Category: World News

  • Munich car attack suspect appears to have had ‘Islamist motivation’: prosecutor

    Munich car attack suspect appears to have had ‘Islamist motivation’: prosecutor

    The suspect accused of injuring more than 30 people in a car ramming attack in Munich, Germany, appears to have been motivated by Islamic extremism, prosecutors revealed Friday. 

    The 24-year-old Afghan, a self-described bodybuilder and fitness model, was arrested Thursday after he drove his Mini Cooper into the back of a labor union demonstration. The incident unfolded near where world leaders — including Vice President JD Vance and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy — were expected to gather for the Munich Security Conference. 

    Prosecutor Gabriele Tilmann said that the suspect said “Allahu Akbar,” or “God is great,” to police and then prayed after his arrest — which prompted a department that investigates extremism and terror to take on the case immediately. 

    In questioning, he admitted deliberately driving into the demonstration and “gave an explanation that I would summarize as religious motivation,” Tilmann said, according to the Associated Press. “According to all we know at the moment, I would venture to speak of an Islamist motivation.” 

    CAR DRIVER IN MUNICH PLOWS INTO CROWD 

    A car is lifted onto a tow truck at the scene where a driver drove into a labor union demonstration in Munich, Germany, on Thursday Feb. 13. (Matthias Balk/dpa via AP)

    However, there were no indications the suspect was in any Islamic extremist organization, she reportedly added. 

    Tilmann also announced Friday that the suspect, who arrived in Germany as an asylum-seeker in 2016 and lived in Munich, posted content with religious references — such as “Allah, protect us always” — on social media. 

    The attack left 36 people injured, and the suspect is now facing 36 counts of attempted murder as well as bodily harm and dangerous interference with road traffic. 

    PLANE CARRYING SECRETARY OF STATE RUBIO RESUMES FLIGHT TO MUNICH AFTER MECHANICAL ISSUE 

    Police investigate Munich attack scene

    Police investigate the scene of the car ramming attack in Munich, Germany on Thursday. (Matthias Balk/dpa via AP)

    The deputy head of Bavaria’s state criminal police office, Guido Limmer, said investigators found a chat, apparently with relatives, in which the suspect wrote “perhaps I won’t be there anymore tomorrow,” but so far they have found nothing that points to concrete preparations for the attack or anyone else being involved. 

    The man had no previous convictions and had a valid residence permit. Tilmann also said there was no indication of mental illness. 

    German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier reportedly laid a flower at the attack scene Friday morning, where he condemned “the brutality of this act” and said that it “leaves us stunned.” 

    Memorial at Munich attack site

    Markus Soeder, Prime Minister of Bavaria, German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Dieter Reiter, Mayor of Munich, from right, bring flowers on Friday, Feb. 14, to the site of the attack in Munich. (AP/Ebrahim Noroozi)

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    A spokesperson for the vice president told Fox News Digital on Tuesday that Vance and President Zelenskyy will meet on the sidelines of the conference, where the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war is likely to be a focus.  

    Fox News’ Rachel Wolf and Morgan Phillips contributed to this report.

  • Hamas to free another American in Saturday hostage release

    Hamas to free another American in Saturday hostage release

    The Palestinian terrorist group Hamas has released the names of the three hostages set to be freed Saturday, including American-Israeli Sagui Dekel-Chen, following days of concern that a ceasefire deal with Israel could collapse. 

    Russian-Israeli Alexander Troufanov and Argentine-Israeli Yair Horn, who along with Dekel-Chen were abducted by Hamas from Kibbutz Nir Oz on Oct. 7, 2023, will also be released on Saturday, which will mark 497 days in captivity.

    Dekel-Chen is the second American to be released by Hamas since President Donald Trump re-entered office, following the release of Keith Siegel on Feb. 1. 

    FORMER HAMAS HOSTAGE’S MOM SAYS DAUGHTER WAS FORCED TO FAKE HER DEATH FOR A PROPAGANDA VIDEO

    Hamas has said it will release Alexander (Sasha) Troponov, 29, Sagi Dekel-Chen, 36, Yair Horn, 46, on Saturday Feb. 15, 2025 in the next hostage release. 

    International concern over the stability of the ceasefire reached new heights after Hamas threatened not to release any more hostages – in direct violation of the agreement – after it claimed that Israel had violated the treaty by not facilitating the transport of humanitarian aid and targeting Palestinians in airstrikes. 

