Category: Global

  • ‘Grief to gallery’: The woman behind the £51k Malala portrait

    ‘Grief to gallery’: The woman behind the £51k Malala portrait

    Working under the name Zara Muse, Alexandra Johnson, a former city trader with no formal art background, has made a name for herself as an artist. Earlier this April, her painting of Malala Yousafzai was sold for £51,200 at Bonhams, a prestigious global auction house.

    Her work is known for crafting richly textured portraits of women, each piece honouring quiet perseverance. During the UK lockdown in 2020, while still processing the death of her mother, Johnson found herself in her kitchen, palette knife in hand, attempting to cope with her grief.

    “Malala represents strength and bravery — the kind of woman I want to celebrate through my work,” she said in an interview with the BBC.

    The portrait of Malala was put up for auction by one of Johnson’s collectors.

    Now 27, Malala, was shot in the head by the Taliban at 15 merely for attending school in Pakistan, and is now a global symbol for girls’ education, peace, and standing against extremism.

    For Johnson, whose own experiences involve grief and caregiving, Malala’s narrative resonated deeply.

    “I always go for powerful women, not for [their] jobs and career, just for their inner strength,” said Johnson.

    In 2002, Johnson left the corporate sector to become a full-time mother, and later a full-time carer after her mother was diagnosed with cancer. Her mother, Janet, who donated a kidney to her brother at age 60, laid the groundwork for Johnson’s initial artistic endeavours. “Everything I create is in her honour,” she states.

    During the UK lockdown in 2020, Alexandra Johnson was still processing the death of her mother. A former city trader without a formal background in art, she found herself in her kitchen, palette knife in hand, attempting to cope with her grief. Little did she know at that moment that those initial strokes would pave the way for the eventual sale of her painting of Malala Yousafzai for £51,200 at Bonhams, a prestigious auction house globally.

    Her debut painting, Angelique, fetched £22,500 in 2023. Another piece, Shape of Stillness, was sold for £47,500 in December. However, it is the portrait of Malala that stands as the emotional centrepiece of her artistic career—an artwork born from grief, strength, and an unwavering belief in women supporting one another.

  • Pope Francis has died: Vatican

    Pope Francis has died: Vatican

    Pope Francis died on Monday aged 88, a day after making a much hoped-for appearance at Saint Peter’s Square on Easter Sunday, the Vatican said in a statement.

    “Dearest brothers and sisters, it is with deep sorrow that I must announce the death of our Holy Father Francis,” said Cardinal Kevin Farrell in the statement published by the Vatican on its Telegram channel.

    “This morning at 7:35 am (0535 GMT) the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the home of the Father.

    “His entire life was dedicated to the service of the Lord and His church.”

    Francis’s death came just a day after he delighted the crowds of worshippers at the Vatican on Easter Sunday with an appearance on the balcony at Saint Peter’s Basilica despite still convalescing after a severe illness.

    Francis had come close to dying twice earlier this year while suffering from pneumonia.

    He spent 38 days in hospital before he was released on March 23.

    On Sunday he wished the crowds on Saint Peter’s Square a “Happy Easter” as he waved and in his traditional “Urbi et Orbi” (“To the City and the World”) benediction he called for freedom of thought and tolerance.

    Francis: radical leader who broke the papal mould

    Pope Francis, who died Monday aged 88, will go down in history as a radical pontiff, a champion of underdogs who forged a more compassionate Catholic Church while stopping short of overhauling centuries-old dogma.

    Dubbed “the people’s Pope”, the Argentine pontiff loved being among his flock and was popular with the faithful, though he faced bitter opposition from traditionalists within the Church.

    The first pope from the Americas and the southern hemisphere, he staunchly defended the most disadvantaged, from migrants to communities battered by climate change, which he warned was a crisis caused by humankind.

    But while he confronted head-on the global scandal of sex abuse by priests, survivors’ groups said concrete measures were slow in coming.

    From his election in March 2013, Jorge Mario Bergoglio was eager to make his mark as the leader of the Catholic Church.

    He became the first pope to take the name Francis after Saint Francis of Assisi, a 13th-century mystic who renounced his wealth and devoted his life to the poor.

