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Are Donald Trump’s actions in Nigeria effective? | News on Armed Groups

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The US president says air strikes are against ISIL, claiming the group targets Christians.

“More to come”: Those are the words of United States Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth after his country carried out a wave of air strikes against ISIL (ISIS) in northwestern Nigeria.

Hegseth said the aim is to stop the group’s killing of what he called “innocent Christians”.

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Back in November, President Donald Trump warned the US would take action against the group if the Nigerian government continued to allow what he claimed was the targeting of Christians.

Many say Trump was pressured by his right-wing Christian base in the US to carry out the recent attacks in Nigeria. But what could be the fallout on the African country with a highly complex religious makeup?

Presenter: Adrian Finighan

Guests:

Malik Samuel – Senior researcher at Good Governance Africa

Ebenezer Obadare – Senior fellow for Africa studies at the Council on Foreign Relations

David Otto – Deputy director of counterterrorism training at the International Academy for the Fight Against Terrorism

Jeffrey Holland, the future leader of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, passes away at 85

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Jeffrey Holland, next in line to lead the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, dies at 85

Snowstorm in New York causes widespread travel disruptions

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Kwasi Gyamfi AsieduNew York City

AFP via Getty Images A person wearing a red Christmas-themed jumper looks at the snow in Central Park in New York City on December 27, 2025.AFP via Getty Images

Some 4.3in of snow was recorded in Central Park

New York has woken up to its heaviest snowfall in nearly four years after a winter storm blanketed parts of the US north-east.

New York City’s Central Park recorded 4.3in (11cm) of snow, its highest since January 2022, while other parts of the state saw up to 7.5in of snow, said the US National Weather Service (NWS).

New York Governor Kathy Hochul declared a state of emergency for more than half of counties in the state ahead of the storm.

On Saturday, nearly 700 domestic flights were cancelled, mostly in the New York area, while more than 3,000 were delayed nationwide, according to tracking website FlightAware.

Reuters A man skis in Central ParkReuters

A Central Park skier

By early Saturday, about 6-10in of snow had fallen from Syracuse in central New York to Long Island in the south-east of the state.

The highest snowfall was recorded in neighbouring New Jersey, where a state of emergency was also declared, and Connecticut, where 9.1in of snow fell in Fairfield County.

AFP via Getty Images People walk through the snow in Brooklyn after an overnight storm in New York City on 27 December 2025 AFP via Getty Images

The New York City borough of Brooklyn on Saturday

The worst of the storm was over by Saturday morning, but temperatures were below freezing and road conditions hazardous.

The state activated a “code blue” to bring homeless people inside from the cold.

On the other side of the country, meanwhile, California is counting the cost after the worst winter storm to hit the south of the state in recent memory buried cars in rivers of mud.

Watch: Powerful storm batters southern California

Icon of a Downward Pointing Arrow Button

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Business professor and entrepreneur Scott Galloway shared some career advice for young people struggling to find a job during a recent appearance on Shane Smith’s Vice News podcast, emphasizing how networking and personal connections remain critical to a long and successful career.

During the interview, Galloway highlighted the stark mathematics of modern job searches. “Google puts out a job opening, they get 200 CVs within like eight minutes. They limit it down to the 20 most qualified. Seventy percent of the time, the person they pick is someone who has an internal advocate,” he said.

The advice from Galloway, a marketing professor from the NYU Stern School of Business, aligns with extensive research on hiring patterns. Studies show employee referrals, while representing only 6% to 7% of job applications, account for 37% to 45% of successful hires across various industries, underscoring the importance of making connections. You never know who might be able to help you get your next gig.

The social imperative

Galloway’s advice seems deceptively simple: If you want a great career, you need to make connections in the real world first. “The way you [achieve professional success] as a young person is you go out, you make friends, you drink, and at every possible opportunity, you help that person out,” he said, also recommending speaking well of others behind their backs and positioning yourself to be remembered when opportunities come up.

“You want to be placed in rooms of opportunities when you’re not physically there,” Galloway said, emphasizing effective networking creates advocates who will recommend you for positions even when you’re not actively job searching.

