Ukraine working to restore power in southeast after Russian strikes

By Dan Peleschuk

KYIV, Jan 8 (Reuters) - Ukrainian officials were racing to restore power on Thursday after Russian strikes plunged ​two southeastern regions into near-total blackout overnight, forcing critical ‌infrastructure to rely on reserves.

Moscow has intensified its attacks on Ukraine's energy system as ‌Ukrainian forces fend off Russian advances on the battlefield and Kyiv faces U.S. pressure to secure a peace deal.

Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Oleksiy Kuleba said repairs were still ongoing to return heat and ⁠water supplies to more ‌than 1 million consumers in the industrialised region of Dnipropetrovsk.

The energy ministry said nearly 800,000 consumers in ‍the region remained without electricity early on Thursday but that power had been restored to the other affected region, Zaporizhzhia.

Zaporizhzhia governor Ivan Fedorov said it ​was the first time in "recent years" that his region had ‌faced a total blackout, but that officials had been quick to respond.

"A difficult night for the region. But 'light' always wins," he wrote on Telegram on Thursday.

Ukraine's energy ministry said eight mines across the Dnipropetrovsk region had faced blackouts, but that workers had been ⁠evacuated.

Water supplies to the strategic city of ​Pavlohrad and nearby areas could take ​up to a day to repair, said Mykola Lukashuk, head of the Dnipropetrovsk regional council.

Ukraine is facing an ‍impending cold snap ⁠this week, with Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko warning late on Tuesday that it would likely compound disruptions to power and ⁠heating.

The energy ministry added on Wednesday that weather conditions had already cut power ‌to some settlements in at least four regions.

(Reporting by ‌Dan Peleschuk; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Ukraine working to restore power in southeast after Russian strikes

By Dan Peleschuk KYIV, Jan 8 (Reuters) - Ukrainian officials were racing to restore power on Thursday after Russ...
Pope Leo urges Catholic cardinals to create more inclusive Church

By Joshua McElwee

VATICAN CITY, Jan 8 (Reuters) - Pope Leo met on Thursday with the world's Catholic cardinals as part of a two-day ​summit, urging the senior clerics to shun divisions in the 1.4-billion-member ‌Church and focus on attracting new believers.

Leo also signalled a desire to press ahead with ‌the reforms of the late Pope Francis, who battled with conservative cardinals while trying to make Catholicism more inclusive by welcoming gay Catholics and discussing women's ordination.

Beginning the closed-door summit on Wednesday, Leo said the Church would only grow if ⁠it could attract people ‌with a message of God's love for everyone, according to remarks released by the Vatican.

"Only love is trustworthy; only love ‍is credible," said the pope. "While unity attracts, division scatters."

Massimo Faggioli, an Italian academic at Trinity College Dublin, who follows the Vatican, said Leo was "working to convince the cardinals that ​they need to work collectively together to do what the Catholic people ‌want them to do".

"Leo is cautious, but I think he will continue on Pope Francis' trajectories," said Faggioli. "I don't think he will go back."

Francis, who led the Church for 12 years, died in April. Leo, formerly the U.S. Cardinal Robert Prevost, was elected the new pope in May.

One hundred and ⁠seventy of the world's 245 cardinals were attending ​the summit, which ends on Thursday, the ​Vatican said.

The clerics have been asked to refrain from publicly discussing their meetings in order to allow for frank conversations, spokesman ‍Matteo Bruni said.

Leo, opening ⁠his first full year as Church leader, asked the cardinals on Wednesday for advice on what priorities he should focus on for the ⁠next two years.

British Cardinal Timothy Radcliffe urged his peers to shun divisions. If they quarrel ‌with one another, he said, "we shall be of no use to ‌the Holy Father".

(Editing by Janet Lawrence)

Pope Leo urges Catholic cardinals to create more inclusive Church

By Joshua McElwee VATICAN CITY, Jan 8 (Reuters) - Pope Leo met on Thursday with the world's Catholic cardina...
Swiss families file legal complaint over New Year's bar fire

GENEVA, Jan 8 (Reuters) - Families of those who died or were ​injured in a New Year's ‌Eve fire in the bar of a Swiss ski ‌resort have filed a legal complaint to the Swiss prosecutor's office, a lawyer for a group of victims ⁠confirmed to ‌Reuters on Thursday.

"Each family filed a complaint and joined the ‍proceedings as a plaintiff. These applications were accepted (by prosecutors)," Romain Jordan, a Geneva-based ​lawyer, said in response to emailed ‌questions.

He did not specify the target of the legal complaint, adding only that it was "against all those responsible, without exception".

The criminal investigation into the ⁠Crans-Montana fire only ​includes the bar's owners ​who are suspected of crimes including homicide by negligence. Questions remain ‍about ⁠the fire and the safety procedures in place.

