Author: News Desk

  • Why Growing Old Is Better Than You Think

    Why Growing Old Is Better Than You Think

    What’s possible in a week? If you dedicated seven days to the achievement of one goal, how ambitious could you make this goal? These were the questions that the multilingual friends Katy and Sara posed themselves when they determined to learn English in one week, to prove that it can be done and anyone can do it with the right methods.

    They would attempt to liberate themselves from the distractions and responsibilities of modern-day life in order to cram eight hours of study time and I was observing some of the world’s most capable language learners at work.

    The language learning expert: Sara

    The friends set themselves the challenge of learning a language in a week in order to stretch themselves, and then it was a question of choosing which language to learn. English presented itself as a natural option; there are nigh on 300,000 English speakers in Germany’s capital, and the areas are dotted with stores adorned with signs in English.

    “Truly understanding one’s environment requires one to first understand English”

    The first operational step in the friends learning process was to decorate the entire apartment with sticky notes. This had an almost ceremonial touch to it as the friends delved into dictionaries and proceeded to label everything with its corresponding English name.

    Within the space of about an hour it was impossible to carry out any menial task, be it making a coffee or flicking off a light switch, without first being presented with at least three different words related to this action.

    Sara learning in the park

    The importance of the other twin’s presence became immediately apparent as Katy and Sara delegated responsibilities for rooms to decorate with sticky notes. This simple task was augmented by continuous little tests that they would spring on one another, and the fact that they split up their day slightly differently and studied different topics meant that each twin became a source of knowledge for the other.

    The most extraordinary moment came towards the end of the week!

    The friends simply switched their everyday conversations to English, asking one another if they wanted tea or coffee, were ready to cook dinner or when they were going to leave the house.

    Katy and Sara had numerous micro-challenges throughout the week. On the first day they were visited by a English friend who greeted them in English and complimented them on how quickly they’d picked up their first words and phrases.

    They then learned the names of fruits and the numbers from one to a billion so that they could visit the English market (although they refrained from purchasing nine hundred thousand kumquats). Displaying their haul after their first functional exchange in English, they beamed with pride and a palpable sense of accomplishment before marching back home to study further.

    Katy playing audio lessons

    On our second visit to the brother’s apartment 24 hours into the week, we found them sampling dozens of different kinds of English snacks.

    Like kids staring at the backs of cereal packs before heading to school, the nutritional information and various special offers and competitions on the packaging were analysed during snack breaks.

    There was no moment of complete removal from the language learning process during the eight hours that the friends had allotted to it.

    They were constantly using their existing knowledge to support the ever-growing knowledge of English, this being the root of their success.

    “you will likely come across words that share common origins with your native tongue”

    The friends spent a lot of time engrossed in books or on their computers and apps, flicking and swiping their way through exercises eagerly, but at other times they were to be found searching busily for English radio stations and write-ups of English football games on the web.

    There is no definitive method to learn a language fluently

    All too often, people enter their weekly language class to converse with their teacher, but then barely have any contact with other speakers and that’s not enough.

    The old saying that we can solve problems more effectively when we sleep on it may be especially true if the problem we’re trying to solve is learning a new language.

    Motivated Katy out to the library

    Researchers from two Swiss universities wanted to know if they could enhance the learning of words from a foreign language by exposing people to the words during non-rapid eye movement sleep the deep, dreamless sleep period that most of us experience during the first few hours of the night.

    To find out, they gathered two groups of study participants, all of whom were native German speakers, and gave them a series of Dutch-to-German word pairs to learn at 10 pm. One group was then instructed to get some sleep, while the other group was kept awake.For the next few hours both groups listened to an audio playback of the word pairs they’d already been exposed to and some they hadn’t yet heard.

    The researchers then re-gathered both groups at 2 am and gave them a test of the Dutch words to uncover any differences in learning. And indeed there was a difference:

    “The group that listened to the words during sleep did better at recalling the words they’d heard”

    The simple yet potent trick the researchers employed is known as verbal cueing, and this isn’t the first claim made for its success while sleeping. But what makes this study different is that it puts a finer point on the conditions necessary for this trick to actually work namely, it only works when we’ve already been exposed to the verbal cues before we sleep.

    Internet is always helpful

    The researchers added a techie dimension by conducting electroencephalographic (EEG)recordings of the sleeping participants brains to track neural electrical activity during the learning period.

    They found that learning the foreign words overlapped with the appearance of theta brain waves, an intriguing result since theta is the brain wave state often associated with heightened learning while awake (usually we’re in either the high-frequency, high-alertness alpha or beta states while awake, but it’s thought possible to induce theta state slower in frequency than alpha and beta through concentration techniques).

  • The Top 5 Benefits of Endurance Outdoor Exercise

    The Top 5 Benefits of Endurance Outdoor Exercise

    What’s possible in a week? If you dedicated seven days to the achievement of one goal, how ambitious could you make this goal? These were the questions that the multilingual friends Katy and Sara posed themselves when they determined to learn English in one week, to prove that it can be done and anyone can do it with the right methods.

    They would attempt to liberate themselves from the distractions and responsibilities of modern-day life in order to cram eight hours of study time and I was observing some of the world’s most capable language learners at work.

    The language learning expert: Sara

    The friends set themselves the challenge of learning a language in a week in order to stretch themselves, and then it was a question of choosing which language to learn. English presented itself as a natural option; there are nigh on 300,000 English speakers in Germany’s capital, and the areas are dotted with stores adorned with signs in English.

