Donald Trump is once again appealing a blockbuster fraud penalty against the president and his real-estate empire after his political adversary Letitia James won a multi-million dollar verdict against his sprawling family business.
Last year, a fractured state appeals court tossed a $500 million penalty against Trump and his associates after judges determined the penalty, which has ballooned with interest, was “excessive.”
But the court upheld Justice Arthur Engoron’s findings that the president and his business partners committed brazen fraud, falling short of the vindication that the president sought through the courts to save him.
The president is now asking to throw out the remaining fraud ruling, which his legal team claimed is based on politically motivated and “legally and factually baseless” and “demonstrably wrong” arguments.
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The 119-page appeal called on the court to “put an end to this legally deficient case.”
They accused James — who was targeted by Trump’s Department of Justice after her victory in the fraud case — of “unconstitutional selective enforcement.”
“The reason here was pure politics, as Attorney General James’s own statements make clear,” they wrote.
In 2024, Engoron’s verdict in Manhattan determined that Trump and his co-defendants in his Trump Organization empire had illegally enriched themselves by defrauding banks and investors as part of a decade-long scheme to secure favorable financing terms for some of his brand-building properties.
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The decision followed a bench trial and three-year investigation under James’s office, who had accused Trump and his associates of fraudulently convincing banks and lenders to give them favorable financing terms based on bogus and inflated financial statements.
Belfast actor Michael Campbell has died at the age of 35. An online death notice for the actor, also known as Michael Patrick, said he died on Tuesday at NI Hospice “surrounded by his loving family and friends”.
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The award-winning actor has worked on stage, TV, film and radio productions. Recent theatre work includes his autobiographical play My Right Foot, and The Tragedy Of Richard II.
On television, he has appeared in This Town, Blue Lights, Krypton and Game of Thrones. He had been diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease in early 2023 and later began to use a wheelchair.
In a social media post, his wife Naomi said: “Words can’t describe how broken-hearted we are.
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“It’s been said more than once that Mick was an inspiration to everyone who was privileged enough to come into contact with him, not just in the past few years during his illness but in every day of his life.
“He lived a life as full as any human can live. Joy, abundance of spirit, infectious laughter. A titan of a ginger haired man.”
She added: “We are so grateful for every person who supported us through the last few years.”
The Lyric Theatre in Belfast also paid tribute to Michael, saying they are “devastated” to hear of his passing. A spokesperson for the theatre said: “Michael has been part of the Lyric family for many years, from performing his first one-man show, I, Banquo to the incredible The Tragedy of Richard III in 2024, where his portrayal of Richard III made it a legendary production & one of the greatest performances ever on the Lyric stage.
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“His work as a writer and actor has been hugely impactful and the great strength and dignity he showed in light of his diagnosis with Motor Neurone Disease (MND) is a great inspiration to us all. We at the Lyric pay tribute to his remarkable talent and send our deepest condolences to his wife Naomi, his mother and sisters, and all his friends, family and colleagues at this sad time.”
In his funeral notice, Michael was described as the “beloved husband of Naomi, devoted son of Pauline and the late Michael, brother to Kate, Maurice and Hannah, uncle of Micheál.”
The notice added: “Michael will be reposing in O’Kanes Funeral Home, 2 St Jude’s Avenue, Belfast BT7 2GZ, from Thursday 9/4/26, those wishing to pay their respects, are welcome to call Thursday, Friday, between 9.00am and 5.00pm.
“Requiem Mass will be celebrated on Monday 13th April 2026, in Immaculate Heart of Mary Church, Knockbracken Drive, Carryduff, BT8 8EX at 11.00am, Mass can be viewed live at https://churchmedia.tv/parish-of-drumbo-and-carryduff.
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“Followed by burial in Roselawn Cemetery at 1.00pm. Deeply regretted by his entire family circle.”