Prosecutors for the canton ⁠of Valais did not respond to requests for ‌comment.

(Reporting by Emma Farge, editing ‌by Thomas Seythal)

Swiss families file legal complaint over New Year's bar fire

GENEVA, Jan 8 (Reuters) - Families of those who died or were ​injured in a New Year's ‌Eve fire in the bar of a Swiss...
Iran army chief threatens preemptive attack over 'rhetoric' targeting country after Trump's comments

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran's army chief threatened preemptive military action Wednesday over the "rhetoric" targeting the Islamic Republic, likely referring toU.S. President Donald Trump's warningthat if Tehran "violently kills peaceful protesters," the United States "will come to their rescue."

The comments by Maj. Gen. Amir Hatami come as Iran tries to respond to what it sees as a dual threat posed by Israel and the United States, as well as theprotests sparked by its economic woesthat have grown into a direct challenge to its theocracy.

Seeking to halt the anger, Iran's government began Wednesday paying the equivalent of $7 a month to subsidize rising costs for dinner table essentials like rice, meat and pastas.Shopkeepers warn prices for itemsas basic as cooking oil likely will triple under pressure from the collapse of Iran's rial currency and the end of a preferential subsidized dollar-rial exchange rate for importers and manufacturers — likely fueling further popular anger.

"More than a week of protests in Iran reflects not only worsening economic conditions, but longstanding anger at government repression and regime policies that have led to Iran's global isolation," the New York-based Soufan Center think tank said.

Army chief's threat

Hatami spoke to military academy students. He took over as commander in chief of Iran's army, known by the Farsi word "Artesh," after Israel killed a number of the country's top military commanders in June's 12-day war. He is the first regular military officer in decades to hold a position long controlled by Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard.

"The Islamic Republic considers the intensification of such rhetoric against the Iranian nation as a threat and will not leave its continuation without a response," Hatami said, according to the state-run IRNA news agency.

He added, "I can say with confidence that today the readiness of Iran's armed forces is far greater than before the war. If the enemy commits an error, it will face a more decisive response, and we will cut off the hand of any aggressor."

Iranian officials, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, have been responding to Trump's comments, which took on more significance after the U.S. military raid that seized Venezuelan PresidentNicolás Maduro, a longtime ally of Tehran, over the weekend. But there's been no immediate public sign of Iran preparing for an attack in the region.

New subsidy payment begins

Iranian state television reported on the start of a new subsidy of the equivalent of $7, put into the bank accounts of heads of households across the country. More than 71 million people will receive the benefit, which is 10 million Iranian rials, it reported. The rial now trades at over 1.4 million to $1 and continues to depreciate.

The subsidy is more than double than the 4.5 million rial people previously received. But already, Iranian media report sharp rises in the cost of basic goods, including cooking oil, poultry and cheese, placing additional strain on households already burdened by international sanctions targeting the country and inflation.

Iran's vice president in charge of executive affairs, Mohammad Jafar Ghaempanah, told reporters on Wednesday that the country was in a "full-fledged economic war." He called for "economic surgery" to eliminate rentier policies and corruption within the country.

More protests

Iran has faced rounds of nationwide protestsin recent years. Assanctions tightenedand Iran struggled afterthe June war with Israel, its rial currency sharply fell in December. Protests began soon after on Dec. 28. They reached their 11th day on Wednesday and didn't appear to be stopping.

Social media videos purported to show new cities like Bojnourd, Kerman, Rasht, Shiraz and Tabriz, as well some smaller towns, joining the demonstrations on Wednesday.

The U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency offered the latest death toll of 36 for the demonstrations. It said 30 protesters, four children and two members of Iran's security forces have been killed. Demonstrations have reached over 310 locations in 28 of Iran's 31 provinces. More than 2,100 people have been arrested, it said.

The group, which relies on an activist network inside of Iran for its reporting, has been accurate in past unrest.

Iran army chief threatens preemptive attack over 'rhetoric' targeting country after Trump's comments

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran's army chief threatened preemptive military action Wednesday over the "r...
Pope Leo XIV convenes cardinals and signals reforms ahead now that the Holy Year is over

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Leo XIV on Wednesday opened a new phase of his pontificate by gathering the world's cardinals to Rome and indicating some reform-minded priorities by calling the modernizing teachings of the Second Vatican Council the "guiding star" of the church.

Red-capped cardinals trickled into the Vatican's audience hall for the opening session of the two-day meeting, the first of Leo's papacy. Several cardinals said they didn't know what to expect, since Leo's written invitation had spoken only in vague terms about four main agenda items.

"We'll see, we'll see, we haven't even started yet. Be patient!" Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, said as he arrived.

