Teherán transmite a la Unión Europea su disposición a frenar la guerra si cesan los ataques, mientras Washington advierte de que responderá con contundencia a cualquier agresión contra intereses estadounidenses.

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Mundiario
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Teherán transmite a la Unión Europea su disposición a frenar la guerra si cesan los ataques, mientras Washington advierte de que responderá con contundencia a cualquier agresión contra intereses estadounidenses.

Lançando um novo livro de contos, O Anonimato dos afetos, o jornalista, escritor e artista visual Jean Wyllys está de olho também nas eleições de outubro de 2026. Não apenas na posição de quem esteve na política e viveu os desafios da disputa com a extrema direita, tendo precisado sair do país por um período, […] Fonte

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Lançando um novo livro de contos, O Anonimato dos afetos, o jornalista, escritor e artista visual Jean Wyllys está de olho também nas eleições de outubro de 2026. Não apenas na posição de quem esteve na política e viveu os desafios da disputa com a extrema direita, tendo precisado sair do país por um período, […] Fonte

La elección de la guatemalteca Karla Lisbeth Gutiérrez Herrera como presidenta del Parlamento Centroamericano marca una nueva etapa para la institución regional, que refuerza su apuesta por la integración política, económica y social.

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La elección de la guatemalteca Karla Lisbeth Gutiérrez Herrera como presidenta del Parlamento Centroamericano marca una nueva etapa para la institución regional, que refuerza su apuesta por la integración política, económica y social.

دانیشتووانی شارۆچکەی گرکێ لەکێ لە ڕۆژئاوا ڕژانە سەر شەقامەکان و هێرشەکانی ڕژێمی ئێران بۆ سەر هەرێمی کوردستان شەرمەزار دەکەن.

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دانیشتووانی شارۆچکەی گرکێ لەکێ لە ڕۆژئاوا ڕژانە سەر شەقامەکان و هێرشەکانی ڕژێمی ئێران بۆ سەر هەرێمی کوردستان شەرمەزار دەکەن.

President Donald Trump signed a sweeping executive order on Tuesday that attempts to restrict mail-in voting, a White House priority certain to face significant legal challenges. The order directs the U.S. Department of Homeland Security along with the Social Security Administration to compile a list of voting-age American citizens in each state and share it […]

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President Donald Trump signed a sweeping executive order on Tuesday that attempts to restrict mail-in voting, a White House priority certain to face significant legal challenges. The order directs the U.S. Department of Homeland Security along with the Social Security Administration to compile a list of voting-age American citizens in each state and share it […]

Sign up for Chalkbeat Colorado’s free daily newsletter to get the latest reporting from us, plus curated news from other Colorado outlets, delivered to your inbox.Low-income families in Colorado’s child care subsidy program will get financial assistance at least through June 30 as a lawsuit challenging a Trump administration effort to withhold $10 billion in funding from five states unfolds. The Colorado Department of Early Childhood announced the funding extension on Friday after a recent disbursement of child care dollars from the federal government. Colorado’s program helps cover the cost of child care for more than 27,000 children so parents can work or take classes. It’s mostly funded by the federal government with smaller contributions from states and counties. In January, the federal government threatened to cut off funding to Colorado, California, Illinois, Minnesota, and New York, suggesting without evidence that the states were providing benefits to “illegal aliens.” The five states quickly sued to prevent funding disruptions. Now, even after orders from a federal judge to release the funding as scheduled, there is a sense of uncertainty about the fate of the targeted programs. In early January, when federal officials first threatened to restrict funding, Colorado officials estimated they had only enough money to offer child care aid through the end of January. Since then, they have sent regular alerts to child care providers and the public with updates on the freeze lawsuit and the latest estimate of how long funding will last.In February, federal District Judge Vernon Broderick granted a preliminary injunction requiring the federal government to continue providing the child care and social services funding to the five states that sued. In early February, Colorado estimated the child care assistance money would last through May. Friday’s announcement extended that by a month. Ann Schimke is a senior reporter at Chalkbeat. Contact Ann at aschimke@chalkbeat.org.