    Trump then said on Monday that Israel should cancel the ceasefire agreement if Hamas did not hand over all remaining hostages, not just the three slated to be released on Feb. 15 under the ceasefire agreement. 

    Concern mounted when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday also called on Hamas to release hostages come Saturday, but did not specify whether he meant all hostages or the three previously agreed to. 

    “The Israeli formal position is that we have an agreement that should be fulfilled,” retired IDF Major General Yaakov Amidror confirmed on Thursday during a discussion hosted by the Jewish Institute for National Security of America (JINSA).

    EGYPT REPORTEDLY RELEASES DETAILS ON PLAN TO REBUILD GAZA; THERE’S NO MENTION OF ‘COOPERATION’ WITH THE US

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Donald Trump

    U.S. President Donald Trump, accompanied by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (L), speaks during a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House on February 4, 2025, in Washington, D.C.  (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    “We don’t [want to] shake the boat by adding [Trump’s] demand,” he said. “The question is, will Hamas fulfill the agreement from its side and release the three hostages? 

    “I think Hamas is not going to take the risk now when this is the mood in Washington,” Amidror added. “But we don’t know.” 

    Just 16 of the 33 hostages scheduled to be released during the first 42-day phase of the ceasefire have been freed. 

    Following the first week of the rocky agreement, which saw the release of seven hostages, three hostages per week were slated to be released under terms agreed to by Hamas and Israel. The final 14 hostages will be released together on Feb. 22, marking the final week of the first phase.

    MOTHER OF ISRAELI HOSTAGE BEGS TRUMP, NETANYAHU TO BRING SON HOME BEFORE CEASEFIRE COLLAPSES: ‘NO MORE TIME’

    The Bibas family, from left: Yarden, Ariel, Shiri, and Kfir

    The Bibas family, from left: Yarden, Ariel, Shiri, and Kfir. Yarden was released by Hamas in February 2025. The fate of his family remains unknown.  (Ofri Bibas Levy)

    The IDF has assessed that at least eight of the hostages slated for release in the first phase have been killed while in Hamas captivity, though the number could be higher as the fate of Shiri Bibas and her two young boys – Ariel, who was four years old when he was abducted alongside his brother Kfir, who was nine months old – remains unconfirmed by the IDF. 

    Hamas has claimed they were killed by an Israeli airstrike, though the IDF has said it does not have evidence to support this. 

    Mediators were supposed to start to negotiate terms for the release of the remaining 65 hostages earlier this month, though Amidror said he does not believe they has officially begun. At least 26 of those slated for release in the second phase are assessed to have been killed. 

    In recent weeks, the hostages have confirmed fears that they were tortured, interrogated and starved during their time in Hamas captivity. And the state of the hostages released last week sparked an outcry as many pointed out the similarities in appearance of the three men to images of those who survived the Holocaust.

    Hamas releases Israeli hostages

    Emaciated Israeli hostages, from left to the right, Ohad Ben Ami, Eli Sharabi and Or Levy, who were held hostage by Hamas in Gaza since Oct. 7, 2023, are taken by terrorists to a stage before being handed over to the Red Cross in Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on Saturday, Feb. 8, 2025.  (AP/Abdel Kareem Hana)

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    Five other Americans remain in captivity, including Edan Alexander, 19, an IDF soldier and the only remaining American still assessed to be alive, though he is not slated for release until the second phase of the ceasefire. 

    IDF soldiers Itay Chen, 19, and Omer Neutra, 22, are believed to have been killed by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023, and their bodies continue to be held alongside Gadi and Judi Haggai, who were also killed during the terrorist attack near their kibbutz. 

    Siegel, 65, thanked Trump for his help in securing his release but urged him to ensure that the ceasefire is upheld and said, “Your leadership and strength will ensure the agreement is honored by all sides – that is what will allow all . . . hostages to return home to their families,” he added. 

  • Hegseth, Vance appear to give different answers on sending troops to Ukraine

    Hegseth, Vance appear to give different answers on sending troops to Ukraine

    Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told reporters on Friday that “the reality of U.S. troops in Ukraine is unlikely,” but insisted that there was “no daylight” between himself and Vice President JD Vance.

