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Demi Moore wins at Critics Choice with disgraced rival Gascon absent

Demi Moore won best actress at the Critics Choice Awards on Friday, confirming her status as favorite for the Oscars in a week that saw scandal envelop her “Emilia Perez” rival Karla Sofia Gascon.Nineties megastar Moore’s horror film “The Substance” also won best original screenplay at a glitzy Los Angeles gala held by North America’s largest critics’ group, which crowned “Anora” as the year’s best picture.Moore’s win follows her victory at the Golden Globes in January, and puts her on track to cap a remarkable career renaissance at next month’s Oscars.”This has been such a wild ride,” said Moore, 62, who made a string of hit films in the 1990s, but came to be known as much for her love life as her acting in subsequent decades.That has changed with “The Substance,” a body-horror flick about an aging celebrity who injects a serum to temporarily live again in her younger body.Nodding to the film’s frequently bloody and horrifying depictions of warped bodies, Moore thanked critics for rewarding “this genre of horror films, that are overlooked and not seen for the profundity that they can hold.”Moore’s win came at the expense of Gascon, the Spanish transgender star of narco-musical “Emilia Perez” whose Oscar campaign collapsed in spectacular fashion over the past week.Social media messages posted years ago by Gascon resurfaced in which she made derogatory and racist remarks about Muslims, China and even the Oscars themselves.The film’s distributor Netflix has since dropped Gascon from its Oscars campaign, and director Jacques Audiard disavowed his lead actor for her “absolutely hateful” and “inexcusable” comments.Gascon was notably absent at the Critics Choice Awards, and when her name was read out among the nominees, the usually celebratory Hollywood audience fell conspicuously silent.Moore did namecheck Gascon while thanking her fellow nominees during her acceptance speech.But neither Audiard nor Zoe Saldana, who won best supporting actress for “Emilia Perez,” mentioned Gascon in their remarks from the stage.A Netflix representative told AFP they hoped “the actions of one person” would not “affect the whole film,” which is still in the running to win best picture at the Oscars.That race, for the most coveted Academy Award, is unusually wide-open this year.Friday’s ceremony provided a major boost for “Anora,” the Cannes festival Palme d’Or winner, about a young New York stripper who marries the young son of a Russian billionaire in an ill-fated whirlwind romance.Several other contenders also picked up key wins Friday.”The Brutalist” star Adrien Brody won best actor, “Conclave” won best adapted screenplay and best acting ensemble, and Broadway adaptation “Wicked” earned best director for Jon M. Chu. 

