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Two Dutch teens found dead in Istanbul hotel

Two Dutch teens found dead in Istanbul hotel
This handout photograph taken on August 22,2025 and released on August 23,2025 by Turkish news agency DHA (Demiroren News Agency) shows the entrance of a hotel where two Dutch citizan teenager brothers found death, at Fatih district, in Istanbul. (AFP PHOTO / DHA (Demiroren News Agency)
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Updated 23 August 2025

Two Dutch teens found dead in Istanbul hotel

Two Dutch teens found dead in Istanbul hotel
  • The boys, aged 15 and 17, were deceased when police and paramedics arrived at the hotel where they were staying
  • Istanbul police have launched an investigation with initial suspicion falling on a restaurant meal they had eaten

ISTANBUL: Two Dutch teenagers were found dead in their Istanbul hotel room and their father hospitalized, Turkish media reported on Saturday, with initial suspicion falling on a restaurant meal they had eaten.
The boys, aged 15 and 17, were deceased when police and paramedics arrived at the hotel where they were staying, in the Fatih district, near Istanbul’s Blue Mosque and Grand Bazaar, according to the NTV television channel.
“When they arrived, ambulance paramedics noted the two children were deceased. The father was taken to hospital by ambulance” in a state of shock, the channel reported.
The three had been vacationing in Turkiye and were believed to have gone to the touristy Taksim district for dinner, media said.
The 57-year-old father told police he had gone with his sons to Taksim “but did not eat,” the Haber Turk news outlet reported.
Later that evening, after returning to the hotel, the father called out to the boys, who did not respond. A hotel employee, Mehmet Kirdag, heard the father crying for help, NTV reported.
“When I knocked at the door and entered, the two sons were dead, one of them in bed, the other on the floor... When paramedics arrived, the two young men were deceased. The father was in a state of shock,” Kirdag said.
Istanbul police have launched an investigation, NTV reported.


Vietnam evacuates tens of thousands ahead of Typhoon Kajiki

Vietnam evacuates tens of thousands ahead of Typhoon Kajiki
Updated 28 sec ago

Vietnam evacuates tens of thousands ahead of Typhoon Kajiki

Vietnam evacuates tens of thousands ahead of Typhoon Kajiki
  • The typhoon – the fifth to affect Vietnam this year – is currently at sea
  • More than 325,500 residents in five coastal provinces have been slated for evacuation
VINH, Vietnam: Tens of thousands of residents were being evacuated from coastal Vietnam on Monday, as Typhoon Kajiki barrelled toward landfall expected to lash the country’s central belt with gales of around 160 kmh.
The typhoon – the fifth to affect Vietnam this year – is currently at sea, roiling the Gulf of Tonkin with waves of up to 9.5 meters (31 feet).
More than 325,500 residents in five coastal provinces have been slated for evacuation to schools and public buildings converted into temporary shelters, authorities said.
The waterfront city of Vinh was deluged overnight, its streets largely deserted by morning with most shops and restaurants closed as residents and business-owners sandbagged their property entrances.
By dawn nearly 30,000 people had been evacuated from the region, as 16,000 military personnel were mobilized.
Two domestic airports were shut and all fishing ships in the typhoon’s path have been called back to harbor.
“I have never heard of a typhoon of this big scale coming to our city,” said 66-year-old Le Manh Tung at a Vinh indoor sports stadium, where evacuated families dined on a simple breakfast of sticky rice.
“I am a bit scared, but then we have to accept it because it’s nature – we cannot do anything,” he said, among only a few dozen people camped out at the evacuation site on Monday morning.
The typhoon is expected to make landfall around 1:00 p.m. (0600 GMT) with winds of 157 kilometers per hour (98 miles per hour), Vietnam’s National Center for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting said.
Scientists say human-caused climate change is driving more intense and unpredictable weather patterns that can make destructive floods and storms more likely, particularly in the tropics.
“Normally we get storms and flooding, but never this big,” said 52-year-old evacuee Nguyen Thi Nhan.
The typhoon’s power is due to dramatically dissipate after it makes landfall.
The Joint Typhoon Warning Center said conditions suggested “an approaching weakening trend as the system approaches the continental shelf of the Gulf of Tonkin where there is less ocean heat content.”
Over a dozen domestic Vietnamese flights were canceled on Sunday, while China’s tropical resort of Hainan evacuated around 20,000 residents as the typhoon passed its south.
The island’s main city, Sanya, closed scenic areas and halted business operations.
In Vietnam, more than 100 people have been killed or left missing from natural disasters in the first seven months of 2025, according to the agriculture ministry.
Economic losses have been estimated at more than $21 million.
Vietnam suffered $3.3 billion in economic losses last September as a result of Typhoon Yagi, which swept across the country’s north and caused hundreds of fatalities.

