Tag: Trump

  • Trump, Lula, Erdoğan in fireworks at Day 1

    Trump, Lula, Erdoğan in fireworks at Day 1

    United States President Donald, Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan African leader Cyril Ramaphosa, on the first day,  addressed the United Nations General Assembly in combative and wide-ranging speeches that levelled scathing criticism of world leaders on key global issues.

    Trump attacks UN, Europe, immigration

    Trump relentlessly mocked the United Nations yesterday in his first address since his White House comeback, blasting it for failing to bring peace and claiming the world body encourages illegal migration.

    In his return to the UN General Assembly podium, Trump accused the UN of fostering an “assault” through migration on Western countries that he said were “going to hell”.

    He likewise used the major forum to denounce efforts to reduce global warming, calling climate change concerns “the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world.”

    “What is the purpose of the United Nations?” asked Trump.

    “All they seem to do is write a really strongly worded letter,” he said. “It’s empty words, and empty words don’t solve war.”

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    The 79-year-old even complained about a broken escalator and teleprompter at the New York headquarters of the UN, which he has repeatedly targeted during both of his presidential terms.

    “These are the two things I got from the United Nations, a bad escalator and a bad teleprompter,” he said.

    Trump accused the UN of “funding an assault” against the West by supporting mass migration, alleging the organisation had backed illegally entry into the United States.

    “The United Nations is funding an assault on Western countries and their borders,” he said. “The UN is supporting people that are illegally coming into the United States.”

    Touting what he said were his efforts to end seven wars, Trump turned to two where his outreach has produced no results – Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Israel’s war in Gaza following Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack.

    He called recognition by a slate of Washington’s allies of a Palestinian state a “reward” to armed group Hamas for “horrible atrocities” and urged the group to release hostages to reach peace.

    Trump lashed out at European allies, as well as China and India, for failing to stop oil purchases from Russia, while remaining relatively restrained on Moscow even as he said Washington was ready to impose unspecified sanctions.

    Brazil’s Lula takes jab at Trump

    Inacio Lula da Silva opened the United Nations General Assembly with a message to Donald Trump.

    Lula said “attacks against the independence of the judiciary are unacceptable” and that “Our democracy and our sovereignty are non-negotiable”.

    Lula’s speech and UN agenda may trigger fresh escalation between Brasilia and Washington, particularly over issues like the fate of former President Jair Bolsonaro and trade practices.

    As part of a decades-long tradition, Brazilian leaders typically open the UN’s annual gathering in New York. But this year’s meeting came at an especially tense moment as the two largest nations in the Americas clash over the fate of former President Jair Bolsonaro — a Trump ally convicted of attempting a coup against Lula.

    Turkish president urges leaders to help Palestinians

    Erdogan urged “all world leaders to stand firmly with oppressed Palestinians today in the name of humanity”.

    “Here, I sincerely appeal to all heads of state and government. Today is the day. Today is the day to stand upright by the oppressed Palestinians in the name of humanity. While your people react against the barbarism in Gaza, have the courage to follow through,” said Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    “Today, we are also here at this podium to speak on behalf of Palestinian people, whose voices are being silenced, together with our own citizens,” said Erdogan.

    Erdogan thanked all countries that have recognised Palestine so far, and called on the states that have not yet done so “to act without delay.”

    He said that for 23 months, Israel has killed one child every hour in Gaza, stressing: “These are not numbers, but innocent people.”

    “Every day, 2.5 million Gazans living within 365 square kilometers (141 square miles) are displaced, forced to move to another area,” said Erdogan.

    “Innocent little children, only 2 or 3 years old, without hands, arms, or legs, sadly became an ordinary image of Gaza today,” the Turkish president said.

    Holding up a photo of a child on the brink of starvation, Erdogan asked: “What conscience can endure, what conscience can remain silent on this? Can there be peace in the world where children die from hunger, lack of medicine?”