Trump revokes Biden’s security clearance, escalates foreign aid crackdown

President Donald Trump on Friday revoked his predecessor Joe Biden’s security clearance in a blizzard of new orders, while escalating his campaign to dismantle the US humanitarian agency charged with helping the world’s poorest and extending American influence around the globe. In a new series of rapid-fire power plays, the 78-year-old billionaire also froze aid to South Africa, where his top donor Elon Musk was born, and named himself head of one of Washington’s premier cultural venues, the Kennedy Center. “There is no need for Joe Biden to continue receiving access to classified information,” Trump said on his Truth Social network, adding that he was “immediately” revoking the Democrat’s security clearances and ending his daily intelligence briefings. “JOE, YOU’RE FIRED,” he added in all caps. US presidents are traditionally given the right to receive intelligence briefings even after they step down. Trump also stepped up his assault on the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), which distributes humanitarian aid globally.”THE CORRUPTION IS AT LEVELS RARELY SEEN BEFORE. CLOSE IT DOWN!” he wrote on his Truth Social app about USAID, without offering evidence.USAID has received the most concentrated fire since Trump launched a crusade led by Musk — the world’s richest person — to downsize or dismantle swaths of the US government. On Friday, Musk — who along with Trump has spread blatantly false information about USAID’s finances — reposted photos of the agency’s signage being removed from its Washington headquarters.The Trump administration has frozen foreign aid, ordered thousands of internationally-based staff to return to the United States, and begun slashing the USAID headcount of 10,000 employees to around only 300.Labor unions are challenging the legality of the onslaught. A federal judge on Friday ordered a pause to the administration’s plan to put 2,200 USAID workers on paid leave by the weekend.Democrats say it would be unconstitutional for Trump to shut down government agencies without the legislature’s green light.- Soft power -The United States’ current budget allocates about $70 billion for international assistance, a tiny fraction of overall spending.But it gets a big bang for its buck. USAID alone runs health and emergency programs in around 120 countries, including in the world’s poorest regions, boosting Washington’s battle for influence against rivals such as China.”We are witnessing one of the worst and most costly foreign policy blunders in US history,” Samantha Power, the USAID chief under former president Joe Biden, wrote in a scathing New York Times opinion piece.Hard-right Republicans and libertarians have long questioned the need for USAID and criticized what they say is wasteful spending abroad.Also Friday, Trump named himself as chairman of the Kennedy Center, suggesting that the stately white marble entertainment complex overlooking the Potomac River did not reflect his own values.”Just last year, the Kennedy Center featured Drag Shows specifically targeting our youth — THIS WILL STOP,” he wrote on Truth Social, without explaining what show he was referring to. Trump has repeatedly attacked gender-nonconforming people.He also followed up Friday on a promise to freeze US aid to South Africa, citing a law in the country that he alleges allows farmland to be seized from white farmers, despite Johannesburg’s denials.Musk has frequently criticized the South African government.- Racist social posts -Musk and his so-called Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, have rampaged through agencies that most Americans have for decades taken for granted.While Democrats have struggled to find footing to halt the budget-slashing moves, court challenges are slowly taking shape.An attempt by Trump to overturn the constitutional guarantee to birthright citizenship has been blocked by a judge, and on Thursday another judge paused an attempt to offer mass buyouts to federal workers, pending arguments on Monday.Musk, the CEO of SpaceX and Tesla, ran into controversy last week with reports he and his team were accessing sensitive Treasury Department data and systems.An internal assessment from the Treasury called the DOGE team’s access to federal payment systems “the single biggest insider threat the Bureau of the Fiscal Service has ever faced,” US media reported.Adding to the drama, one member of the DOGE team resigned after it emerged that he had advocated racism and eugenics on social media.On Friday, following backing for the sacked 25-year-old from Trump, Musk said he would reinstate the staffer.Vice President JD Vance weighed in Friday saying he did not think “stupid social media activity should ruin a kid’s life.”

