التصنيف: estaql

estaql

  • ChatGPT maker OpenAI agrees deal for ousted Sam Altman to return as chief executive | Science & Tech News

    ChatGPT maker OpenAI agrees deal for ousted Sam Altman to return as chief executive | Science & Tech News

    ChatGPT maker OpenAI agrees deal for ousted Sam Altman to return as chief executive | Science & Tech News

    ChatGPT maker OpenAI agrees deal for ousted Sam Altman to return as chief executive | Science & Tech News

    ChatGPT maker OpenAI says it has agreed a deal for Sam Altman to return as chief executive after he was ousted by its board.

    The agreement “in principle” involves a new board being installed, the company said.

    In a post on X, OpenAI said: “We have reached an agreement in principle for Sam Altman to return to OpenAI as CEO with a new initial board of Bret Taylor (Chair), Larry Summers, and Adam D’Angelo.

    “We are collaborating to figure out the details. Thank you so much for your patience through this.”

    It followed a threatened mutiny by OpenAI staff.

    The vast majority of them said they would quit and work for Microsoft if the board did not resign and if Mr Altman and his ally and company president Greg Brockman, who left in solidarity with Mr Altman, were not reinstated.

    The pair had been hired to work at Microsoft, OpenAI’s biggest investor, on a new artificial intelligence (AI) research project.

    This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly.

    Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

    You can receive Breaking News alerts on a smartphone or tablet via the Sky News App. You can also follow @SkyNews on X or subscribe to our YouTube channel to keep up with the latest news.

    المصدر

    أخبار

    ChatGPT maker OpenAI agrees deal for ousted Sam Altman to return as chief executive | Science & Tech News

  • For Joe Biden, the Israel-Hamas hostage deal is personal | US News

    For Joe Biden, the Israel-Hamas hostage deal is personal | US News

    For Joe Biden, the Israel-Hamas hostage deal is personal | US News

    For Joe Biden, the Israel-Hamas hostage deal is personal | US News

    For the president, it was personal.

    That was certainly the tone struck in a late night statement on the hostage deal from the White House.

    “Jill and I have been keeping all those held hostage and their loved ones close to our hearts these many weeks, and I am extraordinarily gratified that some of these brave souls, who have endured weeks of captivity and an unspeakable ordeal, will be reunited with their families once this deal is fully implemented.”

    He had felt it.

    Follow latest: Deal agreed but Israel says war will continue to ‘complete the elimination of Hamas’

    US officials describe what they call a “gut-wrenching” zoom call between President Biden and relatives of hostages in the week after they were taken. Thereafter, he took a central role in the delicate process towards securing their release.

    After the Qataris approached the United States and Israel to work towards hostage release, a “cell” was set up to work towards contacting and dealing with Hamas. According to a senior US administration official, Joe Biden was “directly and personally” engaged in the process.

    In the wake of the hostage deal, assuming all goes according to plan, he shares credit for a significant breakthrough – one that has delivered a pause in hostilities, a substantial increase in humanitarian aid and freedom for 50 hostages.

    They may not be the last.

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player


    1:52

    ‘We will not relent until hostages released’

    Read more: Vote a major step in right direction, but it remains a fragile situation

    US officials talk about getting all the hostages out, beyond the initial number, saying that a deal that offers extra days of pause in exchange for more hostages is a deal structured to “incentivise the release of everybody”.

    “Today’s deal should bring home additional American hostages,” Biden said in his statement. “And I will not stop until they are all released.”

    Read more:
    Premature babies evacuated from Gaza arrive in Egypt
    Gaza on verge of major disease outbreak, WHO warns

    The US president’s stewardship throughout this war has been called into question and those questions won’t necessarily disappear. He has been criticised for America’s position more sharply as this conflict has continued through unrelenting horror.

    As his administration stood with Israel, so the divergence between the two embarrassed the US president.
    Requests he made – on military restraint, humanitarian aid and pauses in hostilities – weren’t honoured as he wished. So, for all his input with a view to shaping the course of conflict, events have exposed limitations in his influence.

    But securing the freedom of hostages is unquestionably a success. Events that could, and should, unfold in the coming days go some way to endorsing the way he’s played his hand.

    المصدر

    أخبار

    For Joe Biden, the Israel-Hamas hostage deal is personal | US News

  • Pakistan’s Imran Khan trial in jail declared illegal, lawyer says | Imran Khan News

    Pakistan’s Imran Khan trial in jail declared illegal, lawyer says | Imran Khan News

    Pakistan’s Imran Khan trial in jail declared illegal, lawyer says | Imran Khan News

    Former prime minister was indicted for allegedly revealing official secrets after his 2022 ouster from office.

