A church bombing leads Syria's Christians to consider leaving as foreign fighters remainNew Foto - A church bombing leads Syria's Christians to consider leaving as foreign fighters remain

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — The day after last month'sdeadly suicide attack on a churchoutside Syria's capital, hundreds of Christians marched in Damascus chanting against foreign fighters and calling for them to leave the country. The June 22 attack on the Mar Elias church, killing at least 25 people and wounding dozens, was the latest alarm for religious minorities who say they have suffered one blow after another sincePresident Bashar Assadwas removed from power in December. Muslim militant groups led by the IslamistHayat Tahrir al-Sham, which is headed by Syria's interim president Ahmad al-Sharaa, now control much of the country. While the new government has condemned attacks on minorities, many accuse it of looking the other way or being unable to control the armed groups it is trying to absorb. Among the groups are thousands of foreign fighters, who often hold a more extreme Islamic ideology than many of their Syrian counterparts. In a highly unusual move, al-Sharaa early on promoted a half-dozen foreign fighters to ranks as high as brigadier general. How Syria's new leaders address the treatment of minorities, and the presence of foreign fighters, is being closely watched by the United States and others moving tolift long-standing sanctionson the country. Fears of a mass Christian exodus Syria's top Greek Orthodox religious authority has called the church bombing the worst crime against Christians in Damascus since 1860, when thousands were massacred within days by Muslim attackers. Two weeks after the church attack, it is not clear who was behind it. The government blamed the extremist Islamic State group, which did not claim responsibility as it usually does. A little-known group called Saraya Ansar al-Sunna said a member carried out the attack, but the government called the group merely a cover for IS. Al-Sharaa vowed that those behind the bombing will be brought to justice and called for national unity against "injustice and crime." But many Christians in Syria were angered by what they saw as an inadequate government response, especially as officials did not describe the dead as "martyrs," apparently depriving them of the honorific reference because they were not Muslims. The attack has raised fears of a mass exodus of Christians similar to what happened in Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003 and the rise of sectarian violence. "I love Syria and would love to stay here, but let's hope that they don't force us to leave," said Kameel Sabbagh, who stayed in Syria throughout the conflict that began in 2011 when Assad cracked down on anti-government protests and morphed into a civil war. The years of chaos included the rise of IS in Syria, whose sleeper cells still carry out deadly attacks. Hundreds of thousands of Christians did leave during the civil war during multipleattacks on Christiansby mostly Muslim militants, including thekidnapping of nunsand priests anddestruction of churches. Some priests estimate a third of Christians left. "We are a main component in this country and we are staying," Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch John X Yazigi said during the funeral for the church bombing victims, in an apparent reference to concerns that Christians will be forced to leave. Islamization of Syria Christians made up about 10% of Syria's prewar population of 23 million, enjoying freedom of worship under the Assad government and some high government posts. Initially, many Christians were willing to give the new authorities a chance. In a nationwide survey conducted in May by local research group Etana, 85% of Sunnis said they felt safe under the current authorities, compared with 21% of Alawites and 18% of Druze. Militant groups have been blamed for revenge killings against members ofAssad's Alawite sectin March and clashes withDruze fightersweeks later. Christians fell in the middle in the survey, with 45%. But now, "the size of fear has increased among Christians," said politician Ayman Abdel Nour, who recently met with religious leaders. He said they told him that many Christians might decide that leaving the country is the only solution. The attack came as Christians noticed growing signs of Islamization. In some Christian neighborhoods, Muslim missionaries have marched through the streets with loudspeakers calling on people to convert to Islam. Last month, Syrian authorities said women should wear the all-encompassing burkini for swimming except in upscale resorts. Bearded gunmen beat up men and women partying at nightclubs in Damascus. Today, Social Affairs Minister Hind Kabawat is the only Christian, and only woman, out of23 cabinet ministers. One Christian who spoke on condition of anonymity out of security concerns said he had applied to immigrate to Canada or Australia. Many foreign fighters could stay The Interior Ministry has said the church attacker was not Syrian and had been living in al-Hol camp in the northeast, where thousands of family members of IS fighters have been held since the extremists' defeat in 2019. The U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces that control the camp, however, said their investigation showed that the attacker did not come from al-Hol. Days later, dozens of Syrian Christians marched near the attack site chanting "Syria is free, terrorists out." During the civil war, tens of thousands of Sunni Muslim fighters from more than 80 countries came to take part in battles against Assad, who was backed by regional Shiite power Iran, Tehran's proxies and Russia. They played an instrumental role in ending54 years of Assad family rule, seeing their fight as a holy war. Days after Assad's fall, al-Sharaa thanked six foreign fighters by promoting them to the ranks of colonel and brigadier general, including ones from Egypt and Jordan as well as the Albanian Abdul Samrez Jashari, designated as a terrorist by the U.S. in 2016 for his affiliation with al-Qaida's branch in Syria. Among the groups enjoying wide influence in post-Assad Syria are theTurkistan Islamic Party in Syria, who are mostly Chinese Muslims; Junud al-Sham, mostly ethnic Chechen gunmen; and Ajnad al-Qawqaz, mostly Muslim fighters from the former Soviet Union. Al-Sharaa has said many foreign fighters are now married to Syrian women and could end up getting citizenship, and has given no indication whether any of the fighters will be asked to leave the country. Recon Geopolitics, a Beirut-based research center, warned last month in a study on foreign fighters in Syria that the situation could get worse, with founder Firas al-Shoufi saying "time is not on Syria's side." ___ Mroue reported from Beirut.

