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Nine dead, 13 wounded in second Turkish mass shooting in two days

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A 14-year-old boy is dead after allegedly killing at least nine people and wounding 13 more at a Turkish middle school Wednesday, according to media and official reports.

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The boy reportedly carried out the violent attack, the second of its kind in as many days in Turkey, with guns belonging to his father, a former police officer, according to Regional Governor Mukerrem Unluer.

«A student came to school with guns that we believe belonged to his father in his backpack. He entered two classrooms and opened fire randomly, causing injuries and deaths,» Unluer told reporters, according to multiple media reports.

Eight of the deaths were students, while the other was a teacher, Turkey’s Interior Minister Mustafa Ciftci told reporters, per Reuters.

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Paramedics provide medical assistance to an injured student after a deadly school shooting in Kahramanmaras, Turkey, April 15, 2026. (Ihlas News Agency/Reuters)

Ciftci was also adamant that this was a «sole incident» and not a terror attack.

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The shooting took place at Ayser Çalık Middle School in Turkey’s Kahramanmaras region, roughly 140 miles west of the high school where another student killed himself after injuring 16 others in a shooting one day earlier.

Shooting deaths are rare in Turkey, with just over 2.6 per 100,000 residents every year, compared to the U.S.’s 14.5. Gun applicants must be at least 21 years old and go through a rigorous medical clearance and background check process.

Gun acquisition is, however, considerably more expedient for professionals with certain careers, such as law enforcement.

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People wait in front of the school building after a deadly shooting in Turkey

People wait in front of a school building after a deadly shooting in the southeastern province of Kahramanmaras, Turkey, April 15, 2026. (Reuters/IHA (Ihlas News Agency))

Despite the difficulties, Turkey has now been rocked by two mass shootings in two days. In response, the government has urged citizens not to spread misinformation and to protect the peace.

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An injured person being carried to an ambulance after a school shooting in Kahramanmaras, Turkey

An injured person is carried to an ambulance after a school shooting in Kahramanmaras, Turkey, April 15, 2026. (IHA/Ihlas News Agency via Reuters)

«Managing the process with sound judgment, protecting societal peace, and particularly ensuring the psychological security of our children are of utmost importance,» the country’s Ministry of Communications also posted on X.

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«It is essential for our media organizations to act with the utmost sense of responsibility in their broadcasting policies,» the post continued, adding that «such incidents create a highly fertile ground for disinformation.»

Four chief inspectors and four inspector generals have been assigned to an investigation into the incident, the Turkish Ministry of the Interior wrote on X.

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La reacción de la prensa británica a la postura de Trump sobre las Malvinas: “La amenaza de las islas”

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Un collage de recortes de prensa británica ilustra la repercusión de las declaraciones de Donald Trump sobre la soberanía de las Islas Malvinas, con titulares que destacan la «amenaza» de Estados Unidos. (Imagen Ilustrativa Infobae)

La posibilidad de que Estados Unidos revise su apoyo a la soberanía británica sobre las Malvinas tras declaraciones de Donald Trump generó una fuerte reacción en la prensa británica. Medios como The Sun, The Telegraph, Daily Mail, The Independent y The Guardian destacaron el impacto de esta advertencia, surgida a partir de un correo interno filtrado del Pentágono en el que se menciona la opción de castigar al Reino Unido por su postura sobre el conflicto con Irán.

Primera plana del periódico The Sun con grandes retratos de Donald Trump y Keir Starmer, superpuestos a una vista costera de las Malvinas
La portada del periódico The Sun destaca la posible acción de Donald Trump de revisar el reclamo del Reino Unido sobre las Malvinas, junto a imágenes del ex presidente y Keir Starmer.

El periódico The Sun informó que Trump podría examinar la postura estadounidense respecto a la soberanía británica sobre las “Falkland Islands” (nombre que dan los británicos a las Malvinas) como represalia por la negativa del Reino Unido a permitir el uso de sus bases en el contexto del reciente conflicto con Irán. La publicación resaltó que la información proviene de documentos internos del Pentágono, donde se exponen posibles medidas contra aliados que, a juicio del expresidente estadounidense, no respaldaron a Estados Unidos en acciones militares.

