Measles is costing the U.S. millions of dollars. The true losses can't be counted.

In early 2025, as measles began to tear through West Texas, Katherine Wells knew she needed money.

NBC Universal Spartanburg, S.C., mobile health unit. (Patrick Martin / NBC News)

Though the outbreak was concentrated in Gaines County, a community an hour away, Wells, who heads Lubbock's public health department, needed more staff to respond to numerous exposures at local pediatricians' offices, urgent care centers, restaurants and day cares.

"We were really relying on staff that aren't hourly, because I can work them for 80 hours if I have to, which is horrible," Wells said. In emergency planning meetings with the Texas Department of State Health Services, she pleaded for roughly $100,000 to hire temporary workers to help her exhausted staff.

"I was like, can I just have money so that if I need a few hours of work from a retired school nurse who we've worked with before, I can just pay them?" Wells said.

The answer, she said, was consistently "no." The state did send a few travel nurses from other areas to help, but no extra funding.

To stop a measles outbreak from escalating out of control, public health workers have to snap into action, contacting every person exposed to the virus as fast as possible, determining their vaccination status or health risk, and then try to woo them into either getting vaccinated or staying home for three weeks in quarantine.

Wells pulled at least half of her staff to work the outbreak response on top of their other daily duties.

What's the real cost of a measles outbreak?

Wells couldn't estimate what it cost the Lubbock Health Department to contain the virus before the outbreak, which began in a mostly unvaccinated Mennonite community in late January of last year, ended months later.

Since 2019, more than two-thirds of counties and jurisdictions have reportednotable drops in vaccination rates, an NBC News/Stanford University investigation found. Among states that track MMR rates, more than half their counties — 67% — fall below the level needed to stop a measles outbreak.

An alarming new report calculates the price tag for the U.S. if those rates continue to fall.

If measles vaccination rates continue to drop just 1% annually for the next five years, the cost to the U.S. could reach $1.5 billion a year, according to a new report from theYale School of Public Health.

Armed with existing county-level vaccination coverage data, Yale researchers used mathematical models to calculate predicted increases in measles cases, hospitalizations and their associated medical and societal costs.

Based on their projections, $41.1 million would be needed each year to cover patients' basic medical needs, including health insurance, and $947 million for public health response efforts such as surveillance and contact tracing. Lost productivity in the workforce, the report found, could reach $510.4 million each year.

Dr. Dave Chokshi, chair of Common Health Coalition, a nonprofit, nonpartisan public health group that partnered with Yale for the project, said a measles outbreak reverberates through all parts of "the health ecosystem."

The human consequences of measles outbreaks "are important for us to face very squarely," said Chokshi, who was previously health commissioner of New York City. "But we also wanted to make it clear that there are economic consequences, including employees absorbing lost work, public health departments that are stretched too thin to respond, and health care systems straining to shoulder the burden of emergency response."

Measles was declared eliminated in the U.S. in 2000. Since then, outbreaks here and there have generally been stopped quickly. But backsliding vaccination rates have increased the risk of massive eruptions and now threaten the nation's measles elimination status.

In late January 2025, as President Donald Trump was taking his second oath of office, measles cases were beginning to spread in West Texas. Under his presidency, following the guidance of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the administration has not strongly endorsed vaccines as a way to end such outbreaks.

Instead, the messaging on childhood vaccination has focused on "personal choice" rather than public health necessity.

In the first two months of 2026, there have beenmore than 1,000 confirmed cases of measles, nearly half of the 2,281 in all of 2025. Ninety-four percent of the people infected were unvaccinated.

According to a recent analysis from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, the initial financial hit to a community from a measles outbreak is about $244,480. That's the money local and state public health departments can expect to pay for resources like vaccine clinics and staffing until the outbreak is over, said study author Bryan Patenaude, an associate professor of health economics.

"We know the ingredients that go into dealing with a measles outbreak, how many cases wind up becoming severe and seeking care, because they have to be really well-traced and documented," Patenaude said.

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The report, which was posted in Octoberon medRxiv, a site that releases research before it's gone through peer review, tracked measles outbreaks in 18 states since 2004 (not including the 2025 cases in Texas, Utah and Arizona).

