INTERNACIONAL
Putin thanks North Korea for sending troops to fight Ukraine: ‘Will never forget the heroism’

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday thanked North Korea for sending troops to fight alongside Russia in Moscow’s war against Ukraine and vowed not to forget their sacrifices.
Putin’s comments came just hours after North Korea confirmed for the first time that it had deployed troops to fight Ukrainian forces.
Russia said two days earlier that its troops had fully reclaimed the Kursk region, which Ukrainian forces seized last year. Ukrainian officials have denied Russia’s claim and said that the operation in certain areas of Kursk is ongoing.
In a statement, Putin praised North Korean troops who he said fought «shoulder to shoulder with Russian fighters, defended our Motherland as their own.»
TRUMP BLASTS PUTIN, QUESTIONING IF RUSSIAN LEADER WANTS PEACE OR IS JUST ‘TAPPING ME ALONG’
Russian President Vladimir Putin thanked North Korea for sending troops to fight alongside Russia in Moscow’s war against Ukraine. (Sputnik/Kristina Kormilitsyna/Kremlin via REUTERS)
«The Russian people will never forget the heroism of the DPRK special forces,» Putin said. «We will always honor the heroes who gave their lives for Russia, for our common freedom, fighting side by side with their Russian brothers in arms.»
Earlier Monday, North Korea’s Central Military Commission said the country’s leader, Kim Jong Un, had sent troops to Russia to «annihilate and wipe out the Ukrainian neo-Nazi occupiers and liberate the Kursk area in cooperation with the Russian armed forces.» North Korean troops eventually made «an important contribution» to Russia seizing the border territory, the commission said.
While this was North Korea’s first official confirmation that its troops were deployed to Russia, it has repeatedly expressed its unwavering support of Russia’s war against Ukraine.
U.S., South Korean and Ukrainian intelligence officials have said North Korea deployed 10,000-12,000 troops to Russia last fall in its first involvement in a major armed conflict since the Korean War in the early 1950s.
RUSSIA ‘READY TO MAKE A DEAL’ ON UKRAINE WAR, LAVROV SAYS

Putin promised not to forget the sacrifices of North Korean troops sent to help Russia fight Ukrainian forces. (Mikhail Svetlov/Getty Images)
Putin and Kim said the deployment of North Korean troops was made under a mutual defense treaty signed in June 2024 that requires both countries to use all available means to provide immediate military assistance if either is attacked.
The two U.S. adversaries have moved significantly closer to each other in recent years.
In addition to its deployment of troops, North Korea has been supplying a large number of conventional weapons to Russia. South Korea and the U.S. are concerned that Russia could reward North Korea with military and economic assistance, including by transferring high-tech weapons technologies that can bolster its nuclear weapons program.
Kim citing North Korea’s role in Russia regaining control of the Kursk region suggests his urgent desire to receive what he wants from Russia, including its sensitive military technologies and a solid security commitment to North Korea, according to Moon Seong Mook, an analyst for the Seoul-based Korea Research Institute for National Strategy.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Monday that Russia could provide military assistance to North Korea if necessary in accordance with the defense treaty, Russian state media reported.

The deployment of North Korean troops was made under a mutual defense treaty signed in June 2024. (Sputnik/Mikhail Metzel/Kremlin via Reuters/File Photo)
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North Korea and Russia did not disclose how many North Korean soldiers were sent to Russia or how many casualties they suffered. But last month, South Korea’s military assessed that roughly 4,000 North Korean soldiers had been killed or wounded in the Russia-Ukraine war. The South Korean military also said North Korea sent about 3,000 additional troops to Russia earlier this year.
South Korea’s Unification Ministry on Monday called on North Korea to withdraw its troops from Russia immediately, arguing that the North’s support of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine poses a grave provocation to international security. Ministry spokesperson Koo Byoungsam also called the North’s deployment of troops «an act against humanity.»
If Russia’s retaking of Kursk is confirmed, it would deprive Ukraine of key leverage in U.S.-brokered efforts to negotiate an end to the war by exchanging its gains for some Russia-occupied land in Ukraine.
U.S. President Donald Trump said Saturday he doubts Putin wants to end the war. Just a day before, Trump had said Ukraine and Russia were «very close to a deal.»
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
INTERNACIONAL
Guerra Rusia-Ucrania: Putin anunció una tregua de tres días