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Sign up for Chalkbeat Colorado’s free daily newsletter to get the latest reporting from us, plus curated news from other Colorado outlets, delivered to your inbox.Low-income families in Colorado’s child care subsidy program will get financial assistance at least through June 30 as a lawsuit challenging a Trump administration effort to withhold $10 billion in funding from five states unfolds. The Colorado Department of Early Childhood announced the funding extension on Friday after a recent disbursement of child care dollars from the federal government. Colorado’s program helps cover the cost of child care for more than 27,000 children so parents can work or take classes. It’s mostly funded by the federal government with smaller contributions from states and counties. In January, the federal government threatened to cut off funding to Colorado, California, Illinois, Minnesota, and New York, suggesting without evidence that the states were providing benefits to “illegal aliens.” The five states quickly sued to prevent funding disruptions. Now, even after orders from a federal judge to release the funding as scheduled, there is a sense of uncertainty about the fate of the targeted programs. In early January, when federal officials first threatened to restrict funding, Colorado officials estimated they had only enough money to offer child care aid through the end of January. Since then, they have sent regular alerts to child care providers and the public with updates on the freeze lawsuit and the latest estimate of how long funding will last.In February, federal District Judge Vernon Broderick granted a preliminary injunction requiring the federal government to continue providing the child care and social services funding to the five states that sued. In early February, Colorado estimated the child care assistance money would last through May. Friday’s announcement extended that by a month. Ann Schimke is a senior reporter at Chalkbeat. Contact Ann at aschimke@chalkbeat.org.

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24 minutes

Mundiario
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El humor gráfico, con casi tres siglos a cuestas, es hoy un arte expresivo y comunicador de primer orden, que MUNDIARIO trae a su página home de la mano de Manuel Arriaga.

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24 minutes

El humor gráfico, con casi tres siglos a cuestas, es hoy un arte expresivo y comunicador de primer orden, que MUNDIARIO trae a su página home de la mano de Manuel Arriaga.

(The Center Square) – Three wrestlers at California Baptist University have filed a federal lawsuit challenging the school’s decision to eliminate its men’s wrestling program, arguing it violates Title IX and unfairly discriminates against male athletes. The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, comes after the university announced Jan. 2 that it would discontinue its men’s wrestling, golf and swimming and diving teams at the end of the 2025–26 academic year. Women’s athletic programs were not affected. CBU, an NCAA Division I school in Riverside in Southern California, competes in the Big 12 Conference for wrestling. The plaintiffs - Paul Kelly, Cooper Shore and Jesse Vasquez, all CBU students and wrestlers - allege the university is using a federal Title IX compliance standard as a pretext to reduce opportunities for men. The issue is a longstanding 1979 policy interpretation by the U.S. Department of Education that introduced a “three-part test” for Title IX compliance. One prong of the policy evaluates whether athletic participation opportunities are substantially proportionate to overall student enrollment by sex. Attorneys for the athletes argue the university relied on that proportionality standard to justify eliminating men’s teams in order to align roster spots more closely with the school’s male-female enrollment ratio. “Instead of doing the hard work or once it just becomes too difficult, they just employ sex-based quotas, which really flouts the entire point of Title IX, which is to ensure there is not sex discrimination and that it's an equal opportunity statute, not a equity focused quota system,” said Caleb Trotter, a senior attorney with Pacific Legal Foundation. Trotter, whose organization is representing the wrestlers, spoke to The Center Square during an exclusive interview.. Trotter said the case could prompt courts to reconsider the three-part test, which he described as encouraging quota-like outcomes. The Pacific Legal Foundation has filed a separate petition to repeal the interpretation, arguing it has distorted Title IX beyond its text and intent. “Equal opportunity and equality do not mean quotas,” Trotter said. “You cannot single out one sex for worse treatment than the other. And unfortunately, that's what CBU has done here. And we are hopeful that, combined with our Department of Education Petition and this lawsuit, it will spark a fundamental change in how Title IX is viewed and used by universities across the country.” Supporters of the wrestling program also criticized the decision. Nolan Kistler, a 2018 graduate and former wrestler who now speaks for the Keep CBU Wrestling movement, said athletes are being forced into difficult choices. “I love this school, and I want it to thrive, but I also disagree with this decision, and I know there are better solutions than eliminating three sports,” Kistler told The Center Square in an interview. Kistler added that affected athletes have been “left with an ultimatum on whether to transfer and potentially be set back academically or stay here and not do the sport that you love and trained your whole life for.” The Center Square reached out to CBU for a comment but has not received a response.

