Apple users at risk, government issues ‘severe’ warning; check details

Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) issued the advisory on its official platform, flagging the issue as ‘highly severe’.
Weather update: IMD issues red alert for heavy rain in these states for next 2 days, check details

A deep depression over northeast Madhya Pradesh and a low-pressure area over West Rajasthan are expected to trigger significant rainfall across multiple states, including Bihar, Jharkhand, and Uttar Pradesh, according to the IMD.
Wayanad landslides: Search operation enters Day 6, death toll crosses 350, over 200 still missing

By Saturday night, authorities had confirmed 357 deaths. The search operations were halted overnight but resumed at first light on Sunday
Seven people killed after Delhi-bound bus collides with car on Lucknow-Agra Expressway

Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP), Sanjay Kumar Verma, said that the incident occurred at around 12: 30 am on Sunday when a double-decker bus travelling from Raibareli to Delhi collided with a car.
Himachal Pradesh Rains: Search, rescue ops underway in flood-affected Samej village after cloudburst in Shimla

Himachal Pradesh minister Vikramaditya Singh on Saturday said that around 50 people are feared dead in the affected areas and the official number can only be declared after official confirmation and completion of rescue operations.
What is fuelling protests and a violent crackdown in Nigeria?

Demonstrators killed by police and millions put under curfew. In Nigeria, people have been shot dead by police and hundreds arrested for protesting against the government’s economic policies. President Bola Tinubu says the reforms are vital. Critics say they are too extreme. So why are people so angry? And could the unrest spread? Presenter: Mohammed Jamjoom Guests: Isa Sanusi – Director of Amnesty International Nigeria Ayisha Osori – Director of Open Society Foundations Ideas and Fellowship Collaborative Kabir Adamu – Managing director of Beacon Security and Intelligence, a consultancy in Abuja Mohammed Idris – Minister of information and national orientation in Nigeria Adblock test (Why?)
US candidate Jill Stein considering vocal Palestine advocates for VP spot

United States Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein is considering three Palestinian rights advocates, including two Arab Americans, to be her running mate in the elections, her campaign has confirmed. The vice president announcement will be made during a livestream rally on Thursday, the Stein campaign told Al Jazeera. The candidates are Abed Ayoub, executive director at the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC); Amer Zahr, a Palestinian American activist; and Jacqueline Luqman, a journalist and activist. All three have been vocal critics of Israel and the US’s unflinching support for the war on Gaza. Stein, a physician and activist, herself is a longtime supporter of Palestinian rights. Having one of the three on the ballot could boost Stein’s chances of tapping into the mass of disaffected voters who have grown angry with the mainstream Democratic Party’s stance on Israel. While Stein’s campaign is a long-shot bid, with US politics dominated by the Republican and Democrat parties, if she wins a significant share of the votes, her campaign may affect the result of the election. Moreover, Stein’s supporters say they hope that her candidacy could broaden the conversation around Gaza and amplify voters’ concerns with US policy. With a Palestine advocate on the ticket, Stein’s candidacy could also force Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic nominee, to further contend with the growing frustration with President Joe Biden’s unconditional backing of Israel. Even with a small percentage of the votes, Stein’s campaign could make a major impression on the election in places like the swing state of Michigan – home to large Arab- and Muslim-American communities. Both Ayoub and Zahr are from Michigan. ‘Honoured’ Luqman, Zahr and Ayoub all confirmed to Al Jazeera that they were approached by the campaign and said they were “honoured” to be considered for the position. Ayoub said it is “important” that Stein is considering Palestinian rights advocates to be her running mate. “This is a critical time. This is a time where the genocide is in front of everybody’s eyes. There’s no hiding from it. And it’s a time where most of the world and many Americans see how complicit and active both parties are in the genocide.” Zahr also said selecting a vocal supporter of Palestinian rights as Stein’s running mate was a “smart choice” by the campaign. “It’s clear that the genocide in Gaza has dominated the entire presidential campaign,” Zahr told Al Jazeera. While Biden dropped out after growing concerns over his age following a disastrous debate performance in May, Zahr said the Democratic president’s coalition “was falling apart” because of the war on Gaza. Luqman said opposing the war on Gaza should not be a campaign issue, but a human issue. “There’s no such thing as lesser evil. Evil is evil, and genocide is evil,” she told Al Jazeera. The US-backed Israeli offensive in Gaza has killed at least 39,550 people, levelled large parts of the territory and brought its more than two million inhabitants to the verge of starvation. Gaza and the elections While foreign policy is not usually a major factor in US elections, the war on Gaza has increasingly become a decisive issue in the presidential race. Arabs, Muslims, young people and progressives have expressed anger at Biden’s support for the war. And while it remains unclear how the issue will play out following the US president’s withdrawal from the race and endorsement of Harris, some communities have shown willingness to break with Democrats over Gaza. Predominantly Arab neighbourhoods in places like the Detroit suburb of Dearborn voted overwhelmingly for Biden against former President Donald Trump in 2020, helping him win Michigan. But with the war in Gaza, support for Biden dropped sharply in Arab-American communities, according to public opinion polls. The US administration has signed off on at least $14bn in additional military aid to Israel and vetoed three United Nations Security Council proposals that would have called for a ceasefire in Gaza. The White House has said that Harris has been a “full partner” in shaping Gaza policy. Still, the vice president has expressed greater empathy for Palestinian suffering while still pledging “unwavering commitment” to Israel. Harris, who is set to become the Democratic candidate to take on Trump in November after securing enough delegates to win the nomination, has not selected a running mate. But Palestinian rights advocates are pushing against a rumoured frontrunner for the position – Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, who earlier this year compared Gaza solidarity protesters on college campuses to the Ku Klux Klan. In 2021, Shapiro – as Pennsylvania’s attorney general – also backed sanctions against Ben & Jerry’s after the ice cream company decided to stop doing business in the Israeli-occupied West Bank over ethical concerns. Opposition to Shapiro grew this week after The Philadelphia Inquirer unearthed a 1993 college newspaper op-ed, in which Shapiro played down the prospect of solving the conflict after White House talks between then-Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. “Palestinians will not coexist peacefully,” Shapiro wrote in the article. “They do not have the capabilities to establish their own homeland and make it successful even with the aid of Israel and the United States. They are too battle-minded to be able to establish a peaceful homeland of their own.” Why run? As Democrats rally around Harris, they have portrayed Trump as an existential threat to US democracy. Democratic officials have also accused Stein of helping the former president by taking progressive votes despite not having a realistic chance of winning. Stein ran for president in 2012, 2016 and 2020 but never mounted a competitive campaign. Luqman, Ayoub and Zahr all said Stein’s bid was about giving the voters a choice and challenging the monopoly of the two major parties on US politics. “We don’t engage in the franchise of voting … only to vote for candidates who are guaranteed to win,” Luqman told Al Jazeera. “We are supposed to exercise that right however we choose. And if the two major parties offered nothing
Ledecky seals GOAT status, USA break world record in Olympic swimming pool

