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A huge outage of Web Services has knocked out many of the world’s biggest websites and apps – “Snapchat, Roblox and Lloyds bank hit by Amazon Web Services internet outage –

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A huge outage of Amazon Web Services has knocked out many of the world’s biggest websites and apps – here’s what we know so far

Snapchat, Duolingo, Zoom and Roblox are among hundreds of sites hit, as well as Lloyds and Halifax banks, the UK’s National Rail and HMRC – what else is impacted?

Amazon Web Services (AWS) make the infrastructure underpinning millions of large companies’ websites and platforms

AWS says it is now “seeing significant signs of recovery” and most requests should now be succeeding

But some Snapchat users tell the BBC that while their account is back, they’ve lost all their friends on the app.Major internet outage affecting websites, games and apps
A major internet outage is affecting dozens of websites, online games and apps including Amazon, Snapchat and Vodafone.

Issues started this morning, and problems appear to be related to an issue at Amazon Web Services.

According to Downdetector, there are more than 2,000 reports of the Amazon Web Services outage in the US alone.

On its service status page, the company said it was seeing “increased error rates” and delays with “multiple AWS services”.

Houthi rebels detain over 20 UN employees after raiding facility in Yemen capital Sanaa, confiscate phones & servers Iranian-backed Houthi rebels detained about two dozen UN employees in Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, after raiding a UN facility, according to officials.

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Supporters of Yemen’s Huthis pose with a portrait of Major General Mohammed al-Ghamari, the Huthis’ military chief, as they attend a rally condemning Israel a day after the Iran-backed group said that Ghamari had been killed in an Israeli attack earlier this year, in Sanaa on October 17, 2025. An Israeli attack has killed Major General Mohammed al-Ghamari, the Huthis said on October 16, threatening revenge. His death was announced days into a ceasefire in the two-year Gaza war, during which the Huthis repeatedly attacked Israeli targets and cargo ships in the Red Sea.
Supporters of Yemen’s Huthis pose with a portrait of Major General Mohammed al-Ghamari, the Huthis’ military chief, as they attend a rally condemning Israel a day after the Iran-backed group said that Ghamari had been killed in an Israeli attack earlier this year, in Sanaa on October 17, 2025. An Israeli attack has killed Major General Mohammed al-Ghamari, the Huthis said on October 16, threatening revenge. His death was announced days into a ceasefire in the two-year Gaza war, during which the Huthis repeatedly attacked Israeli targets and cargo ships in the Red Sea.
Iranian-backed Houthi rebels detained around two dozen United Nations employees on Sunday, a day after storming another UN facility in Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, The Associated Press reported citing a UN official a saying.

Jean Alam, spokesperson for the UN resident coordinator in Yemen, told the news outlet that the detentions occurred at a UN facility in Sanaa’s southwestern Hada neighborhood. The group includes five Yemeni nationals and 15 international staff. Another 11 UN workers were released after questioning.

UN calls for immediate release
Alam said the UN is in contact with the Houthis and other parties “to resolve this serious situation as swiftly as possible, end the detention of all personnel, and restore full control over its facilities in Sanaa.”

Trump races to catch up to China’s rare earth dominance”

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Trump races to catch up to China’s rare earth dominance

President Trump is racing to respond to a major escalation of the U.S.-China trade war, with the American supply of critical technology hanging in the balance.

Trump administration officials announced plans this week to take a more active role in ensuring access to “rare earths” — minerals that are key components in several important technologies — in response to new Chinese export restrictions.

The new rules give China significant leverage in its trade war with the U.S. as both nations race to dominate the future of AI and the semiconductor chips essential to powering the technology.

The U.S. and China have butted heads over tech exports and defense-related technologies for decades, and Beijing could ease or issue exemptions to the new rules to bring the temperature back down.

But China’s latest actions, experts say, reflect an unprecedented willingness and ability to test the boundaries of its relationship with the U.S. at a dangerous time for the dynamic between the two nations.

“We’re just playing with fire here,” said Edward Alden, senior fellow at the Center for Foreign Relations.

“We don’t actually know what the potential consequences are. We may be able to keep this to a fairly small blaze, or it may really burn out of control with extraordinary consequences that are hard to forecast.”

