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Pope Leo visits ‘school of peace’ sailing the Mediterranean

Pope Leo visits ‘school of peace’ sailing the Mediterranean
Pope Leo XIV arrives at the Marina of Ostia, near Rome, for a visit to the “Med 25 — Bel Espoir” Peace Training Ship, Oct. 17, 2025. (AP)
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Pope Leo visits ‘school of peace’ sailing the Mediterranean

Pope Leo visits ‘school of peace’ sailing the Mediterranean
  • The current trip began in Naples and was headed to Marseille, the eighth and final stop
  • Fatima Al-Wardi, a 30-year-old Iraqi Muslim who runs a humanitarian project in Baghdad, had never seen the sea before the voyage

OSTIA, Italy: Arm in arm, young people of different faiths perform the dabke, an Arabic folk dance, in the Italian port of Ostia, elated by a visit from Pope Leo XIV.
Behind them is the Bel Espoir, a schooner vessel on which the youths — whether from Libya and Egypt or France and Bosnia — have been sailing the Mediterranean to promote peace.
“For me especially it means a lot that the pope believes in the project and he wants to come and meet us,” Jesus Marro, a 30-year-old Spaniard, told AFP.
“He believes in peace and building bridges together.”
Since March, the ship, built in 1944 and recently restored, has welcomed some 200 young people aged 19 to 35 from different cultures and religions, making voyages across various points of the Mediterranean.
The current trip began in Naples and was headed to Marseille, the eighth and final stop.
Hailing from all parts of the Mediterranean and involved in community projects in their home countries, the youth onboard say they see the voyage as an opportunity to promote dialogue in the face of what they called a worrying rise of conflict.
On Friday afternoon, during a visit to the three-masted ship docked at the port of Ostia outside Rome, the US pope sought to encourage them to listen in “a world that is increasingly prone to violence, hatred and separation.”
Greeted by singing, the head of the Catholic Church came aboard, inspected the cabins and shared pastries in the boat’s small dining room.
“Today’s world needs signs and testimonies that give hope more than words,” he said in an impromptu speech in English on the main deck.

- ‘Life is short’ -

While sailing, the participants, who include Muslims, Orthodox Christians, Catholics and those without religion, help with chores such as cooking, cleaning and night shifts, providing a feeling of closeness.
Christina Hilana, a 27-year-old Palestinian from a village near Ramallah in the West Bank called the experience “very moving.”
“These two years have been very painful, and leaving my country in this situation has not been easy at all,” said the young woman wearing a black and white keffiyeh headdress and a gold cross around her neck.
Fatima Al-Wardi, a 30-year-old Iraqi Muslim who runs a humanitarian project in Baghdad, had never seen the sea before the voyage.
“I wasn’t ready, I’m afraid of water, I can’t swim, but life is short and when you get a chance, you have to take it,” she said.
“Iraq has seen the American army, then civil war between Sunnis and Shiites, and now there’s Daesh. We’ve been through many incessant conflicts, but we still need peace because we believe in humanity,” she said.

- ‘School of Peace’ -

The project’s co-organizer, Catholic priest Alexis Leproux from Marseille, said every day the youth exchange views on topics as varied as the environment, economy, role of women, education and cultural dialogue.
It is about “building a culture of encounter as an alternative to the culture of conflict and rivalry, and that can be learned,” he said.
Back on land, participants continue the experience during seminars and workshops in the cities they visit as part of the Catholic Church’s 2025 edition of “Mediterranean Encounters.”
Al-Wardi from Baghdad shared a passage from the Qur'an she said had left an impression.
“’Go out, explore people. I created you all so that you could get to know each other... You just have to step outside your comfort zone’.”


Flights suspended at Dhaka airport due to fire – media report

Flights suspended at Dhaka airport due to fire – media report
Updated 10 sec ago

Flights suspended at Dhaka airport due to fire – media report

Flights suspended at Dhaka airport due to fire – media report
  • Thirty-six firefighting units are already working to douse the flames
A fire broke out in the cargo section of Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport in the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka on Saturday, forcing the suspension of all flights, local newspaper The Daily Star reported.
Thirty-six firefighting units are already working to douse the flames, said Talha Bin Zasim, an officer at the Fire Service and Civil Defense Media Cell, the report added.
“All our aircraft are confirmed safe. Further updates will be provided as the situation develops,” the newspaper reported, citing a spokesperson for the airport.
Reuters could not immediately verify the report. The airport did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Repairs begin on Zaporizhzhia power plant lines after ceasefire zones established, IAEA’s Grossi says