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(The Center Square) – Three wrestlers at California Baptist University have filed a federal lawsuit challenging the school’s decision to eliminate its men’s wrestling program, arguing it violates Title IX and unfairly discriminates against male athletes. The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, comes after the university announced Jan. 2 that it would discontinue its men’s wrestling, golf and swimming and diving teams at the end of the 2025–26 academic year. Women’s athletic programs were not affected. CBU, an NCAA Division I school in Riverside in Southern California, competes in the Big 12 Conference for wrestling. The plaintiffs - Paul Kelly, Cooper Shore and Jesse Vasquez, all CBU students and wrestlers - allege the university is using a federal Title IX compliance standard as a pretext to reduce opportunities for men. The issue is a longstanding 1979 policy interpretation by the U.S. Department of Education that introduced a “three-part test” for Title IX compliance. One prong of the policy evaluates whether athletic participation opportunities are substantially proportionate to overall student enrollment by sex. Attorneys for the athletes argue the university relied on that proportionality standard to justify eliminating men’s teams in order to align roster spots more closely with the school’s male-female enrollment ratio. “Instead of doing the hard work or once it just becomes too difficult, they just employ sex-based quotas, which really flouts the entire point of Title IX, which is to ensure there is not sex discrimination and that it's an equal opportunity statute, not a equity focused quota system,” said Caleb Trotter, a senior attorney with Pacific Legal Foundation. Trotter, whose organization is representing the wrestlers, spoke to The Center Square during an exclusive interview.. Trotter said the case could prompt courts to reconsider the three-part test, which he described as encouraging quota-like outcomes. The Pacific Legal Foundation has filed a separate petition to repeal the interpretation, arguing it has distorted Title IX beyond its text and intent. “Equal opportunity and equality do not mean quotas,” Trotter said. “You cannot single out one sex for worse treatment than the other. And unfortunately, that's what CBU has done here. And we are hopeful that, combined with our Department of Education Petition and this lawsuit, it will spark a fundamental change in how Title IX is viewed and used by universities across the country.” Supporters of the wrestling program also criticized the decision. Nolan Kistler, a 2018 graduate and former wrestler who now speaks for the Keep CBU Wrestling movement, said athletes are being forced into difficult choices. “I love this school, and I want it to thrive, but I also disagree with this decision, and I know there are better solutions than eliminating three sports,” Kistler told The Center Square in an interview. Kistler added that affected athletes have been “left with an ultimatum on whether to transfer and potentially be set back academically or stay here and not do the sport that you love and trained your whole life for.” The Center Square reached out to CBU for a comment but has not received a response.

Más allá de las pantallas, la verdadera cuestión es hasta qué punto hemos normalizado el funcionamiento en automático, delegando nuestra atención y nuestras decisiones en dinámicas diseñadas para no detenerse nunca.

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Más allá de las pantallas, la verdadera cuestión es hasta qué punto hemos normalizado el funcionamiento en automático, delegando nuestra atención y nuestras decisiones en dinámicas diseñadas para no detenerse nunca.

Governo bolivariano promove mudanças na lei de mineração para facilitar investimentos estrangeiros Fonte

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Governo bolivariano promove mudanças na lei de mineração para facilitar investimentos estrangeiros Fonte

34 minutes

Mundiario
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En una época en la que la palabra circula con velocidad y las acusaciones pueden instalarse sin pruebas, el derecho al honor recupera una relevancia decisiva.

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Mundiario
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En una época en la que la palabra circula con velocidad y las acusaciones pueden instalarse sin pruebas, el derecho al honor recupera una relevancia decisiva.