Mexican drug lord Ismael ‘El Mayo’ Zambada to plead guilty to federal charges

Mexican drug lord Ismael ‘El Mayo’ Zambada to plead guilty to federal charges
Updated 7 min 19 sec ago

Mexican drug lord Ismael ‘El Mayo’ Zambada to plead guilty to federal charges

Mexican drug lord Ismael ‘El Mayo’ Zambada to plead guilty to federal charges
  • Longtime leader of the Sinaloa cartel is scheduled to appear before a federal judge in Brooklyn for a change of plea hearing
  • Appearance comes after federal prosecutors said two weeks ago that they wouldn’t seek the death penalty against Zambada

NEW YORK: Former Mexican cartel kingpin Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada is expected to plead guilty Monday to federal charges related to his role in the violent drug trade that for years flooded the US with cocaine, heroin and other illicit substances.
The longtime leader of the Sinaloa cartel is scheduled to appear before a federal judge in Brooklyn for a change of plea hearing.
The appearance comes after federal prosecutors said two weeks ago that they wouldn’t seek the death penalty against Zambada, who was arrested in Texas last year.
Prosecutors, in a court filing ahead of Monday’s hearing, said they expect the 77-year-old to plead guilty to one count of racketeering conspiracy and one count of running a continuing criminal enterprise.
Zambada pleaded not guilty last year to a range of drug trafficking and related charges, including gun and money laundering offenses.
Lawyers for Zambada didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment Friday.
Prosecutors say the Sinaloa cartel evolved from a regional player into the largest drug trafficking organization in the world under the leadership of Zambada and co-founder Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzman.
They say Zambada presided over a violent, highly militarized cartel with a private security force armed with powerful weapons and a cadre of “sicarios,” or hitmen, that carried out assassinations, kidnappings and torture.
Guzman was sentenced to life behind bars following his conviction in the same federal court in Brooklyn in 2019. His two sons, who ran a cartel faction, also face federal charges.


SpaceX postpones Starship test flight over ground system issue

SpaceX postpones Starship test flight over ground system issue
Updated 8 min 30 sec ago

SpaceX postpones Starship test flight over ground system issue

SpaceX postpones Starship test flight over ground system issue
  • SpaceX is now targeting as soon as Monday, August 25, for Starship’s next launch attempt
  • Development of SpaceX’s next-generation rocket has faced repeated hiccups this year

