NewsBolsonaro charged, world record duo meet, Netanyahu defiant
Bolsonaro charged, world record duo meet, Netanyahu defiant
It happened while you were sleeping. Here is what the world agencies reported overnight from Thursday to Friday.
A meeting between the tallest and the shortest woman in the world
22 November 2024 07:31
- Height difference is not an obstacle, writes Reuters. The tallest woman in the world, Rumeysa Gelgi, met with the shortest, Jyoti Amge. The women enjoyed each other's company during the Guinness World Records meeting in London.
- Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro and over 30 other people have been charged with planning a coup. Police announced the charges after nearly two years of speculation about Bolsonaro's role in questioning the election result and the riots led by his supporters in the country's capital, Brasília, in January 2023. It was a week after the inauguration of his rival, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, as president. Many participants in these protests admitted that they wanted to create chaos to justify a military coup, emphasised Reuters.
- Donald Trump nominated former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi for the position of the new U.S. Attorney General after Matt Gaetz withdrew on Thursday afternoon. An investigation was ongoing involving Gaetz by the FBI and a Congressional committee concerning payments for sex with a 17-year-old.
- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday that the International Criminal Court (ICC) decision to issue an arrest warrant against him was met with constructive mobilization led by "many friends from the USA", which shows that this step will have "serious consequences for the ICC and those cooperating with it." Netanyahu released a video on Thursday evening on social media criticising the ICC's decision. He called it "an anti-Semitic move" aimed at deterring Israel from defending itself against its enemies who want to destroy the Jewish state.
- Residents of the Havana, Guantánamo, Santiago de Cuba metropolitan areas, and several other Cuban cities are protesting numerous power outages. For two weeks, some parts of the island have been without electricity. In most cases, protests against the energy crisis and the government's ineffectiveness in resolving it involve nighttime marches and banging spoons against pots.
- Elon Musk, owner of the social media platform X and the world's richest man, criticised the Australian government for banning social media use by children under the age of 16. "It seems like a way to control the internet access of all Australians through the back door," Musk wrote in response to a tweet from Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.
Source: Reuters/X/PAP/WP