35 minutes

The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – A Colorado bill to prevent sexual abuse in jails is one step closer to passage. House Bill 1123 was approved Tuesday by the House on a voice vote for its second reading. To pass in the House, the bill must be approved again on its third and final reading. Rep. Katie Stewart, D-District 59, is a primary sponsor of HB 1123. Speaking to lawmakers on the floor Tuesday, Stewart said the bill is very personal. “It comes from my district, where a jail commander abused his privilege of power,” said Stewart, who represents Archuleta, La Plata, Montezuma and San Juan counties. “We've identified 117 victims of this abuse, and so, moving forward, we'd like to offer safeguards to protect folks in jail awaiting trial to make sure that they aren't violated in the same way that these 117 women were.”Stewart did not go into detail on where the alleged abuse occurred. However, various news outlets in Colorado identify the location as La Plata County Jail in Durango. In July 2025, the Colorado Bureau of Investigation charged a former jail commander, Edward Aber, with 117 counts of invasion of privacy for sexual gratification and one count of first-degree official misconduct.“The investigation into Aber, who was promoted to Jail Commander in 2018 and granted administrative access to evidence in 2019, focused on his alleged inappropriate viewing of sensitive video footage,” CBI said in a press release. “Aber was placed on administrative leave in July 2024 following allegations of unlawful sexual contact with female inmates and the sexual harassment of numerous female employees.”“Aber resigned in July of 2024 during the sexual harassment investigation," CBI said.According to CBI, investigators believe 117 different female inmates' strip search videos were “allegedly accessed and viewed by Aber, multiple times,” between 2019 and 2024.“The charges are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt,” said CBI.In her remarks to lawmakers on Tuesday, Stewart said she has been engaging in conversations with law enforcement, victim advocacy groups, and judiciary members about her bill.“I really hope you can support this bill, and we can do better for our neighbors,” said Stewart.Rep. Javier Mabrey, D-District 1, is a co-sponsor of the bill. He said the measure is about preventing sexual abuse in Colorado jails to protect the dignity and bodily autonomy of people who are in custody.“People who are in custody, people who have no ability to leave, no ability to protect their privacy, were recorded in one of the most vulnerable moments imaginable, and those recordings were allegedly used not for security or for evidence, but for sexual exploitation,” Mabrey said, speaking to lawmakers on the House floor. “Strip searches are one of the most intrusive powers that the government has. They involve forcing a person to expose themselves for inspection, and that power must come with the highest possible safeguards.”HB 1123 requires that a strip search happens only after two peace officers agree there's a "reasonable belief" that it's necessary. It also requires the reason and results to be documented. HB 1123 also limits access to video recordings that depict prisoner nudity. And local detention facilities would be required to have a policy on responding to and reporting abuse. HB 1123 also creates “whistleblower protection policies for jail staff.”

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(The Center Square) – A Colorado bill to prevent sexual abuse in jails is one step closer to passage. House Bill 1123 was approved Tuesday by the House on a voice vote for its second reading. To pass in the House, the bill must be approved again on its third and final reading. Rep. Katie Stewart, D-District 59, is a primary sponsor of HB 1123. Speaking to lawmakers on the floor Tuesday, Stewart said the bill is very personal. “It comes from my district, where a jail commander abused his privilege of power,” said Stewart, who represents Archuleta, La Plata, Montezuma and San Juan counties. “We've identified 117 victims of this abuse, and so, moving forward, we'd like to offer safeguards to protect folks in jail awaiting trial to make sure that they aren't violated in the same way that these 117 women were.”Stewart did not go into detail on where the alleged abuse occurred. However, various news outlets in Colorado identify the location as La Plata County Jail in Durango. In July 2025, the Colorado Bureau of Investigation charged a former jail commander, Edward Aber, with 117 counts of invasion of privacy for sexual gratification and one count of first-degree official misconduct.“The investigation into Aber, who was promoted to Jail Commander in 2018 and granted administrative access to evidence in 2019, focused on his alleged inappropriate viewing of sensitive video footage,” CBI said in a press release. “Aber was placed on administrative leave in July 2024 following allegations of unlawful sexual contact with female inmates and the sexual harassment of numerous female employees.”“Aber resigned in July of 2024 during the sexual harassment investigation," CBI said.According to CBI, investigators believe 117 different female inmates' strip search videos were “allegedly accessed and viewed by Aber, multiple times,” between 2019 and 2024.“The charges are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt,” said CBI.In her remarks to lawmakers on Tuesday, Stewart said she has been engaging in conversations with law enforcement, victim advocacy groups, and judiciary members about her bill.“I really hope you can support this bill, and we can do better for our neighbors,” said Stewart.Rep. Javier Mabrey, D-District 1, is a co-sponsor of the bill. He said the measure is about preventing sexual abuse in Colorado jails to protect the dignity and bodily autonomy of people who are in custody.“People who are in custody, people who have no ability to leave, no ability to protect their privacy, were recorded in one of the most vulnerable moments imaginable, and those recordings were allegedly used not for security or for evidence, but for sexual exploitation,” Mabrey said, speaking to lawmakers on the House floor. “Strip searches are one of the most intrusive powers that the government has. They involve forcing a person to expose themselves for inspection, and that power must come with the highest possible safeguards.”HB 1123 requires that a strip search happens only after two peace officers agree there's a "reasonable belief" that it's necessary. It also requires the reason and results to be documented. HB 1123 also limits access to video recordings that depict prisoner nudity. And local detention facilities would be required to have a policy on responding to and reporting abuse. HB 1123 also creates “whistleblower protection policies for jail staff.”

