US official says Trump not signing G7 statement on Israel-Iran de-escalation
US official says Trump not signing G7 statement on Israel-Iran de-escalation/node/2604741/world
US official says Trump not signing G7 statement on Israel-Iran de-escalation
Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer, right, and US President Donald Trump, second right, during the first working session at the G7 summit in Kananaskis, Alberta, Canada, Monday June 16, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 17 June 2025
Reuters
US official says Trump not signing G7 statement on Israel-Iran de-escalation
Canadian and European diplomats said G7 attendees are continuing discussions on the conflict at the summit in Canada, which ends on Tuesday
Updated 17 June 2025
Reuters
CALGARY, Alberta: A US official said on Monday that President Donald Trump would not sign a draft statement from Group of Seven leaders calling for de-escalation of the Israel-Iran conflict.
The draft statement, seen by Reuters, also commits to safeguarding market stability, including energy markets, says Iran must never have a nuclear weapon, and that Israel has the right to defend itself.
Canadian and European diplomats said G7 attendees are continuing discussions on the conflict at the summit in Canada, which ends on Tuesday.
Vietnam wants to be the next Asian tiger and itâs overhauling its economy to make it happen
Vietnam is launching its biggest economic overhaul in a generation, aiming to become Asiaâs next âtiger economy with reforms focused on tech, green energy,
For the first time, the ruling Communist Party is calling Vietnamâs private sector the most important force in the economy
Updated 39 sec ago
AP
HANOI: Beneath red banners and a gold bust of revolutionary leader Ho Chi Minh in Hanoiâs central party school, Communist Party chief To Lam declared the arrival of âa new era of developmentâ late last year. The speech was more than symbolicâ it signaled the launch of what could be Vietnamâs most ambitious economic overhaul in decades. Vietnam aims to get rich by 2045 and become Asiaâs next âtiger economyâ â a term used to describe the earlier ascent of countries like South Korea and Taiwan. The challenge ahead is steep: Reconciling growth with overdue reforms, an aging population, climate risks and creaking institutions. Thereâs added pressure from President Donald Trump over Vietnamâs trade surplus with the US, a reflection of its astounding economic trajectory. In 1990, the average Vietnamese could afford about $1,200 worth of goods and services a year, adjusted for local prices. Today, that figure has risen by more than 13 times to $16,385. Vietnamâs transformation into a global manufacturing hub with shiny new highways, high-rise skylines and a booming middle class has lifted millions of its people from poverty, similar to China. But its low-cost, export-led boom is slowing, while the proposed reforms â expanding private industries, strengthening social protections, and investing in tech, green energy. It faces a growing obstacle in climate change. âItâs all hands on deck...We canât waste time anymore,â said Mimi Vu of the consultancy Raise Partners. The export boom canât carry Vietnam forever Investment has soared, driven partly by US-China trade tensions, and the US is now Vietnamâs biggest export market. Once-quiet suburbs have been replaced with industrial parks where trucks rumble through sprawling logistics hubs that serve global brands. Vietnam ran a $123.5 billion trade surplus with the US trade in 2024, angering Trump, who threatened a 46 percent US import tax on Vietnamese goods. The two sides appear to have settled on a 20 percent levy, and twice that for goods suspected of being transshipped, or routed through Vietnam to avoid US trade restrictions. During negotiations with the Trump administration, Vietnamâs focus was on its tariffs compared to those of its neighbors and competitors, said Daniel Kritenbrink, a former US ambassador to Vietnam. âAs long as theyâre in the same zone, in the same ballpark, I think Vietnam can live with that outcome,â he said. But he added questions remain over how much Chinese content in those exports might be too much and how such goods will be taxed. Vietnam was preparing to shift its economic policies even before Trumpâs tariffs threatened its model of churning out low-cost exports for the world, aware of what economists call the âmiddle-income trap,â when economies tend to plateau without major reforms. To move beyond that, South Korea bet on electronics, Taiwan on semiconductors, and Singapore on finance, said Richard McClellan, founder of the consultancy RMAC Advisory. But Vietnamâs economy today is more diverse and complex than those countries were