Blog

  • Gaza: ‘Unacceptable’ choice between getting shot or getting fed – UN News

    1. Gaza: ‘Unacceptable’ choice between getting shot or getting fed  UN News
    2. Rights group calls for Trump to be prosecuted over aid seeker killings  Dawn
    3. Israeli officials signaling they want UN to remain key Gaza aid channel — WFP deputy  The Times of Israel
    4. UN reports 798 deaths near Gaza aid hubs in six weeks  Ptv.com.pk
    5. Middle East crisis live: Almost 800 people killed in Gaza while trying to get food aid since end of May, says UN – as it happened  The Guardian

    Continue Reading

  • UN urged to take legal action at ICJ to uphold Francesca Albanese’s immunity – Middle East Eye

    1. UN urged to take legal action at ICJ to uphold Francesca Albanese’s immunity  Middle East Eye
    2. Hamas slams US over sanctions imposed on UN expert Albanese  Dawn
    3. US sanctions UN expert Francesca Albanese over Israel criticism  Al Jazeera
    4. UN Gaza investigator Francesca Albanese says US sanctions against her a sign of ‘guilt’  The Guardian
    5. UN expert Albanese rejects ‘obscene’ US sanctions for criticising Israel  Al Jazeera

    Continue Reading

  • Pakistan, UAE agree to ease visa process for Pakistani citizens – Arab News

    Pakistan, UAE agree to ease visa process for Pakistani citizens – Arab News

    1. Pakistan, UAE agree to ease visa process for Pakistani citizens  Arab News
    2. UAE assures full visa facilitation support for Pakistanis  Dawn
    3. Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi discusses visa issues, security cooperation with UAE counterpart  Ptv.com.pk
    4. UAE Visa Crackdown on Pakistanis: What’s Behind the Rising Rejections?  Times Now
    5. Saif bin Zayed meets with Pakistani Interior Minister  malaysiasun.com

    Continue Reading

  • Gaza’s largest functioning hospital facing disaster, medics warn, as Israel widens offensive

    Gaza’s largest functioning hospital facing disaster, medics warn, as Israel widens offensive

    Rushdi Abualouf

    Gaza correspondent

    Reuters A Palestinian medic cares for injured people receiving treatment at Nasser hospital, Khan Younis, southern Gaza (9 July 2025)Reuters

    A fuel shortage threatens to shut down life-saving services at Nasser hospital

    Doctors have warned of an imminent disaster at Gaza’s largest functioning hospital because of critical shortage of fuel and a widening Israeli ground offensive in the southern city of Khan Younis.

    Nasser Medical Complex was forced to stop admitting patients on Thursday, when witnesses said Israeli troops and tanks advanced into a cemetery 200m (660ft) away and fired towards nearby camps for displaced families. The forces reportedly withdrew on Friday after digging up several areas.

    Medical staff and dozens of patients in intensive care remain inside the hospital, where the fuel shortage threatens to shut down life-saving services.

    There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military.

    However, it said on Friday morning that an armoured brigade was operating in Khan Younis to dismantle “terrorist infrastructure sites” and confiscate weapons> It has previously issued evacuation orders for the areas around the hospital.

    A witness told the BBC that Israeli tanks accompanied by excavators and bulldozers advanced from the south of the cemetery near Nasser hospital on Thursday.

    The tanks fired shells and bullets as they moved into an area, which was previously farmland, and several tents belonging to displaced families were set on fire, the witness said. Video footage shared online showed a plume of dark smoke rising from the area.

    The witness added that Israeli quadcopter drones also fired towards tents in the Namsawi Towers and al-Mawasi areas to force residents to evacuate. Another video showed dozens of people running for cover amid as gunfire rang out.

    Medical staff inside Nasser hospital meanwhile sent messages to local journalists expressing their fear. “We are still working in the hospital. The tanks are just metres away. We are closer to death than to life,” they wrote.

    Civilians standing near the hospital’s gates were reportedly injured by stray bullets.

    Dr Saber al-Asmar, an emergency physician at Nasser hospital, told the BBC World Service’s Newshour programme on Friday that the medical staff had received no call from the Israeli military giving them advance notice of the operation or saying whether they needed to evacuate the facility.

    “We didn’t get any warning… [There was] shooting all around. We had casualties from the hospital yard,” he said.