La nota de The Telegraph sobre Trump y las islas Malvinas
La nota de The Telegraph sobre Trump y las islas Malvinas

De acuerdo con The Telegraph, la filtración reveló que Washington considera “penalizar” a socios de la OTAN reticentes a apoyar la ofensiva en Oriente Medio. Entre las sanciones evaluadas figura “la revisión del respaldo a la reclamación británica” sobre las Malvinas, lo que supone un giro en la tradicional alianza entre ambos países y reaviva el debate sobre la soberanía del archipiélago en el Atlántico Sur, administrado por el Reino Unido y reclamado por Argentina.

Recorte de periódico con soldados británicos y bandera del Reino Unido en paisaje frío, junto a Donald Trump hablando, y titulares sobre Malvinas
Donald Trump, en una noticia del Daily Mail, amenaza con revisar la soberanía británica sobre las Malvinas y sancionar a España por su postura ante un conflicto con Irán.

Daily Mail amplió que el Pentágono valora alternativas para sancionar a los miembros de la OTAN que no colaboraron con Estados Unidos en la guerra contra Irán, citando como ejemplo la posible suspensión de España de la Alianza Atlántica y la reconsideración del apoyo diplomático a las “posesiones imperiales europeas”, entre ellas las Malvinas. El medio remarcó que la postura estadounidense se encuentra detallada en mensajes internos donde se expresa frustración por la negativa de algunos aliados a conceder permisos de sobrevuelo y uso de bases militares.

Captura de pantalla de un artículo de noticias. Donald Trump está sentado en un escritorio de madera, rodeado de hombres en traje y periodistas
Una captura de pantalla muestra un artículo sobre la posible revisión por parte de Donald Trump del reclamo de soberanía del Reino Unido sobre las Malvinas, junto a una imagen del expresidente en un evento de prensa.

El análisis de The Independent subrayó la tensión entre la administración de Trump y el gobierno británico encabezado por Keir Starmer, a quien el expresidente norteamericano calificó de “cobarde” por no sumarse al operativo militar en Irán. El periódico recordó que la opción de revisar la posición estadounidense sobre las Malvinas fue propuesta como una forma de represalia por la falta de apoyo británico, según la información filtrada.

Primer plano del presidente del Gobierno español, Pedro Sánchez, con una sonrisa ligera, mirando hacia la derecha con un fondo claro
En la nota de The Guardian, el presidente del Gobierno español, Pedro Sánchez, sonríe mientras España desmiente informes sobre posibles represalias del Pentágono por su postura en la OTAN y las Malvinas.

The Guardian abordó el tema al contextualizar la situación de España en la OTAN y recogió que el correo interno del Pentágono plantea la posibilidad de que Estados Unidos deje de respaldar la soberanía británica sobre las islas, como parte de un paquete de medidas de presión. El diario también mencionó la persistente disputa entre el Reino Unido y Argentina por el control del archipiélago, escenario de un conflicto armado en 1982 que causó la muerte de aproximadamente 650 soldados argentinos y 255 británicos.

En este contexto, The Sun citó al almirante Lord West, excomandante de la fragata HMS Ardent durante la guerra de 1982, quien afirmó que Donald Trump “no comprende la OTAN ni el liderazgo de alianzas”. La controversia se produce en un momento donde la relación diplomática entre Londres y Washington atraviesa una etapa marcada por la desconfianza y la incertidumbre sobre el futuro de los compromisos bilaterales.

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El presidente estadounidense Donald Trump y el primer ministro británico Keir Starmer se dan la mano durante una rueda de prensa en Chequers, al término de una visita de Estado el 18 de septiembre de 2025 en Aylesbury, Reino Unido. Leon Neal/Pool vía REUTERS
El presidente estadounidense Donald Trump y el primer ministro británico Keir Starmer se dan la mano durante una rueda de prensa en Chequers, al término de una visita de Estado el 18 de septiembre de 2025 en Aylesbury, Reino Unido. Leon Neal/Pool vía REUTERS

Según los reportes, el Departamento de Estado de Estados Unidos mantiene en su web que las islas se encuentran bajo administración del Reino Unido, pero son reclamadas por Argentina, cuyo presidente, Javier Milei, mantiene una relación cercana con Trump. Este dato añade un matiz al escenario internacional, donde las declaraciones del exmandatario estadounidense se interpretan como un intento de presionar a sus aliados europeos.

