Nigeria deploys troops after 170 killed in deadly Kwara village attack

By Camillus Eboh

Reuters People dig graves with shovels after a deadly attack by an armed gang in Katsina, Nigeria, February 4, 2026, in this screengrab from video. Reuters TV/via REUTERS People stand around graves after a deadly attack by an armed gang in Katsina, Nigeria, February 4, 2026, in this screengrab from video. Reuters TV/via REUTERS

Deadly attack by an armed gang on a village in northern Nigeria

ABUJA, Feb 5 (Reuters) - Nigeria's President Bola Tinubu has deployed an army battalion to Kaiama district in the central Kwara ​state after suspected jihadist fighters killed 170 people in an overnight ‌attack, his office said on Thursday.

Tuesday's assault on Woro village was the deadliest this year in ‌the state bordering Niger, a hotspot where Islamic State West Africa Province and other armed groups have stepped up village attacks and mass kidnappings.

The violence highlights fears that jihadist factions from the north are pushing south along the Niger-Kwara axis ⁠toward the Kainji forest, which ‌security analysts warn could become their next stronghold.

Nigeria has come under scrutiny after U.S. President Donald Trump accused it last ‍year of failing to protect Christians amid Islamist attacks and mass kidnappings. U.S. forces struck what they described as terrorist targets on December 25.

Abuja says it is working with Washington ​to improve security and denies any systematic persecution of Christians.

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Tinubu said the ‌new military unit would stem further attacks and protect remote communities. He condemned the attack as "cowardly and barbaric," saying the gunmen targeted villagers who had rejected attempts to impose extremist rule.

"It is commendable that community members, even though Muslims, refused to be conscripted into a belief that promotes violence over peace," ⁠Tinubu said in a statement.

Residents told Reuters ​the attackers were jihadists who had long preached ​in the village, urging locals to abandon the Nigerian state and adopt Sharia rule. When villagers refused, the militants opened fire.

About ‍38 houses were destroyed, ⁠said Saidu Baba Ahmed, a lawmaker representing the district at the state assembly.

In a separate attack in northern Katsina state on Tuesday, gunmen ⁠killed at least 21 people, moving from house to house to shoot their victims, residents and ‌local police said.

(Additional reporting by Ardo Hazzad in Bauchi and ‌Tife Owolabi in Yenagoa; Writing Elisha Bala-Gbogbo)

Nigeria deploys troops after 170 killed in deadly Kwara village attack

By Camillus Eboh Deadly attack by an armed gang on a village in northern Nigeria ABUJA, Feb 5 (Reuters) - Ni...
China warns of security risks linked to OpenClaw open-source AI agent

BEIJING, Feb 5 (Reuters) - China's industry ministry on ​Thursday issued a ‌security alert warning that ‌improper deployment of the open-source AI agent OpenClaw could expose systems ⁠to cyberattacks ‌and data leaks.

Reuters

The warning said recent ‍monitoring found that some OpenClaw deployments carry "high security risks" ​when left under ‌default or poorly configured settings.

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OpenClaw, formerly known as Clawdbot or Moltbot, is an open-source AI ⁠agent that ​integrates large language ​models with multi-channel communication capabilities to create ‍customizable ⁠AI assistants with persistent memory and autonomous ⁠execution features.

(Reporting by Shi Bu, ‌Che Pan and ‌Brenda Goh)

China warns of security risks linked to OpenClaw open-source AI agent

BEIJING, Feb 5 (Reuters) - China's industry ministry on ​Thursday issued a ‌security alert warning that ‌improper dep...
China launches new crackdown on medical insurance fraud

SHANGHAI, Feb 5 (Reuters) - Authorities in China launched a new countrywide ​crackdown on medical insurance fraud ‌in mental health institutions this week, after local ‌media reported some hospitals were offering free services to compete for patients in Hubei province.

Reuters

The National Healthcare Security ⁠Administration said in ‌a notice on Wednesday that all provincial-level departments must summon ‍local officials in charge of designated mental health institutions to strengthen management, and ​eliminate the illegal or non-compliant use ‌of insurance funds.

