5 killed in Afghan-Pakistan border fire despite peace talks: official

Five people were killed and six were wounded in brief cross-border fire between Afghanistan and Pakistan on Thursday, a hospital official on the Afghan side told AFP, in an incident both countries blamed on each other.The violence was likely to complicate ceasefire negotiations underway in Turkey, which intended to finalise a truce aimed at ending deadly clashes between the South Asian neighbours.Security issues are at the heart of their dispute, with Islamabad accusing Kabul of harbouring militant groups, particularly the Pakistani Taliban (TTP), that launch attacks in Pakistan. The Taliban government denies these allegations.According to the anonymous official at the Spin Boldak district hospital in Afghanistan’s southern Kandahar province, “five people died in today’s incident — four women and one man — and six were wounded.”There was no immediate report of victims from the Pakistani side.The two countries quickly blamed each other for initiating the fire.”While the third round of negotiations with the Pakistani side has begun in Istanbul, unfortunately, this afternoon Pakistani forces once again opened fire on Spin Boldak,” Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said.”The Islamic Emirate’s forces, out of respect for the negotiation team and to prevent civilian casualties, have so far shown no reaction,” the official added on X.Pakistan denied the accusation and put the blame on Afghanistan.”We strongly reject claims circulated by the Afghan side,” Pakistan’s Information Ministry said on X. “Firing was initiated from the Afghan side, to which our security forces responded immediately in a measured and responsible manner.”- Talks at an impasse -Hamdullah Fitrat, deputy spokesman for the Taliban authorities, said “we don’t know the reason” for the Pakistani fire, telling AFP that talks in Turkey were ongoing.”Pakistan used light and heavy weapons and targeted civilian areas,” said an Afghan military source who spoke on condition of anonymity. Ali Mohammed Haqmal, head of Kandahar’s information department said the firing was brief. Residents told AFP it lasted 10-15 minutes.Pakistan confirmed that calm had been restored.”The situation was brought under control due to responsible action by Pakistani forces and the ceasefire remains intact,” the information ministry said. “Pakistan remains committed to ongoing dialogue and expects reciprocity from Afghan authorities.”Negotiations in Istanbul reached an impasse last week when it came to finalising ceasefire details, with each side accusing the other of not being willing to cooperate.Both sides also warned of a resumption of hostilities in case of failure. Host Turkey said at the conclusion of last week’s talks that the parties had agreed to establish a monitoring and verification mechanism to maintain peace and penalise violators. Fifty civilians were killed and 447 others wounded on the Afghan side of the border during a week of clashes in October, according to the United Nations. At least five people died in explosions in Kabul.The Pakistani army reported 23 of its soldiers were killed and 29 others wounded, without mentioning civilian casualties.The Taliban government wants Afghanistan’s territorial sovereignty respected.Islamabad also accuses the Afghan government of acting with the support of India, its historical enemy, amid closer ties between these two countries.

US judge drops criminal charges against Boeing over 737 MAX 8 crashesThu, 06 Nov 2025 18:53:14 GMT

A US judge dropped criminal charges against Boeing on Thursday over deadly crashes of its 737 MAX 8 aircraft as part of an agreement between the company and prosecutors.Judge Reed O’Connor’s decision stemmed from a May 23 agreement between the Department of Justice (DoJ) and the aircraft manufacturer to resolve the case over two crashes …

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US judge drops criminal charges against Boeing over 737 MAX 8 crashes