“As Attorney General, you are directly responsible for overseeing the Department’s collection, review, and determinations regarding the release of files pursuant to the Epstein Files Transparency Act, and the Committee therefore believes that you possess valuable insight into these efforts,” Comer said of Bondi last month.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — There are faster ways to get from Chicago to Los Angeles, but none have the allure or cultural cachet of Route 66.
To John Steinbeck, it was the Mother Road that led poor farmers from Dust Bowl desperation to sunny California. To Native Americans along the route, it was an economic boon that also left scars. To Black travelers, it offered sanctuary during segregation. And to music fans, it was the place to get their kicks.
Route 66 marks its 100th anniversary this year. Despite losing its status decades ago as one of the nation’s main arteries, people from around the world still flock to it to take perhaps the quintessential American road trip and soak in its neon lights, kitschy motels and attractions, and culinary offerings.
Each town has its own history and magic, said Sebastiaan de Boorder, a Dutch entrepreneur who, with his wife, breathed new life into The Aztec Motel in Seligman, Arizona.
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“It’s an essential part of American culture and history,” he said of the highway. “The historical aspect is just a very big important part of American culture, with its influence and its character.”
The dream
Route 66, which runs for roughly 2,400 miles (3,860 kilometers) from Chicago through Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico and Arizona before ending in Santa Monica, California, was stitched together a century ago from a collection of Native American trading routes and old dirt roads with the goal of linking the industrial Midwest to the Pacific coast.
Oklahoma businessman Cyrus Avery, known as the Father of Route 66, saw it as more than just a way to cross the country efficiently. It was a chance to connect rural America and create new pockets of commerce.
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A sign marking the beginning of historic Route 66 stands at the intersection of East Adams Street and South Michigan Avenue, in Chicago, Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Erin Hooley)
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A sign marking the beginning of historic Route 66 stands at the intersection of East Adams Street and South Michigan Avenue, in Chicago, Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Erin Hooley)
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Avery knew the number 66 would be ripe for marketing and could be seared into drivers’ minds, and he was right: Route 66 has been immortalized in movies, books, including Steinbeck’s “The Grapes of Wrath” and Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road,” and songs such as Bobby Troup’s “(Get Your Kicks on) Route 66,” which served as an anthem for post-World War II optimism and mobility.
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Waves of migration
Since its November 1926 designation as one of the nation’s original numbered highways, the onetime Main Street of America has embodied the promise of prosperity.
It became a literal path of hope for migrants escaping drought-ravaged farms and poverty during the 1930s Dust Bowl and the Great Depression. And during World War II, it was used to move troops, equipment and workers out West.
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A car is driven along Oatman Highway, historic Route 66, near Oatman, Ariz., Friday, Nov. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
A car is driven along Oatman Highway, historic Route 66, near Oatman, Ariz., Friday, Nov. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
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The postwar boom of the 1940s and 1950s were Route 66’s heyday, as it became a popular vacation route. Cars became more affordable, disposable income increased, and people began chasing freedom on the open road.
“People generally have a sense of adventure, a sense curiosity. And you can find that on Route 66. This is the road of dreams,” author and historian Jim Hinckley said.
Going mainstream
Roadside diners and motels thrived, as crafty entrepreneurs dreamed up ways to part motorists from their money. There were rattlesnake pits, totem poles, trading posts, caverns where Old West outlaws purportedly hung out, and modern engineering marvels like St. Louis’ gleaming steel arch.
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Barns were painted with larger-than-life ads, billboards teased local attractions, and neon was everywhere.
The cherry on top? The food.
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A person pulls up to a stoplight in Galena, Kan., Monday, Nov. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)
A person pulls up to a stoplight in Galena, Kan., Monday, Nov. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)
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An astronaut figure is placed in front of a window opening at Meteor Crater, an attraction near historic Route 66, near Winslow, Ariz., Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
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An astronaut figure is placed in front of a window opening at Meteor Crater, an attraction near historic Route 66, near Winslow, Ariz., Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
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There were places to grab and go, but also to sit down and relish a slice of home. The Cozy Dog Drive In — famous for its breaded hot dogs on a stick — has fit both bills since 1949. Inside the dining room in Springfield, Illinois, travelers tell tales of life on the highway.
