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An unknown attacker threw Molotov cocktails at a Russian center in Prague, police say

PRAGUE (AP) — An unknown perpetrator threw several Molotov cocktails at a Russian center in Prague promoting culture and history, Czech police said on Friday.

Associated Press

The incident in the Czech capital took place late Thursday and is now being investigated, they said.

The building of the center did not catch fire. A photo shows a broken window while two windows and a wall are partly covered with smoke.

Known as the Russian House, the building is funded by the Russian state but doesn't have diplomatic status.

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The center said it organizes various cultural, educational and scientific programs and offers courses in the Russian language.

Its director, Igor Girenko, told the Russian state news agency Tass that three of the six Molotov cocktails did not explode.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova, called it "a barbaric act," the agency said.

The Russian embassy in Prague has asked the Czech authorities to boost security of Russian institutions and its employees in the country.

Czech Interior Minister Lubomír Metnar called the attack "unacceptable."

An unknown attacker threw Molotov cocktails at a Russian center in Prague, police say

PRAGUE (AP) — An unknown perpetrator threw several Molotov cocktails at a Russian center in Prague promoting culture and ...
3 Killed, 2 Hospitalized After Helicopter Crashes into the Ocean Near Beach in Hawaii

Three people have died, and two others have been transported to the hospital after a helicopter crashed into the ocean near Kalalau Beach on the Hawaiian island of Kauaʻi

People A photo taken on the Kalalau Trail in Kaua'i, HawaiiCredit: Rolf Nussbaumer/imageBROKER/Shutterstock

NEED TO KNOW

  • One pilot and four passengers were on board at the time of the crash, which occurred on Thursday, March 26, at approximately 3:45 p.m. local time

  • Officials confirmed the helicopter was being operated by Airborne Aviation

Three people have died and two more have been hospitalized following a helicopter crash in Hawaii.

On Thursday, March 26 at approximately 3:45 p.m. local time, Kauaʻi Police Dispatch received a text-to-911 message that a helicopter had crashed into the ocean near Kalalau Beach on the Nā Pali Coast in northwest Kauaʻi, pera Kauaʻi Police Department (KPD) release, citing a preliminary report.

"Officials have identified the helicopter as being operated by Airborne Aviation, with one pilot and four passengers," the release noted, adding that the incident "resulted in three fatalities."

Police said that two survivors had been transported to Wilcox Medical Center in Lihue for treatment, per the release.

An area near the Nā Pali Coast in Kaua'i, HawaiiCredit: AP Photo/Maryclaire Dale

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The U.S. Coast Guard confirmed that the incident occurred approximately 300 feet offshore, perHawaii News Now.

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"Personnel and resources from the Kauaʻi Fire Department, the Kauaʻi Emergency Management Agency, the United States Coast Guard, American Medical Response, the Department of Land and Natural Resources, and the Kauaʻi Police Department are actively involved in the response," the police release added.

Police concluded, "No further information is available at this time. Updates will be provided as they become available."

A photo of a U.S. Coast Guard officer near the Nā Pali Coast in Kaua'i, HawaiiCredit: Tyler Robertson/USCG via AP

Kauaʻi Mayor, Derek Kawakami, described the location of the crash as being "very, very isolated" in a clip shared byKHON2 Newsand said it was "very tricky" to "get down into," thanking authorities for their "phenomenal" response to the incident.

Some waterfalls, beaches and cliffs in the region are only accessible via boat or hiking on the Nā Pali Coast, so helicopter tours have become a popular way to explore the area, per theAssociated Press.

PEOPLE has contacted the Kauaʻi Police Department, Airborne Aviation and the U.S. Coast Guard for additional information, but didn't immediately receive a response.

Read the original article onPeople

3 Killed, 2 Hospitalized After Helicopter Crashes into the Ocean Near Beach in Hawaii

Three people have died, and two others have been transported to the hospital after a helicopter crashed into the ocean ne...
'We don't sleep': Sailors stranded in Persian Gulf as rockets fly over their heads

HONG KONG — He and his shipmates stay up on the deck at night, sometimes watching rockets fly over their heads.