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It said provincial departments should use the problems recently exposed by the media at mental health institutions in Hubei province, and the ⁠results of other inspections, ​as examples to educate ​institutions.

The NHSA also said provincial departments should organise the institutions ‍to inspect ⁠their facilities and rectify any problems. They should submit reports to ⁠the NHSA by the end of March.

(Reporting ‌by Andrew Silver in Shanghai; Editing ‌by Sharon Singleton)

China launches new crackdown on medical insurance fraud

SHANGHAI, Feb 5 (Reuters) - Authorities in China launched a new countrywide ​crackdown on medical insurance fraud ‌in men...
US pushes to widen talks with Iran beyond nuclear issue

By Simon Lewis and Humeyra Pamuk

WASHINGTON, Feb 4 - Meaningful talks between the United States and Iran will have to include Tehran's missile arsenal and other issues, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Wednesday, as Tehran said it would only discuss its nuclear programme, not its missiles.

Talks between the countries amid fears of a military ​confrontation have been planned for Friday, with Iran pushing to restrict the negotiations to discussion of its long-running nuclear dispute with Western countries.

"If the Iranians want to meet, we're ready," ‌Rubio said. But he added that talks would have to include the range of Iran's ballistic missiles, its support for groups around the Middle East and its treatment of its own people, besides the nuclear dispute.

A senior Iranian official, however, said the ‌talks would only be about Iran's nuclear programme, and that its missile programme was "off the table".

TALKS MAY MOVE TO OMAN

The meeting was originally planned for Turkey, but a Gulf official, another regional official and Iranian state-affiliated media said the talks were expected to take place in Oman.

Rubio said U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff was prepared for the talks but that the location was "still being worked through" after Iran had previously agreed to a particular format.

Iran wanted the meeting to take place in Oman as a continuation of previous rounds of talks held in the Gulf Arab country on its nuclear programme and asked for a change of location from ⁠Turkey, the regional official said.

This was to avoid any expansion of the ‌discussions to issues such as Tehran's ballistic missiles, the regional official said.

Plans for the talks, to be mediated by several countries, were still being finalised, the Gulf official said, adding that the discussions would start on the nuclear issue and then move to other topics on a step-by-step basis.

The diplomatic efforts come after ‍U.S. President Donald Trump's threats of military action against Iran during its bloody crackdown on protesters last month and the deployment of more naval power to the Gulf.

After Israel and the United States bombed the Islamic Republic last summer, renewed friction has kindled fears among regional states of a major conflagration that could rebound on them or cause long-term chaos in Iran.

Trump has continued to weigh the option of strikes on Iran, sources say. Oil prices have ​risen on the tension.

NUCLEAR DISPUTE

U.S. President Donald Trump has warned that "bad things" would probably happen if a deal could not be reached, ratcheting up pressure on the Islamic Republic in a standoff ‌that has led to mutual threats of air strikes.

Iran's leadership is increasingly worried a U.S. strike could break its grip on power by driving an already enraged public back onto the streets, according to six current and former Iranian officials.

Trump, who stopped short of carrying out threats to intervene during last month's crackdown, has since demanded nuclear concessions from Iran, sending a flotilla to its coast.

Iran also hopes for an agreement that could help lift Western sanctions over its nuclear programme that have ravaged its economy - a major driver of last month's unrest.

Ministers from several other countries in the region including Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates had been expected to attend Friday's talks, but a regional source told Reuters that Tehran wanted only bilateral talks with the U.S.

BALLISTIC MISSILE STOCKPILE

Iranian sources told Reuters last ⁠week that Trump had demanded three conditions for the resumption of talks: zero enrichment of uranium in Iran, limits ​on Tehran's ballistic missile programme and an end to its support for regional proxies.

Iran has long said all three demands ​are unacceptable infringements of its sovereignty, but two Iranian officials told Reuters its clerical rulers saw the ballistic missile programme, rather than uranium enrichment, as the bigger obstacle.

An Iranian official said there should not be preconditions for talks and that Iran was ready to show flexibility on uranium enrichment, which it says is for peaceful, ‍not military purposes.

