A$AP Rocky’s accuser set to testify about alleged shooting in the biggest moment at rapper’s trial

A$AP Rocky’s accuser set to testify about alleged shooting in the biggest moment at rapper’s trial
The trial’s key witness, known by the name A$AP Relli, will provide what’s likely to be the trial’s most important piece of testimony when he gets back on the stand Wednesday. (AFP)
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Updated 29 January 2025

A$AP Rocky’s accuser set to testify about alleged shooting in the biggest moment at rapper’s trial

A$AP Rocky’s accuser set to testify about alleged shooting in the biggest moment at rapper’s trial
  • A former friend of A$AP Rocky is set to testify about the moment the hip-hop star allegedly fired a gun at him on a Hollywood street in 2021
  • The trial’s key witness, known by the name A$AP Relli, will provide what’s likely to be the trial’s most important piece of testimony when he gets back on the stand Wednesday

A former friend of A$AP Rocky is set to testify Wednesday about the moment the hip-hop star allegedly fired a gun at him on a Hollywood street in 2021.
The trial’s key witness, known by the name A$AP Relli, will provide what’s likely to be the trial’s most important piece of testimony when he gets back on the stand.
Rocky, whose legal name is Rakim Mayers, has pleaded not guilty two felony counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm. His lawyer says the shots he fired were blanks from a starter pistol that he carried as a prop.
On Tuesday, Relli, born Terell Ephron, described the first part of the confrontation, and was on the verge of describing the alleged shooting itself when court ended for the day.
He said he and Rocky, members of A$AP, a crew of creators at a New York high school, had been close but their relationship eroded after fame came for Rocky.
He said their relationship had been strained for years and getting worse in the previous days, but he was still “furious” when Rocky pulled a gun on him after a scuffle that began the moment the two met up near the W Hotel.
“I told him to use it. Because mentally I couldn’t believe it,” Relli testified, with his old friend staring at him intently from the defense table. “I physically could not believe there was a gun in my face. That was the breaking point for me.”
He said he had expected to argue but reconcile with his old friend, and the last thing he wanted to do was get into a fight that could ruin the modest music management business he had built.
“He’s famous,” Relli said. “I’m nobody.”
The testimony will come on an abbreviated court day. The trial will only be in session for two hours in the morning because of a prosecutor’s previous commitment. Relli can expect to face fierce cross-examination from the defense that could begin Wednesday.
Raised in Harlem, Rocky’s rap songs became a phenomenon on the streets of New York in 2011. He had his mainstream breakthrough when his first studio album went to No. 1 on the Billboard 200 in 2013. The second one, in 2015, did the same.
He’s set to have his biggest career year as a multi-media star. This Sunday, he’s nominated for a Grammy Award for best music video for his song “Tailor Swif,” at the ceremony at Crypto.com Arena just two miles from the Los Angeles courthouse where his trial’s being held.
He’s also set to headline the Rolling Loud Music Festival, to star opposite Denzel Washington in a film directed by Spike Lee, and to co-chair the Met Gala in May.
But the prospect of a conviction and the possibility of a maximum of 24 years in prison casts a shadow over all of it.
Rocky is the longtime partner of Rihanna, with whom he has two toddler sons. She has yet to appear at his trial.


Jumbo drop in estimates of India elephant population

Jumbo drop in estimates of India elephant population
Updated 15 October 2025

Jumbo drop in estimates of India elephant population

Jumbo drop in estimates of India elephant population
  • India is home to the majority of the world’s remaining wild Asian elephants
  • The species listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature
NEW DELHI: India’s wild elephant population estimates have dropped sharply by a quarter, a government survey incorporating a new DNA system has found, marking the most accurate but sobering count yet.
India is home to the majority of the world’s remaining wild Asian elephants, a species listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and increasingly threatened by shrinking habitat.
The Wildlife Institute of India’s new All-India Elephant Estimation report released this week puts the wild elephant population at 22,446 – down from nearly 29,964 estimated in 2017, a fall of 25 percent.
The survey drew on genetic analysis of more than 21,000 dung samples, alongside a vast network of camera traps and 667,000 kilometers (414,400 miles) of foot surveys.
But researchers said the methodological overhaul meant the results were “not comparable to past figures and may be treated as a new monitoring baseline.”
‘Gentle giants’
But the report also warned that the figures reflect deepening pressures on one of India’s most iconic animals.
“The present distribution of elephants in India represents a mere fraction of their historical range,” it said, estimating they now occupy only about 3.5 percent of the area they once roamed.
Habitat loss, fragmentation, and increasing human-elephant conflict are driving the decline.
“Electrocution and railway collisions cause a significant number of elephant fatalities, while mining and highway construction disrupt habitats, intensifying man-wildlife conflicts,” the report added.
The Western Ghats, lush southern highlands stretching through Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, and Kerala, remain a key stronghold with nearly 12,00 elephants.
But even there, populations are increasingly cut off from one another by commercial plantations, farmland fencing, and human encroachment.
Another major population center lies in India’s northeast, including Assam and the Brahmaputra floodplains, which host more than 6,500 elephants.
“Strengthening corridors and connectivity, restoring habitat, improving protection, and mitigating the impact of development projects are the need of the hour to ensure the well-being of these gentle giants,” the report said.