A church bombing leads Syria's Christians to consider leaving as foreign fighters remain

A church bombing leads Syria's Christians to consider leaving as foreign fighters remain DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — The day after last month...
Ex-South Korean leader Yoon appears in Seoul court for hearing on possible arrest warrantNew Foto - Ex-South Korean leader Yoon appears in Seoul court for hearing on possible arrest warrant

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Disgraced former South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol arrived in court Wednesday for a hearing to review a special prosecutor's request for his arrest on charges related to his brief imposition of martial law in December. Yoon, who wasousted in Aprilafter the Constitutional Court upheld his impeachment, was released from prison in March after the Seoul Central District Court overturned his January arrest, allowing him to stand trial for rebellion without being detained. Arriving in a black van with his lawyers, Yoon did not respond to questions before entering the court in Seoul. His criminal case is being handled by a team of investigators under a special prosecutor, Cho Eun-suk, who are pursuing additional charges over Yoon's authoritarian push, including abuse of power, falsifying official documents and obstructing official duties. Cho's team said they view Yoon as a potential threat to destroy evidence. They questioned him twice before submitting a request for his arrest warrant to the court on Sunday. Yoon's lawyers issued a statement denouncing the request for his arrest as excessive and lacking evidence. The court is expected to decide on the arrest warrant by Wednesday evening or early Thursday. The former conservative leader described his martial law imposition on Dec. 3 as a necessary step to quash his "anti-state" liberal opponents, accusing them of using their legislative majority to obstruct his agenda. But Yoon's decree lasted only hours, after a quorum of lawmakers broke through a blockade of heavily armed soldiers at the National Assembly andvoted to lift the measure. Yoon wasimpeached by lawmakers Dec. 14andindicted Jan. 26 by public prosecutorswho accused him of masterminding an attempted rebellion, describing his power grab as an illegal attempt to seize the legislature and election offices and detain political opponents. The charges are punishable by the death penalty or life imprisonment. Yoon also faces accusations of enforcing martial law without following required legal procedure, such as deliberation by a formal Cabinet meeting, and of unlawfully deploying the presidential security forces like a private army to block an initial attempt by law enforcement to detain him at his residence in early January. Yoon's liberal rival, Lee Jae Myung, who won the June snap election to replace him, last month approved legislation to launch sweepingspecial investigationsinto Yoon's martial law debacle and other criminal allegations involving his wife and administration.

Ex-South Korean leader Yoon appears in Seoul court for hearing on possible arrest warrant

Ex-South Korean leader Yoon appears in Seoul court for hearing on possible arrest warrant SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Disgraced former South K...
Mary Lou Retton's Arrest Captured on Bodycam — Mugshots of Former Gold Medalist ReleasedNew Foto - Mary Lou Retton's Arrest Captured on Bodycam — Mugshots of Former Gold Medalist Released