A US judge dropped criminal charges against Boeing on Thursday over deadly crashes of its 737 MAX 8 aircraft as part of an agreement between the company and prosecutors.Judge Reed O’Connor’s decision stemmed from a May 23 agreement between the Department of Justice (DoJ) and the aircraft manufacturer to resolve the case over two crashes that resulted in 346 fatalities.Under the deal, Boeing will pay $1.1 billion in return for the dismissal of a charge of “conspiracy to defraud the United States” over its conduct in the certification of the MAX, according to a federal filing.The amount includes a $244 million fine, $445 million for a compensation fund for families of victims, and $455 million to strengthen safety, quality and compliance programs at Boeing.The accord, a “non-prosecution agreement,” scuttled a criminal trial that had been scheduled for June in Fort Worth, Texas.The agreement resolves the case without requiring Boeing to plead guilty to fraud in the certification of the MAX.A criminal conviction could have jeopardized Boeing’s ability to secure contracts with the US government, a major customer for its aerospace and defense businesses.Boeing has said it is “deeply sorry” for the crashes of a 2018 Lion Air flight in Indonesia that killed 189 and a 2019 Ethiopian Airlines flight that killed 157.Boeing has blamed the design of the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS), a flight handling system that malfunctioned.”We are committed to honoring the obligations of our agreement with the Department of Justice. We are also committed to continuing the significant efforts we have made as a company to strengthen our safety, quality, and compliance programs,” Boeing said in a statement Thursday.- Public interest -But in his order Thursday, O’Connor wrote that he had to dismiss the fraud charge even though he “disagrees with the Government that dismissing the criminal information in this case is in the public interest.”Attorney Paul Cassell, a former federal judge who represents some family members of MAX victims on a pro bono basis, noted O’Connor’s reservations as he “reluctantly concluded that he was powerless to do anything about the reprehensible deal.” “We believe that the courts don’t have to stand silently by while an injustice is perpetrated,” said Cassell, now a law professor at the University of Utah, in an email to AFP.”We will be rapidly going to the Fifth Circuit to ask it to reverse this decision, enforce the rights of the victim’s families, and deny the Government’s effort to simply drop these charges.”In announcing its plan in May, the DoJ acknowledged the opposition of some families, while noting that others preferred to move on and not prolong the litigation — with the latter informing the agency’s course.”Rather than allow for protracted litigation, this agreement provides finality for the victims and requires Boeing to act now,” the department said Thursday. “We are confident that this resolution is the most just outcome.”Thursday’s announcement is the latest development in a marathon case that came in the wake of the two crashes, which tarnished Boeing’s reputation and contributed to leadership shakeups at the aviation giant.The case dates to a January 2021 DOJ agreement with Boeing that settled charges that the company knowingly defrauded the Federal Aviation Administration during the MAX certification.The 2021 accord included a three-year probation period. But in May 2024, the DOJ determined that Boeing had violated the 2021 accord following a number of subsequent safety lapses.Boeing agreed in July 2024 to plead guilty to the conspiracy charge. But in December, O’Connor rejected a settlement codifying the guilty plea.Boeing also still faces a small group of civil cases on the MAX crashes, despite having settled dozens of cases.A Chicago federal court began hearing this week a claim from family members of one victim over financial damages.  

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Sommet climat: dans la touffeur amazonienne, les dirigeants tombent la cravate

Chefs d’Etat sans cravate, voire en bras de chemise: au sommet des dirigeants mondiaux en prélude à la COP30, qui a débuté jeudi à Belem, les participants ont pu se mettre à leur aise pour ne pas trop souffrir de la chaleur et de l’humidité dans la ville amazonienne.Alors que le mercure dépasse les 30 degrés dans cette ville fluviale située à l’entrée de la plus grande forêt tropicale de la planète, le Brésil, pays-hôte de la conférence des Nations unies sur le climat, a proposé un code vestimentaire inhabituel dans la haute diplomatie: les cravates ne sont pas obligatoires.Le président brésilien Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva a donné l’exemple, en se passant de sa “cravate porte-bonheur” aux couleurs du drapeau brésilien, qu’il porte habituellement lors des grands rendez-vous internationaux, comme les derniers sommets du G20 et des Brics, organisés à Rio de Janeiro.Le secrétaire général de l’ONU, Antonio Guterres, a également laissé cet accessoire au placard, tout comme les présidents de la Finlande, du Chili, du Mozambique et de la Colombie, entre autres.Le Premier ministre d’Antigua-et-Barbuda, Gaston Browne, était venu avec une cravate, mais il l’a dénouée et retirée avant de poser pour une photo officielle aux côtés de Lula.”Ce sera une COP sans cravate”, avait déclaré en octobre le diplomate brésilien André Correa do Lago, président de la COP30, soulignant que cela donnerait à l’événement “une certaine touche informelle brésilienne”.Les salles du vaste centre de conférences où ont lieu les débats et les négociations de la COP30 sont toutefois climatisées. Le Brésil s’est engagé à compenser toutes les émissions de carbone générées par ces installations.

Controversial Canadian ostrich cull order will go ahead

Canada’s high court on Thursday ended a months-long battle to save some 400 ostriches exposed to avian influenza that had attracted support from the likes of US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.The final legal block to culling the birds was removed when Canada’s Supreme Court refused to hear the case brought by the owners of the ostriches seeking to overturn a kill order.  The Canadian Food Inspection Agency said it will now move forward with “depopulation and disposal measures” aimed at mitigating the risk of further avian influenza infections, after a December 2024 outbreak killed 69 birds at Universal Ostrich Farms in rural British Columbia.The owners of the farm had launched multiple legal appeals against the initial cull order, maintaining that the birds developed herd immunity and could have medically valuable antibodies.”They’re healthy. They are everything that we have and everything that we’ve loved for 35 years. They’re healthy, please stop,” said Katie Pastiney, the daughter of the farm owners, in a tearful plea posted to Facebook following the court’s refusal to hear the case. Since January 2025, the movement to “Save the ostriches” has attracted hundreds of in-person protesters and a swell of sympathy online, largely pushing back on government health interventions. The mobilization went international in May when Kennedy sent a letter to the Canadian government criticizing the cull as a “potentially disproportionate measure.”In October, American billionaire John Catsimatidis, who is partially funding Universal Ostrich Farms’ legal fees, called on the Canadian government to allow the US Food and Drug Administration to test the flock, raising the possibility that the birds could be transferred to the United States.Doctors and the poultry industry track outbreaks of avian influenza to prevent the spread of the virus to other farm animals and humans.The latest data from the Canadian government indicates 50 outbreaks of avian influenza in birds across the country in November 2025.Since 2003, the World Health Organization has documented 900 cases of human infection with avian influenza, more than half of which have been fatal.