La periodista independiente Shelly Kittleson fue secuestrada por varios hombres armados en el centro de Bagdad; las autoridades iraquíes han detenido a un sospechoso, presuntamente vinculado a una milicia proiraní.

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La periodista independiente Shelly Kittleson fue secuestrada por varios hombres armados en el centro de Bagdad; las autoridades iraquíes han detenido a un sospechoso, presuntamente vinculado a una milicia proiraní.

عەبدوڵڵا حیجاب شرۆڤەکاری سیاسی لە وتوێژێکدا بە دەنگی ئەمەریکای ڕاگەیاند، قازی محەممەد ڕەمزی نەتەوەی کوردە و دۆناڵد ترامپ سەرۆکی ئەمەریکا بڕیاری دروستی لە بارەی ئێرانەوە داوە.

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عەبدوڵڵا حیجاب شرۆڤەکاری سیاسی لە وتوێژێکدا بە دەنگی ئەمەریکای ڕاگەیاند، قازی محەممەد ڕەمزی نەتەوەی کوردە و دۆناڵد ترامپ سەرۆکی ئەمەریکا بڕیاری دروستی لە بارەی ئێرانەوە داوە.

Despite Idaho having the fewest medical professionals per capita in the United States, the Idaho Legislature’s budget committee on Tuesday cut funding for graduate medical education that helps train health care workers. The Idaho Legislature’s Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee, or JFAC, voted 12-7 to reduce funding for the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare’s health care […]

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Despite Idaho having the fewest medical professionals per capita in the United States, the Idaho Legislature’s budget committee on Tuesday cut funding for graduate medical education that helps train health care workers. The Idaho Legislature’s Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee, or JFAC, voted 12-7 to reduce funding for the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare’s health care […]

La ministra de Seguridad, Trinidad Steinert, confirmó la renuncia del jefe de la Unidad Estratégica del Ministerio, Fabián Gil, tras...

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La ministra de Seguridad, Trinidad Steinert, confirmó la renuncia del jefe de la Unidad Estratégica del Ministerio, Fabián Gil, tras...

El Centro de Justicia decretó prisión preventiva para sujeto que asesinó a su pareja al interior de un departamento en...

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El Centro de Justicia decretó prisión preventiva para sujeto que asesinó a su pareja al interior de un departamento en...

North Country rower Renee Blacken of Bethlehem has completed her quest to row the Atlantic Ocean covering 3,200 miles in 65 days, two hours and 51 minutes on Monday.

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North Country rower Renee Blacken of Bethlehem has completed her quest to row the Atlantic Ocean covering 3,200 miles in 65 days, two hours and 51 minutes on Monday.

NorthWestern Energy doesn’t have to turn over more information about data centers at this point as part of a proposed $15.4 billion merger with Black Hills Corp. Tuesday, the Montana Public Service Commission voted 3-2 to approve a staff recommendation to reject motions to compel the monopoly utility to provide details about its planned service to […]

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NorthWestern Energy doesn’t have to turn over more information about data centers at this point as part of a proposed $15.4 billion merger with Black Hills Corp. Tuesday, the Montana Public Service Commission voted 3-2 to approve a staff recommendation to reject motions to compel the monopoly utility to provide details about its planned service to […]

41 minutes

法国国际广播电台
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一艘装载着73万桶原油的俄罗斯油轮周二停靠在古巴港口,给古巴运来了今年1月份以来的首批原油。

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一艘装载着73万桶原油的俄罗斯油轮周二停靠在古巴港口,给古巴运来了今年1月份以来的首批原油。