Fairmont PD/ET/YouTube Mary Lou Retton was arrested in May on a DUI charge in West Virginia The Olympian's arrest was captured on body cam footage She made history in 1984 as the first American female gymnast to win an individual all-around gold medal Bodycam footage ofMary Lou Retton'sMay arrest shows her in an apparently distressed state as she tries to perform a sobriety test for West Virginia law enforcement officials. Retton wasarrested on a DUI chargeon May 17 in Marion County, W. Va., according to court records reviewed by PEOPLE at the time. The five-time Olympic medalist was allegedly spotted in her car in a Marion County AutoZone parking lot witha screw-top bottle of wine in her passenger seat, the Associated Press reported, citing a criminal complaint. Retton, 57, is seen in the bodycam footageobtained byEntertainment Tonightas an officer with the Fairmont City Police Department instructs her to carry out the sobriety test. As the officer guides her through the steps, Retton appears compliant, though at times she expresses shock at the situation, gasping and saying, "Oh my God." She appears to struggle to complete the test, which requires her to put her foot up six inches off the ground, and count until instructed by the officer to stop. Retton appears to struggle to count past nine. At one point, she seems to have trouble breathing, and has to get her oxygen, tying the tube to her nose while doing the test. Retton has been relying on daily oxygen since her recovery from aserious bout of pneumoniain 2023 — an illness so severe that doctors briefly believed she might not survive, she told PEOPLE in 2024. In July 2024, theDancing with the Starsalum told PEOPLE that she was so gravely ill at one point during her month-long hospital stay that the doctors had toldher four daughtersshe might not make it. "It's been really hard," she told PEOPLE in 2024. "My lungs are so scarred. It will be a lifetime of recovery. My physicality was the only thing I had and it was taken away from me. It's embarrassing." Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Sign up forPEOPLE's free True Crime newsletterfor breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases. Retton entered a no contest plea to a non-aggravated DUI charge and was slapped with a $100 fine, standard for first-time, non-aggravated offenses in the area. Following her arrest, she told PEOPLE in a statement thatshe is taking accountabilityfor the incident. "What happened was completely unacceptable. I make no excuses. To my family, friends and my fans: I have let you down, and for that I am deeply sorry," she said through her attorney Edmund J. Rollo. The Fairmont City Police Department, which made the arrest, was not available for comment at publication time. Read the original article onPeople

Mary Lou Retton's Arrest Captured on Bodycam — Mugshots of Former Gold Medalist Released

Mary Lou Retton's Arrest Captured on Bodycam — Mugshots of Former Gold Medalist Released Fairmont PD/ET/YouTube Mary Lou Retton was arre...
Nikola Jokić reportedly won't sign extension with Nuggets this summer as more money awaits next offseasonNew Foto - Nikola Jokić reportedly won't sign extension with Nuggets this summer as more money awaits next offseason

Don't panic, Denver Nuggets fans. Nikola Jokić won't sign a contract extension with the Nuggets this offseason,according to the Denver Post. But there's a perfectly good — and obvious — reason for the decision. He'll stand to secure roughly $80 million more if he waits to sign an extension until 2026. Per the Post, Jokić has informed the Nuggets he won't sign an extension this summer, the first offseason he was eligible to do so. Jokić is approaching the third year of a five-year, $276 million supermax contract that runs through the 2027-28 season. The final season of the deal comes with a player option, so his services are secured in Denver through the 2026-27 season. Jokić is eligible this summer to sign a three-year, $212 million extension ($70.6 million AAV) that would keep him under Denver's control into his mid-30s. The precise value of an extension if he waits until 2026 isn't clear. But permultiple reportsincluding the Post's, waiting until next summer would net Jokić an additional year on the extension and an estimated $80 million more in guaranteed money. That's plenty of reason to exercise patience. The decision by Jokić was expected and reported on the first day he was eligible to sign an extension. Nuggets governor Josh Kroenke anticipated the decision in comments to media in June. "We're definitely going to offer it," Kroenke said of an extension for Jokić. "I'm not sure if he's going to accept it or not, because we're also going to explain every financial parameter around him signing now versus signing later. "To be completely transparent, that's the way we always are. And then he makes the best decision for himself and his family, and we'll support him in it." Jokić, 30, is a three-time MVP who led the Nuggets to the franchise's first NBA championship in 2023. He's coming off another MVP-caliber season in which he finished second in voting to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. Extension talk arrives amid an offseason of change in Denver in which the Nuggets have hired a new coach and revamped their front office after dismissing head coach Michael Malone and general manager Calvin Booth late in the season. With new coach David Adelman at the helm, the Nuggets pushed the eventual champion Oklahoma City Thunder to seven games in a second-round playoff series that exposed the flaws in Denver's roster. Denver's front-office tandem of executive vice presidents Ben Tenzer and Jonathan Wallacehas been aggressive this offseason in retooling Denver's rosterin hopes of maximizing the remainder of Jokić's prime — and convincing him to stay. The Nuggets traded Michael Porter Jr. to the Brooklyn Nets in a deal that returned sharp-shooting wing Cam Johnson and opened salary cap flexibility for Denver to address significant depth issues. They've capitalized on that flexibility by reuniting with wing defender Bruce Brown, adding more shooting in veteran guard Tim Hardaway Jr. and providing much-needed post relief for Jokić intrading for center Jonas Valančiūnas— thoughit remains to be seen if Valančiūnas will play for the Nuggetsas he's being courted overseas. The moves signal Denver's intent to return to championship contention. And the Nuggets are certainly hoping they'll nudge Jokić into signing a four-year extension next summer.

