In New York, an anti-fascist superhero rises — at the Met

The Statue of Liberty makes a cameo in the Metropolitan Opera’s season opener, invoking a time when New York stood as a beacon of hope for Jews desperately fleeing Nazism.The image from “The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay” — which kicks off the Met’s 2025-26 cycle on Sunday — resonates at a time when President Donald Trump’s government is cracking down on the media and immigration.The opera tells the fictitious tale of Joe Kavalier’s escape from Nazi-occupied Prague in 1939 to Brooklyn, where he joins forces with cousin Sam Clay to try to raise funds to attempt to save Kavalier’s family.Their money-making venture? A comic strip featuring an superhero called “The Escapist,” who fights fascists. Tenor Miles Mykkanen, who plays Clay, calls the work “a 21st century opera with stories that we want to hear nowadays and stories that affect our lives, which I don’t think we can say about a lot of the standard repertoire.”- ‘Never done with fascism’ -The ambitious piece, based on a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel published in 2000 by Michael Chabon, alternates in music and sets between Prague, Brooklyn and the fantastic world of The Escapist.The meditation on love, loss, family and the necessity of art comes on the heels of other recent Met productions that have sought to reinvent the medium.The world of professional boxing, a magical realist universe evocative of Gabriel Garcia Marquez, the debate over the death penalty in American and the ravages of the AIDS era have all been handled on the Met’s stage.But “Kavalier & Clay” represents the first work in the Met’s 142-year history that revolves around a comic book superhero — a pop culture mainstay that may provide an entry point for those who may not usually try opera.Chabon’s book was the first time “a big serious art form like the novel had taken comic books so seriously,” said composer Mason Bates.”We still embrace superheroes because we are never done with fascism and authoritarianism,” he said. “We long for the simplicity of a good guy to fight back.”- ‘The stuff of opera’ -With a huge symphonic burst, the opera starts in the ominous fog of Nazi-occupied Prague at night before shifting to Clay’s Brooklyn brownstone and his bustling office.The novel was published at more than 650 pages, necessitating a heavy streamlining by librettist Gene Scheer. Choruses and dancers come and go in a quickfire staging that includes frequent jolts of animation beamed to a busy stage.Some moments link worlds, as when Kavalier reads a letter from his mother, who is shown as he imagines her in Prague.New York is “the city of freedom and hope,” she tells her son, who is played by baritone Andrzej Filonczyk, before the tone shifts.”I want you to forget us,” she adds, leaving a crestfallen Kavalier as Prague inevitably darkens further.Bates, who is known for works that combine symphonic and electronic music, said he immediately thought “Kavalier & Clay” would work as opera, a medium of “storytelling on a grand scale” he said.”You’ve got desperation, passion, art, Nazis and superheroes,” he said. “Mix all that together. That’s the stuff of opera.”Bates pitched the idea to Met General Manager Peter Gelb, who greenlighted the commission in 2018. For director Bartlett Sher, the opera is landing at a moment when the rise of fascism in World War II and the response of artists to that calamity feels particularly resonant.People go to theater and opera “to learn from our own history who we are,” said Sher.He said he is especially moved when characters “talk about what it means to be an immigrant fleeing a country politically and the refuge you seek in the United States.”That allows the audience to “think to ourselves, ‘Well, is that who we are?'” Sher added.