    “How I would like a poor church for the poor,” he said three days after his election as the 266th pope.

    He was a humble figurehead who wore plain robes, eschewed the sumptuous papal palaces and made his own phone calls, some of them to widows, rape victims or prisoners.

    The football-loving former archbishop of Buenos Aires was also more accessible than his predecessors, chatting with young people about issues ranging from social media to pornography — and talking openly about his health.

    Francis always left the door open to retiring like his predecessor Benedict XVI, who in 2013 became the first pontiff since the Middle Ages to step down.

    After Benedict died in December 2022, Francis became the first sitting pope in modern history to lead a papal funeral.

    He suffered increasingly poor health, from colon surgery in 2021 and a hernia in June 2023 to bouts of bronchitis and knee pain that forced him to use a wheelchair.

    His fourth hospitalisation, of more than a month for bronchitis in both lungs, was his longest, raising speculation he might step down.

    But he brushed off talk of quitting, saying in February 2023 that papal resignations should not become “a normal thing”.

    In a 2024 memoir, he wrote that resignation was a “distant possibility” justified only in the event of “a serious physical impediment”.

    Kissed prisoners’ feet

    Before his first Easter at the Vatican, he washed and kissed the feet of prisoners at a Rome prison.

    It was the first in a series of powerful symbolic gestures that helped him achieve enthusiastic global admiration that eluded his predecessor.

    For his first trip abroad, Francis chose the Italian island of Lampedusa, the point of entry for tens of thousands of migrants hoping to reach Europe, and slammed the “globalisation of indifference”.

    He also condemned plans by US President Donald Trump during his first term to build a border wall against Mexico as un-Christian.

    After Trump’s re-election, Francis denounced his planned migrant deportations as a “major crisis” that “will end badly”.

    In 2016, with Europe’s migration crisis at a peak, Francis flew to the Greek island of Lesbos and returned to Rome with three families of asylum-seeking Syrian Muslims.

    He was also committed to inter-faith reconciliation, kissing the Orthodox Patriarch Kirill of Moscow in a historic February 2016 encounter, and making a joint call for freedom of belief with leading Sunni cleric Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb in 2019.

    Francis re-energised Vatican diplomacy in other ways, helping facilitate a historic rapprochement between the United States and Cuba, and encouraging the peace process in Colombia.

    And he sought to improve ties with China through a historic — but criticised — 2018 accord on the naming of bishops.

    Climate appeal

    Experts credited Francis with having influenced the landmark 2015 Paris climate accords with his “Laudato Si” encyclical, an appeal for action on climate change that was grounded in science.

    He argued that developed economies were to blame for an impending environmental catastrophe, and in a fresh appeal in 2023 warned that some of the damage was “already irreversible”.

    An advocate of peace, the pontiff repeatedly denounced arms manufacturers and argued that in the myriad of conflicts seen around the globe, a Third World War was underway.

    But his interventions were not always well received, and he sparked outrage from Kyiv after praising those in war-torn Ukraine who had the “courage to raise the white flag and negotiate”.

    In his modest rooms in the Vatican’s Casa Santa Marta guesthouse, Francis dealt with stress by writing down his problems in letters to Saint Joseph.

    “From the moment I was elected I had a very particular feeling of profound peace. And that has never left me,” he said in 2017.

    He also loved classical music and tango, stopping off once at a shop in Rome to buy records.

    ‘Who am I to judge?’

    Francis’s admirers credit him with transforming perceptions of an institution beset by scandals when he took over, helping to bring lapsed believers back into the fold.

    He will be remembered as the pope who, on the subject of gay Catholics, said: “Who am I to judge?”

    He allowed divorced and remarried believers to receive communion, and approved the baptism of transgender believers as well as blessings for same-sex couples.

    But he dropped the idea of letting priests marry after an outcry, and despite nominating several women to leading positions inside the Vatican, he disappointed those who wanted women allowed to be ordained.

    Critics accused him of tampering dangerously with tenets of Catholic teaching, and he faced strong opposition to many of his reforms.

    In 2017, four conservatives cardinals made an almost unheard of public challenge to his authority, saying his changes had sown doctrinal confusion among believers.

    But his Church showed no inclination to relax its ban on artificial contraception or opposition to gay marriage — and he insisted that abortion was “murder”.