“The road wouldn’t be alive without the stories of all the places along it that kept it going from town to town,” third-generation owner Josh Waldmire said. “We just survive off each other. The road feeds us, and as long as we put our feelings and love back into the road, it will reverberate with the travelers and the stories of the people.”
A divided highway
Route 66 was an economic boon to the Native American tribes along the way. But although it brought tourists, it also left scars of eminent domain across tribal land and perpetuated stereotypes.
More than half of the highway crossed through Indian Country, and vendor signs often made casual references to tipis and feathered headdresses — symbols easily appropriated for marketing but not always representative of the distinct cultures found along the route.
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At Laguna Pueblo west of Albuquerque, restaurants and service stations sprang up, some operated by military veterans from the pueblo who were masters at fixing everything from flat tires to busted radiators.
Pueblo women adapted too, turning utilitarian pottery vessels into works of art coveted by tourists. Homemade bread and pies sealed the deal.
Laguna leaders have long considered the road — or he-ya-nhee’ in the tribe’s language of Keres — as “the corridor of commerce,” said businessman and tribal member Ron Solimon. Capitalizing on that potential, the tribe has built a multimillion-dollar empire of casinos, burger stands and other businesses.
There were also dangers along the route, particularly during the Jim Crow era, when Black travelers had to rely on guides like the Green Book to find safe lodging and services.
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“Especially for long-distance travel, segregation was a fact of life,” said Matthew Pearce, state historian for the Oklahoma Historical Society. “And so Black motorists needed to know a safe place to go.”
The Threatt Filling Station near the central Oklahoma community of Luther wasn’t listed in the Green Book, but it did serve as a safe haven between two sundown towns, where people who weren’t white needed to leave by sunset. The station offered barbecue and even baseball.
Edward Threatt, whose grandparents opened the station around 1933, recalled a TV program about travelers getting their kicks on 66. “By and large, the Black traveler didn’t get a lot of kicks on Route 66,” he said. “And if they got some kicks, it wasn’t the kind you would think of.”
A new direction
President Dwight Eisenhower’s vision for a modern interstate highway system eventually led to Route 66 being decommissioned as a federal highway in 1985. Some towns along the route died, and it fell to local governments, state historical societies, and private businesses to preserve their sections of the famed road.
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A driving force was Angel Delgadillo, a barber who lobbied the Arizona Legislature to designate the road as a historic highway. He saved Seligman from turning into a ghost town and set the bar for preservation elsewhere.
In New Mexico, original sketches for neon signs have been preserved, Route 66-themed murals abound and developers in Albuquerque have restored motor lodges along the longest urban stretch of the road still intact.
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A visitor poses for photos with the “End of the Trail” Route 66 sign on the Santa Monica Pier in Santa Monica, Calif., Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
A visitor poses for photos with the “End of the Trail” Route 66 sign on the Santa Monica Pier in Santa Monica, Calif., Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
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More than 90% of the road is still drivable in California. Cadillac Ranch in the Texas Panhandle offers the chance to spray-paint half-buried cars. And at the Mississippi River, travelers can walk or bike across the old Chain of Rocks Bridge.
More than 250 of the route’s buildings, districts and road segments are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. But it’s more than bricks and asphalt that fuel the fascination.
“Some of the most interesting and fun things that happen to people when they travel the route is running into somebody they know or some happenstance thing that comes totally unexpected,” said author and historian Jim Ross. “And that’s a great part of the Route 66 experience.”
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Associated Press writers John O’Connor in Springfield, Illinois, and Sean Murphy in Oklahoma City contributed to this report.