Las publicaciones británicas coinciden en señalar la gravedad del mensaje emitido por el entorno de Trump, que pone en tela de juicio el tradicional respaldo estadounidense a la reivindicación británica sobre las Malvinas/Falkland Islands. La filtración de estos documentos internos del Pentágono, revelada inicialmente por Reuters y reproducida por la prensa británica, expone la fragilidad de ciertas alianzas históricas ante el nuevo escenario geopolítico.



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US economic chokehold on Iran reaches peak leverage as collapse risks emerge

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U.S. economic pressure on Iran has reached one of its most powerful points in decades, but inconsistent enforcement has prevented sanctions from achieving their full impact, according to a former Treasury sanctions expert.

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Miad Maleki, who played a central role in Treasury Department sanctions campaigns against Iran and its network of proxy groups, said in an on-camera interview the current moment reflects a rare convergence of economic, political and diplomatic leverage against Tehran.

«We’ve never had the level of leverage that we have today with Iran in the history of our conflict … since 1979,» Maleki said. 

His assessment comes as President Donald Trump signaled escalating pressure Thursday, writing on Truth Social that the United States has «total control over the Strait of Hormuz» and that it is effectively «sealed up tight» until Iran agrees to a deal.

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IRAN PRESIDENT VOWS DEFIANCE AS PROTESTS BUILD AGAINST REGIME AMID US MILITARY BUILD UP

Maleki argues the current moment marks a turning point because multiple pressure tools — sanctions, a U.S. naval blockade, and tighter enforcement — are being applied simultaneously for the first time in years. Unlike previous cycles, he said, the strategy is now directly targeting Iran’s oil exports and the networks that help move them, raising the risk of a rapid economic squeeze.

He said Iran may run out of oil storage in as little as two to three weeks, forcing production cuts, while gasoline shortages could hit on a similar timeline due to heavy reliance on imports. Combined with an estimated $435 million in daily economic losses, the pressure could spill into the financial system, leaving the regime struggling to pay salaries and raising the risk of renewed unrest.

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An oil tanker is seen near the terminal at Kharg Island, Iran, as U.S. officials and analysts consider whether seizing the island could significantly impact Iran’s oil exports. (Ali Mohammadi/Bloomberg)

Maleki said the real leverage lies in sustained economic pressure and enforcement.

At the core of that pressure is an Iranian economy he describes as «on the verge of collapse,» driven by years of sanctions and compounded by recent disruptions.

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He pointed to triple-digit food inflation, a sharply devalued currency and a roughly 90% collapse in purchasing power, along with potential long-term oil revenue losses of up to $14 billion annually.

Maleki, who is currently a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, estimated that current conditions are costing Iran «about $435 million a day in combined economic damage … with the blockade and closure of the Strait of Hormuz.»

A key driver of that pressure is the Strait of Hormuz, long viewed as one of Iran’s primary tools of leverage in global energy markets. Maleki said the dynamic has shifted.

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IRAN IS ‘TRYING TO GIVE THE GLOBAL ECONOMY A HEART ATTACK’ BY CLOSING STRAIT OF HORMUZ, UAE MINISTER SAYS

oil hub at Kharg Island

Former President Donald Trump weighs a potential attack on Iran’s oil hub at Kharg Island amid expert predictions of market chaos. (Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto)

«Iran’s economy relies on the Strait of Hormuz more than any other economy,» he said, calling its closure a form of «economic self-sabotage.»

While countries in Asia — including Japan, South Korea, India and China — are most exposed to disruptions, many have built up reserves. «Japan’s oil reserve is pretty significant. Same with China,» Maleki said.

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Still, the region remains heavily dependent on the waterway, with roughly 75% of liquefied natural gas supplies for countries including India, China and South Korea flowing through the strait.

Inside Iran, however, vulnerabilities are more immediate. Despite vast oil reserves, the country imports between 30 million to 60 million liters of gasoline per day to cover a domestic shortfall of up to 35 million liters.