Elon Musk’s SpaceX on Sunday called off the launch of Starship’s tenth mission from Texas over an issue at its launch site, delaying an attempt to achieve several long-sought development milestones missed due to past tests ending in early failures.
The 70.7-meter-tall Super Heavy booster and its 52-meter-tall Starship upper half sat stacked on a launch mount at SpaceX’s Starbase rocket facilities as it was being filled with propellant ahead of a liftoff time of 7:35 p.m. ET (2335 GMT).
But roughly 30 minutes from liftoff, SpaceX said on X it was standing down to allow time to troubleshoot an issue with ground systems.
Musk had been poised to provide an update on Starship’s development progress prior to the rocket’s launch on Sunday, but a placeholder live stream indicated it had been canceled.
Similar postponements in the past have been resolved in a matter of days. SpaceX is now targeting as soon as Monday, August 25, for Starship’s next launch attempt, according to its website.
Development of SpaceX’s next-generation rocket, the center of the company’s powerful launch business future and Musk’s Mars ambitions, has faced repeated hiccups this year.
Two Starship testing failures early in flight, another failure in space on its ninth flight, and a massive test stand explosion in June that sent debris flying into nearby Mexican territory have tested SpaceX’s test-to-failure development approach.
Still, the company has continued to swiftly produce new Starships for test flights at its sprawling Starbase production facilities. NASA hopes to use the rocket as soon as 2027 for its first crewed moon landing since the Apollo program.
The setbacks underscore the technical complexities of Starship’s latest iteration, packed with far more capabilities such as increased thrust, a potentially more resilient heat shield and stronger steering flaps crucial to nailing its atmospheric reentry – key traits for Starship’s rapid reusability that Musk has long pushed for.
The stacked system had been expected to blast off from Texas around sunset on Sunday before its Starship upper stage separated from the Super Heavy booster dozens of miles in altitude. Super Heavy, which has returned for a landing at its launch pad in giant mechanical arms in past tests, would have instead targeted the Gulf of Mexico for a soft water landing in order to test a backup engine configuration.
Starship was to briefly ignite its own engines to blast further into space, where it would have attempted to release its first batch of mock Starlink satellites and reignite an engine while on a suborbital path around the planet.
After that phase, the ship targets an atmospheric reentry over the Indian Ocean, a crucial flight phase that tests a variety of prototypical heat shield tiles and engine flaps designed to endure a barrage of blazing heat that has largely shredded the rocket’s exterior during past flights.
“Starship’s reentry profile is designed to intentionally stress the structural limits of the upper stage’s rear flaps while at the point of maximum entry dynamic pressure,” SpaceX said on its website.


Bleak future for Rohingya, as Bangladesh seeks to tackle crisis

Bleak future for Rohingya, as Bangladesh seeks to tackle crisis
Updated 24 min 28 sec ago

Bleak future for Rohingya, as Bangladesh seeks to tackle crisis

Bleak future for Rohingya, as Bangladesh seeks to tackle crisis
  • Bangladesh on Monday is holding talks aimed at addressing the plight of Rohingya refugees, even as fresh arrivals cross over from war torn Myanmar and shrinking aid flows deepen the crisis

DHAKA: The rain was relentless the night Mohammad Kaisar fled for his life from his home in Myanmar’s Maungdaw township.
Barefoot and exhausted, he trudged with his parents and four siblings on mud paths until they reached the Naf River.
On a flimsy boat, they crossed into Bangladesh, joining around a million of the largely Muslim Rohingya minority, fleeing a military crackdown in Myanmar’s Rakhine state.
That was in 2017. Eight years later, rain still lashes down on his simple shelter in the sprawling refugee camps of Cox’s Bazar.
But for the 28-year-old refugee, nothing has washed away his despair.
“War is raging. Hundreds are waiting at the border to enter Bangladesh. Every day, a new family from Rakhine takes refuge,” Kaisar told AFP by telephone, speaking outside his cramped hut in Balukhali camp.
“How is it possible to return home? We were destined to stay in this crowded camp, sandwiched between small huts.”


Bangladesh on Monday is holding talks aimed at addressing the plight of Rohingya refugees, even as fresh arrivals cross over from war-torn Myanmar and shrinking aid flows deepen the crisis.
The meetings in Cox’s Bazar are taking place ahead of a UN conference in New York on September 30.
Both Bangladesh and the UN want to provide stable conditions in Myanmar for the Rohingya to eventually return.
That seems unlikely any time soon.
“I consistently hear from Rohingya refugees that they want to return to their homes in Myanmar, but only when it is safe to do so,” Nicholas Koumjian, who heads the UN’s Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar, warned ahead of the meeting.
“Ending the violence and atrocities against civilians from all communities in Rakhine is critical for the eventual safe, dignified, voluntary and sustainable return of those that have been displaced.”
But Kaisar’s old homeland of Rakhine is the site of intense fighting in Myanmar’s civil war, triggered by the 2021 coup that ousted the democratic government.
Bangladesh has recorded a surge of refugees from Myanmar since early 2024, with 150,000 more Rohingya arriving.
For Kaisar, life in Myanmar was a spacious home, running a small grocery shop.
Today, in the grim camps, it’s a battle for survival.
Safety is fragile. Factional clashes have shaken the camp in recent months.
“We had two armed groups fighting only a few months ago. It was like a hostage situation,” he said.
“Violence is common; children are the most vulnerable.”