    “Here, in America, in Europe, everywhere in the world, if a small thorn pricks a child’s hand, parents’ hearts hurt deeply; but in Gaza, children’s hands, arms, and legs have to be amputated without anesthesia. Let us be clear: This is the lowest point of humanity. Human history has not witnessed such savagery in the last century. Everything is unfolding right before our eyes. The genocide in Gaza is being broadcast live at any moment through the media and social media.”

    In fact “there is no war in Gaza,” he said, as the Israeli army is using the most modern, deadliest weapons against innocent civilians.

    Erdogan said Israel’s occupation under the pretext of the events of Oct. 7, 2023 is not counterterrorism, it is “a policy of deportation, exile, genocide, and mass slaughter.”

    “Israel is not limiting itself to Gaza and West Bank; by carrying out attacks on Syria, Iran, Yemen, and Lebanon, it is also threatening regional peace,” he added.

    The Turkish leader said Israel “completely lost control” after its attack on Qatar earlier this month, proving that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “has no intention of (seeking) peace or freeing hostages.”

    He said Israeli attacks have pushed aside basic human, women’s, and children’s rights, and freedom of expression, protest, equality, and justice

    Ramaphosa calls for UN founding values to be upheld

    Ramaphosa stressed the need for international law to be upheld.

     “Through the UN Charter, the nations of the world pledged to uphold peace, development and human rights, which would be underpinned by international law,” he said.

    “Now more than ever, we are called upon to uphold the values and advance the purpose of the United Nations,” he said.

    Ramaphosa made what appears to be a glancing reference to Trump’s tariff policy, saying that both “geopolitical shocks and unprecedented trade policy volatility are destabilising the global economy and jeopardising a critical source of development finance”.

    “In fact, trade is now being used as a weapon against a number of countries in the world. We must redouble our efforts to strengthen the link between trade and development,” he said.

    He called for the lifting of the U.S.’s trade embargo on Cuba, which has been to varying degrees since 1962.

    3.

    Guterres warns: ‘the pillars of peace and progress are buckling’

    With global peace and progress under siege, the Secretary-General Antonio Guterres challenged world leaders yesterday to choose a future where the rule of law triumphs over raw power and where nations come together rather than scramble for self-interests.

    Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the UN’s founders faced the same questions 80 years ago, but he told today’s world leaders at the opening of their annual gathering at the General Assembly that the choice of peace or war, law or lawlessness, cooperation or conflict, is “more urgent, more intertwined, more unforgiving”.

     “We have entered in an age of reckless disruption and relentless human suffering,” he said in his annual “state of the World” speech. “The pillars of peace and progress are buckling under the weight of impunity, inequality and indifference.”

    But despite all the internal and external challenges facing the UN, he and General Assembly President Annalena Baerbock pleaded with its members not to give up. “If we stop doing the right things, evil will prevail,” Baerbock said in her opening remarks.

    Guterres said the leaders’ first obligation is to choose peace, and without naming any countries, he urged all parties — including those in the Assembly chamber – to stop supporting Sudan’s warring parties.

    He also didn’t name Israel but used his strongest words against its actions in Gaza, saying the scale of death and destruction are the worst in his nearly nine years as secretary-general, and that “nothing can justify the collective punishment of the Palestinian people.”

    While Guterres has repeatedly said only a court can determine whether Israel has committed genocide in Gaza, he referred to the case South Africa brought to the UN’s highest court under the genocide convention by name – and stressed its legally binding provisional measures, first and foremost to protect Palestinian civilians.

    Since the International Court of Justice issued that ruling in January 2024, Guterres said, killings have intensified, and famine has been declared in parts of Gaza. He said the court’s measures “must be implemented – fully and immediately.”

    The UN also is facing financial cuts as the U.S. and some other nations pulled back funding or have yet to pay their dues. Guterres said aid cuts are “wreaking havoc,” calling them “a death sentence for many.”