Trump’s war with the US media

Armed with multimillion-dollar lawsuits and regulatory threats, Donald Trump is taking his long-standing battle with the US media to a new level –- targeting the finances of organizations already struggling in an increasingly tough commercial climate.The president has long had an antagonistic relationship with mainstream news outlets, deriding them as the “enemy of the people.” A notable exception is the powerful conservative broadcaster Fox News, some of whose hosts have taken on major roles in his administration and where his daughter in law Lara Trump is set to start as a primetime host.Trump now appears to be doubling down on his anti-media rhetoric in his first month in office, focusing on cutting government agencies’ news subscriptions in what observers call a case of manufactured outrage.News outlet Politico was at the center of a social media storm, with Trump supporters including Elon Musk posting screenshots that falsely purported to show more than $8 million was funneled from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to the site.The humanitarian agency has been the target of a sweeping cost-cutting campaign by billionaire Musk, a key Trump advisor, with the president calling for its closure.Records on USAspending.gov, an online tracker of government payments, showed that federal agencies paid about $8 million to Politico for subscriptions, including to its Politico Pro service.Payments from USAID were a small fraction of that total, the records showed.But the facts did not stop Trump from falsely claiming that billions of dollars from USAID and other agencies had improperly gone to the “fake news media as a ‘payoff’ for creating good stories about the Democrats.””We have never received any government funding — no subsidies, no grants, no handouts,” Goli Sheikholeslami, Politico’s chief executive, and John Harris, its editor-in-chief, wrote in a note to readers.”Government agencies that subscribe do so through standard public procurement processes — just like any other tool they buy to work smarter and be more efficient. This is not funding. It is a transaction.”- ‘Punish the media’ -The White House has said it will cancel its Politico subscriptions.Other media outlets also risk losing millions of dollars if the government drops more subscriptions, a lever for the Trump administration to undermine a press that is already facing financial strain, observers say.”The upshot of all of this nonsense is that the (Make America Great Again) base has new lore they can use to explain away any unfavorable coverage for Trump,” said Matt Gertz, from the left-leaning think tank Media Matters, referring to the president’s key “MAGA” political slogan.In another kind of pressure, Brendan Carr, Trump’s new head of the Federal Communications Commission, has ordered an investigation into NPR and PBS, a move that some worry is aimed at unraveling federal funding for public broadcasters.”The new administration seems to be ramping up a multifaceted effort to punish the media,” Roy Gutterman, a Syracuse University professor, told AFP.”We are moving beyond mere threats.”- $10 billion lawsuit -In an unprecedented move, Trump’s administration announced that eight media organizations including The New York Times, The Washington Post, CNN, NBC and NPR must vacate their dedicated office spaces in the Pentagon.It cited the need to create room for other outlets including the conservative New York Post and Breitbart.And in December, ABC News agreed to pay $15 million to settle a lawsuit brought by Trump which contended the network’s star anchor George Stephanopoulos had defamed him.The settlement was seen as a major concession by a large media organization to Trump, whose previous efforts to sue news outlets have often ended in defeat.”The spectacle of powerful media organizations debasing themselves before Trump has become so familiar that it is beginning to feel like scheduled programming,” Jameel Jaffer, executive director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, wrote in a New York Times column.CBS News, a broadcaster at the center of another FCC probe and a $10 billion lawsuit from Trump, recently complied with an FCC request to hand over the raw footage from an interview last year with Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris, with the president accusing it of deceitful editing.Paramount, CBS’s parent company, is now considering settling the lawsuit, media reports say, at a time when it needs Trump’s support for its proposed merger with Skydance.

No survivors after wreckage of missing Alaska plane found: coast guard

The wreckage of a plane that went missing in Alaska has been found, US officials said Friday, with all 10 people aboard thought to have died.The US Coast Guard said it had discovered the remnants of the Bering Air Caravan around 34 miles (55 kilometers) from Nome.”Three individuals were found inside and reported to be deceased,” the Coast Guard posted on social media.”The remaining seven people are believed to be inside the aircraft but are currently inaccessible due to the condition of the plane.”Nome’s volunteer fire department, which had scrambled in the search for the plane, said on Facebook it was helping with recovery.”The Nome Search and Rescue Team is spooling up with assistance from the Alaska Air National Guard with recovery efforts,” a post said.”From reports we have received, the crash was not survivable. Our thoughts are with the families at this time.”The privately operated plane, with nine passengers and one pilot on board, was reported overdue Thursday on a flight from Unalakleet to Nome, Alaska state police said.The two cities are located roughly 150 miles apart across the Norton Sound, on the state’s west coast.According to publicly available information the plane’s last known position was over the water around 40 minutes after takeoff.The crash is the latest incident in a string of aviation disasters in the United States.On January 30, a passenger jet collided midair with a US Army helicopter in Washington, killing all 67 people aboard both aircraft. The disaster was followed closely by the crash of a medical plane into a busy Philadelphia neighborhood, killing seven and injuring 19. 