    “[Israeli forces] invaded the area, and then through the microphone, they asked the people to leave immediately, without even to take any of their stuff around the hospital, and people started to run away under the gunshots and shelling.”

    On Friday morning, the Israeli tanks and troops pulled out of the cemetery and other areas close to the hospital.

    Pictures shared online later in the day appeared to show deep trenches dug into the sandy ground, flattened buildings, burnt tents, and crushed vehicles piled on top of each other.

    Staff at Nasser hospital said they were assessing if they could resume admitting patients.

    “What we really need is just one thing – to stop the killing machine. Just one night, one shift, only one shift, without receiving tens of casualties with severe injuries,” Dr Asmar said.

    “We are mentally and physically exhausted,” he added. “We are working with very minimal resources and with a very big shortage of medical equipment and materials. But we still need to keep working because these are lives we need to save.”

    Anadolu via Getty Images People search for belongings after Israeli tanks and bulldozers operated in an area where there was a tent camp, in Khan Younis, southern Gaza (11 July 2025)Anadolu via Getty Images

    Displaced people search for their belongings at the site of a camp near Nasser hospital that was destroyed by Israeli forces

    On Wednesday, they warned that the hospital was very close to a complete shutdown due to a critical fuel shortage.

    They said electricity generators were expected to function for one additional day despite significant efforts to reduce power consumption and restrict electricity to only the most critical departments, including the intensive care and neonatal units.

    If the power went out completely, dozens of patients, particularly those dependent of ventilators, would “be in immediate danger and face certain death”, the hospital added.

    An Israeli military official told Reuters news agency on Thursday that around 160,000 litres of fuel destined for hospitals and other humanitarian facilities had entered Gaza since Wednesday, but that the fuel’s distribution around the territory was not the responsibility of the army.

    There is a shortage of critical medical supplies, especially those related to trauma care.

    During a visit to Nasser hospital last week, the Gaza representative of the World Health Organization (WHO) described it as “one massive trauma ward”.

    Dr Rik Peeperkorn said in a video that the facility, which normally has a 350-bed capacity, was treating about 700 patients, and that exhausted staff were working 24 hours a day.

    The director and doctors reported receiving hundreds of trauma cases over the past four weeks, the majority of them linked to incidents around aid distribution sites, he added.

    “There’s many boys, young adolescents who are dying or getting the most serious injuries because they try to get some food for their families,” he said.

    Among them were a 13-year-old boy who was shot in the head and is now tetraplegic, and a 21-year-old man who has a bullet lodged in his neck and is also tetraplegic.

    On Friday, 10 people seeking aid were reportedly killed by Israeli military fire near an aid distribution site in the nearby southern city of Rafah. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has not commented.

    Meanwhile, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said it was outraged that one of its staff members, together with a volunteer from the Palestinian Red Crescent, were shot and wounded on Thursday night in Gaza. It did not say who might have been responsible.

    The two people shot were part of a mission to evacuate another injured ICRC staff member, who had been unreachable for a week because of fighting.

    The mission, the ICRC said, was notified to and agreed with the authorities, and all vehicles were clearly marked and lit. The injured ICRC colleague remains unreachable.

    The Israeli military said the incident was under review.

    Reuters Medical personnel work in an operating room at Nasser hospital, in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, amid a critical fuel shortage (9 July 2025)Reuters

    Nasser hospital said doctors were performing some surgeries without electricity or air conditioning

    Also on Thursday night, in northern Gaza, a senior Hamas commander was among eight people who were killed in an Israeli air strike on a school sheltering displaced families in Jabalia, a local source told the BBC.

    Iyad Nasr, who led the Jabalia al-Nazla battalion, died alongside his family, including several children, and an aide when two missiles hit a classroom at Halima al-Saadia school, according to the source.

    Another Hamas commander, Hassan Marii, and his aide were reportedly killed in a separate air strike on an apartment in al-Shati refugee camp, west of Gaza City.

    It comes as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that a new Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal could be just days away, after concluding his four-day trip to the US.

    Before flying back from Washington on Thursday night, he told Newsmax that the proposal would supposedly see Hamas release half of the 20 living hostages it is still holding and just over half of the 30 dead hostages during a 60-day truce.

    “So, we’ll have 10 living left and about 12 deceased hostages [remaining], but I’ll get them out, too. I hope we can complete it in a few days,” he added.

