Doc Rivers defends Bucks' handling of Giannis Antetokounmpo's injury

A day after the National Basketball Players Association criticized the Milwaukee Bucks for their handling of superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo and his injury status, coach Doc Rivers on Wednesday defended his organization and the decision to not play his star.

Field Level Media

"He's progressing," Rivers told reporters Wednesday. "He's just not healthy."

Reports surfaced last week that Antetokounmpo, a 10-time All-Star and two-time league MVP, requested to play but the club refused. On Tuesday, the NBPA released a statement calling the Bucks out for tanking.

"The Player Participation Policy was designed by the league to hold teams accountable and ensure that when an All-Star like Giannis Antetokounmpo is healthy and ready to play, he is on the court," the union said in its statement. "Unfortunately, anti-tanking policies are only as effective as their enforcement; fans, broadcast partners, and the integrity of the game itself will continue to suffer as long as ownership goes unchecked. We look forward to collaborating with the NBA on meaningful new proposals that will directly address and discourage tanking."

The Bucks are 29-43 and nine games out of the final play-in spot in the Eastern Conference with 10 games remaining following Wednesday's 130-99 blowout at the hands of the Trail Blazers in Portland.

"We're just trying to get Giannis clear and healthy," Rivers said before the game. "That's our only focus. All the other stuff, we stay above."

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Antetokounmpo has endured an injury-plagued season that has caused him to miss a career-high 36 games. The team, which had rebuffed trade offers for its superstar, has argued that it's best for Antetokounmpo's future as well as for the organization that he cut short the season, per the reports.

Antetokounmpo missed 15 games due to a calf strain before returning on March 2, then sat out another two games when the team went 2-4 with him and 0-2 without him. A left ankle sprain was cited as the cause of his absence from the 122-99 loss to the Atlanta Hawks on March 14.

He exited during the third quarter after landing awkwardly on a dunk during a home victory over the Indiana Pacers on March 15. Then he missed a home loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers on March 17 and road games against the Utah Jazz on Thursday (loss), against the Phoenix Suns on Saturday (win) and the Los Angeles Clippers on Monday (loss).

He is averaging 27.6 points, 9.8 rebounds and 5.4 assists in 36 games and already is set to play the fewest games of his 13 seasons with the Bucks. His previous low was 61 games during the shortened 2020-21 campaign.

Antetokounmpo has career averages of 24.1 points, 9.9 rebounds and 5.0 assists in 895 games (830 starts).

--Field Level Media

Doc Rivers defends Bucks' handling of Giannis Antetokounmpo's injury

A day after the National Basketball Players Association criticized the Milwaukee Bucks for their handling of superstar...
Jessica Alba Used This $28 Finishing Spray for Her Stunningly Bouncy Oscars Blowout

Jessica Alba'sred carpet hairalways hits that sweet spot between polished and touchable — and for theVanity Fair Oscars Party, it was all about soft, bouncy volume with movement. Celebrity hairstylistBrittney Ryancreated the look by sprayingInnersense Organic Beauty I Create Finish Finishing Sprayonto a paddle brush, then brushing through Alba's hair to sculpt that airy, lifted blowout without locking it into place.

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Jessica Alba Used This $28 Finishing Spray for Her Stunningly Bouncy Oscars Blowout

Jessica Alba'sred carpet hairalways hits that sweet spot between polished and touchable — and for theVanity Fair Osca...
Photos show China Fashion Week

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Associated Press Models wear creations by Xiong Ying - Heaven Gala during China Fashion Week (Spring) 2026 in Beijing, China, Friday, March 20, 2026. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian) Models wear creations by A model wears a creation by Shengze Silk during China Fashion Week (Spring) 2026 in Beijing, China, Tuesday, March 24, 2026. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian) A model wears a creation by Models wears a creation by Xiong Ying - Heaven Gala during China Fashion Week (Spring) 2026 in Beijing, China, Friday, March 20, 2026. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian) A model wears a creation by Models wear a creation by Maggie Ma during China Fashion Week (Spring) 2026 in Beijing, China, Wednesday, March 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian) Models wear creations by Xiong Ying - Heaven Gala during China Fashion Week (Spring) 2026 in Beijing, China, Friday, March 20, 2026. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian) A model wears a creation by Shengze Silk during China Fashion Week (Spring) 2026 in Beijing, China, Tuesday, March 24, 2026. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian) An assistant helps a model wearing a shoes at backstage as they preparing to showcase a creations by Xiong Ying - Heaven Gala during China Fashion Week 2026, in Beijing, China, Friday, March 20, 2026. (AP Photo/Andy Wong) Models wear creations by Xiong Ying take a souvenir photo as they wait at backstage for the Heaven Gala Show during China Fashion Week (Spring) 2026, in Beijing, China, Friday, March 20, 2026. (AP Photo/Andy Wong) A model wears a creation by Shengze Silk during China Fashion Week (Spring) 2026 in Beijing, China, Tuesday, March 24, 2026. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian) Models wear a creation by Suyun Liang during China Fashion Week (Spring) 2026 in Beijing, China, Wednesday, March 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian) A model wears a creation by

