issue holding up a deal is disagreement on the number of Palestinian prisoners to be released in exchange for hostages, Foreign Minister Gideon Saar has said.Hamas has said it wants “real guarantees” for a lasting truce and Israel’s full withdrawal from Gaza, and that it opposes any Israeli moves to push Palestinians into “isolated enclaves”.The group’s 2023 attack on Israel led to the deaths of 1,219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.Out of 251 hostages seized in the attack, 49 are still held in Gaza, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead.At least 57,823 Palestinians, most of them civilians, have been killed since the start of the war, according to the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza.

Pope Leo’s Illinois childhood home to become tourist site

Pope Leo XIV’s childhood home has been sold to the village where he grew up, which intends to make it a historical site, local media reported Friday.The modest brick home in the Chicago suburb of Dolton, population 21,000, was sold by its current owner for $375,000, WGN television said.It said the owner had bought the house for $66,000 last year — prior to Pope Leo’s election as the first American pontiff — and done extensive renovations.The Dolton village board of trustees voted earlier this month to purchase the three-bedroom house and turn it into an attraction open to the public.According to WBEZ Chicago radio, the parents of Pope Leo — born Robert Prevost — bought the house in 1949 and sold it in 1996.

Ecuador’s top drug lord agrees to US extradition

Ecuador’s most notorious drug lord has agreed to be extradited to the United States to face cocaine and weapons smuggling charges, a court in Quito said Friday.Adolfo Macias, alias “Fito,” was captured in June after escaping from a maximum security prison last year in a jailbreak that sparked a severe wave of gang violence.Macias, head of the “Los Choneros” gang, is wanted in the United States on charges of cocaine distribution, conspiracy and firearms-related crimes, including weapons smuggling.The former taxi driver turned crime boss became the prime target of Ecuadoran law enforcement early last year after escaping from prison in the southwestern port of Guayaquil. He had been serving a 34-year sentence since 2011 for involvement in organized crime, drug trafficking and murder. President Daniel Noboa’s government at the time released “wanted” posters and offered $1 million for information leading to Macias’s recapture. In a country plagued by drug-related crime, Los Choneros members responded with violence — using car bombs, holding prison guards hostage and storming a television station during a live broadcast.After months of pursuit, Macias was recaptured last month in a massive military and police operation in which no shots were fired. He was found hiding in a bunker concealed under floor tiles in a luxury home in the fishing port of Manta, and Noboa declared he would be extradited “the sooner the better.””We will gladly send him and let him answer to the North American law,” Noboa told CNN at the time.- Fighting cocks and mariachi bands -Macias, dressed in an orange prison uniform, took part in a court hearing Friday by video link from a high-security prison in Guayaquil.In response to a judge’s question, he replied, “Yes, I accept (extradition).”Given his consent, the court said in a statement “the pertinent procedure for the transfer process” will now follow, with Noboa having to sign the official handover papers.This would make Macias the first Ecuadoran extradited by his country since the measure was written into law last year after a referendum in which Noboa sought the approval of measures to boost his war on criminal gangs.Ecuador, once a peaceful haven between the world’s two top cocaine exporters Colombia and Peru, has seen violence erupt in recent years as enemy gangs with ties to Mexican and Colombian cartels vie for control.Gang wars have largely played out inside the country’s prisons, where Macias wielded immense control. He was the unofficial boss of his Guayaquil prison, where authorities found images glorifying the gangster, weapons and US dollars.Videos of parties he held in the prison showed the use of fireworks and a mariachi band. In one clip, he appeared waving, laughing and petting a fighting rooster. Macias earned his law degree behind bars.By the time he escaped, he was considered a suspect in the assassination of presidential candidate and anti-corruption crusader Fernando Villavicencio in 2023.Soon after Macias’s prison break, Noboa declared Ecuador to be in a state of “internal armed conflict” and ordered the military and tanks into the streets to “neutralize” the gangs.Los Choneros has ties to Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, Colombia’s Gulf Clan — the world’s largest cocaine exporter — and Balkan mafias, according to the Ecuadorian Organized Crime Observatory. More than 70 percent of all cocaine produced in the world now passes through Ecuador’s ports, according to government data.In 2024, the country seized a record 294 tons of drugs, mainly cocaine.