    In a bilateral press conference with Polish Deputy Prime Minister and Defense Minister Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz, Hegseth touched on the possibility of U.S. troops going into Ukraine. At first, he appeared to shut down the idea, but then he seemed to not take it entirely off the table. 

    Hegseth added that he would “never put constraints around what the President of the United States would be willing to negotiate with the sovereign leaders of both Russia and Ukraine.”

    VANCE WARNS US WILL USE SANCTIONS, MILITARY ACTION IF PUTIN DOESN’T AGREE TO UKRAINE PEACE DEAL: REPORT

    Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth deliver a press statement after a bilateral meeting at the Ministry of Defense on Feb. 14, 2025 in Warsaw, Poland.  (Omar Marques/Getty Images)

    On Thursday, in an exclusive interview with The Wall Street Journal, Vance reportedly said that the option of sending U.S. troops to Ukraine remained “on the table.”  

    Vance also told the outlet that the U.S. could use “economic tools” or “military tools” against Russia to bring about an end to the nearly three-year-long war. The vice president said that President Donald Trump wants “a productive negotiation” with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Russian President Vladimir Putin. He also teased a deal that would “shock a lot of people.”

    Vance is in Germany for the Munich Security Conference, where he is expected to meet with Zelenskyy.

    The vice president’s remarks appear contrast with what Hegseth told the Ukraine Defense Contact Group in Brussels earlier this week. In his opening remarks to the group, Hegseth said that rather than admitting Ukraine to NATO, security guarantees to the country would be supported “by capable European and non-European troops.” However, he also appeared to completely rule out the possibility of U.S. troops

    “To be clear, as part of any security guarantee, there will not be U.S. troops deployed to Ukraine,” he said.

    Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth

    Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth delivers remarks during a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the Pentagon on Feb. 5 in Arlington, Va.  (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

    FORMER US AMBASSADOR TO NATO PREDICTS IMMINENT CEASEFIRE IN UKRAINE

    At the Munich Security Conference, Senate Armed Services Chair Roger Wicker, R-Ms., told Politico that he was “puzzled” and “disturbed” by Hegseth’s remarks in Brussels.

    “Everybody knows … and people in the administration know you don’t say before your first meeting what you will agree to and what you won’t agree to,” Sen. Wicker told Politico, classifying Hegseth’s comments as a “rookie mistake.”

    trump, putin and zelenskyy

    President Donald Trump (center), Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelenskyy (left) and Russian President Vladimir Putin (right). (Alessandro Bremec/NurPhoto via Getty Images | Contributor/Getty Images | Scott Olson/Getty Images)

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    Trump has long spoken about ending the war between Ukraine and Russia, often asserting that it would not have started had he been in the Oval Office.

    On Wednesday, Trump announced that in a “lengthy and highly productive” phone call Putin agreed to “immediately” begin negotiations to end the war in Ukraine.

    Trump said he asked Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Director of the CIA John Ratcliffe, National Security Advisor Michael Waltz and Ambassador and Special Envoy Steve Witkoff to lead the negotiations, saying he thinks they “will be successful.”

  • Head of UN watchdog says UNRWA hired people ‘who were supporting terrorism’

    Head of UN watchdog says UNRWA hired people ‘who were supporting terrorism’

    UNITED NATIONS – President Donald Trump has made major foreign policy moves in his first few weeks in office, including cutting off U.S. funding to the controversial United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA). UNRWA has long faced accusations of ties to terrorists, which have intensified over the course of the Israel-Hamas war that began with the massacre on Oct. 7, 2023.

    Former President Joe Biden initially cut off U.S. funding to UNRWA in January 2024, months into the war, after Israel accused members of the U.N. agency of taking part in Hamas’ brutal attacks.

    U.N. Watch Executive Director Hillel Neuer said Americans need to know that some U.N. agencies, such as UNRWA, are founded on “altruistic good intentions,” but have “morphed into something which is the complete opposite of what it was supposed to be.”

    President Donald Trump has cut off U.S. funding to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees in the Near East. (Getty)

    DAYS BEFORE TRUMP HALTED FUNDING, AN EX-ISRAELI HOSTAGE WAS HELD AT UNRWA SCHOOL IN GAZA, SHE REVEALS

    UNRWA was founded in 1949 “to carry out direct relief and works programs for Palestine refugees,” according to the agency’s website. However, Neuer disputes Palestinians’ refugee status and says that President Trump’s proposed Gaza takeover uncovered a “truth that has been hidden.”