The world’s driest desert blooms into a rare, fleeting flower show

The world’s driest desert blooms into a rare, fleeting flower show
Updated 14 October 2025

The world’s driest desert blooms into a rare, fleeting flower show

The world’s driest desert blooms into a rare, fleeting flower show
  • 2025 was one of Atacama’s wettest in recent years, with some high-elevation borderlands receiving up to 60 mm of rain in July and August
  • Seeds from more than 200 flower species sit in the red and rocky soil of the Atacama all year, awaiting the winter rains, says Chilean botanist

LLANOS DE CHALLE NATIONAL PARK, Chile: A rare bloom in Chile’s Atacama Desert has briefly transformed one of the world’s driest places into a dazzling carpet of fuchsia-colored wildflowers.
The arid region — considered the driest nonpolar desert on Earth, averaging around 2 millimeters (0.08 inches) of rainfall a year — was a riot of color this week after unusual downpours throughout the Southern Hemisphere’s winter months soaked the desert foothills and highlands.
Experts describe 2025 as among the Atacama’s wettest in recent years, with some high-elevation borderlands receiving up to 60 millimeters of rain (2.3 inches) in July and August.
Seeds from more than 200 flower species sit in the red and rocky soil of the Atacama Desert all year, awaiting the winter rains, said Víctor Ardiles, chief curator of botany at Chile’s National Museum of Natural History.
Moisture from the Amazon basin arrives to the desert’s eastern fringes as modest rainfall, and from the Pacific Ocean to its coastline as dense fog. Dormant seeds must store up at least 15 millimeters (0.6 inches) of water to germinate.
“When certain moisture thresholds are met, (the seeds) activate, grow and then bloom,” Ardiles said.
Yet even then there’s no guarantee that brightly colored bulbs will explode through the soil.
“There are four key factors that determine whether this process reaches the seed – water, temperature, daylight and humidity,” Ardiles added.
“Not all the seeds will germinate, some will remain waiting … a portion will make it to the next generation, while others will be left behind along life’s path.”
The main threads in the floral carpet are pink and purple. But yellow, red, blue and white strands emerge as well.
Tourists flocked to the northern desert in recent days to marvel at the short-lived flower show. Some even trek from Chile’s capital, Santiago, 800 kilometers (497 miles) south of the Copiapó region.
Most flowers will have vanished by November, as summer sets in. But more drought-resistant species can stick around until January.
“It’s one of those rare things you have to take advantage of,” said Maritza Barrera, 44, who hit the road with her two kids for almost six hours to catch the desert bloom in the Llanos de Challe National Park last week. “It’s more stunning than I could have imagined.”
Recognizing the ephemeral desert flowers as a conservation priority, Chilean President Gabriel Boric minted a new national park further inland in 2023, converting about 220 square miles (570 square kilometers) of flower fields along the Pan-American Highway into Desert Bloom National Park.
“Nowhere on Earth does this phenomenon occur like it does here in Chile,” Ardiles said.
 