NBC Universal

What was supposed to be an uneventful first voyage transporting oil across the Persian Gulf has turned into a nightmare for a 28-year-old sailor from India, who has spent the past month stuck as his ship sits idled by theIran war.

"We don't sleep at night. We stay up on deck because you never know what might happen next," said the sailor, who asked not to be named for fear of reprisals from authorities and his employer.

The seafarer, who has been at sea since November, was speaking to NBC News from Iraqi waters minutes after an air attack Tuesday afternoon, which he says landed on Iran just a few miles away.

"The ship is still vibrating," he said in an interview in Hindi.

He and the three other crew members on the small oil vessel are among20,000 sailors strandedon hundreds of ships in the Persian Gulf, according to the U.N.'s maritime agency, after Iran effectively shut down theStrait of Hormuzin response to U.S.-Israeli strikes.

The blockade of the crucial shipping route, which hassent global energy prices soaring, has also trapped the largely invisible workforce that keeps the world's maritime trade afloat, prolonging their time away from their families and putting their lives at risk. At least seven seafarers have been killed and several others have been severely injured in what the U.N. says were Iranian attacks on commercial vessels.

"The world has relied on these people to keep trade moving under impossible conditions," said Angad Banga, chief executive of the Caravel Group, a Hong Kong-based shipping conglomerate. Caravel's subsidiary company, Fleet Management Limited, manages more than 600 ships, including some that are stuck in the Gulf.

It has already been a difficult few years for the world's nearly 2 million seafarers, who mostly come from thePhilippines,Indiaand other Asian nations. During the Covid pandemic, they were confined to their ships for long periods, unable to take breaks on shore because of border restrictions that many countries imposed.

Their work and mental health were further disrupted when Houthi rebels in Yemen beganattacking ships in the Red Sea, with at least nine sailors killed and 11 othersheld captive for five months.

"The moment the crises fade from the headlines, the world forgets they exist, and that cycle has to break," Banga added.

A Thai bulk carrier travelling in the crucial Strait of Hormuz was attacked March 11, with 20 crew members rescued so far, the Thai navy said.  (Royal Thai Navy via AFP - Getty Images)

The International Maritime Organization, the U.N.'s maritime agency, hasconfirmed18 incidents of damage to commercial vessels from March 1 to 19 in the Strait of Hormuz, the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman. In one instance March 11, there was an explosion on a Thai-flagged ship after it was hit by projectiles and 20 of its crew members had to be rescued, withthree still missingFriday as Iranian state media reported the ship had run aground off Iran's Qeshm Island. Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps said the ship had ignored "warnings."

Even if their vessels are not directly hit, the stranded seafarers can only watch in fear as Iran trades strikes with the U.S. and Israel.

In the incident Tuesday, the sailor said, he heard missile strikes for nearly half an hour and counted more than a dozen explosions.

"I was initially in the engine room so I didn't know what was going on," he said. "When I came up to the deck, I saw the rest of my crew watching the rockets fly by, which would be followed by explosions in the distance."

"I could see when they were hitting the ground, see smoke rise and feel the impact through the ship," he added.

The same day, Banga's firm showed NBC News just how bad the situation has become.

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The “Bridge” at Fleet Management’s office in Hong Kong where onshore officers handle emergencies. (The Caravel Group)

Inside Fleet Management's headquarters in a Hong Kong office tower, in a room known as "the Bridge," hundreds of white dots appeared across eight screens that formed a giant maritime world map, each representing a vessel under the group's management.

The contrast is stark: While normally about 130 ships would pass through the Strait of Hormuz daily, some of them Fleet Management's, virtually none are able to get through now. Several ships awaiting passage were visible on the screen.

As the stranded seafarers struggle to keep their spirits up, Banga said his firm has been conducting regular check-ins with crew members, who try to maintain somewhat of a routine that includes leisure activities and maintenance work on their ships.

"They exercise, they watch movies, some play basketball on the deck, sit there," he said.

"When the routine breaks down is when people start to unravel," he added. "The sun goes down, and that's when the fear comes because most of the attacks happen in the dark."

On Tuesday, the vessel tracking website MarineTraffic said in apost on Xthat only nine ships had passed through the strait since the day before, with apparent Iranian support.

One of them was a Chinese-owned vessel that successfully transited the waterway Monday.