On top of the upfront cost, each additional case of measles averages $16,000 a pop for contact tracing, medical expenses and quarantine monitoring. Five measles cases could reach $324,480, while an outbreak of 50 might cost $1 million, the Johns Hopkins report estimated.

In 2019, Clark County, Washington, experienced an outbreak of 72 measles cases. Health officials spent hours making certain that people adhered to quarantines.

"We brought in staff from the state, the CDC, even from other jurisdictions as far away as Idaho to help us with the case investigation and contact tracing," said Dr. Alan Melnick, the public health director for Clark County. The team contacted people who were quarantined every day. Ultimately, 87% of subsequent measles cases occurred among people who'd been quarantined, Melnick said.

An assessmentfound that productivity losses from the relatively small outbreak in Clark County soared to over a million dollars.

The measles vaccine is free in the U.S.

"The public should be aware of what a good deal vaccines are," Melnick said, "because they save a lot of money in addition to saving lives."

As a former California legislator, pediatrician Dr. Richard Pan helped strengthen state vaccine requirements following a 2015 measles outbreak linked to Disneyland. "People need to recognize that there's a tremendous cost to these outbreaks," he said. "That cost, by the way, is being borne by American families."

South Carolina is wrestling to contain the country's largest single outbreak in more than a generation. Spartanburg County has been on high alert since fall, with at least 1,000 cases and possible exposures in fast food restaurants, stores, medical clinics and a government office.

Spartanburg, S.C., mobile health unit. (Patrick Martin / NBC News)

The South Carolina Department of Public Health wouldn't divulge how much contact tracing, mobile vaccine clinics and increased staffing have cost.

A department official said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had approved a request to redirect several hundred thousand dollars previously allocated for emergencies.

"Additionally, South Carolina requested and received $100k from CDC available for vaccine-preventable disease responses," Louis Eubank, deputy incident commander for the South Carolina Department of Public Health, said in a statement to NBC News. "South Carolina and the CDC continue to discuss additional funding needs and resource support."

A senior official at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said the CDC sent $8.5 million to seven areas of the country experiencing measles outbreaks over the past year, but declined to say where or give additional details.

"Amounts were awarded based on requests from the state or local health agency and availability of funding at CDC," the person said.

As the South Carolina outbreak spilled over into North Carolina, Dr. David Wohl, a global health and infectious disease specialist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, has scrambled to prevent a surge beyond the 23 cases already confirmed.

"There's so many people working on this in my health care system," Wohl said. "I can't tell you how many calls, how many hours, how stretched people are."

Intangible, indirect costs

The potential economic burden of measles outbreaks is easily calculated. The personal cost of having children unprotected against the world's most contagious virus is impossible to measure.

Hundreds of people infected with measles over the past year — more than 1 in 10, according to the CDC — have been hospitalized with dangerously high fever, pneumonia, trouble breathing and dehydration.

Mothers and fathers have spent countless, blurry hours by their child's bedside. Most recovered. Some are left with the long-term consequences of encephalitis — inflammation of the brain that can lead to seizures, blindness, deafness and learning disabilities.

Rarely, measles can hide in the body for a decade before re-emerging by attacking the brain and nervous system. The condition, calledsubacute sclerosing panencephalitis, is almost always fatal.

Two little girls in Texas, ages 6 and 8, died of measles much sooner, within weeks of their diagnosis.

While the economic consequences of measles outbreaks are real, the human impact cannot be ignored, Chokshi said. "Behind every number is a child struggling with a devastating illness, or a family reckoning with an unexpected hospitalization, and, in the worst circumstances, a death or a long-term consequence from what is a preventable disease."

Measles is costing the U.S. millions of dollars. The true losses can't be counted.

In early 2025, as measles began to tear through West Texas, Katherine Wells knew she needed money. Though the ...
9 people injured in Cincinnati mass shooting

CINCINNATI – Nine people were injured in amass shooting during an event at concert venue in Cincinnatiearly Sunday, March 1, police said.

USA TODAY

The people injured atRiverfront Livewere taken to local hospitals and their injuries are not considered life-threatening, Adam Hennie, interim chief of the Cincinnati Police Department said. At least one person is still in critical condition, according to the hospital.

