5 minutes
Donostiako Cibrian eta Villa Magdalena galeriek eta Bilboko Carreras Mugicak parte hartuko dute erakustazokan; gaurtik igandera arte egingo dute. June Cresporen, Asier Mendizabalen eta Juan Perez Agirregoikoaren lanak egongo dira ikusgai, besteak beste.
Donostiako Cibrian eta Villa Magdalena galeriek eta Bilboko Carreras Mugicak parte hartuko dute erakustazokan; gaurtik igandera arte egingo dute. June Cresporen, Asier Mendizabalen eta Juan Perez Agirregoikoaren lanak egongo dira ikusgai, besteak beste.
9 minutes

For environmentalists, the Philippine Mining Act of 1995 only enabled both foreign and local corporations to plunder natural resources through large scale-mining, displaced Indigenous and farmer communities while having no significant contributions to the national economy. The post Environmentalists demand repeal of Philippine Mining Act of 1995 appeared first on Bulatlat.

For environmentalists, the Philippine Mining Act of 1995 only enabled both foreign and local corporations to plunder natural resources through large scale-mining, displaced Indigenous and farmer communities while having no significant contributions to the national economy. The post Environmentalists demand repeal of Philippine Mining Act of 1995 appeared first on Bulatlat.
10 minutes
ترامپ: از اعضای سپاه، نیروهای نظامی و پلیس میخواهم سلاحهای خود را زمین بگذارند
ترامپ: از اعضای سپاه، نیروهای نظامی و پلیس میخواهم سلاحهای خود را زمین بگذارند
11 minutes
Aux Comores, le gouvernement a réagi aux griefs de la cinquantaine d'agents de l'aéroport d'Anjouan licenciés en fin de semaine dernière. En conférence de presse mardi 3 mars à Moroni, la ministre des Transports a annoncé que la restructuration touche aussi Mohéli et la direction générale des aéroports des Comores (ADC). En effet, en plus des 57 agents remerciés à Anjouan, 25 postes ont été supprimés à Mohéli et 9 à la direction générale. Au final, l’ADC conserve 111 agents sur les 205 qu’il employait. Les autorités assument la mesure, assurant qu’il ne s’agit pas de politique, mais de leur survie.
Aux Comores, le gouvernement a réagi aux griefs de la cinquantaine d'agents de l'aéroport d'Anjouan licenciés en fin de semaine dernière. En conférence de presse mardi 3 mars à Moroni, la ministre des Transports a annoncé que la restructuration touche aussi Mohéli et la direction générale des aéroports des Comores (ADC). En effet, en plus des 57 agents remerciés à Anjouan, 25 postes ont été supprimés à Mohéli et 9 à la direction générale. Au final, l’ADC conserve 111 agents sur les 205 qu’il employait. Les autorités assument la mesure, assurant qu’il ne s’agit pas de politique, mais de leur survie.
15 minutes

A sweeping GOP proposal that would overhaul local property taxes failed to pass Tuesday, with nearly all House Democrats opposing the measure over concerns about the impact to public services and schools back home. The proposal was rolled out with much fanfare in late January, with Speaker Jon Burns calling the proposal “historic” at the […]

A sweeping GOP proposal that would overhaul local property taxes failed to pass Tuesday, with nearly all House Democrats opposing the measure over concerns about the impact to public services and schools back home. The proposal was rolled out with much fanfare in late January, with Speaker Jon Burns calling the proposal “historic” at the […]
15 minutes
Two Congressional districts that observers say could flip this year — one Democratic-held seat in the eastern part of North Carolina, one Republican-held in the west — have settled on their primary nominees for 2026. North Carolina’s 1st Congressional District covers the northeastern portion of the state and several Black Belt counties, as well as […]
Two Congressional districts that observers say could flip this year — one Democratic-held seat in the eastern part of North Carolina, one Republican-held in the west — have settled on their primary nominees for 2026. North Carolina’s 1st Congressional District covers the northeastern portion of the state and several Black Belt counties, as well as […]
20 minutes
Maggie Ellis and Kristen Hawkins win Texas Supreme Court Dem primaries. John Messinger wins his GOP race for Court of Criminal Appeals, while Alison Fox and Thomas Smith head to a runoff.