Foot: l’Ajax Amsterdam met fin au contrat de l’entraîneur Heitinga

L’Ajax Amsterdam a limogé jeudi son entraîneur John Heitinga, qui paye le début de saison catastrophique du club néerlandais, dernier de la phase de ligue de Ligue des champions après quatre journées et seulement 4e en championnat des Pays-Bas après 11 journées. “L’Ajax est à la recherche d’un nouvel entraîneur. En attendant, Fred Grim (l’entraîneur adjoint, Ndlr) reprendra les fonctions de Heitinga”, a déclaré le club quadruple champion d’Europe dans un communiqué.Le contrat de John Heitinga, 41 ans, qui avait signé pour deux ans et demi en mai, sera résilié, a précisé l’Ajax.”Nous savons qu’il faut du temps à un nouvel entraîneur pour travailler avec une équipe qui a subi des changements”, a déclaré le directeur technique du club, Alex Kroes, qui a admis qu’il s’agissait d’une “décision douloureuse”.”Nous avons donné ce temps à John, mais nous pensons qu’il est préférable pour le club de nommer quelqu’un d’autre à la tête de l’équipe,” a-t-il poursuivi.M. Kroes a présenté sa démission, mais le conseil d’administration lui a demandé de rester en place afin d’assurer une certaine continuité.L’entraîneur quitte son poste au lendemain d’une défaite face à Galatasaray (3-0) en C1, la quatrième de rang après Chelsea (5-1), l’Inter Milan (2-0) et Marseille (4-0), avec un bilan calamiteux d’un but marqué pour 14 concédés par le club quadruple champion d’Europe.- “L’un des nôtres” -En Eredivisie, le club d’Amsterdam, détenteur du record de titres nationaux (36 dont le dernier en 2022) a déjà huit points de retard sur les co-leaders, le Feyenoord Rotterdam et le PSV Eindhoven.L’Association officielle des supporters de l’Ajax a regretté dans un communiqué le départ de “l’un des nôtres”, même si Heitinga était régulièrement hué à la Johan-Cruyff Arena pour l’absence de fond de jeu de ses joueurs.L’entraîneur est en effet un pur produit de l’Ajax où il a intégré le centre de formation à 12 ans avant de débuter en pro en 2001.Le défenseur central international (87 sélections) a quitté son club de coeur en 2008 pour l’Atletico Madrid puis Everton et Fulham, avant de revenir à l’Ajax pour une dernière saison en 2015.Le départ de John Heitinga est une nouvelle crise dans l’histoire récente de l’Ajax. A la fin de la saison dernière, le club, alors en tête du championnat avec 11 points d’avance à cinq journées de la fin, s’était effondré, laissant s’échapper le titre au profit du PSV Eindhoven, et provoquant le limogeage du coach Francesco Farioli.Et la saison précédente, l’Ajax avait connu le pire début de son histoire depuis 1964, et l’avait terminée avec 35 points de retard sur le champion, le PSV Eindhoven, subissant notamment une humiliation (6-0) à Rotterdam contre le grand rival du Feyenoord lors du “classique” néerlandais.

“Cette loi joue avec nos vies”: nouvelle menace sur les LGBT+ en Turquie

“Si cette loi passe, elle menacera notre existence”. Devant son miroir, Florence, qui s’apprête à entrer en scène dans un club d’Istanbul, redoute un nouveau coup porté à la communauté LGBT+ en Turquie.Un projet d’amendement au code pénal, proposé par le gouvernement islamo-conservateur d’Ankara, permettrait de poursuivre les personnes homosexuelles, bisexuelles et transgenres pour comportements …

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Argentine: procès-phare de corruption pour une Cristina Kirchner crépusculaire

L’ex-présidente argentine Cristina Kirchner, déjà condamnée à de la prison à domicile et inéligible, est jugée depuis jeudi dans un procès-phare de corruption présumée, un jalon de plus dans le crépuscule de cette figure politique dominante pendant 20 ans.Pour l’accusation, le procès consacre “l’enquête sur des faits de corruption la plus vaste jamais réalisée dans …

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