El presidente ruso, Vladimir Putin, anunció una tregua con Ucrania por el 80° aniversario de la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Ante esto, el gobierno ucraniano solicitó que la medida sea de al menos 30 días.
El alto el fuego durará tres días en los que el Kremlin recibirá a los principales líderes mundiales afines. Se llevará a cabo desde el 8 de mayo hasta el 11, según informaron las autoridades rusas en un comunicado.
Leé también: La sorpresiva reunión entre Trump y Zelenski en el Vaticano antes del funeral del papa Francisco
El 9 de mayo más de veinte autoridades internacionales, entre los que se encuentran el mandatario chino, Xi Jinping; el brasileño, Lula da Silva, y el eslovaco Robert Fico, llegarán a Rusia.
Ante este evento, el gobierno ruso busca garantizar la seguridad y que ningún drone enemigo pueda interrumpir el desfile militar en la plaza Roja.
Putin estableció una tregua con Ucrania. (Foto: Sputnik/Mikhail Metzel/Pool via REUTERS)
En respuesta al comunicado del Kremlin, el gobierno ucraniano pidió que la tregua se extienda a 30 días. “Si Rusia realmente quiere la paz, debe cesar el fuego de inmediato”, expresó el Ministro de Exteriores de Ucrania, Andrii Sibiga, a través de sus redes.
“¿Por qué esperar hasta el 8 de mayo? Si el fuego puede extinguirse ahora y en cualquier momento durante 30 días, entonces es real, no solo para un desfile. Ucrania está dispuesta a apoyar un alto el fuego completo, duradero y duradero. Y esto es lo que proponemos constantemente, durante al menos 30 días», completó.
En el documento expedido por Rusia se destacó que la decisión de la tregua fue tomada por el Kremlin “por motivos humanitarios”. “Considera que la parte ucraniana debe seguir este ejemplo”, se destacó.
Además, remarcaron que en el caso de que el país comandado por Volodimir Zelenski viole el alto el fuego, “las Fuerzas Armadas de Rusia darán una respuesta adecuada y efectiva”.
“La parte rusa expresa una vez más su disposición a participar en unas negociaciones de paz sin condiciones previas que estén dirigidas a eliminar las causas primarias de la crisis ucraniana y a cooperar de manera constructiva con sus socios internacionales”, sumaron.
Putin ya había declarado unilateralmente el 19 de abril una tregua por la Pascua ortodoxa, a la que Ucrania se sumó poco después. Luego de que se comprobó que durante 30 horas se redujo la actividad militar en casi todos los frentes, el Kremlin se mostró dispuesto a reanudar las negociaciones de una guerra que ya lleva tres años.
Este lunes, el ministro de Exteriores de Rusia, Serguéi Lavrov, exigió el reconocimiento internacional de las regiones ucranianas anexadas por Moscú, incluido la península de Crimea, como condición para un arreglo pacífico del conflicto.
Leé también: Donald Trump reconoció un acuerdo con Rusia por la guerra y lanzó una dura advertencia contra Zelenski
“Es imperativo el reconocimiento internacional de la pertenencia a Rusia de Crimea, Sebastopol, la república popular de Donetsk, la república popular de Lugansk, Jersón y Zaporiyia”, dijo en una entrevista con el diario O Globo.
Inclusive, señaló que las otras condiciones son la neutralidad ucraniana en línea con la declaración sobre la soberanía estatal de Ucrania (1990), lo que significa el no ingreso del país en bloques militares como la OTAN.
En el mismo sentido, pidió derogar las leyes que persiguen “todo lo ruso”: desde el idioma, a la cultura, los medios de comunicación, las tradiciones y la Iglesia Ortodoxa, adoptadas desde 2014. “Todas las obligaciones de Kiev deben ser fijadas jurídicamente y deben tener un mecanismo de supervisión y un carácter indefinido”, dijo.
Además, el ministro aseguró que permanecen en la agenda “la desmilitarización y desnazificación de Ucrania, el levantamiento de las sanciones, las denuncias judiciales y las órdenes de arresto, y el retorno de los activos rusos congelados en Occidente”.
“También intentaremos lograr garantías de seguridad fiables para Rusia ante las amenazas que surgen de las actividades hostiles de la OTAN, la Unión Europea y ciertos estados miembros en nuestras fronteras occidentales”, cerró.
Rusia, Ucrania, Guerra Rusia Ucrania, Vladimir Putin, Volodimir Zelensky
INTERNACIONAL
Times Square billboard pops up rallying around ‘historic’ Trump accomplishment during first 100 days
FIRST ON FOX: A nonprofit patient’s rights advocacy group has placed a billboard in New York City’s Times Square praising President Donald Trump for «delivering» on a major healthcare promise within his first 100 days in office.
The billboard, placed by PatientsRightsAdvocate.org, (PRA) will run from April 28 to May 4 and touts Trump’s executive order signed in February directing the departments of the Treasury, Labor, and Health and Human Services to make healthcare prices transparent.
«President Trump delivers healthcare price transparency,» the billboard, along with a picture of Trump resembling Superman says. «First 100 Days!»
Trump’s order directed the departments to «rapidly implement and enforce» the Trump healthcare price transparency regulations, which he claims were slowed by the Biden administration.
TRUMP AND A HEALTHIER AMERICA WELCOMED BY DOCTORS: ‘NEW GOLDEN AGE’

