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Bessent does not back up Trump on China tariff discussions

Bessent does not back up Trump on China tariff discussions
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent departs a breakfast meeting during the World Bank/IMF Spring Meetings at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) headquarters in Washington, April 25, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 27 April 2025

Bessent does not back up Trump on China tariff discussions

Bessent does not back up Trump on China tariff discussions
  • Trump’s erratic, and often confusing, rollout of tariffs has hit many countries including the largest US trading partners, like Canada, Mexico and China

WASHINGTON: US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Sunday did not back President Donald Trump’s assertion that tariff talks with China were under way and said he did not know if the US president had talked to Chinese President Xi Jinping.
The Trump administration signaled openness last week to de-escalating a trade war between the world’s two largest economies that has raised fears of recession. Trump himself has said talks on tariffs were taking place with China and that he and Xi have spoken.
Yet Beijing has denied that any trade talks are occurring.
Bessent, a key player in US trade talks with multiple countries, said that he had interactions with his Chinese counterparts last week during International Monetary Fund meetings in Washington, but did not mention tariffs.
“I had interaction with my Chinese counterpart, but it was more on the traditional things like financial stability, global economic early warnings,” he said on ABC’s “This Week.”
“I don’t know if President Trump has spoken with President Xi,” Bessent added. “I know they have a very good relationship and a lot of respect for each other.”
Asked why the Chinese were denying talks, Bessent said. “I think they’re playing to a different audience.”
Bessent, who said last week that tariff negotiations with Beijing would be a “slog,” did not give a timetable for any potential agreement with China.
He said a trade deal can take months, but a de-escalation and an agreement in principle can be achieved sooner and would keep tariffs from ratcheting back to the maximum level.
Trump’s erratic, and often confusing, rollout of tariffs has hit many countries including the largest US trading partners, like Canada, Mexico and China. The result has been almost unprecedented market volatility and serious damage to investor trust in US assets.
In a separate television interview on Sunday, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said the United States was holding daily conversations with China over tariffs, but did not elaborate.
“Every day we are in conversation with China, along with those other 99, 100 countries that have come to the table,” Rollins said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”


Family fears for elderly UK couple held by Taliban

Family fears for elderly UK couple held by Taliban
Updated 36 sec ago

Family fears for elderly UK couple held by Taliban

Family fears for elderly UK couple held by Taliban
  • The family of elderly British couple Peter and Barbie Reynolds, detained for six months without charge in Afghanistan, fears the worst as their health declines
LONDON: The family of elderly British couple Peter and Barbie Reynolds, detained for six months without charge in Afghanistan, fears the worst as their health declines.
“I don’t know if they’re still alive,” said their son, Jonathan Reynolds, who has not spoken to his parents since their last phone call on June 15.
“How would I know if they were no longer alive? Who’s going to call me? The Taliban’s never called me. Who’s going to call? I don’t know,” asked Reynolds, one of the couple’s four children.
Peter Reynolds, 80, and his 76-year-old wife were arrested in February along with Chinese-American friend, Faye Hall, who was released in March, and an Afghan translator.
The couple were married in Kabul in 1970, and have spent almost two decades living in Afghanistan running educational programs after moving there. They also became official Afghan citizens.
Taliban officials have refused to detail why the couple was arrested in February as they were returning to their home in central Bamiyan province.
“They were told by the judge that they were not guilty of any crimes,” said their son.
“So many times we’ve been told two to three days and then you’ll be released ... But it’s six months on Saturday,” he added.
The couple were first held in a maximum security facility, “then in underground cells, without daylight, before being transferred” to the intelligence services in Kabul, according to UN experts.
In late July, the independent UN human rights experts called for the Taliban to free the pair warning of the “rapid deterioration” of their physical and mental health, stating that they “risk irreparable harm or even death.”
UN experts shared a voice message from the couple with their son, but he has not been reassured.
“You have to remember their age,” Reynolds, 45, told AFP during a video call from his home in Chicago.
“Are they in danger? Yeah, they’re an elderly couple who are unjustly held ... in captivity. They are not free,” he said.
“Their bodies are not used to being put through this, they’re being trapped, they’re sleeping on a little mattress on the floor,” he said.
The couple’s children have set up a website called Free Peter and Barbie to campaign for their release, which counts down the number of days they have been held.
Since being detained, Peter Reynolds has suffered two eye infections and intermittent tremors in his head and left arm, according to the UN experts.
“My dad has had heart attacks ... he has a stent in his heart. He has had skin cancer,” Jonathan Reynolds said.
“So he needs an ECG (electrocardiogram), blood test, EEG (electroencephalogram), CT scans. He needs all of that,” he added.
His mother suffers from malnourishment and anaemia after months of being “fed once a day in prison,” her son added.
She is “weak and fragile,” the experts said.
The Taliban government’s top diplomat Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi said the couple had been receiving medical care.
“Their human rights are being respected,” he told a press conference in Kabul.
“They are being provided with medical care. They are in occasional contact with their families.”
“Their case isn’t anything serious,” the Taliban interior ministry said in April, adding they hoped it would be “resolved soon.”
The couple run an organization in Afghanistan called Rebuild, which provides educational programs for women and children.
“My parents have never thought about their security and safety,” Reynolds said, it was “no way to treat an elderly couple who’ve given the last two decades of their life for the good of Afghanistan.”
When the Taliban returned to power in 2021, the couple remained in Afghanistan against the advice of the British embassy.
Their son recalled the embassy asking them: “’Why are you staying? You’re on your own’.”
His parents had replied: “’How could we leave these people in their darkest hour? We came here because we love these people, and that’s what we’ll give the rest of our lives to, even if it means we die’.”