Beware of ICE on roads: how migrants in Texas help each other avoid raids

These days, Martina Grifaldo begins her mornings by posting a special Facebook message for her immigrant community.”May everyone who goes out today make it home safely,” Grifaldo writes in Spanish to her 171,000 followers.The Facebook page, managed with fellow activist Francisco Mendoza, aims to warn migrants where possible raids are happening in real time using photos and videos submitted by community members.Since President Donald Trump began his immigration crackdown after returning to power in January, federal authorities have increased their detention of undocumented migrants, asylum seekers, and even those with Latino features who have US citizenship or permanent residency.Social media has flooded with pictures and videos of these arrests, some of which turn violent, despite uproar from civil rights groups.Several times a week, Grifaldo, 62, goes out on patrol before the crack of dawn to monitor areas where immigration authorities usually operate in Houston, the fourth most populous city in the United States and the largest in the southern US state of Texas.”We start around 5:30 or 6 am with a ‘good morning’ message, and people send each other blessings. Then we ask: how are the roads?” said Grifaldo, director of the nonprofit Alianza Latina Internacional.- ‘Terrorized’ -US Immigration raids are carried out by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, with images of frozen water becoming synonymous with migrant detentions.A common roadside warning sign, “Beware of ice on roads,” now carries a double meaning for Latino communities.”In our posts, we put a picture of an ice cube next to an image of a police officer, and we ask the public to help report” where they are, Grifaldo explained.Through their own observations and submissions from followers, Grifaldo and her collaborator Mendoza share information about raids taking place in the city.On several occasions, ICE agents carrying out raids did not identify themselves, did not wear official uniforms, and did not even show arrest warrants.This makes Grifaldo and Mendoza suspect that the raids are sometimes carried out by bounty hunters, though federal immigration officials have denied employing such methods.Even so, it is common for ICE agents to wear masks, military-style vests, and use violence when carrying out raids.”Every time we go out and check the reports, and we see them, we see how they treat our people, we feel… terrorized, because at any time it could happen to us,” said Mendoza, 57, head of Disaster Management at Alianza Latina Internacional.Grifaldo, who works as a public notary and researcher, volunteers her time to conduct the patrols along with Mendoza, a Mexican immigrant himself who runs an air conditioning and plumbing business.- ‘They keep us informed’ -As the pair drive in their truck, they continue to broadcast live on their page.They later stop for a bite at a fast food restaurant, invited by local employees in a show of thanks for their work.”I respect them because they are taking risks for us,” said Elizabeth, a 35-year-old woman who works at the restaurant and is seeking legal status in the United States.She came to the United States from El Salvador over a decade ago with her mother and son.”I take care of my mother, who has fallen ill. Imagine if she was waiting for me, and I did not come home,” she continued.Mendoza said it was “heartbreaking” how America treats migrants.”Undocumented people pay so much taxes… and we don’t receive anything back,” Mendoza told AFP. Undocumented workers paid $97 billion in taxes in 2022 alone, according to Americans for Tax Fairness.As Mendoza and Grifaldo conduct their patrols, they inspect work vehicles, such as vans and pickup trucks, that appear to be abandoned, as they can be left behind by migrant workers who have been detained.By the late afternoon, they wind down their patrol, and Grifaldo pens another message for the Facebook page:”Good night, warriors. Even though it’s hard, we have to rest. Tomorrow will be another day to continue resisting.”

Americans would dominate board of new TikTok US entity: W. House

A deal for the Chinese parent company of popular video-sharing app TikTok to sell its US operations would see the creation of a board dominated by Americans, the White House said Saturday.”There will be seven seats on the board that controls the app in the United States, and six of those seats will be Americans,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told Fox News.She said a deal could be signed “in the coming days.”The United States has forcefully sought to take TikTok’s US operations out of the hands of Chinese parent company ByteDance for national security reasons.Under President Donald Trump’s predecessor Joe Biden, Congress passed a law to force ByteDance to sell its US operations or face a ban of the app.US policymakers, including Trump in his first term, have warned that China could use TikTok to mine data from Americans or exert influence on what they see on social media.But Trump turned to the platform, which is hugely popular with young Americans, to garner support during his successful 2024 presidential campaign.The Republican president has repeatedly delayed implementation of the ban while a deal has been sought.Investors reportedly being eyed to take over the app include Oracle, the tech firm owned by Larry Ellison, one of the world’s richest people — and a major Trump supporter.Leavitt seemed to confirm Oracle’s participation.”The data and privacy will be led by one of America’s greatest tech companies, Oracle, and the algorithm will also be controlled by America as well,” she told Fox News.”So all of those details have already been agreed upon. Now we just need this deal to be signed.”Trump, when asked about the deal later by reporters at the White House, said: “We have great American patriots that are buying it. Very substantial people.”He declined to say who the seventh board member would be, saying that would be announced at a later date.The TikTok deal was discussed in a call between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping on Friday.Trump said afterward that Xi had “approved” the deal during the phone call, but then said: “We have to get it signed.” China did not confirm any agreement.”We’re going to have a very, very tight control,” Trump said Friday. “There’s tremendous value with TikTok, and I’m a little prejudiced because I frankly did so well on it.”The Wall Street Journal, quoting sources familiar with the talks, reported that the US government could receive a multi-billion-dollar fee from investors as part of the deal.

