Monday, June 29, 2026
Dry, windy conditions fuel explosive wildfire growth across western US (AP) Three firefighters died and two were injured while tackling fires on the Colorado-Utah border, the U.S. Wildland Fire Service reported Sunday. Wildfire activity has intensified across the western United States, as consecutive days of hot, dry and windy weather have fueled flames in Utah, Arizona and elsewhere as new fires popped up across the region. The largest blaze, the Cottonwood Fire, was burning in rugged terrain in southwest Utah. It ballooned Saturday to more than 144 square miles (373 square kilometers) after marching through canyons and mountainsides, destroying part of a ski resort and other summer cabins along the way.
Mexican Officials Have Become Informants for the Trump Administration (NYT) As the Trump administration ramps up its investigations into Mexico’s government, elected officials in the country’s governing party have been quietly offering themselves to U.S. authorities as informants against fellow party members, according to eight people involved in the conversations. The discussions have come in the weeks since the United States indicted 10 current and former Mexican officials, charging them with colluding with one of the nation’s most powerful drug cartels. In turn, President Claudia Sheinbaum of Mexico has made challenging those investigations a rallying cry for her leftist political party, Morena, denouncing the indictments as foreign interference. At least a dozen elected officials in Mexico—including governors and members of Congress, many from the governing party—have reached out to discuss sharing information about fellow politicians, multiple people said, and several have already begun talks with the United States. Many of the officials are seeking to get ahead of investigations that they fear could soon focus on them, the people said.
Venezuela Was on the Cusp of Rebirth. Then Disaster Struck, Again. (NYT) The blows just keep coming. Venezuela’s economy began crumbling so badly more than a decade ago that hospitals were hollowed out, blackouts were everywhere and even the most basic goods disappeared from store shelves. Soon, millions of Venezuelans fled the country. Faced with the nation’s steep decline, Venezuela’s already repressive government clamped down even harder, stealing an election and people’s hopes for change. Next came American military strikes on boats off the nation’s coasts, a partial blockade of its oil and a stunning intervention: The Trump administration raided the capital, seized Venezuela’s authoritarian leader and declared that the United States would run the country, effectively turning it into a vassal state. After all the head-spinning crises, Venezuela finally appeared to be on the cusp of an economic rebirth this year. Oil was flowing again, its leaders were mending ties with global lenders and energy executives were flocking to Caracas, the capital, to explore potential deals. Then, the twin earthquakes this week upended everything. The cash-strapped Venezuelan government, already struggling to tame the world’s highest inflation rate, must now somehow muster an enormous disaster response: clearing vast amounts of rubble; finding and caring for countless, newly-homeless survivors; and restoring basic services to a nation in crisis. “This is a country that already had massive reconstruction needs,” said Francisco Rodríguez, a prominent Venezuelan economist. “Now, on top of that, they need to rebuild without having ready access to resources.”
Venezuelans sleep in cars and under trees as they question where they’ll live after the earthquakes (AP) The Quintero family crowded around their new home this week after two deadly earthquakes forced them to flee their apartment building in Caracas. Francisco Quintero reserved the seats of his small, beat-up car for his children, while the trunk is now home to Paquito, their green-and-red parakeet, and a handful of pet turtles. Quintero, a musician, said he and other adults in the family search nightly for a place to sleep near the car “until we get an answer about what they might do with us.” Thousands of Venezuelans left suddenly homeless have since poured into parks, plazas and even the shoulders of blocked highways, looking for a place to lay their heads. The latest crisis in this nation of roughly 30 million comes after decades of economic struggle. More than half of the population lives in extreme poverty and nearly 8 million were already in need of humanitarian aid before the quakes struck.
Thousands of Vespas swarm Rome’s historic center to mark iconic scooter’s 80th anniversary (AP) More than 10,000 Vespas putt-putt-putted around the Colosseum and past the Roman Forum on Saturday, marking the 80th anniversary of the iconic scooter. Enthusiasts came from all over; the AP spoke to people from across continental Europe, northern England, San Francisco, Australia’s Gold Coast, the Philippines and more. Vespa-borne visitors converged on the Eternal City’s cobblestone streets to celebrate a brand they likewise view as timeless. If for only a day, Ferrari and Ducati were forgotten as the little Vespa left them in its dust. “The passion for Vespa is for the Italian style, freedom, the ‘60s,” said Natalie Dunand, a retiree from France who was celebrating her own 61st birthday, too. “I love it.” With curved lines evoking a bygone era, plus an ability to produce smiles among onlookers, Vespa—which means “wasp” in Italian—is to two-wheeled transport what the Volkswagen Beetle is to cars.
Central Europe sizzles as heat records are smashed in Switzerland, Denmark and Czech Republic (AP) Temperatures soared to record highs from Switzerland to the Czech Republic and Denmark on Saturday, as a heat wave that baked western European countries this week moved to central and eastern parts of the continent. Unusually high temperatures were recorded even in the Nordic countries not known for sweltering summers. Denmark’s Meteorological Institute reported a record 37 degrees Celsius (98.6 degrees Fahrenheit) in Ødum north of Aarhus—the warmest day since records there began in 1874. In Switzerland, a record 38.8 C (101.8 F) was set in the city of Basel. Germany’s famous Autobahn was overwhelmed, too, as temperatures were expected to hit 40 C (104 F). In two places outside Berlin, the concrete of the A2 burst due to the high temperatures and the highway had to be closed. Other highway damage was reported across the country, according to the German daily Bild.