Already rated one of swimming’s all-time greats coming into the Paris Olympics, Katie Ledecky made it official by storming to victory in her signature event, the 800-metre freestyle, to end her work in the French capital in great style. French torpedo Leon Marchand may be the prince of Paris, electrifying the home nation with four spectacular gold medals, but it is Ledecky writing her name in the record books after she claimed her ninth gold, equalling Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina for the most by any woman in any Olympic sport. In sharp contrast to Ledecky’s runaway win in the 1,500-metre, the 800-metre freestyle on Saturday was a thriller from start to finish, with Ariarne Titmus matching her stroke-for-stroke for almost the entire distance. But with the American setting a relentless, grinding pace, her great Australian rival would never get her nose in front, settling for silver as Ledecky got to the wall first in a time of 8 minutes, 11.04 seconds. Paige Madden took bronze for the United States. It is the fourth time Ledecky has won the 800-metre freestyle and she joins compatriot Michael Phelps as the only swimmer to win gold in four different Olympics. The 800-metre was the final event on Ledecky’s Paris card and she returns home having added two golds, a silver and a bronze, bringing her Olympic stockpile to 14 medals in all – with more possible. The 27-year-old has hinted that a home Olympics in Los Angeles in four years is on her mind. Katie Ledecky had plenty of support in the stands [Manan Vatsyayana/AFP] And in a passing of the baton moment, Canada’s Summer McIntosh enhanced her status as the rising star of women’s swimming by winning her third gold medal of the games in the 200-metre individual medley. The 17-year-old produced a brilliant late surge to win in a time of 2min 06.56sec, the third-fastest time in history. Kate Douglass of the USA finished second to take silver while Australian Kaylee McKeown took the bronze after American Alex Walsh, who had finished third, was disqualified. McIntosh had already claimed gold in the 400-metre individual medley and the 200-metre butterfly, as well as a silver in the 400-metre freestyle. “It’s pretty surreal. I’m just so proud of myself, how I’ve been able to recover and manage the events because it is a lot,” said the teenager, who also won silver in the 400-metre freestyle during what has been an intense games for her. “The reason I’m able to do this just because of all the hard work and dedication I’ve given to this moment along with all my family and my teammates and my coaches, and I’ve also worked so hard for me to be here today,” she said. The Canadian said she knew that she had to pull out all the stops to secure her latest win. Canada’s Summer Mcintosh celebrates her second gold medal of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games [Manan Vatsyayana/AFP] Earlier, Hungarian powerhouse Kristof Milak stormed to a second Olympic gold with victory in a thrilling men’s 100-metre butterfly final, while adding to the silver medal he won in the 200-metre event at the Paris Games. Three years after claiming the 200-metre gold at Tokyo, the 24-year-old secured the shorter of the two Olympic butterfly titles by touching the wall in 49.90, 0.09 seconds ahead of Canadian runner-up Josh Liendo. Ilya Kharun grabbed a second bronze for Canada, having also taken one in the 200-metre butterfly in Paris. Now boasting four Olympic medals, Milak gave Hungary a second gold in the Paris meet following Hubert Kos’s 200-metre backstroke title. Hungary’s Kristof Milak celebrates during the podium ceremony of the men’s 100-metre butterfly event [Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP] In the final race of the night in the pool, the United States broke the world record in winning the 4×100-metre mixed medley relay gold, outgunning China and Australia. Their team of Ryan Murphy, Nic Fink, Gretchen Walsh and Torri Huske touched in 3min 37.43sec to narrowly better the mark set by Britain at the Tokyo Games, when the event was first added to the Olympic programme. China’s Zhang Yufei took silver in 3:37.55, with Australia filling the podium in 3:38.76. It is only the second world record in the pool in Paris after China’s Pan Zhanle smashed the men’s 100-metre freestyle best. Teams in the mixed medley comprise two women and two men, with each of the four swimmers allocated to one of the four traditional medley strokes – backstroke, breaststroke, butterfly and freestyle. The United States chose to lead off with Murphy up against China’s Xu Jiayu, while Australia opted for Kaylee McKeown. Both Fink and Walsh then swam storming legs before Huske brought it home with China’s Yang Junxuan and Australia’s Mollie O’Callaghan in hot pursuit. USA won the mixed 4×100-metre medley relay final ahead of China and Australia [Sebastian Bozon/AFP] Adblock test (Why?)
‘Tears rolled down its eyes’: Woman recalls how elephant guarded her, family from Wayanad landslides

