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Worldnews

Iran Could Resume Uranium Enrichment Within Months: IAEA Chief
~1.9 mins read
Rafael Grossi raises concern over Iran’s stockpile of 60 percent enriched uranium, just below weapons grade. Iran may be able to restart uranium enrichment in a matter of months despite a wave of attacks by the United States and Israel that targeted its nuclear infrastructure, according to the head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog, Rafael Grossi. The remarks came on Saturday, days after US President Donald Trump insisted this month’s attacks had set Iran’s nuclear ambitions back “by decades”. Speaking to CBS News on Saturday, the director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said while key facilities had been hit, some are “still standing”. “They can have, you know, in a matter of months, I would say, a few cascades of centrifuges spinning and producing enriched uranium,” Grossi said, adding that it could even be sooner. He raised concerns over Iran’s stockpile of 60 percent enriched uranium, just below weapons grade, which could theoretically produce more than nine nuclear bombs if refined further. He acknowledged the IAEA does not know whether this stockpile was moved before the bombings or partially destroyed. “There has to be, at some point, a clarification,” he said. The Israeli assault began on June 13 with strikes on Iran’s nuclear and military sites. Israel claimed the attacks were designed to prevent Iran from building a nuclear weapon, an accusation Tehran has consistently denied. The US joined the offensive days later, hitting three of Iran’s nuclear facilities. In the wake of the attacks, Iranian lawmakers moved to suspend cooperation with the IAEA and denied Grossi’s request to inspect facilities, including the underground enrichment plant at Fordow. “We need to be in a position to confirm what is there, where it is, and what happened,” Grossi said. The Iranian Ministry of Health reported at least 627 civilian deaths across the country during the 12-day assault that also saw 28 people killed in Israel in retaliatory strikes launched by Iran, according to Israeli authorities. On Saturday, Iran’s judiciary said an Israeli missile strike on Tehran’s Evin Prison on June 23 killed 71 people, including military recruits, detainees and visitors. Reporting from Tehran, Al Jazeera’s Resul Serdar Atas said on Sunday that Iranians believe Israel struck the facility to free the prisoners. “Definitely the worst way to do that is to bomb the facility itself and kill civilians,” he added. “This prison is not dedicated to specific crimes. We see political prisoners, journalists, financial offenders, and foreign detainees. “In 2018, the United States put Evin Prison on its sanctions list, and the European Union did the same in 2021 because of human rights violations.” Follow Al Jazeera English:...
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Worldnews

At Least 38 People Killed In Tanzania Bus Collision, Subsequent Fire
~0.9 mins read
Another 28 people injured in the accident between a bus and a minibus in the Kilimanjaro region. Nearly 40 people have been killed after a bus and a minibus collided in Tanzania, sparking a fire that engulfed both vehicles. The crash occurred on Saturday evening in Sabasaba in the Kilimanjaro region after one of the bus’s tyres was punctured, causing the driver to lose control of the vehicle. “A total of 38 people died in the crash, including two women,” a statement by the presidency said on Sunday. “Due to the extent of the burns, 36 bodies remain unidentified.” The nationalities of the victims were not immediately known. Twenty-eight people were injured, six of whom were still in hospital for treatment, the presidency added. President Samia Suluhu Hassan expressed “heartfelt condolences” to the bereaved families and wished a “quick recovery” to those injured. She also called for stricter adherence to road safety as deadly vehicle crashes are frequent on Tanzania’s roads. In recent years, the government has made repeated calls to curb road accidents, which continue to plague the country despite various road safety campaigns. In a 2018 report by the World Health Organization, an estimated 13,000 to 19,000 people in the country were killed in traffic accidents in 2016, significantly higher than the government’s official toll of 3,256 people. Follow Al Jazeera English:...