    However, a Palestinian official told the BBC that the indirect negotiations in Qatar were stalled, with sticking points including aid distribution and Israeli troop withdrawals.

    The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

    At least 57,762 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.

    Map of Israeli evacuation and "no-go" zones in Gaza (9 July 2025)

    Continue Reading

  • Why Robinhood’s stock is falling while crypto peers and bitcoin surge

    Why Robinhood’s stock is falling while crypto peers and bitcoin surge

    By Tomi Kilgore

    Florida AG launches probe into alleged false promotion of crypto trading pricing, Robinhood responds by saying pricing disclosures are ‘best in class’

    Shares of Robinhood Markets Inc. are standing out in early Friday trading, falling while the stocks of others in the cryptocurrency business are surging, and as bitcoin climbs further into record territory.

    Robinhood’s stock (HOOD) dropped 1% in premarket trading, after running up 8.1% over the past two sessions to close Thursday at a record high.

    Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier has launched an investigation into a Robinhood crypto-trading services subsidiary, Robinhood Crypto LLC, alleging violation of the state’s Deceptive and Unfair Practices Act. Uthmeier alleges that Robinhood falsely promoted its crypto platform as the least expensive way to purchase crypto, while he said there is evidence to suggest that is not true.

    “Robinhood has long claimed to be the best bargain, but we believe those representations were deceptive,” Uthmeier said on Thursday.

    Robinhood responded to the allegations, saying its disclosures on pricing are “best in class.”

    “We disclose pricing information to customers during the life cycle of a trade that clearly outlines the spread or the fees associated with the transaction and the revenue Robinhood receives,” Robinhood General Counsel Lucas Moskowitz said in an emailed statement to MarketWatch. “We are proud to be a place where customers can trade crypto at the lowest cost on average.”

    Meanwhile, bitcoin (BTCUSD) was rallying 1.7%. It has shot up 8.9% amid a four-day winning streak, heading for a second straight record close.

    Robinhood stock’s decline stands out because it has a high correlation with bitcoin at 0.86 over the past year. A correlation of 1.00 would mean they move exactly in sync. That compares with the correlation of 0.71 between bitcoin and crypto-trading platform Coinbase Global Inc.’s stock (COIN).

    Meanwhile, Coinbase shares were rising 1.6% in Friday’s premarket, after climbing 9.6% over the past two sessions to close Thursday at a record high.

    MicroStrategy Inc.’s stock (MSTR), which has a correlation of 0.96 with bitcoin, given that it owns nearly 600,000 bitcoin as a treasury reserve asset, rallied 2.9% toward an eight-month high.

    Elsewhere, Mara Holdings Inc.’s stock (MARA) rose 3.5% and Riot Platforms Inc.’s stock (RIOT) rallied 3%, with both on track to open at six-month highs.

    The gains in crypto-related stocks stand in contrast to early weakness seen in the broader stock market, as S&P 500 index futures (ES00) dropped 0.5%.

    -Tomi Kilgore

    This content was created by MarketWatch, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. MarketWatch is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

    (END) Dow Jones Newswires

    07-11-25 0843ET

    Copyright (c) 2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

    Continue Reading

  • Nobel Laureate Conversation: Prof. J. Michael Kosterlitz

    Nobel Laureate Conversation: Prof. J. Michael Kosterlitz

    Newswise — CQ1: Can you share the story behind your discovery of Kosterlitz-Thouless (KT) transition? Is there any preceding research that relates to or inspires you to discover KT transition?

    A1: When I accepted the postdoc position in Birmingham, I intended to shift from high-energy physics to a different field, perhaps condensed matter physics. I spoke with several faculty members to get their advice. One day, David Thouless showed me some experimental results on thin helium films, which clearly indicated a phase transition that didn’t align with existing theories. Although I was not David’s student or postdoc, and he probably didn’t even expect me to come up with anything given his very vague ideas, I decided to make efforts. After several months, I eventually came back and showed him what I got. We decided to write and publish this, and the rest is the history you’ve all known.

    Q2: KT transition has challenged the conventional wisdom at the time, did you encounter any skepticism?

    A2: Thouless and I were exactly the right people to look at this problem. The situation was clearly awkward because there was a conflict between theory and experiment, and the theory looked extremely reasonable. At that time, I was completely ignorant of condensed matter physics. But luckily in this case, ignorance turned out to be an advantage as I wasn’t burdened by the conventional notions, so I was free to explore new ideas with nothing to influence my thinking. We managed to solve this problem because we realized that instead of thinking about the low energy excitation, the only possibility was to think higher energy excitation, essential for the vortex excitations, the only excitations that we can destroy superfluidity.

