Spain reverses ban on hunting wolves in north

Spain reverses ban on hunting wolves in north
An Iberian wolf roams inside an enclosure at the Lobo Park in Antequera near Malaga, southern Spain, Feb. 22, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 20 March 2025

Spain reverses ban on hunting wolves in north

Spain reverses ban on hunting wolves in north
  • An amendment stipulates that capture and killing of wolves may be 'justified' in the event of a threat to the Spanish agricultural production
  • Conservation group Ecologists in Action called the reversal of the hunting ban 'irresponsible'

MADRID: Spanish lawmakers on Thursday voted to end a ban on hunting wolves in the north of the country, three years after its introduction by Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s minority leftist government.
Spain declared Iberian wolves living north of the Douro river a protected species in 2021, extending an existing hunting ban that was in place in the south over the objections of farmers who argued that it would lead to more attacks on their livestock.
Controlled hunting of the species had been allowed until then in the region which includes Asturias, Cantabria, Castile and Leon, and Galicia where the vast majority of the country’s Iberian wolves live.
The reversal of the hunting ban was introduced via an amendment to a law on food waste and approved with the votes of lawmakers from the conservative main opposition Popular Party (PP), far-right Vox, Basque regional party PNV and Catalan separatists JxCat.
The amendment introduced by the PP stipulates that the capture and killing of wolves may be “justified” in the event of a threat to the Spanish “productive system,” namely agricultural production.
It removes the wolf from a list of wild species under “special protection” north of the Douro.
Conservation group Ecologists in Action called the reversal of the hunting ban “irresponsible” while animal rights party PACMA described it as “the biggest step backwards in wildlife conservation in years.”
Members of the Bern Convention, tasked with the protection of wildlife in Europe and some African countries, in December agreed to lower the wolf’s protection status from “strictly protected” to “protected.”
Grey wolves were virtually exterminated in Europe 100 years ago but their numbers have rebounded since then to the current population of 20,300, mostly in the Balkans, Nordic countries, Italy and Spain.


Muhammad Ali’s unsigned draft card, a piece of Vietnam-era history, will be auctioned

Muhammad Ali’s unsigned draft card, a piece of Vietnam-era history, will be auctioned
Updated 59 min 5 sec ago

Muhammad Ali’s unsigned draft card, a piece of Vietnam-era history, will be auctioned

Muhammad Ali’s unsigned draft card, a piece of Vietnam-era history, will be auctioned
  • There’s a blank line on the card where Ali was supposed to sign in 1967 but refused to do so
  • The document could fetch $3 million to $5 million, the auction house estimated

Muhammad Ali’s refusal to sign his Vietnam-era military draft card upended the boxing champ’s life and added a powerful voice to the anti-war movement. Now that piece of history is coming up for sale.
There’s a blank line on the card where Ali was supposed to sign in 1967 but refused to do so — a polarizing act of defiance as the Vietnam War raged on. It triggered a chain of events that disrupted his storied boxing career but immortalized him outside the ring as a champion for peace and social justice.
“Being reminded of my father’s message of courage and conviction is more important now than ever, and the sale of his draft card at Christie’s is a powerful way to share that legacy with the world,” Rasheda Ali Walsh, a daughter of Ali, said Thursday in a statement issued by the auction house.
The auction house said it will hold the online sale Oct. 10-28, adding the card came to it via descendants of Ali. A public display of the card began Thursday at Rockefeller Center in New York and will continue until Oct. 21. The document could fetch $3 million to $5 million, Christie’s estimated.
“This is a singular object associated with an important historical event that looms large in our shared popular culture,” said Peter Klarnet, a Christie’s senior specialist.
Ali, the three-time heavyweight boxing champion, died in 2016 at age 74 after a long battle with Parkinson’s disease. An estimated 100,000 people chanting, “Ali! Ali!” lined the streets of his hometown of Louisville, Kentucky, as a hearse carried his casket to a local cemetery. His memorial service was packed with celebrities, athletes and politicians.
The draft card, typewritten in parts, conjures memories from when Ali wasn’t universally beloved but instead stood as a polarizing figure, revered by millions worldwide and reviled by many.
For refusing induction into the US Army, Ali was convicted of draft evasion, stripped of his boxing title and banned from boxing. Ali appealed the conviction on grounds he was a Muslim minister. He famously proclaimed: “I ain’t got no quarrel with them Viet Cong.”
During his banishment, Ali spoke at colleges and briefly appeared in a Broadway musical. He was allowed to resume boxing three years later.
He was still facing a possible prison sentence when in 1971 he fought Joe Frazier, his archrival, for the first time in what was labeled “The Fight of the Century.” A few months later the US Supreme Court overturned the conviction on an 8-0 vote.
The draft card was issued the day the draft board in Louisville ordered Ali to appear for induction, Christie’s said Thursday in a news release. The card was signed by the local draft board chairman but pointedly not by Ali.
The card identified him by his birth name — Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr. — but misspelled his given middle name. Upon his conversion to Islam, he was given a name reflecting his faith, the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville says on its website. Meanwhile, the top of the draft card reads: “(AKA) Muhammad Ali.”
The Ali Center features exhibits paying tribute to Ali’s immense boxing skills. But its main mission, it says, is to preserve his humanitarian legacy and promote his six core principles: spirituality, giving, conviction, confidence, respect and dedication.
Now an artifact reflecting how Ali personified some of those principles will be up for auction.
“This is the first time collectors will be able to acquire a vital and intimate document connected to one of the most important figures of the last century,” Klarnet said Thursday.