The call for the shooting came in about 1 a.m. ET, Hennie said. The music venue and the area around it were blocked off as police investigated at 3 a.m. ET.

Police have not said anything about suspects or what led up to the shooting. Mayor Aftab Pureval called the shooting"unconscionable"in a statement.

The shooting occurred the same day at least three people died and 14 were injured during amass shooting at a bar in Austin, Texas. There have been 56 mass shootings, in which four or more people are injured, so far in 2026, according to theGun Violence Archive.

What happened during the Cincinnati mass shooting?

The shooting came as Jermaine Tandy, also known as DJ Fresh, was hosting his annual birthday celebration at Riverfront Live on Feb. 28.

Dozens flooded out from inside the venue in a panic as gunshots rang out, according to a neighboring business' surveillance camera footage obtained byFox 19, a media partner of the Cincinnati Enquirer, part of the USA TODAY Network.

In a Facebook post from Tandy's management, Fresh said he has held a birthday event for the past 14 years and has "never had a security issue of this magnitude."

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"We are devastated by the horrific events that took place during the DJ Fresh Birthday Celebration. Our hearts go out to the victims, their families, and everyone impacted by this senseless act of violence," the post said. "This event was intended to be an opportunity for us to come together and enjoy great music; and have fun celebrating life, it is deeply frustrating that the actions of one individual ruined the evening for so many."

Eight of the people shot were taken to University of Cincinnati Medical Center and one person was brought to Good Samaritan Hospital, according to police.

One person is in critical condition, according to University of Cincinnati Medical Center spokeswoman Heather Chura-Smith. Five people are in stable condition and two have been treated and released, she said.

The status of the person at Good Samaritan Hospital is unknown. Hospital staff declined to provide an update on the person's status.

Hennie is holding a press conference with other city leaders at 2 p.m. ET on March 1 to release more information about the shooting. The Columbus Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is assisting Cincinnati police in the investigation.

This story has been updated to add new information.

Contributing: Reuters

This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer:9 people injured in Cincinnati mass shooting

9 people injured in Cincinnati mass shooting

CINCINNATI – Nine people were injured in amass shooting during an event at concert venue in Cincinnatiearly Sunday, March...
Trump says Iran military operations are 'ahead of schedule,' CNBC reports

March 1 (Reuters) - ‌U.S. ‌President Donald ​Trump told ‌CNBC ⁠on ⁠Sunday ​that ​U.S. military ​operations ‌against Iran ‌are "ahead ​of ​schedule."

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(Reporting ​by ‌Gnaneshwar ​Rajan ​in ​Bengaluru; Editing ‌by ​Paul ​Simao)

Trump says Iran military operations are 'ahead of schedule,' CNBC reports

March 1 (Reuters) - ‌U.S. ‌President Donald ​Trump told ‌CNBC ⁠on ⁠Sunday ​that ​U.S. military ​operations ‌against Iran ...
At least 10 killed in Pakistan as protesters try to storm US Consulate over Khamenei's death

KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) — Violent clashes between protesters and security forces in Pakistan's port city of Karachi on Sunday left at least 10 people dead and more than 50 others injured as pro-Iran demonstrators attempted to storm the U.S. Consulate, authorities said.

Associated Press Paramilitary soldiers take positions at the U.S. Consulate after protesters stormed the building in Karachi, Pakistan, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Ali Raza) Police officers chase Shiite Muslims blocking a road and set on fire tires during a protest over the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in Karachi, Pakistan, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Muhammad Farooq) Shiite Muslims mourn the death of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during a protest against the U.S. and Israel in Lahore, Pakistan, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary) Firefighters pour water on a burning car, which was set on fire by protestors close to the U.S. Consulate in Karachi, Pakistan, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Ali Raza) Pakistani Shiite Muslims sit on a road during a demonstration to condemn the death of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in a major attack by Israel and the United States, in Lahore, Pakistan, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary)

Pakistan Iran US Israel

In the north of the country, demonstrators also attacked U.N. and government offices.