Maggie Ellis and Kristen Hawkins win Texas Supreme Court Dem primaries. John Messinger wins his GOP race for Court of Criminal Appeals, while Alison Fox and Thomas Smith head to a runoff.
25 minutes
Maggie Gyllenhaal aktore eta zinemagileak 1930eko hamarkadan girotu du 'The Bride!', Mary Shelleyk sortutako pertsonaia eta haren laguna protagonista dituen filma.
Maggie Gyllenhaal aktore eta zinemagileak 1930eko hamarkadan girotu du 'The Bride!', Mary Shelleyk sortutako pertsonaia eta haren laguna protagonista dituen filma.
27 minutes
Wake County District Court Judge Christine Walczyk appears to be the winner of the Democratic primary for Seat 3 on the North Carolina Court of Appeals. With 81% of statewide precincts reporting, Walczyk leads Raleigh attorney and political newcomer James Whalen with 62% of the votes cast in unofficial results. Whalen captured 38% of the […]
27 minutes
Wake County District Court Judge Christine Walczyk appears to be the winner of the Democratic primary for Seat 3 on the North Carolina Court of Appeals. With 81% of statewide precincts reporting, Walczyk leads Raleigh attorney and political newcomer James Whalen with 62% of the votes cast in unofficial results. Whalen captured 38% of the […]
30 minutes
The food, shopping and community festival came to Tarrant County for the first time on Feb. 28.
The food, shopping and community festival came to Tarrant County for the first time on Feb. 28.
31 minutes
The two appear headed for a May runoff, with U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt trailing in a distant third.
The two appear headed for a May runoff, with U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt trailing in a distant third.
35 minutes
"Most of the complainants based their petitions on the controversial barcodes, which they argued could make ballots traceable and compromise ballot secrecy."
"Most of the complainants based their petitions on the controversial barcodes, which they argued could make ballots traceable and compromise ballot secrecy."
35 minutes
Dünýäniň dürli regionlarynda we Türkmenistanda şu günki bolan we bolup duran soňky wakalar barada gysgaça habarlar.
35 minutes
Dünýäniň dürli regionlarynda we Türkmenistanda şu günki bolan we bolup duran soňky wakalar barada gysgaça habarlar.
36 minutes
مستەفا مەولودی، جێگری سکرتێری گشتیی حزبی دێموکراتی کوردستانی ئێران، سەبارەت بە ئێران لە دوای خامنەیی و داهاتووی کورد و ئەو هاوپەیمانییەی کە بنیات نراوە، لەگەڵ ڕۆژنامەنووس هونەر ئەحمەد قسە دەکات.
مستەفا مەولودی، جێگری سکرتێری گشتیی حزبی دێموکراتی کوردستانی ئێران، سەبارەت بە ئێران لە دوای خامنەیی و داهاتووی کورد و ئەو هاوپەیمانییەی کە بنیات نراوە، لەگەڵ ڕۆژنامەنووس هونەر ئەحمەد قسە دەکات.