The professor drew parallels to high school social dynamics to illustrate his point.

“The most successful people in high school aren’t the best looking [or] the best athletes, they’re the ones that like other people the most. The kid who says, ‘Hey, you know, great game, Brett,’ or ‘Wow, way to go on the basketball team, Lisa.’ The person who shows the most goodwill and like toward other people is the most popular, successful person in high school,” he said.

Research backs up Galloway’s assertion. Referred candidates are 40% more likely to be hired than those sourced through other means, and people hired through internal referrals tend to perform 25% better and stay 70% longer than employees hired through traditional job boards.

This advice extends to current workplace trends around working remotely versus returning to the office. As you might expect, people who go into the office have a clear advantage as they’re able to be more social with colleagues. According to a 2021 study from the U.K.’s Office of National Statistics, young professionals working remotely are 38% less likely to receive promotions compared to their office-based counterparts.

You can watch the full interview with Scott Galloway and Shane Smith below.

For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing.

A version of this story originally published on Fortune.com on October 7, 2025.

Map: Taiwan Hit by 6.6-Magnitude Earthquake

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Note: Map shows the area with a shake intensity of 4 or greater, which U.S.G.S. defines as “light,” though the earthquake may be felt outside the areas shown.  All times on the map are Taiwan time. The New York Times

A strong, 6.6-magnitude earthquake struck in the Philippine Sea on Saturday, according to the United States Geological Survey.

The temblor happened at 11:05 p.m. Taiwan time about 19 miles southeast of Yilan, Taiwan, data from the agency shows.

U.S.G.S. data earlier reported that the magnitude was 6.7.

As seismologists review available data, they may revise the earthquake’s reported magnitude. Additional information collected about the earthquake may also prompt U.S.G.S. scientists to update the shake-severity map.

Source: United States Geological Survey | Notes: Shaking categories are based on the Modified Mercalli Intensity scale. When aftershock data is available, the corresponding maps and charts include earthquakes within 100 miles and seven days of the initial quake. All times above are Taiwan time. Shake data is as of Saturday, Dec. 27 at 11:21 p.m. Taiwan time. Aftershocks data is as of Sunday, Dec. 28 at 12:51 a.m. Taiwan time.

Maps: Daylight (urban areas); MapLibre (map rendering); Natural Earth (roads, labels, terrain); Protomaps (map tiles)

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Turkish authorities launch investigation into crash of Libyan officers’ jet in Turkey

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Istanbul, Turkiye – Turkish authorities and Libyan officials are conducting an investigation into the crash of a private jet that killed Libya’s army chief, Mohammed Ali Ahmed al-Haddad, and seven other people near Ankara.

The probe, coordinated by the Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office, is focusing on technical evidence, flight recordings, crew activity and aircraft maintenance, officials said. The French civil aviation investigations agency, BEA, has announced that it will participate in the probe.

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General al-Haddad had been received in Ankara on Tuesday for talks with his Turkish counterpart, Selcuk Bayraktaroglu, and Defence Minister Yasar Guler.

According to officials, the French-made Dassault Falcon 50 took off from Ankara Esenboga Airport at 2:17pm on Tuesday, heading back to Libya, reported an electrical malfunction 16 minutes later and requested an emergency return.

Radar contact was lost shortly after at 2:41 pm (17:41 GMT) while the aircraft was descending towards the runway.

Officials said there was only a two-minute window between the emergency alarm and the crash.

The probe’s many factors

The forensic examination of the bodies of General al-Haddad and his military companions was completed early on Saturday and they have been repatriated to Libya after a ceremony in their honour at an airbase outside Ankara.

The site of Tuesday’s crash – near Kesikkavak village in Haymana district, roughly 70km (43 miles) south of Ankara – has been sealed off by Turkish security forces. All wreckage, including the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder, or “black boxes”, has been secured and transported for analysis, according to authorities.

As part of the prosecutor-led investigation, specialists are examining air traffic control recordings, radar data and airport security camera footage.