But during his morning general audience Wednesday, Leo gave the strongest signal yet about the direction of his still-young pontificate, calling for the full implementation of the reforms of Vatican II, the 1960s meetings that modernized and revolutionized the Catholic Church and remain a source of debate today.

Leo said that for the foreseeable future, he would devote his weekly catechism lessons to a rereading of key Vatican II documents, noting that the generation of bishops and theologians who had attended the meetings and crafted the reforms are dead.

"Therefore, while we hear the call not to let its prophecy fade, and to continue to seek ways and means to implement its insights, it will be important to get to know it again closely, and to do so not through hearsay or interpretations that have been given, but by rereading its documents and reflecting on their content," he said.

Citing all the popes from Vatican II forward who spoke about its importance, Leo said: "Indeed, it is the magisterium that still constitutes the guiding star of the church's journey today."

Among other things,Vatican IIallowed for use of the vernacular rather than Latin for Mass. It called for greater participation of lay faithful in the life of the church and revolutionized Catholic relations with Jews and people of other faiths. At the time and in the decades since, though, its reforms crystalized the divisions between traditionalist, conservative Catholics and the more progressive wing of the church that are still alive today.

Leo turns to the College of Cardinals for support

Leo's first few months as pope were dominated by fulfilling the intense 2025 Holy Year obligations of meeting with pilgrimage groups, celebrating special Jubilee audiences and Masses and wrapping up the outstanding matters ofPope Francis'pontificate.

He called the consistory of cardinals, as such meetings are known, to begin the day after he closed out the Jubilee, suggesting that he too saw its conclusion as the opportunity to unofficially launch his pontificate and look ahead to his own agenda.

It was a significant gesture, since Francis had relied not on consistories or the College of Cardinals as a whole to help him govern, but rather a small, hand-picked group of nine cardinals who met every few months at the Vatican.

Before the May conclave that elected Leo, cardinals had complained about Francis' go-it-alone governing style, suggesting that Leo is responding to their requests to be consulted more.

The Vatican said Leo's first consistory was aimed at "fostering common discernment and offering support and advice to the Holy Father in the exercise of his high and grave responsibility in the government of the universal church."

A Francis-style agenda

On the agenda is a discussion of two of Francis' key reform documents: hisoriginal mission statementissued at the start of his pontificate, and the 2022 document thatreformed the Vatican bureaucracy. Also being discussed is Francis' call for the church to be more"synodal,"or responsive to the needs of rank-and-file Catholics, and a discussion of the liturgy, according to Vatican News.

The last agenda item is believed to refer to divisions within the church over the old Latin Mass, which was celebrated before the Vatican II reforms allowed Mass in different languages and with the active participation of the faithful.

Francis had greatly restrictedthe celebration of the old Latin Mass, arguing its spread in recent years had created divisions in the church. But Francis' crackdown fueled a strong conservative and traditionalist backlash against him, especially in the United States, which the Chicago-born Leo seemskeen to try to pacify.

"Critics of Francis have held out hope that Leo XIV will relax restrictions on the Latin Mass, but given his emphasis on church unity and Vatican II, Leo XIV might wait and see before making changes," Matthew Schmalz, professor of religious studies at the Jesuit-run College of the Holy Cross, in Worcester, Massachusetts, said in an email.

There are currently 245 cardinals, almost equally split between those who are under age 80 and voted in the conclave that elected Leo, and those who are older. The Vatican hasn't said how many would attend.

One senior cardinal, though, was listed prominently on Leo's agenda of private audiences Wednesday:Cardinal Joseph Zen, the retired archbishop of Hong Kong. Zen, who turns 94 next week, was a fierce conservative critic of Francis, especially over the pope's outreach to China, and complained for years that the Argentine Jesuit wouldn't receive him in private audience.

Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP'scollaborationwith The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

Pope Leo XIV convenes cardinals and signals reforms ahead now that the Holy Year is over

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Leo XIV on Wednesday opened a new phase of his pontificate by gathering the world's cardinal...
11Alive Tires blow out on arriving plane at Atlanta Airport, passengers evacuated on runway

NEED TO KNOW

  • The FAA said that a LATAM Airlines flight from Peru "blew tires after safely landing" on the runway at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on Tuesday, Jan. 6

  • This prompted several emergency vehicles to head to the scene, as one first responder noted, "all tires are blown on the landing gear on the rear"

  • The FAA said it will investigate the incident in a statement to PEOPLE

A flight landing at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport prompted an emergency response after its landing didn't go as planned.

A spokesperson with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) told PEOPLE in a statement that a LATAM Airlines flight from Peru "blew tires after safely landing" on the runway at the airport on Tuesday, Jan. 6.