    Macron calls Trump after being blocked by U.S. leader’s motorcade

    Even presidents are subject to the annoyances of New York City traffic, as French President Emmanuel Macron learned late on Monday, when a New York City police officer stopped him crossing the street because of U.S. President Donald Trump’s motorcade.

    But unlike most of those inconvenienced, Macron then rang Trump personally from the sidewalk to joke about his plight, according to a video clip circulating on social media.

    “I’m sorry, Mister President, I’m really sorry,” a clearly embarrassed police officer told Macron who was trying to cross the street with members of his delegation.

    “It’s just that everything’s been frozen right now. There’s a motorcade coming,” the police officer said.

    “If you don’t see it, let me cross. I negotiate with you,” quipped Macron, a light-hearted reference to the negotiations he and other leaders will be involved in this week during the annual General Assembly of the United Nations in New York.

    Forced to wait at the barricade, Macron then rang Trump.

    “Guess what – I’m waiting in the street because everything is frozen for you,” Macron said, holding the phone to his ear, adding that he would like to have a short discussion with Trump and Qatar about the situation in Gaza.

    A source close to the French president confirmed that Macron had spoken by phone with Trump while walking. The conversation was warm and friendly and allowed them to discuss several international topics, the source added.

  • Trump hails Charlie Kirk as ‘martyr’ as thousands fill memorial service

    Trump hails Charlie Kirk as ‘martyr’ as thousands fill memorial service

    US President Donald Trump hailed the conservative activist Charlie Kirk as a “great American hero” and “martyr” during a speech to tens of thousands of mourners at a memorial service in Arizona.

    Trump was the headline speaker at the packed event on Sunday, which saw top officials from his administration, including Vice-President JD Vance, praise Kirk’s political legacy after he was shot dead on 10 September.

    Kirk’s wife, Erika, delivered a tearful speech at the State Farm Stadium near Phoenix, in which she said she had forgiven her husband’s alleged killer.

    But the US president broke with her forgiveness message to say he disagreed with Charlie Kirk’s view of wanting the best for his opponent.

    “I hate my opponent and I don’t want the best for them,” he said, adding: “I’m sorry, Erika.”

    It was a contrast to the words spoken by Ms Kirk earlier, who delivered perhaps the most powerful moment of the service. 

    “My husband, Charlie, he wanted to save young men, just like the one who took his life,” she said, adding: “I forgive him because it is what Christ did. The answer to hate is not hate.”

    Tens of thousands of people queued for hours outside the stadium before the event, with some even camping out the night before to secure their spot. Many wore Make America Great Again (Maga) hats, other Trump-branded items and red, white and blue outfits. 

    Inside the stadium, the mood and atmosphere resembled a raucous political rally or megachurch service with music beforehand from Christian bands who prompted singalongs and prayer from the crowd of almost 100,000.

    The list of speakers included members of Kirk’s organisation, Turning Point USA, which focuses on conservative activism on college campuses, well-known figures in the conservative movement, Trump administration officials and those who said they had been shaped by Kirk’s work and right-wing Christian worldview.

    They stressed the need to continue the 31-year-old’s activism and emphasised his deep faith throughout the five-hour service. Kirk, who was debating students at a university in Utah when he was shot dead, was repeatedly described as a martyr and cast as a historic figure for the conservative movement.

    BBC

  • Trump imposes $100,000 annual fee on skilled worker visa applicants

    Trump imposes $100,000 annual fee on skilled worker visa applicants

    The United States has imposed a $100,000 annual fee on companies seeking H-1B visas for skilled foreign workers.

    The new policy is set to take effect on September 21, 2025.

    According to a report yesterday by the BBC, the development followed a broad executive order signed by President Donald Trump.

    “Companies need to decide — is the person valuable enough to have a $100,000-a-year payment to the government, or should they head home and go hire an American?” said US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.

    “All of the big companies are on board.”

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    The new fee will apply to all new H-1B visa applications and must be paid annually for up to six years.