at the time and it canât rely on just one winning sector to drive long-term growth and stay competitive as wages rise and cheap labor is no longer its main advantage. It needs to make âmultiple big bets,â McClellan said. Vietnamâs game plan is hedging its bets Following Chinaâs lead, Vietnam is counting on high-tech sectors like computer chips, artificial intelligence and renewable energy, providing strategic tax breaks and research support in cities like Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, and Danang. Itâs also investing heavily in infrastructure, including civilian nuclear plants and a $67 billion NorthâSouth high-speed railway, that will cut travel time from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City to eight hours. Vietnam also aspires to become a global financial center. The government plans two special financial centers, in bustling Ho Chi Minh City and in the seaside resort city of Danang, with simplified rules to attract foreign investors, tax breaks, support for financial tech startups, and easier ways to settle business disputes. Underpinning all of this is institutional reform. Ministries are being merged, low-level bureaucracies have been eliminated and Vietnamâs 63 provinces will be consolidated into 34 to build regional centers with deeper talent pools. Private business to take the lead
Vietnam is counting on private businesses to lead its new economic push â a seismic shift from the past. In May, the Communist Party passed Resolution 68. It calls private businesses the âmost important forceâ in the economy, pledging to break away from domination by state-owned and foreign companies. So far, large multinationals have powered Vietnamâs exports, using imported materials and parts and low cost local labor. Local companies are stuck at the low-end of supply chains, struggling to access loans and markets that favored the 700-odd state-owned giants, from colonial-era beer factories with arched windows to unfashionable state-run shops that few customers bother to enter. âThe private sector remains heavily constrained,â said Nguyen Khac Giang of Singaporeâs ISEASâYusof Ishak Institute. Again emulating China, Vietnam wants ânational championsâ to drive innovation and compete globally, not by picking winners, but by letting markets decide. The policy includes easier loans for companies investing in new technology, priority in government contracts for those meeting innovation goals, and help for firms looking to expand overseas. Even mega-projects like the North-South High-Speed Rail, once reserved for state-run giants, are now open to private bidding. By 2030, Vietnam hopes to elevate at least 20 private firms to a global scale. But Giang warned that there will be pushback from conservatives in the Communist Party and from those who benefit from state-owned firms. A Closing Window from climate change Even as political resistance threatens to stall reforms, climate threats require urgent action. After losing a major investor over flood risks, Bruno Jaspaert knew something had to change. His firm, DEEP C Industrial Zones, houses more than 150 factories across northern Vietnam. So it hired a consultancy to redesign flood resilience plans. Climate risk is becoming its own kind of market regulation, forcing businesses to plan better, build smarter, and adapt faster. âIf the whole world will decide itâs a priority...it can go very fast,â said Jaspaert. When Typhoon Yagi hit last year, causing $1.6 billion in damage, knocking 0.15 percent off Vietnamâs GDP and battering factories that produce nearly half the countryâs economic output, roads in DEEP C industrial parks stayed dry. Climate risks are no longer theoretical: If Vietnam doesnât take strong action to adapt to and reduce climate change, the country could lose 12â14.5 percent of its GDP each year by 2050, and up to one million people could fall into extreme poverty by 2030, according to the World Bank. Meanwhile, Vietnam is growing old before it gets rich. The countryâs âgolden populationâ window â when working-age people outnumber dependents â will close by 2039 and the labor force is projected to peak just three years later. That could shrink productivity and strain social services, especially since families â and women in particular â are the default caregivers, said Teerawichitchainan Bussarawan of the Center for Family and Population Research at the National University of Singapore. Vietnam is racing to pre-empt the fallout by expanding access to preventive health care so older adults remain healthier and more independent. Gradually raising the retirement age and drawing more women into the formal workforce would help offset labor gaps and promote âhealthy aging,â Bussarawan said.
