reels

A week after the floods, central Mexico still reels from the devastation | Floods News

The stench of decay extends miles beyond Poza Rica in one of the regions most devastated by last week’s torrential rains that inundated central and eastern Mexico.

By Wednesday, the official death toll had reached 66, with the number of missing people increasing to 75. Nearly 200 communities remain isolated — predominantly in Hidalgo’s central mountainous region, where persistent cloud cover has hindered helicopter access.

A persistent dust cloud hangs over the main avenue of Poza Rica, a gulf-adjacent oil-producing city, where soldiers laboured continuously. To the east, near the overflowed Cazones River, numerous streets remained submerged under 3 feet (about 1 metre) of water and mud, covered by an additional 6 feet of accumulated rubbish, furniture, and debris.

“A week later, this looks horrible — worse. You can’t even cross the street,” lamented Ana Luz Saucedo, who escaped with her children when water rushed in “like the sea”.

She now fears disease because a decomposing body near her home remains uncollected. “The dead body has already started to rot, and no one has come for him.”

The impact of last week’s catastrophic rains, floods, and landslides continues to unfold as Mexico’s government proceeds with rescue and recovery operations.

Officials attribute the disaster to multiple converging weather systems — two tropical systems colliding with warm and cold fronts — arriving as an unusually intense rainy season concluded, leaving saturated rivers and unstable hillsides.

Residents like Saucedo believe warnings were insufficient, particularly in Poza Rica.

“Many people died because they didn’t give notice — really, they didn’t warn us,” she said. “They came only when the river was already overflowing … not before, so people could evacuate.”

President Claudia Sheinbaum explained that alert systems for such events differ from hurricane warnings. She acknowledged the need to review river maintenance and emergency protocols after the crisis to determine “what worked, what we need to improve and whether there are better alert mechanisms”.

Military, naval, and civilian emergency teams continue operating across affected states, supplemented by hundreds of volunteers.

In Poza Rica, women from Veracruz distributed clothing and 1,000 pots of homemade tamales to flood victims.

Meanwhile, authorities work to clear blocked roadways, restore electricity, and monitor dams — many now at maximum capacity.

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Shock and disbelief as Manchester community reels from synagogue attack | Religion News

Residents in UK’s Crumpsall say they are shocked after a car and knife attack near synagogue kills two people.

Manchester, England – As people gathered near a synagogue in Manchester, hours after an attack there killed two people, many struggled to make sense of the assault. Attacks don’t happen in places like this, locals say, not least on Yom Kippur.

About 9.30am (08:30 GMT) on Thursday, a man drove his car into people near the Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation Synagogue in Crumpsall in the north of Manchester before emerging to attack others with a knife.

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The synagogue’s security staff and members of the public prevented him from entering the building before police arrived and fatally shot the assailant, who appeared to be wearing an “explosive device”, police said. Four injured people were admitted to hospital in serious condition.

Two people have been arrested since the attack, said the Metropolitan Police’s head of counterterrorism policing, Assistant Commissioner Laurence Taylor. The identity and potential motives of the attacker have not been disclosed.

Standing with some of his family on the corner of a nearby road with a police helicopter hovering overhead, 23-year-old Zaki said he still can’t believe what happened.

“I heard the shots this morning,” he told Al Jazeera. “It didn’t seem believable. I thought it was fireworks.”

Zaki echoed the comments of many who gathered around the synagogue. These things don’t happen here, onlookers said. Crumpsall has long been a multicultural area. “Everyone in our community gets on well,” Zaki said. “Our neighbours are Jewish.”

Another resident, 41-year-old Sam Martin, also described struggling to understand the attack.

“There’s everyone here,” he told Al Jazeera, “Muslims, Jews, everyone. I’ve known nothing but love and kindness from our Jewish community. I’m just shocked this could happen.”

According to many people in the neighbourhood, even Israel’s war on Gaza hasn’t caused any great division within the community. However, many expressed concerns that far-right groups – their confidence fuelled after an August campaign to hang English flags across the country and a mass rally in London a month later – would seek to take advantage of the attack to further unrest.