In Rahkine, restricted access due to fighting has been compounded by worldwide aid cutbacks spearheaded by US President Donald Trump’s freeze on humanitarian funding.
The World Food Programme — which received nearly half its 2024 donations from the United States — warned this month that 57 percent of families in central Rakhine are now unable to meet basic food needs.
In the camps, food too is a constant worry.
Each refugee receives a ration card worth about $12 a month. Kaisar listed what that buys: 13 kilogrammes of rice, a liter of oil, a handful of onions and garlic, and a packet of salt.
“It fills our stomachs, but there is no nutrition,” he said.
“I have a three-year-old son. He needs milk, eggs, lentils, but we cannot afford them. Nutrition centers in the camps provide support to children under two. After that, we are left to struggle.”


Education is the next looming hurdle, and Kaisar fears for his young son.
“Will he be able to study and get a job? Or will he spend his whole life as a refugee like me?” Kaisar asked.
He recalled how ordinary villagers in Bangladesh once handed him dry clothes and food after his escape. But beyond that generosity, the future looks bleak.
The violence that uprooted him still rages across the border, and Rohingya militants working with the Myanmar junta have tried to recruit refugees, according to camp residents, UN reports and analysts.
“We civilians have been continuously betrayed,” Kaisar said bitterly. “Every side has used us as pawns.”
For now, the father’s appeal is simple: that Dhaka eases restrictions on education, to allow Rohingya children to attend regular Bangladeshi schools.
“At least allow our children to attend school,” he said. “If they can stand on their own, maybe their future won’t be as hopeless as ours.”


Amid tensions with Pakistan, China’s new mega dam triggers fears of water war in India

Amid tensions with Pakistan, China’s new mega dam triggers fears of water war in India
Updated 57 min 32 sec ago

Amid tensions with Pakistan, China’s new mega dam triggers fears of water war in India

Amid tensions with Pakistan, China’s new mega dam triggers fears of water war in India
  • India fears Chinese dam will reduce flow on major river by up to 85 percent in dry season
  • Delhi says mega dam of its own will mitigate risks, but faces heavy local resistance

PARONG, India: India fears a planned Chinese mega dam in Tibet will reduce water flows on a major river by up to 85 percent during the dry season, according to four sources familiar with the matter and a government analysis seen by Reuters, prompting Delhi to fast-track plans for its own dam to mitigate the effects.

The Indian government has been considering projects since the early 2000s to control the flow of water from Tibet’s Angsi Glacier, which sustains more than 100 million people downstream in China, India and Bangladesh. But the plans have been hindered by fierce and occasionally violent resistance from residents of the border state of Arunachal Pradesh, who fear their villages will be submerged and way of life destroyed by any dam.

Then in December, China announced that it would build the world’s largest hydropower dam in a border county just before the Yarlung Zangbo river crosses into India. That triggered fears in New Delhi that its longtime strategic rival — which has some territorial claims in Arunachal Pradesh — could weaponize its control of the river, which originates in the Angsi Glacier and is known as the Siang and Brahmaputra in India.

India’s largest hydropower company in May moved survey materials under armed police protection near a prospective site of the Upper Siang Multipurpose Storage Dam, which would be the country’s biggest dam, if completed. Senior Indian officials have also been holding meetings about accelerating construction this year, including one organized in July by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s office, according to two of the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive government matters.

Delhi’s concerns were described in the undated Indian government analysis of the Chinese dam’s impact, the specifics of which Reuters corroborated with four sources and is reporting for the first time.

Beijing hasn’t released detailed plans about the dam’s construction, but the analysis drew on past work conducted by Indian government-affiliated institutions like the Central Water Commission and accounted for the expected size of the Chinese project, which broke ground in July and will cost nearly $170 billion.

Delhi estimates the Chinese dam will allow Beijing to divert as much as 40 billion cubic meters of water, or just over a third of what is received annually at a key border point, according to the sources and the document. The impact would be especially acute in the non-monsoon months, when temperatures rise and lands become barren across swathes of India. The Upper Siang project would alleviate that with its projected 14 BCM of storage capacity, allowing India to release water during the dry season. 

That could mean the major regional city of Guwahati, which is dependent on water-intensive industry and farming, would see a reduction in supply of 11 percent, according to the sources and the document, as opposed to 25 percent if the Indian dam isn’t built.