Repairs begin on Zaporizhzhia power plant lines after ceasefire zones established, IAEA’s Grossi says
Updated 31 min 42 sec ago

Repairs begin on Zaporizhzhia power plant lines after ceasefire zones established, IAEA’s Grossi says

Repairs begin on Zaporizhzhia power plant lines after ceasefire zones established, IAEA’s Grossi says
  • The Russian-appointed management of the plant confirmed the maintenance work
  • The Russian Defense Ministry will play a key role in ensuring the safety of the repair work

Repair work has started on damaged off-site power lines to Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant following a four-week outage, IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi said on Saturday.
The work began after local ceasefire zones were established to allow the work to proceed, Grossi added in a post on social media platform X.
The Russian-appointed management of the plant confirmed the maintenance work, saying it was made possible by “close cooperation” between the IAEA and Russia’s state nuclear corporation Rosatom.
The Russian Defense Ministry will play a key role in ensuring the safety of the repair work, the plant said on Saturday via its Telegram channel.
Russian forces seized the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, Europe’s largest, in the first weeks of Moscow’s February 2022
invasion of Ukraine.
It is not currently generating electricity but relies on external power to keep the nuclear material cool and prevent a serious accident.


’No Kings’ rallies expected to draw millions across US in protest against Trump

’No Kings’ rallies expected to draw millions across US in protest against Trump
Updated 18 October 2025

’No Kings’ rallies expected to draw millions across US in protest against Trump

’No Kings’ rallies expected to draw millions across US in protest against Trump
  • More than 2,600 “No Kings” protest events are scheduled to take place on Saturday in all 50 US states, a mass mobilization against President Donald Trump’s policies on immigration

REUTERS: More than 2,600 “No Kings” protest events are scheduled to take place on Saturday in all 50 US states, a mass mobilization against President Donald Trump’s policies on immigration, education and security that organizers say are pushing the country toward autocracy.
The protests — big and little, in cities, suburbs and small towns across the US — follow similar demonstrations in June and will gauge the frustration level of opponents of a conservative agenda that has rolled out quickly.
Since Trump took office 10 months ago, his administration has ramped up immigration enforcement, moved to slash the federal workforce and cut funding to elite universities over issues including pro-Palestinian protests against Israel’s war in Gaza, campus diversity and transgender policies.
Residents in some major cities have seen National Guard troops sent in by the president, who argues they are needed to protect immigration agents and to help combat crime.
“There is nothing more American than saying ‘we don’t have kings’ and exercising our right to peacefully protest,” said Leah Greenberg, co-founder of Indivisible, a progressive organization that is the main organizer of the No Kings marches.
Trump has said very little about Saturday’s protests. But in an interview with Fox Business aired on Friday he said that “they’re referring to me as a king — I’m not a king.”
More than 300 grassroots groups helped organize Saturday’s marches, Greenberg said. The American Civil Liberties Union said it has given legal training to tens of thousands of people who will act as marshals at the various marches, and those people were also trained in de-escalation. No Kings ads and information have blanketed social media to drive turnout.
Senator Bernie Sanders, a progressive independent, and Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a progressive Democrat, have backed the marches along with former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton who lost the 2016 presidential election to Trump. An array of celebrities also has backed the movement.
In June, over 2,000 No Kings protests took place, mostly peacefully, on the same day that Trump celebrated his 79th birthday and held a military parade in Washington.
REPUBLICANS CLAIM PROTESTS ARE ANTI-AMERICAN
US House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican, on Friday echoed a common refrain among the GOP on the No Kings protests.
“Tomorrow the Democrat leaders are going to join for a big party out on the National Mall,” Johnson said at a press conference on Friday. “They’re going to descend on our Capitol for their much anticipated, so-called No Kings rally. We refer to it by its more accurate description: The hate America rally.”
Other Republicans have blasted Democrats and marches like No Kings as motivating people to carry out political violence, especially in the wake of the September assassination of political activist Charlie Kirk, a close confidant of Trump and key members of his administration.
Dana Fisher, a professor at American University in Washington, D.C., and the author of several books on American activism, forecast that Saturday could see the largest protest turnout in modern US history — she expected that over 3 million people would participate, based on registrations and participation in the June events.
“The main point of this day of action is to create a sense of collective identity among all the people who are feeling like they are being persecuted or are anxious due to the Trump administration and its policies,” Fisher said. “It’s not going to change Trump’s policies. But it might embolden elected officials at all levels who are in opposition to Trump.”