Far-right activist Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, who uses the pseudonym Tommy Robinson, quickly seized upon the attack, assigning blame to groups from the Board of Deputies of British Jews to the United Kingdom’s ruling Labour Party for the assault despite the identity and potential motives of the attacker remaining unclear.

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar criticised British authorities, accusing them of failing to curb anti-Semitism.

“Blatant and rampant antisemitic and anti-Israeli incitement, as well as calls of support for terror, have recently become a widespread phenomenon in the streets of London, in cities across Britain, and on its campuses,” he wrote on X.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said the attacker was a “vile” person who was motivated to attack Jews “because they are Jews.”

One of the young men gathered near the police cordon, 23-year-old Akiva, who asked neither to be recorded or have notes taken during his interview out of respect for the holiday, was sure the English far right would seize upon the attack. He said the attack has shaken Jewish residents and would likely sow divisions in the otherwise quiet and well integrated community.

Akiva had come to the synagogue to check on his brother, who normally took a route past the synagogue on his way to worship. He said his mother collapsed when she first heard of the attack so close to their home in Manchester.

Other members of the district’s Jewish community gathered nearby spoke of feeling targeted for their identity, of having been attacked on their holiest day of the year.



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South East Nigeria Still Reels from Nnamdi Kanu’s Incarceration

Most communities in southeastern Nigeria fall silent every Monday. Markets that once buzzed with commerce stand empty, schools that nurtured dreams remain locked, and roads that carried aspirations lie barren. This weekly ritual of protest, born from the continuous detention of Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), has become both a symbol of resistance and a testament to a region’s suffering. Through the voices of ordinary people who live this reality daily, the human impact of this political stalemate reveals a story of economic devastation, social disruption, and unwavering determination.

The story of Kanu’s incarceration is deeply intertwined with historical grievances that predate Nigeria’s independence. For many in the South East, the continued detention of the secessionist leader represents another chapter in the systematic marginalisation of the Igbo people. This sentiment echoes through the region, from the bustling cities to the rural communities where memories of the 1967–1970 civil war remain fresh.

“You cannot understand the current situation without acknowledging the historical context,” said Prof. Chinedu Okafor, a historian at Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Anambra State. “The Igbo people have long felt like second-class citizens in Nigeria, and Kanu’s movement tapped into that deep well of frustration. His detention has become a symbol of wider injustices that people here experience daily, from inadequate infrastructure to limited political representation.”

The cost of empty streets

The sit-at-home protests have unleashed an economic catastrophe across South East Nigeria. Analysts estimate the region has lost between ₦900.9 billion and ₦7.6 trillion over roughly 191 days of forced closures since October 2021. But behind these numbers lie countless personal tragedies: businesses destroyed, dreams deferred, and livelihoods lost.

“Before this struggle, I could feed my family and pay my children’s school fees from my fabric business. Now, I’m deep in debt. Every Monday we’re forced to close, I lose customers who go elsewhere,” said Chinelo Ogadi, a trader at the Onitsha Main Market. “The worst part is we don’t even know when this will end. They’re killing us slowly, and nobody in government seems to care.”

Her frustration is shared across sectors, from petty traders to transport operators who keep the region moving. 

Ekene Okoye, a transportation business owner in Enugu, said the protests have crippled his business. Of his five buses that once ran between Enugu and Port Harcourt, three now sit idle. He has also laid off more than half of his drivers, “young men with families depending on them”. For Ekene, “this isn’t just about Nnamdi Kanu; it’s about all of us suffering for politics.”

The impact extends beyond direct losses. Small-scale businesses that relied on daily savings schemes now struggle to contribute on Mondays, undermining their ability to invest in future and creating a ripple effect that stifles growth across the region.

Education and community under threat

The sit-at-home has done more than crippling the economy. It has begun to erode the very social foundations of the South East. Education, highly valued in Igbo culture, has become collateral damage in this prolonged political struggle.