President Donald Trump smiles as he meets with President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador in the Oval Office of the White House on April 14, 2025 in Washington, D.C. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
The departments will ensure hospitals and insurers disclose actual prices, not estimates, and take action to make prices comparable across hospitals and insurers, including prescription drug prices.
PRA says that more than 1 in 3 Americans postponed or avoided care due to «fear of unknown costs» and that 100 million Americans are in medical debt, which represents the country’s largest cause of personal bankruptcy.
«The magnitude of President Trump’s delivering ‘radical’ price transparency in healthcare is historic,» Cynthia Fisher, founder and chairman of PatientRightsAdvocate.org, said in a statement.
SOARING MEDICARE PRESCRIPTION DRUG PRICES TARGETED IN TRUMP’S NEW EXECUTIVE ORDER

President Donald Trump speaks at the White House on Tuesday, April 22. (AP/Alex Brandon)
«Patients soon will have access to actual prices, not estimates, before they receive care. Prices create a functional market where the consumer benefits from competition and choice to lower costs,» Fisher continued. «Soon, patients will be able to shop for the best quality of care at the best price. Prices protect patients with remedy and recourse from overcharges, errors, and fraud. We are closer than ever to shifting the power to the consumer to live healthier and longer lives at a far lower cost.»
Andrew Bremberg, former assistant to President Donald Trump and director of the Domestic Policy Council at the first Trump White House, also touted Trump’s executive order, saying that the president «built on his first term healthcare legacy and signed an even stronger price transparency executive order.
«His efforts to deliver real prices, not estimates, underscore his unwavering commitment to the American people. President Trump has a bold vision to transform the American healthcare system with price transparency as the catalyst.»
The executive order notes a number of concerns with current healthcare pricing, including that prices vary between hospitals in the same region.
«One patient in Wisconsin saved $1,095 by shopping for two tests between two hospitals located within 30 minutes of one another,» according to the statement.
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Billboard touting President Donald Trump’s healthcare executive order set to run in Times Square. (Fox News Digital)
The White House claims one economic analysis found Trump’s original price transparency rules, if fully implemented, could deliver savings of $80 billion for consumers, employers and insurers by 2025.
«The hospital wanted me to pay $3,700 up front for a simple fibroid removal surgery,» Arizona patient Theresa Schmotzer said in a statement at the time of the billboard’s placement. «Because that seemed high, I went looking for what it should cost. I found the actual price online and saw that my share was only $700 not $3,700. Because I had access to real prices, not estimates, I saved $3,000. President Trump’s executive order on healthcare price transparency will allow more people to find real prices and save.»
States across the country have been pushing similar measures in the form of legislation to ensure that patients are given more transparency about the healthcare costs they are assuming, including in Ohio, where legislation was recently signed into law requiring hospitals to post exact prices in dollars and cents for all available services.