37 minutes
(The Center Square) – The Seattle City Council unanimously approved a plan Tuesday requiring the police department to document evidence of potentially unlawful acts by Immigrations and Custom Enforcement agents during immigration actions. The plan was first announced in an executive order by Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson on Jan. 29. Tuesday's city council vote codifies it into city law. Kent Loux, the new president of the Seattle Police Officer's Guild, did respond to an email seeking comment. But former president Mike Solan had attacked the mayor's executive order on X, a day after Wilson's order. “The concept of pitting two armed law enforcement agencies against each other is ludicrous, and will not happen," Solan said. "I will not allow SPOG members to be used as political pawns." City Council Public Safety Committee Chairman Robert Kettle said Tuesday that the measure was necessary given the unprofessional behavior of federal immigration agents during enforcement actions. He cited the death of two protesters in Minneapolis at the hands of ICE in January. "Federal law enforcement actions with ICE and Customs and Border Patrol, have not been to the standards that we expect from law enforcement, " he told the Center Square after Tuesday's vote. Under the resolution, Seattle police officers are required to to investigate, verify, and document any reports of immigration enforcement activity. Officers who are dispatched to the scene are then directed to monitor the immigration enforcement action with in-car and body-worn video, validate the status of federal law enforcement agents by asking for official identification, and secure scenes of potentially unlawful acts to gather evidence for transmittal to prosecutors. Kettle, a retired naval officer who has served overseas in conflict zones in the Middle East, said he accepts the premise that federal immigration agents have the authority to operate in the U.S. "But what we were seeing from federal agents in Minneapolis was substandard," he said. "The resolution is about leadership and the expectations we have from federal immigration agents." ICE officials and the U.S. Border Patrol did not respond to requests for comment. Tuesday's resolution also condemns ICE for the actions in Minneapolis involving the deaths of two civilians. Another part of the resolution requires the city of Seattle to install more than 600 signs prohibiting ICE enforcement action on city property including parks, city garages and The Seattle Center. The signs have already started to be installed at the cost of $45,000 as part of Mayor Wilson's executive order.
(The Center Square) – The Seattle City Council unanimously approved a plan Tuesday requiring the police department to document evidence of potentially unlawful acts by Immigrations and Custom Enforcement agents during immigration actions. The plan was first announced in an executive order by Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson on Jan. 29. Tuesday's city council vote codifies it into city law. Kent Loux, the new president of the Seattle Police Officer's Guild, did respond to an email seeking comment. But former president Mike Solan had attacked the mayor's executive order on X, a day after Wilson's order. “The concept of pitting two armed law enforcement agencies against each other is ludicrous, and will not happen," Solan said. "I will not allow SPOG members to be used as political pawns." City Council Public Safety Committee Chairman Robert Kettle said Tuesday that the measure was necessary given the unprofessional behavior of federal immigration agents during enforcement actions. He cited the death of two protesters in Minneapolis at the hands of ICE in January. "Federal law enforcement actions with ICE and Customs and Border Patrol, have not been to the standards that we expect from law enforcement, " he told the Center Square after Tuesday's vote. Under the resolution, Seattle police officers are required to to investigate, verify, and document any reports of immigration enforcement activity. Officers who are dispatched to the scene are then directed to monitor the immigration enforcement action with in-car and body-worn video, validate the status of federal law enforcement agents by asking for official identification, and secure scenes of potentially unlawful acts to gather evidence for transmittal to prosecutors. Kettle, a retired naval officer who has served overseas in conflict zones in the Middle East, said he accepts the premise that federal immigration agents have the authority to operate in the U.S. "But what we were seeing from federal agents in Minneapolis was substandard," he said. "The resolution is about leadership and the expectations we have from federal immigration agents." ICE officials and the U.S. Border Patrol did not respond to requests for comment. Tuesday's resolution also condemns ICE for the actions in Minneapolis involving the deaths of two civilians. Another part of the resolution requires the city of Seattle to install more than 600 signs prohibiting ICE enforcement action on city property including parks, city garages and The Seattle Center. The signs have already started to be installed at the cost of $45,000 as part of Mayor Wilson's executive order.
37 minutes
Ketika pemerintah tak bisa diandalkan dalam mitigasi banjir, apa yang harus dilakukan warga untuk mencegah penularan penyakit?
Ketika pemerintah tak bisa diandalkan dalam mitigasi banjir, apa yang harus dilakukan warga untuk mencegah penularan penyakit?