“How can I teach when classes are constantly disrupted?” Adaobi Nwosu, a secondary school teacher in Aba, asked. “My students are falling behind their peers in other regions. The worst was when protesters attacked primary school children taking entrance exams. Is this how we fight for freedom? By destroying our children’s future?”

The disruptions have been severe, with schools and universities repeatedly shutting down, denying students the stability of continuous learning. Beyond the classroom, the social contract that binds communities together is fraying under the strain of enforced compliance with protest measures.

“We’ve always prided ourselves on our strong community values, but this situation has created divisions. Some support the protests, others resent being forced to comply. It’s tearing at the fabric of our society in ways that will take generations to repair,” Onyia Kalu, a community leader in Owerri, the Imo State capital, told HumAngle.

Beneath the economic and social impacts lies a deeper psychological trauma affecting millions across the region. 

“My practice has seen a 300 per cent increase in patients with anxiety and depression since these protests intensified,” Amara Nwankwo, a psychologist in Awka, Anambra State, told HumAngle. “People are living in constant stress: fear of violence, economic uncertainty, and political instability. The trauma is particularly acute among children who don’t understand why their routines have been disrupted or why they sometimes hear gunshots.”

The psychological toll extends beyond clinical diagnoses. It manifests in the quiet desperation of parents who cannot provide for their children, the dashed hopes of graduates who see no future in their homeland, and the weary resignation of elders who have witnessed cycles of violence and protest throughout their lives.

Kanu’s health, a metaphor for regional decline

Concerns about Nnamdi Kanu’s health have become a powerful metaphor for how many in the region view their own situation. Claims that Kanu suffers from a “life-threatening heart condition” and receives inadequate medical treatment in detention mirror broader frustrations about healthcare infrastructure in the region.

His younger brother, Emmanuel Kanu, stated in a 14-paragraph affidavit that Nnamdi’s condition is serious and the medical facility where he is being detained is inadequate to treat him. These concerns have heightened tensions throughout the South East, with groups like the World Igbo Congress warning of “serious consequences” should he die in detention.

For ordinary people, these fears are folded into their daily struggles.

“The strange thing is that even those who weren’t supporters of Kanu before are now sympathetic because they see the government’s handling of the situation as unfair. It’s united people in ways I didn’t expect,” Ndidi Romanus, a restaurant owner in Umuahia, the Abia State capital, said. 

Younger Nigerians in the region, meanwhile, see little hope. “My generation is tired. We’re tired of the protests, tired of the economic hardship, tired of being afraid. But we’re also tired of a system that doesn’t work for us. Many of my friends are planning to leave the country. How can we build a future here?” Peace Emeka, a 22-year-old university student in Nnewi, said. 

From the pulpit, religious leaders echo the same sense of exhaustion. Livinus Mmadu, a religious leader in Owerri, said, “I see the pain in people’s eyes. We need dialogue, not confrontation. The government must understand that Kanu’s detention isn’t just about one man; it’s about the hopes and frustrations of millions. And those enforcing the protests must remember that violence against our own people contradicts the freedom we seek.”

Healing for the South East

As the Oct. 10, 2025, court date approaches, when Justice James Omotosho is expected to rule on a no-case submission that could lead to Kanu’s release, the region holds its breath. Yet, whatever the outcome, the underlying issues that fuelled the separatist movement cannot be solved in court alone.

Organisations like Ohanaeze Ndigbo, the apex Igbo socio-cultural group, have called for political dialogue to address the crisis at its root. John Azuta-Mbata, leader of the group, stated that “as Kanu is being incarcerated, even with a bail granted by a competent court, it is the entire Igbo that is being incarcerated”. 

Healing the South East will require more than legal decisions. The economic devastation requires targeted investment and recovery programmes to help businesses and workers affected by the prolonged protests. Schools need urgent support to catch students up after years of disrupted learning. Above all, community reconciliation processes are needed to heal the social divisions that have emerged during this period.

“We cannot solve today’s problems with the same thinking that created them. We need new approaches, new dialogues, and new understandings,” Mbazulike Amechi, an elder statesman in the region, said. “The future of our children depends on our ability to find peaceful solutions that recognise the dignity and aspirations of all people.”