Philippines kicks off free health-screening program for Filipinos in Bahrain

Philippines kicks off free health-screening program for Filipinos in Bahrain
Updated 17 min 39 sec ago

Philippines kicks off free health-screening program for Filipinos in Bahrain

Philippines kicks off free health-screening program for Filipinos in Bahrain
  • Some 57,000 Filipino migrant workers live and work in Bahrain
  • Health-check program is available in more locations this year

MANILA: The Philippines launched on Friday a month-long health-screening program for Filipino workers in Bahrain, as Manila seeks to promote wellness among its citizens abroad.

Gulf countries have for years been the main overseas destination for Filipinos, with some 57,000 currently living and working in Bahrain.

The “Healthy Pinoy” campaign, a project spearheaded by the Philippine Embassy in Bahrain in collaboration with the Al-Hilal Healthcare Group, offers free blood testing and doctor consultations for Filipino workers.

“This project, which is in its second year, was conceptualized with the view of promoting health and wellness of the Filipinos in Bahrain by providing them free health screening (and) health check-ups … This will be for the whole month of August,” Consul Bryan Baguio from the Philippine Embassy in Bahrain told Arab News.

Philippine nationals are entitled to get free tests for blood sugar, cholesterol, uric acid, as well as kidney and liver screening, he said, as well as a complimentary medical consultation for a further evaluation.

The services are available at all nine hospitals under the Al-Hilal Healthcare Group across Bahrain, including in Manama, Muharraq and Askar.

The embassy also brought a consular outreach mission on the first day of the campaign, Baguio added, which is providing various services for workers.

“We’re doing this mission in conjunction with the launching because it will be a Friday, which is a rest day for our countrymen here in Bahrain. So this will be an opportunity for them to avail and to consult with the embassies on various services on their day off,” he said.

In 2024, the free health-screening program benefited about 1,000 Filipinos and was held at only one hospital. With additional locations this year, embassy officials are expecting more people to participate.

“Now it will be in nine Al-Hilal hospitals, and we are also adding the complimentary doctor consultations. So we expect more, more than 1,000,” Baguio said.

“Health is a top priority of Filipinos in Bahrain, and that is what we intend to do — to promote the health and wellness of our nationals here by providing them free healthcare services.”

 


France to halt Gaza arrivals pending probe into student’s antisemitic posts

France to halt Gaza arrivals pending probe into student’s antisemitic posts
Updated 01 August 2025

France to halt Gaza arrivals pending probe into student’s antisemitic posts

France to halt Gaza arrivals pending probe into student’s antisemitic posts
  • The move comes after officials said the female student from Gaza will have to leave France after the Sciences Po university in the northern city of Lille revoked her accreditation over the online post