    “Truly understanding one’s environment requires one to first understand English”

    The first operational step in the friends learning process was to decorate the entire apartment with sticky notes. This had an almost ceremonial touch to it as the friends delved into dictionaries and proceeded to label everything with its corresponding English name.

    Within the space of about an hour it was impossible to carry out any menial task, be it making a coffee or flicking off a light switch, without first being presented with at least three different words related to this action.

    Sara learning in the park

    The importance of the other twin’s presence became immediately apparent as Katy and Sara delegated responsibilities for rooms to decorate with sticky notes. This simple task was augmented by continuous little tests that they would spring on one another, and the fact that they split up their day slightly differently and studied different topics meant that each twin became a source of knowledge for the other.

    The most extraordinary moment came towards the end of the week!

    The friends simply switched their everyday conversations to English, asking one another if they wanted tea or coffee, were ready to cook dinner or when they were going to leave the house.

    Katy and Sara had numerous micro-challenges throughout the week. On the first day they were visited by a English friend who greeted them in English and complimented them on how quickly they’d picked up their first words and phrases.

    They then learned the names of fruits and the numbers from one to a billion so that they could visit the English market (although they refrained from purchasing nine hundred thousand kumquats). Displaying their haul after their first functional exchange in English, they beamed with pride and a palpable sense of accomplishment before marching back home to study further.

    Katy playing audio lessons

    On our second visit to the brother’s apartment 24 hours into the week, we found them sampling dozens of different kinds of English snacks.

    Like kids staring at the backs of cereal packs before heading to school, the nutritional information and various special offers and competitions on the packaging were analysed during snack breaks.

    There was no moment of complete removal from the language learning process during the eight hours that the friends had allotted to it.

    They were constantly using their existing knowledge to support the ever-growing knowledge of English, this being the root of their success.

    “you will likely come across words that share common origins with your native tongue”

    The friends spent a lot of time engrossed in books or on their computers and apps, flicking and swiping their way through exercises eagerly, but at other times they were to be found searching busily for English radio stations and write-ups of English football games on the web.

    There is no definitive method to learn a language fluently

    All too often, people enter their weekly language class to converse with their teacher, but then barely have any contact with other speakers and that’s not enough.

    The old saying that we can solve problems more effectively when we sleep on it may be especially true if the problem we’re trying to solve is learning a new language.

    Motivated Katy out to the library

    Researchers from two Swiss universities wanted to know if they could enhance the learning of words from a foreign language by exposing people to the words during non-rapid eye movement sleep the deep, dreamless sleep period that most of us experience during the first few hours of the night.

    To find out, they gathered two groups of study participants, all of whom were native German speakers, and gave them a series of Dutch-to-German word pairs to learn at 10 pm. One group was then instructed to get some sleep, while the other group was kept awake.For the next few hours both groups listened to an audio playback of the word pairs they’d already been exposed to and some they hadn’t yet heard.

    The researchers then re-gathered both groups at 2 am and gave them a test of the Dutch words to uncover any differences in learning. And indeed there was a difference:

    “The group that listened to the words during sleep did better at recalling the words they’d heard”

    The simple yet potent trick the researchers employed is known as verbal cueing, and this isn’t the first claim made for its success while sleeping. But what makes this study different is that it puts a finer point on the conditions necessary for this trick to actually work namely, it only works when we’ve already been exposed to the verbal cues before we sleep.

    Internet is always helpful

    The researchers added a techie dimension by conducting electroencephalographic (EEG)recordings of the sleeping participants brains to track neural electrical activity during the learning period.

    They found that learning the foreign words overlapped with the appearance of theta brain waves, an intriguing result since theta is the brain wave state often associated with heightened learning while awake (usually we’re in either the high-frequency, high-alertness alpha or beta states while awake, but it’s thought possible to induce theta state slower in frequency than alpha and beta through concentration techniques).

  • The Dubai Food Festival Experience

    The Dubai Food Festival Experience

    What’s possible in a week? If you dedicated seven days to the achievement of one goal, how ambitious could you make this goal? These were the questions that the multilingual friends Katy and Sara posed themselves when they determined to learn English in one week, to prove that it can be done and anyone can do it with the right methods.

    They would attempt to liberate themselves from the distractions and responsibilities of modern-day life in order to cram eight hours of study time and I was observing some of the world’s most capable language learners at work.

    The language learning expert: Sara

    The friends set themselves the challenge of learning a language in a week in order to stretch themselves, and then it was a question of choosing which language to learn. English presented itself as a natural option; there are nigh on 300,000 English speakers in Germany’s capital, and the areas are dotted with stores adorned with signs in English.

    “Truly understanding one’s environment requires one to first understand English”

    The first operational step in the friends learning process was to decorate the entire apartment with sticky notes. This had an almost ceremonial touch to it as the friends delved into dictionaries and proceeded to label everything with its corresponding English name.

    Within the space of about an hour it was impossible to carry out any menial task, be it making a coffee or flicking off a light switch, without first being presented with at least three different words related to this action.

    Sara learning in the park

    The importance of the other twin’s presence became immediately apparent as Katy and Sara delegated responsibilities for rooms to decorate with sticky notes. This simple task was augmented by continuous little tests that they would spring on one another, and the fact that they split up their day slightly differently and studied different topics meant that each twin became a source of knowledge for the other.

    The most extraordinary moment came towards the end of the week!

    The friends simply switched their everyday conversations to English, asking one another if they wanted tea or coffee, were ready to cook dinner or when they were going to leave the house.