Huge crowds as body of revered Kenya politician Odinga heads home

Huge crowds as body of revered Kenya politician Odinga heads home
Updated 18 October 2025

Huge crowds as body of revered Kenya politician Odinga heads home

Huge crowds as body of revered Kenya politician Odinga heads home
  • Raila Odinga, 80, died from a suspected heart attack in India on Wednesday
  • Odinga served as prime minister from 2008 to 2013 yet never succeeded in winning the presidency despite five attempts

KISUMU, Kenya: Vast crowds gathered in western Kenya on Saturday to see the body of a beloved politician, Raila Odinga, for the biggest day of mourning ceremonies that have already claimed at least five lives this week.
There were cries of “Baba” (father) and “We are orphans” among the tens of thousands who packed the streets in Kisumu, the heartland of Odinga’s support, as his coffin arrived at the city stadium by helicopter.
Odinga, 80, died from a suspected heart attack in India on Wednesday, triggering a huge outpouring of grief across the country, but particularly in western Kenya where his Luo tribe are dominant.
Mourners barged through security barriers and clambered up the sides of the stadium and nearby structures to catch a glimpse of the coffin, AFP journalists saw.
Emergency responders said they had taken more than 100 injured people out of the stadium.
“Without Baba, we are dead. We don’t have anywhere to go,” said Don Pelido, 20, a supporter pressed up against one barrier.
Many feared Saturday’s ceremony could turn deadly, given the mayhem at memorials in Nairobi this week.
On Thursday, security forces opened fire to disperse a surging crowd in a Nairobi stadium where Odinga was brought to lie in state, killing at least three people.
And on Friday, at the state funeral in another stadium, led by President William Ruto, a stampede of mourners killed at least two people and left dozens injured.
‘Bad dream’
Arguably the most important political figure of his generation in Kenya, Odinga served as prime minister from 2008 to 2013 yet never succeeded in winning the presidency despite five attempts.
But he outlasted many rivals and is credited as a major player in returning Kenya to multi-party democracy in the 1990s and overseeing the widely praised constitution of 2010.
Odinga’s body was repatriated from India on Thursday.
After lying in state in Kisumu on Saturday, the body will go to Bondo in nearby Siaya county, the family’s ancestral seat, for a private burial.
Odinga’s death leaves a leadership vacuum in the opposition, with critics accusing him of failing to prepare a successor.
“We have not accepted that he is really gone. It is still a bad dream,” said shop owner Maureen Owesi, 39, in Kisumu.
Odinga’s pragmatic deals with rivals – including current president Ruto last year – cost him support among young voters who have staged mass protests in the last two years over poor governance and the economy.
It is unclear whether Odinga’s movement and the alliance with Ruto will survive his death, leaving Kenya on an uncertain path ahead of potentially volatile elections in 2027.


Three killed in blast at Russian chemical factory: official

Three killed in blast at Russian chemical factory: official
Updated 18 October 2025

Three killed in blast at Russian chemical factory: official

Three killed in blast at Russian chemical factory: official
  • An explosion at a chemical plant in southern Russia has killed three people, the regional governor said Saturday without giving the cause of the blast

MOSCOW: An explosion at a chemical plant in southern Russia has killed three people, the regional governor said Saturday without giving the cause of the blast.
The Avangard factory, located in the Bashkortostan region’s Sterlitamak, produces weapons and ammunition for Russia’s war in Ukraine, Russian media outlets reported.
Ukrainian drones targeting a major oil refinery hit the same region a month ago.
Bashkortostan’s governor, Radiy Khabirov, said on Telegram on Saturday that “a pretty violent explosion destroyed one of the buildings” at the chemical factory site, killing three women.
He said another five people were wounded and hospitalized, two of them in serious condition.
The factory “carries out an important state-mandated mission” and “handles explosive materials,” Khabirov said.
He said the cause of the blast was being evaluated by experts.
On September 18, Ukrainian drones hit the Bashkortostan oil refinery run by state-controlled giant Gazprom, as part of a Kiev counter-offensive targeting Russian energy revenues used to fund the military.
Khabirov at the time confirmed that two drones had hit the refinery.