Trump issues vague threat to Afghanistan over Bagram air base

US President Donald Trump on Saturday threatened Afghanistan with unspecified punishment if the Taliban-controlled country did not “give Bagram Airbase back.””If Afghanistan doesn’t give Bagram Airbase back to those that built it, the United States of America, BAD THINGS ARE GOING TO HAPPEN!!!” the 79-year-old leader wrote on his Truth Social platform.The vague threat came just days after he raised the idea of the United States retaking control of the base while on a state visit to the United Kingdom.Bagram, the largest air base in Afghanistan, was a linchpin of the US-led war effort against the Taliban, whose government Washington toppled following the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. A massive, sprawling facility, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and others have repeatedly raised allegations of systematic human rights abuses by US forces at Bagram, especially pertaining to detainees in Washington’s murky “War on Terror.”Trump has often lamented the loss of access to Bagram, noting its proximity to China, but Thursday was the first time he has made public that he was working on the matter.”We’re trying to get it back, by the way, that could be a little breaking news. We’re trying to get it back because they need things from us,” Trump said at a press conference with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer.US and NATO troops chaotically pulled out of Bagram in July 2021 as part of a Trump-brokered peace deal, as the resurgent Taliban took over swaths of Afghanistan before finally taking control of the entire country.Trump has repeatedly criticized the loss of the base since returning to power, linking it to his attacks on his predecessor Joe Biden’s handling of the US pullout from Afghanistan.Trump has also complained about China’s growing influence in Afghanistan.Later on Saturday, the US president was asked by reporters at the White House if he was considering sending US troops to retake Bagram.”We won’t talk about that, but we’re talking now to Afghanistan, and we want it back and we want it back soon, right away. And if they don’t do it, you’re going ot find out what I’m going to do,” he said.

Des Américains domineront le conseil d’administration de TikTok aux Etats-Unis, affirme la Maison Blanche

Les négociations en cours avec Pékin prévoient que six des sept membres du conseil d’administration de l’application de vidéos TikTok aux Etats-Unis soient Américains, a affirmé samedi la Maison Blanche.”TikTok sera majoritairement détenue par des Américains aux Etats-Unis. Il y aura sept membres au conseil d’administration, dont six seront Américains”, a déclaré la porte-parole de la présidence Karoline Leavitt à la chaîne de télévision Fox News.Elle a ajouté que “les données et la confidentialité seront supervisées par une des meilleures entreprises technologiques américaines, Oracle, et l’algorithme sera aussi contrôlé par les Etats-Unis”. Selon Mme Leavitt, “tous ces éléments font déjà l’objet d’un accord” entre les parties, qui ne reste plus qu’à “être finalisé”. “Je pense que cela arrivera dans les prochains jours”, a-t-elle poursuivi.”Nous avons de grands patriotes américains qui vont l’acheter, des gens très importants, des gens qui aiment notre pays, qui sont très doués en technologie”, a déclaré de son côté le président Donald Trump à la presse, dans la soirée.Il avait dit la veille, après un appel avec son homologue Xi Jinping, que la signature d’un accord sur TikTok pouvait désormais être une “simple formalité”.Pékin n’a pas donné d’indication en ce sens après la conversation entre les deux chefs d’Etat.A propos de TikTok, le dirigeant chinois a simplement appelé les Etats-Unis à “offrir un environnement des affaires ouvert, équitable et non discriminatoire aux entreprises chinoises investissant aux États-Unis.”Ces tractations ont lieu alors qu’une loi américaine prévoyait d’interdire la plateforme aux Etats-Unis, au nom de la sécurité nationale.Mais depuis son retour au pouvoir, Donald Trump a cherché à trouver une voie pour la maintenir en place, via la cession des activités de TikTok aux Etats-Unis à un consortium d’investisseurs américains, dont son allié Larry Ellison, à la tête d’Oracle.Donald Trump estime que TikTok l’a aidé à doper sa popularité auprès des jeunes Américains pendant la dernière campagne présidentielle.Selon des informations du Wall Street Journal vendredi soir, le gouvernement américain compte obtenir une commission de plusieurs milliards de dollars pour son rôle d’intermédiaire dans les négociations.

