
Pakistan says it has killed 145 'India-backed terrorists' in Balochistan after deadly attacks

Pakistani police and military forces killed over 100 "India-backed terrorists" in counter-terrorism operations across the southwestern province of Balochistan over the past 40 hours, according to government officials.
The provincial chief minister, Sarfraz Bugti, told reporters in Quetta that troops and police officers responded quickly, killing at least 145 members of “Fitna al-Hindustan,” a phrase the government uses for the Baloch Liberation Army, or BLA, which is suspected of being backed by India.
The Balochistan region has long been a zone of conflict and terrorist attacks, which have caused dozens of casualties and ongoing tensions between Pakistan and its neighbors.
Jeffrey Epstein planned to steal frozen Libyan funds with the cooperation of international intelligence services, including Mossad

American billionaire Jeffrey Epstein and his network planned to exploit the political and economic unrest in Libya in 2011 to retrieve frozen Libyan funds, amounting to about $80 billion, including $32.4 billion in the US.
Epstein intended to use former officials of British and Israeli intelligence services, including Mossad, as well as international law firms, to identify and recover these "stolen assets."
The frozen Libyan fund was part of international sanctions under UN Resolution 1973, and ongoing wars have prevented Libya from recovering these funds until now.
US is talking to Cuban leaders, Trump says, after threats of blockade

Washington is negotiating with Havana's leaders to reach a deal, Donald Trump said, just days after threatening to limit the country's fuel supply.
Trump said that the economic crisis in Cuba is severe, that the country lacks oil and money that previously came from Venezuela, and expressed confidence that the two countries could negotiate a solution, but did not provide details on what a possible agreement would include.
Meanwhile, the Cuban government has accused Trump of trying to worsen the island's economy, where daily power outages are frequent and lines at gas stations are getting longer and longer.
The resemblance of a restored angel to Giorgia Meloni causes investigations in Rome

Italy's culture minister and the diocese of Rome have launched investigations after claims that an angel in a historic church in Rome has been restored in the likeness of Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.
Restorer Bruno Valentinetti said he had simply restored the faces to their original state in 2000 and denied any political or propagandistic intent.
As the "before and after" photos made the rounds on social media, Meloni got involved, posting the photo and saying that she looked nothing like an angel, while opposition politicians warned that such an intervention could constitute a violation of inheritance rules, sparking a wide national debate.