    Q3: What were the key inspirations that led you to explore topology in condensed matter physics?

    A3: I have to admit, I didn’t even know what topology was at the time. I only had a vague idea that it was a branch of mathematics concerned with characterizing various shapes, but I had no idea of its importance until I had done a lot of calculations. I then talked to Thouless and he said these vortices were topological excitations, and that’s how ‘topological physics’ came into the picture. But it doesn’t change anything, because what I really did and understood was physics. So to me it was simple and intuitive. Thouless found those vortex behaviors look like topology to him. And we can bring those fancy mathematical names to physics, but underneath is physics only.

    Q4: Following your theoretical breakthrough, many of the experimental verification were conducted in the years after, did those verification timelines match your expectations?

    A4: After we finished and published the work, we were eager about experimental verifications. At that time, a few experimental groups were studying helium films, particularly, John Reppy’s group at Cornell had been working on thin superfluid films for quite some time. So I went to Cornell for a one-year postdoc, and one day I was giving a seminar about what Thouless and I had achieved, but it seemed that almost no one really followed our reasoning. I remember that even Kenneth G. Wilson—who later won Nobel Prize in Physics 1982 – was also there and asked me a question about irrelevant variables. I had no idea what he was talking about, so I sort of hummed and hawed basically giving a non-answer to his question. But there was one single person in that room who really got it: a bright young graduate student named David R. Nelson (now professor at Harvard). From then on, we got along very well.

    So back then, what we did involve new physics and all sorts of heretical ideas, but turned out to be right. It really needed young and open minds to grasp and develop it further. Nelson and I later collaborated on calculating the normalized superfluid density at the transition point. We managed to come up with this universal jump prediction, where the ratio of the superfluid density is a universal constant in terms of various fundamental properties, e.g., mass of the helium atoms, Plank’s constant. And this is in principle a measurable quantity, because the superfluid density is basically the stiffness constant, to be measured by the flow properties.

    Then there was still a slight problem to conquer. Superfluidity says that there’s no dissipation in the flow, which implies that the flow velocity is finite. However, the theoretical prediction was at zero flow velocity and zero frequency. An extrapolation from the dynamical predictions was needed to agree perfectly with all the experimental measurements, which was later done by Nelson, Vinay Ambegaokar and B.I. Halperin. It took a few years for the physical community to accept that the weird theory (KT transition) was correct.

    Q5: The KT transition has led to applications in superconductivity, superfluidity, and 2D materials, what’s your perspective towards them?

    A5: The applications to superconductivity and related phenomena seemed natural. One could say that a superconductor is also a type of superfluid, and our theory should be applicable to it as well. The vortices are the essential excitations to consider in the superfluid and the vortex cores can be described as point particles in two dimensions, which interacts as Coulomb interactions. You can use the same vortex language for superconductivity except that the vortices in a superconducting film interact with a screened Coulomb interaction with a finite screening length.

    Thouless and I published a paper predicting that there should be no phase transition in superconducting films. But it turned out that the screening length in a thin superconducting film is often so long—even bigger than the experimental system itself. Thus it’s very nice to see that our theory of superfluid can also apply to some superconducting films. Similarly, for two-dimensional material whose penetration length is larger than its scale in one dimension, KT transition can also be applied to.

    Thouless came up with all sorts of wonderful applications based on topological ideas.

    The only frustrating part was that I had a health issue that kept me from participating for about six months. Since then, the KT transition has found applications across a wide range of systems, both quantum and classical.

    Q6: Topological concepts are now widely used in physics, leading to promising applications of topological insulators and quantum computing, what’s your vision about them?

    A6: David Thouless deserves more credit for introducing topological ideas into physics. But since I was involved in it, I suppose my name has become associated with it as well. My perspective on this is fairly simple-minded. In quantum computing, you need some sort of object to carry information, so these topological objects are especially useful because they’re not local—they spread and therefore less susceptible to local imperfections, which are inevitable in normal material. In my opinion, it was the key advantage of these topological materials.

    Q7: Could you name the three most important unsolved questions in condensed matter physics?