The violence came after theUnited States and Israel attacked Iran, killing its Supreme LeaderAyatollah Ali Khamenei. Police and officials at a hospital in Karachi said that at least 25 people were also wounded in the clashes and some of them were in critical condition.

President Asif Ali Zardari expressed his "profound sorrow over the martyrdom" of Khamenei" and conveyed his condolences to Iran, according to his office. He said: "Pakistan stands with the Iranian nation in this moment of grief and shares in their loss."

Summaiya Syed Tariq, a police surgeon at the city's main government hospital, confirmed six bodies and multiple injured people were brought to the facility. However, she said the death toll rose to 10 after four critically wounded people died.

In the northern Gilgit-Baltistan region, thousands of Shiite protesters angered by U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran attacked the offices of the U.N. Military Observer Group and the U.N. Development Programme (UNDP), government spokesman Shabir Mir said, adding that all staff working for those organizations was safe.

Mir said protesters repeatedly clashed with police at various places in the region, damaged the offices of a local charity, and set fire to police offices. However, he said authorities had deployed troops and brought the situation under control.

Police in Gilgit-Baltistan said at least two protesters were killed in the clashes.

The U.S. Embassy in Pakistan said in a post on X that it was monitoring reports of ongoing demonstrations at the U.S. Consulates General in Karachi and Lahore, as well as calls for additional protests at the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad and the Consulate General in Peshawar.

It advised U.S. citizens in Pakistan to monitor local news, stay aware of their surroundings, avoid large crowds and keep their travel registration with the U.S. government up to date.

Consulate windows smashed

In Karachi, which is the capital of southern Sindh province and Pakistan's largest city, senior police official Irfan Baloch said that protesters briefly attacked the perimeter of the U.S. Consulate, but were later dispersed.

He dismissed as baseless reports that any part of the consulate building was set on fire. However, he said that protesters torched a nearby police post and smashed windows of the consulate before security forces arrived and regained control.

Witnesses said that dozens of Shiite protesters remained gathered about a kilometer (half-mile) from the consulate, urging others to join them. They said one of the protesters had tried to burn a window of the consulate, before security forces arrived there and dispersed the demonstrators.

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Appeal for calm

The clashes prompted Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi to issue an appeal for calm.

"Following the martyrdom of Ayatollah Khamenei, every citizen of Pakistan shares in the grief of the people of Iran," Naqvi said in a statement.

He described it as "a day of mourning for the Muslim Ummah and for the people of both Iran and Pakistan," but urged people not to take the law into their own hands and to express their protests peacefully.

The provincial government of Sindh in a statement also urged citizens to express their views peacefully and warned against engaging in violence.

Protests in the area surrounding the U.S. Consulate in Karachi went on for hours, with dozens of Shiite youth, some covering their faces, throwing stones at law enforcement officials and vowing to reach the consulate, where hundreds of police and paramilitary Rangers have been deployed.

Security raised at US embassy and consulates

In Islamabad, police fired tear gas and swung batons as hundreds of Shiite protesters, angered by the killing of Khamenei, tried to march toward the U.S. Embassy. The clashes took place outside the Diplomatic Enclave, where the embassy is located and additional police had been deployed.

Meanwhile, in the northwestern city of Peshawar, authorities also used tear gas and batons to disperse thousands of demonstrators attempting to approach the U.S. Consulate to hold a rally to denounce the killing of the Iranian leader, police said.

Shiites also held a peaceful rally in Multan, a city in Punjab province, chanting slogans against Israel and the United States.

Mamoona Sherazi, who attended the rally, said that she was protesting Khamenei's killing. She described him as a fatherly figure and a strong voice for Shiites, adding that he also supported Sunni Muslims facing oppression. "God willing, we will never bow before America and Israel," she said.

Shiites also held a rally and clashes with police repeatedly near the U.S. Consulate in Lahore, the capital of eastern Punjab province, police said. Rallies against Israel and the United States were also planned in northern Gilgit-Baltistan region. Authorities said that the government has stepped up security around the U.S. Embassy in the capital, and consulates across the country to avoid any further violence.

Shiites make up roughly 15% of Pakistan's population of about 250 million and represent one of the largest Shiite communities in the world. They have frequently staged anti-Israel and anti-U. S. rallies in the past, though clashes of this scale are rare.