Nikola Jokić reportedly won't sign extension with Nuggets this summer as more money awaits next offseason

Nikola Jokić reportedly won't sign extension with Nuggets this summer as more money awaits next offseason Don't panic, Denver Nugget...
Rescuers search for 19 missing and recover 9 bodies after flooding in NepalNew Foto - Rescuers search for 19 missing and recover 9 bodies after flooding in Nepal

KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — Dozens of rescuers searched the banks of a mountain river Wednesday looking for people missing aftermonsoon floods swept awayNepal's main bridge connecting to the country to China and caused at least nine deaths. Police said dozens of rescuers were already at the area and more are expected to join the rescue efforts. Nine dead bodies have been recovered from the river. Security forces have rescued 55 people, including four Indians and a Chinese person so far, according to the Rasuwa District Administration Office. Prime Minister Khadga Prasad Oli, along with top ministers and officials, flew to the area. Oli called an emergency meeting Tuesday night and instructed all security forces and government offices to assist the rescue and recovery efforts. The flooding on the Bhotekoshi River early Tuesday destroyed the Friendship Bridge at Rasuwagadi, which is 120 kilometers (75 miles) north of the capital, Kathmandu. Several houses and trucks that were parked at the border for customs inspections also were swept away. Hundreds of electric vehicles imported from China had been parked at the border point. The 19 missing are 13 Nepali citizens and six Chinese nationals, said the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Authority. The Chinese and eight of the Nepalis were workers at a Chinese-assisted construction project on the Nepali side of the border, according to the Chinese Embassy in Nepal, quoted by state media. The destruction of the bridge has halted all trade from China to Nepal through this route. The longer alternative is for goods to be shipped from China to India and then brought overland to Nepal. Monsoon rains that begin in June and end in September often cause severe flooding in Nepal, disrupting infrastructure and endangering lives.

Rescuers search for 19 missing and recover 9 bodies after flooding in Nepal

Rescuers search for 19 missing and recover 9 bodies after flooding in Nepal KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — Dozens of rescuers searched the banks of...
White House's DOGE cuts package faces uncertain path in Senate as clock ticksNew Foto - White House's DOGE cuts package faces uncertain path in Senate as clock ticks

The White House's package to formalize spending cuts from the Department of Government Efficiency faces potential obstacles ahead in the Senate as congressional Republicans confront an upcoming deadline to enact the measure into law. Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins on Tuesday expressed uncertainty over whether the bill to codify sweeping federal government cuts could pass in the Senate by next Friday's deadline. "I don't know," the Maine Republican told reporters when asked if she thoughta House-passed packageto claw back $9.4 billion in spending can clear the Senate even with changes. "I'll be meeting with members of the Appropriations Committee to discuss changes in it. For my part, I believe it needs some significant changes," she continued, adding that she wants to remove proposed cuts to the global program to fight AIDS, known as PEPFAR. "I can't imagine why we would want to terminate that program, or the maternal and child health program, which is aimed at providing malnourished pregnant women with important vitamins that they need to deliver healthy babies, and also provides food supplements for children," Collins said. The House narrowly passed the legislation last month that would rescind federal dollars for programs like foreign aid and public broadcasting, which has made some centrist Republicans wary. Congress has a 45-day window to approve the cuts, meaning the Senate has until July 18, to pass the package and send it to the president's desk for his approval. If the Senate makes changes to the bill, the House will have to adopt it again before that deadline. Asked if she thinks it can be passed by the deadline, Collins answered, "I don't know what's going to happen." Other Republicans have also suggested that the Senate will likely have to make changes to the House-passed package. "It's highly unlikely that we don't amend anything that comes over here," said Sen. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma. "I mean, everybody's got to put the fingerprints on it. So I'm assuming it probably will be amended." One Republican warned that it would be a bad sign if a Republican-controlled Congress can't pass the administration's spending cuts package. Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana told reporters that if they can't get it across the finish line, "then we should be embarrassed, and it will embarrass the White House." At a recent hearing on Capitol Hill, a number of Republican senatorsraised questionsabout the types of programs the Trump administration has proposed slashing or questioned how it is planning to go about implementing them. Democrats, meanwhile, have remained broadly opposed to the package. The head of the White House budget office defended the Trump administration's push at the hearing. The White House first sent thespending cuts requestto Congress in early June. The bill would only need a simple majority to pass the Senate, rather than the usual 60-vote threshold to avert a filibuster. Sen. Mike Rounds of South Dakota told CNN that he wants to ensure protections for "the radio stations in some of the rural areas that provide emergency services," an issue that Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska has also raised. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, for his part, said he expects the package of spending cuts to be voted out of committee and advance to the floor ahead of another vote-a-rama, or open-ended series of votes on amendments, next week. "I think that will hit the floor next week. Obviously, it's a fairly open process and subject to amendment. So, we'll see where it goes," he said. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer warned Republicans against codifying DOGE's federal government cuts from the floor Tuesday. "If Republicans cave to Donald Trump and gut these investments agreed to by both parties, that would be an affront – a huge affront – to the bipartisan appropriations process," he declared. "It's absurd to expect Democrats to play along with funding the government if Republicans are just going to renege on a bipartisan agreement by concocting rescissions packages behind closed doors without the customary 60 votes required in the appropriations process." GOP Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina predicted that he'll end up backing the package. "We're just looking at any of the national security impacts, any nexus there that would raise concern, but generally predisposed to voting for it," he said. Sen. Roger Marshall of Kansas insisted that he doesn't need any changes to the House-passed package. "I'm happy with where it is. Lots of folks back home are very disappointed in USAID. They're disappointed money's been wasted. They're disappointed in NPR as well, so I'm fine the way it is." This story has been updated with additional details. CNN's Veronica Stracqualursi contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