Authorities have also requested communication logs between the pilots and the control tower and are reviewing the crew’s rest periods, medical history and records of meals or medication taken before the flight.

Maintenance logs and documentation related to the aircraft’s most recent checks are also under scrutiny to identify any possible technical lapses.

Fuel samples have been taken from both the wreckage and airport tanks to rule out contamination or incorrect fuel use, while local weather data from the time of the crash has been requested.

If evidence points to a structural failure or design flaw, investigators said, the inquiry could be expanded to include manufacturers and maintenance contractors.

International rules and reporting timeline

Gursel Tokmakoglu, former head of the Turkish air force’s intelligence agency, said the crash should be viewed as an international case, given the number of actors involved.

“The Libyan government chartered an aircraft from a foreign country. The aircraft was manufactured in another country. The pilots were from elsewhere. The passengers were Libyan, and the crash happened in Turkiye,” he said.

“If you also consider insurance companies and international aviation bodies, this is clearly a multinational incident.”

Earlier, Turkish Transport Minister Abdulkadir Uraloglu had announced that the black boxes may be sent to another country for further analysis, raising some questions about why analysis could not be done in either Turkiye or Libya.

Tokmakoglu said Turkiye could either examine the black boxes domestically or send them abroad for further analysis.

“Transferring the recorders can help ensure greater transparency and a clearer understanding of what happened, especially in a case involving so many international stakeholders,” he said.

Tokmakoglu noted that according to preliminary findings, the aircraft transmitted the 7700 emergency “squawk” code, which indicates an emergency that requires immediate attention, and the crew reported an electrical malfunction.

However, he added, it would be premature to assume that the electrical malfunction was the cause of the aircraft’s crash.

“In aviation, an electrical failure can trigger other problems,” he said, likening such a situation to “being admitted to intensive care for heart failure but dying later from a lung infection”.

Aviation industry analyst Guntay Simsek told Al Jazeera, citing his own sources, that there are no indications so far that the crash was caused by an external factor such as an explosion, adding that the technical investigation remains ongoing.

The probe starting immediately is within general best practices after a crash, aviation industry analyst Guntay Simsek said, pointing to ICAO regulations that govern aircraft accident investigations, which require a preliminary report within 30 days and a final report within 12 months.

Waymo’s San Francisco outage raises concerns about robotaxi readiness in times of crisis

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Analysis-Waymo’s San Francisco outage raises doubts over robotaxi readiness during crises

Russian attack leaves thousands in Kyiv without power

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Adam Goldsmithand

Tiffany Wertheimer

The sound of gunfire and blasts can be heard overnight and into the morning in Kyiv

A third of residents in Ukraine’s capital Kyiv are without power after a “massive bombing” of residential areas and critical infrastructure by Russia overnight, Ukraine’s foreign minister has said.

Andrii Sybiha said residents had been left without heating in freezing winter temperatures.

At least one person was killed and 30 others were injured in the strikes, Kyiv Mayor Vitaliy Klitschko said.

The attacks happened hours before Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky departed for Florida, where he will meet Donald Trump on Sunday for peace talks.

Russia’s ministry of defence said it had launched a “massive retaliatory strike” on Ukrainian energy infrastructure facilities.

It said it used long-range, land-, air-, and sea-based precision weapons to target the facilities, which it claimed were being used “in the interests of the Ukrainian Armed Forces and enterprises of the Ukrainian military-industrial complex”.

Following the strikes, Zelensky repeated his claim that Russia does “not want to end the war and is trying to use every opportunity to inflict more pain on Ukraine”.

Writing on Telegram, Zelensky said Russia directed almost 500 drones and 40 missiles towards Kyiv, targeting energy and civilian infrastructure.

Pictures show apartment buildings with gaping holes and homes on fire following the strikes.

The apartment block of BBC journalist Anastasiya Gribanova was struck, leaving some homes on the higher levels of the high-rise building in flames. Gribanova, who was in the building’s elevator at the time, was unharmed.