    Neuer points out that UNRWA supporters and critics of the president’s proposal have accused Trump of “uprooting them [Palestinians] from their homes and lands,” which would mean that “they’re not refugees.” Gaza, which the U.N. recognizes as part of the “State of Palestine,” would be considered their home under this criticism, negating their refugee status.

    However, the problems with UNRWA go beyond ambiguous definitions. Neuer told Fox News Digital that the agency “systematically employed individuals who were supporting terrorism.” He pointed to Fathi al-Sharif, who served as the principal of a school run by UNRWA, as well as the agency’s teachers’ union in Lebanon.

    “We know that the head of UNRWA’s education system, namely, teacher, school principal and head of the teachers’ union of 2,000 teachers in Lebanon, was a man named Fathi al-Sharif… he was the head of Hamas in Lebanon,” Neuer said, adding that American taxpayers’ money funded al-Sharif and “the entire education system that he oversaw.”

    In the case of Suhail al-Hindi, UNRWA’s former head of a “local staff union in Gaza,” the agency insists that it suspended and fired al-Hindi after an announcement that he had been “elected to political office with Hamas.”

    In response to a request for comment, UNRWA told Fox News Digital that it “prohibits any type of involvement of staff in a militant or armed group. As a representative of the U.N., any involvement in a group that promotes discrimination or violence violates the principle of neutrality and gravely jeopardizes UNRWA’s ability to provide services and protection to refugees.”

    UNRWA referenced al-Hindi’s case specifically, noting it “also dismissed another staff member whose name appeared in the list of those newly elected to Hamas political office in Gaza.”

    Contrary to critics’ claims, Neuer told Fox News Digital that Israel was not always trying to shut down UNRWA, saying that the Jewish State first saw the agency as “convenient” in the late 1960s. However, Neuer said that Israel’s view on the agency has greatly shifted, particularly since Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attacks.

    Hamas UNRWA

    Photos released by the Israeli Defense Force show three individuals that the Israeli military claims are Hamas terrorists inside an UNRWA compound in Rafah. (IDF)

    ISRAEL TELLS UN IT’S SHUTTING DOWN ALL UNRWA OPERATIONS IN JERUSALEM: ‘ACUTE SECURITY RISKS’

    In January 2024, UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini ordered an investigation of any staff who allegedly participated in Hamas’ attacks, which he condemned in a statement. UNRWA told Fox News Digital that “upon ascertaining that the individuals were indeed UNRWA staff members,” Lazzarini “immediately” terminated their appointments.

    Late last month, Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Danny Danon formally notified U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres of Israel’s demand that UNRWA cease operations in Jerusalem and evacuate its premises.

    “Months of good-faith engagement with the United Nations and years of related grievances conveyed to UNRWA, have been met with blatant disregard, compromising its fundamental obligation to impartiality and neutrality beyond repair,” Danon wrote in the letter.

    In a statement released last month, UNRWA spokesperson Jonathan Fowler slammed the laws that Israel passed in October 2024, saying that the Jewish State’s shortening of UNRWA staff visas was “tantamount to being evicted.” However, Fowler confirmed that “UNRWA remains absolutely committed to stay and deliver,” referring to the agency’s other locations in the region.

    While Israel’s views on the agency have changed, prompting action from the country’s government, Neuer points out that several countries, including the U.S., failed to “take any meaningful action” against UNRWA. He called the countries’ past moves “largely performative and limited.”

    United Nations terrorism

    A protester holds a flag outside the United Nations Relief and Works Agency during the demonstration. (Ahmed Zakot/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

    When asked about what Americans need to know about UNRWA, Neuer says that the agency is “a wolf in sheep’s clothing,” adding examples of U.N. officials who he says have gone against their mission. He also compared it to a social issue commonly debated here, namely anti-racism.

    “Just like Americans were told for at least the past 5 years – maybe more – that anti-racism means you have to discriminate against white people, against heterosexuals, you know, all kinds of categories, we were told that’s tolerance, that’s equality. We were told that racism and discrimination was anti-racism and anti-discrimination. We were fed a pack of lies,” Neuer told Fox News Digital.