One of the worldâs most polluted cities, Lagos, has banned single-use plastics. Itâs not so easy/node/2611666/world
One of the worldâs most polluted cities, Lagos, has banned single-use plastics. Itâs not so easy
Updated 6 sec ago
LAGOS: Nigerian shop manager Olarewanju Ogunbona says he uses Styrofoam and plastic packs at least five times a day â nothing unusual in the megacity of Lagos, one of the worldâs most plastics-polluted urban areas. The cityâs over 20 million people contributed 870,000 tons of the worldâs 57 million tons of plastic waste in 2024. Lagos state authorities last month imposed a ban on single-use plastics, but residents say weak enforcement and the absence of alternatives have weakened its effectiveness. Under the law that kicked off on July 1, the use of single-use plastics such as cutlery, plates and straws is banned and offenders risk their businesses being shut down. However, other forms of plastics, which make up a smaller percentage of the cityâs waste, are still in use. The ban is far from being fully implemented, as some shops still display Styrofoam packs on their shelves. âSellers are still using it very well,â said Ogunbona, who continues to buy his Styrofoam-packed meals. A global treaty on plastics In Geneva this week, countries including Nigeria are negotiating a treaty to end plastic pollution. Such talks broke down last year, with oil-producing countries opposed to any limits on plastic production. In large part, plastics are made from fossil fuels like oil and gas. Lagos generates at least 13,000 tons of waste daily, almost a fifth of which is plastics, officials have said. In the absence of a proper waste management system, most of it ends up in waterways, clogging canals, polluting beaches and contributing to devastating floods. Although the state government has promoted the ban on single-use plastics as a major step, watchdogs are skeptical. âIts effectiveness is limited without strong enforcement, affordable alternatives for low-income vendors and meaningful improvements in the cityâs overwhelmed waste management systems,â Olumide Idowu, a Lagos-based environmental activist, told The Associated Press. The Lagos state government did not respond to a request for comment. Scraping off labels with razor blades With the quest for a better life driving millions of Nigerians to Lagos, some in the city are finding ways to manage the pollution. Recent years have seen a rise of private waste managers and sustainability groups helping to tackle the crisis. At a sorting site in Obalende, a bustling commercial suburb adjacent to the upscale Ikoyi neighborhood, two women with razor blades scraped labels from plastic soft drink bottles. They uncapped the bottles and threw them into different nets, ready to be compressed and sold for recycling. Competition has become tougher as more people join the work, the women said. The informal network of waste collectors sell to, or sort for, private waste management companies. They can make around around 5,000 naira ($3.26) a day. But far more work is needed. Manufacturers have a key role to play in tackling the plastic waste problem, according to Omoh Alokwe, co-founder of the Street Waste Company that operates in Obalende. âThey need to ... ensure that the plastics being produced into the environment are collected back and recycled,â Alokwe said. Experts also call for a behavioral change among residents for the law banning single-use plastics to be effective. Lagos residents need alternatives to plastics, shop owner Ogunbona said. Otherwise, âwe will keep using them.â
Zelensky, European leaders to speak to Trump ahead of Putin summit/node/2611665/world
Zelensky, European leaders to speak to Trump ahead of Putin summit
Trump agreed last week to the first US-Russia summit since 2021, abruptly shifting course after weeks of voicing frustration with Putin for resisting the US peace imitative
The unpredictability of how the summit will play out has fueled European fears that the US and Russian leaders could take far-reaching decisions and even seek to coerce Ukraine into an unfavorable deal
Updated 11 min 40 sec ago
Reuters
BRUSSELS/LONDON/KYIV: Europe and Ukraineâs leaders will speak to US President Donald Trump at a virtual meeting on Wednesday ahead of his summit with Russiaâs Vladimir Putin, as they try to drive home the perils of selling out Kyivâs interests in pursuit of a ceasefire.
Trump hosts Putin, a pariah in the West since Russiaâs 2022 invasion of Ukraine, at talks in Alaska on Friday that the US president has said will serve as a âfeel-outâ meeting in his efforts to end the Russo-Ukraine war.
Trump agreed last week to the first US-Russia summit since 2021, abruptly shifting course after weeks of voicing frustration with Putin for resisting the US peace imitative. Trump said his envoy had made âgreat progressâ at talks in Moscow.
The US president says both Kyiv and Moscow will have to cede land to end the war. Russian troops have already occupied almost a fifth of Ukraine.
The unpredictability of how the summit will play out has fueled European fears that the US and Russian leaders could take far-reaching decisions and even seek to coerce Ukraine into an unfavorable deal.
âWe are focusing now to ensure that it does not happen â engaging with US partners and staying coordinated and united on the European side. Still a lot of time until Friday,â said one senior official from eastern Europe.
Trumpâs administration tempered expectations on Tuesday for major progress toward a ceasefire, calling his meeting with Putin in Alaska a âlistening exercise.â
The video conference among Trump, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky and the leaders of Germany, Finland, France, Britain, Italy, Poland and the European Union is expected to take place at 1200 GMT (1400 CET), a German government spokesperson said.