    A7: Prediction is not my advantage. I prefer to jump in and explore, and then you will naturally know what is important. One of the important unsolved questions to me is in driven out of equilibrium systems:

    ‘Consider a driven out of equilibrium system has a set of possible stationary states. Is any of the states unique?’

    To answer this one, I think one need to include some stochastic noise into the system and to have it started. It eventually will come to a stage of one stationary state. Is there a stationary state unique or deterministic? Or does it depend on initial conditions? Such important question—tying with the evolution of life—may not seem a question to many. However to me, it is the ultimate question, and no other problems are of equal importance.

    Q8: One of your remarkable achievements is to implement topology in physics, showcasing a paradigm of breaking the boundary of disciplines. Our journal eLight is targeting at expanding the boundary of optics and exploring cross-disciplinary research. What should be most valued, when exploring cross-disciplinary research? What kind of cross-disciplinary research could generate broad impact?

    A8: I thought about such questions—but without any answers. The truth is, many major discoveries come out of the blue. Some strange and ridiculous ideas may eventually turn out to be relevant and correct. I don’t believe anyone can predict which field or direction an important idea will come from—it could emerge from anywhere. So, don’t focus on making a broad impact while you’re doing research. When I was working on KT transition, I wasn’t aiming for Nobel Prize. I pursued it simply because it made sense to me. The idea of waking up one morning and saying, ‘Today, I’m going to do something worthy of a Nobel Prize’ would be nice, but that’s not how science works. There’s no way of telling what is going to be important. The only thing one can do is to conquer some problem that truly interests you. Have fun doing it and if you’re lucky, it will turn out to be important with applications here and there.

    Cross-discipline is of course important, and you should try to make people from other disciplines to understand your works. David R. Nelson understood me and tried to prepare an experiment, and I witnessed experiments I had never thought about. Cross-discipline can make theorists and experimentalists understand each other, and find the truth. No matter how fancy your theory is, the ultimate authority is whether the prediction of your theory can be verified or not.

    Q9: Looking back, was there a defining moment or a crucial insight that helped you persist in your research despite early skepticism?

    A9: What has mattered most to me wasn’t a particular thought or idea—it was meeting the right people and finding the right problem to work on. My personal advice for overcoming skepticism is this: find a problem that genuinely excites you. Once you’re excited, you’re motivated, and that motivation will carry you through. If your work is sound and correct, the skepticism will eventually fade away.

    Another key insight is to have fun with your research. That’s easier said than done, because if you are paid to do research, usually what you find fun is not what whoever paying you finds fun. Many people prioritize success over fun, but the unfortunate truth is, not many people actually achieve success. That’s why it’s important to let go of the pressure to be important or famous.

    Instead, find a problem which turns you on, then dive in—without worrying about what others think. If you’re lucky, it might turn out to be important. And actually, I personally believe that if you’re genuinely having fun doing your research, you will get a better chance of being successful as well.

    Q10: What advice would you give to younger generation interested in theoretical physics?

    A10: Personally, I’ve been extremely lucky. My father was a well-known academic—brilliant with full of unconventional or even heretical ideas. He was also a determined person, firmly believing that his ideas were important and worth working on. This attitude infected me and my academic career was dedicated to trying to understand things. My advice to young generation, as through the whole conversation, is to ‘have fun’. You are pursuing a pathway to scientists. Scientists may not make the greatest living; to me, I enjoy it because I am paid to have fun.

    ###

    References

    DOI

    10.1186/s43593-025-00090-0

    Original Source URL

    https://doi.org/10.1186/s43593-025-00090-0

    About eLight

    The eLight will primarily publish the finest manuscripts, broadly covering all sub-fields of optics, photonics and electromagnetics. In particular, we focus on those emerging topics and cross-disciplinary researches related to optics.


    Continue Reading

  • Can AI Enhance Ultrasound Detection of Cardiac Amyloidosis? What a Multicenter Study Reveals

    Can AI Enhance Ultrasound Detection of Cardiac Amyloidosis? What a Multicenter Study Reveals

    Based off a transthoracic apical four-chamber view, an emerging echocardiography-based artificial intelligence (AI) screening software may offer enhanced detection of cardiac amyloidosis (CA) in comparison to the transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis score (TCAS) and the increased wall thickness (IWT) score.