’Taste of peace’: Palestinian, Israeli join forces in Paris

’Taste of peace’: Palestinian, Israeli join forces in Paris
Updated 12 October 2025

’Taste of peace’: Palestinian, Israeli join forces in Paris

’Taste of peace’: Palestinian, Israeli join forces in Paris
  • “I’m happy about this day because it comes at a time when there is finally hope there too,” said Laloum as Aboudagga looked on, referring to the expected return of Israeli hostages and the release of Palestinian prisoners

PARIS: A new restaurant opened its doors in Paris on Saturday, founded by a Palestinian from Gaza and a Franco-Israeli, aiming to promote reconciliation through food.
The Palestinian, French and Israeli flags fly from the ceiling of ٲ, the Taste of Peace,” where the first customers packed in to eat hummus, falafel or Gazan salad.
Radjaa Aboudagga and his team have been toiling since 6:00 am to create the Middle Eastern dishes for families and friends of all ages seated on mats or at tables.
“Everything is handmade,” said Aboudagga, a Franco-Palestinian originally from the Gaza Strip, in the restaurant’s crowded kitchen, as he prepares “manakish,” a flatbread topped with cheese, ground beef and herbs.
The restaurant, which will be open four nights a week until June next year, was conceived with Franco-Israeli Edgar Laloum, in partnership with the “Nous reconcilier” (We Reconcile) group.
“I’m happy about this day because it comes at a time when there is finally hope there too,” said Laloum as Aboudagga looked on, referring to the expected return of Israeli hostages and the release of Palestinian prisoners.
Laloum, who lived for 30 years in Jerusalem, said the restaurant’s menu is made of “dishes that Israelis and Palestinians eat in the same way.”
“The two peoples, Palestinian and Israeli, have the same customs, the same dreams, the same tears and the same sadness,” added Aboudagga.
“We share the same land, we all have to live together on it,” he added, welcoming the decision of the French government and others to recognize a state of Palestine.

- Joie de vivre -

The restaurant is housed at the Consulat Voltaire, an old electricity sub-station turned cultural center, in the 11th district of Paris near the place de la Bastille.
One customer, Raphael, who did not want to give his last name, told AFP that the three flags were “symbolic.”
“It’s very beautiful and I was explaining to my son that, in the end, we can all live together.”
Another diner, Henri Poulain, 57, said he saw it as a sign of “reconciliation” and “a link between the French Republic on the one hand” and “these two states, one of which has yet to be born.”
Even if the war were to resume in the Gaza Strip, he said he was convinced “it wouldn’t weaken a place like this.”
Psychosociologist Joelle Bordet, 72, said she thought the word “reconciliation” was “too strong.”
“Just being together in the same space, when you’re effectively enemies, is extraordinary,” she said. “I can’t do it today in my network with Russians and Ukrainians.”
Next to Bordet was Nour-Eddine Skiker, head of the “Jalons pour la paix” association, some of whose volunteers came with a local youth council group to lend a hand.
“In this very small space, there is room for everyone,” he said.
One of the young volunteers, Mboreha Ahamed, 23, added: “Being here under these three flags is super symbolic... over a meal where we think of other things.”
At about 2:00 pm, the queue to order mezze was long.
Readings of poems in Hebrew, Arabic and French, discussion groups and concerts were all planned, all, in the words of the restaurant’s founders, in the spirit of “joie de vivre” — the meaning of ٲ” in both Israel and the Palestinian Territories.
 

 


Spain finds 250 dead animals in ‘breeding ground of horror’

Spain finds 250 dead animals in ‘breeding ground of horror’
Updated 11 October 2025

Spain finds 250 dead animals in ‘breeding ground of horror’

Spain finds 250 dead animals in ‘breeding ground of horror’
  • The dead animals, which included 28 chihuahuas and birds, were “in different stages of decomposition”
  • The Civil Guard saved 171 other animals, including exotic and protected bird species

MADRID: Spanish police on Saturday said they made an arrest after finding 250 dead animals, mostly dogs, in a filthy warehouse that local media dubbed “the breeding ground of horror.”
The Civil Guard said the illegal site in the northwestern village of Meson do Vento had “extremely poor” hygiene and animal welfare conditions, with cages “totally covered in excrement.”
The dead animals, which included 28 chihuahuas and birds, were “in different stages of decomposition, some even mummified,” the force said in a statement.
The Civil Guard saved 171 other animals, including exotic and protected bird species such as macaws and cockatoos, which were found in a life-threatening condition.
The survivors were feeding off the dead animals due to the lack of food and water.
The site manager was arrested on charges of animal abuse, illegal possession of protected species and unqualified veterinary practice.