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What Aamir Khans Sitaare Zameen Par Role Teaches The Alpha Males Of Kabir Singh And Animal
~3.4 mins read
In an era dominated by chest-thumping alpha males and hyper-masculine portrayals on screen, Aamir Khan’s return with Sitaare Zameen Par feels like a much-needed breath of fresh air. The actor, often referred to as ‘Mr. Perfectionist,’ doesn’t just return to the big screen; he returns with purpose. With Sitaare Zameen Par, Aamir breaks away from the testosterone-fueled archetype of the modern-day Bollywood hero and presents us with a deeply flawed, vulnerable, and ultimately healing male character. Set against the backdrop of a basketball court and a community of children with intellectual disabilities, Sitaare Zameen Par isn’t just a film; it’s a powerful counter-narrative. At the heart of it is Gulshan, a perpetually frustrated coach who begins the film as someone hard to empathize with. But as the story unfolds, so does Gulshan. We meet a man hiding behind layers of trauma, suppressed emotions, and a stubborn fear of confrontation. Slowly, the mask of anger slips off, revealing someone far more human and far more relatable. In recent years, Indian cinema has seen the meteoric rise of the alpha male archetype characters like Kabir Singh and Animal’s Rannvijay, who wear their emotional baggage like a badge of honor and use violence and aggression as expressions of love and loyalty. These are unstable men, emotionally unavailable and habitually destructive not only to themselves but to those around them. Kabir Singh (2019), starring Shahid Kapoor, became a hit even though it had a problematic message. His explosive temper, drug abuse, and acceptance of emotional abuse were used as signs of extreme, unrelenting love. Likewise, in Animal, Ranbir Kapoor’s Rannvijay is another emotionally scarred male whose love and hurt find expression through abusive dominance. These figures were cult idols not because they were heroes, but because they catered to a fantasy that romanticized uncontrolled male fury. But what happens when a character faces similar demons and chooses empathy instead of dominance? That’s where Aamir Khan’s Gulshan steps in. Gulshan, in Sitaare Zameen Par, is no saint. He drinks, he yells, he abandons conversations midway, and he emotionally neglects his wife, Sunita (played beautifully by Genelia Deshmukh). But rather than descend into self-destruction, he is assigned to an unfamiliar setting, serving alongside children who are differently abled in a community service order. At first resistant and aloof, Gulshan gradually starts to bond. Not with words, but with small acts of noticing, shared delight, and finally, true concern. These children, in their innocence and toughness, become mirrors to him. He finds in them what he has suppressed in himself: hope. His change is incremental and plausible. He doesn’t become an instant perfect human being. He trips, he struggles, and he cries. But that’s why his journey is so strong. It’s not redemption through spectacle; it’s healing through modesty. The genius of Sitaare Zameen Par is how it redefines masculinity. Gulshan’s emotional odyssey tells us that crying is not a sign of weakness, being unsure doesn’t make you less of a man, and healing can only start when we stop acting tough. At a time when Bollywood continues to mint money by projecting emotional abuse as ‘true love,’ Aamir Khan dares to play a character who doesn’t want to win at all costs. He simply wants to understand, to grow, and to be better. And maybe that’s the kind of hero we need more of. This isn’t the first time Aamir Khan has ventured into the grey. In Dil Chahta Hai, his Akash was emotionally avoidant and dismissive, almost losing his best friends and his chance at love. In Fanaa, he played a terrorist who truly loved the woman he was betraying. In Talaash, he portrayed a grieving father drowning in guilt and loneliness. But Gulshan is perhaps his most grounded character in recent memory, one that doesn’t rely on dramatic twists or high-stakes action. It relies on something far more powerful: emotional truth. In the grand scheme of Bollywood narratives, Sitaare Zameen Par may or may not shatter box office records like its alpha male counterparts. But it’s already done something far more valuable: it has started a conversation. A conversation about masculinity, emotional health, and the kind of stories we uplift. The success of Sitaare Zameen Par, both critically and commercially, proves that audiences are ready for nuance. We’re tired of the noise, the chest-thumping, and the relentless rage. We’re craving stories that remind us of the quiet strength in empathy, the courage in accountability, and the beauty of human imperfection. In the Japanese art of Kintsugi, broken pottery is mended with gold, highlighting its cracks instead of hiding them. In Sitaare Zameen Par, Aamir Khan gives us a character who does exactly that; he shines not in spite of his flaws, but because of them. And that, perhaps, is the truest kind of heroism.