    For a new multicenter study, recently published in the European Heart Journal, researchers evaluated the AI screening software (EchoGo Amyloidosis, Ultromics) for the detection of CA. The external validation cohort, including 597 people with CA and 2,122 controls, was derived from 18 facilities, according to the study.

    In external validation testing, the study authors found that the AI screening software had an 85 percent sensitivity and a 93 percent specificity for detecting CA. The researchers also noted a 95.6 percent negative predictive value (NPV) and a 78 percent positive predictive value (PPV).

    For the detection of cardiac amyloidosis, the EchoGo Amyloidosis AI screening software provided a 93 percent AUROC, an 85 percent sensitivity and a 93 percent specificity in findings from a recent multicenter study. (Image courtesy of Ultromics.)

    “The AI model presented in this manuscript has the potential to improve both the accuracy and efficiency of CA detection compared with traditional TTE-based methods. Importantly, the model had sufficiently high PPV and NPV to demonstrate clinical utility, offering the potential to augment the frontline screening role that echocardiography plays in the evaluation of suspected CA,” wrote lead study author Jeremy A. Slivnick, M.D., FACC, an assistant professor of medicine in the Section of Cardiovascular Medicine and the Department of Internal Medicine at the University of Chicago, and colleagues.

    The researchers also noted that the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) for the AI software (93 percent) was 20 percent higher than that of the TCAS (73 percent) and 13 percent higher than the IWT score (80 percent).

    “Our AI model also outperformed the accuracy of both the TCAS and IWT score in a subset of older adults with HFpEF (heart failure with preserved ejection fraction) and increased left ventricular wall thickness. These multiparametric risk scores were previously found to be accurate at differentiating ATTR-CA from phenotypically similar conditions including HFpEF and left ventricular hypertrophy,” added Slivnick and colleagues.

    Three Key Takeaways

    1. High diagnostic performance of AI tool. The EchoGo Amyloidosis AI software demonstrated strong diagnostic performance for cardiac amyloidosis (CA), with 85 percent sensitivity, 93 percent specificity, 95.6 percent negative predictive value (NPV), and 78 percent positive predictive value (PPV) based on transthoracic apical four-chamber echocardiographic views.
    2. Superior to traditional scoring system. The AI model significantly outperformed traditional CA screening tools such as the transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis score (TCAS) and increased wall thickness (IWT) score, showing a higher AUROC (93 percent vs. 73 percent and 80 percent, respectively).
    3. Potential to enhance frontline screening. The fully automated AI model could improve the accuracy and efficiency of echocardiographic CA detection in diverse clinical settings and across CA subtypes (light-chain, wild-type transthyretin, hereditary), potentially leading to earlier diagnosis and improved access to life-prolonging therapies.

    The AI screening software also offered consistent sensitivity across different subtypes of CA, including light-chain CA (84 percent), wild-type transthyretin CA (85 percent) and hereditary transthyretin CA (86 percent), according to the researchers.

    “The use of this rapid, fully automated AI model has the potential to improve the accuracy and efficacy of echocardiographic CA detection, thereby facilitating access to life-prolonging therapies,” emphasized Slivnick and colleagues.

    (Editor’s note: For related content, see “FDA Clears AI-Powered Ultrasound Software for Cardiac Amyloidosis Detection,” “Emerging PET Imaging Agent Gets FDA’s Breakthrough Therapy Designation for Cardiac Amyloidosis” and “UltraSight’s AI-Powered Cardiac Ultrasound Guidance Gets FDA Nod.”)

    In regard to study limitations, the authors acknowldged the retrospective nature of the research as well as the larger proportion of men and higher percentage of left ventricular wall thickness in the CA group. The researchers also conceded the majority of the cohort was derived from tertiary academic medical facilities.

    Continue Reading

  • US equity fund inflows ease on caution over tariff threats

    US equity fund inflows ease on caution over tariff threats

    (Reuters) -U.S. equity funds saw a significant drop in net investments in the week through July 9 on caution over President Donald Trump’s threats of fresh tariffs on trading partners, even though stocks surged to new records on rising demand in the artificial intelligence sector.

    Investors acquired just $2.1 billion worth of U.S. equity funds during the week when compared with a robust $31.6 billion worth of net accumulations in the prior week, data from LSEG Lipper showed.

    President Trump this week extended the tariff deadline until August 1 to facilitate trade negotiations, but announced noticeably higher duties for some key trading partners including Japan, South Korea, Canada and Brazil alongside a 50% tariff on copper.