Meta unveils AI-powered smart glasses with display and neural wristband at Connect event

Meta unveils AI-powered smart glasses with display and neural wristband at Connect event
Updated 18 September 2025

Meta unveils AI-powered smart glasses with display and neural wristband at Connect event

Meta unveils AI-powered smart glasses with display and neural wristband at Connect event

MENLO PARK, California: Meta’s newest artificial-intelligence powered smart glasses include a tiny display and can be controlled by a neural wristband that lets you control it with “barely perceptible movements,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced Wednesday.
Zuckerberg continues to evangelize the glasses as the next step in human-computer interactions — beyond keyboards, touch screens or a mouse.
“Glasses are the only form factor where you can let AI see what you see, hear what you hear,” and eventually generate what you want to generate, such as images or video, Zuckerberg said, speaking at the tech giant’s Menlo Park, California, headquarters.
The glasses, called Meta Ray-Ban Display, will be available Sept. 30 and cost $799.
Mike Proulx, research director at Forrester, said Meta’s latest reveal is “reminiscent of when the Apple Watch first debuted as an alternative to the smartphone.”
“But what these glasses do is bring more utility to consumers in a single device. Unlike VR headsets, glasses are an everyday, non-cumbersome form factor,” the analyst added. “However, the onus is on Meta to convince the vast majority of people who don’t own AI glasses that the benefits outweigh the cost. The good news? There’s a lot of runway to earn market share.”
Meta also updated its original, display-less Ray-Ban glasses to have a better battery life, which Meta says lasts eight hours with typical use, nearly twice as long as the previous model. An upcoming feature, called “conversation focus,” will amplify the voice of the person the user is speaking to and help drown out background noise. This will be available on the older version of the glasses too, as a software update, Zuckerberg said. Meta also added German and Portuguese to the gadget’s live translation capabilities. The new model costs $379, and the previous model now costs $299.
The company also unveiled a new set of AI-powered glasses for athletes, called the Oakley Meta Vanguard, which Meta says is specifically for “high-intensity sports” and can be integrated with Garmin devices to give users feedback about their workouts such as heart rate and stats. For instance, a runner could ask “Hey Meta, what’s my heart rate?” and get a voice response through the glasses. It also auto-captures video clips when the user hits key milestones or ramps up their heart rate, speed or elevation. The glasses will cost $499 and go on sale Oct. 21.
While the company has not disclosed sales figures of the glasses, it said they have been more popular than expected.
“For more than a decade, Zuckerberg’s long-term vision with Oculus and the Metaverse has been that glasses and headsets will blur the lines between physical and digital worlds,” Forrester analyst Thomas Husson said. “After many false starts, the momentum to move beyond an early adopter niche is now.”
Meta teased a prototype for Orion, which Zuckerberg called “the most advanced glasses the world has ever seen,” last year — but these holographic augmented reality glasses are still years away from being on the market.
Like other tech companies, Meta has been making massive investments in AI development and hiring top talent at eye-popping compensation levels.
In July, Zuckerberg posted a note detailing his views on “personal superintelligence” that he believes will “help humanity accelerate our pace of progress.” While he said that developing superintelligence is now “in sight,” he did not detail how this will be achieved or exactly what “superintelligence” means. The abstract idea of “superintelligence” is what rival companies call artificial general intelligence, or AGI.
Zuckerberg has said he believes AI glasses are going to be “the main way we integrate superintelligence.”