The plane, a Boeing 767-300ER, landed at around 7:38 p.m., ahead of its scheduled landing time of 7:55 p.m., according toFox 5 Atlanta. The flight had been around seven hours and 24 minutes and had been undergoing landing procedures when the incident happened, per the outlet.

Atlanta Fire Rescue Department crews responded to the incident, which was initially reported as "flat tires on an aircraft," according toCBS News.

Video from Fox 5 Atlanta showed several emergency vehicles surrounding the plane on the tarmac, as a first responder could be heard saying over a radio, "All tires are blown on the landing gear on the rear, the last eight. All tires under the wing seem to be blown."

No injuries were reported in the incident; however,Atlanta News Firstnotes that passengers were "stranded on the runway" for hours.

Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport

Smith Collection/Gado/Getty

It is unclear what caused the tires to blow out or what state the plane was in after the incident. The FAA told PEOPLE in a statement that it will investigate the cause.

LATAM Airlines and the Atlanta Fire Rescue Department did not immediately respond to PEOPLE's request for comment on the incident.

Following the incident, portions of the runway were cleared for safety and airport operations continued with minimal disruption, according to CBS News.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Barbara Williams, told Atlanta News First that her 16-year-old son had been on the flight and that she was "already freaking out" by the incident.

Brandon Hagin, whose stepson was on the flight, added, "It's nice to hear somewhat quickly the developments and things. Accidents do happen and the most important thing is how the response is…"

Read the original article onPeople

Passengers Left Stranded on Runway After Tires of Boeing 767 Blow on Landing at Atlanta Airport

NEED TO KNOW The FAA said that a LATAM Airlines flight from Peru "blew tires after safely landing" on the runway at Hartsfield-J...
A screenshot from the wedding video of Spencer Tepe and his wife Monique Tepe, who were found dead from gunshot wounds in their Columbus, Ohio home on Dec 30th. (Rob Misleh)

It's been more than a week since anOhio dentist and his wife were fatally shot in their Columbus home, and police have released few details as the search for the suspect continues.

Spencer Tepe, 37, and Monique Tepe, 39, were found dead Dec. 30 from apparent gunshot wounds, according to a police incident report.

Their two young children were in the home unharmed.

The deaths have been a "nightmare" for the family, Spencer's cousin, Audrey Mackie, said.

"I have never experienced anything close to this type of tragedy. It's heartbreaking," Mackie told NBC News. "The whole entire family is just really torn up. They were fantastic people, so it's really hard for everyone right now."

The couple had married in their home and were just one month shy of celebrating their fifth wedding anniversary.

Officers responded to the couple's home after several concerned friends and coworkers called police to report that Spencer had not shown up to work and Monique was not answering the phone.

"He's been reliable. We cannot get in touch with him, his wife, his family, anybody that lives in that house," one of Spencer's colleagues said in a recording of a 911 call.

The man said Spencer not showing up to work was out of character for him.

"And we can't get in touch with his wife, which is probably the more concerning thing," he told the dispatcher.

In a separate call, another man said he could hear children playing in the home but had no way of getting inside.

Around 10 a.m., a man called and said he could see a body and blood in the home.

"There's blood. He's laying next to his bed, off of his bed, and there's blood. I can't get closer to see more than that," the man said, getting emotional.

The Franklin County coroner's office said they died from an apparent homicide by gunshot wounds, but added that the case is not finalized. The police department previously said it does not believe the killings were a murder-suicide.

Three 9mm shell casings were found in the home, police said.

A person walks outside on a residential street, snowy street, person wearing dark clothing and hood (Columbus Police Department)

A motive in the killings remains unclear. As of Wednesday morning, police have not identified a suspect or made any arrests.

Earlier in the week,Columbus police released a video of a person of interest walking in an alley by the home. The video was recorded between 2 a.m. and 5 a.m. Dec. 30, the timeframe investigators believe the couple was killed. The footage shows a person wearing a hooded jacket and pants.

Mackie said the person "could be anyone," and hopes that the footage leads to the family getting answers.

Spencer practiced at Athens Dental Depot and was fluent in Spanish. His wife had a background in childhood education, family said, and loved baking.

"They were extraordinary people whose lives were filled with love, joy, and deep connection to others," the Tepe family said in a statement last week.

"Together, Spencer and Monique shared a beautiful, strong, and deeply happy relationship. They loved to travel, to laugh, and to build a life rooted in love," the statement read. "They were proud parents of two beautiful children and their beloved Goldendoodle, and they created a home filled with warmth, happiness, and connection."

An Ohio dentist and his wife were fatally shot in their home. One week later, questions remain.

It's been more than a week since anOhio dentist and his wife were fatally shot in their Columbus home, and police have released few det...

 

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