    According to BBC, the programme, currently capped at 85,000 visas per year, has long been a mainstay for tech firms and startups seeking highly educated foreign talent. Until now, the associated fees totalled approximately $1,500.

    Critics, however, say the measure could severely undercut US competitiveness in the global economy, especially in the tech sector.

    “This $100,000 as an entry point is going to have a devastating impact,” said Tahmina Watson, an immigration attorney based in Seattle.

    “Almost everyone’s going to be priced out. Many small or medium-sized companies simply can’t find qualified Americans to do the job.”

    The executive order also introduces a new “gold card” system, offering fast-track immigration for certain high-net-worth individuals in exchange for fees starting at £1 million.

    Last month, the US introduced a pilot programme requiring bonds of up to $15,000 for some tourist and business visas. In June, a travel ban restricting entry from 12 nations was announced.

  • Trump, UK PM split on Palestine, energy, and migration

    Trump, UK PM split on Palestine, energy, and migration

    United States President Donald Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer held a joint press conference at the Prime Minister’s country residence in Buckinghamshire, where both leaders affirmed their commitment to stronger ties but diverged sharply on the recognition of Palestine, energy policy, and illegal migration.

    Starmer, who hosted Trump as part of the ongoing state visit, defended Britain’s recent decision to recognise Palestine, describing it as part of a “roadmap to peace” in the Middle East.

    “We absolutely agree on the need for peace and a roadmap because the situation in Gaza is intolerable,” Starmer said. “The hostages must be freed and aid must get into Gaza at speed. The question of recognition needs to be seen as part of that overall package which takes us from the appalling situation we are in now to the outcome of a safe and secure Israel and a viable Palestinian state.”

    Trump, however, rejected the recognition move outright, insisting the priority must be the release of Israeli hostages.

    “Well, simply, I want the hostages released now, right now,” he said. “We are the ones who got many, many hostages released. I have heard stories like I never thought possible: no humanity, no warmth. We have to remember October 7th, one of the worst, most violent days in the history of the world. I have a disagreement with the Prime Minister on that score, one of our few disagreements actually.”

    On energy, Trump renewed his familiar call to “drill baby drill,” contrasting sharply with Starmer’s insistence on pursuing renewables alongside traditional energy.

    “We have to drill,” Trump declared. “We have to frack, we have to drill, we have to get energy. The United States was energy independent when I left. Now we are not, and it is very bad for the world.”

    Starmer countered that Britain would stick to its balanced approach. “I believe in a mix that includes renewables and investment in green energy while making the best use of our existing resources,” he said.

    On illegal migration, both leaders stressed the need for strong borders but offered different prescriptions. Trump issued his usual dire warning.

    Read Also: Trump threatens severe consequences against ‘wrongful’ detention of U.S. nationals abroad

    “Migration will destroy countries if it is not checked,” he told reporters. “I see what is happening in Europe. We had millions of people flowing in under the last administration, totally unchecked. That cannot continue.”

    Starmer pointed to a recent returns agreement with the European Union as evidence of progress under his government. “We have struck a deal that will allow us to return those who come here illegally. It is the right and fair thing to do,” he said.

    Despite the sharp exchanges, both men emphasised the strength of the transatlantic alliance.

    “The United States and the United Kingdom are bound by history, by values and by friendship,” Trump said. Starmer echoed him, saying:

    “We will not agree on everything, but the partnership remains strong. It is vital for our people and for the world.”

  • Father turns in son for killing Trump’s ally

    Father turns in son for killing Trump’s ally

    The manhunt that gripped America after the brazen killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk did not end with a SWAT raid or a dramatic shootout. Rather, it ended with a father’s phone call.

    Tyler Robinson, 22, was arrested late Thursday night after a 33-hour pursuit, for allegedly killing 31-year-old Kirk during a packed campus event at Utah Valley University.