«They’ll be able to check them, compare them, go to different locations, so they can shop for the highest-quality care at the lowest cost,» Trump wrote in a statement when he signed the executive order. «And this is about high-quality care. You’re also looking at that. You’re looking at comparisons between talents, which is very important. And, then, you’re also looking at cost. And, in some cases, you get the best doctor for the lowest cost. That’s a good thing.»
Fox News Digital’s Alexandra Koch contributed to this report.
Politics,Donald Trump,Healthcare
INTERNACIONAL
Trump threats boosted Canada’s Carney, hurt Conservatives as country votes for new leader

OTTAWA- In a dramatic reversal, the governing Liberals, who were trailing the official opposition Conservatives in the polls earlier this year, appear poised to win their fourth consecutive term in office thanks to President Donald Trump’s threats against Canada’s economy and sovereignty, according to election watchers.
«It looks like there will be a Liberal government, which seems to be what the polls point to, and it would be a very big surprise if the Conservatives won,» Angus Reid, founder and chair of the Angus Reid Institute, told Fox News Digital.
In an Angus Reid Institute poll released on Dec. 30, the Conservatives were in super-majority territory with 45% support, compared to the Liberals at 11%. The results of a poll released on Saturday had the Liberals at 44% with a four-point lead over the Conservatives at 40%.
TRUMP TAKES CENTER STAGE IN CANADA’S PRIME MINISTER ELECTION DEBATE
Canadian Liberal leader, Prime Minister Mark Carney, speaks after being elected as the new Liberal Party leader, in Ottawa on March 9, 2025. (Getty Images)
«This really has been an extraordinary election in that, by all rights, Canadians had it with the Liberals’ woke policies and with their misspending and didn’t like Trudeau,» Reid said.
He explained that the political dynamic changed when Justin Trudeau announced his resignation as Canada’s 23rd prime minister and Trump was inaugurated as the 47th president in January, and former central bank governor Mark Carney succeeded Trudeau as prime minister and Liberal leader in March.

A truck with vehicles crosses the Blue Water Bridge border crossing into the United States from Sarnia, Ontario, Canada, on April 3, 2025. (Photo by GEOFF ROBINS/AFP via Getty Images)
«Between tariffs and threats of annexation, Trump became the single most important issue in the country overnight,» said Reid. «That gave Mark Carney an opportunity to be the first out of the gate to say that we’re not going to put up with this – we’re a sovereign nation and we’re going to fight.»
The campaign has been a two-party race between the Liberals and Conservatives and led by two starkly different leaders who focused on strengths that their critics considered weaknesses.
Carney, a 60-year-old former senior executive at Goldman Sachs who never held elected office prior to winning the Liberal leadership, has called on voters to consider – during a time of economic crisis fueled by Trump’s threats – his experience, which includes running the central banks of Canada and England, and as the United Nations Special Envoy for Climate Action and Finance.