Munir Ahmed reported from Islamabad. Riaz Khan and Rasool Dawar in Peshawar, Pakistan, Babar Dogar in Lahore, and Asim Tanveer in Multan, contributed to this story.

At least 10 killed in Pakistan as protesters try to storm US Consulate over Khamenei's death

KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) — Violent clashes between protesters and security forces in Pakistan's port city of Karachi on...
Teeth, finger bones and blessings: Buddhist relics inspire belief

ROSEMEAD, Calif. (AP) — Katherine Nguyen stood with hands folded and head bowed at the altar of a Buddhist temple in Southern California.

Associated Press Buddhist practitioner and disciple of Master YongHua, Sarah Kim, shows the Fragrant Oil Shariras among other Buddhist relics displayed at Wei Mountain Temple, in Rosemead, Calif., Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes) Buddhist resident monks perform a blessing to devotees and visitors at Wei Mountain Temple, in Rosemead, Calif., Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes) Devotee Sandra Chen meditates at Wei Mountain Temple, in Rosemead, Calif., Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes) A Buddha's tooth relic is displayed at Wei Mountain Temple, in Rosemead, Calif., Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes) Buddhist relics, including shariras and bones believed to be those of the Buddha, are displayed at Wei Mountain Temple, in Rosemead, Calif., Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes) Buddhist resident monks perform a blessing to devotees and visitors at Wei Mountain Temple, in Rosemead, Calif., Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes) Buddhist relics, including the Shakyamuni Buddha Finger Bone, left, are displayed at Wei Mountain Temple, in Rosemead, Calif., Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes) A Buddha statue is displayed outside at Wei Mountain Temple, in Rosemead, Calif., Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

Buddhist Relics

Before her were tooth and finger bone relics believed to belong to Shakyamuni Buddha, the founder of Buddhism who is said to have attained enlightenment in India about 2,500 years ago.

"To be able to see the Buddha, to get close to him and feel the energy — it's very special for a Buddhist," Nguyen said.

Every Lunar New Year, the Wei Mountain Temple in Rosemead, California, publicly displays what it calls the "10,000 Buddha Relics," though the actual number contained in several glass display cases and miniature stupas or reliquaries is far larger, according to the temple's founder, Master YongHua.

The collection prominently features bones and teeth believed to have come from the bodies of the Buddha, his relatives and disciples. It also includes numerous shariras — colorful pearl- or crystal-like objects said to have been culled from the cremated ashes of Buddhist masters and the Buddha.

Relics in Catholicism and Orthodox Christianity are venerated as links to the saints or Christ, while Buddhist relics are primarily seen as living, active sources of blessings imbued with supernatural qualities. It's believed they can appear on their own, grow or even multiply, which is how Buddhists often explain the mystery of why there are so many spread across the world. Relics of the Buddha or revered monks are typically enshrined in a stupa — a sacred, dome-shaped monument that Buddhists also use for meditation and pilgrimage.

Belief in relics is a matter of faith

At the Rosemead temple, the teeth and finger bone relics are significantly larger than those in the average human body. YongHua said that's because they have "grown" over the years. The tooth relic, he said, produces "baby shariras," the multicolored crystals believed to have multiplied and filled several containers in their exhibit.

Most Buddhist sects acknowledge the spiritual significance of relics even if some teachers have tried to shift the focus to Buddha's teachings that emphasize mindfulness and kindness. Relics can be found in every country where Buddhism has a deep history: India, Japan, Myanmar, Nepal, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Taiwan and Thailand. In temple and monastic settings, the authenticity of these items is rarely questioned; spiritual leaders avoid subjecting them to scientific tests over worries that it might strip them of what makes them extraordinary.

Over the years, there have been many reports of fake tooth and bone relics as well as manufactured acrylic shariras flooding markets in Asia and online shopping platforms, often sold with falsified authenticity certificates.