    As Americans grappled with the import of what investigators surmised as a political assassination, more stunning news broke concerning the identity of the man who brought the fugitive to heel: his father, Matt Robinson.

    Former President Donald Trump was the first to hint at the family’s role, telling Fox & Friends that “someone very close” to Robinson had turned him in.

    Having recognised the Converse sneakers and sunglasses on his son in FBI images released after the killing, Matt, a registered Republican, confronted his son. Robinson confessed, thus pitting his father in the unbearable calculus to either protect or give him up. The father chose the latter.

    Law enforcement later confirmed that Robinson’s father, faced with his son’s chilling confession, sought help from a family friend who contacted the Washington County Sheriff’s Office. By 10 p.m. Thursday, U.S. Marshals had Robinson in custody, FBI Director Kash Patel said Friday.

    Governor Cox confirmed: “A family member of Tyler Robinson reached out to a family friend who contacted the Sheriff’s Office with information that Robinson had confessed to them,” thus ending the manhunt within hours and averting further tragedy.

    Authorities recovered the weapon abandoned in a wooded stretch near campus: a Mauser .30-06 bolt-action rifle. What chilled investigators were the engravings on its bullet casings: part political manifesto, part internet taunt. One read: “Hey fascist! Catch!” Another echoed the Italian anti-fascist anthem: “Oh bella ciao, ciao.”

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    For investigators, the ideological markers mattered. But for Americans, it was the father’s choice that became the story.

    Robinson’s hometown lies more than three hours from the scene of his crime at Utah Valley University, but the shock of the murder traveled faster than geography.

    His journey toward radicalisation seemed unlikely at first glance. Raised in Washington, Utah, a quiet suburb of St. George, he was remembered as a bright student.

    After graduating Pine View High School in 2021, he earned a presidential scholarship to Utah State University. A family video showed his mother beaming with pride as he read aloud the award letter. But his promise unraveled quickly as he dropped out after just one semester, retreating into a more isolated life.

    Though registered to vote, records show he had no party affiliation and was listed as “inactive,” having failed to cast ballots in the two most recent elections.

    Yet, as Cox revealed at Friday press conference, Robinson “had become more political in recent years,” with family members recalling increasingly heated remarks, particularly aimed at Kirk.

    At a recent dinner, Robinson reportedly mentioned Kirk’s upcoming Utah Valley appearance, declaring the activist was “full of hate and spreading hate.”

  • Trump threatens severe consequences against ‘wrongful’ detention of U.S. nationals abroad

    Trump threatens severe consequences against ‘wrongful’ detention of U.S. nationals abroad

    U.S. President Donald Trump has signed an executive order to protect U.S. nationals from what he termed “wrongful detention” abroad.

    U.S. Department of State, in a statement issued on Friday, threatened severe consequences for those who “wrongfully” detain Americans abroad.

    “Today, President Trump signed an Executive Order that takes unprecedented action to impose new consequences on those who wrongfully detain Americans abroad,” the statement read.

    “Through this Executive Order, actors designated as State Sponsors of Wrongful Detention may face severe penalties,” the statement added.

    The penalties include economic sanctions, visa restrictions, foreign assistance restrictions and travel restrictions for U.S. passport holders, according to the statement.

    “Like the State Sponsor of Terrorism determination, no nation should want to end up on this list.

    “The bottom line: Anyone who uses an American as a bargaining chip will pay the price.”

    This administration is not only putting America first but also putting Americans first, the statement said.

    (NAN)

  • Trump and Nobel Peace prize

    Trump and Nobel Peace prize

    • By Olabode Lucas

    Nobel prizes awarded annually are without doubt the most prestigious prizes in the world, and they are named after Alfred Nobel (1833-1896), a chemist, engineer and inventor. Nobel invented ballistics, and amassed a great fortune from almost 355 inventions. In his last will when he died, he specified that his fortune, which was estimated  then at  around $166 million, be used to create a series of prizes for those who “confer the greatest benefit to humankind.” Originally, the prizes were awarded in five fields, Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature and Peace. The sixth prize in the field of Economics was added in 1968. The prizes in the fields were awarded in 1901 to mark the fifth anniversary of Alfred Nobel’s death.

