Tag: killing

  • UN accuses Rwanda-backed rebels in Congo of killing, recruiting children

    UN accuses Rwanda-backed rebels in Congo of killing, recruiting children

    • Volker Türk, the U.N. human rights chief, said his office “confirmed cases of summary execution of children by M23… We are also aware that children were in possession of weapons.”
    • The United Nations Human Rights Council earlier this month launched a commission to investigate atrocities committed by both Congolese government forces and the rebels since the beginning of the year.
    • The M23 is the most prominent of more than 100 armed groups vying for control of eastern Congo’s trillions of dollars in valuable minerals that are used in much of the world’s technology.

    The U.N. human rights chief accused Rwanda-backed rebels who seized a second major city in eastern Congo of killing children and attacking hospitals and warehouses storing humanitarian aid.

    Volker Türk said in a statement Tuesday that his office “confirmed cases of summary execution of children by M23 after they entered the city of Bukavu last week. We are also aware that children were in possession of weapons.”

    13 UN PEACEKEEPERS, ALLIED SOLDIERS DEAD IN CONGO AS M23 REBELS MAKE GAINS IN KEY CITY

    He provided no details or did not refer to specific events, but U.N. agencies have previously accused both Congolese government forces and the rebels of recruiting children. The United Nations Human Rights Council earlier this month launched a commission that will investigate atrocities, including rapes and killings akin to “summary executions” committed by both sides since the beginning of the year.

    The M23 rebels on Sunday captured Bukavu, the city of 1.3 million people, after seizing Goma, 63 miles to the north last month. At least 3,000 were reported killed and thousands displaced in the Goma fighting.

    Red Cross workers clear the area in Bukavu, east Congo’s second-largest city, one day after it was taken by M23 rebels, on Feb. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Janvier Barhahiga)

    The M23 is the most prominent of more than 100 armed groups vying for control of eastern Congo’s trillions of dollars in mineral wealth that’s critical for much of the world’s technology. The rebels are supported by about 4,000 troops from neighboring Rwanda, according to U.N. experts.

    Rwanda accuses Congo of enlisting Hutu fighters responsible for the 1994 genocide of minority Tutsis and moderate Hutus. M23 says it’s fighting to protect Tutsis and Congolese of Rwandan origin from discrimination and wants to transform Congo from a failed into a modern state — though critics say it’s a pretext for Rwanda’s involvement.

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    Unlike in 2012, when the M23 briefly seized Goma and withdrew after international pressure, analysts have said the rebels this time are eyeing political power.

    The decades-long fighting has displaced more than 6 million people in the region, creating the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.

    A Ugandan military official said Tuesday that Ugandan troops had entered the eastern Congolese city of Bunia to assist the Congolese army in quelling deadly violence by armed ethnic groups.

  • Trump admin aims for killing blow to independence of ‘Deep State’ agencies

    Trump admin aims for killing blow to independence of ‘Deep State’ agencies

    President Donald Trump’s Department of Justice is seeking to overturn a landmark Supreme Court case in an effort to give the president greater control over independent three-letter agencies.

    In a move that could allow Trump to more easily fire officials who refuse to implement his policies, the acting U.S. solicitor general sent Illinois Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin a letter on Wednesday, notifying him of the Justice Department’s plans to ask the Supreme Court to overturn a key precedent that limits the president’s power to remove independent agency members. 

    The letter, penned by Acting Solicitor General Sarah Harris, says the DOJ has determined “that certain for-cause removal provisions” that apply to certain administrative agency members are unconstitutional, and the department would “no longer defend their constitutionality.”

    TRUMP’S JUSTICE DEPARTMENT ORDER TO DROP CHARGES AGAINST NYC MAYOR ERIC ADAMS SPARKS RESIGNATIONS

    Humphrey’s Executor v. United States, the case in question, is a 1935 Supreme Court case that narrowed the president’s constitutional power to remove agents of the executive branch. 

    Earlier this month, a former NLRB member sued President Donald Trump over her termination, arguing that federal law protects her from being arbitrarily dismissed. (Evan Vucci/AP)

    Harris cited a previous case, Myers v. United States, which held that the Constitution granted the president sole power to remove executive branch officials. 

    “The exception recognized in Humphrey’s Executor thus does not fit the principal officers who head the regulatory commissions noted above,” Harris wrote in the letter. 