    U.S. multi-cap funds saw the first weekly net investment in four weeks to the tune of $1.8 billion. Large-cap, mid-cap and small-cap funds, meanwhile, suffered net outflows of $2.83 billion, $785 million and $472 million, respectively.

    Sectoral funds saw net purchases extended into a second successive week, with approximately $1.28 billion flowing into these funds. Tech drew in $1.7 billion but healthcare saw net outflows of $874 million.

    U.S. money market funds faced a net $9.78 billion weekly outflow, ending two weeks of buying.

    Inflows into U.S. bond funds, meanwhile, cooled to a three-week low of $4.34 billion.

    Short-to-intermediate investment-grade funds received $1.76 billion with weekly net investments dropping by 57% over the week. General domestic taxable fixed income funds received just $634 million compared with a net $3.03 billion purchase in the prior week.

    Short-to-intermediate government and treasury funds, meanwhile, attracted $982 million, the largest amount in four weeks.

    (Reporting by Gaurav Dogra in Bengaluru; Editing by Susan Fenton)

    Continue Reading

  • Paris rejoices as Moulin Rouge windmill sails turn again year after collapse | Paris

    Paris rejoices as Moulin Rouge windmill sails turn again year after collapse | Paris

    The sails of the red-painted windmill on top of the Moulin Rouge, the most celebrated cabaret in Paris, have begun turning again, restoring the home of French can-can to its full glory more than a year after they tumbled inelegantly to the ground.

    In a profusion of red feathers, members of the Montmartre institution’s 90-strong troupe performed its signature dance on the road outside to mark the occasion on Thursday night, after the second of two daily performances that draw 600,000 visitors a year.

    The 12-metre sails collapsed in April last year after a mechanical failure, injuring no one but sparking an outpouring of emotion including from the Paris mayor, Anne Hidalgo, who called the cabaret a vital part of the capital’s cultural heritage.

    “The sails have always turned at the Moulin Rouge, so we had to restore this Parisian symbol to Paris, to France, and to the state it was in before,” said Jean-Victor Clérico, the cabaret’s managing director. The sails will now rotate daily from 4pm to 2am.

    “The whole troupe is very happy to find our sails again – these are the sails of Paris,” said Cyrielle, one of the 60 dancers who took part in the street celebration, which was illuminated by a specially commissioned firework display.

    Founded in 1889, the Moulin Rouge became a global symbol of fin-de-siècle Parisian nightlife, its famed can-can dancers depicted in paintings by artists such as Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. An eponymous 2001 film by Baz Luhrmann cemented its present-day appeal.

    The French can-can is believed to have evolved from the final figure of a dance for couples known as the quadrille. It caused considerable scandal when it first became popular as a cabaret act mainly because of its intentionally revealing high kicks.

    Performed by a line of female dancers, the dance, devised in the early 1920s by Pierre Sandrini, then artistic director of the Moulin Rouge, revolves around the “vigorous manipulation of skirts and petticoats, high kicks, jump splits and cartwheels”.

    After their collapse, new aluminium sails were ready in time for the Paris Olympics last July, but it has taken almost a year to build and fit a new electric motor ready to turn them and power the hundreds of red and gold bulbs that stud the display.

    Continue Reading

  • Nearly 800 Gazans killed awaiting aid distribution: UN

    Nearly 800 Gazans killed awaiting aid distribution: UN

    Listen to article

    At least 798 people have been killed in Gaza since late May while attempting to receive food aid, the United Nations Human Rights Office (OHCHR) said.

    “Up until the seventh of July, we’ve recorded now 798 killings, including 615 in the vicinity of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation sites, and 183 presumably on the route of aid convoys,” OHCHR spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani told reporters in Geneva, according to Reuters.

    Meanwhile, at least eight Palestinians were killed on Friday in an Israeli air strike on a school sheltering displaced families in northern Gaza, said local medical sources.

    The strike targeted the school in an area where many civilians had sought refuge from ongoing military operations, according to Al Jazeera Arabic. The report, citing a source at Al-Shifa Hospital, added that several others were wounded in the attack.

    A beam of light is seen resulting from an explosion, as seen from the Israeli side of the Israel-Gaza border on July 10, 2025. — Reuters

    UNRWA calls Gaza ‘graveyard of children and starving people’

    The UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) has described Gaza as a “graveyard of children and starving people,” highlighting the dire humanitarian situation.