«If they run out of gasoline… they’re going to have a major crisis domestically,» Maleki said, noting that past shortages and price hikes have triggered widespread protests.

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NUCLEAR EXPERTS WARN IRAN’S URANIUM ‘RIGHT’ IS A MYTH, SAY TRUMP IS RIGHT TO HOLD FIRM

The economic pressure is being reinforced by a U.S. naval blockade targeting Iran’s oil exports, the regime’s primary source of revenue.

A billboard showing a portrait of the late Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei looming over an empty square.

A billboard showing a portrait of the late Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed in U.S.-Israeli strikes, looms over an empty square in Tehran, Iran, Thursday, March 5, 2026. (Vahid Salemi/AP Photo)

A senior administration official said the Treasury Department is intensifying enforcement under what it describes as an «Economic Fury» campaign, using financial and maritime tools in tandem to squeeze Iran’s revenue streams.

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The official said the strategy focuses on «systematically degrading Iran’s ability to generate, move, and repatriate funds,» including by constraining maritime trade through the naval blockade, which targets Iran’s primary source of revenue from oil exports.

Financial pressure is also expanding globally. The official said Treasury has warned banks in China, Hong Kong, the United Arab Emirates and Oman that facilitating Iranian trade could expose them to secondary sanctions, signaling a more aggressive approach to enforcement beyond Iran’s borders.

Treasury has issued sanctions on more than 1,000 targets since 2025 under the current maximum pressure campaign, the official said, aimed at disrupting Iran’s oil trade and financial networks.

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The official added that Iran is facing immediate logistical constraints, warning that storage capacity at Kharg Island — the country’s main oil export terminal — could be filled within days if exports remain blocked, potentially forcing production shut-ins.

«Treasury will continue to freeze the funds stolen by the corrupt leadership on behalf of the people of Iran,» the official warned.

A new analysis from United Against Nuclear Iran said the blockade is already deterring high-value shipments, even as some Iran-linked vessels continue to transit the region.

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TRUMP CLAIMS IRAN ‘STARVING FOR CASH,’ ‘COLLAPSING FINANCIALLY’ AFTER EXTENDING CEASEFIRE

Two oil tankers seized in the Strait of Hormuz

Iran seized two oil tankers Thursday while former Iranian minister Ezzatollah Zarghami threatened to make the Strait of Hormuz a «massacre and hell» for U.S. forces. (Giuseppe Cacace/AFP)

«Effectiveness should not be measured by the total number of Iran-linked vessels at sea,» the group said in an April 22 statement. «But by whether the U.S. is disrupting high-value Iranian oil exports… and deterring large-scale illicit shipments.»

At least 29 vessels have been turned around or forced back to port, including several very large crude carriers, according to the report.

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The blockade, announced April 12 and enforced by U.S. Central Command, is designed to cut off Iranian crude exports, particularly shipments to China, while prioritizing high-impact targets.

While sanctions are clearly biting, Maleki said their impact has been limited by inconsistent enforcement across successive U.S. administrations.

U.S. sanctions on Iran have been in place in various forms for years, targeting the country’s oil exports, banking sector and access to global financial systems.

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Under the Obama administration, sanctions pressure was partially lifted under the nuclear deal. The first Trump administration reimposed «maximum pressure,» but enforcement ramped up gradually and lasted only a limited period. The Biden administration later eased enforcement in pursuit of diplomacy.

He argued that cycles of tightening and relief — including sanctions rollback under the Iran nuclear deal and pauses in enforcement — have allowed Tehran to adapt.

«What’s different now,» Maleki said, is the combination of sustained sanctions with real-time enforcement measures that directly restrict Iran’s ability to export oil — a step that was largely absent in earlier phases.

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To maximize pressure, Maleki said Washington must sustain enforcement, particularly through secondary sanctions targeting foreign banks and companies facilitating Iranian trade.

Crucially, he downplayed the likelihood that outside powers could offset the pressure.

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Anti-regime protesters marching in the streets of Tehran

Anti-regime protests engulf the streets of Tehran, Iran, on Jan. 6, 2025. (Reuters)

«I can’t really point to any other nation… that is going to jump in and give the Iranian regime a lifeline,» he said.