After more than five weeks of fighting between the U.S. and Iran, the two countries agreed to a two-week ceasefire as the sides attempt to negotiate an end to the deadly conflict in the Middle East.
Before Israel and then the U.S. began striking Iran’s nuclear sites last summer, Iran had enlarged its stockpile of uranium enriched to near weapons-grade levels, according to a confidential report by the United Nations’ International Atomic Energy Agency obtained by the Associated Press.
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Vice President JD Vance has used an analogy about second lady Usha Vance to explain issues with the Iran war ceasefire (AFP via Getty Images)
While speaking to the press about the U.S.-Iran ceasefire on the tarmac in Budapest, Hungary, Wednesday, a reporter asked Vance, “Do you see a scenario in which the administration may be willing to agree to allow Iran to continue enriching uranium for civilian nuclear purposes?”
Nuclear energy isn’t just used for weapons-making, but can also generate electricity, provide drinkable water through seawater desalination, and is used in medical treatments.
“What the president has said is that we don’t want Iran to have the capacity to build a nuclear weapon. The president has also said that we don’t want Iran enriching towards a nuclear weapon and we want Iran to give up the nuclear fuel. Those are going to be our demands during the negotiation,” Vance said.
The vice president later mentioned that Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of the Iranian Parliament, noted that his country’s 10-point proposal to end the war included “Iran’s right to enrichment.”
After more than five weeks of fighting between the U.S. and Iran, the two countries agreed to a two-week ceasefire (Getty Images)
“I thought to myself, you know what? My wife has the right to skydive, but she doesn’t jump out of an airplane because she and I have an agreement that she’s not going to do that because I don’t want my wife jumping out of an airplane,” Vance said in reaction to Ghalibaf’s comment.
“We don’t really concern ourselves with what they claim they have the right to do. We concern ourselves with what they actually do,” the vice president said.
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Ghalibaf’s comment was part of a larger statement accusing the U.S. of violating parts of its peace plan, which the speaker said Trump had called a “workable basis on which to negotiate.”
Vance said his wife has ‘the right to skydive, but she doesn’t jump out of an airplane,’ in response to Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of the Iranian Parliament, saying ‘Iran’s right to enrichment’ has been denied (Middle East Images/AFP via Getty)
A White House official told The New York Times Iran’s published plan does not match the framework Trump was referring to.
When asked for comment about Trump’s views on Iran’s proposal, White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly told The Independent, “As the White House has said, these are ongoing discussions and the United States will not negotiate through the press.
“President Trump believes that the current plan is a workable document that can lead to lasting peace in the Middle East.”
Vance will lead the U.S. negotiating team in peace talks in Pakistan’s capital of Islamabad starting Saturday, the White House has announced.
Tanner Horner made a chilling confession to police when he was first apprehended for the murder of Athena Strand, seven, who was discovered dead near Fort Worth, Texas
23:13, 08 Apr 2026Updated 23:15, 08 Apr 2026
A FedEx driver who murdered a seven-year-old girl told police he “kind of tossed her” into the woods when he was first detained.
The killer will appear in court later this month where he will either face the death penalty or life in prison. The prosecution had blasted his deceit, slamming his “lie upon lie, upon lie, upon lie”.
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And the newly released bodycam footage shows police search Horner’s home for signs of Athena before demanding he tell them where she was. He told the officers: “‘I can show you.” One cop asks him: “Is she alive?” Horner responded: “She wasn’t alive when I put her in the truck.”
Horner had strangled the girl after delivering Christmas presents at her home in Fort Worth, Texas, in November 2022. Athena’s body was found two days later approximately seven miles from her home, beside a country road.
Initially, Horner told authorities he had accidentally struck the youngster with his truck, and then strangled her in a fit of panic. He continued to deny murder until the first day of his trial in Dallas, Texas, this week.