    Every year, the attention of the whole world is focused on who would be the recipients of these prestigious prizes, especially the recipients of the Nobel Peace prize, the award of which every year usually generates controversy. Africans have featured prominently in the award of the Nobel Peace prize unlike in the other fields. Notable Africans who had got Nobel Peace Prize included Albert Luthuli of South Africa (1960), Anwar Sadat of Egypt (1978), Desmond Tutu of South Africa (1984), Nelson Mandela of South Africa (1993), De Klerk of South Africa (1993) and Kofi Annan of Ghana (2001). Our own Professor Wole Soyinka is the first African to get the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1986, and at present two other Africans have got the literature prize.

    President Donald Trump of the USA in his characteristic ebullient way has now raised the stake for this year’s Nobel Peace Prize award and he is presently leaving no stone unturned to be the recipient of this year’s award. In his quest for this award, he wants to follow the footsteps of previous presidents of the USA like Theodore Roosevelt (1906), Woodrow Wilson (1915), Jimmy Carter (2002) and Barack Obama (2009) who had won the prize. Donald Trump has contacted some pliable world leaders to nominate him and some of these leaders include presidents of Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Pakistan and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan before he died. Trump’s action in this respect is certainly against the guidelines for the award which forbid lobbying for the award. Donald Trump based his claim for the award of the Nobel Peace Prize on his so-called successes in brokering peace in the wars, between Israel and Iran, Pakistan and India, Rwanda and Democratic Republic of Congo, Thailand and Cambodia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, Ethiopia and Egypt, and Serbia and Kosovo.

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    An assessment of Trump’s claim to be a worthy peace maker in the wars mentioned above, would show that his claim is hollow and overblown just to satisfy his ego. It baffles any rational imagination, how Donald Trump could claim to be a peacemaker in the recent 12-day war between Israel and Iran, when it was Trump who joined Israel to bomb Iran’s nuclear facilities, and gave Israel intelligence support. In addition, most of the arms used by Israel in the conflict were supplied by the USA. Trump only called for a ceasefire after Israel under his friend, Benjamin Netanyahu had thoroughly humiliated Iran in the conflict. HIs claim on the Rwanda and Democratic Republic Congo conflict is hollow as the M23 rebels supported by Rwanda are still wreaking havoc in Eastern Congo. Trump’s interest in this area is not about peace but for the opportunity to exploit the rare minerals of Democratic Republic of Congo.  Opinion is still divided on his role in the recent conflict between India and Pakistan, following the terrorist attack in the India controlled Kashmir in May 2025.  While Pakistan eulogised Trump as the peacemaker in the conflict, and nominated him for Nobel Peace Prize probably at the behest of Trump, India has denied that the USA under Trump had any role to play in the ceasefire. In the Azerbaijan, Armenia conflict, Trump’s intervention has not affected the deplorable situation of the ethnic Armenians living in Nagorno Karabakh controlled by Azerbaijan, despite the orchestrated peace meeting presided over by Trump in the White House. In Southeast Asia, Trump got his way in the conflict between Cambodia and Thailand by threatening the two countries with higher trade tariffs if they did not sign a ceasefire agreement. Trump no doubt threatened the countries so that he could bolster his claim as a peace maker in the world. Finally, the conflict between Egypt and Ethiopia, which did not degenerate to war, was settled by the African Union not through Trump’s intervention. It is clear from the above analysis that the interventions of Trump in the above enumerated conflicts, were done solely not for altruistic reasons, but for his ego so that he would get the coveted Nobel Peace Prize.