    Addressing UNRWA and the U.N. Human Rights Council (UNHRC), Neuer added, They are no humanitarian agencies. They are agencies that systematically have incentivized and legitimized terrorist groups from Hamas and Islamic Jihad, the Islamic regime in Iran. That’s the reality.”

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    When asked by Fox News Digital about Neuer’s allegations, UNRWA dismissed them and accused U.N. Watch of “spreading disinformation against” the agency.

    “The agency systematically reviews all allegations of misconduct, including breaching U.N. values and humanitarian principles, and launches investigations into any credible allegation, applying disciplinary measures where misconduct has been established, up to and including separation,” UNRWA told Fox News Digital.

    President Trump’s executive order called for “renewed scrutiny” of UNHRC, UNRWA and the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). In the order, UNHRC is accused of “protecting human rights abusers,” while UNESCO is slammed for its “failure to reform itself” among other issues.

  • Pope Francis hospitalized for bronchitis treatment, Vatican says

    Pope Francis hospitalized for bronchitis treatment, Vatican says

    Pope Francis was hospitalized on Friday to receive treatment for a bout of bronchitis that he has reportedly been dealing with for a week, the Vatican confirmed to Fox News. 

    The 88-year-old pope is also expected to undergo tests in addition to the treatment, The Associated Press reported.

    This is a developing story, please check back for updates.

  • Chernobyl plant’s protective shell hit by Russian drone, Zelenskyy says damage ‘significant’

    Chernobyl plant’s protective shell hit by Russian drone, Zelenskyy says damage ‘significant’

    An alleged drone struck the protective shell covering the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine early Friday, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is pointing the finger at Russia. 

    The International Atomic Energy Agency reported on X that overnight Thursday, the IAEA team at the Chornobyl site heard an explosion coming from the New Safe Confinement.

    The site protects the remains of the nuclear reactor that exploded in Chernobyl in 1986 and was reportedly set ablaze after an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) struck the NSC roof. Zelenskyy said initial assessments show “the damage to the shelter is significant.” 

    Zelenskyy took to X stating that the incident occurred when allegedly a “Russian attack drone with a high-explosive warhead struck the shelter.”

    RUSSIA LAUNCHES FRESH DRONE ATTACK AGAINST UKRAINE SHORTLY AFTER TRUMP-PUTIN PHONE CALL

    Surveillance footage from his posts shows the moment the drone impacts the dome, causing an explosion.

    “The shelter at the Chernobyl NPP was damaged by this drone. The fire has been extinguished. As of now, radiation levels have not increased and are being constantly monitored,” Zelenskyy added. “According to initial assessments, the damage to the shelter is significant.”

    PUTIN VIEWED AS ‘GREAT COMPETITOR’ BUT STILL A US ‘ADVERSARY’ AS UKRAINE NEGOTIATIONS LOOM, LEAVITT SAYS

    While the incident is currently still under investigation, Zelenskyy claimed the alleged attack was the result of a terrorist threat.

    “This shelter was built by Ukraine together with other countries of Europe and the world, together with America – all those committed to real security for humanity,” Zelenskyy said in his post. “The only country in the world that attacks such sites, occupies nuclear power plants, and wages war without any regard for the consequences is today’s Russia. This is a terrorist threat to the entire world. The shelter at the Chornobyl NPP was damaged by this drone.”

    Russia has denied any involvement. 

    Teams assess the damage after what was said to be a drone struck the protective shell at the Chernobyl plant.  (@ZelenskyyUa)

    The IAEA said its fire safety personnel were able to respond in minutes and there was no indication of a breach in NSC’s inner containment.

    The agency also reported that there were currently no casualties, but are monitoring the situation and radiation levels inside and outside remain normal and stable. 

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    The explosion comes as world leaders are meeting in Munich, Germany on Friday for the Munich Security Conference where the future of Ukraine and its ongoing war with Russia will be the top item on the agenda. 

  • ‘Hatred underpins them’: Nurses suspended after viral video threatening to kill Israeli man

    ‘Hatred underpins them’: Nurses suspended after viral video threatening to kill Israeli man

    Two Sydney nurses who threatened on camera to kill an Israeli man and other Jewish people in their care were identified and immediately suspended from practicing.

    The Australian Department of Health and Aged Care announced in a statement on Thursday that the Nursing and Midwifery Council of New South Wales (NSW) suspended the registrations of registered nurses Ahmad Rashad Nadir and Sarah Abu Lebdeh, effective immediately.