A video shot by one of the sailors onboard the ship, shared on Chinese social media platform Douyin and geolocated by NBC News, showed the tanker passing through a narrow section of the strait off the coast of Bandar Abbas in southern Iran.

A screengrab from a video by a crew member on a Chinese-owned tanker appears to show it sailing through the Strait of Hormuz on March 23. (Obtained by NBC News)

The sailor panned the camera around the ship, showing small speedboats in the distance that were escorting his ship and at least three other tankers in an apparent convoy.

"We can see some large tankers. Not sure why they decided to anchor here," the sailor filming the video can be heard saying in Mandarin in another video, pointing to the Iranian coastline and some high-rise buildings visible in the distance.

"I can't shoot any videos outside anymore. It's dangerous. Let's hide in the cabin quickly," he says.

NBC News reached out to the vessel's manager for comment.

Iran said this week that "non-hostile vessels" would be allowed safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz in coordination with Iranian authorities.

"As we repeatedly emphasized, the Strait of Hormuz remains open, and maritime traffic has not been suspended," the Iranian Foreign Affairs Ministry wrote in a letter to the U.N. seen by NBC News. "Navigation continues, subject to compliance with the necessary measures referenced above and the realities arising from the ongoing conflict."

The letter defines "non-hostile vessels" as those that "neither participate in nor support acts of aggression against Iran." It did not say which countries qualify, though it said vessels "belonging to the aggressor parties," namely the U.S. and Israel, did not.

The sailor stuck in Iraqi waters is hoping his ship will be able to leave soon.

"My family is panicking," he said. "We've packed all our bags and are ready the moment someone calls us."

'We don't sleep': Sailors stranded in Persian Gulf as rockets fly over their heads

HONG KONG — He and his shipmates stay up on the deck at night, sometimes watching rockets fly over their heads. ...
Arnold Schwarzenegger helps pump Joseph Baena up as he follows in dad's bodybuilding footsteps

The barbell doesn't fall far from the rack — or however the saying goes.

Entertainment Weekly Arnold Schwarzenegger and Joseph Baena at the 'Fubar' season 2 premiere in Los Angeles in 2025Credit: Matt Baron/BEI/Shutterstock

Arnold Schwarzeneggerappears to have become his son's biggest cheerleader, as he follows in his famous dad's footsteps. No, not Patrick Schwarzenegger, whose acting bug bite has led to memorable roles in series likeThe White Lotus.

A set of photosposted to TikTokon Tuesday by Schwarzenegger's son Joseph Baena shows theTerminatorstar on the sidelines at Gold's Gym in Venice, Calif., coaching Baena through some heavy-looking lifts.

Joseph Baena in 2022Credit: MICHAEL TRAN/AFP/Getty

Schwarzenegger appears in two of the four photos, both times locked in on Baena, who shows off ripped biceps as he reps a weighted bar. In one shot, Schwarzenegger and another gym-goer appear to shout instructions or encouragement at Baena as he trains his physique.

"You have to shock the muscles!" Baena wrote in the caption of the post, a reference to one of his father'soft-repeatedbodybuilding philosophies.

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Baena, 28, is Schwarzenegger's youngest son. His parentage was not a matter of public record until until 2011, when he was 13. News broke then that Schwarzenegger hadfathered two childrenby two different women just five days apart in 1997: Christopher, his youngest child with ex-wife Maria Shriver, and Baena, whose mother is Mildred Patricia "Patty" Baena, a former domestic employee of Schwarzenegger and Shriver.

Both Schwarzenegger and Patty claimed it tookseveral years to discoverBaena's true provenance.

"It was as Joseph grew and I started to see the resemblance that I wondered — but it became more apparent as time went on," Patty shared a month after the 2011 revelation.

Schwarzenegger opened up about thefallout from the ordealin his 2023 Netflix docuseriesArnold: "I think that I have caused enough pain for my family because of my f---up. Everyone had to suffer: Maria had to suffer, the kids had to suffer, Joseph, his mother — everyone."

For his part, Baena has said relatively little about the public scandal, though he did reflect toMen's Healthin 2022, "[Patty] was really the only person I had, and I was really the only person that she had... No one knew, and everyone wanted the details. We had each other's backs."