Singapore's Buddha Tooth Relic Temple and Museum houses a tooth relic said to have been recovered from the Buddha's funeral pyre in a giant stupa fashioned from 705 pounds (320 kilograms) of gold. That relic came under scrutiny in 2007 after dental experts pointed out that the 3-inch (7.5 centimeter) tooth's characteristics were incompatible with the dimensions of a human tooth and most likely belonged to a cow or a buffalo. The temple's abbot, the Venerable Shi Fazhao, said at the time that he had never questioned its authenticity and "if you believe it's real, it's real."

YongHua says the main purpose of the relics donated to the Rosemead temple about 14 years ago by a collector is to inspire faith. He has no doubts about their ethereal nature.

"I have seen them multiply with my own eyes," he said. "They move on their own, they levitate. ... I've seen people get cured of various ailments just by being in their presence."

John Strong, professor emeritus of religion at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine, wrote the book "Relics of the Buddha" in 2004. He said the earliest accounts of Buddha's funeral are found in Pali texts dating from about the 2nd century B.C.E. Later commentaries describe the relics that came out of the Buddha's ashes as glittering jewels — some as small as mustard seeds and others resembling gems or golden nuggets.

Theories abound about what generates these relics and why, Strong said, adding that they do serve the important purpose of connecting Buddhists to the Buddha, who is "essentially absent" because he became enlightened and liberated from the cycle of birth, death and reincarnation.

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Relics are signs of a spiritually realized yogi

Geshe Tenzin Zopa, a Tibetan monk and educator, said relics are "the most precious, most sacred, most powerful holy objects in our understanding." As a young monk in Nepal, he believes he saw his teacher, Geshe Lama Konchog — who was recognized as a realized yogi by the Dalai Lama — generate relics as his body was being cremated. The guru died in October 2001.

Zopa said he observed pearl-like relics popping out of the crematorium "like popcorn." He said senior monks advised that the structure be sealed and left undisturbed for three days. When they returned, disciples found hundreds of relics and to their shock, the guru's intact heart, tongue and eyes, Zopa said.

"I'd never seen anything like that in my life. It was truly a miracle," he said. It's widely believed the relics later multiplied; most are enshrined in a memorial stupa at Kopan monastery in Nepal.

For students of yogis, looking for relics in cremains is not a morbid fascination, but an act of unshakeable faith and an expectation that their guru would leave behind a message — a physical sign of their spiritual realization, Zopa said. They're not easy to produce either.

"We believe that the relics are left behind due to the kindness of these holy gurus for the sake of us sentient beings to collect merit and purify ourselves," Zopa said. "One has to make very strong and extensive prayers and preserve pure morality for many lifetimes in order to create the causes that produce relics."

Not all Buddhist teachers view relics the same way

In Southern California, at the U.S. headquarters for the Fo Guang Shan Buddhist order, the Venerable Hui Ze explained that their founder, Venerable Master Hsing Yun, taught his followers not to solely focus on relics.

"Our venerable master emphasized Humanistic Buddhism — how we can bring Buddha's teachings into our daily lives with good thoughts, words and actions," said Hui Ze. "He instructed us that relics should not distract us from the path to liberation."

The order's headquarters in Taiwan houses a Buddha tooth relic gifted to Hsing Yun by a lama, Kunga Dorje Rinpoche, who carried the sacred object as he fled Tibet in 1968 and safeguarded it for three decades. Hui Ze said he was moved by the relic the moment he saw it.

"I had this really intimate experience and felt like I had connected with the Buddha who was here 2,600 years ago, and that connection is priceless," he said.

Hsing Yun had instructed disciples not to look for relics in his ashes. He died Feb. 5, 2023, at age 95. Following the master's cremation, his disciples sifted through the cremains and found several colorful, pearly relics.

But in deference to the master's wishes, they've been left in the ashes to be spread across the order's dozen centers across five continents.

Hsing Yun's ashes containing the relics will be enshrined in the Southern California headquarters during a ceremony on March 21.

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.

Teeth, finger bones and blessings: Buddhist relics inspire belief

ROSEMEAD, Calif. (AP) — Katherine Nguyen stood with hands folded and head bowed at the altar of a Buddhist temple in Sout...
Passengers flee smoke-filled Dubai airport as Iran attacks major Gulf travel hubs

Passengers rushed to evacuate one of the world's busiest airports on Sunday after a reported Iranian strike, as Tehran targeted travel hubs in US-friendly Gulf states typically regarded as safe, luxury destinations.