Months of progress toward a U.S.-China trade pact skidded to a halt last week when the Chinese government announced new, wide-ranging restrictions on rare earth minerals and related products.

The restrictions require companies to seek licenses for products manufactured abroad that contain trace amounts of certain rare earth minerals from China or rely on Chinese rare earth mining technologies.

It also announced new export controls on five additional rare earth minerals, as well as various rare earth and lithium battery related technologies.

The move threatens to upend numerous high-tech industries that are dependent on the materials.

These materials are essential for semiconductors, electric vehicles and U.S. F-35 fighter jets. China plays an outsized role in the sector, accounting for nearly 70 percent of the world’s rare earth mining as of 2024, according to Oxford Economics.

Owen Tedford, a senior research analyst at Beacon Policy Advisors, suggested the Chinese government sees this as leverage that it can use to pressure Washington to roll back restrictions.

“The Chinese see this as being a very powerful source of leverage, in large part because the supply chain outside of China is not well-developed, so there aren’t easy substitutes for the U.S. to go and increase their purchases from,” Tedford said.

Beijing has previously sought to flex its dominance over rare earths, imposing export restrictions on seven minerals in April, after the U.S. levied hefty new tariffs against China and dozens of other countries.

While the minerals themselves can be widely found in trace amounts, deposits large enough to be economically viable to mine are hard to find.

Even a partial disruption of supply chains would “echo across markets,” warned Louise Loo, head of Asia Economics at Oxford Economics, in a research note Tuesday. Such restrictions could cut U.S. growth by at least 1 percentage point over two years, she said.

However, Loo noted this is a “lower-bound estimate” that “significantly underestimates the market impact of spiraling bilateral escalations.”

China’s move on rare earths prompted a sharp response from Trump, who threatened 100 percent tariffs and new export controls on “critical software.” The newly reignited tensions between the two superpowers, who previously appeared to be nearing a trade deal, sent markets reeling.

The U.S. and China had already taken major steps to undercut each other’s AI and chipmaking capabilities. In recent years, Washington has increasingly expanded export controls on semiconductors.

The Trump administration initially placed restrictions on Nvidia’s H20 chips before walking them back this summer, in a reversal that faced bipartisan backlash. Beijing has, in turn, taken steps to block Chinese companies from purchasing Nvidia’s chips, according to the Financial Times.

While Trump struck a softer tone after the announcement — telling his Truth Social followers, “Don’t worry about China, it will all be fine” — the latest restrictions have a sparked a new push to shore up U.S. access to rare earth minerals.

“When we get an announcement like this week with China on the rare earth, you realize we have to be self-sufficient, or we have to be sufficient with our allies,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CNBC on Wednesday.

“When you are facing a non-market economy like China, then you have to exercise industrial policy,” he added.

Judge orders embezzlement trial for Sánchez’s wife

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                                             The ruling comes just a day after another Spanish court said Sánchez’s brother, David, would also face trial on charges of malfeasance and influence peddling.A judge investigating Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez wife, Begoña Gómez, for alleged embezzlement has ordered that she face trial in a case roiling national politics, a court document showed on Wednesday.

Juan Carlos Peinado said in a ruling dated Tuesday that his preliminary investigation showed that a jury trial was warranted, and summoned her to appear in court on Saturday. Gómez can appeal the ruling.

The ruling comes a day after another Spanish court said Sánchez’s brother, David, would also face trial on charges of malfeasance and influence peddling, which he denies.