APTOPIX China Fashion Week

BEIJING, China (AP) — This photo gallery, curated by AP photo editors, features highlights from China Fashion Week.

Photos show China Fashion Week

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Something Very Bad Takes Way Too Long to Happen

Netflix allows users to change the playback speed of its videos. I hate this feature. Timing, pace, and duration are crucial parts of audiovisual storytelling; sure, youcanwatchGilmore Girlsat half speed, but you'll miss the rapid-fire dialogue that gives the show its bounce. Yet as I was watchingNetflix'snewhorror seriesSomething Very Bad Is Going to Happen, I had to fight the urge to toggle up the speed to 1.5x. By the third aimless episode, I felt more dread about having five more installments to go than I did about anything that was happening to the characters.

Time

Created by Haley Z. Boston (and, flaws aside, a big improvement on her broad Netflix horror noirBrand New Cherry Flavor),Somethingis notable for being executive producers theDuffer brothers'first new series in the decade sinceStranger Thingsdebuted. But don't be fooled by their involvement; this is not a family show. It is, rather, a showaboutfamily—and specificallymarriage. What makes two peoplesoulmates, if such a phenomenon even exists? How do parents or siblings or household lore about love influence ourromantic relationships? How can you really know, by the time you exchange vows, that you'vefoundyour person?These could have been rich ideas to explore through horror, if only the show didn't take so long to raise the questions and then hide its lack of insightful answers behind a dozen mostly predictable twists.An eerie wedding opens the premiere. As a beautiful, palpably anxious bride,Camila Morrone's Rachel, walks down the aisle to her adoring groom, Nicky (Adam DiMarco), the sound of labored breathing nearly drowns out the music. There are point-of-view shots filtered through the gauze of Rachel's veil. A montage of the couple's past flashes by. We note the slightest hint of hesitation. Ominous vibes aside, it's all pretty typical wedding stuff. Cut to a wolflike creature stalking darkened hallways, empty except for a wide stream of blood, to a chorus of screams.

Camila Morrone and Adam DiMarco in Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen —Netflix

This is a flash-forward. The story unfolds in the five days leading up to it; when you title your showSomething Very Bad Is Going to Happen(which, when you think about, could be the name of just about any story), there's no need to pretend that everything's going to go off without a hitch. Rachel and Nicky are driving to his family's rural vacation home, where they are planning to have a very low-key winter wedding. In an echo of DiMarco'sWhite Lotuscharacter, he's the sweet, coddled baby boy of the kind of rich clan who call their lush woodland compoundscabins. She is the opposite—a young woman with no family support and little backstory. Shrewd, guarded, and a smidge gothy, Rachel is our audience surrogate and Morrone's self-possessed performance the show's greatest asset. For her, the bad juju begins on the road, and not just because Nicky is trying to persuade her that they should have kids. ("I don't wanna be torn open," she protests.) A gory rest-stop bathroom tableau and a cavernous,David-Lynch-literoadhouse raise the possibility that she's seeing things that aren't really there.

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Nicky's family is weird, too. Matriarch Victoria (a thrillingly creepy Jennifer Jason Leigh) doesn't seem to be all there, saving her moments of coherence for morbid speeches about love. "Time is an unstoppable force, and it will do whatever it can to destroy you. And ultimately it will win," she reminds her kids and their partners. "Marriage is a powerful merging of souls. It's like being sewn together." When he isn't holed up doing taxidermy, her protective physician husband (Ted Levine) stalks around the cabin angrily. Their older son, Jules (Jeff Wilbusch), has struggled to recover from a traumatic childhood experience in the woods outside the cabin but is now married to a patient ex-girlfriend of Nicky's, Nell (Karla Crome), and father to a curious boy, Jude (Sawyer Fraser). Nick and Jules' sister Portia is a real trip, an alternately flighty and haughty mean girl played to devilishly effervescent perfection byDickinsonscene stealer Gus Birney.