    “To the extent that Humphrey’s Executor requires otherwise, the Department intends to urge the Supreme Court to overrule that decision, which prevents the President from adequately supervising principal officers in the Executive Branch who execute the laws on the President’s behalf, and which has already been severely eroded by recent Supreme Court decisions,” Harris continued. 

    Durbin called the letter a “striking reversal of the Justice Department’s longstanding position under Republican and Democratic presidents alike,” in a statement to Fox News Digital. He added that the request is “not surprising from an administration that is only looking out for wealthy special interests – not the American people.” 

    BONDI ANNOUNCES NEW LAWSUITS AGAINST STATES ALLEGEDLY FAILING TO COMPLY WITH IMMIGRATION ACTIONS: ‘A NEW DOJ’

    However, conservative legal theorists supported the Trump administration’s move, arguing that overturning Humphrey’s Executor would move the federal government closer to the original intent of the Constitution’s framers. Trump notably posed his presidential campaign against former President Joe Biden as a contest between the “deep state” and democracy, saying at the time, “Either we have a deep state or we have a democracy. We’re going to have one or the other. And we’re right at the tipping point.”

    “Congress makes the laws, it’s the president’s duty to carry out and enforce those laws under the unitary executive theory,” Hans von Spakovsky, Senior Legal Fellow at the Heritage Foundation, told Fox News Digital. “That means that the president, since he’s the head of the executive branch, has complete control over the executive branch, and that includes the hiring and firing of everyone in the executive branch, most particularly, and most importantly, the heads of all the different offices and departments within the executive branch.”

    Sen. Dick Durbin

    The Acting U.S. Solicitor General sent Illinois Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin a letter on Wednesday, notifying him of the Justice Department’s plans to ask the Supreme Court to overturn a key precedent limiting the president’s power to remove independent agency members.  (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

    Von Spakovsky says the exception carved out by the Court in Humphrey’s Executor “does not apply to these federal agencies.” In her letter, Harris specifically mentioned the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) and the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC). 

    Earlier this month, a former NLRB member sued Trump over her termination, arguing that federal law protects her from being arbitrarily dismissed. The Trump administration has also become the target of various other lawsuits involving federal employee dismissals. 

    PATEL CAMP DECRIES DURBIN ACCUSATIONS AS ‘POLITICALLY MOTIVATED’ ATTEMPT TO DERAIL FBI CONFIRMATION

    “My take on what’s going on with the Trump agenda right now is that they’re itching to get up to the higher federal court level, including the Supreme Court, to press just this kind of question,” Ronald Pestritto, Graduate Dean and Professor of Politics at Hillsdale College, told Fox News Digital. 

    Pestritto says some of the administration’s actions “contradict existing civil service law, existing protections, for example, against removing the NLRB commissioners.”

    Supreme Court Justices sitting for a portrait.

    “And so the real tale of the tape will be when these initial rulings get appealed up the appellate ladder and ultimately up to the Supreme Court, which certainly has many justices who I think understand Article II of the Constitution properly and may be open to a reconsideration of Humphrey’s,” Pestritto said.  (Photo by Olivier DoulieryAFP via Getty Images)

    “And so, clearly, they know they’re going to lose a lot of that at the lower court level. And they want to push them up into the Supreme Court, because they think they might get a reconsideration of it,” Pestritto said. 

    Von Spakovsky stated that independent agencies are “unaccountable” as a result of Humphrey’s Executor, saying “you make them accountable to voters by putting them back where they belong, which is under the authority of the president.”

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    Trump’s lawyers are likely to lose in the lower court, Pestritto says, where he expects judges to apply the Supreme Court’s precedent in their own decisions. But even so, the Trump administration can appeal higher and higher to attempt to get Supreme Court review, where Humphrey’s Executor could be overturned. 

    [Democrats] are going to win injunctions very often, first of all, because they know it’s easy to judge-shop for sympathetic district judges. And number two, the district judges are basically going to go by the existing Supreme Court precedent,” Pestritto said. “And so the real tale of the tape will be when these initial rulings get appealed up the appellate ladder and ultimately up to the Supreme Court, which certainly has many justices who I think understand Article II of the Constitution properly and may be open to a reconsideration of Humphrey’s.”

  • Brazil plane crash: Aircraft collides with bus in São Paulo, killing 2

    Brazil plane crash: Aircraft collides with bus in São Paulo, killing 2

    Two people are dead in Brazil on Friday after a small plane crashed into a bus on a busy road in São Paulo. 

    Video taken at the scene showed firefighters surrounding the smoldering wreckage of the aircraft, which plunged from the sky shortly after taking off from a nearby private airport.  