Proceedings heard grim details about Horner’s crimes, including how he told police he “just kind of tossed” Athena into the woods after she had died. He was, though, unable to identify the exact location of the youngster’s body.
The court was also shown a disturbing picture of Athena stood behind Horner in the vehicle as he drove her to her death. The nightmarish image was the girl’s final moments as, just minutes later, Horner attacked the child.
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Addressing the jury, Wise County District Attorney James Stainton said: “You are going to hear what a 250lb man can do to a 67lb child. And when I say it’s horrible, I mean it… I’m going to put you as close as you can be without actually being there that day. We have video of it and we’re going to show it now.”
Jurors watched video and listening to audio files during the hearing on Wednesday. They were warned they would be faced with gruesome evidence, including horrific audio of Athena’s killing, during the proceedings.
The King and Queen celebrate 21 years married this year, but their love story is far from a fairy tale. It’s a complex, multi-decade romance shaped by intense public scrutiny, previous marriages, and the involvement of various family members, all of which presented significant challenges along the way.
Given King Charles’s marriage to Princess Diana, their relationship had to remain largely out of the public eye for years.
Here’s a look at the King and Queen’s remarkable journey together.
When did King Charles and Queen Camilla get married?
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King Charles and Camilla married on April 9, 2005, in a civil ceremony in Windsor.
They first met at a polo match at Windsor Great Park in 1970, the two joked about their sordid family connection, with Camilla saying: “My great-grandmother was the mistress of your great-great-grandfather. I feel we have something in common.”
They then became embroiled in one of the biggest royal scandals in modern history.
Despite Camilla marrying army cavalry officer Andrew Parker Bowles in 1973, while Charles proposed to Diana Spencer in 1981 (reportedly in Camilla’s garden), the two remained close and firmly in one another’s lives — so much so that Charles is Camilla’s son Tom’s godfather.
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Charles and Camilla on their wedding day
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“They were a relationship that was never really allowed to get off because it wasn’t deemed appropriate when she was Camilla Shand, which turned into an adulterous affair during Charles’s marriage to Diana that ultimately threatened to unhinge the monarchy because it was a scandal at the time,” says Katie Nicholl, author of The New Royals and Vanity Fair’s royal editor.
According to Charles’s authorised biography, he began an affair with Camilla in 1986, which came to a head in Andrew Morton’s explosive 1992 book Diana: Her Story that publicly revealed multiple instances of Charles’s betrayal.
The public’s scrutiny of Camilla intensified following the infamous 1995 Martin Bashir interview. Bashir asked Diana if Camilla had played a role in the breakdown of her marriage.
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Diana famously replied, “Well, there were three of us in this marriage, so it was a bit crowded.”
When did the King and Queen get engaged?
After Princess Diana died in 1997, King Charles and Camilla faced significant challenges in publicly legitimising their relationship. Initially, Queen Elizabeth II disapproved, even refusing to attend Charles’s private 50th birthday party because Camilla would be present.
The Queen did not give her official approval until 2000, after attending a birthday celebration for the King of Greece, to which Camilla was also invited.
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In February 2005, Charles and Camilla announced their engagement 35 years after their first meeting. Following a civil ceremony, which the Queen did not attend, Camilla was given the title Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cornwall. It was also decided that Camilla would be known as Princess Consort rather than Queen once Charles ascended the throne.
Charles and Camilla on their 15th wedding anniversary in 2020
Clarence House via Getty Images
“It has stood the test of time. They have stuck together through thick and thin, and they are each other’s greatest champions, and she will be with him every step of the way,” says Nicholl. She points out that the late Queen Elizabeth herself used her 70th accession anniversary speech to make it publicly known that it was her wish for Camilla to be known as Queen Consort.
“It was certainly always Charles’s intention that Camilla would be Queen. Even though at the time of their wedding we were told she would be styled as Princess Consort, she was always going to be his Queen,” Nicholl says. She explains that by the time of the coronation, she was no longer referred to as Queen Consort Camilla, but simply as Queen Camilla.
