Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Fourteen-year-old boy from Hampshire charged with plotting terror attack

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A 14-year-old boy has been charged with plotting a terror attack, police say.

The teenager, from Eastleigh in Hampshire, has been charged with one count of preparation of terrorist acts, contrary to Section 5(1)(a) of the Terrorism Act 2006 connected to Islamist terrorism.

Counter Terrorism Policing South East (CTPSE) said the boy, who has not been named, was arrested by officers from Hampshire Constabulary on Friday – and later further arrested by counter-terrorism detectives under Section 41 of the Terrorism Act.

He is due to appear before Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Thursday.

A CTPSE statement said: “We know that the community of Eastleigh might be concerned about this news, however Hampshire Constabulary have been working closely with colleagues in Counter Terrorism Policing South East on this investigation and we want to reassure you that we believe the investigation is isolated, and with no known wider risk to the community.

“If you think you have seen something suspicious that may be linked to terrorist activity, have the confidence to share those concerns. It may be unusual behaviour in a particular place or at a particular time of day – don’t rely on others.”

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ACLU Drags John Bolton’s Record After He Retweets Support Of His Book Release

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FILE – This May 11, 2012, file photo shows Nusrat Chadoury, lead attorney for the plaintiffs, National ACLU National Security Program, talking with reporters following oral arguments on the ACLU No Fly List challenge, in Portland, Ore. A federal appeals court ruled Thursday that a lawsuit over the government’s no-fly list can go forward in a lower court in Oregon.”More than two years ago, our clients were placed on a secret government blacklist that denied their right to travel without an explanation or chance to confront the evidence against them,” Nusrat Choudhury, an ACLU lawyer who argued the case, said in a statement. “The Constitution requires the government to provide our clients a fair chance to clear their names and a court will finally hear their claims.” (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)

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Virginia Gov. Northam: ‘There’s been an awakening’ on Black ‘oppression’

RICHMOND, Va. — Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam on Wednesday called President Donald Trump’s police reform executive order a “step in the right direction,” but cautioned there’s “a lot” of work left to do to address racial bias in policing and the excessive use of force by some officers.

Speaking during an exclusive interview set to air Wednesday evening on “Nightly News with Lester Holt,” Northam said that “police brutality, the racism that exists here in 2020” underscore the need for reform.

“We really need to reform our police forces,” Northam told NBC News, pointing to ideas like diversifying police, implementing body cameras and educating police officers on de-escalation techniques.

“There’s been an awakening of really what black oppression is. A lot of people that look like me have learned a lot, have listened, have seen the pain that is in this country, that is in Virginia in the last few weeks,” he added.

“People are now standing up and saying enough is enough. And so, this is an opportunity for us to really change the direction and change the course of history not only in Virginia, but in this country.”

Trump signed his executive order on Tuesday after weeks of protests calling for reforms to policing. The measure encourages police departments to ban chokeholds unless officers lives are at risk, creates a national database of excessive fore complaints and calls for mental-health professionals to be more involved in police response.

Congress is also looking at legislative measures — both House Democrats and Senate Republicans have unveiled plans that are expected to receive votes in the coming weeks.

Virginia is currently wrestling with removing statues honoring Confederate leaders across the state. The state’s capital, Richmond, served as the capital of the Confederacy during the Civil War, and is still home to many commemorations of the Confederacy.

Northam called Confederate statues “symbols of divisiveness,” evoking the 2017 white nationalist rally in Charlottesville protesting the removal of a statue honoring Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. Now, the state is fighting a court battle over its attempts to remove another statue of Lee, this time in Richmond.

“I said back then: These statues need to come down. They need to be either in museums or cemeteries or somewhere out of the public, where they’re not symbols, where they’re not glorifying the institution of slavery, where they’re not glorifying this divisiveness. And so I have been committed to doing that,” he said.

“It shouldn’t matter the color of your skin, the country that you come from, the religion that you practice or who you love. We want to welcome people to Virginia, and how can we welcome people to our capitol city to Virginia with a lineup of five Confederate generals? In 2020, we can do better than that.”

A neurologist, Northam served in the state senate and as lieutenant governor before being elected governor in 2017. The debate over Virginia’s Confederate statues played a big role in that campaign, particularly after the white nationalist rally in Charlottesville that summer where a counter-protestor was killed.

In 2019, Northam’s medical school yearbook picture was discovered, showing one man in blackface and another in what appeared to be a Ku Klux Klan-style robe on Northam’s page. The governor initially apologized “for the decision I made to appear as I did in this photo and for the hurt that decision caused then and now,” and bucked calls to resign.