    A piece of the plane hit a bus, injuring one woman inside, while a motorcyclist was struck by another piece of wreckage, according to local firefighters. 

    “Unfortunately, we began the day with this tragic plane crash in the capital of São Paulo, with the confirmed deaths of the pilot and co-pilot of the aircraft,” São Paulo Governor Tarcisio de Freitas wrote on X.  

    BERING AIR PLANE VANISHES IN ALASKA WHILE CARRYING 10 PEOPLE 

    Firefighters inspect a small plane that crashed on a road in São Paulo, Brazil, on Friday, Feb. 7. (AP/Ettore Chiereguini)

    “Two people who were on the ground were injured and were taken to the Vergueiro Emergency Care Unit. It is worth highlighting the quick action of the Fire Department, which put out the flames of the accident in a few minutes, preventing an even greater tragedy,” he added. “My condolences to the families and friends of the victims.” 

    The plane went down in the busy Barra Funda neighborhood on the city’s west side, near its downtown. 

    US MILITARY SURVEILLANCE FLIGHT CRASHES IN PHILIPPINES, KILLING 4 

    Bus catches fire following plane crash

    Police inspect a bus that caught fire following the crash in Brazil. (AP/Ettore Chiereguini)

    Images on local media showed the plane’s fuselage and the bus on fire, with firefighters working to extinguish the blaze. The avenue is home to office buildings and there is a key bus, train and subway station nearby. 

    The aircraft was heading to the city of Porto Alegre.  

    Brazil plane crash scene

    Firefighters inspect the small plane following the crash Friday in São Paulo, Brazil. (AP/Ettore Chiereguini)

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    It’s not immediately clear what caused the crash. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

  • US military surveillance flight crashes in Philippines, killing 4

    US military surveillance flight crashes in Philippines, killing 4

    A U.S. military service member and three defense contractors died Thursday in the Philippines after their surveillance flight crashed, officials say. 

    U.S. Indo-Pacific Command said the aircraft contracted by the Department of Defense went down in the southern province of Maguindanao del Sur and “was providing intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance support at the request of our Philippine allies.” 

    “The incident occurred during a routine mission in support of U.S.-Philippine security cooperation activities,” U.S. Indo-Pacific Command said in a statement to Fox News. 

    “We can confirm no survivors of the crash. There were four personnel on board, including one U.S. military service member and three defense contractors,” it added. 

    The wreckage of the plane in Maguindanao del Sur province, Philippines, following the crash on Thursday, Feb. 6. (Sam Mala/UGC via AP)

    The cause of the crash remains under investigation. 

    The names of those involved are being withheld pending next of kin notification. 

    Windy Beaty, a provincial disaster-mitigation officer, told the Associated Press that she received reports that residents saw smoke coming from the plane and heard an explosion before the aircraft plummeted to the ground about half a mile from a cluster of farmhouses. 

    A water buffalo on the ground was also killed as a result of the plane crash, local officials said. 

    U.S. forces have been deployed in a Philippine military camp in the country’s south for decades to help provide advice and training to Filipino forces battling Muslim militants, the AP reported. 

    The region is the homeland of minority Muslims in the largely Roman Catholic nation. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

  • White House says Biden admin’s killing 100M chickens contributed to high egg prices

    White House says Biden admin’s killing 100M chickens contributed to high egg prices

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt addressed the high cost of eggs while speaking to reporters on Tuesday, saying the Biden administration contributed to the supply shortage by directing the killing of over 100 million chickens.

    Leavitt held her first White House press briefing on Tuesday afternoon, when one of the reporters asked about the price of eggs skyrocketing since President Donald Trump took office.

    She told reporters there is a lot of reporting that is putting the onus on the current administration for the rising cost of eggs.

    “I would like to point out to each and every one of you, that in 2024, when Joe Biden was in the Oval Office or upstairs in the residence sleeping, I’m not so sure, egg prices increased 65% in this country,” Leavitt said, noting that the costs of bacon, groceries and gasoline have increased because of the “inflationary” policies of the Biden administration.

    HERE’S WHY GROCERS ARE REALLY RAISING PRICES

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt holds her first news conference at the White House on Jan. 28, 2025. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “As far as the egg shortage, what’s also contributing to that is that the Biden administration and the Department of Agriculture directed the mass killing of more than 100 million chickens, which has led to a lack of chicken supply in this country, therefore, a lack of egg supply, which is leading to the shortage,” she said. “So, I will leave you with this point: This is an example of why it’s so incredibly important that the Senate moves swiftly to confirm all of President Trump’s nominees, including his nominee for the United States Department of Agriculture, Brooke Rollins, who is already speaking with Kevin Hassett, who’s leading the economic team here at the White House, on how we can address the egg shortage in this country.”