Schwarzenegger now appears a constant presence in Baena's life,inviting himto big events like the 2025 season 2 premiere of his action-packed seriesFubar.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Arnold Schwarzenegger helps pump Joseph Baena up as he follows in dad's bodybuilding footsteps

The barbell doesn't fall far from the rack — or however the saying goes. Arnold Schwarzeneggerappears to h...
A world in bloom: Spring flowers unfold from Tokyo to Mexico, in photos

From soft peach to vivid pink and purple blooms, spring arrives in a burst of color across the Northern Hemisphere. In Washington, D.C. and Tokyo, streets and parks are awash in a sea of cherry blossoms. Across the plains of Greece's largest peach-producing region, orchards unfurl like a pink veil over the landscape, while in London parks burst into bloom. And each spring, a purple haze of blossoming jacaranda trees brightens Mexico City.

Associated Press People walk among the cherry blossom trees along the tidal basin on the National Mall on Thursday, March 26, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Tom Brenner) Members of the Mississippi National Gard patrol among the cherry blossom trees along the tidal basin on the National Mall on Thursday, March 26, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Tom Brenner) The blooming peach trees are seen form above near the city of Veria, northern Greece, on Sunday, March 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Giannis Papanikos) Rachel Lincoln and her dog Blossom, are seen among cherry blossom trees in bloom along the tidal basin, Tuesday, March 24, 2026, in Washington, as the trees inch close to peak bloom. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) People enjoying the sun are seen reflected in a mirror among the blooming peach trees at an event to encourage the public to visit the blossoms near the city of Veria, northern Greece, March 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Giannis Papanikos) People take photos of cherry blossom trees in full bloom, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Monday, March 23, 2026. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press via AP) People capture images of cherry blossom trees along the tidal basin on the National Mall on Thursday, March 26, 2026, in Washington. The Washington Momument stands, left. (AP Photo/Tom Brenner) A bumblebee collects pollen from an Anemone Coronaria in Hyde Park in London, Thursday, March 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth) A canopy of purple jacaranda blossoms hangs over Paseo de la Reforma in Mexico City, Wednesday, March 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte) Mingtong Gu meditates beside a cherry blossom tree along the tidal basin, on Wednesday, March 25, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Tom Brenner) Cherry blossoms in bloom are seen on a tree along the tidal basin, Tuesday, March 24, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) A woman is standing under a blooming magnolia tree during a sunny spring Monday in a park in Gelsenkirchen, Germany, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Martin Meissner) People enjoy a picnic among the blooming peach trees at an event to encourage the public to visit the blossoms near the city of Veria, northern Greece, on Sunday, March 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Giannis Papanikos) People walk under as the cherry blossoms in full bloom along the Chidorigafuchi palace moat in Tokyo, Friday, March 27 2026. (AP Photo/Shuji Kajiyama) A wild ring-necked parakeet eats blossoms in St. James's Park in London, Monday, March 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant) People jog among the cherry blossom trees along the tidal basin at sunrise, on Wednesday, March 25, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Tom Brenner)

APTOPIX Washington Cherry Blossom

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This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

A world in bloom: Spring flowers unfold from Tokyo to Mexico, in photos

From soft peach to vivid pink and purple blooms, spring arrives in a burst of color across the Northern Hemisphere. In Wa...
Trump says he will pause attacks on Iran's energy plants

By Bhargav Acharya and Kanishka Singh

Reuters

WASHINGTON, March 26 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said on Thursday he was ‌pausing attacks on Iran's energy plants for 10 ‌days at what he cast as the Iranian government's request, and said talks ​with Tehran were going "very well."

"As per Iranian Government request... I am pausing the period of Energy Plant destruction by 10 Days to Monday, April 6, 2026, at 8 P.M., Eastern Time," ‌Trump said in a ⁠post on Truth Social.

"Talks are ongoing and, despite erroneous statements to the contrary by the Fake ⁠News Media, and others, they are going very well," he said.

"I gave them a 10-day period. They asked for seven," ​Trump later ​told Fox News' "The Five" show.

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Trump, ​who has offered shifting goals ‌and timeline for the Iran war, ranging from overthrowing Iran's government to destroying its military and missile capabilities, told Fox News he thinks the U.S. has won the war.