As the silent Mondays continue, each empty street and closed market stand as a testament to the price ordinary people are paying for a political struggle that stretches back generations. 

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Angler reels MONSTER 9ft catfish from Czech river in epic 50-minute battle

AN ANGLER reeled in a massive 9ft catfish after a gruelling 50-minute battle.

Jakub Vagner, 43, hauled in the epic catch just south of Prague, in the Czech Republic – setting a new national record.

Man holding a 2.68-meter-long catfish.

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Celebrity angler Jakub Vagner set a Czech record with a 9ft catfishCredit: Newsflash
A man holding a 2.68-meter-long catfish in a reservoir.

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The Fish Warrior host let the giant catfish swim free again after posing for photosCredit: Newsflash
A man holding a 2.68-meter-long catfish.

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The encounter took place at the Vranov Reservoir just south of PragueCredit: Newsflash

The celebrity angler was drifting past a rocky overhang in the Vranov Reservoir, on August 4, when he spotted the giant fish gliding below in the early morning light.

He cast his custom-made rod towards it and waited.

“Ten minutes passed and nothing happened. Suddenly, it turned and went straight into my trap,” Jakub said.

What followed was “the hardest battle I have ever had with a catfish in the Czech Republic”, he continued.

The fish put up such a fight that Jakub had to call in a friend to help him hold onto the rod.

“After almost 50 minutes, it was lying half-tired next to my boat. I was shaking, completely done,” the angler said.

He released the record-breaking fish back into the water after posing with it for photographs.

Jakub explained: “At 2.68 metres (8.8ft) in length, it’s four centimetres (1.6in) longer than the one I caught last year.

“This is one of the biggest catfish I’ve ever seen in Europe.”

Pictures show the Fish Warrior TV host, aired on the National Geographic Channel, standing in the shallows with the enormous catfish.

Angler catches rare Atlantic Salmon while fishing on a river in London

The 8.8ft whopper was “not only long, but also brutally tall and broad… a beautiful, almost flawless fish with the potential to grow even bigger”, Jakub said.

He added that catching big fish is all about “morale, dedication and determination” – and stressed he never kills his catches, releasing them so they can keep growing.

It comes after another angler landed a monster 20-stone catfish in Italy following a 45-minute fight to reel it in.

Dramatic images show Benjamin Grunder, 37, wrestling with the catch of a lifetime on the banks of the River Po.

At first, he thought his hook had snagged a submerged tree, but the sheer weight revealed it was a huge fish.

The German angler finally hauled in the 8ft 8in Wels catfish – the largest freshwater species in Europe – estimating its weight at 20 stone.

That fish was also released back into the water safe and sound.

A man holding a 2.68-meter-long catfish in a reservoir.

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Jakub Vagner with his record-breaking catchCredit: Newsflash

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British and Irish Lions: Welsh rugby reels from Jac Morgan omission blow

Former Wales and Lions three-quarter Dafydd James says the lack of a Welshman in the line-up “says exactly where Welsh rugby is and it’s worrying”.

James, a Lions Test cap against Australia in 2001, said: “I didn’t think he’d [Morgan] get in, unfortunately, because unless he was going to start, I didn’t think they were going to put him on a bench, which is a travesty.

“But just purely on the basis of there’s so many back-row options there, it didn’t look from the first couple of games that Jac was figuring as his [Farrell’s] main seven, which is bitterly disappointing.

“It’s sobering and a sad indictment of the way the game has gone in Wales. Only two players being selected is hard, and you’d have to say on the back of 18 losses we were always going to be up against it trying to get many more players.

“I thought there might have been four going on the tour, and we’d be in with a chance [of players in the Test XV].

“And I thought with Williams, who started his campaign on the Lions tour, he was looking sharp.

“He was probably my tip for starting nine, but unfortunately he pulled a hamstring and then Jac stood up. He didn’t really figure that much in the Argentina game, but that could be just a little bit rusty, not knowing the team members around you.

“And then he had an exceptional game where he had a man of the match performance and put himself back in contention.