    The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that the average price of a dozen Grade A large eggs was $4.15 during the month of December, which shows an increase from $2.51 in December 2023.

    One of the largest reasons for the increase is the recent bird flu outbreak.

    SHELLING OUT: EGG PRICES RISE NEARLY 37 PERCENT

    cage-free-eggs

    Cases of cage-free eggs for sale at a Costco store in Florida. (Lindsey Nicholson/UCG/Universal Images Group via / Getty Images)

    The Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) was either directly or indirectly responsible for killing more than 20 million egg-laying hens in the last quarter of 2024, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported.

    Some estimations indicate the average price of a dozen large eggs could be nearly $5 by the end of 2025, which would be the highest average price for a dozen eggs ever recorded.

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    Still, the price of eggs in California has already surpassed that, reaching nearly $9 per dozen in some areas.

    Fox News Digital’s Alexandra Koch contributed to this report.

  • UnitedHealthcare announces new CEO after killing of Brian Thompson

    UnitedHealthcare announces new CEO after killing of Brian Thompson

    UnitedHealth Group on Thursday announced the new leader of its insurance division, UnitedHealthcare, after last month’s alleged targeted killing of former CEO Brian Thompson. 

    Tim Noel, who most recently served as CEO of UnitedHealth Group’s Medicare and retirement business, will step into the top job at UnitedHealthcare after Thompson’s killing. Noel has worked for the company since 2007.

    UnitedHealth Group said in a statement Noel “brings unparalleled experience to this role with a proven track record and strong commitment to improving how healthcare works for consumers, physicians, employers, governments and our other partners.”

    UnitedHealthcare is the largest U.S. health insurer and provides benefits to more than 50 million Americans.

    UNITEDHEALTH GROUP AIMS TO GET BACK TO BUSINESS AFTER CEO MURDER

    UnitedHealth Group veteran Tim Noel will serve as CEO of the company’s insurance division, UnitedHealthcare. (Stephen Maturen/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Thompson was shot and killed Dec. 4 in Manhattan, where he was about to attend the company’s investor day. Law enforcement officials called the killing a “premeditated, targeted attack.”

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    UNH UNITEDHEALTH GROUP INC. 529.66 +10.34 +1.99%

    Thompson worked for the company for more than 20 years and had previously served as chief financial officer for several of the company’s businesses, including its employer and individual, community and state and Medicare and retirement divisions before becoming UnitedHealthcare CEO.

    WHO WAS BRIAN THOMPSON, UNITEDHEALTHCARE CEO?

    UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty

    UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty testifies during a Senate Finance Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., May 1, 2024.  (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Luigi Mangione was arrested and charged with murder in the killing, and he also faces charges related to stalking, guns and a fake ID. Mangione faces federal charges in addition to charges in the states of New York and in Pennsylvania, where he was apprehended after a manhunt. 

    Scores of people online praised Mangione for allegedly carrying out the killing, using the crime as an opportunity to unleash frustrations with the U.S. healthcare system.

    LUIGI MANGIONE WASN’T A UNITEDHEALTHCARE MEMBER, MAY HAVE TARGETED COMPANY BECAUSE OF SIZE AND INFLUENCE: NYPD

    Photo of Brian Thompson was was the Chief Executive Officer of UnitedHealthcare Unit until he was shot in New York City in December 2024

    This 2017 file photo of Brian Thompson was released by Businesswire when he was named CEO of UnitedHealthcare in 2017. (Businesswire / Fox News)

    Last week, UnitedHealth Group announced its most recent earnings report in which CEO Andrew Witty thanked the public for the “overwhelming expressions of condolence and support” after Thompson’s murder.

    “Many of you knew Brian personally. You knew how much he meant to all of us, and how he devoted his time to helping make the health system work better for all of the people were privileged to serve,” Witty said. Thompson “would dive in with passion and care to find solutions to improve experiences, whether for an individual consumer or an employer or a public health agency.

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    “The people of UnitedHealth Group remain focused on making high-quality, affordable healthcare more available to more people while making the health system easier to navigate for patients and providers, positioning us well for growth in 2025.”

    FOX Business’ Daniella Genovese and Reuters contributed to this report.