CNN Social Media

Dramatic footage shows people fleeing a smoke-filled passageway strewn with furniture and debris at Dubai International Airport, where officials confirmed four staff had been injured.

Hours later, an explosion near the airport sent a thick plume of black smoke into the air – part of a fresh wave of Iranian strikes across the Middle East on Sunday following the death of Iran's supreme leader in US-Israeli strikes.

The weekend attacks have caused travel chaos worldwide as airlines cancel flights through key Middle Eastern hubs that have become the target of Iranian retaliation for hosting US military bases.

CNN teams reported blasts in several capitals and major cities on Sunday, including Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Doha and Bahrain's Manama.

A wide corridor of airspace over the Middle East was closed this weekend while neighboring countries restricted flights.

Social media videos show the interior of Dubai International Airport filled with smoke as dozens of airline employees calmly evacuated the building. - Social Media

Strikes on Dubai

Dubai is the biggest tourism and trade hub in the Middle East. Its airport is one of the world's busiest, serving as a home base for Emirates.

The leading international airline has temporarily suspended all flights to and from Dubai until 3 p.m. local time on Monday.

UAE airports have established themselves as key nodes for connecting flights all over the world. Last year, Dubai and Abu Dhabi's hubs handled a combined 127.7 million passengers, according to official figures.

After the first incident at Dubai International Airport early Sunday, video verified by CNN shows a passenger in a blood-spattered shirt pressing a tissue to his head while others hurry along a travelator, while a voice is heard saying "go home, don't stay here."

A thick plume of smoke rose near Dubai International Airport following a second major incident in the city on March 1, 2026. - Social Media

A concourse at the airport sustained "minor damage" and emergency response teams were "immediately deployed" in Sunday's evacuation, Dubai Airports told CNN. Four staff were injured.

Passengers at the airport said they'd been given vouchers for hotels for what could be a long wait in Dubai. India's double Olympic medallist PV Sindhu was among those caught up in the airport chaos as she tried to make her way to the All England Open Badminton Championship in the UK.

"My coach had to quickly run out of the area as he was closest to the smoke and debris. It was an extremely tense and scary moment for all of us," she said on X.

In Dubai's ritzy Palm Jumeirah district – a global symbol of the emirate's opulence and serenity – an explosion hit the Fairmont Hotel, leaving it in flames shortly after videos, verified by CNN, showed the moment a drone appeared to dive toward the ground.

Will Bailey, from the UK, was relaxing at a nearby beach club when he saw missiles being intercepted overhead.

"Oh my days, over the beach club. Literally directly above us… they were so loud" he said on Instagram in a poolside video capturing a plume of smoke overhead.

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Elsewhere in the UAE, a drone strike at Abu Dhabi's Zayed International Airport – another key international gateway – killed one person and injured seven, the airport said in a statement on social media.

Firemen and rescue workers inspect the site of an explosion at the Fairmont The Palm Hotel in Dubai, United Arab Emirates on February 28, 2026. - Altaf Qadri/AP

Attacks on other Gulf states

Qatar and Bahrain also came under attack, piercing the kingdoms' polished image as luxurious havens in an unstable region.

Varun Krishnan described "long lines" overnight into Sunday at Qatar's Doha airport, with families, children and elderly people among those affected by the airspace closure.

"Chaos at Doha airport when we were asked to wait for buses to hotels," he said on X, sharing video of a packed terminal.

In Qatar, missiles were intercepted over the capital, while officials at Bahrain International Airport said a drone strike has damaged the facility.

Bahrain's interior ministry said the strike resulted in "material damage without loss of life," adding that authorities were securing the site.

Videos geolocated and verified by CNN show a large fire at a residential high-rise building in Bahrain's capital Manama on Saturday and smoke rising from the vicinity of the Crowne Plaza hotel in the city on Sunday.

Smoke seen rising from near the Crowne Plaza hotel in Manama, Bahrain. - Social Media

Flight disruption

Dubai Airports confirmed that all flights in and out of the city's two main airports have been suspended until further notice.