Alaska lawmakers push back on Trump’s mountain name change

Donald Trump’s order to change the name of the highest mountain in the United States faced pushback Friday from members of his own party.Alaska’s Republican-dominated senate voted overwhelmingly against his plan to ditch the Indigenous name Denali for the huge peak, which Trump has rechristened Mount McKinley.The president has unleashed a flood of executive orders in his first few days in the White House as he attempts to remake the US government.Orders have included mass pardons for pro-Trump rioters, a federal hiring freeze and an attempt to overturn the constitutionally mandated practice of granting birthright citizenship.But his order to rename the 20,300-foot (6,200-meter) Denali drew the ire of Alaska’s state legislators.A resolution passed unanimously by the Alaska state senate on Friday urged Trump to rethink his plan.”The name Denali is deeply ingrained in the state’s culture and identity,” the motion said.”Residents of the state believe that the names of the geographic features in the state should be determined by state residents and representatives.”The motion, which earlier cleared the lower chamber by a sizable majority, notes that state lawmakers called for the mountain to be known by its Indigenous name as far back as 1975.Four decades later, then-president Barack Obama officially recognized that push and dropped the moniker Mount McKinley, which had been the peak’s official name since 1917.It was coined in honor of Republican president William McKinley who served in the Oval Office from 1897 until his assassination in 1901.The resolution by the state legislature appeared unlikely to change Trump’s mind, but was notable as a rare display of disobedience from members of his largely quiescent Republican Party.

Trump to make himself head of top Washington cultural venue

US President Donald Trump announced Friday he will name himself to be chairman of the Kennedy Center, putting his aggressive rightwing stamp on Washington’s premier cultural venue.Trump broke the news in a post on his social media platform as he engages in a blizzard of policy changes upending the city and the country, attacking people, causes and policies he says are dangerously left wing.In a way, this appointment is another form of retribution, which Trump is seeking in his second term as he goes after perceived enemies: in his first term, from 2017 to 2021, the Republican regularly skipped the center’s yearly gala event because people in line to receive awards criticized him and said they would not show up if he did.In his post, Trump suggested that the Kennedy Center, the stately white marble entertainment complex overlooking the Potomac River and named for the late president John F Kennedy, offered entertainment that did not reflect his own values.Several members of the board will be replaced, including the current chairman, the billionaire philanthropist David Rubenstein, Trump wrote.”I have decided to immediately terminate multiple individuals from the Board of Trustees, including the Chairman, who do not share our Vision for a Golden Age in Arts and Culture. We will soon announce a new Board, with an amazing Chairman, DONALD J. TRUMP!” the president said  on Truth Social.”Just last year, the Kennedy Center featured Drag Shows specifically targeting our youth — THIS WILL STOP. The Kennedy Center is an American Jewel, and must reflect the brightest STARS on its stage from all across our Nation. For the Kennedy Center, THE BEST IS YET TO COME!” Trump said.Trump did not say what show he was referring to.In December, the center hosted concerts by a band called Bertha that featured some of its musicians dressed in drag.The Kennedy Center is the home of the National Symphony Orchestra and also offers theatre, opera, comedy and other productions.Rubenstein served as an advisor to the late president Jimmy Carter and also has ties to former president Joe Biden, who regularly attended the venue’s top gala, the Kennedy Center Honors, every year.

Trump says he’s revoking Biden’s security clearance

US President Donald Trump said Friday he was revoking Joe Biden’s security clearance, ending his predecessor’s right to receive intelligence briefings after leaving office.”There is no need for Joe Biden to continue receiving access to classified information,” Trump said on his Truth Social network.”Therefore, we are immediately revoking Joe Biden’s Security Clearances, and stopping his daily Intelligence Briefings.”In a reference to the catchphrase of his former reality TV show “The Apprentice,”  Trump added in capitals: “JOE, YOU’RE FIRED.”US presidents are traditionally given the right to receive intelligence briefings even after they step down. Trump said he was making the move because Democrat Biden had removed his own security clearance after winning the 2020 election.Biden at the time cited Trump’s “erratic behavior” both before and after the January 6, 2021 attack on the US Capitol by protesters trying to overturn Trump’s election loss. In his post on Friday, Trump claimed that Biden “could not be trusted” with intelligence briefings because a special counsel’s report into classified documents found at the Democrat’s home found that Biden, 82, suffered from “poor memory.”Trump was also prosecuted for mishandling classified documents but the Justice Department ended the case after the Republican won the 2024 election.