    Francis also pushed reforms within the Vatican, from allowing cardinals to be tried by civilian courts to overhauling the Holy See’s banking system.

    He also sought to address the enormously damaging issue of sex abuse by priests by meeting victims and vowing to hold those responsible accountable.

    He opened up Vatican archives to civil courts and made it compulsory to report suspicions of abuse or its cover-up to Church authorities.

    But critics say his legacy will be a Church that remains reluctant to hand paedophile priests over to the police.

    ‘Raised on pasta’

    Jorge Mario Bergoglio was born into an Italian emigrant family in Flores, a middle-class district of Buenos Aires, on December 17, 1936.

    The eldest of five children, he was “born an Argentine but raised on pasta”, wrote biographer Paul Vallely.

    From 13, he worked afternoons in a hosiery factory while studying to become a chemical technician in the mornings. Later he had a brief stint as a nightclub bouncer.

    He was said to have liked dancing and girls, even coming close to proposing to one before, at age 17, he found a religious vocation.

    Francis later recounted a period of turmoil during his Jesuit training, when he became besotted with a woman he met at a family wedding.

    By then he had survived a near-fatal infection that resulted in the removal of part of a lung. His impaired breathing scuppered his hopes of becoming a missionary in Japan.

    He was ordained a priest in 1969 and appointed the provincial, or leader, of the Jesuits in Argentina just four years later.

    His time at the helm of the order, which spanned the country’s years of military dictatorship, was difficult.

    Critics accused him of betraying two radical priests who were imprisoned and tortured by the regime.

    No convincing evidence of the claim ever emerged but his leadership of the order was divisive and, in 1990, he was demoted and exiled to Argentina’s second-largest city, Cordoba.

    Then, in his 50s, Bergoglio is seen by most biographers as having undergone a midlife crisis.

    He emerged to embark on a new career in the mainstream of the Catholic hierarchy, reinventing himself first as the “Bishop of the Slums” in Buenos Aires and later as the pope who would break the mould.

  • Hackers leak Russian data, Trump’s files

    Hackers leak Russian data, Trump’s files

    The hacking group Anonymous has claimed responsibility for a major cyberattack targeting Russian networks. According to the group, it has released 10 terabytes of data, including sensitive information on Russian political figures, state-run companies, Kremlin-linked assets abroad, and even files allegedly connected to former US President Donald Trump.

    The data was made public on April 15 and announced through Anonymous’ official account on X (formerly Twitter). In the post, the group wrote, “In defence of Ukraine, Anonymous has released 10TB of leaked data on all businesses operating in Russia, all Kremlin assets in the West, pro-Russian officials, Donald Trump, and more.”

    A photo shared with the post showed several file folders, one labelled “Leaked Data of Donald Trump”, which quickly caught netizens’ attention.

    Although the group did not reveal detailed contents of the data, the mention of Trump has sparked interest, especially with ongoing criticism of his foreign policy stance and alleged support for Russia.

    Anonymous is a global hacking collective with no official leadership. It’s known for “hacktivism”—using cyberattacks to fight against corruption, oppression, and injustice. The group first declared a cyberwar on Russia in 2022 after the invasion of Ukraine.

    Cybersecurity experts say this is one of Anonymous’ largest leaks in recent years. Though the full impact is still unknown, the 10-terabyte size suggests a serious security breach. The data reportedly includes links between Russian companies and their foreign connections, financial transactions, and names of pro-Kremlin officials with assets in the West.

    The Russian government has not made any official comments yet, but experts believe internal investigations are likely happening behind the scenes.

    The leak also comes at a time when Trump’s international dealings are being closely watched. Anonymous has recently accused Trump of working against Ukraine and supporting Russian interests. In one post, the group stated, “Trump is on Russia’s side. His actions do not support Ukraine, Europe, or even US security. His goal is to weaken and destroy global democracy.”

    As of now, Anonymous has not made any new threats or announced more data leaks. However, the group remains active online, regularly posting about the Ukraine war and global politics involving Russia and the West.

  • Maldives ban Israelis to protest genocide in Gaza

    Maldives ban Israelis to protest genocide in Gaza

    The Maldives announced Tuesday it was banning the entry of Israelis from the luxury tourist archipelago in “resolute solidarity” with the Palestinian people.