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Charles and Camilla on their wedding day
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“She was the mistress who wreaked havoc within the royal family, who had caused the breakdown of the Wales marriage. It’s not just the metamorphosis of a title, it‘s the metamorphosis of her whole public image,” says Nicholl on the stunning transformation.
“Having quietly and diligently worked in the sidelines and being committed to the crown and to duty — to have been like [Prince] Philip was, one step behind the monarch, but always there for him to lean on. The public has moved on from all the negative connotations of the past, which, you know, was 25 years ago.”
Nicholl argues that today, many view their relationship as “the ultimate love story,” having withstood numerous challenges and obstacles. She is confident, with many others, that they will overcome this latest hurdle too.
Diarra Niang was wearing blue Nike hooded jumper and a pair of light coloured Uggs.
A frantic search has been launched in an effort to trace a teen who has been reported missing in Edinburgh. Diarra Niang, 15, vanished in Portobello on Tuesday, April 7.
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The teen lives in Kirkliston but has not been seen in the last 24 hours and Police Scotland are growing concerned for her welfare. She is described as a black female of slim build and has long black braided hair.
When she was last seen Diarra was wearing black flared trousers, blue Nike hooded jumper, and pair of light coloured Uggs. The teen has links to the wider area of the city and her home village in Kirkliston.
Police Scotland urge anyone with information on Diarra’s whereabouts to come forward. A spokesperson for the force said: “Anyone who may have seen Diarra since this time, or who has any information on her whereabouts, is urged to contact Police Scotland via 101 quoting incident number 2590 04/04/2026.”
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BEIRUT (AP) — Israeli strikes hit busy commercial and residential areas in central Beirut without warning on Wednesday, hours after a ceasefire was announced in the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran. Lebanon said at least 182 people were killed and hundreds were wounded, making it the deadliest day in the latest Israel-Hezbollah war.
U.S. President Donald Trump told PBS News Hour that Lebanon was not included in the deal because of the Lebanese militant Hezbollah group. When asked about Israel’s latest strikes, he said, “That’s a separate skirmish.” Israel had said the agreement does not extend to its war with the Iran-backed Hezbollah, although Iran and mediator Pakistan said it does.
The fleeting sense of relief among Lebanese after the ceasefire announcement turned into panic with what Israel’s military called its largest coordinated strike in the current war, saying it had hit more than 100 Hezbollah targets within 10 minutes in Beirut, southern Lebanon and the eastern Bekaa Valley.
Black smoke towered over several parts of the seaside capital, where a huge number of people displaced by war have taken shelter. Explosions interrupted the honking of traffic on what had been a bustling, blue-sky afternoon. Ambulances raced toward open flames. Apartment buildings were struck.
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AP AUDIO: Israel strikes central Beirut without warning after saying Iran ceasefire doesn’t apply there
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AP correspondent Charles de Ledesma reports for displaced Lebanese, joy at the news of the two-week ceasefire is short-lived.
Associated Press journalists saw charred bodies in vehicles and on the ground at one of Beirut’s busiest intersections in the central Corniche al Mazraa neighborhood, a mixed commercial and residential area. Using forklifts, rescue workers removed smoldering debris and sifted through ruins for survivors.
There was no sign of Hezbollah launching strikes against Israel in the first couple of hours after the attacks.
In response to the attacks on Lebanon, Iran later Wednesday said it was again halting the movement of oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz, the country’s state-run media reported.
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A deadly midday barrage
Central Beirut has been targeted before, but not by so many strikes at once and in the middle of the day. Israel had rarely struck central Beirut since the outbreak of the latest Israel-Hezbollah war on March 2 but has regularly struck southern and eastern Lebanon and Beirut’s southern suburbs.
Lebanon’s Minister of Social Affairs, Haneed Sayed, in an interview with The Associated Press condemned Israel’s wide range of strikes, calling it a “very dangerous turning point.”