    Nadir and Lebdeh, who initially claimed they were doctors while donning scrubs, threatened Israeli influencer Max Veifer on an international video chat website called Chatrouletka.

    Australian authorities are investigating after two healthcare workers claimed to have killed Jews in their care. (Credit: @maxveifer via Instagram)

    AUSTRALIAN HEALTHCARE WORKERS THREATEN ISRAELI MAN, CLAIM TO HAVE KILLED JEWS IN THEIR CARE ON CAMERA

    After asking Veifer about his nationality, Lebdeh said “it’s Palentine’s country, not your country you piece of s—,” according to the video.

    She proceeded to tell Veifer “when the time comes, I want you to remember my face, so you can understand that you will die the most disgusting death.”

    Nadir chimed in and they both said they would not treat Veifer and would kill him if he came to their hospital.

    “You have no idea how many Israelis came to this hospital and…,” Nadir said, while sliding his arm across his neck in a throat-slashing motion.

    Australia's Department of Health and Aged Care

    The Australia Department of Health and Aged Care released a statement announcing the nurses were suspended. (Google Maps)

    The Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency automatically updated their record on the public register of practitioners, making the two Bankstown Hospital nurses unable to practice nursing anywhere in Australia, in any context.

    “The idea that you would single out a particular group in our community and indicate you wouldn’t care for them, let alone actively threaten their lives, runs against every single principle in our health care system,” the health department wrote in the statement. 

    JEWISH CHILDREN, TEENS VIOLENTLY ATTACKED IN LONDON: ‘STREETS ARE NO LONGER SAFE’

    Officials said “their sickening comments – and the hatred that underpins them – have no place in our health system and no place anywhere in Australia.”
     
    The department added Australians have a right to feel safe wherever they go and “nowhere should be safer” than a hospital.
     
    “Health workers have a solemn duty to treat and heal everyone who comes before them needing help,” according to the statement. “The overwhelming majority hold to that oath.”

    Anthony Albanese

    Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese posted on X after the video went viral online. (Mick Tsikas/AAP Image via AP)

    Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese confirmed on Tuesday the pair were “rightly” referred to the NSW Police for criminal investigation.

    “Individuals found to have committed criminal antisemitic acts will face the full force of our laws,” Albanese wrote in a post on X. “The footage is sickening and shameful.”

    On Wednesday, Australia enacted a hate crimes bill imposing minimum mandatory penalties for certain hate-related crimes, including six years for terrorist offenses, three years for financing terrorism and one year for displaying hate symbols.

    NSW Health Minister Ryan Park, Health Department secretary Susan Pearce and David Ossip from the Jewish Board of Deputies visited Bankstown Hospital, where the two nurses worked, on Thursday. 

    NSW Health Minister Ryan Park, Health Department secretary Susan Pearce and David Ossip from the Jewish Board of Deputies visited Bankstown Hospital, where the two nurses worked, on Thursday.  (NSW government)

    COLUMBIA GROUP’S ANTISEMITIC NEWSPAPER DRAWS OUTRAGE FROM NY LAWMAKER, AS UNIVERSITY INVESTIGATES

    NSW Health Minister Ryan Park claimed there was “no evidence” the nurses harmed patients in their care, but the investigation is ongoing.

    Lebdeh’s family members spoke to various news outlets claiming she was “baited” and that she was “sorry,” the New York Post reported.

    Israel’s biggest newspaper, Israel Hayom, seemingly responded to the remarks with a story titled, “Sorry, not sorry,” and accused the two nurses of minimizing the incident, according to the report.

    Sharren Haskel, deputy minister of foreign affairs of the state of Israel, reacted to the viral video, calling the nurses "racist."

    Sharren Haskel, deputy minister of foreign affairs of the state of Israel, reacted to the viral video, calling the nurses “racist.” (@Sharren Haskel via X)

    Sharren Haskel, deputy minister of foreign affairs of the state of Israel, posted on X, commending Australian officials for their response, and calling the pair “racist.”

    “Thank you, @ChrisMinnsMP for your swift and decisive action against the racist nurses who threatened to kill Jews. Your dedication and efforts in combating antisemitism over the past month are commendable, and we deeply appreciate your commitment to protecting the Jewish community of New South Wales.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Haskel added there must be “zero tolerance” for racism and antisemitism and noted threats must be met with “the full force of the law.”