Since the U.S. strikes in June, Tehran ⁠has said its uranium enrichment work has stopped.

In June, the United States struck Iranian nuclear targets, joining in at the close of a 12-day Israeli bombing campaign and Iran struck back at Israel with missiles and drones.

Iran said it replenished its missile stockpile after the war with Israel last year, warning it will unleash its missiles if its security is under threat.

Adding ⁠to tensions, on Tuesday the U.S. military shot down an Iranian drone that "aggressively" approached the Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier in the Arabian Sea, the U.S. military said, in an incident first reported by Reuters.

In another incident in the Strait of Hormuz, ‌the U.S. Central Command said Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps forces had approached a U.S.-flagged tanker at speed and threatened to board and seize it.

(Reporting by Simon Lewis, Humeyra ‌Pamuk, Andrew Mills and Parisa Hafezi; Writing by Michael Georgy and Angus McDowall; Editing by Aidan Lewis)

US pushes to widen talks with Iran beyond nuclear issue

By Simon Lewis and Humeyra Pamuk WASHINGTON, Feb 4 - Meaningful talks between the United States and Iran will ha...
How Americans' top concerns compare to more than 100 other countries, according to Gallup

WASHINGTON (AP) — Americans are exceptionally anxious about their political system, according tonew international polling from Gallup, a situation that sets the country apart from other rich and powerful nations.

About one-third of Americans rated politics and government as the top issue facing their nation, behind only Taiwan — which faces the prospect of an invasion from China — and on par with Slovenia, Spain and South Korea.

The United States also stands out for the anxiety its younger residents have over economic issues, with younger Americans more likely than young adults in many of the other 107 surveyed countries to say affordability and other pocketbook issues are worrying them

Wealthier countries are more likely to list politics and government as a top issue, as are democracies. But the U.S. stands out as a country that's particularly concerned about the stability of its democratic system and whether it's still possible to get ahead economically, said Benedict Vigers of Gallup.

"It's really unique in that regard," Vigers said of the United States' position in the survey, which was conducted from March to October of 2025.

The finding comes after decades of partisan polarization in the United States that culminated in the rise of PresidentDonald Trump, theJan. 6, 2021attack on the U.S. Capitol, thelargely unsuccessful effortsto prosecute Trump during the administration of PresidentJoe Bidenand Trump's return to office raising new questions about the country'spolitical and constitutional guardrails.

It's the latest of a wide range of surveys showinginternational andAmerican anxietyabout the economy and democratic governance. Economic anxiety is closely linked to the health of democratic systems, according to Brendan Nyhan, a Dartmouth political scientist.

"A world where people aren't optimistic about their economic futures is one in which they're willing to destabilize institutions even further," Nyhan said.

Younger Americans worry about the country's economic future

The United States is among several high-income nations where younger people are unusually likely to prioritize economic issues.

Those 35 and under are most likely to list economic issues — including the affordability of food and shelter — as a top issue, while older Americans are far more likely to cite politics. About one-third of American young people in the poll cited economics and affordability as a top issue compared to only 13% of those 55 and older.

That's a version of heightened concern about affordability among young people seen in other rich countries worldwide, including in places like Australia, Canada and Ireland. All three countries,like the United States, are suffering from a housing affordability crisis and saw younger citizens rank the issue as more pressing than older ones.

"It's a literally concrete example of young people being locked out of economic progress," Vigers said.

The survey found that even those in some wealthier countries worry about affordability and economic issues at similar rates as those in some African countries. For example, 57% of adults in Ireland cite economics or affordability as a top issue, with countries like Nigeria, Zambia, Egypt and Albania being in the same league.

The housing affordability crisis has been particularly acute in the English-speaking world, and the only other high-income countries with similar levels of concern as Ireland over the economy and affordability among younger residents were Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and New Zealand.

Other wealthy countries, like France and Germany, did not see similar affordability concerns or age gaps.

Older Americans are concerned about politics and governance

While younger Americans focus on the economy, older Americans are more concerned about politics and government. About 4 in 10 Americans ages 35 and older said politics and government were the most important problem facing the country, compared to only about 2 in 10 younger Americans.