    President Mohamed Muizzu ratified the legislation shortly after it was approved by parliament on Tuesday.

    “The ratification reflects the government’s firm stance in response to the continuing atrocities and ongoing acts of genocide committed by Israel against the Palestinian people,” his office said in a statement.

    “The Maldives reaffirms its resolute solidarity with the Palestinian cause.”

    The ban will be implemented with immediate effect, a spokesman for Muizzu’s office told AFP.

    The Maldives, a small Islamic republic of 1,192 strategically located coral islets, is known for its secluded white sandy beaches, shallow turquoise lagoons and Robinson Crusoe-style getaways.

    Official data showed that only 59 Israeli tourists visited the archipelago in February, among 214,000 other foreign arrivals.

    The Maldives had lifted a previous ban on Israeli tourists in the early 1990s and briefly moved to restore relations in 2010.

    Opposition parties and government allies in the Maldives have been pressuring Muizzu to ban Israelis as a statement of opposition to the genocide being committed in Gaza by Israel against Palestinians.

    Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs urged its citizens last year to avoid travelling to the Maldives.

    The genocide against Palestinians worsened after Palestinian militant group Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

    Gaza’s health ministry said on Sunday that at least 1,613 Palestinians had been killed since March 18, when a ceasefire collapsed, taking the overall death toll since the war began to 50,983.

  • Bangladesh reintroduces ‘except Israel’ phrase on passports

    Bangladesh reintroduces ‘except Israel’ phrase on passports

    Bangladesh has restored an “except Israel” inscription on passports, local media reported Sunday, effectively barring its citizens from travelling to that country.

    Israel is a flashpoint issue in Muslim-majority Bangladesh, which does not recognise it.

    The phrase “valid for all countries except Israel,” which was printed on Bangladeshi passports for decades, was removed during the later years of ousted prime minister Sheikh Hasina’s tenure.

    Nilima Afroze, a deputy secretary at the home ministry, told Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha (BSS) news agency on Sunday that authorities had “issued a directive last week” to restore the inscription.

    “The director general of the department of immigration and passport was asked to take necessary measures to implement this change,” local newspaper The Daily Star quoted Afroze as saying Sunday.

    In 2021, the words “except Israel” were removed from passports, although the then government under Hasina clarified that the country’s stance on Israel had not changed.

    The country’s support for an independent Palestinian state was visible on Saturday when around 100,000 people gathered in Dhaka in solidarity with Gaza.

    Israel has been committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza after Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures.

    A fragile ceasefire between the warring parties fell apart last month and Gaza’s health ministry said Sunday that at least 1,574 Palestinians had been killed since then, taking the overall death toll since the war began to 50,944.

  • Prada to buy Versace for $1.38bn to create new force in Italian fashion

    Prada to buy Versace for $1.38bn to create new force in Italian fashion

    Prada said Thursday that it had reached a deal to buy Versace for 1.25 billion euros ($1.38 billion), building a new Italian fashion powerhouse and hoping to insert much-needed “spark” into its smaller, flashier rival.

    The much anticipated acquisition, from US group Capri Holdings, will create a group with revenues of over six billion euros that could better compete with giants such as the French conglomerates LVMH and Gucci owner Kering.

    “We are delighted to welcome Versace to the Prada Group and to build a new chapter for a brand with which we share a strong commitment to creativity, craftmanship and heritage,” Prada Group chairman Patrizio Bertelli said.

    In 2018, Capri paid 1.83 billion euros (then $2.1 billion) to acquire Versace, which was previously owned 80 per cent by the Versace family and 20pc by the US investment fund BlackRock.

    But amid declining sales it sought a buyer, opening exclusive negotiations with Prada at the end of February.

    Capri, which also owns Jimmy Choo and Michael Kors, had to accept a reduced price from Prada amid the market turmoil caused by US President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

    The Financial Times had reported that the price was initially expected to be about $1.6 billion but had been negotiated downwards in recent days.

    Donatella’s departure

    Last month, Donatella Versace stepped down as creative director after more than 30 years, a move widely seen as a prelude to the accord.