He subsequently denied being in the picture upon further review, and an investigation by Eastern Virginia Medical School “could not conclusively determine” whether one of the two men pictured was Northam. But he did admit to appearing in blackface — darkening his face with shoe polish — while impersonating Michael Jackson at a dance competition.

Northam repeated those denials Wednesday, arguing that the issue was bigger than him and that he’s since committed himself to addressing racial inequality issues in office.

“We’ve had two very thorough investigations, and those investigations showed no evidence of me being in the picture,” he said.

“This isn’t about me anymore. This is really about Virginia, it’s about this country, it’s about black oppression, it’s about systemic racism and that’s really what I would like people to focus on moving forward.”

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Vestager – EU needs the right tools to ensure that foreign subsidies do not distort the Single Market

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Executive Vice-President Margrethe Vestager

Today (17 June) the European Commission adopted a White Paper on the distortive effects caused by foreign subsidies in the Single Market. The Commission now seeks views and input from all stakeholders on the options set out in the White Paper.

The EU’s competition rules, trade defence instruments and public procurement rules play an important role in ensuring fair conditions for companies in the Single Market, the so-called level playing field. Subsidies by EU member states have always been subject to EU state aid rules to avoid distortions. However, subsidies granted by non-EU governments to companies in the EU appear to be having an increasingly negative impact on competition within the Single Market, but fall outside the EU’s state aid controls. 

The Commission says that there are a growing number of instances in which foreign subsidies seem to have facilitated the acquisition of EU companies or distorted investment decisions, or public procurement. 

The Commission has put forward several approaches to resolving this problem. The first three options aim at addressing the distortive effects of foreign subsidies (i) in the Single market generally (Module 1), (ii) in acquisitions of EU companies (Module 2) and (iii) during EU public procurement procedures (Module 3). These Modules may be complementary to each other, rather than alternatives. The White Paper also sets out a general approach to foreign subsidies in the context of EU funding.

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Tulsa Health Official Urges Rally Postponement As Oklahoma Sees Spike In COVID-19 Cases

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The top health official in Tulsa, Oklahoma, urged the Trump campaign Wednesday to postpone its upcoming rally in the city, pointing out that the state just saw its largest daily increase in COVID-19 cases and that a massive public gathering could cause another spike. 

“I know so many people are over COVID, but COVID is not over,” Bruce Dart, executive director of the Tulsa Health Department, said in a news briefing. He pleaded with people to wear masks and take precautions.

Supporters of President Donald Trump are expected to completely fill Tulsa’s 19,000-seat BOK Center indoor arena Saturday for Trump’s first rally since the campaign paused events because of the pandemic.

The virus is still a major problem in the U.S. ― there have been more than 2.1 million cases in the country and more than 117,000 deaths ― but Trump has pushed to reopen the country and restart public campaign events. 

This worries some officials in Oklahoma, where there have been 8,904 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 364 deaths, according to totals released Wednesday. The state reported its largest single-day increase in cases, up 259 from the day before. Tulsa County has reported 1,825 confirmed cases and 64 deaths so far. 

The rally’s large crowd in an indoor venue, and the lack of a requirement that attendees wear masks, poses risks to those who attend. The campaign is even making attendees agree not to sue if they do get COVID-19.

The campaign will check attendees’ temperatures and give out hand sanitizer and face masks before entry, Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale tweeted on Monday. 

Trump told Gray Television on Wednesday that he was not concerned about people getting sick at the rally, even though cases are rising in Oklahoma.

“If you look, the numbers are very minuscule compared to what it was,” he said. “It’s dying out. … We’re not concerned. Actually, Oklahoma has had a very low rate relatively speaking. It is a little spike, a small spike for a specific reason.”

“We’ll go there, everyone is going to be safe,” Trump added.

Top Trump backers acknowledged the rally won’t be safe for some supporters. 

“If you have comorbidities, if you are older or if you have other health issues, don’t come. Watch it on TV,” Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) said Wednesday on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” adding that he encourages attendees to wear masks, but “that’s gonna be an individual decision.” 

Despite the concerns, the campaign is moving ahead with the rally. Kellyanne Conway, a top White House adviser to the president, told reporters Wednesday that “people are going to go if they feel comfortable going.” 

But White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany repeatedly declined on Wednesday to tell reporters which health officials Trump consulted before picking Oklahoma as a site for the rally. The White House has not offered up any other experts to vouch for the safety of the rally.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, an infectious disease expert and member of the White House’s coronavirus task force, said he personally would not attend a rally. 

“I’m in a high risk category,” Fauci told The Daily Beast on Tuesday. “Personally, I would not. Of course not.” He added that “outside is better than inside, no crowd is better than crowd” and “crowd is better than big crowd.”