Reuters A firefighter works at a residential building that is ablazeReuters

A house in Kyiv was also hit, Ukraine’s emergency services said

Ukraine’s State Emergency Service said that 68 people were evacuated from a retirement home in the eastern Darnytskyi district.

“Russian representatives are having long conversations, but in reality the Daggers [missiles] and Shaheds [drones] are speaking for them,” Zelensky wrote on Telegram, saying that Vladimir Putin does not want to end the war.

“This sick activity can only be responded to with really strong steps. America has this opportunity, Europe has this opportunity, many of our partners have this opportunity,” he wrote, urging allies to show strength against Russian aggression.

The strikes saw Poland, which shares a 530km-long (320-miles) border with western Ukraine, ready its fighter jets, ground-based air defence systems and radar reconnaissance.

The move was “aimed at securing and protecting the airspace, especially in areas adjacent to the threatened regions,” Poland’s Armed Forces said.

Later on Saturday morning, it concluded that there had been no violation of the country’s airspace.

Meanwhile, Russia’s defence ministry said its air defences destroyed seven Ukrainian drones overnight.

Reuters A pink apartment building with a huge hole in the side of it and a firefighter on a crane spraying water into it.Reuters

The aftermath of the damage in Kyiv

On Saturday, Zelensky, EU leaders and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen are expected to hold a phone call to discuss the road to peace.

Zelensky’s new 20-point draft is a revised version of an earlier 28-point plan which was drafted by US special envoy Steve Witkoff, but widely seen as being too favourable to Russia.

The Ukrainian president has voiced optimism around the new draft, describing it as “a foundational document on ending the war”, but Trump warned that Zelensky “doesn’t have anything until I approve it” in an interview with Politico.

The draft reportedly includes security guarantees from the US, Nato and European allies for a co-ordinated military response if Russia were to invade Ukraine again.

Control of Ukraine’s eastern Donbas has been a sticking point in talks so far, but now Zelensky has said a “free economic zone” could be an option.

Trump told Politico that he was expecting to see the new draft on Sunday.

“I think it’s going to go good with him. I think it’s going to go good with [Vladimir] Putin,” Trump said in the interview, adding that he expects to speak with Russia’s president “soon”.

Former Australian Swimming Physiotherapist Peter John Wells Allegedly Accused of Sexual Assault

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By Madeline Folsom on SwimSwam

Australia’s  former Olympic Swimming Physiotherapist Peter John Wells has been accused of child sexual assault after repeated sexual contact with five girls and indecent assault of two others.

Wells is accused of having relationships with five girls in Brisbane between 2003 and 2009. At the Olympics in 2008 and 2016, he was the head physiotherapist for the Australian swim team. He was also the lead physiotherapist in 2016 for the entire Australian Olympic Team at their headquarters clinic.

When he was not at major events, he owned his own practice in Kelvin Grove and he worked at a sports complex in Chandler. Both are in Queensland and this is where the abuse allegedly occurred.

He was originally arrested in 2022 and last week he had a committal hearing where his massage techniques were discussed and at least one victim gave a testimony about their experience.

A committal hearing is designed to determine whether the evidence is substantial enough to charge the defendant with a crime. The hearing was scheduled to last at least a week with more than 26 witnesses, but after a few days, it was postponed and will resume on January 20th. Wells has not entered a plea to any charges yet.

Olympic gold medalist Bronte Barratt was called as a witness during the first part of the hearing, not a complainant. Barratt, who won a gold medal in the 800 freestyle relay in Beijing, was called to the stand due to the fact that she had extensive communication with another elite swimmer who wanted to make a report against Wells.

Barratt responded, “Such a toughie. Only do it if you feel comfortable, and it’s your life, so don’t be pressured or anything … Have you spoken to anyone else from our era? Literally every Queensland girl on the swim team would have been treated by Peter Wells at some point.”

She reportedly withheld some of the communication from the former swimmer, which is why she was questioned at the hearing.

At least one of the alleged victims got the opportunity to address the judge on the first day with the court being closed to the public to allow anonymity.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Australian Swimming’s Former Physiotherapist Peter John Wells Accused of Sexual Assault