NATOâs secretary general will also attend the conference hosted by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.
Ukraine hopes the meeting will serve â at least partially â as a European counterweight to the summit in Alaska.
European leaders, who are wary of provoking Trumpâs ire, have repeatedly emphasized that they welcome his peace efforts, while underlining that there should be no deal about Ukraine without Ukraineâs participation.
Half a dozen senior European officials told Reuters that they see a risk of a deal being struck that is unfavorable for Europe and Ukraineâs security. They said European unity would be vital if that happened. A source familiar with internal US deliberations said it could not be ruled out that Trump would seek a deal directly with Putin without involving Ukraine or Europe. But the source voiced doubt about that, saying it could cause problems with Kyiv and the EU.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Tuesday the summit will be a âlistening exerciseâ for Trump to hear what it will take to get to a deal.
After the call, Trump and Vice President JD Vance were expected to speak to European leaders at a separate online meeting at 1300 GMT (1500 CET), the German spokesperson said.
That will be followed at 1430 GMT by an online meeting of the âcoalition of the willing,â a group of countries working on plans to support Ukraine in the event of a ceasefire.
MOUNTING BATTLEFIELD PRESSURE
A Gallup poll released last week found that 69 percent of Ukrainians favor a negotiated end to the war as soon as possible. But polls also show Ukrainians do not want peace at any cost if that means crushing concessions.
Ahead of the calls, Zelensky said it would be impossible for Kyiv to agree to a deal that would require it to withdraw its troops from the eastern Donbas region, a large swathe of which is already occupied by Russia.
That, he told reporters on Tuesday, would deprive Ukraine of a vast defensive network in the region, easing the way for Russia to mount a new push deeper into Ukraine in the future.
Territorial issues, he added, could only be discussed once a ceasefire has been put in place and Ukraine has received security guarantees.
Moscowâs troops have recently ramped up pressure on the battlefield, tightening their stranglehold on the cities of Pokrovsk and Kostyantynivka in eastern Ukraine.
New Zealand prime minister says Israelâs Netanyahu has âlost the plotâ
Luxon said earlier this week New Zealand was considering whether to recognize a Palestinian state
Updated 54 min 27 sec ago
Reuters
New Zealandâs Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said on Wednesday that Israelâs leader Benjamin Netanyahu had âlost the plotâ as the country weighs up whether to recognize a Palestinian state.
Luxon told reporters that the lack of humanitarian assistance, the forceful displacement of people and the annexation of Gaza were utterly appalling and that Netanyahu had gone way too far.
âI think he has lost the plot,â added Luxon, who heads the center-right coalition government. âWhat we are seeing overnight, the attack on Gaza City, is utterly, utterly unacceptable.â
Luxon said earlier this week New Zealand was considering whether to recognize a Palestinian state. Close ally Australia on Monday joined Canada, the UK and France in announcing it would do so at a UN conference in September.
The humanitarian crisis in Gaza has reached âunimaginable levels,â Britain, Canada, Australia and several of their European allies said on Tuesday, calling on Israel to allow unrestricted aid into the war-torn Palestinian enclave.
Israel has denied responsibility for hunger spreading in Gaza, accusing Hamas militants of stealing aid shipments, which Hamas denies.
Ahead of Wednesdayâs parliamentary session, a small number of protesters gathered outside the countryâs parliament buildings, beating pots and pans. Local media organization Stuff reported protesters chanted âMPs grow a spine, recognize Palestine.â
On Tuesday, Greens parliamentarian Chloe Swarbrick was removed from parliamentâs debating chamber after she refused to apologize for a comment insinuating government politicians were spineless for not supporting a bill to âsanction Israel for its war crimes.â
Swarbrick was ordered to leave the debating chamber for a second day on Wednesday after she again refused to apologize. When she refused to leave, the government voted to suspend her.
âSixty-eight members of this House were accused of being spineless,â House speaker Gerry Brownlee said. âThere has never been a time where personal insults like that delivered inside a speech were accepted by this House and Iâm not going to start accepting it.â
As Swarbrick left, she called out âfree Palestine.â
Judge to hear arguments on halting âAlligator Alcatrazâ construction over environmental concerns
Lawyers are set to make their closing remarks Wednesday morning before US District Judge Kathleen Williams
Last week she ordered a two-week halt on new construction that doesnât include any restrictions on law enforcement or immigration enforcement activity at the center
Updated 57 min 37 sec ago
AP
MIAMI: A federal judge is set to hear closing arguments Wednesday over whether to stop construction indefinitely at an immigrant detention center in the Florida Everglades dubbed âAlligator Alcatrazâ as she considers whether it violates environmental laws.