39 minutes
Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for Votebeat Texas’ free newsletter here.This story was published in partnership with Dallas Free Press, a nonprofit newsroom focused on community and civic issues in Dallas. Sign up for Dallas Free Press’ texts and newsletters here.DALLAS, Texas — Veronica Anderson walked 2½ miles Tuesday afternoon to the Martin Luther King Jr. Community Center because she wanted to vote.When she arrived, election workers told her she was at the wrong polling place and would need to cast her ballot at a different precinct — one she said she had never heard of. Unsure where it was or how to get there, she stood outside trying to sort out her options. “I walked up here because I want to vote so, so bad,” she told a reporter for the Dallas Free Press and Votebeat, adding that it felt like “your self-esteem and everything is torn down.”Anderson was one of hundreds of voters across Dallas County on Tuesday who went to the wrong voting location as they tried to cast ballots in the state’s high-turnout primaries, with closely watched contests for U.S. Senate at the top of the ticket. Under state law, political parties have wide authority to decide how to run county primaries. The confusion stemmed from a decision by the Dallas County Republican Party to abandon the use of countywide vote centers — which allow voters to cast a ballot at any location — and return to a system of precinct-based assigned polling places for Election Day, a decision that forced Dallas Democrats to do the same. Voters were still able to cast ballots at countywide sites during early voting. Dallas County Democrats had objected to the decision and warned it would confuse voters. After reports of hundreds of confused voters being redirected after going to the wrong polling place Tuesday, Democrats obtained a court order extending voting hours for Democrats in Dallas County until 9 p.m., with ballots cast after 7 p.m. counted provisionally. (The Texas Supreme Court later stayed the order, and said ballots cast by voters who weren’t in line by 7 p.m. should be separated pending a final ruling.) For their part, Republicans did not request an extension of voting hours. Dallas County has used countywide vote centers since 2019. Local Republican leaders — in Dallas and in other counties making similar changes, including Williamson — said the shift would boost voter confidence. Dallas County Election Navigator Edwin Hightower Jr., right, helps a voter who arrived at the wrong polling station find her correct voting location in Dallas, Tuesday, March 3, 2026.County and party officials said they had warned voters ahead of time that Election Day rules would be different. The Dallas County Elections Department sent text messages, mailed notices, and ran social media and streaming ads urging voters to cast ballots early and reminding them they would need to vote at their assigned precinct if they waited until Election Day, according to Nicholas Solorzano, a spokesperson for the Dallas County Elections Department. The county also stationed nonpartisan “election navigators” outside at least 75 polling locations to redirect voters who showed up at the wrong site. Dallas County Republican Party Chair Allen West said the party had publicized the changes as well and framed the return to precinct-based voting as a matter of trust in the process. Kardal Coleman, chair of the Dallas County Democratic Party, told Votebeat that Democrats have “called, texted, we’ve sent mailpieces. We’ve run a full campaign.”‘There are a lot of infuriated voters’At the Anita Martinez Recreation Center in West Dallas, election navigator Juston Marine stood outside with a county-issued tablet, stopping voters before they entered.“Are you here to vote?” he asked. “Can I see your driver’s license? Can you choose your party? I’m just trying to make sure you’re in the right location.”Marine said he was redirecting every second or third voter who approached. He lost count of how many people he had sent elsewhere.