From left: Karla Crome, Jeff Wilbusch, Gus Birney, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Ted Levine, Adam DiMarco, and Camila Morrone in Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen —Netflix

It's a promising cast of characters, one that riffs on stock horror types without repeating them and, in its portrait of a rich family, avoids defaulting to scarySuccession. (Netflix has already done that, well, withMike Flanagan'sThe Fall of the House of Usher.) With eight episodes' worth of time to fill, Boston could have really dug into the relationships between fiancés and spouses, parents and children, sisters and brothers, idealized romance and the reality of spending most of your life with a person. None of this would've necessarily contradicted the conventions of the genre. Instead, she gives us what might have been enough character development for a feature film and spends the bulk of the season—and especially those first three prefatory episodes—loading up on generically spooky atmospherics: jump scares, darkened corners, found-footage framing, heavy breathing and other unnerving sounds, sudden spurts of blood and abrupt bursts of violence. There's even some textbook kiddie nightmare fuel, in the form of a local frozen custard (not ice cream!) business founded by a psycho killer, whose logo is a swirl of white soft serve dipped in something revoltingly red. It's a stylish yawn.

The back half of the season is better overall. The ending isn't revelatory, in the sense that it doesn't quite completeSomething's thoughts on matrimony or family or inherited attitudes toward either, but it's clever and kind of exhilarating. Characters like Nell and Jules gain some depth. There are a few well-executed twists among the many that are easy to anticipate. But those developments create new problems, pulling our attention away from any mysteries we've managed to become invested in and discarding them as empty misdirection. There are still episodes, too, like one set at Rachel and Nicky's rehearsal dinner, whose substance could've been covered in a scene. A fine line separates suspense from boredom. Draw out a plot beat for too long or keep repeating an effect that was scary the first time, and you're bound to cross it.

Something Very Bad Takes Way Too Long to Happen

Netflix allows users to change the playback speed of its videos. I hate this feature. Timing, pace, and duration are cruc...
Southeast Asia revisits nuclear power plans for AI data centers as Iran war disrupts energy supplies

BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) — Nuclear power is getting a second look in Southeast Asia as countries prepare to meet surging energy demand as they vie for artificial intelligence-focuseddata centers.

Associated Press FILE -Construction workers walk to a data center building under construction in Sedenak Tech Park in Johor state of Malaysia, Sept. 27, 2024. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian, File) FILE -This aerial view, taken Jan. 19, 2025, shows the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant in the Philippines, which has never produced a single watt of energy. (AP Photo/Anton L. Delgado, File) FILE -US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, left, takes part in a memorandum of understanding signing with Malaysia's Minister of Foreign Affairs Mohamad Hasan during the 58th Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Foreign Ministers' meeting and related meetings at the Convention Centre in Kuala Lumpur, July 10, 2025. (Mandel Ngan/Pool Photo via AP, File) FILE -A data center building is seen under construction in Sedenak Tech Park in Johor state of Malaysia, Sept. 27, 2024. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian, File) FILE -Protesters hold a sign during a rally against the restart of the No. 6 reactor at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant, in front of Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings (TEPCO) headquarters in Tokyo, Jan. 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko, File)

Southeast Asia-Data Centers-Nuclear Power

Several Southeast Asian nations are reviving mothballed nuclear plans and setting ambitious targets and nearly half of the region could, if they pursue those goals, have nuclear energy in the 2030s. Even countries without current plans have signaled their interest.

Southeast Asia has never produced a single watt of nuclear energy, despite long-heldatomic ambitions. But that may soon change as pressure mounts to reduce emissions that contribute toclimate change, while meeting growing power needs.

TheIran waris underscoring thevulnerability of Asia's energy supplies, raising the sense of urgency about findingalternatives to oil and gasin Southeast Asia, analysts say.

Thesurge in crude oil pricescaused bythe escalating conflicthas raised the motivation for countries to speed up their nuclear efforts, said Alvie Asuncion-Astronomo of the Philippine Nuclear Research Institute.

Vietnam and Russiaadvanced a nuclear power deal this weekas the region's energy security concerns worsened. In South Asia, Bangladesh is racing to power up its new nuclear power plant, also backed by Russia, to address the country's energy shortfalls.