"Passengers are advised not to travel to the airport at this time and to contact their respective airlines directly for the latest updates regarding their flights," the Dubai Media Office said.

Etihad Airways suspended all flights to and from Abu Dhabi until Monday morning due to regional airspace closures.

Qatar Airways said flights remain temporarily suspended and an update will be provided by 9 a.m. Monday while Singapore Airlines has cancelled its Singapore-Dubai service until March 7.

Virgin Atlantic canceled its flight from London Heathrow to Dubai on Saturday, as "a precautionary measure" and said it is temporarily avoiding Iraqi airspace.

Lufthansa confirmed cancellations of flights to and from Tel Aviv, Israel, citing the safety of passengers and crew members.

British Airways said it was cancelling flights to and from Tel Aviv and Bahrain for several days.

Karina Tsui contributed to this report.

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Passengers flee smoke-filled Dubai airport as Iran attacks major Gulf travel hubs

Passengers rushed to evacuate one of the world's busiest airports on Sunday after a reported Iranian strike, as Tehra...
Afghanistan fires at Pakistani jets over Kabul as conflict intensifies

By Mohammad Yunus Yawar

Reuters

KABUL, March 1 (Reuters) - Afghanistan said it was firing at Pakistani jets in Kabul after blasts and gunfire rocked the capital on Sunday, compounding instability in a ‌region rattled by U.S.–Israeli strikes on Iran and retaliatory attacks on U.S. targets in Gulf states.

The ‌Taliban-ruled state has suffered Pakistani strikes against government installations over the past week following accusations, which it denies, that it harbours militants.

The ​heaviest fighting in years between the neighbours has raised fears of a protracted conflict along their 2,600-km (1,615-mile) border, with several countries including Qatar and Saudi Arabia calling for restraint and offering to help mediate a ceasefire.

Explosions echoed across parts of Kabul before sunrise, followed by bursts of gunfire, a Reuters witness said. It was not clear what ‌had been targeted or whether there ⁠were casualties.

Taliban administration spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said the sounds were the result of Afghan forces targeting Pakistani aircraft over the capital.

"Air defence attacks were carried out in Kabul ⁠against Pakistani aircraft. Kabul residents should not be concerned," Mujahid said.

Pakistan's prime minister's office, information ministry and military did not respond to requests for comment.

The violence follows air strikes inside Afghanistan this week that Pakistan said targeted militant infrastructure. ​Afghanistan described ​the strikes as a violation of sovereignty and announced ​retaliatory operations along their shared border.

Iran, which shares ‌borders with both Afghanistan and Pakistan, had offered to help facilitate dialogue before itself coming under attack on Saturday from Israel and the U.S. bent on diminishing Iran's military capability.

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ACCUSATION AND ESCALATION

Pakistan has said Afghanistan harbours Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militants, which it said are waging an insurgency inside Pakistan.

Afghanistan has denied the accusation, saying it does not allow Afghan territory to be used against other countries and that Pakistan's security challenges are an ‌internal matter.

Pakistani security sources have said operation "Ghazab Lil Haq", meaning "Wrath ​for the Truth", was ongoing and that Pakistani forces had destroyed ​Afghan posts and camps.

Both sides have reported heavy ​losses, issuing differing casualty figures for each other.

Reuters could not independently verify the claims.

Diplomatic ‌efforts have intensified, with Saudi Arabia, Russia, China, ​the European Union and ​United Nations urging restraint and calling for talks.

The U.S. said it supports Pakistan's right to defend itself.

Pakistan Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif described the fighting as "open war".

Afghanistan Interior Minister Sirajuddin Haqqani said the ​conflict would be "very costly". He said ‌only front-line forces were engaged in fighting that the country has yet to fully deploy its ​military.

(Reporting by Mohammad Yunus Yawar in Kabul and Rajveer Singh Pardesi in Bengaluru; Writing by ​Ariba Shahid; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Saad Sayeed)

Afghanistan fires at Pakistani jets over Kabul as conflict intensifies

By Mohammad Yunus Yawar KABUL, March 1 (Reuters) - Afghanistan said it was firing at Pakistani jets in Kabul a...

 

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