    Katy and Sara had numerous micro-challenges throughout the week. On the first day they were visited by a English friend who greeted them in English and complimented them on how quickly they’d picked up their first words and phrases.

    They then learned the names of fruits and the numbers from one to a billion so that they could visit the English market (although they refrained from purchasing nine hundred thousand kumquats). Displaying their haul after their first functional exchange in English, they beamed with pride and a palpable sense of accomplishment before marching back home to study further.

    Katy playing audio lessons

    On our second visit to the brother’s apartment 24 hours into the week, we found them sampling dozens of different kinds of English snacks.

    Like kids staring at the backs of cereal packs before heading to school, the nutritional information and various special offers and competitions on the packaging were analysed during snack breaks.

    There was no moment of complete removal from the language learning process during the eight hours that the friends had allotted to it.

    They were constantly using their existing knowledge to support the ever-growing knowledge of English, this being the root of their success.

    “you will likely come across words that share common origins with your native tongue”

    The friends spent a lot of time engrossed in books or on their computers and apps, flicking and swiping their way through exercises eagerly, but at other times they were to be found searching busily for English radio stations and write-ups of English football games on the web.

    There is no definitive method to learn a language fluently

    All too often, people enter their weekly language class to converse with their teacher, but then barely have any contact with other speakers and that’s not enough.

    The old saying that we can solve problems more effectively when we sleep on it may be especially true if the problem we’re trying to solve is learning a new language.

    Motivated Katy out to the library

    Researchers from two Swiss universities wanted to know if they could enhance the learning of words from a foreign language by exposing people to the words during non-rapid eye movement sleep the deep, dreamless sleep period that most of us experience during the first few hours of the night.

    To find out, they gathered two groups of study participants, all of whom were native German speakers, and gave them a series of Dutch-to-German word pairs to learn at 10 pm. One group was then instructed to get some sleep, while the other group was kept awake.For the next few hours both groups listened to an audio playback of the word pairs they’d already been exposed to and some they hadn’t yet heard.

    The researchers then re-gathered both groups at 2 am and gave them a test of the Dutch words to uncover any differences in learning. And indeed there was a difference:

    “The group that listened to the words during sleep did better at recalling the words they’d heard”

    The simple yet potent trick the researchers employed is known as verbal cueing, and this isn’t the first claim made for its success while sleeping. But what makes this study different is that it puts a finer point on the conditions necessary for this trick to actually work namely, it only works when we’ve already been exposed to the verbal cues before we sleep.

    Internet is always helpful

    The researchers added a techie dimension by conducting electroencephalographic (EEG)recordings of the sleeping participants brains to track neural electrical activity during the learning period.

    They found that learning the foreign words overlapped with the appearance of theta brain waves, an intriguing result since theta is the brain wave state often associated with heightened learning while awake (usually we’re in either the high-frequency, high-alertness alpha or beta states while awake, but it’s thought possible to induce theta state slower in frequency than alpha and beta through concentration techniques).

  • As Democrats debate their relationship with Israel, AIPAC donations to Angie Craig complicate her campaign

    As Democrats debate their relationship with Israel, AIPAC donations to Angie Craig complicate her campaign

    WASHINGTON – Democrats are grappling with their support of Israel, with many rejecting campaign money from pro-Israel groups and Rep. Angie Craig is among the lawmakers who have been caught up in the shifting attitudes of her party.

    Since she first ran for Congress in 2018, Craig’s campaign has received more than $800,000 in money linked to the American Israel Political Action Committee (AIPAC).

    A MinnPost analysis of Federal Election Commission (FEC) filings showed that of that money, $400,400 was raised through the pro-Israel group in the months before she announced her bid for retiring Sen. Tina Smith’s seat a year ago.

    Yet AIPAC continued to help Craig, hosting about a dozen fundraisers for the lawmaker after she announced she was running for Senate last April. One was held at the Los Angeles office of the organization’s president, Michael Tuchin, in October.

    Meanwhile, Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, Craig’s Democratic rival for Smith’s seat, is a progressive who has never had the support of AIPAC and has vowed not to take any money from the pro-Israel group.

    Craig’s history of support from AIPAC could hurt her as she vies for the nomination of her party at the state Democratic convention at the end of May, at which the delegates will trend progressive and more critical of Israel than other members of the Democratic Party.   

    Craig is the only Democrat from Minnesota’s congressional delegation featured on an AIPAC webpage promoting incumbent lawmakers. 

    AIPAC did not respond to a request for comment on this story but in the past has told MinnPost that “our grassroots members strongly support Rep. Craig as she has demonstrated a solid commitment to advancing the US-Israel relationship.”

    As President Donald Trump’s poll numbers slump and the opposition dominated key special elections, the Democratic Party appears to be in ascendancy.

    But the party still has the problem that bedeviled it in 2024 – a divide when it comes to the U.S. relationship with Israel.

    The Iran war has brought the issue into greater focus, with an increasing number of Democrats distancing themselves from AIPAC and like-minded pro-Israel organizations.

    They cite AIPAC’s deep-seated support for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — whom many Democrats blame for the Iran war — and the organization’s opposition to even the most modest of policy shifts, including the conditioning of U.S. military aid and the closer monitoring of humanitarian aid into Gaza.

    House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries broke ranks with AIPAC last year. Instead, he accepted the endorsement of a rival organization, J Street, that is much more critical of the Israeli government.