The project could also mitigate any move by Beijing to release devastating torrents of water downstream, the sources said. If the dam is at its minimum drawdown level — where water is stored at less than 50 percent of its height — it would be able to fully absorb any excess water released from a breach in Chinese infrastructure, according to the document and the sources. India is considering a proposal to keep 30 percent of its dam empty at any time in order to account for unexpected surges, two of the sources said.

A spokesperson for China’s foreign ministry said in response to Reuters’ questions that the hydropower projects “have undergone rigorous scientific research on safety and environmental protection, and will not adversely impact the water resources, ecology, or geology of downstream countries.”

“China has always maintained a responsible attitude toward the development and utilization of transboundary rivers, and has maintained long-term communication and cooperation with downstream countries such as India and Bangladesh,” the spokesperson added.

Modi’s office and the Indian ministries responsible for water and external affairs did not respond to Reuters’ questions. State-owned hydropower major NHPC also did not return a request for comment.

India’s foreign ministry has said that top diplomat S. Jaishankar raised concerns about the dam during a meeting with his Chinese counterpart on Aug. 18. A Jaishankar deputy also told lawmakers in August that the government was implementing measures to safeguard the lives and livelihoods of citizens in downstream areas, including building the dam.

India has itself been accused by Pakistan, a Chinese ally that it briefly clashed with in May, of weaponizing water. Delhi this year suspended its participation in a 1960 water-sharing treaty with Islamabad and is considering diverting flows from another crucial river away from its downstream neighbor.

An international tribunal has ruled that India must adhere to the agreement but Delhi says the panel lacks jurisdiction.

DEVELOPMENT OR DESTRUCTION?

When NHPC workers moved surveying materials near the village of Parong in May, angry locals damaged their machinery, destroyed a nearby bridge and looted the tents of police sent to guard the operation.

Many of them are members of Arunachal’s Adi community, who live off paddy, orange and sweet lime farms in the mist-shrouded hills and valleys nourished by the Siang.

The villagers have set up makeshift watch posts on regional roads to deny access to NHPC workers. That has forced security personnel to trek miles, often under cover of night, to reach a prospective site of the dam.

At least 16 Adi villages are likely to be lost to the storage area of the dam, directly affecting an estimated 10,000 people, according to two of the sources. Community leaders say more than 100,000 people will be impacted overall.

“The cardamom, paddy, jackfruit and pear we grow on this land help educate our children and support our family,” said Odoni Palo Pabin, an Adi grocer and mother of two. “We will fight the dam to death.”

The dam has the support of Arunachal’s chief minister, who is a member of Modi’s party and has called the Chinese project an existential threat. The project will “ensure water security and provide flood moderation to counter any potential water surges,” the state government said in a statement, adding that it decided in June to engage in detailed compensation discussions with families that could be affected by the dam.

Lawmaker Alo Libang, an Adi who represents an area that would be submerged by the Indian project, said he believed locals could be convinced to move if they received generous compensation.

NHPC has plans to spend more than $3 million on education and emergency infrastructure to incentivize the villagers to move elsewhere, three of the sources said, citing instructions from Modi’s office.

In one sign of progress, three villages in the area recently agreed to let NHPC officials carry out dam-related work, according to the Arunachal government and dozens of locals.

India has a history of activist movements against large dams, which have sometimes slowed these projects by years or forced them to scale down.

Even if the Upper Siang dam gets the go-ahead, it could take a decade to build after breaking ground, according to four of the sources. That means the project would likely be completed after China’s project, which Beijing expects to start generating power by the early-to-mid 2030s.

The delay means an Indian project would be vulnerable during construction if Beijing suddenly releases water during the monsoon season, triggering a surge that could wash away temporary dams, two of the sources said.

International experts and Adi activists have also warned that building large dams in seismically active Tibet and Arunachal could heighten risks for downstream communities.

The Chinese “dam is being built in a zone of high seismicity and in a zone that experiences extreme weather events,” said Sayanangshu Modak, an expert on the India-China water relationship at the University of Arizona.

“These kinds of extreme weather events trigger landslides, mudslides, glacial lake outburst flooding,” he said. “So that raises concerns about dam safety... it’s a very legitimate concern and India should engage with China.”