‘Superman’ aims to save flagging film franchise, not just humanity

Superman is often called upon to save the world from evildoers, but in his latest big-screen incarnation, he’s also being asked to swoop in and save a franchise.James Gunn’s “Superman,” which opened in theaters worldwide this week, is a reboot aimed at relaunching the so-called DC Universe of comic book-based superhero movies, which also features Wonder Woman and Batman.The celluloid efforts of Warner Bros. and DC Studios have been widely eclipsed by Disney’s Marvel Cinematic Universe — the world of Iron Man, Thor, Black Panther and the Fantastic Four, who are getting their own reboot later this month. “Warner Bros. has invested a lot of energy and money in trying to refocus and renew DC Studios, and this is going to be the big release from that,” analyst David A. Gross from Franchise Entertainment Research told AFP.The heavy task falls on the shoulders of Gunn, the writer-director who won praise from fans of the genre with Marvel’s “Guardians of the Galaxy” trilogy. The movie’s rollout has already encountered several headwinds, including a right-wing backlash to Gunn’s comments on Superman’s role as an immigrant, and skepticism from fans of the previous Superman films helmed by director Zack Snyder.Gunn has shrugged off the high stakes surrounding the movie’s box office success.”Is there something riding on it? Yeah, but it’s not as big as people make it out to be,” he told GQ Magazine. “They hear these numbers that the movie’s only going to be successful if it makes $700 million or something and it’s just complete and utter nonsense.”The hype around the movie is real — the White House even superimposed President Donald Trump onto one of the movie’s official posters with the caption “THE SYMBOL OF HOPE. TRUTH. JUSTICE. THE AMERICAN WAY. SUPERMAN TRUMP.”- ‘A diminished genre’ -Warner Bros. hopes the DC Universe can catch up with Marvel which — after years of huge successes with the “Avengers” movies — has seen more muted box office returns with the recent “Thunderbolts” and “Captain America: Brave New World.”Gross explained that superhero films hit a peak right before the Covid-19 pandemic, with box office earnings and audience enthusiasm waning ever since that time.”It’s really a diminished genre,” Gross said.However, the analyst said early buzz for “Superman” was “really good.” The film stars up-and-comer David Corenswet as the new Superman/Clark Kent, with “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” star Rachel Brosnahan playing love interest Lois Lane and Nicholas Hoult as arch-villain Lex Luthor.The story follows the Man of Steel coming to terms with his alien identity as he finds his place in the human world.The supporting cast boasts a selection of other DC Comics characters, from the peacekeeping Green Lantern (Nathan Fillion) — who is scheduled to reprise the role in upcoming TV series “Lanterns” — to the mace-wielding Hawkgirl. Gross noted that July “is the top moviegoing month of the year,” leading tracking estimates to forecast a total of more than $100 million for the film’s opening weekend in North America.- ‘The story of America’ -DC Studios however must shake off a reputation for producing mediocre films that did not score well with audiences.The last round of “DC Extended Universe” films included the well-liked “Wonder Woman” (2017) starring Gal Gadot — but also box office flops like “Shazam! Fury of the Gods” (2023) and the under-performing “Aquaman” sequel with Jason Momoa.”The success was mixed, and they were spending a lot of money on some of the new spinoff characters who were not working particularly well,” Gross said, pointing at 2021’s “The Suicide Squad” — directed by Gunn — as an example.The last films featuring Superman, starring Henry Cavill and directed by Snyder, were relatively successful for Warner Bros. until “Justice League” — DC’s effort at recreating the “Avengers” vibe — which lost millions of dollars.Fans of Snyder have stirred up negative buzz for the new “Superman” movie, voicing hope online that the reboot fails out of a sense of loyalty to the previous films.The backlash was further widened after right-wing pundits groaned about Superman’s specific characterization as an immigrant, lamenting the superhero had become “woke.”Gunn addressed the criticism, telling The Times newspaper that “Superman is the story of America,” with the character reflecting those who “came from other places and populated the country.””I’m telling a story about a guy who is uniquely good, and that feels needed now,” he added.Ultimately, time will soon tell if Corenswet’s chiseled looks and Gunn’s directorial vision will be the superpowers that DC Studios need — or prove to be its Kryptonite.