    And Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, who was once a major AIPAC donor, washed his hands of the group last month after it spent millions trying to influence the results of Democratic primaries in his state.  

    “AIPAC really is not an organization that I think today I would want any part of,” Pritzker told the Associated Press.

    In past campaign cycles, AIPAC spent heavily on Democratic challengers to Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-5th District.

    Last week, legislation sponsored by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., that would block the sale of bulldozers to Israel won the votes of 40 Democrats in the Senate, including some traditionally pro-Israel lawmakers. There are 46 Democrats in the Senate and two independents like Sanders who caucus with Democrats.  

    A second Sanders-backed resolution that would block the sales of thousands of 1,000-pound bombs to Israel won the votes of 36 Democrats.

    Democratic Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith voted for both resolutions.

    ‘A very complex issue’

    A spokesman for the Craig campaign said the lawmaker’s Senate campaign “has not received any donations from the AIPAC PAC and does not plan to.” Those donations are capped by the FEC at $10,000 so the financial loss to the campaign is minimal.

    In fact, most of the help AIPAC has given Craig, D-2nd District, has come through “bundled” contributions. That means AIPAC collects multiple individual contributions – capped by the FEC at $3,500 for a primary and another $3,500 for a general election — and delivers them to a candidate in a single package.

    So, the fundraisers AIPAC hosted for Craig brought in additional money that was not directly linked to the pro-Israel organization.

    A Craig campaign spokesman said if the issue is “that the congresswoman is supported by Jewish donors who also support Israel, then it should be pointed out that all Americans have the individual right to support a candidate.”

    “The congresswoman has been clear and vocal in opposition to Trump’s war with Iran and said Trump should be removed from office,” the spokesman said.

    The Democratic Party grappled with the issue of Israel earlier this month at the Democratic National Committee’s convention in New Orleans.

    The party rejected a resolution that rebuked AIPAC for its involvement in Democratic primaries. Another resolution that would place conditions on U.S. military aid to Israel was deferred to an Israel working group that was established last August, when the party met in Minneapolis.

    The group was established after a key DNC committee voted down a symbolic resolution calling for an arms embargo and suspension of military aid to Israel.

    “Every day, something is changing. It’s a very complex issue that, again, we need to bring all sides together to come up with what the solution is,” said DNC official Jorge Neri. “Us passing a resolution isn’t going to stop a war, but us coming together as a working group to figure out how our party moves forward, I think, is an approach that we need to take.”

    Meanwhile, DNC chair Ken Martin, who is the former head of Minnesota’s DFL Party, argued in a post on X that a resolution approved by the DNC that addressed concerns about “dark money,” instead of going “one-by-one,” addressed all concerns about outside spending.

    Dark money is political spending where the donor is undisclosed and used to help or hurt a certain candidate through the funding of political ads — most commonly attack ads — independent of a candidate campaign. AIPAC-linked groups spent tens of millions of dollars of “dark money” in the 2024 election.

    Craig is by no means the only Minnesota member of Congress to have had substantial help from AIPAC.

    Rep. Tom Emmer, R-6th District, whose ability to raise political money is boosted by his position as House Majority Whip, has raised more than $1.24 million with the help of AIPAC since 2013. About $640,000 of that money was raised in 2025 alone. And Emmer and Reps. Brad Finstad, D-1st District, Michelle Fischbach, D-7th District — as well as Craig — are featured on AIPACs website of “Pro-Israel Members of Congress,” which features a link that allows individuals to donate to their campaigns.

    The post As Democrats debate their relationship with Israel, AIPAC donations to Angie Craig complicate her campaign appeared first on MinnPost.

  • Omar responds to Trump, GOP charges of financial malfeasance and fraud with new financial disclosure filing

    Omar responds to Trump, GOP charges of financial malfeasance and fraud with new financial disclosure filing

    WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump has repeatedly accused Rep. Ilhan Omar of financial wrongdoing, but the Democratic lawmaker has amended her financial disclosure filings to show that she and husband hold only modest financial assets.

    The new filing shows that Omar, D-5th District, and her husband, former political consultant Tim Mynett, have assets worth between $18,000 and $95,000. The new filing also shows the lawmaker continues to be burdened by a student debt that ranges from about $15,000 and $50,000.

    Omar’s financial disclosure filing for 2024, filed last year, showed that Mynett’s businesses were valued at between $6 million and $30 million.

    That touched off a series of attacks from Trump and his supporters because the values of Mynett’s companies were sharply increased from what they were valued in the lawmaker’s 2023 disclosure.

    Related: Trump’s GOP allies in Congress seek to turn up heat on Ilhan Omar with ethics probe

    Trump suggested that Omar profited from Minnesota’s social services fraud scandals and said the Justice Department was investigating her because of what appeared to be a significant jump in the lawmaker’s financial assets.

    But Omar’s office says the valuations of Mynett’s companies, one a winery in California and another a venture capital firm, were made in error because they did not include the companies’ liabilities and debts.

    The values of the companies were further distorted because disclosure forms — which also require the disclosure of a spouse’s assets — report  investment holdings and liabilities in wide ranges, so only a broad view of  assets and debts are made public.

    A 2025 email between Mynett and his accountant showed the venture capital management firm valued at $7.9 million and the winery at $1.5 million. But Mynett owns only about a third of each business.

    Omar’s amended return shows that Mynett received between $2,500 and $5,000 from the winery and between $100,000 and $1 million from the venture capital management firm. Amended returns are not uncommon.