“These hits are now at the heart of Beirut … Half of the sheltered (internally displaced people) are in Beirut in this area,” she said, adding that she had just driven by areas hit.
She said Lebanon’s government is ready to enter into negotiations with Israel for an end to hostilities, an offer that the Lebanese president previously made. Israel has not responded. “There are calls and efforts being made as we speak,” Sayed said.
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Prime Minister Nawaf Salam in a statement accused Israel of escalating at a moment when Lebanese officials were seeking to negotiate a solution, and of hitting civilian areas in “utter disregard for the principles of international law and international humanitarian law — principles it has, in any case, never respected.”
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun called the Israeli attacks “barbaric.” Lebanon’s health ministry said that along with the 182 killed, at least 890 people were wounded in the strikes. Altogether, 1,739 people have been killed and 5,873 wounded in Lebanon in just over five weeks since the outbreak of the war.
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Israel’s military said it had targeted missile launchers, command centers and intelligence infrastructure. It accused Hezbollah fighters of trying to “blend into” non-Shiite Muslim areas beyond their traditional strongholds.
Residents and local officials denied that the buildings hit were military sites.
“Look at these crimes,” said Mohammed Balouza, a member of Beirut’s municipal council, at the scene of a strike in Corniche al Mazraa. An apartment building behind a popular shop selling nuts and dried fruit had been hit. “This is a residential area. There is nothing (military) here.”
Katz called Wednesday’s strikes the largest blow against Hezbollah since the attack that caused pagers used by hundreds of its members to explode almost simultaneously in September 2024.
Before the new strikes, a Hezbollah official told the AP that the group was giving a chance for mediators to secure a ceasefire in Lebanon, but “we have not announced our adherence to the ceasefire since the Israelis are not adhering to it.” He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment publicly.
The Hezbollah official said the group will not accept a return to the pre-March 2 status quo, when Israel carried out near-daily strikes in Lebanon despite a ceasefire being nominally in place since the last full-blown Israel-Hezbollah war ended in November 2024.
“We will not accept for the Israelis to continue behaving as they did before this war with regards to attacks,” he said.
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Hezbollah had fired missiles across the border days after the United States and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28, sparking a regional war. Israel responded with widespread bombardment of Lebanon and a ground invasion.
The Israeli military chief of staff, Lt Gen. Eyal Zamir, said the attacks are to protect Israel’s northern residents, who have come under heavy fire.
The Israeli military has said it has killed hundreds of Hezbollah fighters. More than 1 million people have been displaced in Lebanon.
Early Wednesday, after the Iran ceasefire was announced and before Israel struck, many displaced people sleeping in tents on the streets of Beirut and the coastal city of Sidon had begun packing their belongings in preparation to return home.
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Families at a sprawling displacement camp on Beirut’s waterfront later expressed confusion and despair.
“We can’t take this anymore, sleeping in a tent, not showering, the uncertainty,” said Fadi Zaydan, 35. He and his parents had prepared to head back to the southern city of Nabatieh. Instead, they decided to wait things out in Sidon, a bit closer to home.
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Associated Press writer Isabel DeBre and AP journalists Hussein Mallah and Fadi Tawil in Beirut, Michelle Price in Washington and Melanie Lidman in Eilat, Israel, contributed to this report.
A fuel protest in several locations around Northern Ireland is due to take place on April 14
Rob Currell Live news reporter
22:21, 08 Apr 2026
A Northern Ireland fuel protest will take place in several locations across the region at 2pm on April 14 after prices at the pump increased due to recent military action.
A post on Facebook has called for everyone from HGV drivers to farmers to take part in the day of action.
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The post reads: “Join us as we bring the country to a stop and make our voices be heard.”
A PSNI spokesman said: “Police are aware of posters online calling for protests at various locations across Northern Ireland and we will be monitoring the situation.”
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