“There are a lot of infuriated voters,” he said. Some cursed at him. Others had driven across the county only to learn they were in the wrong place — including one example of a voter who traveled from Balch Springs to West Dallas and was then redirected to Cedar Hill.Ashley Feldt, who recently moved to West Dallas from East Dallas, arrived at the site with her fiancé. Marine told her she was actually assigned to vote at Hexter Elementary, miles away. Unsure she would have time to get there before polls closed, she told her fiancé — who was assigned to the recreation center — to go ahead and vote without her.James Crolley, an Election Day inspector assigned to 12 locations ranging from downtown Dallas to Trinity Groves and West Dallas, said that voters were also surprised to find that voters assigned to the same precinct, but who vote in different parties, often weren’t voting at the same sites.“If you had always voted at Mockingbird Elementary as a Republican, and you go there today, and you’re like, ‘Why am I not able to vote? This is my spot,’” he said, “that caused a little bit of conflict.”The problems were not confined to Dallas.Williamson County Republicans also returned to precinct-based voting and adopted a different counting process for their primary. Instead of using precinct scanners to tabulate votes throughout the day, Republican ballots were to be placed into separate boxes by precinct and scanned centrally after polls close, according to Connie Odom, a spokeswoman for Williamson County. Odom said in an email that reconciliation rules and manual review of some ballots mean few, if any, Election Day results are expected before midnight. The Democratic primary there is using the county’s traditional scanner system.In Eastland County, which moved away from vote centers to enable hand-counting of ballots, election workers at the county courthouse said they had told about 68 voters by late morning that they were at the wrong location.Jennie Trejo and Keri Mitchell of Dallas Free Press and Carrie Levine, Nathaniel Rakich, and Natalia Conteras of Votebeat contributed reporting. Jessica Huseman is Votebeat’s editorial director and is based in Dallas. Contact Jessica at jhuseman@votebeat.org.
39 minutes
Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for Votebeat Texas’ free newsletter here.This story was published in partnership with Dallas Free Press, a nonprofit newsroom focused on community and civic issues in Dallas. Sign up for Dallas Free Press’ texts and newsletters here.DALLAS, Texas — Veronica Anderson walked 2½ miles Tuesday afternoon to the Martin Luther King Jr. Community Center because she wanted to vote.When she arrived, election workers told her she was at the wrong polling place and would need to cast her ballot at a different precinct — one she said she had never heard of. Unsure where it was or how to get there, she stood outside trying to sort out her options. “I walked up here because I want to vote so, so bad,” she told a reporter for the Dallas Free Press and Votebeat, adding that it felt like “your self-esteem and everything is torn down.”Anderson was one of hundreds of voters across Dallas County on Tuesday who went to the wrong voting location as they tried to cast ballots in the state’s high-turnout primaries, with closely watched contests for U.S. Senate at the top of the ticket. Under state law, political parties have wide authority to decide how to run county primaries. The confusion stemmed from a decision by the Dallas County Republican Party to abandon the use of countywide vote centers — which allow voters to cast a ballot at any location — and return to a system of precinct-based assigned polling places for Election Day, a decision that forced Dallas Democrats to do the same. Voters were still able to cast ballots at countywide sites during early voting. Dallas County Democrats had objected to the decision and warned it would confuse voters. After reports of hundreds of confused voters being redirected after going to the wrong polling place Tuesday, Democrats obtained a court order extending voting hours for Democrats in Dallas County until 9 p.m., with ballots cast after 7 p.m. counted provisionally. (The Texas Supreme Court later stayed the order, and said ballots cast by voters who weren’t in line by 7 p.m. should be separated pending a final ruling.) For their part, Republicans did not request an extension of voting hours. Dallas County has used countywide vote centers since 2019. Local Republican leaders — in Dallas and in other counties making similar changes, including Williamson — said the shift would boost voter confidence. Dallas County Election Navigator Edwin Hightower Jr., right, helps a voter who arrived at the wrong polling station find her correct voting