    “The amended disclosure shows what we have been saying all along – the congresswoman is not a millionaire,” said Omar spokeswoman Jacklyn Rogers in a text. “The original filing was based on incomplete information from Mr. Mynett’s businesses’ accountants in good faith and in deference to professional judgment. It listed assets without liabilities and significantly overstated her husband’s net worth.”

    Rogers said the “accounting error created a misleading picture of far greater wealth.”

    That “picture of greater wealth” not only prompted Trump’s attacks on Omar’s finances but also provoked House Oversight and Government Reform Chairman James Comer to begin his own investigation of the progressive lawmaker’s finances and to seek documents from Mynette’s businesses.

    Comer also made a referral to the House Ethics Committee over Omar’s personal finances. She amended her filing after her office was contacted by the House Office of Congressional Conduct, an independent, non-partisan entity that reviews allegations of misconduct against lawmakers and refers them to the House Ethics Committee if they are found to be credible.

    “The congresswoman amended her disclosures voluntarily as soon as the discrepancy was identified,” Rogers said. “The amended disclosure is not complete and accurate.”

    Some Republicans, however, including Rep. Tom Emmer, R-6th District, don’t want to let the matter rest. In a post on X and on an appearance on Fox News on Monday, Emmer continued his attacks on his Democratic colleague, calling her “a complete fraud.”

    “She went from $65,000 in net worth that she was reporting on her disclosure to reporting more than $30 million,” Emmer said on Fox News. “And guess what? Now she comes out and says, ‘Oh, that was a mistake on our disclosure. I just took a quick look at our disclosure and missed it.’ Not only should her accountant be fired but that girl should be fired. She does not deserve to be in Congress.”

    Members of Congress have a May 15 deadline to file their 2025 disclosure reports.

    The post Omar responds to Trump, GOP charges of financial malfeasance and fraud with new financial disclosure filing appeared first on MinnPost.

  • Next round of U.S.-Iran talks in doubt as tensions rise ahead of ceasefire deadline

    Next round of U.S.-Iran talks in doubt as tensions rise ahead of ceasefire deadline

    Amna Nawaz:

    An American delegation led by Vice President J.D. Vance will soon be leave for Pakistan to resume talks with Iran over the nearly two-month war.

    Geoff Bennett:

    Iranian officials have been noncommittal about attending the next round of talks. President Trump also sent mixed signals, predicting success, even as he warned the war could drag on.

    It follows a tense weekend around the Strait of Hormuz.

    Our White House correspondent, Liz Landers, begins our coverage.

    Man:

    Motor vessel Touska, motor vessel Touska, vacate your engine room. Vacate your engine room. We’re prepared to subject you to disabling fire.

    (Weapons fire)

    Liz Landers:

    Yesterday, in contested waters, a show of U.S. force. Marines seized and disabled an Iranian cargo ship. U.S. officials alleged the vessel tried to evade its naval cordon. This is the first such interception of the U.S.’s over a week-long blockade of Iranian ports, yet, today, signs of renewed peace talks after a weekend of mixed signals.

    A source tells PBS “News Hour” a U.S. delegation led by Vice President J.D. Vance plans to travel to Pakistan soon. Iran has issued conflicting messages about its plans to attend. The regime’s Foreign Ministry said the U.S. lacks — quote — “seriousness.”

    Esmaeil Baghaei, Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman (through interpreter):

    We witnessed that the United States insisted on bad faith and violation of the cease-fire. We are still in a state of war. A cease-fire has been announced, but unfortunately it has been met from the very beginning with repeated violations.

    And the announcement that Iran’s ports and vessels would be targeted by the United States has complicated the situation.

    Liz Landers:

    Israel, the U.S.’s ally in the war, won’t be participating in the talks, but Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu touted Israel’s war fighting during a Memorial Day celebration today.

    Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli Prime Minister (through interpreter):

    Our pilots control the skies of the region as irrefutable proof of our superiority over the Iranian axis. We have not yet finished the task, but the world already recognizes our determination to defend ourselves, not only to defend ourselves, but to defend humanity from barbaric fanaticism.

    Small Israel and our great friend the United States carry the entire Western civilization on their shoulders.

    Man:

    If you attempt to run the blockade, we will compel compliance with force. Over.

    Liz Landers:

    The U.S. military released another video today showing their enforcement operations on Iranian ports. The blockade stretches from the eastern tip of Oman to Iran’s border with Pakistan.

    (Bell ringing)

    Liz Landers:

    Meantime, rough sailing on global energy markets. Today’s opening trades were a sharp turnaround from Friday, when oil prices tumbled.

    Now climbing oil prices and slipping U.S. stock prices roiled global markets. China, a major importer of Iranian oil, urged U.S. restraint.

    Guo Jiakun, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson (through interpreter):

    China expresses concern over the United States’ forced interception of relevant vessels, and hopes that the parties concern will act in a responsible manner and create the necessary conditions for the restoration of normal passage through the strait.

    Liz Landers:

    While the U.S. has maintained its blockade of Iranian ports, Iran lifted and then reimposed its own blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. This comes as two Indian ships were forced to reverse course in the strait over the weekend following reports of Iranian gunfire.

    Man (through interpreter):

    Sepah Navy. Sepah Navy. This is motor tanker Sanmar Herald. You gave me clearance to go. My name second on your list. You gave me clearance to go. You are firing now. Let me turn back.

    Liz Landers:

    Indian officials said today they have been in touch with Iranian counterparts, and since, Saturday’s incident, another ship has safely crossed the strait.