The U.S. is losing ground to China in university research (NPR) The U.S. was once the leading force in the world's research engine, but it is now losing ground to China. The country may be taking the dominant role due to significant investments and a disruptive year for American universities under the Trump administration. This year, Harvard University lost its top position in a global ranking measuring academic output to a Chinese university. In fact, seven out of the top 10 institutions on the list, compiled by Leiden University in the Netherlands, are located in China.
A Mayor Is Taking Maternity Leave in Japan. Some Men Are Furious. (NYT) The news traveled fast in Yawata, a spiritual oasis of 68,000 people in western Japan known for its traditional tea culture and cherry blossoms. Shoko Kawata, the city’s mayor, was pregnant with her first child—and she was planning to take maternity leave, the first mayor in Japan to do so. Many residents of Yawata celebrated Ms. Kawata, 35, and her decision, which she announced in May. They offered gifts like crocheted baby shoes and auspicious ceremonial rocks. But in Japan’s patriarchal society, some people—especially men—responded with anger, calling her irresponsible, and accusing her of placing her personal life above her constituents. Ms. Kawata’s decision has prompted a national debate about the hurdles that working women still face—on the factory floor, in corporate suites and in government. Discrimination against young mothers is still so common that there is a Japanese word for it: matahara, or maternity harassment.
African migrants fear a surge in xenophobic violence in South Africa (NPR) Johannesburg has always been a melting pot. Traverse South Africa’s economic capital and you’ll come across Zimbabweans trained as doctors but driving Ubers, Ethiopians running bustling restaurants, and Congolese selling colorful wax print fabrics. Some of these immigrants have lived here for years. Others have recently arrived, seeking a better life in one of the continent’s richest and most stable democracies. Some are here legally, others not. But all of them are now under threat as South Africa is engulfed by a rising tide of xenophobia. For months now, mobs of anti-immigrant protesters, many brandishing sticks, have been marching through the streets. Foreign-owned businesses have been attacked, people chased from their homes, and several migrants have been killed. In Durban, it’s a tinder keg, and thousands of Malawians who have fled their homes to escape the violence have camped out in the open, in winter, begging their country to send buses to rescue them. Nigeria, Ghana and Mozambique weren’t waiting—they’ve already repatriated those citizens who wanted to leave.
Deal With Israel Divides Lebanese, Fueling Protests in Beirut (NYT) After Israel and Lebanon signed a preliminary agreement in Washington on Friday aimed at establishing a lasting peace between them, the reaction in Lebanon was immediate and sharply divided. Supporters of the U.S.-brokered deal said it was a move to curtail Iranian influence in Lebanon, setting out a pathway for the disarmament of the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah, which Israel is at war with. They also said it asserts Lebanese sovereignty over the country’s internal security. Others, not least Hezbollah, rejected the framework, calling it a capitulation to Israeli and American demands. Hezbollah leader Naim Kassem said his group will keep fighting until Israel is forced to leave Lebanon. At the core of the deal is a phased security arrangement in which the Lebanese Armed Forces would gradually assume control over all Lebanese territory as nonstate armed groups, like Hezbollah, are disarmed and their military infrastructure is dismantled.
Iran and the U.S. exchange attacks (Politico) Iran launched a fresh round of attacks against Bahrain and Kuwait, responding to U.S. airstrikes this weekend in a back-and-forth that is rattling the shaky ceasefire and threatening to derail negotiations, AP’s Jon Gambrell And Melanie Lidman report. Trump accused Iran of violating the agreement and threatened to “complete the job.” But Iran is saber-rattling over the Strait of Hormuz, as it looks to gain complete control over the international waterway. Complicating the peace deal further are tensions over Hezbollah in Lebanon, with Trump now pushing Syria to take the lead in combatting Hezbollah. Trump has suggested that the battle-hardened and Islamist-led insurgents who overthrew Syria’s autocratic President Bashar Assad a year and a half ago and formed a new government would do a better job of rooting out Hezbollah than the Israeli army. Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa has said he has no interest in doing so, and has asserted that Trump’s comments were misconstrued. But Trump has doubled down on the idea. The prospect of a Syrian invasion has raised alarms in Lebanon—and also in Israel, which regards al-Sharaa’s Islamist-led government with suspicion and has seized control of a strip of southern Syria since he took power.
Pope Leo XIV says war ‘never blessed by God’ as he opens meeting of world’s cardinals (AP) Pope Leo XIV said war is “never blessed by God” as he opened a meeting of the world’s cardinals on Friday by insisting the Catholic Church has a prophetic message of peace for a world ravaged by conflict. Leo highlighted what he called God’s work defending human dignity, justice and the rule of law. During Russia’s war in Ukraine and the U.S.-Israel war in Iran, Leo has voiced a consistent message of peace, at times drawing the ire of U.S. President Donald Trump.
