US District Judge Kathleen Williams ordered a two-week halt on new construction last Thursday as witnesses continued to testify in a hearing to determine whether construction should end until the ultimate resolution of the case.
The temporary order doesnât include any restrictions on law enforcement or immigration enforcement activity at the center, which is currently holding hundreds of detainees. The center, which was quickly built two months ago at a lightly used, single-runway training airport, is designed to eventually hold up to 3,000 detainees in temporary tent structures.
The order temporarily barred the installation of any new industrial-style lighting, as well as any paving, filling, excavating, fencing or erecting additional buildings, tents, dormitories or other residential or administrative facilities.
Environmental groups and the Miccosukee Tribe want Williams to issue a preliminary injunction to halt operations and further construction, which they say threatens environmentally sensitive wetlands that are home to protected plants and animals and would reverse billions of dollarsâ worth of environmental restoration.
Plaintiffs presented witnesses Wednesday and Thursday who testified that the facility violates the National Environmental Policy Act, which requires federal agencies to assess the environmental effects of major construction projects.
Attorneys for the state and federal government have said that although the detention center would be holding federal detainees, the construction and operation of the facility is entirely under the state of Florida, meaning the federal environmental review wouldnât apply.
The judge last week said the detention facility was, at a minimum, a joint partnership between the state and federal government.
Witnesses describe environmental threats
Witnesses for the environmental groups have testified that at least 20 acres (8 hectares) of asphalt have been added to the site since the Florida Division of Emergency Management began construction. They said additional paving could lead to an increase in water runoff to the adjacent wetlands, spread harmful chemicals into the Everglades and reduce the habitat for endangered Florida panthers.
Amy Castaneda, the Miccosukee Tribeâs water resource director, testified Tuesday that nutrient runoff from the detention center could flow into tribal lands, changing vegetation growth. That could lead to fish kills and block humans and wildlife from moving throughout certain areas, she said.
Marcel Bozas, director of the Miccosukee Tribeâs fish and wildlife department, said tribe members hunt and fish for subsistence and cultural reasons. Sustained human activity can drive away game animals, like whitetail deer, as well as protected species, like Florida panthers, wood storks, eastern black rails and bonneted bats, he said.
State official says Florida runs center
Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles executive director David Kerner testified that the 1,800 state troopers under his command are authorized to detain undocumented migrants under an agreement with the US Department of Homeland Security. He said the federal government doesnât tell the state where to detain immigrants, and that the Everglades facility was built to alleviate overcrowding at federal immigration detention facilities, as well as state and county facilities with agreements to hold federal immigration detainees.
Kerner couldnât say how many of the âAlligator Alcatrazâ detainees have been charged with violent crimes or whether any other sites besides the middle of the Everglades were considered for possible detention centers.
Attorneys for federal and state agencies last month asked Williams to dismiss or transfer the injunction request, saying the lawsuit was filed in the wrong jurisdiction. Even though the property is owned by Miami-Dade County, Floridaâs southern district is the wrong venue for the lawsuit because the detention center is in neighboring Collier County, which is in the stateâs middle district, they said.
Williams had yet to rule on that argument.
Facility faces a second legal challenge
In a second legal challenge to âAlligator Alcatraz,â a federal judge over the weekend gave the state more time to prepare arguments against an effort to get the civil rights litigation certified as a class action.
US District Judge Rodolfo Ruiz in Miami said he will only consider a motion by detaineesâ lawyers for a preliminary injunction during an Aug. 18 hearing. He set a Sept. 23 deadline for the state to respond to the detaineeâs class action request. The second lawsuit claims detaineesâ constitutional rights are being violated because they are barred from meeting lawyers, are being held without any charges, and a federal immigration court has canceled bond hearings.
The lawsuits were being heard as DeSantisâČ administration apparently was preparing to build a second immigration detention center at a Florida National Guard training center in north Florida. At least one contract has been awarded for what is labeled in state records as the âNorth Detention Facility.â