The state has several large outdoor venues, including the University of Oklahoma football stadium in Norman, the Oklahoma State University football stadium in Stillwater and the University of Tulsa football stadium. Each can handle the same number of people as the BOK Center arena. Lankford said the rally would be held indoors because of the heat. 

Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum, a Republican, on Tuesday also voiced his concerns about the rally coming into his city. 

“Was the nation’s first large campaign rally after the arrival of COVID-19 my idea? No,” Bynum said in a Facebook post. “Do I share anxiety about having a full house at the BOK Center? Of course. As someone who is cautious by nature, I don’t like to be the first to try anything. I would have loved some other city to have proven the safety of such an event already.” 

But Oklahoma’s GOP Gov. Kevin Stitt has been very receptive to the idea of Trump’s coming to Tulsa and even invited him to visit the Greenwood District, site of the Tulsa Race Massacre that occurred 99 years ago, sparking outrage among Black Oklahomans. 

Stitt declined HuffPost’s request for a comment on the potential dangers of increased COVID-19 and the measures the state is taking to promote safety among rally attendees. 

Beyond the COVID-19 concerns, the rally was controversial for its location and its initial date. The fact that the campaign picked Tulsa, where the racist massacre took place, was offensive to many, given the ongoing protests against racism and police brutality.

In addition, the campaign initially scheduled the rally for Juneteenth (which takes place Friday), a holiday that celebrates the emancipation of enslaved people in the U.S. The campaign pushed the rally to Saturday in light of that concern.

A HuffPost Guide To Coronavirus



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Bolton Claims Trump Asked China’s President For Favor To Boost Reelection Chances

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President Donald Trump asked Chinese President Xi Jinping to help him win reelection in 2020 by purchasing agricultural products from key U.S. states, former national security adviser John Bolton wrote in his new book.

During a Group of 20 summit meeting in Japan last summer, Trump was “pleading with Xi to ensure he’d win,” Bolton wrote in a book excerpt published Wednesday in The Wall Street Journal. 

Trump stressed the importance of farmers and of “increased Chinese purchases of soybeans and wheat” to his electoral success, Bolton wrote. He added that he would have printed Trump’s exact words, but the “government’s prepublication review process has decided otherwise.”

Trump’s conversations with Xi reflected not only the incoherence in his trade policy but also the confluence in Trump’s mind of his own political interests and U.S. national interests. Trump commingled the personal and the national not just on trade questions but across the whole field of national security. I am hard-pressed to identify any significant Trump decision during my White House tenure that wasn’t driven by reelection calculations.

He said he reported such incidents to Attorney General William Barr and White House Counsel Pat Cipollone, The New York Times reported.

Neither the Justice Department nor the White House immediately responded to HuffPost’s requests for comment.

Reacting to Bolton’s highly anticipated memoir, “The Room Where It Happened,” Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, blasted Trump in a statement. 

“If these accounts are true, it’s not only morally repugnant, it’s a violation of Donald Trump’s sacred duty to the American people to protect America’s interests and defend our values,” the former vice president said of Bolton’s allegation that Trump had sought Xi’s help to get reelected.

Biden also issued a warning to China’s leaders “or anyone else who President Trump might invite to interfere: Stay out of our democracy. Stay out of our elections. The American people alone will decide the future of this country, and I am confident in the choice they will make.”

Bolton makes several startling revelations in his book, which is set to be released Tuesday.

According to the excerpt in the Journal, Trump also encouraged Xi to build camps to imprison Uighur Muslims in China. Bolton said Xi had told Trump during a 2019 G-20 meeting that he was “basically building concentration camps” to detain Uighurs. 

“Trump said that Xi should go ahead with building the camps, which Trump thought was exactly the right thing to do,” Bolton wrote of the exchange, quoting an interpreter.

Bolton also wrote that Trump was willing to intervene in Justice Department investigations into Chinese and Turkish companies to curry personal favor with the countries’ autocratic leaders. 

The Trump administration sued Bolton on Tuesday to block the publication of the book, arguing that it contains classified information. In response, Bolton’s attorney accused the White House of using national security information as a pretext to censor Bolton.

Bolton, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under President George W. Bush, served as Trump’s national security adviser from April 2018 to September 2019. He resigned amid reports that he disagreed with Trump on certain foreign policy issues, including strategy on North Korea.

Trump claimed he fired Bolton, but Bolton has said this isn’t true and that he was never directly or indirectly asked to resign.

In his book, Bolton bashed House Democrats for focusing too much on Trump’s Ukraine dealings during the impeachment proceedings and not targeting the president’s other foreign policy debacles.