    In a post on social media platform X, UNRWA said, “No way out. Their choice is between two deaths: starvation or being shot at.”

    The agency condemned what it called a “cruel and Machiavellian scheme” killing Palestinians and warned that “our norms and values are being buried.”

    UNRWA urged urgent action, stating, “Inaction will bring more chaos. Time to act is overdue.”

    Ceasefire talks

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has, for the first time, publicly stated that Israel is seeking an end to the war in Gaza — but only under conditions set by Israel, Al Jazeera reported.

    Excavators enter Gaza, on the Israel-Gaza border, as seen from the Israeli side of the Israel-Gaza border on July 10, 2025. — Reuters

    Excavators enter Gaza, on the Israel-Gaza border, as seen from the Israeli side of the Israel-Gaza border on July 10, 2025. — Reuters

    Speaking in Washington, Netanyahu said Israel is prepared to enter a 60-day temporary ceasefire and begin negotiations for a permanent resolution. However, he listed three “minimal requirements” for any lasting end to the conflict.

    These include a complete disarmament of Hamas, the group’s full military and political dismantlement, and its removal from any future role in Gaza.

    Beams of light are seen from the Israeli side of the Israel-Gaza border on July 10, 2025. — Reuters

    Beams of light are seen from the Israeli side of the Israel-Gaza border on July 10, 2025. — Reuters

    Netanyahu warned that if Israel’s demands are not met during the ceasefire period, military operations would resume. “One way or another, Israel is going to achieve its objectives,” he said.

    Smoke and flames from an explosion, as seen from the Israeli side of the Israel-Gaza border on July 10, 2025. — Reuters

    Smoke and flames from an explosion, as seen from the Israeli side of the Israel-Gaza border on July 10, 2025. — Reuters

    MSF evacuates Gaza clinic as Israeli forces advance in Khan Younis

    Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said on Wednesday it was forced to evacuate one of its clinics in western Khan Younis and suspend operations at another, as Israeli forces advanced into the densely populated area of southern Gaza.

    In a statement posted on X, the medical charity said tanks came within 100 metres of the al-Attar clinic, and the surrounding area was hit by gunfire, drones, and airstrikes, forcing staff and patients to flee.

    “The quadcopter and military vehicles near the clinic were firing. Several bullets penetrated the facility. Then we heard multiple explosions around the clinic, and shrapnel hit the building,” said Rami Abu Anza, MSF’s nursing team supervisor.

    The advance pushed thousands of displaced people into a shrinking coastal area, MSF added, describing conditions as increasingly perilous.

    MSF also reported that its al-Mawasi clinic was struggling to function. It received two critically injured boys who had been shot near the GHF aid distribution point in Rafah. Staff were unable to transfer them to nearby hospitals due to ongoing hostilities and overcrowding at medical facilities.

    ‘Counterterrorism’ operations in occupied West Bank

    Separately, Israeli Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant-General Eyal Zamir visited the site of an attack in the Israeli settlement of Gush Etzion on Thursday night and vowed to escalate counterterrorism operations in the occupied West Bank.

    Israeli security personnel stand guard near the scene of a stabbing attack in Gush Etzion in the occupied West Bank on July 10, 2025 [Ammar Awad/Reuters]

    Israeli security personnel stand guard near the scene of a stabbing attack in Gush Etzion in the occupied West Bank on July 10, 2025 [Ammar Awad/Reuters]

    Earlier in the day, a Palestinian carried out a combined stabbing and shooting attack, killing one Israeli before being shot dead by security forces, the Israeli military said.

    The statement quoted Zamir as describing the incident as a “grave terror attack” and expressing condolences for the victim’s family.

    He also praised the security forces for preventing what he said could have been a “larger and more severe” assault.

    “We will continue intense counterterrorism activity wherever necessary,” Zamir said, referring to ongoing operations across the West Bank.

    Israel’s war on Gaza

    The Israeli army has launched a brutal offensive against Gaza since October 2023, killing at least 57,481 Palestinians, including 134,592 children. More than 111,588 people have been injured, and over 14,222 are missing and presumed dead.

    Last November, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

    Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its war on the enclave. The proposed deal includes a pause in hostilities, increased humanitarian aid, and negotiations on the release of captives.


    Continue Reading