Trump says Nippon Steel to ‘invest’ in US Steel, not buy it

US President Donald Trump said Friday that Japan’s Nippon Steel will make a major investment in US Steel, but will no longer attempt to take over the troubled company.Trump, referring to the Japanese car company Nissan but apparently meaning Nippon Steel, said “they’ll be looking at an investment rather than a purchase.”Spokespeople for Nippon Steel and US Steel did not respond to a request for comment. US Steel’s shares closed down 5.8 percent on the news.The announcement marks a shift in tone from Trump, who heavily criticized Nippon’s $14.9 billion takeover offer during the 2024 presidential election campaign. Former US president Joe Biden blocked the deal shortly before he left office last month on national security grounds, sparking a joint lawsuit from the two firms — and condemnation from Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba.In the suit filed on January 6, Nippon Steel and US Steel said Biden had improperly used his influence and blocked the deal “for purely political reasons” to gain favor with workers’ unions.In response, the US authorities announced they had extended the deadline for the Japanese firm to abandon its acquisition of US Steel until June 18, extending an initial 30-day deadline.Trump’s remarks suggest his administration is open to Nippon Steel’s investment in the US steel giant so long as it does not assume overall control — a step that could in theory ensure it remains in American hands. “Our concerns regarding Nippon’s continued interest in US Steel remain unchanged,” United Steelworkers international president David McCall said in a statement. “Nippon has proven itself to be a serial trade cheater with a history of dumping its products into our markets,” he said, adding that the US steelworkers’ union had not been in contact with either company or the Trump administration about Nippon’s proposed investment.  “While we await the details of the proposed investment, we encourage President Trump to continue safeguarding the long-term future of the domestic steel industry by instead seeking American alternatives,” he added.

Trump’s ‘God squad’ holds increasing sway at White House

Donald Trump said at his inauguration that he had been “saved by God.” Now he appears to be returning the favor with an increasingly conservative, religious focus in his second term as US president.The three-times-married billionaire signed an executive order on Friday to open a “Faith Office” at the White House, led by the televangelist Paula White, Trump’s so-called spiritual advisor.A day earlier Trump had unveiled a task force under new Attorney General Pam Bondi to root out what he called the “persecution” of Christians in the United States.The Republican has also appointed several cabinet members with links to Christian nationalists, including Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth.All of this comes despite the fact that Trump has long had an ambiguous relationship with religion. Unlike his predecessor Joe Biden, a devout Catholic, Trump rarely appears in Church. He was confirmed into the Presbyterian church but said he was “non-denominational.”Then there are the sexual scandals — and a criminal conviction for in a porn star hush money case — and the selling of $60 Trump-branded Bibles on the campaign trail.Yet evangelical Christians continued to back him in the 2024 election, just as they did in 2016.- ‘Changed something’ -During his first term Trump certainly dabbled with religion. He posed with a Bible outside a church near the White House after security forces cleared out “Black Lives Matter” protesters, and had prayer meetings in the Oval Office with evangelicals.But now Trump claimed to have had what amounts to a religious awakening.The 78-year-old said that he had become more religious since he narrowly escaped death when a gunman’s bullet hit him in the ear at an election rally in Butler, Pennsylvania last year.”It changed something in me,” Trump told a prayer breakfast at the US Capitol on Thursday. “I believed in God, but I feel much more strongly about it.”Not that this stopped Trump lashing out at the bishop who gave the sermon at his inauguration service, Mariann Budde, after she called on him to show “mercy” to immigrants and LGBTQ people.But the people Trump has chosen to surround himself in the White House are also telling.A number have ties to the New Apostolic Reformation church — a Christian nationalist movement that calls for the levers of government and society to come under Christian control.Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson has been linked to the movement, as has Paula White, who will head up his new Faith Office.White hit the headlines in 2020 when she led a marathon — and widely mocked — prayer session to call for Trump to win the US election against Joe Biden.Vance converted to Catholicism in his 30s and appeared at a town hall hosted by a leading figure in the New Apostolic Reformation Church.- ‘Bring religion back’ -Former Fox contributor and military veteran Hegseth, meanwhile, belongs to a church affiliated to the right-wing Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches (CREC), a Christian nationalist group.The movement wants to reestablish Biblical law, with some of its adherents calling for the repeal of women’s right to vote, US media reported.While Trump has not expressed support for such views, he has increasingly adopted positions that have delighted America’s religious right.He repeatedly boasted that the Supreme Court justices he picked in his first term helped lead to the 2022 overturning of the nationwide right to abortion.Since his inauguration he has sent a video message to a huge anti-abortion march attended by far-right groups and signed a series of executive orders tackling liberal causes, from diversity to transgender rights and abortion.His prayer breakfast speech at the US Capitol this week was unusually explicit in its call for an increased role for religion.”We have to bring religion back,” said Trump. “Let’s bring God back into our lives.”