A group of elephants provided comfort and protection to a family during Kerala’s devastating landslide and flooding.
Georgia activist steals the show after being introduced by Trump at Atlanta rally: ‘Incredible’

A Georgia activist stole the show after being introduced by former President Trump at his rally in Atlanta on Saturday. Trump invited the young woman, Michaelah Montgomery, up on stage towards the end of his speech at the Georgia State University Convocation Center. He introduced Montgomery by explaining that he met her at a restaurant this year. Trump said that Montgomery, who went to Clark Atlanta University, had recognized him in public and commended him for funding historically Black colleges and universities. “She looks at me, says ‘It’s President Trump. You saved my college.’ And I said, ‘How the hell do you know that?’ ….This one is so smart, so sharp,” Trump recalled. ALINA HABBA ACCUSES KAMALA HARRIS OF ‘COMMITTING A CRIME,’ COVERING UP BIDEN’S HEALTH “She grabbed me. She gave me a kiss,” he added. “I said, ‘I think I’m never going back home to the first lady.’” “You were supposed to keep that quiet,” Montgomery laughed. The former president commended Montgomery, described her as “incredible” with a “tremendous future,” and told her he would do “whatever I can to help you,” before giving her the podium. “I do want to add on to some of the remarks that were made by others,” the conservative activist began. “And we do need to do our best to get the message out there. The fight is nothing if all we do is talk about it amongst ourselves.” Montgomery added that she was a founder of an organization called Conserve the Culture, which helps “mobilize the HBCU students so that they may get this [conservative] message.” THE ‘WEIRD’ CAMPAIGN: THE STUNNING DIFFERENCE BETWEEN HARRIS AND VANCE COVERAGE “Nobody needs this message more than my folks, so do y’all care for real?” Montgomery said to the cheering audience. “Are y’all with us for real?” “Imma give it back to Big T,” she concluded. The rally took place days after Trump was criticized by the White House for statements he made at the recent National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) convention about Vice President Kamala Harris’ racial identity. “She was always of Indian heritage, and she was only promoting Indian heritage,” Trump said. “I didn’t know she was Black until a number of years ago when she happened to turn Black. And now she wants to be known as Black. So, I don’t know, is she Indian or is she Black?” On Wednesday, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Dr. Ben Carson praised Trump for “answering tough questions,” at the conference. “I commend my friend @realdonaldtrump for going into a hostile environment at @NABJ today and answering tough questions,” Carson said in a post on X. Fox News Digital reached out to the Trump campaign, but did not immediately hear back.