Read this and Other similar stories at MissMalini.com
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Worldnews

Ukraine F-16 Pilot Killed Repelling Massive Russian Air Attack
~2.6 mins read
Maksym Ustimenko’s aircraft shot down seven air targets before losing altitude and crashing, the air force says. Ukraine has lost an F-16 aircraft and its pilot while repelling a Russian missile and drone strike, according to country’s air force, as heavy fighting in the war, now in its fourth year, grinds on daily with no signs of a ceasefire on the horizon. After shooting down seven air targets, the plane was damaged and lost altitude overnight, the Ukrainian military said in a statement published on Telegram on Sunday. “This night, while repelling a massive enemy air attack, a pilot of the 1st class, Lieutenant Colonel Maksym Ustimenko, born in 1993, died on an F-16 aircraft,” it said. In a separate statement, the air force said Russia launched 537 projectiles against Ukraine, including Shahed drones, cruise and ballistic missiles. Ukraine claimed to have intercepted 475 of them. According to the Kyiv Independent newspaper, the sound of explosions and strikes was reported in multiple areas across the country, including in southern Mykolaiv, southeastern Zaporizhia and western Lviv. Ihor Taburets, the governor of central Ukraine’s Cherkasy region, said at least six people were injured and civilian infrastructure was damaged in attacks. Three multistorey buildings and a college were damaged in the attack, he said. Industrial facilities were hit in the southern Ukrainian region of Mykolaiv and the central Dnipropetrovsk region, officials say. Local authorities published photos of high-rise residential buildings with charred walls and broken windows, and rescuers evacuating people. In Russia, the Ministry of Defence said its forces destroyed three Ukrainian drones in the border regions of Kursk and Rostov, and in Ukraine’s annexed Crimean Peninsula. Russia’s state-run RIA Novosti news agency said one person was killed by a Ukrainian drone in the Russian-controlled part of Ukraine’s Luhansk region. Moscow also claimed Sunday that it had taken control of the village of Novoukrainka in the partially Russian-occupied Donetsk region. The latest wave of violence comes after Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Friday he intended to scale back military expenditure and also indicated he was ready for a new round of peace negotiations with Ukraine. In the past months, Moscow and Kyiv have sent delegations twice to the Turkish city of Istanbul for peace talks, but have made no progress towards ending the conflict, which started after Russia invaded its neighbour more than three years ago. However, both sides agreed upon and showed cooperation on prisoners’ swap. Meanwhile, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy signed a decree on Sunday setting Ukraine on the road to leaving the antimine Ottawa Convention, according to a document published on his website. The treaty bans signatories from acquiring, producing, stockpiling or using antipersonnel mines, which are designed to be buried or hidden on the ground, and often cause terrible injuries to victims, including the loss of limbs, who survive their impact. Rights groups have often decried the long-term risk of unexploded landmines for civilians. More than 160 countries and territories are signatories to the Ottawa Convention, though neither the United States nor Russia has joined. The decision still must be ratified by the Ukrainian parliament, and the United Nations would then need to be notified. Confronted with Russia’s invasion, “Ukraine is compelled to give unconditional priority to the security of its citizens and the defence of the state,” Ukraine’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement. “Russia … uses mines against our military and civilians on a massive scale. We cannot remain bound by conditions when the enemy has no restrictions,” Ukrainian lawmaker Roman Kostenko said on social media. The treaty withdrawal follows similar decisions by Kyiv’s allies – Poland, Finland, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia – which are all neighbours of Russia. Follow Al Jazeera English:...
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