    She took over in 1997 following the murder of her older brother Gianni, who founded the label in 1978.

    But on April 1, she was replaced as creative director by Dario Vitale, who has overseen soaring sales at Miu Miu, Prada’s sister brand targeting a younger clientele.

    Donatella will now serve as Versace’s chief brand ambassador.

    While still a label associated with the jet set, some of Versace’s lustre has faded in recent years.

    Capri had expected turnover to fall to $810 million during its 2025 fiscal year, according to Prada, down from $1.03 billion a year earlier.

    By contrast, Prada, under the creative helm of Miuccia Prada, the 76-year-old granddaughter of group founder Mario, is in robust health.

    Despite a global slowdown in luxury good sales in recent years, Prada’s net profit jumped 25pc to 839 million euros in 2024, on revenues that grew 15pc to 5.4 billion euros.

    Andrea Guerra, Prada’s group chief executive, said Thursday that Versace had “huge potential” but warned there was work to do.

    “The journey will be long and will require disciplined execution and patience,” he said.

    The deal, funded through 1.5 billion euros of new debt, is expected to close in the second half of 2025.

    For its part, Capri said the sale would allow it to step up investments in Michael Kors and strengthen its balance sheet.

    No revolution

    The two fashion labels have starkly different styles, with Versace’s exuberance contrasting with Prada’s sophisticated minimalism.

    Prada said its new acquisition “constitutes a strongly complementary addition” to its portfolio and promised to “maintain its creative DNA and cultural authenticity”.

    “I don’t think we need to change the brand, to revolutionise it,” Prada’s marketing director, Lorenzo Bertelli, told analysts during a conference call.

    “We need to just evolve it… all together, they’re going to make, hopefully, a huge spark and bring back Versace to be a huge success.”

    Bertelli, the eldest son of Miuccia Prada and Patrizio Bertelli and who is expected one day to take over, said his mother would not have creative involvement in Versace.

    Core business

    The deal bucks the trend of recent years, which has seen major names in Italian fashion such as Gucci, Fendi, and Bottega Veneta fall under the control of their French competitors.

    However, a previous attempt to expand the Prada portfolio — which also includes luxury footwear brands Car Shoe and Church’s — offers a cautionary tale.

    In 1999, the family group acquired the German brand Jil Sander and the Austrian label Helmut Lang before selling them in 2006 as they were weighing down its financial results.

    In 2000, Prada jointly acquired a 51pc stake in the Roman label Fendi with LVMH, but sold its 25.5pc stake to the French luxury giant a year later.

    With the Versace acquisition, “I see a risk for Prada to become distracted from its core business,” Luca Solca, an analyst at Bernstein, told AFP.

  • Tourist family, pilot killed in ‘tragic’ NY helicopter crash

    Tourist family, pilot killed in ‘tragic’ NY helicopter crash

    Six people including three children were killed after a sightseeing helicopter crashed into the Hudson River in New York on Thursday, sparking a major water rescue operation, authorities said.

    The crash killed all those onboard the aircraft: the pilot and a family from Spain. Two of the victims were initially taken to a hospital, but later succumbed to their injuries.

    “At this time, all six victims have been removed from the water. And sadly, all six victims have been pronounced deceased,” Mayor Eric Adams told a briefing, after earlier calling it a “heartbreaking and tragic crash.”

    Officials have yet to release the identities of the victims, but widespread US media reports identified one of the people aboard the helicopter as Agustin Escobar, a Spanish executive at global technology company Siemens.

    The chopper’s landing skids were seen protruding from the river beside a tunnel vent as several boats clustered around the impact site.

    Police from both New York and New Jersey, which is on the opposite side of the river from Manhattan, responded to the scene along with fire department vessels.

    The NBC4 channel reported that its own helicopter was unable to take off because of weather conditions, with the weather in New York on Thursday gusty under thick cloud cover.

    A witness told AFP it appeared like the helicopter’s rotor blade “shattered in the sky.”

    “And after it shattered, then we saw the helicopter just spiral… And then it just crashed into the water just like that,” said fashion designer Belle Angel.

    The Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement it was Bell 206 helicopter.

    “The FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board will investigate,” it added.

    President Donald Trump took to social media to call the crash “terrible.”