“I would have picked him personally, but I’m just reading between the lines he [Farrell] seems to favour Curry, [Josh] Van der Flier and obviously [Henry] Pollock.”

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As L.A. reels, White House sees ‘grand success’ in novel crackdown tactics

National Guard troops and immigration agents on horseback, clad in green uniforms and tactical gear, trotted into MacArthur Park on Monday, surrounding the iconic square with armored vehicles in a show of force widely denounced as gratuitous. The enforcement operation produced few tangible results that day. But the purpose of the display was unmistakable.

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The Trump administration’s monthlong operation in Los Angeles, which began on June 6 with flash raids at work sites and culminated days later with Trump’s deployment of Marines and the Guard, continues to pay political dividends to a president who had been in search of the perfect foil on his signature issue since retaking office, officials close to the president told The Times.

At first, officials in the West Wing thought the operation might last only a week or two. But Trump’s team now says the ongoing spectacle has proven a resounding political success with few downsides. Thus far, the administration has managed to fend off initial court challenges, maintain arrests at a steady clip, and generate images of a ruthless crackdown in a liberal bastion that delight the president’s supporters.

It may be premature for the president to declare political victory. Anger over the operation has swelled, prompting activism across California. And signs have emerged that the White House may be misreading Trump’s election mandate and the political moment, with new polls showing public sentiment turning nationwide on the president’s increasingly aggressive enforcement tactics.

The city has struggled to cope, hobbled by an unpopular mayor and a nationally divisive governor who have been unable to meaningfully respond to the unprecedented federal effort. But the raids have also provided California’s Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, with an opportunity to fill a leadership vacuum as his party grapples to find its footing in the resistance.

Lawsuits could still change the course of the operation. A crucial hearing set for Thursday in a case that could challenge the constitutionality of the operation itself.

But critics say the pace of litigation has failed to meet the urgency of the moment, just as the president’s aides weigh whether to replicate their L.A. experiment elsewhere throughout the country.

To Trump, a gift that keeps on giving

Trump has succeeded in the most significant legal case thus far, with the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals allowing him to maintain control of the California National Guard. Troops remain on L.A. streets despite protests that the administration cited to justify their deployment in the first place ending weeks ago. And the administration has put the city on the defensive in a suit over the legality of its sanctuary city policy.

One White House official told The Times that the administration’s aggressive, experimental law enforcement tactics in Los Angeles have proven a “grand success,” in part because national media coverage of the ongoing crisis has largely moved on, normalizing what is happening there.

A spokesperson for the White House said the administration’s mission in the city is focused on detaining migrants with violent criminal records, despite reporting by The Times indicating that a majority of individuals arrested in the first weeks of the operation were not convicted criminals.

“President Trump is fulfilling his promise to remove dangerous, criminal illegal aliens from American communities — especially sanctuary cities like L.A. that provide safe harbor to criminal illegals and put American citizens at risk,” said Abigail Jackson, a White House spokesperson.

“One month later it’s clear, President Trump is doing his job to protect American citizens and federal law enforcement,” Jackson added. “But Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass have enabled violent rioters who attacked federal law enforcement, protected violent criminal illegal aliens, and betrayed the trust put in them by the American people.”

Trump’s use of Los Angeles as a testing ground to demonstrate raw presidential power has shown his team just how much a unitary executive can get away with. Masked agents snatching migrants has sent a chill through the city and its economy, but there is no end in sight for the operation, with one Homeland Security official telling The Times it would only intensify going forward.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection have arrested nearly 2,800 people in the L.A. area since the crackdown began.

This week, California Sen. Alex Padilla, a Democrat, introduced a bill with Democratic Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey that would bar immigration officers from wearing masks and require them to display clear identification while on the job.

“They wouldn’t be saying that if they didn’t hate our country,” Trump said Wednesday, responding to the legislation, “and they obviously do.”

Trump could still face setbacks

The 9th Circuit ruling last month, allowing Trump to maintain temporary control over the California National Guard, thwarted momentum for Trump’s opponents hoping for a decisive early victory against the operation in federal court.