Gallup for decades has tracked what Americans rank as the top issue for the U.S., and occasionally, politics and government spiked during national scandals like Watergate. But since 2000,the importance of the issue has gradually climbed over timeto the point that, since 2016, it's ranked near or above Watergate levels.

"It's all mixed up with polarization," said Gallup's Frank Newport in an interview, noting that the issue rises among one of the two major parties when the other one is in power. He added that the domestic survey also found older people are more likely to rank politics and government as a top issue.

The United States also has among the widest splits between people who trust many of its institutions — including the national government, the judicial system and election integrity, among others — and those who do not. The distrustful are far more likely to list politics and government as the top issue — 41% of them did — than those who trust many of the country's establishments, where only 21% ranked politics as the top issue.

Nyhan, the political scientist, said that low trust can be toxic in democracies.

"Having a stable society and rule of law without social trust is really difficult," Nyhan said. "Low trust is corrosive. Under conditions of high polarization, it makes it exceptionally difficult to accept losing an election and accept the other party being in power."

Riccardi reported from Denver.

The Gallup World poll was conducted among people aged 15 and older in 107 countries between March and October 2025. The margin of sampling error ranges from plus or minus 2.4 to 4.7 percentage points.

How Americans' top concerns compare to more than 100 other countries, according to Gallup

WASHINGTON (AP) — Americans are exceptionally anxious about their political system, according tonew international polling...
UK's Starmer expresses regret over Mandelson, says ex-ambassador 'lied repeatedly'

By Elizabeth Piper and Muvija M

LONDON, Feb 4 - Prime Minister Keir Starmer expressed regret on Wednesday for appointing Peter Mandelson as UK ambassador to Washington, saying the Labour veteran had created a "litany of deceit" about his ties to U.S. sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Starmer ceded ​to pressure from the opposition Conservative Party to release documents on how Mandelson was appointed, but was forced to water down an attempt to ‌limit the scope of that disclosure after facing a revolt in his own Labour Party.

Mandelson, a government minister when Labour was previously in power more than 15 years ago, quit the House of Lords ‌on Tuesday over links to Epstein, and is now under police investigation for alleged misconduct in office.

Files released by the U.S. Justice Department last week include emails suggesting Mandelson had leaked government documents to Epstein, and that Epstein had recorded payments to Mandelson or his then-partner, now husband.

OPPOSITION QUESTIONS STARMER'S JUDGEMENT

Mandelson has said he does not recall having received payments. He has not commented publicly on allegations he leaked documents, and did not respond to messages seeking comment.

On Wednesday, Starmer defended his own response, saying ⁠he had moved quickly to strip all titles and roles ‌from a man he accused of "betraying" Britain.

But Starmer's explanation of how Mandelson was appointed did little to quieten opposition voices, who said the ambassador's selection in late 2024 put a question mark over the judgment of Starmer and his closest adviser, Morgan ‍McSweeney.

It also did little to quell anger in the Labour Party, with lawmakers increasingly frustrated over Starmer's appointment of Mandelson and a series of embarrassing policy U-turns.

MANDELSON 'LIED REPEATEDLY'

"I am as angry as anyone about what Mandelson has been up to. The disclosures that have been made this week of him passing sensitive information at the height of the response to ​the 2008 financial crash is utterly shocking and appalling," Starmer told a rowdy session of parliament.

"He has betrayed our country, he's lied repeatedly, he's responsible for ‌a litany of deceit. But this moment demands not just anger but action, and that's why we've moved quickly," he said after telling lawmakers he had agreed with King Charles to remove Mandelson from the sovereign's formal body of advisers.

A chaotic afternoon in the House of Commons, in which lawmakers from all sides lined up to criticise Starmer and demand maximum transparency, culminated in the government agreeing a compromise to avoid an embarrassing defeat.

Plans to not release documents deemed prejudicial to national security or international relations were dropped. They will instead be handed to parliament's Intelligence and Security Committee - seen as a body trusted to handle sensitive information.

EMAILS SENT ⁠TO EPSTEIN

Starmer appointed Mandelson in late 2024, arguing that his past work in the governments ​of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown and as the EU's trade commissioner made him an ideal ​person to navigate relations with Washington under President Donald Trump.