Southeast Asia will account for a quarter of growth in global energy demand by 2035, according to the International Energy Agency, or IEA. That partly is because of the more than 2,000 data centers in Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippines, according to the think tank Ember.

Many more data centers are in the pipeline.

That's most obvious in Malaysia, which aspires to be Southeast Asia's AI computing hub and has drawn investments and interest from tech giants likeMicrosoft,GoogleandNvidia.

The revival of Southeast Asia's nuclear interest mirrors a global trend.

Nearly 40 nations — including the United States, Japan, South Korea and China — have joined a global push to triple installed nuclear energy capacity by 2050. Southeast Asia will account for nearly a fourth of the 157 gigawatts expected from "newcomer nuclear nations" by mid-century, according to the industry-backed World Nuclear Association.

"There is a more serious, new and growing momentum for the development of nuclear energy in Southeast Asia," said King Lee, with the association.

Southeast Asia revisits nuclear power

Five of the 11 members of theAssociation of Southeast Asian Nations— Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippines — are chasing nuclear.

Vietnamis building two nuclear plants, backed by the Russian state corporationRosatom. These are "nationally significant, strategic projects," according to Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh. Vietnam's revised atomic energy law took effect in January.

Indonesia added nuclear to its new energy plan last year, aiming to build two small modular reactors by 2034. Officials there say Canada and Russia have issued formal cooperation proposals and others will soon follow.

Thailand set a target last year of adding 600 megawatts of nuclear generating capacity by 2037. Nuclear is a "promising solution" to supplying enough affordable, clean electricity to meet rising demand, officials with Thailand's Electricity Generating Authority told a conference in Bangkok.

No Southeast Asian nation has engaged with atomic energy more than the Philippines, which built a nuclear power plant in the 1970s that it never turned on.

A new atomic energy regulatory authority launched last year will "usher in the integration of nuclear power," according to Philippine officials. The country set a 2032 target and approved a roadmap for potential investors in February.

"We are not anticipating that nuclear electricity will be cheap at the onset," said Asuncion-Astronomo. But in the long term, she said it will improve the Philippines' energy reliability, security, independence and eventually costs.

"The ongoing conflict in the Middle East definitely demonstrates how volatile fossil fuel costs are and the instability of the supply," she said. "Nuclear is an alternative solution that can give us more self-reliance in terms of energy."

Southeast Asian nations without firm plans are also showing interest.

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Cambodia's latest national strategy signaled an openness to nuclear and Singapore outlined plans last year to study its own atomic potential.

Even the tiny oil and gas sultanate of Brunei told theInternational Atomic Energy Agency, or IAEA, that it is "carefully exploring nuclear energy."

Data centers revive Malaysia's nuclear plans

The AI-focused data centers contributing to Southeast Asia's growing energy demand are large windowless buildings filled with rows of computers.

A standard AI data center consumes as much electricity as 100,000 households, the IEA says.

Malaysia has more than 500 operational data centers. Another 300 or so are under construction and around 1,140 are planned, according to Ember.

Malaysia revived its nuclear program last year and set a 2031 target for bringing atomic energy online.

"A lot more industries are expanding in Malaysia," said Zayana Zaikariah, with the Kuala Lumpur-based Institute of Strategic & International Studies, listing growing interest in data centers, semiconductors and mining. "Everything requires energy."

The U.S. is helping.

Secretary of StateMarco Rubiosigned an agreement with Malaysia last year. He called it "a signal to the world of how civil nuclear cooperation is something that is available." President Donald Trump also sees nuclear as a way to meetdata center demands. In 2025, he ordered thequadrupling of U.S. nuclear powerwithin the next 25 years.

"There's more incentive to follow through compared to previous flirtations with nuclear energy," said Amalina Anuar, with the ISEAS-Yusof Institute, a Singapore-based think tank. The fact that Malaysia's oil and gas reserves are finite is driving a search for new energy sources.

Fossil fuels generate 81% of Malaysia's electricity, Ember found, while solar and wind provide just 2%.

"Malaysia's decarbonization is both urgent and critical as rising demand from AI and data centers is anticipated," said Dinita Setyawati with Ember. "But the nuclear option should be approached cautiously."

Nuclear power risks remain

Global nuclear capacity will more than triple — to about 1,446 gigawatts — by 2050 if existing reactors continue operations and governments meet their stated targets, according to the World Nuclear Association.

More than 400 nuclear reactors, in about 30 countries, generate around 380 gigawatts of energy, according to the IAEA's Power Reactor Information System. This is makes up between 4.5% to 10% of the world's energy, the IEA and nuclear association estimate.