Jimmy Kimmel show off air ‘indefinitely’ after Charlie Kirk comments

Jimmy Kimmel show off air ‘indefinitely’ after Charlie Kirk comments
Updated 18 September 2025

Jimmy Kimmel show off air ‘indefinitely’ after Charlie Kirk comments

Jimmy Kimmel show off air ‘indefinitely’ after Charlie Kirk comments

LOS ANGELES, US: Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night television show has been taken off the air “indefinitely” after the host was criticized for comments about the motives behind the killing of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk, US network ABC said.
The stunning decision to suspend one of the United States’ most popular and influential late-night shows comes as President Donald Trump has widened his legal attacks on media organizations that he accuses of bias against him.
“Jimmy Kimmel Live will be preempted indefinitely,” an ABC spokesperson told AFP, using a television industry term for when a show is replaced or removed from the schedule.
Kirk, a close ally of President Donald Trump, was shot dead last week during a speaking event on a Utah university campus.
Authorities said 22-year-old Tyler Robinson used a rifle to shoot Kirk with a single bullet to the neck from a rooftop. He was arrested and has been formally charged with his murder.
On Monday, Kimmel spoke about the shooting in his popular late-night show’s monologue.
“We had some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and with everything they can to score political points from it,” said Kimmel.
“MAGA” refers to the president’s “Make America Great Again” movement.
The White House this week said it would be pursuing an alleged left-wing “domestic terror movement” in the wake of Kirk’s killing, prompting alarm that such a campaign could be used to silence political dissent.
ABC’s decision came shortly after Nexstar — one of the country’s biggest owners of ABC affiliate stations — said it would not broadcast “Jimmy Kimmel Live” for “the foreseeable future.”
In a statement, Nexstar broadcasting president Andrew Alford said the company “strongly objects” to Kimmel’s comments.
“Mr. Kimmel’s comments about the death of Mr. Kirk are offensive and insensitive at a critical time in our national political discourse, and we do not believe they reflect the spectrum of opinions, views, or values of the local communities in which we are located,” he said.
“Continuing to give Mr.Kimmel a broadcast platform in the communities we serve is simply not in the public interest at the current time, and we have made the difficult decision to preempt his show in an effort to let cooler heads prevail as we move toward the resumption of respectful, constructive dialogue.”
Kimmel did not immediately comment, and representatives for the entertainer did not respond to AFP queries.
The decision to suspend Kimmel’s show comes as Trump has intensified his long-established hostility toward the media.
Since his return to the White House, the president has repeatedly badmouthed journalists critical of his administration, restricting access and bringing lawsuits demanding huge amounts of compensation.
The US president filed a $15 billion defamation lawsuit against The New York Times on Monday, alleging a “decades-long pattern” of smears driven by feelings of “actual malice.”
While broad constitutional protections exist for US media, Trump has found success in similar lawsuits brought against other news organizations, winning multi-million dollar settlements from Disney-owned ABC and Paramount-owned CBS.
The settlements in those cases — which are to be paid to Trump’s future presidential library — were seen as being motivated by the desire of the news organizations’ parent companies to stay in Trump’s good graces.


The oldest mummies in the world may hail from southeastern Asia and date back 12,000 years

The oldest mummies in the world may hail from southeastern Asia and date back 12,000 years
Updated 15 September 2025

The oldest mummies in the world may hail from southeastern Asia and date back 12,000 years

The oldest mummies in the world may hail from southeastern Asia and date back 12,000 years
  • Researchers found human remains that were buried in crouched or squatted positions with some cuts and burn marks in various archaeological sites across China and Vietnam and to a lesser extent, from the Philippines, Laos, Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia

NEW YORK: Scientists have discovered what’s thought to be the oldest known mummies in the world in southeastern Asia dating back up to 12,000 years.
Mummification prevents decay by preserving dead bodies. The process can happen naturally in places like the sands of Chile’s Atacama Desert or the bogs of Ireland where conditions can fend off decomposition. Humans across various cultures also mummified their ancestors through embalming to honor them or send their souls to the afterlife.
Egypt’s mummies may be the most well-known, but until now some of the oldest mummies were prepared by a fishing people called the Chinchorro about 7,000 years ago in what’s now Peru and Chile.
A new study published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences pushes that timeline back.
Researchers found human remains that were buried in crouched or squatted positions with some cuts and burn marks in various archaeological sites across China and Vietnam and to a lesser extent, from the Philippines, Laos, Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia.
Studying the bones further, scientists discovered the bodies were likely exposed to heat. That suggested the bodies had been smoke-dried over a fire and mummified by hunter-gatherer communities in the area.
The practice “allowed people to sustain physical and spiritual connections with their ancestors, bridging time and memory,” study author Hirofumi Matsumura with Sapporo Medical University in Japan said in an email.
Dating methods used on the mummies could have been more robust and it’s not yet clear that mummies were consistently smoke-dried across all these locations in southeastern Asia, said human evolution expert Rita Peyroteo Stjerna with Uppsala University in Sweden, who was not involved with the research.
The findings offer “an important contribution to the study of prehistoric funerary practices,” she said in an email.
Mummies are far from a thing of the past. Even today, Indigenous communities in Australia and Papua New Guinea smoke-dry and mummify their dead, scientists said.