    Donald Trump’s latest efforts to bring peace in the conflict between Ukraine and Russia have floundered, thus putting another dent on his desire to win the Nobel Peace Prize. Before he got to power, he boasted that he would end the conflict within 24 hours of becoming the president. To many people, this is the longest 24 hours in the history of mankind.  Since becoming the president, Trump’s interventions in the conflict have been inconsistent and all his actions point to subtle support for Russia, which fair minded people around the world consider as the aggressor.  Trump is not on the same page with European leaders like Emmanuel Macron of France, Keir Stammer of UK, Giorgia Meloni of Italy and Friedrich Merz of Germany in this conflict between Russia and Ukraine. If not because of these European leaders, Trump could have put Ukraine and its leader, Volodymyr Zelensky under the bus. His recent meeting with Vladimir Putin in Alaska, in which he was thoroughly outmanoeuvred by Vladimir Putin, has now emboldened Putin to intensify drone attacks on Ukraine. There is a stalemate in this conflict now and the prospect of peace is bleak. A man like Trump who kowtows with an aggressor like Vladimir is certainly not a man of peace.

    The domestic policies initiated by Trump during his first coming as the President of the USA and now have polarized the people in the USA and without doubt, Donald Trump has become the most divisive president in the history of that country. Under Trump, immigrants are harassed and traumatized, student visas are withdrawn, and Trump is at loggerhead with renowned universities in the USA. Welfare and other safety nets are removed for the poor while rich people are pampered with low taxes. In addition, aid and humanitarian support in education and health given in the past by the USA to poor countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America have been drastically cut down or cancelled under Trump, while he imposed stiff trade tariffs on goods coming from other countries to the USA. Since charity begins at home, Trump’s divisive and draconian domestic policies in the USA certainly disqualify him from being considered for the Nobel Peace Prize.

    Based on rational considerations of both the domestic and international policies of President Trump, especially his relentless support of Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel in his genocidal war in Gaza, Donald Trump, is not a good and proper candidate for the award of the most coveted Nobel Peace Prize. He has certainly turned the world upside down since he appeared on the world stage. Trump is gradually turning to Hitler of our time who covets other people’s territories in Canada and Greenland.

    •Professor Lucas writes from Old Bodija Ibadan.

  • Trump reacts to Taylor Swift’s engagement to Travis Kelce

    Trump reacts to Taylor Swift’s engagement to Travis Kelce

    US President Donald Trump has congratulated American singer Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce on their engagement, describing Swift as a “terrific person” and Kelce as a “great player” and “great guy”.

    He extended his well-wishes to the couple during a cabinet meeting, saying “Well, I wish them a lot of luck”.

    “Well, I wish them a lot of luck. I think he’s a great player, a great guy. I think she’s a terrific person”, He stated.

    Read Also: Trump threatens to impose sanctions on Russia

    Earlier, The Nation reported that Taylor Swift announced her engagement to Travis Kelce in a recent Instagram post accompanied with photos from the proposal.

    Celebrities and sports personalities alike have taken to social media to congratulate the pair, with Swift’s engagement post garnering over 30 million likes on Instagram.

  • Trump threatens to impose sanctions on Russia

    Trump threatens to impose sanctions on Russia

    President Donald Trump said yesterday he is prepared to impose economic sanctions against Russia if Vladimir Putin fails to agree to a ceasefire, warning of serious consequences.

    “We want to have an end. We have economic sanctions. I’m talking about economic because we’re not going to get into a world war,” Trump said.

    This came as Ukrainian forces admitted that Russia’s military have crossed into the eastern industrial region of Dnipropetrovsk and are trying to establish a foothold.

    “This is the first attack of such a large scale in Dnipropetrovsk region,” Viktor Trehubov, of the Dnipro Operational-Strategic Group of Troops told the BBC, although he made clear their advance had been stopped.

    Russia has claimed throughout the summer that it has entered the area, as its forces try to push deeper into Ukrainian territory from the Donetsk region.

    In early June, Russian officials said an offensive had begun in Dnipropetrovsk, although the latest Ukrainian reports suggest they have barely breached the regional border.