An old tradition finds new life as Germans flock to forests to collect mushrooms

An old tradition finds new life as Germans flock to forests to collect mushrooms
Updated 11 October 2025

An old tradition finds new life as Germans flock to forests to collect mushrooms

An old tradition finds new life as Germans flock to forests to collect mushrooms
  • Across Germany, the traditional forest art of mushroom hunting is enjoying a revival, fed by the coronavirus pandemic restrictions
  • While people in rural areas have gone mushroom picking for ages, city dwellers are now also discovering its joys

POTSDAM, Germany: Wolfgang Bivour carefully emptied a basket of freshly collected mushrooms onto a forest floor covered with fallen autumn leaves. Brown-capped porcini and bay boletes lay beside slimy purple brittlegills and honey-colored armillaria – and, among them, the lethal green death caps.
Bivour, one of Germany’s most famous fungi connoisseurs, described the different species just collected in an oak and beech forest on the outskirts of Potsdam in eastern Germany. Surrounding him were 20 people who listened attentively, among them university students, retirees and a Chinese couple with their 5-year-old daughter.
Across Germany, the traditional forest art of mushroom hunting is enjoying a revival, fed by the coronavirus pandemic restrictions, which pushed people from cramped apartments into forests, and by the growing popularity of the vegan lifestyle. A growing interest in the use of medicinal fungi is also playing a role.
While people in rural areas have gone mushroom picking for ages, city dwellers are now also discovering its joys.
Mushroom hunting was a necessity for many Germans in the difficult years after World War II, when people scoured forests for anything edible. But when West Germany’s economy started booming in the 1950s, and economic conditions also improved in East Germany, many turned away from the practice.
In recent years, images of mushrooms have gone viral on social media, and a hobby once considered uncool has become a chic lifestyle pastime.
Guided tours on mushroom hunting are hugely popular
Bivour, a 75-year-old retired meteorologist, said the tour he led on a recent, drizzly autumn day wasn’t “primarily about filling your basket – although it’s always nice to find something for the dinner table.”
Instead, he said, it was “about teaching people about the importance of mushrooms in the ecosystem and, of course, about biodiversity.”
Bivour is sometimes sought out by hospitals when they have cases of suspected mushroom poisonings.
He has also been giving mushroom tours in the Potsdam region southwest of Berlin for more than five decades.
When the members of his group showed him mushrooms, he identified them with their German and sometimes their Latin names. He spoke about their healing powers or toxicity, gave suggestions on how to prepare some of them, offered historical anecdotes. He invited them to smell and taste the ones that were not poisonous.
Karin Flegel, the managing director of Urania, a Potsdam institution that organizes Bivour’s tours, said his classes are filling up instantly.
“We’ve noticed a huge increase in interest in mushrooms,” she said.
Bivour said he, too, had noticed the surge of interest in his longtime hobby. He began sharing his best finds on Instagram and Facebook, has written books on the subject, and even hosts a popular podcast, the Pilz-Podcast. Pilz is the German word for mushroom.
Fears of poisonous mushrooms
Many people are embracing their new passion with caution, afraid of accidentally picking and eating poisonous mushrooms.
While the poisonous red-capped, white-dotted fly agaric can be easily identified, the very toxic green death cap is sometimes confused with the common button mushroom, or champignon, which is the most widely sold mushroom in stores across the country.
Each year, several people die after eating death caps, often immigrants from the Middle East who are not familiar with the local mushroom varieties.
Tim Köster, a 25-year-old university student from Berlin who joined the excursion with his girlfriend, said he had never foraged for mushrooms as a child, and is often satisfied with the white button mushrooms in the stores. But he also wants to be able to find and prepare his own porcini mushrooms – considered the most popular delicacy among Germany’s more than 14,000 different kinds of mushrooms.
While porcini are often served in risotto or pasta in Italian cuisine, in Germany porcini, as well as bay boletes, are often fried in butter and eaten on toasted sourdough bread with salt and pepper.
As Koster stood amid an abundance of yellow and red fall foliage, he said that the tour was a good start. But asked if he was ready to start collecting mushrooms on his own, he said: “I don’t dare yet.”
Instead, he said he considers picking mushrooms and taking them to an expert to verify that they are edible. Experts often offer their knowledge on fall weekends at markets or community colleges where people can bring their bounty and make sure they haven’t accidentally pick poisonous pieces.
Margit Reimann, a 42-year-old who participated in the tour with her mother, said she was surprised to learn how many edible mushroom varieties there are.
But despite her newly acquired knowledge, she plans to stick to the familiar ones – porcini, butter mushrooms, slippery jacks and bay boletes – when going out to the woods with her kids. During the excursion she learned that colors and grain patterns can’t always be clearly determined.
“I think that if enjoyed in moderation, many of them would be a culinary experience, but I still don’t trust myself,” she said.