PARIS: France will suspend its program to receive Palestinians from conflict-torn Gaza pending the outcome of an investigation into how a student accused of sharing antisemitic posts was allowed into the country, the French foreign minister said Friday.
The move comes after officials said the female student from Gaza will have to leave France after the Sciences Po university in the northern city of Lille revoked her accreditation over the online posts.
“No evacuation of any kind will take place until we have drawn conclusions from this investigation,” Jean-Noel Barrot told Franceinfo radio.
All Gazans who have entered France will undergo a second screening, he added.
France has helped more than 500 people leave Gaza since the latest war between Palestinian militant group Hamas and Israel started, including wounded children, journalists, students and artists.
The conflict has seen Israel retaliate with a deadly military campaign and an aid blockade in Gaza that some rights groups have qualified as “genocide.”
Lille’s chief prosecutor told AFP on Thursday a probe had been opened against the student for allegedly trying to “justify terrorism” and “justify a crime against humanity.”
Screenshots of posts the student allegedly shared in September — published by pro-Israel accounts on X — include an image of Adolf Hitler and words appearing to call for the death of Jews.
The account attributed to the student has been taken offline, after French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau demanded it be closed down.
A French diplomatic source said the student arrived in France on July 11 on a scholarship based on “academic excellence” and after “security checks.”
AFP was not immediately able to reach the student for comment. The news agency is not identifying her at this stage of the investigation.
“She must leave the country,” the foreign minister confirmed, adding that discussions were ongoing to determine her destination.


Flash floods kill three in Vietnam, nine missing

Flash floods kill three in Vietnam, nine missing
Updated 01 August 2025

Flash floods kill three in Vietnam, nine missing

Flash floods kill three in Vietnam, nine missing
  • Heavy rain of up to 30 centimeters triggered the floods in the provinces of Son La, Phu Tho, Tuyen Quang and especially Dien Bien
  • Vietnam is now in its tropical storm season, which often cause deadly floods and landslides
HANOI: Flash floods struck Vietnam’s mountainous north overnight, killing at least three people while nine others are missing, disaster authorities said Friday.
Heavy rain of up to 30 centimeters triggered the floods in the provinces of Son La, Phu Tho, Tuyen Quang and especially Dien Bien, isolating several communities.
The ministry of agriculture said three people were killed while a search is ongoing for nine others in Dien Bien province’s Tia Dinh and Xa Dung communes.
State media quoted local authorities as saying rain was heavy from 3:00 am, triggering flash floods from upstream.
Several villages became flooded and remained inaccessible by Friday afternoon.
Last weekend, flash floods claimed five lives in Son La province, inundating crops and washing away poultry and cattle.
Vietnam is now in its tropical storm season, which often cause deadly floods and landslides.
Scientists say human-driven climate change is causing more intense weather patterns that can make destructive floods more likely.
In September 2024, Typhoon Yagi devastated northern Vietnam, leaving 345 people dead and causing an estimated economic loss of $3.3 billion.

Canada PM says ‘disappointed’ by new US tariffs

Canada PM says ‘disappointed’ by new US tariffs
Updated 01 August 2025

Canada PM says ‘disappointed’ by new US tariffs

Canada PM says ‘disappointed’ by new US tariffs
  • The US leader had warned of trade consequences for Ottawa after Mark Carney announced plans to recognize a Palestinian state
  • A wide swath of products covered by a 2020 United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement remain exempt from the tariff rate, however

OTTAWA: Prime Minister Mark Carney said Friday his government is “disappointed” by President Donald Trump’s decision to increase US tariffs on Canadian goods to 35 percent.

The US leader had warned of trade consequences for Ottawa after Carney announced plans to recognize a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly in September.

In an executive order, Trump raised the levy from 25 percent to 35 percent.

A wide swath of products covered by a 2020 United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement remain exempt from the tariff rate, however.

“The Canadian government is disappointed by this action,” Carney said in a statement.

Trump’s order cited Canada’s failure to “cooperate in curbing the ongoing flood of fentanyl and other illicit drugs” as well as its “retaliation” against his measures.

Carney outlined Ottawa’s efforts to crack down on fentanyl and to increase border security.

“Canada accounts for only one percent of US fentanyl imports and has been working intensively to further reduce these volumes,” he said.

Ottawa remained committed to the Canada-US-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), the prime minister said.

“The US application of CUSMA means that the US average tariff rate on Canadian goods remains one of its lowest for all of its trading partners,” he said.

“Other sectors of our economy – including lumber, steel, aluminum and automobiles – are, however, heavily impacted by US duties and tariffs.”