    The trial in jail of Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan has been declared illegal by a court, his lawyer has said.

    On Tuesday, lawyer Naeem Panjutha posted on social media that a court in Islamabad ruled against an in-jail trial for Khan, indicted last month on charges of revealing state secrets after he was ousted from office in 2022.

    “Islamabad High Court has declared illegal the notification for jail trial,” Panjutha said in a post on X.

    The impact of that declaration regarding Khan’s trial is not yet clear, but is expected to be clarified by a court order.

    The trial against Khan, accused of publicising a classified diplomatic cable, has become a flashpoint in Pakistani politics, where the former leader remains popular and has characterised the charges against him as an effort by powerful interests to keep him out of office.

    The 70-year-old former cricket star was expelled from office by a no-confidence vote in parliament in April 2022, an effort Khan accused of being pushed along by the United States.

    Relations between Washington and Khan had become strained by issues such as the war in Ukraine, but the US has denied any involvement in his removal from office.

    In October, Khan was indicted on security charges that accused him of leaking a diplomatic cable between Washington and Islamabad that Khan says offers proof of collusion against him.

    Since his ouster last year, Khan has faced a slew of legal challenges, with the charges against him ranging from contempt of court to “terrorism” and blasphemy.

    المصدر

    أخبار

    Pakistan’s Imran Khan trial in jail declared illegal, lawyer says | Imran Khan News

  • Guinea to investigate former president Conde for alleged treason | Military News

    Guinea to investigate former president Conde for alleged treason | Military News

    Guinea to investigate former president Conde for alleged treason | Military News

    The probe puts more legal pressure on Alpha Conde, already facing allegations of corruption, assassination and torture.

    Guinean Justice Minister Alphonse Charles Wright has announced an investigation into its ex-President Alpha Conde for treason, two years after he was removed from power in a military coup.

    Conde, Guinea’s first democratically elected leader, was removed from office in September 2021 by an elite army unit led by Colonel Mamady Doumbouya. The coup came after he sought to extend his decade-long tenure with a third term in office and violently suppressed protests against the election bid.

    Guinea’s military leaders have since launched a litany of judicial probes into Conde, including for alleged corruption, assassination, torture, kidnapping and rape.

    The latest probe, ordered on Monday, will look into “alleged acts of treason, criminal conspiracy and complicity in the illicit possession of arms and ammunition”, according to a letter from Wright to the public prosecutor in Guinea’s capital of Conakry.

    The letter alleges Conde, who now lives in exile in Turkey, had acquired weapons and ammunition, without providing details.

    Guinea is one of several West and Central African states to have undergone a coup in recent years. Gabon, Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger have all seen at least one coup each since 2020.

    Guinea’s military leaders have vowed to transition the country back to civilian rule by 2026.

    Another ex-president charged

    Earlier this month, a drama played out for another Guinean ex-president in legal turmoil, Moussa Dadis Camara, as he was briefly freed from prison in a jailbreak.

    Camara was recaptured on November 4, hours after being busted out of the Central House prison in Conakry by an armed commando, according to his lawyer. His lawyer, Pepe Antoine Lamah, said the jailed ex-president had not willingly participated in the breakout and instead was kidnapped by armed men.

    However, a judicial source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the masked and armed soldiers who arrived at the prison declared they “had come to free Captain Dadis Camara”. It was unclear whether Camara had escaped of his own free will.

    Camara – a former army officer who himself came to power in a coup, leading the country from December 2008 to January 2010 – has been detained since September 2022 on charges of murder, sexual violence, torture, abduction and kidnapping.

    They stem from a 2009 attack carried out by security forces loyal to the then-military government leader.

    The killing of 156 people and the rape of at least 109 women started at a political rally in a Conakry stadium on September 28, 2009, and continued in the days that followed, according to a UN-mandated inquiry. Camara and ten other co-defendants face life imprisonment if convicted.

    المصدر

    أخبار

    Guinea to investigate former president Conde for alleged treason | Military News

  • Despite risks, hundreds of women return to wartime Ukraine to give birth | Russia-Ukraine war

    Despite risks, hundreds of women return to wartime Ukraine to give birth | Russia-Ukraine war

    Despite risks, hundreds of women return to wartime Ukraine to give birth | Russia-Ukraine war

    Tamara Zaiva, a 35-year-old veterinarian, fled Ukraine when Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022.

    She travelled with her five-year-old son and settled in Poland, where her husband worked.