Canadian Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre holds a news conference in a hotel ballroom in Ottawa, Canada, on Sunday, Dec. 1, 2024. (ustin Tang/The Canadian Press via AP)
His detractors, however, have accused him of being out of touch and «not connected to the common man» and has spent a fair amount of time outside Canada, as a former deputy national Conservative Party campaign manager told Fox News Digital last month.
Meanwhile, Poilievre’s message to voters is that he is the agent for «change.» However, his opponents claim the 45-year-old Conservative leader is part of the political establishment, having spent almost half of his life as a member of Parliament since he was first elected in 2004 – and the change he touts came with a shift in Liberal leadership from Trudeau to Carney.
WHO IS PIERRE POILIEVRE? CANADA’S CONSERVATIVE LEADER SEEKING TO BECOME NEXT PRIME MINISTER AFTER TRUDEAU EXIT
The results of an Ipsos poll conducted for Global News in Canada, released on April 21, showed a narrow three-point lead for the Liberals at 41% over the Conservatives at 38%.
Darrell Bricker, CEO of Ipsos Global Public Affairs, told Fox News Digital that the Liberals were ahead of the Conservatives by 12 points in mid-April and have lost ground since «because of the effect of Donald Trump, both positive and negative.»

From left to right, Canadaian Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre, President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Mark Carney. (Photo by SEAN KILPATRICK/POOL/AFP via Getty Images | Photo by DAVE CHAN/AFP via Getty Images | Photo by Al Drago for The Washington Post via Getty Images)
«When Donald Trump is in the news saying 51st-state stuff, that brings the focus back to the major issue that the Liberals lead on, which is dealing with him,» said Bricker.
«But over the past two weeks, Donald Trump has kind of gone dark on Canada. He’s been focused on China, U.S. government funding of Harvard University, and to the extent he’s talking about trade, it’s about global trade deals.»
That, said Bricker, has resulted in many Canadians returning to their pre-Trump main issue of affordability, through the lens of the Liberals running the government over the past decade.
Ultimately, the outcome of Monday’s general election will be decided by geography, according to Bricker, who said that the national vote «will be won or lost» in Ontario, particularly in Toronto and the surrounding so-called 905 region, which refers to the telephone area code, where there are 55 ridings (electoral districts) and about 4.5 million eligible voters.
«The 905 voted overwhelmingly for Justin Trudeau’s Liberals three times,» said Bricker. «If they do it again, the Liberals will win a fourth consecutive term in office.»
CANADA’S NEW PM AND TRUMP CRITIC MARK CARNEY ACCUSED OF BEING OUT OF TOUCH WITH THE ‘COMMON MAN’

Hundreds of people rally against U.S. tarrifs and threats of annexation at the Manitoba Legislature. Hundreds gathered at the Manitoba Legislature for a «Rally for Canada,» showing national pride and protesting U.S. tariffs and annexation threats. The event featured ball hockey, burgers, and music, with attendees dressed in red and white to affirm Canada’s sovereignty. (Photo by Lyle Stafford/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Last week, Carney said if he remains prime minister following the election that he would have a meeting with Trump «within days» as part of an «ambitious and broad-ranging discussion» on a new trade and security deal between Canada and the U.S.
Reid said that the Liberals’ improved showing was not just about Canadians warming to Carney, but also about Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s failure to turn the dial from focusing on a consumer carbon tax, which the Liberal leader canceled on April 1 in his first act as prime minister, and «still reflecting on Trudeau long after he had gone, instead of jumping right away onto the Trump threat and becoming something that he would lead the charge on.»
The irony, in Reid’s view, is that «Trump imperiled the campaign of an individual who could be in many ways his stepbrother in Canada,» he said about Poilievre, who he called «mini-Trump,» and his «anti-woke,» smaller-government stance – «Trump-esque policies that the American right might want to see in Canada and certainly a lot of Canadians on the right want to see.»
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According to Elections Canada, a record 7.3 million Canadians cast their ballots in advance polls over the Easter weekend. With the country having six time zones, the results aren’t expected to be known until late Monday evening.