"In a certain sense, we have already won," Trump said.

Trump has said ‌Iran must make a deal or ​face a continued onslaught.

The war began ​on February 28 when ​the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran. Tehran subsequently ‌responded by launching its own ​attacks on Israel ​and Gulf states with U.S. bases.

Joint U.S.-Israeli strikes in Iran and Israeli attacks in Lebanon have killed thousands. ​The war has ‌also raised oil prices and shaken global markets.

(Reporting by ​Bhargav Acharya, Kanishka Singh and Jasper Ward; Editing by ​David Ljunggren and Bill Berkrot)

Trump says he will pause attacks on Iran's energy plants

By Bhargav Acharya and Kanishka Singh WASHINGTON, March 26 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said on Thu...
California renames Cesar Chavez Day following sexual abuse allegations

California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill Thursday to renameCésar Chavez Dayas Farmworkers Day in an effort to reconcile the Latino labor icon's legacy with explosive sexual abuse allegations before the state holiday on March 31.

CNN Farm labor leader Cesar Chavez pickets outside the San Diego area headquarters of Safeway markets. Picketing was in protest over the arrest of 29 people at a Delano, California, Safeway on October 25, 1973. - Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

The state Senate approved the legislation earlier in the day with bipartisan support.

The change comes after allegations became public last week that Chavez hadsexually abused girls and womenduring his days building a major farmworker labor rights movement in the 1960s in California's agricultural heartland. Among those who accused him wasDolores Huerta, who co-led the movement that eventually became the United Farm Workers.

The state's effort to rename the holiday is part of a wave of other moves to alter memorials honoring the man who, in the 1960s and 1970s,helped secure better wagesand working conditions for farmworkers and had beenadmired by many Democratic leaders. The swift and sweeping effort to erase Chavez's name from public life was previously unthinkable, as his status had only grown more iconic since his death in 1993.

Republican Sen. Suzette Valladares said Thursday that her family built a life in California by working the fields and that the movement brought together workers from different backgrounds.

"This is not about one person. This is not about one narrative," she said. "It's about honoring generations of sacrifice, of resilience and hope."

Senate President Pro Tempore Monique Limon said honoring farmworkers is especially important in the face of a series of federal raids across the state last year. A worker in her districtdied after being chasedby a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent last summer, Limon said.

"His death is a reminder of how much farmworkers risk every day to put food on our table," she said before the vote. "Our farmworkers remind us that everyone deserves to be treated with dignity and respect."

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California was the first state to designate Chavez's birthday, March 31, as a holiday to honor the civil rights leader nearly 30 years ago. The Legislature then, in 2000, passed a bill to make it an official paid day off for state employees and require that students learn about his legacy and his role in the labor movement in California. The legislation passed Thursday didn't address the curriculum requirement. State leaders said they're in conversation with school officials to adjust lesson plans.

The California bill also passed in the Assembly with bipartisan support on Monday.

"We cannot ignore wrongdoing and we should not continue to celebrate a single person when the movement itself is so much bigger," Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry said before the vote Monday.

Since the allegations came to light, California State University, Fresno, has covered up Chavez's statue on campus, while cities like San Francisco, Los Angeles and Sacramento have taken steps to erase his name from public landmarks. Some advocated for Huerta's name to replace Chavez's, and several states already said they won't observe the day.

As his birthday approaches, cities across the country have remade or canceled annual celebrations to honor him. In Tucson last weekend, the annual César Chavez and Dolores Huerta March and Rally were scaled back and rebranded. There was no march or car show, and it was billed instead as the Comunidad y Labor Unity Fair to focus more broadly on labor rights without mentioning Chavez.

In Grand Junction, Colorado, the organizers of the annual event in Mesa County had already printed flyers and T-shirts, all bearing Chavez's name. There has been a flurry of social media posts in recent days to let people know the event will go on Saturday as the Sí, Se Puede Celebration instead.

In El Paso, Texas, March 31 will be celebrated as the Community and Labor Heritage Day.

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California renames Cesar Chavez Day following sexual abuse allegations

California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill Thursday to renameCésar Chavez Dayas Farmworkers Day in an effort t...

 

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