The embezzlement investigation centers on whether an official employed in the premier’s office, Cristina Alvarez, worked for Gomez during her past academic job at Madrid’s Complutense University at the expense of her public duties.
Judge Juan Carlos Peinado said in a ruling dated Tuesday that his preliminary investigation showed that a jury trial was warranted and summoned her to appear in court on Saturday.
He cited emails sent by Alvarez to third parties that “clearly seem to exceed her duties” and constituted “sufficient evidence.”
Gomez’s “personal friendship” with Alvarez was “the reason for her appointment to the position of highest trust,” Peinado wrote in his ruling.
The appointment, which aimed to serve and improve Gomez’s private activities, “could represent a diversion of public resources in favor of private interests,” Peinado said.
Gomez can appeal and the ruling is not yet definitive.
Gomez denied wrongdoing during a court appearance before Peinado in Madrid two weeks ago.
She told her lawyer Alvarez never helped her in her private professional activities, though she occasionally sent messages that did not affect her primary work, according to legal sources.
Gomez said spouses of previous prime ministers hired staff to coordinate their agenda and security, the sources added.
Peinado set off the saga in April 2024 by opening an investigation to determine whether Gomez exploited her position as Sanchez’s wife for private benefit after complaints by groups with far-right ties.
Sanchez has dismissed the allegations against his wife as an attempt to undermine his government by the right, which has demanded his resignation.
This month he said there were “judges who do politics and politicians who try to do justice” and denounced spurious complaints by groups with far-right links.
Separate corruption probes have ensnared two former Socialist heavyweights, Santos Cerdan and ex-transport minister Jose Luis Abalos, as well as the prime minister’s younger brother David Sanchez.
The legal troubles compound woes for the minority government which engages in laborious negotiations with an array of fringe and regional separatist parties to try to pass legislation.

Senior US negotiator says Hamas ‘acting in good faith’ under Gaza ceasefire deal

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Mediators confirm group is honoring its commitments so far, says Jared Kushner, but warns situation ‘could break down at any minute’

US President Donald Trump’s his son-in-law and former adviser Jared Kushner (Photo by Mostafa Alkharouf)

US President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, one of his key negotiators on the Gaza ceasefire deal, said the Palestinian group Hamas has been “acting in good faith” under the agreement, citing information received from regional mediators involved in the negotiations.

Speaking in an interview that aired Sunday on CBS’ 60 Minutes program, Kushner said the US, Israel and mediators were jointly monitoring implementation of the deal, including the recovery of Israeli hostages and remains held by Hamas in Gaza.

“As far as we’ve seen from what’s being conveyed to us from the mediators, they are so far,” he said when asked whether Hamas was honoring the agreement.

“That could break down at any minute, but right now, we have seen them looking to honor their agreement.”

Kushner, who is also currently serving as an informal adviser to the Trump administration, said Washington was “pushing both sides to be proactive in finding solutions instead of blaming each other for breakdowns,” emphasizing the goal of maintaining stability as the ceasefire’s first phase continues.

He added that progress in recovering the bodies of deceased hostages depended on coordination between Israeli authorities and mediators from Qatar, Egypt and Türkiye, who are relaying information to Hamas officials in Gaza.

China’s economic growth slowed in the three months to the end of September as problems in the property market persisted and trade tensions with the US flared up.

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The world’s second-largest economy grew by 4.8% compared to the same period in 2024, its weakest pace in a year, official figures released on Monday show.

The data comes after China imposed sweeping controls on its exports of rare earths – minerals essential for the global production of electronics – a move that rocked its fragile trade truce with the US.

The third-quarter growth figures will set the tone for a gathering of China’s top leaders this week to discuss the country’s economic blueprint over the next five years.The latest growth figure marked a slowdown from the annual rate of 5.2% seen in the three months to July.

China’s National Bureau of Statistics said the economy showed “strong resilience and vitality” against pressure . It credited momentum in its technology sector and business services as key growth drivers.

Beijing has set a goal of “around 5%” economic growth this year and has so far avoided a sharp downturn, helped by government support measures and what – until recently – had been a trade ceasefire with Washington.

When China announced controls on rare earths earlier this month, US President Donald Trump responded swiftly by threatening an additional 100% tariffs on imports from China.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has said he expects to meet Chinese officials this week in Malaysia in an attempt to ease tensions and set up a meeting between Trump and his counterpart Xi Jinping.

Before the recent flare-up, Chinese businesses had taken advantage of the trade truce with Washington to ship goods to the US, resulting in China’s exports rising by 8.4% in September. The total value of imports to China was also up.

China’s industrial output grew by 6.5% last month from a year earlier, with its 3D-printing, robotics and electric vehicles manufacturers among its strongest performers.

Its service sector, which includes IT support, consultancies, and transport and logistics companies, also grew.-BBC

Trump urged Ukraine’s Zelenskyy to make concessions to Russia, sources say

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Trump also declined to provide Tomahawk missiles for Ukraine’s use, and mused about giving security guarantees to both Kyiv and Moscow, comments that the Ukrainian delegation found confusing, added the two sources, who requested anonymity to discuss a private meeting.