Euro-2025: l’Italie plie devant l’Espagne mais s’ouvre les quarts

Pour la première fois depuis douze ans, les Italiennes se sont offert vendredi un billet pour les quarts de finale de l’Euro de football malgré leur défaite 3-1 contre les championnes du monde espagnoles à Berne.Déjà qualifiée après ses larges succès contre le Portugal (5-0) et la Belgique (6-2), l’Espagne termine sans surprise en tête du groupe B et affrontera la Suisse, pays hôte, vendredi prochain à Berne.L’Italie, grâce à la défaite simultanée du Portugal face à la Belgique (2-1 à Thoune), décroche le second ticket et tourne la page de ses éliminations en poules lors des deux derniers tournois continentaux et du Mondial-2023.Les joueuses d’Andrea Soncin rencontreront les Norvégiennes mercredi prochain à Genève, pour tenter d’écrire une nouvelle épopée européenne après celles achevées en finale lors des éditions 1993 et 1997.Surtout, malgré leur revers, elles ont longtemps fait déjouer des Espagnoles qui éclaboussaient jusqu’alors le tournoi de leur football léché et offensif, porté par une pléiade de stars, même si l’équipe avait été nettement remaniée vendredi.”Nous emportons avec nous l’immense émotion de la qualification”, a souligné Andrea Soncin. “Nous avons vu que grâce à une bonne organisation, nous pouvons résister”, a-t-il souligné, choissant de retenir “une mi-temps de très haut niveau”.Osant un coup de poker tactique, le Lombard a laissé sur le banc jusqu’à la 58e minute sa capitaine Cristiana Girelli, pourtant en pleine forme, buteuse et meilleure joueuse du match face au Portugal (1-1), pour évoluer dans un schéma en 4-4-1-1 très inhabituel.Pari réussi: étouffées par la densité italienne au milieu, les Espagnoles ont eu beaucoup de mal à concrétiser leurs 68% de possession, s’en remettant à des centres hasardeux ou des frappes lointaines, tout en s’exposant en contre.- Bonmati titulaire -Et après une première alerte sur la cage d’Adriana Nanclares, avec un tir sur la barre d’Elena Linari, la latérale de la Lazio Elisabetta Oliviero a récupéré une balle perdue par Caldentey pour ouvrir le score du gauche (1-0, 10e).Menées pour la première fois dans cet Euro, les joueuses de Montse Tomé ont réagi grâce à une combinaison pleine de malice partie de la droite entre Athenea del Castillo et Alexia Putellas, qui a remis une talonnade à la joueuse du Real pour qu’elle propulse le ballon dans la lucarne gauche (1-1, 14e).Après une fin de première mi-temps aussi débridée que marquée par la maladresse des deux formations, les Espagnoles ont doublé la marque avec un peu de réussite, sur une frappe à ras de terre de Patri Guijarro de l’extérieur de la surface, au ras du poteau gauche (2-1, 48e).Plusieurs fois prises de vitesse en contre, les championnes du monde ont fini par se mettre à l’abri grâce à Esther Gonzalez: entrée à la 76e, l’avant-centre a repris une nouvelle offrande de Putellas pour inscrire sa quatrième réalisation du tournoi (3-1, 90e+1).Pour la suite, les Espagnoles pourront compter sur la forme retrouvée de leur double Ballon d’or Aitana Bonmati, titularisée pour la première fois vendredi. Elle n’avait disputé qu’une dizaine de minutes face au Portugal et la deuxième mi-temps face à la Belgique pour pouvoir récupérer d’une méningite virale qui l’a touchée juste avant la compétition.Elles devront néanmoins gérer les transitions adverses et ballons envoyés dans leur dos, déjà une faille visible par séquences dans leurs deux premiers matches. “Nous savons que ce n’est pas une de nos forces”, a reconnu Patri Guijarro, élue joueuse du match. “Mais on essaie de s’améliorer.”