Democrats asked Bolton to testify as part of the impeachment inquiry, but he refused. He said he would testify during the Senate trial if he was issued a subpoena. The Republican-controlled Senate voted 51-49 against calling new witnesses and ultimately acquitted the president.

On Wednesday, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), who led the prosecution in the impeachment trial, skewered Bolton over his refusal to testify before the House.

“Bolton may be an author, but he’s no patriot,” Schiff wrote on Twitter.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said in a statement that the revelations in Bolton’s book validated House Democrats’ vote to impeach Trump and cast a harsh light on Senate Republicans’ subsequent decision to acquit him. 

“It was clear then and could not be any clearer now: the vote to convict and remove Donald Trump from office was absolutely the right vote,” Schumer wrote. “The revelations in Mr. Bolton’s book make Senate Republicans’ craven actions on impeachment look even worse — and history will judge them for it.”



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A Savory Loaf Packed With Cheese and Olives

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I’ve eaten my fair share — arguably more than my fair share — of sweet loaf cakes since the start of this pandemic. But not so many savory ones. So, to rectify that, I baked a cheesy olive bread with chopped fresh thyme, and served it, still warm, for breakfast on Wednesday.

To make it, heat the oven to 350 degrees and grease a 9-inch loaf pan (or line it with parchment).

In a large bowl, whisk together 2½ cups/320 grams all-purpose flour (or a combination of all-purpose and some whole-wheat or rye flour), 1 teaspoon kosher salt, 1½ teaspoons baking powder and ½ teaspoon baking soda.

In a smaller bowl (or a large measuring cup so you don’t have to wash a bowl), whisk together ¼ cup/60 milliliters olive oil and 1 cup/240 milliliters fermented dairy product like buttermilk or plain yogurt. (If using thick Greek yogurt, thin it down with a little water or milk.) I used some yogurt plus the whey leftover from yogurt making, and it worked perfectly. Whisk in 2 eggs.

Whisk the wet ingredients into the dry. It’s a heavy, thick batter.

Now, switch to a rubber spatula and fold in ¾ cup/110 grams sliced pitted olives and 1¾ cups/7 ounces grated cheese. (I used Gruyère, but Cheddar or another firm, grating cheese is fine.) Finally, add a tablespoon or so fresh thyme leaves (or use fresh oregano, marjoram or rosemary, or 1 teaspoon dried thyme). I should have added some freshly ground black pepper to the batter, but didn’t think of it. Next time.

Spread the batter in the pan and scatter another ¼ cup/1 ounce grated cheese on top. I also tossed on some fresh thyme sprigs just to use them up and because they look pretty. But they don’t add any real flavor at this point, so feel free to skip.

Bake until the cheese is browned and the top of the loaf springs back when lightly pressed, 45 to 55 minutes. Serve warm as soon as you can unmold it (about 30 minutes after baking). Or try it toasted later in the day. I like mine piled with sliced tomatoes and onions. But if you’ve got a jar of tapenade in the fridge, you could spread that on top to underscore the savory, olive point.

This is part of a series in which Melissa Clark teaches you how to cook with pantry staples. See more. From the Pantry will resume on Monday, June 22.

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#BlackLivesMatter – ‘In our Union there is no place for racism or any kind of discrimination’ Von der Leyen

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President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen

Following the death of George Floyd an African American man who died while being arrested by police officers on the street in the US city of Minneapolis on 25 May. The European Parliament organised a debate to discuss the racism, discrimination and police violence often faced by minorities, in particular, those of African descent.

Floyd’s death, along with similar cases, sparked both peaceful and violent demonstrations and protests against racism and police brutality all over the US, as well as in Europe, despite the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

The President of the European Commission Von der Leyen argued that we have to relentlessly need to fight racism and discrimination. Von der Leyen said: “Let us look around us, here, in this very hemicycle. The diversity of our society is not represented. And I will be the first to admit, things are not better in the College of Commissioners, nor among the European Commission staff. This is why I say: we need to talk about racism. And we need to act. It is always possible to change direction if there is a will to do so. We need to talk about racism with an open mind.”

The President said that the European Union already prohibits discrimination at the highest possible legal level through its Treaty and Charter of Fundamental Rights and through additional legislation and European funds, but that Europe needs to try harder. 

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Nonbinary astronomers need better support from their field, study finds

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Gender equality in astronomy doesn’t end with the male/female gender binary. 

In a study led by nonbinary astrophysicist Kaitlin Rasmussen, researchers took a look at gender equity in astronomy and what practices could address outstanding issues that leave out or have a negative impact on researchers who do not fit into binary male or female gender identities. 



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