 

 


UK’s largest lake ‘dying’ as algae blooms worsen

UK’s largest lake ‘dying’ as algae blooms worsen
Updated 14 September 2025

UK’s largest lake ‘dying’ as algae blooms worsen

UK’s largest lake ‘dying’ as algae blooms worsen
  • For the third year running toxic blue-green algae blooms that look like pea soup and smell like rotten eggs have covered much of Lough Neagh, the largest lake in the UK and Ireland

BALLYRONAN: For the third year running toxic blue-green algae blooms that look like pea soup and smell like rotten eggs have covered much of Lough Neagh, the largest lake in the UK and Ireland.
But this summer, the thick green veneer — so widespread it is visible from space — has been worse than ever, according to locals living near the Northern Ireland landmark.
“The lake is dying,” Mary O’Hagan, an open water swimmer, told AFP at Ballyronan, on its western shore, as ducks struggled over slick green-coated stones.
The algae growth — fueled by industrial, agricultural and sewage pollution, as well as climate change, according to experts — has ravaged fishing and watersports, and prompted concerns about drinking water safety.
Signs banning bathing dot the lake’s 78-mile-long shoreline, including at Ballyronan, 34 miles (54 kilometers) west of the Northern Irish capital Belfast.
Nutrient-rich fertilizer and slurry run-off from farms supplying mega-firms like chicken processor Moy Park are being blamed for contributing to the pollution.
Untreated sewage spills and septic tank effluent are also suspected.
Moy Park deny polluting the lake and say the poultry sector is “highly regulated with strict limits set for wastewater quality” at all its local sites.
The algae growth is a “complex issue not specifically linked to any one sector,” a spokesperson told AFP.

- ‘Heartbreaking’ -

Lough Neagh was O’Hagan’s “training ground” during the Covid years, but she has hardly dipped a toe in the water since.
The 48-year-old told AFP she suffers from chronic health problems and swimming is her only exercise. Now she must rely on local swimming pools.
“Swimming here with its spectacular sunrises helped me when I was in a bad place in my life. It’s heartbreaking to see it now,” she said as green-tinted waves lapped the shore.
O’Hagan has joined a campaign group, “Save Lough Neagh,” and at a recent protest urged Northern Ireland’s regional government to act faster.
“Fine the polluters!” she said, calling in addition for the creation of an independent environmental agency able to punish factory farms and agri-food giants guilty of pollution.
The invasive zebra mussel species, a recent arrival in the lake’s waters, filter water but any benefit is far outweighed by the molluscs also stimulating algal photosynthesis, worsening the green water effect.
Meanwhile the algae has decimated the Lough Neagh fly, a staple for fish and birds, local fisherman Mick Hagan told AFP while casting a line in a nearby tributary river.
“This river used to be full of trout, but no longer,” said the 38-year-old wading back to dry land without a catch.
Europe’s largest eel fishery — also on the lough — suspended operations this year due to quality concerns.
Hagan’s is the first of many generations in his family not to fish for eels in Lough Neagh.
Now he runs a pizza truck at a campervan site near Ballyronan, but the powerful stench from the lough kept most tourists away this summer.

- ‘Doctor Sludge’ -

According to Gavin Knox, whose paddleboard small business also fell victim to the sludge, the foul smell can reach miles inland.
The 48-year-old launched his venture in 2022 to help people safely have fun on the water.
Working with people with learning disabilities and brain injuries as well as families, Knox said bookings gradually dried up after the algae appeared.
“Doing business became impossible,” he told AFP. “Even if there are safe places to paddle, nobody wants to do it when the fish are dying and the birds are covered in green slime.”
Forced to repay a large start-up loan, he is angry that no compensation was ever offered by the government to affected small businesses.
“It’s not fair that the people most impacted haven’t been responded to in a meaningful manner,” said Knox.
Last July the regional government launched an action plan to kickstart a fix.
But less than half the planned measures have been delivered.
The remaining steps have “delivery timelines extending into 2026 and beyond,” said a government statement sent to AFP. It did not provide further details.
With around 40 percent of Northern Ireland’s drinking water supplied by Lough Neagh, the risk of a health emergency might force swifter action by authorities, said Les Gornall, a local slurry expert whose nickname is “Doctor Sludge.”
“If Belfast suddenly cannot guarantee a clean water supply, then there would be a property and tourism crash,” he predicted.
“Maybe that prospect will jolt them into fixing the lake.”