But a case brought by the American Civil Liberties Union and joined by the city of Los Angeles, set for arguments in court on Thursday, addresses the core of the raids themselves and could deal a significant policy blow to the Trump administration. The ACLU has found success in another case, over raids conducted earlier this year by Border Patrol in the Central Valley, using similar arguments that claimed its tactics were unconstitutional.

“It is far too early to say that challenge has been thwarted,” said Ahilan Arulanantham, co-director of the Center for Immigration Law and Policy at UCLA School of Law.

But Arulanantham argued that city and state officials have demonstrated a lack of leadership in the pace of their response to an urgent crisis.

“There is much more local leaders could be doing to challenge the unlawful actions the federal government is taking against their residents,” he added. “The state also could have sued but did not — they sued to challenge the guard deployment, but not the ICE raids themselves.”

The raids have generated favorable coverage for the administration on right-wing media, presenting the crackdown as Trump finally bringing the fight over immigration to the heart of liberal America. But it is unclear whether Americans agree with his tactics.

Polls released last month from Economist/YouGov and NPR/PBS News/Marist found that while a plurality of Americans still support Trump’s overall approach to immigration, a majority believes that ICE has gone too far in its deportation efforts.

Newsom, speaking this week in South Carolina, a crucial state in the Democratic presidential primary calendar, suggested he saw the president’s potential overreach as a political opportunity.

“They’re now raiding the farms,” he told a crowd. “Quite literally, federal agents running through the fields.”

The governor told the story of a teenage boy from Oxnard whose parents disappeared in a federal raid, despite having no criminal records, leaving their son helpless and alone.

“That’s America,” he said, “Trump’s America.”

What else you should be reading

The must-read: Stephen Miller finally gets his revenge on L.A.
The deep dive: Kidnappers or ICE agents? LAPD grapples with surge in calls from concerned citizens
The L.A. Times Special: Most nabbed in L.A. raids were men with no criminal conviction, picked up off the street

More to come,
Michael Wilner

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Trump hosts West African leaders as the region reels from U.S. aid cuts

President Trump is hosting five West African leaders on Wednesday for a “multilateral lunch” at the White House as the region reels from the impact of U.S. aid cuts.

The leaders of Liberia, Senegal, Gabon, Mauritania and Guinea-Bissau are expected to discuss key areas of cooperation, including economic development, security, infrastructure and democracy, according to a statement from the Liberian presidency. The White House has not provided further details.

The surprise meeting comes as the Trump administration has taken radical steps it said are meant to reshape the U.S. relationship with Africa.

Earlier this month, U.S. authorities dissolved theU.S. Agency for International Development, and said it was no longer following what they called “a charity-based foreign aid model” and will instead focus on partnership with nations that show “both the ability and willingness to help themselves.”

The U.S. African Affairs senior bureau official Troy Fitrell earlier this year said that Trump administration wants to focus on eliminating trade deficits with Africa.

“Assistance involves a donor and a recipient, but commerce is an exchange between equals,” he said.

Critics say that the abrupt shift will result in millions of deaths.

A study published in the Lancet medical journal late last month projected that USAID’s dismantling and deep funding cuts would lead to more than 14 million additional deaths globally by 2030, including 4.5 million children.

West African countries are among the hardest hit by the dissolution of the USAID. The U.S. support in Liberia amounted to 2.6% of the country’s gross national income, the highest percentage anywhere in the world, according to the Center for Global Development.

Five nations whose leaders are meeting Trump represent a small fraction of the U.S-Africa trade, but they possess untapped natural resources. Senegal and Mauritania are important transit and origin countries when it comes to migration, and along Guinea Bissau are struggling to contain drug trafficking, both issues of concern for the Trump administration.

Liberia’s President Joseph Nyuma Boakai in a statement “expressed optimism about the outcomes of the summit, reaffirming Liberia’s commitment to regional stability, democratic governance, and inclusive economic growth.”

Gabon, Liberia, Mauritania and Senegal are among 36 countries which might be included in the possible expansion of Trump’s travel ban.

Pronczuk writes for the Associated Press.

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