location in Dallas, Tuesday, March 3, 2026.County and party officials said they had warned voters ahead of time that Election Day rules would be different. The Dallas County Elections Department sent text messages, mailed notices, and ran social media and streaming ads urging voters to cast ballots early and reminding them they would need to vote at their assigned precinct if they waited until Election Day, according to Nicholas Solorzano, a spokesperson for the Dallas County Elections Department. The county also stationed nonpartisan “election navigators” outside at least 75 polling locations to redirect voters who showed up at the wrong site. Dallas County Republican Party Chair Allen West said the party had publicized the changes as well and framed the return to precinct-based voting as a matter of trust in the process. Kardal Coleman, chair of the Dallas County Democratic Party, told Votebeat that Democrats have “called, texted, we’ve sent mailpieces. We’ve run a full campaign.”‘There are a lot of infuriated voters’At the Anita Martinez Recreation Center in West Dallas, election navigator Juston Marine stood outside with a county-issued tablet, stopping voters before they entered.“Are you here to vote?” he asked. “Can I see your driver’s license? Can you choose your party? I’m just trying to make sure you’re in the right location.”Marine said he was redirecting every second or third voter who approached. He lost count of how many people he had sent elsewhere.“There are a lot of infuriated voters,” he said. Some cursed at him. Others had driven across the county only to learn they were in the wrong place — including one example of a voter who traveled from Balch Springs to West Dallas and was then redirected to Cedar Hill.Ashley Feldt, who recently moved to West Dallas from East Dallas, arrived at the site with her fiancé. Marine told her she was actually assigned to vote at Hexter Elementary, miles away. Unsure she would have time to get there before polls closed, she told her fiancé — who was assigned to the recreation center — to go ahead and vote without her.James Crolley, an Election Day inspector assigned to 12 locations ranging from downtown Dallas to Trinity Groves and West Dallas, said that voters were also surprised to find that voters assigned to the same precinct, but who vote in different parties, often weren’t voting at the same sites.“If you had always voted at Mockingbird Elementary as a Republican, and you go there today, and you’re like, ‘Why am I not able to vote? This is my spot,’” he said, “that caused a little bit of conflict.”The problems were not confined to Dallas.Williamson County Republicans also returned to precinct-based voting and adopted a different counting process for their primary. Instead of using precinct scanners to tabulate votes throughout the day, Republican ballots were to be placed into separate boxes by precinct and scanned centrally after polls close, according to Connie Odom, a spokeswoman for Williamson County. Odom said in an email that reconciliation rules and manual review of some ballots mean few, if any, Election Day results are expected before midnight. The Democratic primary there is using the county’s traditional scanner system.In Eastland County, which moved away from vote centers to enable hand-counting of ballots, election workers at the county courthouse said they had told about 68 voters by late morning that they were at the wrong location.Jennie Trejo and Keri Mitchell of Dallas Free Press and Carrie Levine, Nathaniel Rakich, and Natalia Conteras of Votebeat contributed reporting. Jessica Huseman is Votebeat’s editorial director and is based in Dallas. Contact Jessica at jhuseman@votebeat.org.
39 minutes
The council is considering 50% tax breaks for Edged Data Centers, which wants to build in the Veale Ranch development.
The council is considering 50% tax breaks for Edged Data Centers, which wants to build in the Veale Ranch development.
43 minutes
അമേരിക്കയും ഇസ്രയേലും സംയുക്തമായി നടത്തുന്ന ആക്രമണങ്ങൾക്ക് ശക്തമായ തിരിച്ചടി നൽകി ഇറാൻ.
അമേരിക്കയും ഇസ്രയേലും സംയുക്തമായി നടത്തുന്ന ആക്രമണങ്ങൾക്ക് ശക്തമായ തിരിച്ചടി നൽകി ഇറാൻ.
43 minutes
അന്തരിച്ച ആയത്തുള്ള അലി ഖമനേയിയുടെ പിൻഗാമിയായി അദ്ദേഹത്തിന്റെ മകൻ മോജ്തബ ഖമനേയിയെ ഇറാന്റെ പുതിയ പരമാധികാര നേതാവായി തിരഞ്ഞെടുത്തു.
അന്തരിച്ച ആയത്തുള്ള അലി ഖമനേയിയുടെ പിൻഗാമിയായി അദ്ദേഹത്തിന്റെ മകൻ മോജ്തബ ഖമനേയിയെ ഇറാന്റെ പുതിയ പരമാധികാര നേതാവായി തിരഞ്ഞെടുത്തു.