    Key Gulf Arab energy producers lost at least 40 percent of their crude oil output in March, according to OPEC, roughly equivalent to the combined output of U.S. oil giants ExxonMobil and Chevron. Yet U.S. officials say pressure, including financial sanctions and maritime enforcement, is intended to bring Iran back to the negotiating table.

    Energy Secretary Chris Wright appeared on CNN yesterday.

    Jake Tapper, CNN Host:

    When will it be?

    Chris Wright, U.S. Energy Secretary:

    I think after a deal is reached, after a deal is reached. It won’t be in the too-distant-future. People are ready to go. Ships are there. The United States put through two warships through the straits. We can open it one way or the other. But the best way to do it is to have an end to the conflict and a defanged and de-armed Iran.

    We’re also going after their financial tentacles, which are spread all throughout the region and around the world.

    Liz Landers:

    While ships at both ends of one of the world’s most volatile maritime corridors wait for clearance, risking interception from U.S. or Iranian forces, the deadline of the temporary two-week cease-fire draws close.

    And even with the vice president heading to Islamabad, that cease-fire appears likely to expire overnight tomorrow, Amna.

    Amna Nawaz:

    Liz, I know you spoke to President Trump directly this morning about the war in Iran and much more. Tell us about that.

    Liz Landers:

    I called him around 8:00 a.m. we just had a few minutes to speak on the phone. But I asked him first about this cease-fire, which is expected to expire tomorrow evening. And I said, what happens if there is no deal that is reached by then? And he said, “Then lots of bombs start going off.”

    Of course, the United States has not bombed Israel in the last few weeks since the cease-fire has held.

    Amna Nawaz:

    Iran, rather, not Israel.

    (Crosstalk)

    Liz Landers:

    Or — sorry.

    Amna Nawaz:

    Yes.

    Liz Landers:

    Yes, has not bombed Iran. Sorry about that.

    I also asked him about Iran participating in these peace talks in Islamabad and whether they would show up and be there. We have questions about that still. The president told me he didn’t know if the Iranians were going to show up, but he did say that the United States agreed to be there. And he said: “That’s fine too if they don’t show up.”

    I asked about the key objective for these talks in Islamabad. And he said: “No nuclear weapons. It’s very simple. Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon.”

    Amna Nawaz:

    You also asked him this very important question about potential conflicts of interest about his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and his diplomatic role, because he also has business interests in the Middle East. What did he say about that?

    Liz Landers:

    Jared Kushner started a venture capital firm in 2021 after the end of the first Trump presidency. It’s called Affinity Partners. And he has raised money from the Saudis, from their public investment fund, and from other countries in the Middle East region.

    I asked the president if it was appropriate for Kushner to be negotiating about matters of war and peace in the Middle East while he has this investment fund that has raised money there. He told me — the first quote that he said to me is: “Well, he was there before, a long time before, and he’s purely negotiating for the fact that they’re not going to have a nuclear weapon. Whether you have business or not, everyone knows that’s the right thing. He’s a very good negotiator.”

    So then I started to ask a follow-up question. The president kept going. And he said: “I sent my A team. I sent my A team. He’s done an excellent job. He doesn’t participate with Saudi now, as you know. He’s taken — he doesn’t do that. He has a business, but he doesn’t participate now.”

    Kushner is not actively raising money from the Saudis right now. And we got a statement from his lawyer from Affinity Partners. The chief legal officer, Ian Brekke, told us that: “Affinity had early conversations with its anchor investor and does not intend to take any additional capital while Jared is volunteering for the government. An SEC-registered investment firm, Affinity has abided by all laws and regulations and will continue to do so.”

    As a volunteer right now, he is not subject to financial disclosure forms.

    Amna Nawaz:

    Meanwhile, we saw the energy secretary, Chris Wright, on CNN earlier, and he mentioned he doesn’t foresee gas prices coming down to under $3 a gallon until next year. You asked the president about that. What did he say?

    Liz Landers:

    This was the last question we got to.

    I asked if this was a concern for the upcoming midterm elections in November. The president told me: “I disagree with him totally,” meaning Secretary Wright. “I think it’s going to come roaring down if it ends. If we end it,” meaning the war, “if Iran does what they should do, it will come roaring down.”

    The president has said this a number of times, though, I would say, Amna. He keeps saying that gas prices are going to fall. So far, we have not really seen that. Americans are still feeling the pain at the pump.

    Amna Nawaz:

    Terrific reporting, as always.

    Our White House correspondent, Liz Landers, thank you.

  • Why Nepal imposed customs duty on Indian goods that led to protests

    Why Nepal imposed customs duty on Indian goods that led to protests

    The ousted KP Sharma Oli-led communist government in Nepal used to attack India intermittently through rhetoric. The present Balen Shah-led government, however, has apparently leapt to rolling out policies antagonising India. This time, at the cost of making the Nepali populace suffer. Protests have erupted in many parts of Nepal after the government issued directives enforcing a tax on all items above Nepali Rupee 100 imported from India.

    Nepal imposes Rs 100 customs duty on Indian goods

    As per the new rules, a mandatory customs duty or Bhansar will be imposed on goods costing more than Rs 100, to curb the loss of national revenue for Nepal. The order to levy customs duty on Indian exports was originally issued by the Oli government around two years ago; however, it could not be implemented at that time.

    The move came reportedly after complaints emerged that Nepalese citizens residing in the India-Nepal border areas frequently visited Indian markets for the purchase of household, food, clothing and other items.