    A synagogue was firebombed in Melbourne on Dec. 6, which authorities are now investigating as a likely terrorist attack. Other reports indicate cars have been set aflame and buildings have been vandalized in Sydney Jewish communities.

  • Archaeologists unearth ruins of nearly 2,000-year-old Roman basilica in London

    Archaeologists unearth ruins of nearly 2,000-year-old Roman basilica in London

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    Archaeologists excavating the site of a planned 32-story skyscraper in London uncovered the ruins of a nearly 2,000-year-old Roman basilica. 

    The ancient basilica, constructed between 78 and 84 A.D., once stood at the heart of the city, which was known at the time as Londinium, according to The Associated Press.

    While exploring the basement of a building slated to be demolished for the upcoming office tower, the scientists unearthed the remains of what once served as the foundation of a two-story building, nearly as large as an Olympic swimming pool. 

    They uncovered flint, brick and ragstone walls and foundations 13 feet deep and more than three feet wide, AP reported.

    ANCIENT ROMAN HELMET TURNS UP IN UNUSUAL LOCATION: ‘EXCEPTIONALLY RARE’

    In this photo provided by the Museum of London Archaeology taken in summer 2024 is a view of part of a wall of the Roman London Basilica recently unearthed during the redevelopment of a building in London.  (MOLA via AP)

    The finding marks “one of the most significant discoveries” in years in the City of London, the square-mile financial district that is London’s oldest quarter, according to Sophie Jackson of Museum of London Archaeology.

    ARCHAEOLOGISTS UNCOVER EARLIEST KNOWN EVIDENCE OF CHRISTIANITY NORTH OF THE ALPS: ‘UNUSUAL FOR THIS TIME’

    In Roman London, the basilica was part of the forum, a place where people shopped, mingled and heard the latest from politicians, AP reported.

    “This is the heart of Rome in London, where all the decisions were made,” said Andrew Henderson-Schwartz, head of public impact at Museum of London Archaeology.

    TOPSHOT-BRITAIN-DAILY LIFE

    A person walks on a pier along the River Thames with St Paul’s Cathedral and skyscrapers of London in the background Jan. 15, 2024. (Henry Nicholls/AFP via Getty Images)

    The ruins are also believed to have formed part of the tribunal, an area of the forum where officials made decisions about the governance of the city.

    ANCIENT TREASURE, LARGEST OF ITS KIND IN ISRAEL, FOUND BURIED IN 2,100-YEAR-OLD KITCHEN

    “We’re talking about the early stages of London here, but it’s a real sign of investment in the city, even in its early infancy,” added Henderson-Schwartz.

    Britain Roman Basilica

    In this photo provided by Peter Marsden is a drawing of a representation of the Roman London Basilica, which was recently unearthed during a redevelopment project for a building in London.  (Peter Marsden via AP)

    Further excavation could answer questions about the original forum and why it was replaced with a larger one after only 20 years of use. It could also offer glimpses into the lives of Roman Londoners, according to AP.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    The owner of the site, developer Hertshten Properties, has agreed to display the ruins in a visitor center of the planned office tower, AP reported. Property developers in Britain have to consult archaeologists in their planning process.

    “We do have these little windows into Roman London that are all over the city,” Henderson-Schwartz said. “But this is really in some ways the site that connects them all together.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

  • Mexico may sue Google over Gulf of America change

    Mexico may sue Google over Gulf of America change

    Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said Thursday her government was deciding whether to initiate a lawsuit against Google for renaming the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America on Google Maps. 

    “We are going to wait. We are already seeing, observing what this would mean from the perspective of legal advice, but we hope that they will make a revision,” Sheinbaum said, according to Reuters. 

    Fox News Digital has reached out to Google. 

    TRUMP ANNOUNCES $20 BILLION IN NEW DATA CENTERS IN POST-CERTIFICATION ADDRESS

    President Claudia Sheinbaum and President Donald Trump  (Getty Images)

    Google renamed the body of water after President Donald Trump signed an executive order to change it. Now, Google Maps users in the United States will see “Gulf of America” in the app, and users outside the U.S. and Mexico see both terms, the company said.

    “We’re going to be changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America, which has a beautiful ring. That covers a lot of territory,” Trump said Tuesday. “The Gulf of America. What a beautiful name. And it’s appropriate.”