Concerns over nuclear safety, waste and supply remain. Public resistance flared after the cataclysmic1986 Chernobyland2011 Fukushimanuclear meltdowns. But even Japan, which idled all its plants after that disaster, isrestarting its nuclear plants.

Bridget Woodman, with the research group Zero Carbon Analytics, said that as the world straysfarther off trackfrom itsclimate goals, nuclear can look deceptively more enticing than other less risky alternatives, like renewable energy.

Southeast Asian countries "considering starting a nuclear industry from scratch" need to consider "the possibility of accidents," she said.

Associated Press writerAniruddha Ghosalin Hanoi, Vietnam contributed to this report.

The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

Southeast Asia revisits nuclear power plans for AI data centers as Iran war disrupts energy supplies

BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) — Nuclear power is getting a second look in Southeast Asia as countries prepare to meet surging en...
China launches long-term care insurance system to alleviate aging challenges

BEIJING, March 26 (Reuters) - China has announced the rollout of a long-term care insurance system, a move aimed at easing the burden on families caring ‌for the rapidly growing elderly population, and bolstering the country's social safety net.

Reuters

The ‌plan, released by the China's state council on Wednesday, pledges to provide services or financial support for basic ​nursing and medical care for people with sustained disabilities lasting six months or more.

The official Xinhua news agency said the plan was an important component of China's social security system and key to "actively addressing population aging."

The announcement comes around three weeks after China's National People's Congress, ‌where authorities said they would refine ⁠supportive policies for seniors, including pension financing, wellness and care.

By 2035, the number of people aged over 60 in China is expected to ⁠reach 400 million - roughly equal to the combined populations of the United States and Italy - meaning hundreds of millions of people are set to leave the workforce at a time when ​pension budgets ​are already under strain.

Experts are warning of further ​declines in China's population, which fell ‌for a fourth consecutive year in 2025, as the birth rate dropped to a record low.

The long-term insurance framework sets a three-year target to build "a unified system covering the entire population."

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It follows pilot programs that began in 2016.

For disabled individuals, the program addresses a fundamental need and dramatically improves people's quality of life, officials said.

"Bathing, haircuts, eating, dressing changes — ‌these are no longer distant hopes for those ​confined to a sickbed, but rather bedside, accessible, attentive ​care," said Wang Wenjun, deputy head ​of the National Healthcare Security Administration during a press conference on Thursday.

Funding ‌will come from employers, individuals and government ​subsidies, with a total ​contribution rate of roughly 0.3%.

Residents in both rural and urban areas will draw from the same fund pool and receive the same benefits, Wang said.

China still ​faces wide discrepancies in care ‌and services between rural and urban areas and authorities have vowed to "markedly narrow" ​the rural-urban healthcare gap by 2035.

(Reporting by the Beijing newsroom and Farah Master ​in Hong Kong; Editing by Saad Sayeed)

China launches long-term care insurance system to alleviate aging challenges

BEIJING, March 26 (Reuters) - China has announced the rollout of a long-term care insurance system, a move aimed at easin...
Iran and the US harden their positions as Tehran keeps its grip on the Strait of Hormuz

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran and the United States hardened their positions as diplomacy aimed at reaching a ceasefire inthe war in the Middle Eastappeared to be faltering on Thursday. Tehran moved to formalize its control over the crucialStrait of Hormuzwhile Washington prepared for the arrival of U.S. combat forces in the region that could be used on the ground in the Islamic Republic.

Associated Press Pro-government supporters wave national flags as one of them holds a picture of the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei during a rally in a square in western Tehran, Iran, Wednesday, March 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi) Members of a family, who fled Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon, sit around a bonfire outside a tent used as a shelter in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, March 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) A woman who fled Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon sits outside a tent used as a shelter in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, March 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) An Israeli warplane flies over the city of Tyre, south Lebanon, Wednesday, March 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Iran war

Iran is instituting a "de facto 'toll booth' regime," industry experts say, with some ships paying in Chinese yuan to pass through the strait, where 20% of all traded oil and natural gas is transported in peacetime.

Meanwhile, a strike group anchored by the amphibious assault ship USS Tripoli drew closer to the Mideast with some 2,500 Marines. Also, at least 1,000 paratroopers from the82nd Airbornehave been ordered to the region.

The troop movements don't guarantee U.S. President Donald Trump will try to use force to compel Iran to open the strait and halt its attacks on Gulf Arab states.