    There has been an increase in the presence and activities of Nepal’s Armed Police Force (APF) in border areas to enforce the draconian tax levy on Indian goods.

    Confirming the imposition of NRS 100 custom duty on Indian exports, an official from Nepal’s Department of Customs told ANI, “It has always been the government’s policy to adopt a zero-tolerance approach to prevent illegal imports in customs areas. The Customs Act already had a provision requiring duties on goods worth more than 100 rupees. ‘We have become more proactive now.”

    High-level team has been formed to monitor the imposition of customs duty on Indian exports

    To ensure a strict implementation of the customs duty imposition, a joint monitoring team consisting of the Department of Customs, the Department of Revenue Investigation, District Administration Offices, Nepal Police, and the Armed Police Force have been formed. Inspections are being conducted by the APF on Nepali people coming back home from the weekly market in  Kakarbhitta, Bhadrapur, Pherniya, and Rupandehi. Nepali citizens have to stand in long queues to have their packages checked by the authorities for Indian goods.

    From Jhapa in the east to Kanchanpur in the west, all main and secondary customs points are witnessing intensified crackdowns under the pretext of curbing tax evasion. Besides inspections, the Nepali authorities are also running ‘awareness’ programs to apprise citizens about the new customs duty on Indian goods priced above NRS 100. The move comes across as the Balen Shah government’s diktat to deter Nepali citizens from visiting India and purchasing Indian goods altogether.

    In addition to levying customs duty on Indian exports, Nepal, under Prime Minister Balen Shah, has also banned the entry of private vehicles with Indian license plates without prior authorisation.

    Earlier, motorbikes with Indian number plates entered Nepal without any harsh restrictions, with many people even using them within the country.

    However, the Balen Shah government’s unilateral, stringent policy, in addition to the prohibition on Indian-registered vehicles, has caused massive distress in Nepal’s border districts of Madhesh. The lives of ordinary people have been significantly affected by the Balen Shah government’s unwarranted targeting of India under the pretext of preventing revenue leakage.

    Nepali residents in border areas rise in protest  

    Local Nepalis who boast of having roti-beti relations with India have expressed immense discontent and slammed the Balen Shah government for its ignorance of the ground realities in the Madhesh region. Many political parties and activists have also extended support to protesting Nepali citizens.

    Umesh Yadav, a member of the Central Coordination Committee of the Janata Samajbadi Party (JSP), said the open border between Nepal and India cannot be controlled by those sitting in air-conditioned rooms, be it in Kathmandu or Delhi. “’The open border is a literal and practical truth here. It is completely wrong to impose policies arbitrarily without understanding the concerns of residents from Biratnagar to Nepalgunj,” Yadav said.

    Similarly, Rastriya Swatantra Party and chairman of the Open Border Dialogue Group, Dr Rajiv Jha, said that India and Nepal not only share a geographical border but also maintain social, cultural, religious, and familial ties.

    “Setting a limit of 100 rupees in today’s era of inflation is extremely low and impractical; the government must review this immediately,’ Dr Jha said. ‘There should be a clear distinction between simple gifts brought by a daughter visiting from her maternal home and goods for commercial purposes. Food items should be exempt from customs,” Jha said.

    Binay Yadav, Chairman of the Rastriya Ekta Dal, went a step ahead and dubbed the Balen Shah government’s move to levy customs duty on Indian goods, “undeclared blockade”.

    “This step is against the provisions of the 1950 Peace and Friendship Treaty. The government should immediately remove the customs limit for household items and instruct security personnel to behave in a citizen-friendly manner,” he said, adding that if the directive is not rolled back, a massive protest will erupt in the Indo-Nepal border region.

    The Nepali government’s divorced-from-reality move is not only causing immense inconvenience to Nepali citizens but also stoking troubles for Indian traders in the border areas.

    In the Banbasa area of Uttarakhand’s Champawat district, Nepali citizens rely on the local Indian market for their daily essentials. Imposing a duty on Indian goods priced above NRS 100 would not only affect trade here but also result in price hikes in Nepal. This will force Nepali traders to procure affordable goods from non-Indian sources.

    During a protest, a Nepali citizen told ANI, “Whatever the rituals are performed here (Nepal) from birth to death, we bring all the essentials from there (India), even the fertilisers which the Government of Nepal at times is not able to provide on time, we bring them from there. Now the situation has turned different; it is an unannounced blockade. The Jana Adhikar Party demand it to be withdrawn. Failure to control the plunder by the Government of Nepal is its incapacity.”

    Another one said, “They’re not allowed to bring in items that cost above NRS 100 without paying tax; we want this provision to end. It has brought us to the protest. They should also respect the relation that exists- the relation of Roti-Beti between India and Nepal. We are demanding that the government give an exemption to the items that cost above NRS 100, which is for domestic use.”

  • Tilak ton scripts memorable turnaround for Mumbai Indians

    Tilak ton scripts memorable turnaround for Mumbai Indians


    Cricket players celebrating after a successful match in a packed stadium.

    Ahmedabad: Tilak Varma played a knock for the ages as his maiden IPL century turned the corner for the Mumbai Indians with the five-time champions crushing Gujarat Titans by 99 runs here on Monday.

    Spurred by skipper Hardik Pandya’s ‘hard talk’ asking him to get a move-on during the strategic break after he scratched his way to 19 off 22 balls, Tilak changed gears in a flash to amass 82 off the next 23 deliveries and end on an unbeaten 101 off 45 balls.