    Sheinbaum has decried the move, saying the Gulf of Mexico name has long been recognized internationally.

    “All we are asking of Google is to look at the decree that the White House released and that President Donald Trump signed. You’ll see in that decree that it does not refer to the whole gulf,” Sheinbaum said.

    GOOGLE MAPS, FAA OFFICIALY ACKNOWLEDGE GULF OF AMERICA AFTER TRUMP DECLARATION: ‘ISN’T IT BEAUTIFUL?’

    Trump/Gulf of America split

    Google Maps has begun referring to the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf of America. (AP/Google Maps)

    “If necessary, we will file a civil suit,” she added. “Our legal area is already looking into what that would mean, but we hope that (Google) reconsiders.”

    Aside from Google, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) sent out a charting notice confirming that its systems were in the process of updating the name, in addition to updating the newly named Mount McKinley in Alaska, formerly known as Denali.

    trump on plane

    President Donald Trump, right, speaks to reporters accompanied by Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and Burgum’s wife, Kathryn Burgum, aboard Air Force One, where Trump signed a proclamation declaring Feb. 9 Gulf of America Day as he travels from West Palm Beach, Fla., to New Orleans Sunday, Feb. 9, 2025.  (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

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    “Please be advised that the FAA is in the process of updating our data and charts to show a name change from the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America and a name change from Denali to Mount McKinley. This will be targeted for the next publication cycle,” the notice said.

  • Kayaker gets swallowed by humpback whale off Chilean coast: Watch

    Kayaker gets swallowed by humpback whale off Chilean coast: Watch

    A humpback whale swallowed a man on a kayak off the coast of Chile last week, before he was quickly able to get out of the leviathan’s mouth unharmed.

    Video shows the death-defying and terrifying moment from last Saturday, when Adrián Simancas was kayaking with his father, Dell, in Bahía El Águila near the San Isidro Lighthouse in the Strait of Magellan, off Chilean Patagonia.

    As Simancas was paddling in what appeared to be an inflatable kayak, a humpback whale rolled on the surface with its mouth open, swallowing the kayaker.

    Moments later, the tail broke the surface and the whale dove to deeper depth. Simancas and his yellow kayak then resurfaced after being freed from the clutches of the whale’s jaws.

    FORMER BRAZILIAN PRESIDENT JAIR BOLSONARO UNDER INVESTIGATION FOR ALLEGEDLY HARASSING A HUMPBACK WHALE

    Video captured the moment a kayaker off the coast of Chile was swallowed briefly by a humpback whale. (Credit: Dell Simancas)

    The Associated Press reported that Dell captured the moment on video and encouraged his son to stay calm.

    “Stay calm, stay calm,” the father was heard saying in Spanish after his son was released from the whale.

    “I thought I was dead,” Adrián told the AP. “I thought it had eaten me, that it had swallowed me.”

    KILLER WHALE MOTHERS PROTECT THEIR SONS MORE THAN THEIR DAUGHTERS, NEW STUDY FINDS

    Humpback whale tail

    Video captured the moment a kayaker off the coast of Chile was swallowed briefly by a humpback whale. (Credit: Dell Simancas)

    He described the few seconds of “terror” to the wire service, explaining that his real fear set in after resurfacing, fearing that the whale would hurt his father or that he would die in the cold waters.

    “When I came up and started floating, I was scared that something might happen to my father too, that we wouldn’t reach the shore in time, or that I would get hypothermia,” Adrián said.

    Adrián ultimately reached his father’s kayak, and both returned to shore without injuries.

    SEE IT: HUMPBACK WHALE, NAMED ZILLION, SCOOPS UP SEAL IN RARE PHOTO

    Kayaker resurfaces

    Video captured the moment a kayaker off the coast of Chile was swallowed briefly by a humpback whale. (Credit: Dell Simancas)

    The Strait of Magellan, which is located about 1,600 miles south of Santiago, Chile, is a major tourist attraction in Chilean Patagonia, and is known for adventurous activities.

    The frigid waters in the area pose a challenge for those who attempt to cross the strait.

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    While whale attacks on humans are extremely rare in Chilean waters, whale deaths from collisions with cargo ships have increased in recent years, and strandings have become a recurring issue in the last decade.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.