    “The footage of the accident is horrendous. God bless the families and friends of the victims,” he wrote on Truth Social.


    – ‘Heartbreaking’ –

    The river is a busy shipping channel and the scene of a dramatic 2009 incident when a US Airways jet safely landed in the water. All 155 people on board escaped alive in an event dubbed “Miracle on the Hudson.”

    The river is as deep as 200 feet (60 meters) at points, and an AFP correspondent saw what appeared to be floatation devices deployed on the helicopter’s skids.

    The average temperature of the river is 46 degrees Fahrenheit (8 degrees Celsius) at this time of year, according to the US Geological Survey.

    “Three adults and three children were on board a Bell 206 helicopter that had left from the downtown Skyport at just about 3 pm,” Adams said, adding that the tourists were a family from Spain.

    Police and fire service (FDNY) divers raced to pull survivors from the wreckage, he said.

    “NYPD divers pulled four people from the crash site, and FDNY Divers recovered an additional two. Immediate lifesaving measures were undertaken on the vessels at the scene, as well as the adjoining pier,” police commissioner Jessica Tisch said.

    “Four victims were pronounced dead on scene, and two more were removed to local area hospitals, where, sadly, both succumbed to their injuries.”

    The chopper took off around 3 pm, flying south before heading up the Manhattan shoreline to the George Washington Bridge, turning back towards the downtown Manhattan heliport, losing control and hitting the water near a Hoboken pier, Tisch said.

    The police commissioner said the aircraft was operated by New York Helicopter, which did not respond to a request for comment but lists the Bell 206 among its fleet.

    There have been around 30 helicopter crashes in New York since 1980, Brooklyn Borough President Mark Levine told reporters, calling for tighter restrictions on helicopter traffic in the city.

  • US says to deny visas over antisemitic social media posts, harassment of Jewish people

    US says to deny visas over antisemitic social media posts, harassment of Jewish people

    US immigration authorities said Wednesday they will look at social media accounts and deny visas or residence permits to people who post content considered anti-Semitic by President Donald Trump’s administration.

    Posts defined as anti-Semitic will include social media activity in support of militant groups classified by the United States as terrorists, including Hamas, Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Yemen’s Huthi insurgents.

    The move comes after the Trump administration has controversially canceled visas for students inside the United States, where the First Amendment of the Constitution guarantees freedom of speech.

    Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem “has made it clear that anyone who thinks they can come to America and hide behind the First Amendment to advocate for anti-Semitic violence and terrorism — think again. You are not welcome here,” department spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement.

    The US Citizenship and Immigration Services “will consider social media content that indicates an alien endorsing, espousing, promoting or supporting anti-Semitic terrorism, anti-Semitic terrorist organizations or other anti-Semitic activity as a negative factor” in determining benefits, the statement said.

    The policy will take effect immediately and apply to student visas and requests for permanent resident “green cards” to stay in the United States.

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio said late last month that he has stripped visas for some 300 people and was doing so on a daily basis.

    Rubio said that non-US citizens do not have the same rights as Americans and that it was at his discretion, not that of judges, to issue or deny visas.

    A number of people stripped of visas contend that they never voiced antipathy for Jews, with some saying that they were targeted because they found themselves in the same place as protests.

    The most high-profile deportation case is Mahmoud Khalil, who led protests at Columbia University in New York. He was also taken to Louisiana ahead of deportation proceedings, despite being a US permanent resident.

    The Trump administration has also stripped millions of dollars worth of federal funding to leading universities, with officials saying they did not respond properly to combat anti-Semitism during protests that erupted over the Gaza war.

  • Nearly 100 dead in Dominican Republic nightclub roof collapse

    Nearly 100 dead in Dominican Republic nightclub roof collapse

    Rescuers raced to find survivors early Wednesday after the roof of a Dominican Republic nightclub collapsed during a concert by popular singer Rubby Perez, one of nearly 100 people killed in the disaster.

    Rescue workers were pressing on with the search effort, which more than 24 hours after the roof caved in began to be limited more to recovering bodies.

    Renowned Dominican merengue singer Perez, who was on stage at the popular Jet Set nightclub when the roof collapsed shortly after midnight Tuesday, was one of those killed, according to his manager.