White House’s DOGE cuts package faces uncertain path in Senate as clock ticks

White House's DOGE cuts package faces uncertain path in Senate as clock ticks The White House's package to formalize spending cuts f...
Taylor Fritz credits girlfriend Morgan Riddle after Wimbledon win sends him to semifinalNew Foto - Taylor Fritz credits girlfriend Morgan Riddle after Wimbledon win sends him to semifinal

LONDON (AP) — Morgan knows best, apparently. Taylor Fritz thought the motivational note he wrote to himself after losing atWimbledonfour years ago would stay private. His girlfriend, influencer Morgan Riddle, later shared it on social media. "That note was never supposed to be public," a smiling Fritz said after his 6-3, 6-4, 1-6, 7-6 (4) win over Karen Khachanov set up a semifinal meeting with two-time defending champion Carlos Alcaraz. Fritz had written to himself in the note that "nobody in the whole world is underachieving harder than you" and urged himself to get his act together. Not only does Fritz forgive Riddle, he also credits her for having such a big impact on him rising to No. 5 in the world rankings in pursuit of his first Grand Slam title. "There's been a pretty constant results-and-ranking rise since we've been together," Fritz said. "I think I would have to say she's been a big help to me just kind of keeping me focused, having someone who cares and just pushes you to just do better and do the right things, be healthier. "Almost like kind of just mother me in a way," he added, chuckling to himself, "with like, the diet and going to sleep on time." A smiling Fritz later added: "Yeah, that maybe wasn't the best choice of words." The 27-year-old American, who wasthe runner-up at last year's U.S. Open, didn't face a break point in the first two sets against No. 17 Khachanov, who rebounded in the third set. It was 4-all in the fourth-set tiebreaker before Fritz claimed the final three points on Court No. 1. It's the first time Fritz has reached the last four at Wimbledon. He's won two grass-court titles this season — Stuttgart and Eastbourne — and was happy he wouldn't be facing Alcaraz on clay, which would be "an absolute nightmare." "Grass is very much so an equalizer. It can be an equalizer. So trust in how I'm playing," he said. "I truly know the way that I played the first two sets today, there's not much any opponent on the other side can do." Alcaraz: Golf first, then Fritz The second-seeded Alcaraz is within sight of a Wimbledon three-peat. Heextended his winning streak to 23 matchesthis season by beating Cameron Norrie 6-2, 6-3, 6-3 on Centre Court. Alcaraz, who has beaten Novak Djokovic in the past two finals at the All England Club, faced only five break points and saved all of them. He wants to hit some other greens, though, before he faces Fritz "For sure I'm going to play some golf, just to switch up my mind a little bit," Alcaraz said The 22-year-old Spaniard has been playing golf with Andy Murray during his Wimbledon run. This time, his opponent could be actorTom Holland, whom he had run into earlier. "I would love to play against him in the golf course. For me it would be such an honor. I will try to set it up in these two days that I will have much time to do it. So let's see if he will be available, and we'll tee it up." ___ AP tennis:https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Taylor Fritz credits girlfriend Morgan Riddle after Wimbledon win sends him to semifinal

Taylor Fritz credits girlfriend Morgan Riddle after Wimbledon win sends him to semifinal LONDON (AP) — Morgan knows best, apparently. Taylor...

 

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