«At some point in the next few weeks to a few months, they’re going to face not just gasoline shortages and oil production disruptions, but also a major banking problem to pay salaries of government employees and IRGC personnel,» he said. «Iranians run out of patience again, as they did before, and they’re back on the street. I’m not quite sure if you’re going to have unpaid IRGC forces willing to go back on the street and kill their fellow Iranians who have the same grievances that they have now, which is a collapsed economy.»

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Social media erupts after Mamdani’s far-left supporters turn on him over homeless shelter: ‘Oops’

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East Village residents who voted for New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani by a 40-point margin are now suing to stop a building in their neighborhood from becoming a temporary homeless shelter.

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The lawsuit, filed with the New York City Supreme Court on Monday, shows hesitation even among Mamdani supporters about the cost of implementing some of his plans.

News of the lawsuit has prompted conservative mockery online, with figures like Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, noting the irony of Mamdani’s supporters turning on the fruits of his administration.

«Oops,» Sen. Ted Cruz said in a post to X.

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MAMDANI PRESSED ON PLEDGE TO BE TRUMP’S ‘WORST NIGHTMARE’ AND LANDLORD PUSHBACK ON RENT FREEZE PLAN

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani speaks at a press conference at La Marqueta in East Harlem on April 14, 2026, outlining plans for city-run grocery stores aimed at lowering food prices. (New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani speaks during a press conference announcing a city-run grocery store plan in East Harlem.)

«No one is more ‘not in my backyard’ than white progressives. This community voted for Mamdani in a landslide but don’t want to live with the consequences,» Michael Henry, a former New York attorney general candidate, wrote on social media.

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«Not shocked,» Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., said in a post of his own.

Election District 45, the area that includes East Village, voted for Mamdani in a 70.1% victory over independent candidate Andrew Cuomo, who garnered just 26.0% of the vote.

Even so, 10 residents joined the Village Organization for the Integrity of Community Engagement (VOICE) in their suit against the city after Mamdani announced plans earlier this year to turn a building at 8 East 3rd Street into a citywide intake shelter to house homeless adult men.

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MAMDANI DISCOURAGES HAKEEM JEFFRIES PRIMARY CHALLENGER, TELLS CITY COUNCIL MEMBER TO ‘FOCUS’ ON NYC

Queensboro Plaza subway station with trains arriving and departing and New York City skyline in background

Trains arrive and depart at the Queensboro Plaza subway station with the New York City skyline visible behind on Dec. 23, 2005. (Daniel Acker/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The filing argues the city fast-tracked the process without proper environmental and legal safeguards.

«It challenges the city’s hastily made and legally invalid decision to locate a new citywide homeless adult male intake center at 8 East 3rd Street without following any of the legal requirements that must precede such a significant and consequential decision,» the filing reads.

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To circumvent them, the complaint notes that Mamdani relied on an emergency declaration from 2022 — a power originally issued to handle an influx of asylum-seekers.

Mamdani announced the temporary housing project at 8 East 3rd Street as a way to accommodate the closure of Bellevue Shelter, a separate homeless intake site that the mayor’s office said had deteriorated too far for use.

«The Department of Social Services (DSS) and Department of Homeless Services (DHS) will immediately implement an operational plan to vacate 30th Street and relocate the critical functions to other sites. There are approximately 250 individuals in the shelter and the DSS is working to relocate these individuals by mid-March,» Mamdani’s office said in a press release.

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NYC LANDLORDS FIRE BACK AT ‘RACIST’ MAMDANI AIDE’S CLAIM THAT TIES HOMEOWNERSHIP TO ‘WHITE SUPREMACY’

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani speaking at a SEIU rally on Park Avenue in Manhattan

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani delivers remarks at the Service Employees International Union 32BJ SEIU rally on Park Avenue in Manhattan on April 15, 2026. (Selcuk Acar/Anadolu)

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The mayor’s office also detailed that a second accommodation site would be opened at 333 Bowery St., beginning on May 1, to house families without minor children.

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The New York Supreme Court has not yet responded to requests for emergency relief that would pause the city’s plans.

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