Handcuffs and beach clean-ups: a Cuban migrant’s seven months in Guantanamo Bay

Yeilis Torres, a 38-year-old Cuban woman, knows all too well the loneliness and anguish facing the migrants flown by the United States this week to its notorious military base in Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.Torres was picked up at sea by the US Coast Guard while fleeing Cuba in mid-2022 and held for seven months at Guantanamo Bay before being transferred to the United States, where she was eventually granted asylum.In a rare firsthand account of life at the base, Torres, who now lives in Miami, told AFP: “The hardest part…is the uncertainty and the wait for the long process” of seeking asylum.For the past two decades Guantanamo Bay naval base, leased by Washington from Havana under a 1903 treaty, has been synonymous with the Pentagon prison, where the United States kept hundreds of people it suspected of being “terrorists” for years after the September 11, 2001 attacks by Al-Qaeda.Some suffered waterboarding, sleep deprivation and other forms of torture. Fifteen people, including 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, are still imprisoned there.President Donald Trump’s plans to detain up to 30,000 migrants at a separate center on the base has caused an outcry, with rights groups fearing they could be kept there indefinitely, far from public scrutiny.The NGO Human Rights Watch warned that prolonged detention without proper oversight “violates human rights and may amount to torture.”- No legal aid -During her seven months at Guantanamo Bay, surrounded by the sea on one side and a mined buffer zone separating the base from communist Cuba on the other three, Torres claims she was never given access to a lawyer.She was allowed calls of just “five or six minutes every three days” with her two young children, who stayed behind with her parents in Havana.She was part of a group of 17 Cubans that set sail across the Gulf of Mexico on a makeshift raft in mid-2022, fleeing Cuba’s economic meltdown or, in her case, persecution by the authorities.The group’s raft had been adrift for days when they were picked up by a Coast Guard ship.She was the only member of the group to be brought to Guantanamo Bay, which has for decades been used to hold Caribbean migrants intercepted at sea.- Handcuffs and black goggles -The other migrants were returned directly to Cuba — a fate she avoided by pleading she was in danger in her homeland, where she was jailed on charges of assaulting a Communist Party grandee.On arrival at Guantanamo Bay, she said migrants were handcuffed and forced to wear black goggles “so that we couldn’t see anything” while being transferred around the site.They were kept in isolation while waiting to be interviewed by State Department officials — in her case for three days but “some people were confined to their rooms for around three, four months.”Of the 21 migrants who were held alongside her, 18 were Cubans, two were Haitian and one from the Dominican Republic. There were two families with children and one pregnant woman.The children faced especially harsh conditions, Torres said, with no schooling provided for them and no interaction allowed with the children of US troops stationed at the base. – ‘Opportunity to work’ -Despite the grim conditions, Torres opposes calls to close the migrant center, fearing that without it, Caribbean migrants would never get a chance to make their case for asylum.”They gave us the opportunity to work,” she added, describing how she earned money by taking part in beach clean-ups.After seven months at the base, Torres was transferred to a migrant detention center in Broward County, Florida where she was held for a further four months before being granted asylum.The trained manicurist, who now works in a Florida cotton factory, was one of the few of the 21 migrants from her group in Guantanamo to gain entry to the United States, where she hopes to be reunited with her family.The other migrants accepted asylum offers from third countries such as Canada and Australia.