    Read Also: UPDATED: No safe haven for criminals, says Ribadu

    Any Russian advance into Dnipropetrovsk would be a blow to Ukrainian morale, as a US-led diplomatic bid to bring the war to an end appears to be flagging despite President Donald Trump meeting Russia’s Vladimir Putin in Alaska.

    The Ukrainian DeepState mapping project assessed yesterday that Russia had now occupied two villages just inside the region, Zaporizke and Novohryhorivka.

    However, Ukraine’s armed forces general staff denied that was the case. The military “continue to control” Zaporizke, it said in a statement, and “active hostilities are also ongoing in the area of the village of Novohryhorivka”.

    Moscow has not laid claim to Dnipropetrovsk, unlike Donetsk and Ukraine’s four other eastern regions, but it has attacked its big cities, including the regional capital Dnipro.

  • U.S. Fed Governor to sue Trump over sack threat

    U.S. Fed Governor to sue Trump over sack threat

    United States Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook will file a lawsuit to prevent President Donald Trump from firing her, a lawyer for the embattled central bank official said yesterday.

    The move may kick off what could be a protracted legal fight over the White House’s effort to shape U.S. monetary policy.

    “His attempt to fire her, based solely on a referral letter, lacks any factual or legal basis. We will be filing a lawsuit challenging this illegal action,” Cook’s lawyer, prominent Washington attorney Abbe Lowell, said in a statement.

    The statement was issued a day after Trump said he would fire Cook, the first Black woman to serve on the Fed’s governing body, for alleged “deceitful and potential criminal conduct” related to mortgages she took out in 2021.

    “We need people that are 100% above board and it doesn’t seem like she was,” Trump told reporters at a meeting. He said he had several “good people” in mind to replace Cook but would abide by any court decision that left her in her job.

    Trump’s showdown with the nominally independent central bank follows other largely successful efforts to bring other elements of the U.S. government under his direct control. Since returning to office in January, the president has overseen the departure of hundreds of thousands of civil servants, dismantled several agencies and withheld billions of dollars of spending authorized by Congress.

    Trump pressured the Fed to lower interest rates during his first term in the White House and he has escalated that campaign in recent months. The president has demanded that rates be cut by several percentage points and threatened to fire Fed Chair Jerome Powell, although he recently backed away from that saber-rattling.

    Cook’s departure would allow Trump to pick a majority of the Fed’s seven-member board, including two incumbents and the pending nomination of White House economist Stephen Miran.

    Read Also: UPDATED: No safe haven for criminals, says Ribadu

    The Fed said in a statement that Cook and other board members serve 14-year tenures and cannot be removed easily from office in order to ensure that monetary policy decisions are based on economic data and “the long-term interests of the American people.”

    The attempt to influence U.S. monetary policy has knocked confidence in the dollar and U.S. sovereign debt and sparked fears of global financial turmoil. But market reaction to Trump’s latest Fed gambit was tame on Tuesday.

    Wall Street’s main equities indexes were largely flat on the day, while the dollar dropped. Yields on 2-year, 5-year and 10-year Treasury notes fell, reflecting higher expectations of a near-term rate cut, and rose on longer-dated bonds, in a sign the Fed’s inflation-fighting credentials might weaken.

    Trump said in a letter to Cook on Monday that he had “sufficient cause” to fire her because she had described separate properties in Michigan and Georgia as primary residences on mortgage applications before she joined the Fed in 2022.

    In recent months Trump has fired several Black women who held senior government positions, including the head of the Library of Congress and the chair of the National Labor Relations Board.

    William Pulte, a Trump appointee who is director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, first raised questions about Cook’s mortgages last week and referred the matter to U.S. Attorney General Pamela Bondi for investigation. Bondi has yet to say whether the Justice Department will take action.

    Trump accused Cook on Monday of having “deceitful and criminal conduct in a financial matter” and said he did not have confidence in her “integrity.”