    “We are waiting for the children to reach an agreement for the funeral,” Perez’s manager Enrique Paulino told AFP.

    About 370 rescue personnel combed mounds of fallen bricks, steel bars and tin sheets for survivors.

    Also among the dead was 51-year-old retired Major League Baseball pitcher Octavio Dotel, who won a World Series in 2011 with the St Louis Cardinals.

    He was rescued alive but died of his injuries while being taken to hospital, local media reported.

    A black-and-white photo of the player and images of the Dominican flag were projected onto the scoreboard at Citi Field in New York before Tuesday’s game between the New York Mets and the Miami Marlins.

    “Peace to his soul,” the Dominican Republic Professional Baseball League wrote on social media.

    Local media said there were between 500 and 1,000 people in the club when disaster struck at around 12:44 am (0444 GMT) Tuesday. The club has capacity for 700 people seated and about 1,000 people standing.

    Dozens of ambulances ferried the injured to hospital, as scores of people gathered outside the venue desperately seeking news of their loved ones.

    Perez was on stage when there was a blackout and the roof came crashing down, according to eyewitness reports.

    Perez’s daughter Zulinka told reporters she had managed to escape after the roof collapsed, but he did not.

    Also among the dead was the governor of the Monte Cristi municipality, Nelsy Cruz, according to President Luis Abinader.

    The president visited the scene and declared three days of national mourning.

    The death toll started at 15 and kept rising throughout Tuesday. By early Wednesday, the preliminary toll had reached 98, said Juan Manuel Mendez, director of the Emergency Operations Center.

    “As long as there is hope for life, all authorities will be working to recover or rescue these people,” he said earlier.

    ‘We are desperate’

    Iris Pena, a woman who had attended the show, told SIN television how she escaped with her son.

    “At one point, dirt started falling like dust into the drink on the table,” she said.

    “A stone fell and cracked the table where we were, and we got out,” Pena recounted. “The impact was so strong, as if it had been a tsunami or an earthquake.”

    Dozens of family members flocked to hospitals for news.

    “We are desperate,” Regina del Rosa, whose sister was at the concert, told SIN. “They are not giving us news, they are not telling us anything.”

    Helicopter images revealed a large hole where the club’s roof once was. A crane was helping lift some of the heavier rubble as men in hard hats dug through the debris.

    Authorities have issued a call for Dominicans to donate blood.

    The Instagram page of the Jet Set club said it has been in operation for more than 50 years, with shows every Monday until the early hours.

    Its last post before Monday’s event invited fans to come and “enjoy his (Perez’s) greatest hits and dance in the country’s best nightclub.”

    On Tuesday, the club issued a statement saying it was working “fully and transparently” with authorities.

    The Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti, received over 11 million visitors in 2024, according to the tourism ministry.

    Tourism generates about 15 percent of GDP, with visitors attracted by its music and nightlife, Caribbean beaches, as well as the colonial architecture of the capital Santo Domingo.

  • Danish couple leaves 158 barrels of human poop at their eco-retreat

    Danish couple leaves 158 barrels of human poop at their eco-retreat

    A Danish couple has ran off to Guatemala after their Swedish eco-retreat became the focus of a tax investigation by authorities. 

    Chefs Flemming Hensen and Mette Helbaek abandoned their south Sweden eco-retreat named Stedsans, leaving 158 barrels of human waste at their hotel which is now seeping into a nearby forest. 

    Staff at the retreat have told media that several ducks died after the couple left them outside in the night while other animals were also abandoned.

    The couple operated a successful restaurant in Copenhagen before claiming to have felt “the call of the wild”, leading to the establishment of their hotel in Halland, Sweden. 

    They opened Stedsans, spreading over 16 wooden cabins, in 2016 to much fanfare. By then the two already owed millions of kroner to Danish government in taxes. 

    The couple have now established a retreat in Guatemala. 

    On their website, they wrote: “When you read this we have probably been declared bankrupt by the Swedish tax authorities. All we ever wanted was to be a part of creating a more beautiful planet.” 

    Swedish officials are less flattering. Daniel Helsing, who leads the county’s construction and environment department, said, “Voila. Over 150 barrels of human shit.”