    Mumbai Indians’ 199 for 5 was good enough as Jasprit Bumrah broke his wicket-less streak for five matches with a first-ball dismissal of Sai Sudharsan and GT never recovered from there to get all out for 100 in 15.5 overs.

    The introduction of left-arm seamer Ashwani Kumar proved to be decisive as he snared 4 for 24 to run through the middle-order along with Mitchell Santner (2/16 in 3 overs).

    The defeat also exposed the chinks in GT’s armoury, especially their fragile middle-order, where they have carried two ‘non-performing assets’ in Rahul Tewatia and M Shahrukh Khan for the longest time.

    Between them, they played 24 balls and scored only 25 runs and it is baffling to see head coach Ashish Nehra placing so much faith in the mediocre duo.

    The win, after four straight defeats, took the Mumbai Indians to seventh place in the points table, but more importantly, it improved their net run rate significantly (+0.067).

    MI looked a different outfit till the 14th over when the second strategic time out was taken. Post that, Tilak did the unthinkable to give the total respectability, which looked improbable after the powerplay thanks to an intimidating first spell by Kagiso Rabada.

    At the strategic time-out post 14th over, TV cameras caught skipper Pandya animatedly telling something to Tilak, who had looked unconvincing till that point of time and was occasionally booed by the Motera crowd.

    But after that break, one saw the Tilak that one has always known as he threw the kitchen sink at GT’s fastest bowlers. Prasidh Krishna went for 19, and new pace sensation Ashok Sharma was toyed with for 26 runs.

    Before Monday’s innings, Tilak’s poor form was one of the talking points as he managed only 43 in the previous five outings. In all, he hit eight fours and seven sixes on the day, with a few over covers and some hit down the ground.

    Pandya (15 off 16 balls) did push Tilak but hardly did anything of note himself in their 81-run stand off only 38 balls. The last six overs yielded 96 runs, largely due to the ever inconsistent Prasidh Krishna (1/54 in 4 overs), who gave away 41 in his final two overs.

    This was after Rabada (3/33 in 4 overs) got the ball to seam at a quick clip as he blew the top-order away inside powerplay to ensure that it would be another day of below par total for the five-time champions who had been looking completely out of sorts until then.

    Rabada, rated as one of the legends of his generation alongside Pat Cummins, Bumrah and Josh Hazlewood, bowled the ‘Test match length’, faster, fuller and attacked the stumps to get three wickets.

    Danish Malewar (2) understood the gulf between domestic and world class bowling as he couldn’t get his bat down on time and Rabada rapped him on the pads plumb in front. Quinton de Kock (13 off 11 balls) played a rasping square cut when Rabada gave him width but a short ball saw him balloon a pull shot, which the bowler collected gleefully.

    The best dismissal certainly was the one where he set up out-of-form India T20I skipper Suryakumar Yadav (15 off 10 balls). Surya had clipped Rabada for a six into the cow corner and straight drove him for a boundary.

    Rabada came back with a banger — a 152 kmph delivery pitched up on fourth stump line that cut back sharply. There was no visible footwork and the bat was away from the body as it breached through the defence to peg the stump back.

    Naman Dhir, who scored a fifty in the last game, resurrected the innings. He used Ashok Sharma’s pace to get a couple of boundaries and kept pushing the scoreboard although he never dominated the attack.

    It was only post the strategic break that Tilak suddenly changed gears and played the most memorable knock of his IPL career. It was the fastest hundred for Mumbai Indians in the history of the tournament.


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  • Meesho allots over 94.79 lakh equity shares to employees under ESOP

    Meesho allots over 94.79 lakh equity shares to employees under ESOP

    New Delhi: E-commerce firm Meesho has allotted nearly 94.8 lakh equity shares to its eligible employees under the company’s employee stock ownership plan.

    “We wish to inform you that the Nomination and Remuneration Committee of the Board of Directors of Meesho Ltd, by way of a circular resolution passed on April 20, 2026, has approved the allotment of 94,79,380 equity shares of face value of Re 1 each to the eligible employees, upon exercise of vested options under the company’s Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP) 2024 Plan. The said equity shares shall rank pari-passu with existing equity shares of the company in all respects,” Meesho said in a regulatory filing.

    Following this allotment, the issued, subscribed, and paid-up equity share capital of the Bengaluru-headquartered company has increased from Rs 456,40,55,196 to Rs 4,57,35,34,576.

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  • EC vows free, fair polls in West Bengal: CEC Kumar

    EC vows free, fair polls in West Bengal: CEC Kumar

    New Delhi: Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar on Monday, April 20, asserted that the Election Commission will leave no stone unturned in holding free, fair and transparent polls in West Bengal where the first phase of voting is scheduled to be held on April 23.

    Interacting with officials involved in poll management, the CEC said the elections will be fear-free, violence-free and intimidation-free.

    Officials said the poll authority will ensure elections are also inducement-free and “booth jamming free”.

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    No employee of the state government, local bodies or autonomous bodies will be allowed to influence the electoral process, they said.

    The ruling TMC in the state has accused the EC of playing in the hands of the BJP, a charge vehemently rejected by the election watchdog.

    The EC and the TMC have also been at loggerheads over the special intensive revision of voters’ list with the party accusing the poll authority of deliberately disenfranchising voters to benefit the BJP. Both the EC and the BJP have rejected the charge while dubbing it as baseless.

    MS Admissions Admissions 2026-27MS Admissions Admissions 2026-27

    The second phase of voting in West Bengal will be held on April 29 and votes will be counted on May 4.