Starmer sacked Mandelson in September after seven months in the job, when documents emerged showing he had remained close to Epstein after the financier was found guilty in 2008 of child sex crimes.

Emails released ‍last week appeared to indicate that in 2009 ⁠Mandelson had sent Epstein a memo written for Brown about possible UK asset sales and tax changes, and in 2010 gave Epstein advance notice of a 500 billion euro ($590 billion) bailout by the European Union.

Starmer's government on Tuesday passed a dossier about Mandelson to police, who launched an investigation ⁠into Mandelson over alleged misconduct in public office.

"The Metropolitan Police have been in touch with my office this morning to raise issues about anything that would prejudice their investigations," Starmer told parliament. "We ‌are in discussion with them about that."

(Reporting by Muvija M, Sam Tabahriti and Elizabeth Piper; Additional reporting by Sarah Young; Writing by ‌Sam Tabahriti and William James; Editing by Paul Sandle, Peter Graff and David Holmes)

UK's Starmer expresses regret over Mandelson, says ex-ambassador 'lied repeatedly'

By Elizabeth Piper and Muvija M LONDON, Feb 4 - Prime Minister Keir Starmer expressed regret on Wednesday for ap...
Second Australian skier dies in Japan

A second Australian has died while skiing in Japan, just days after ayoung woman was killedin a separate freak accident on the country's slopes.

The Telegraph Michael Hurst

Melbourne man Michael "Micky" Hurst, 27, disappeared in Japan's Hokkaido region, between Niseko Moiwa Ski Resort and Niseko Annupuri International Ski Resort, after becoming separated from his group of seven friends about 3pm local time on Monday (6am GMT).

His group searched for him and later found another group of skiers administering CPR after discovering him unconscious.

Mr Hurst was taken to hospital by emergency services, where he was pronounced dead.

Local police said they were investigating the cause of his death, but reported there were no visible injuries.

Hokkaido, Japan

Some reports suggest the man may have been buried by snow in an avalanche or suffered a medical episode.

Mr Hurst, who had reportedly been living and working at a lodging facility in the area, was described in an online tribute by a family friend as "the most humble" young man.

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) confirmed it was providing consular assistance to Mr Hurst's family.

"We send our deepest condolences to the family at this difficult time," a DFAT spokesperson said.

"Owing to our privacy obligations we are unable to provide further comment."

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Woman killed in ski lift tragedy

Mr Hurst's death comes amid a deadly two-week spell of heavy snow in northern Japan, which has already been linked to at least 35 deaths nationwide.

Authorities said many victims suffered sudden heart attacks or were injured while clearing snow, with up to two metres (6.5 feet) piling up in some regions.

Australian woman Brooke Day, 22, died just days ago, following a ski lift accident at the Tsugaike Mountain Resort in Otari, in Japan's Nagano prefecture.

Brooke Day - An Australian woman has died after a ski lift accident in a Japanese resort after her backpack got caught and she was left hanging mid-air.

Ms Day, an experienced snowboarder, was critically injured on Friday morning after her avalanche rescue backpack became caught on a chairlift mechanism as she attempted to disembark.

Local media reported she was dragged and suspended mid-air before suffering cardiac arrest.

An emergency stop button was activated and first aid was administered before Ms Day was taken by ambulance to hospital, where she died early on Sunday.

Resort chief executive Tsuneo Kubo said an unfastened buckle on Ms Day's backpack had become hooked on the lift and because the bag was strapped across her chest, she was unable to remove it.

Ms Day had recently completed avalanche safety training and had previously assisted in multiple rescues, her family said.

Japan's chief government spokesperson warned that although the weather was getting warmer, the snow would start melting, resulting in landslides and slippery surfaces.

"Please do pay close attention to your safety, wearing a helmet or using a lifeline rope, especially when working on clearing snow," chief cabinet secretary Minoru Kihara said.

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Second Australian skier dies in Japan

A second Australian has died while skiing in Japan, just days after ayoung woman was killedin a separate freak accident o...

 

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