Cuba gives protesters up to 9-year sentences over blackout demos

At least 15 protesters were sentenced to up to nine years in prison after participating in a day of protests in Cuba last year over power and food shortages, the island’s Supreme Court said.Hundreds of people took to the streets in three Cuban cities on March 17, 2024, during a tense weekend of blackouts that lasted up to 13 hours a day in some provinces. The marches in Santiago de Cuba, Bayamo and Santa Marta were the largest since the social unrest of July 11, 2021, which saw hundreds of protesters convicted, some with sentences of up to 25 years. The People’s Supreme Court of Cuba reported in a statement on Friday night that, among the 15 people tried in the city of Bayamo, “eight were sentenced to between six and nine years in prison, five to between three and five years, and two to correctional labor without imprisonment.”It said that the detainees had committed “crimes of public disorder, assault, resistance, contempt, disobedience, and incitement.”Outbreaks of this type of protest, previously unthinkable on the island ruled by the Communist Party, have skyrocketed since 2022.Amid a worsening energy crisis, Cuba has experienced six widespread blackouts in less than three years.The country’s 9.7 million inhabitants suffer daily scheduled power cuts, which in August reached an average of 15 hours. The government says that a strict US embargo prevents it from repairing its electrical infrastructure, which requires Cuba’s scarce fuel to operate. A week ago, another march of dozens of people took place in Gibara, a picturesque town in the east. Residents complained of spending more than 20 hours without power and weeks without water, a resident who did not want to be identified for fear of reprisals told AFP. The Madrid-based Cuban Human Rights Observatory said on X that it confirmed 27 detentions, with four people still “deprived of their liberty.”Laritza Diversent, director of Cubalex, told AFP that the Miami-based NGO also verified four protesters were under arrest in Gibara. At least 180 people were apprehended at demonstrations over power outages between 2022 and September 2025, added Diversent, saying this number was “an underestimate.”

British couple released by Taliban say feared execution

An elderly British couple released by the Taliban authorities after almost eight months in detention in Afghanistan arrived back in the UK on Saturday, telling the press that they feared “we would never be released”.Peter Reynolds, 80, and his wife Barbie, 76, arrived on a flight from the Qatari capital Doha, where they had stayed for medical checks following their release on Friday.Barbie Reynolds smiled broadly as the couple walked out of the arrivals area at London’s Heathrow airport, accompanied by their daughter and British special representative to Afghanistan Richard Lindsay.After their return, Peter Reynolds told The Times that the couple had “begun to think that we would never be released, or that we were even being held until we were executed”.”We are bewildered as to why any of this happened and are very happy that this ordeal is over,” he said.For her part, Barbie said the toughest thing about the affair was “seeing my 80-year-old husband struggling to get into the back of a police truck with his hands and ankles chained”.Their family has spoken of their “immense joy” on hearing that the Reynolds were released, and there were emotional scenes when they arrived in Doha on a flight from Kabul to be met by their daughter.”This experience has reminded us of the power of diplomacy, empathy and international cooperation,” their four children said in a joint statement on Friday.”While the road to recovery will be long as our parents regain their health and spend time with their family, today is a day of tremendous joy and relief.”Qatar played a key role in helping to free the couple after mounting fears about their health.The couple were arrested in February as they were returning to their home in Bamiyan province, central Afghanistan.They were first held in a maximum security facility, “then in underground cells, without daylight, before being transferred” to the intelligence services in Kabul, UN experts have said.The couple married in Kabul in 1970 and have spent almost two decades living in Afghanistan, running educational programmes for women and children. They also became Afghan citizens.When the Taliban returned to power in 2021, the couple remained in Afghanistan against the advice of the British embassy.- ‘Afghan citizens’ -The Taliban authorities have not explained why the pair were detained.Speaking at Kabul airport on Friday before they left, Barbie Reynolds said the couple had been treated well.”We are looking forward to returning to Afghanistan if we can. We are Afghan citizens,” she added.Their son, Jonathan, echoed to the BBC that his parents were hoping to return to the country they love.”They have not just a heart for the people of Afghanistan, but they have strategy as well, and the work they’ve been doing has been very fruitful and has a massively positive impact,” he said.In July, independent UN human rights experts called on the Taliban government to free the couple, warning that they risked “irreparable harm or even death” as their health deteriorated.Their family had made repeated pleas for their release, citing their failing health.Taliban foreign ministry spokesman Abdul Qahar Balkhi said on Friday the couple “had violated the laws of Afghanistan” and were released from custody “following the judicial process”.Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer said the “long-awaited news will come as a huge relief” to the family.The British government advises against travelling to Afghanistan, warning that its ability to offer consular assistance is “extremely limited”.Russia is the only country to have officially recognised the Taliban government, which has imposed a strict version of Islamic law and been accused of sweeping rights violations.Dozens of foreign nationals have been arrested since the Taliban returned to power in August 2021 following the withdrawal of US-led NATO forces.