    But 18 months later, and 22 weeks pregnant, Zaiva travelled back to Odesa despite the risks so that she could give birth in her homeland.

    “Because her new life depended on it,” said Zaiva, clutching her newborn girl, who stirred momentarily before dozing off again on her shoulder.

    Due to a misunderstanding caused by language barriers, she thought her daughter had Down’s syndrome, and feared that she would be unable to afford expensive testing.

    “I really wanted to go home to see my doctor,” she said.

    Her baby was born five months ago at a hospital in Ukraine’s southwest, weighing 3.3kg at 40 weeks.

    Zaiva said she decided to return to her war-torn country from the Polish port city Gdynia because she did not have help in navigating a health system that felt foreign to her.

    Her son recently started school in Ukraine. Nevertheless, Zaiva keeps the children’s passports close to hand, in case they need to flee again.

    Anna, 30, a teacher from Kyiv, also travelled back from Poland to give birth.

    She had fled the war in the early days of her pregnancy “because I understood that it’s not safe in Ukraine”.

    But she found patient waiting times in Poland were long and said the level of care was insufficient.

    “It was very difficult,” she said.

    She is due in January.

    “If the (safety) situation changes, I will think about going abroad with the newborn.”

    The two women are among hundreds who have returned to wartime Ukraine while pregnant, citing shortcomings in maternity care in host countries, according to local NGOs and research by the New York-headquartered Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR).

    “Because of the barriers that women face in these countries, it’s often easier for them to go back to Ukraine,” Leah Hoctor, CRR’s European leader, told Al Jazeera.

    Some reasons are specific to refugees, such as language barriers and information shortfalls, while others are structural, including a lack of resources or funds.

    “Many of the interviewees pointed out that the standard of care was much lower (than in Ukraine),” said Hoctor.

    In all four countries CRR studied – Hungary, Romania, Slovakia and Poland – NGOs have stepped up to help women.

    “It’s really easy to get lost in this system, refugees are expected to know their way without orientation,” said Anna Ivanyi, from Emma, a women’s association in Hungary.

    Emma volunteers accompany women to their appointments, sometimes to protect Ukrainians from “the hostility” of institutions.

    Even though healthcare for refugees is state-funded, some doctors demand payment or refuse to treat Ukrainians, said Carmen Radu, advocacy officer at the Romanian Independent Midwives Association.

    She estimated that hundreds of Ukrainian women have left Romania to return, since Russia’s war began.

    According to Malgorzata Kolaczek, vice-president of Foundation Towards Dialogue, a Polish NGO working with Roma refugees from Ukraine, hundreds of pregnant women have also left Poland.

    Across Europe, members of Roma communities are heavily persecuted. When Russia’s war began, Roma refugees from Ukraine recounted episodes of discrimination during their perilous journeys to safety.

    “I don’t think that Poland wants to encourage them to stay here to be honest,” said Kolaczek.

    “Compared to some (of these) countries, we have a well-developed system of gynaecologists and family doctors,” said Galina Maistruk, a gynaecologist who heads the Women Health and Family Planning (WHFP), the Ukrainian partner of the International Planned Parenthood foundation.

    “Even during the war, this system didn’t crash,” she said.

    The Kyiv-based organisation has provided medical equipment to maternity clinics around the country, including three hospitals in Mariupol, a city now occupied by Russia.

    In March 2022, Russia bombed a maternity ward in Mariupol, killing at least three people.

    Doctors at Kyiv’s Maternity Hospital No. 1 are busy preparing for winter.

    Last year, doctors and nurses lived at the hospital for 40 days, melting snow for water during blackouts, said Oleksandra Lysenko, vice director of the hospital.

    “Still, everything was clean,” she said.

    Now, the hospital has its own water resources, two power generators and a fully-equipped bomb shelter.

    But there is no cure for anxiety.

    Lysenko, wearing a lab coat decorated with blue and pink birds, joked that she treats her insomnia with a sip of beer each night.

    “Ukrainians are in great psychological shock,” said WHFP’s Maistruk. “And doctors say that there are a lot of complications.”

    According to several studies, miscarriages and pregnancy complications rise during conflict.

    “We have seen an increase in the number of premature births and complicated pregnancies,” said Liudmila Ivanova, a gynaecologist in central Ukraine.

    About 40 percent of her patients left at the start of the war, but many still consult her by phone. Once, she took part in a birth, at a Dutch hospital, via Zoom.

    According to her, all women experience gynaecological issues due to the stress of war.

    المصدر

    أخبار

    Despite risks, hundreds of women return to wartime Ukraine to give birth | Russia-Ukraine war