President Donald Trump pushed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to give up swaths of territory to Russia during a tense meeting on Friday that left the Ukrainian delegation disappointed, according to two people briefed on the discussion.

After his meeting with Zelenskyy, Trump publicly called for a ceasefire on the current frontlines, a position that the Ukrainian president then embraced in comments to reporters. A third person said Trump came up with that proposal during the meeting after Zelenskyy said he would not voluntarily cede any territory to Moscow.

For the latest updates on the Russia-Ukraine war, visit our dedicated page.

Still, the meeting was a clear disappointment for Zelenskyy, who had hoped to convince Trump to supply his government with long-range Tomahawk missiles capable of hitting deep inside Russia.

Elements of the talks were first reported by The Financial Times on Sunday.

In recent weeks, there had been indications Trump was deprioritizing efforts to force a deal on Kyiv and Moscow, in favor of throwing his full support behind the Ukrainians.

But the Friday meeting indicates that Trump may revert to mediating a deal. US officials repeatedly brought up the possibility of a territorial swap between Ukraine and Russia – an idea that Trump had embraced earlier in the year – and the US president said a quick agreement was essential, the sources said

1 dead, 13 injured after car crashes into child’s birthday party in Maryland-ABC

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1 dead, 13 injured after car crashes into child’s birthday party in Maryland

The alleged driver of the vehicle has turned himself in, police said-ABC

One person was killed and 13 others injured, including a toddler, after a vehicle crashed into a child’s birthday party being held on the lawn of a Maryland home Saturday night, according to police.

The incident occurred around 10:15 p.m. on Saturday in a residential neighborhood in Bladensburg, Maryland, a few miles northeast of the nation’s capital.

Of those injured, eight were children, ranging in age from 1 to 17 years old, and six adults, including the deceased victim, the Bladensburg Police Department said in a statement Sunday afternoon, amending an earlier statement that put the total number of people injured at 11.

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The Prince George’s County Fire and EMS Department said in a social media post Saturday evening that of the 11 people taken to the hospital, nine were juveniles, including “1 infant.”

Seven of the victims were taken to Children’s National Hospital in Washington, D.C.; three were being treated at Capital Regional Medical Center near Landover, Maryland; and one was being cared for at Howard University Hospital, according to the police statement earlier Sunday.

The Washington Post reports that Russian President Vladimir Putin is demanding that Kyiv surrender full control of the Donetsk region, as a condition for ending the war.

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The US daily paper reported on Saturday that Putin informed US President Donald Trump of that during telephone talks on Thursday.

Donetsk is a strategically vital region in eastern Ukraine.

Putin also told Trump that in return, he would surrender parts of Zaporizhzhia and Kherson in the country’s south that Russia says it has conquered.

The Washington Post quoted senior officials as saying that Putin is not backing away from his past demands, despite Trump’s optimism about securing a deal.
Fierce fighting continues in Donetsk. Kyiv has maintained it is dead against giving up any of its territories.

Trump and Putin have agreed to meet in Hungary in the coming weeks to discuss Ukraine. Putin’s demand could affect the direction of future ceasefire and peace talks

A cargo plane has skidded off a runway at Hong Kong International Airport and landed in the sea, killing two persons, local media have reported

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The Emirates flight EK9788, a Boeing 747-481 owned by Turkish cargo airline Air ACT, was arriving from Dubai at about 03:50 local time (19:50 GMT) when it hit a vehicle on the north runway

Two airport ground staff fell into the sea – they were rescued but later died in hospital, according to local media citing the police

Four crew members onboard the plane survived and were taken to hospital

Airport authorities are due to give a press conference on the incident at 10:00 local time (02:00 GMT).Hong Kong: Two dead after cargo plane skids off runway into sea – The affected runway is closed, but the airport’s other two runways are still in operation.

The Airport Authority is set to host a press conference at 10:00 local time (02:00 GMT).

Hong Kong’s Government Flying Service has deployed helicopters above the affected runway, while Fire Services Department vessels also took part in the rescue, media reports say.

At least 11 cargo flights initially scheduled to arrive at Hong Kong International Airport on Monday have been cancelled, according to the Airport Authority’s website.

It is a rare incident for the Hong Kong International Airport, which has had a good safety record.

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