Espagne: le Real Madrid reçu cinq sur cinq, Mbappé inarrêtable

Imparable Mbappé! L’attaquant star du Real Madrid, à nouveau décisif samedi à domicile face à l’Espanyol Barcelone (2-0), a permis au géant madrilène de rester seul leader du championnat espagnol avec un bilan parfait de cinq  victoires en cinq journées.Insatiable, le buteur français, bourreau de l’OM mardi en Ligue des champions avec deux pénalties (2-1), a fait le break en début de seconde période d’une frappe tendue de l’extérieur de la surface (47e, 2-0). Son neuvième but en huit matches toutes compétitions confondues en club et en sélection.Le défenseur brésilien Eder Militao avait ouvert le score en première mi-temps d’un missile du droit en pleine lucarne (22e, 1-0), plaçant le Real (1er, 15 points) sur la route d’un cinquième succès en cinq journées.Le club madrilène, seul leader avec ce bilan parfait, prend ainsi cinq longueurs d’avance sur son rival, le FC Barcelone (2e, 10 points), qui reçoit Getafe (6e, 9 points) dimanche (21H).L’entraîneur basque Xabi Alonso, qui avait choisi d’aligner un onze très offensif en 4-4-2 avec les titularisations des jeunes Gonzalo Garcia et Franco Mastantuono, reste invaincu en championnat depuis son arrivée sur le banc merengue. L’ex-milieu de terrain de la Roja a également enregistré deux bonnes nouvelles en fin de match, avec les retours sur le terrain de l’Anglais Jude Bellingham, remis de son opération de l’épaule, et de l’international français Eduardo Camavinga, touché à la cheville en début de saison.- Les anciens de Ligue 1 brillent -Plus tard samedi soir, Villarreal (3e, 10 points) s’est relancé en Liga après deux défaites consécutives (face à l’Atlético puis Tottenham, en C1) en renversant (2-1) Osasuna (12e, 6 points) grâce aux deux anciens de Ligue 1 Georges Mikautadze et Pape Gueye. L’ex-coéquipier du Sénégalais à l’OM, Alexis Sanchez, 36 ans, a lui donné de l’air au Séville FC (8e, 7 points), en offrant un succès étriqué (2-1) au club andalou sur la pelouse d’Alavés (9e, 7 points), tandis que l’ancien Rennais Baptiste Santamaria a été le grand artisan de la victoire solide (2-0) de Valence (10e, 7 points) contre l’Athletic Bilbao (7e, 9 points), avec un but et une passe décisive.Dans l’après-midi, Gérone, qui disputait la Ligue des champions la saison dernière, s’est enfoncé dans la crise en concédant un humiliant revers (4-0) sur sa pelouse face au promu Levante, en supériorité numérique à onze contre neuf pendant toute la deuxième mi-temps.Le petit club catalan reste lanterne rouge, avec un seul point glané face au Celta Vigo le week-end dernier, et quatre défaites. La veille, la Real Sociedad (18e, 2 points) s’est inclinée (3-1) face au Betis Sévile (5e, 9 points) et demeure relégable, sans la moindre victoire en cinq rencontres.Cette cinquième journée se poursuit dimanche, avec notamment le déplacement de l’Atlético Madrid à Majorque (16h15) et la réception de Getafe pour le FC Barcelone (21H).Toujours dans l’attente des autorisations nécessaires à un retour au Camp Nou, encore en travaux, le Barça, champion d’Espagne en titre, jouera à nouveau au stade Johan Cruyff, devant 6.000 spectateurs.