Trump previously deployed a large force in the Caribbean before the American military captured former Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro in January. In the current situation, the U.S. is seen as focused on possibly seizing Iran's oil terminal at Kharg Island or other sites near the strait.

U.S. Navy Adm. Brad Cooper, who commands the American military in the region, said his forces have hit more than 10,000 targets since Israel and the U.S. started the war Feb. 28, destroying 92% of Iran's largest ships and more than two-thirds of the country's missile, drone and naval production facilities.

"We're not done yet," said Cooper, who heads the U.S. Central Command, in a video message. "We are on a path to completely eliminate Iran's wider military apparatus."

Iran seen as operating Strait of Hormuz as 'de facto toll booth'

With its stranglehold on traffic through theStrait of Hormuz,which leads from the Persian Gulf toward the open ocean, Iran has been blocking ships it perceives as linked to the U.S. and Israeli war effort, but letting through a trickle of others.

The Fars and Tasnim news agencies, both close to Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, quoted lawmaker Mohammadreza Rezaei Kouchi as saying that parliament was working to formalize the process of charging fees to let ships pass.

"We provide its security, and it is natural that ships and oil tankers should pay such fees," he was quoted as saying.

Lloyd's List Intelligence called it a "de facto 'toll booth' regime."

The shipping intelligence firm said vessels have to provide manifests, crew details and their destination to Iran's Guard for sanctions screening, cargo alignment checks that currently prioritizes oil over all other commodities, and for what is described as 'geopolitical vetting.'"

"While not all ships are paying a direct toll, at least two vessels have and the payment is settled in yuan," Lloyd's List said, referring to China's currency.

Iran's grip on the strait and relentless attacks on Gulf regional energy infrastructure has sent oil prices skyrocketing and concerns of a global energy crisis surging. Brent crude, the international standard, traded at US$104 early Thursday, up more than 40% from the day the war started.

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"To make it crystal clear, this war is a catastrophe for world's economies," German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius told reporters during a vist to Australia.

US maintains negotiations are ongoing but Iran says there are no talks

Using Pakistan as an intermediary,Washington has deliveredto Iran a15-point ceasefire proposal, which includes the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.

Trump, speaking at a fundraiser Wednesday night in Washington, insisted thatIran still wants to cut a deal.

"They are negotiating, by the way, and they want to make a deal so badly, but they're afraid to say it because they figure they'll be killed by their own people," Trump said.

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in an interview on state TV, however, that his government hasnot engaged in talksto end the war, "and we do not plan on any negotiations."

Araghchi said the U.S. had tried to send messages to Iran through other nations, "but that is not a conversation nor a negotiation."

Press TV, the English-language broadcaster on Iranian state television, said Iran has its own five-point proposal, which includes "sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz."

A wave of Israeli airstrikes hits as Iran fires on Gulf neighbors

Israel said it carried out a wave of attacks early on Thursday targeting Iranian infrastructure, and air defenses were heard in Tehran, while heavy strikes were also reported around Isfahan, a city some 330 kilometers (205 miles) south of the Iranian capital.

Ifahan is home to a major Iranian air base and other military sites, as well as one of the nuclear sites bombed by the U.S. during the 12-day war between Israel and Iran in June.

Sirens sounded very early on Thursday morning in parts of Tel Aviv and cities in central Israel. Rescue workers said two people were injured in a blast in Kfar Qasim.

Saudi Arabia's Defense Ministry said it intercepted multiple drones over its oil-rich Eastern Province, the United Arab Emirates' air defenses also worked to intercept incoming fire, and Bahrain reported extinguishing a blaze in a neighborhood that is home to the Bahrain International Airport.

Since the war began, more than 1,500 people have been killed in Iran, its Health Ministry says. Twenty people have been killed in Israel; two Israeli soldiers have also been killed in Lebanon. At least 13 U.S. military members have been killed. More than a dozen civilians in the occupied West Bank and Gulf Arab states have also died.

Nearly 1,100 people have died in Lebanon, authorities said. In Iraq, where Iranian-supported militant groups have entered the conflict, 80 members of the security forces have been killed.

Rising reported from Bangkok. Associated Press writers Rod McGuirk in Melbourne, Australia, and Giovanna Dell'Orto in Miami, Florida, contributed to this report.

Iran and the US harden their positions as Tehran keeps its grip on the Strait of Hormuz

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran and the United States hardened their positions as diplomacy aimed at reaching a c...

 

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