Taiwan opposition leader heads to China in what she calls a ‘journey for peace’

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Taiwan opposition leader Cheng Li-wun is heading to China on Tuesday at the invitation of President Xi Jinping, in what she call it a “journey for peace” as Beijing calls for the self-ruled island to come under its control.

Associated Press FILE - Cheng Li-wun, newly elected chairperson of Taiwan's main opposition Nationalist Party, or Kuomintang (KMT), cheers during a party congress in Taipei, Taiwan, on Nov. 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Chiang Ying-ying, File) Supporters hold slogans reading ''Support Cheng Li-wun'' before Taiwan's main opposition Nationalist Party, or Kuomintang (KMT) chairperson Cheng Li-wun leaves for China outside of Taipei Songshan Airport in Taipei, Taiwan, Tuesday, April 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Chiang Ying-ying) Protesters hold slogans before Taiwan's main opposition Nationalist Party, or Kuomintang (KMT) chairperson Cheng Li-wun leaves for China, outside Taipei Songshan Airport in Taipei, Taiwan, Tuesday, April 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Chiang Ying-ying) A protester delivers a speech as Taiwan's main opposition Nationalist Party, or Kuomintang (KMT) chairperson Cheng Li-wun leaves for China, outside of Taipei Songshan Airport in Taipei, Taiwan, Tuesday, April 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Chiang Ying-ying) Supporters shout slogans before Taiwan's main opposition Nationalist Party, or Kuomintang (KMT) chairperson Cheng Li-wun leaves for China outside of Taipei Songshan Airport in Taipei, Taiwan, Tuesday, April 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Chiang Ying-ying)

Taiwan China

The visit is the first by a Taiwanese opposition leader in a decade and comes ahead of a meeting in Beijing between Xi and U.S. President Donald Trump scheduled to take place in May.

Before leaving Taipei, the chairwoman of the Kuomintang told reporters that Taiwan must spare no effort to prevent war and seize any opportunity to promote peace.

China claims the self-ruled island as its own territory and has not ruled out the use of force to take it.

“The purpose of this visit to mainland China is precisely to show the world that it is not just Taiwan that unilaterally hopes for peace,” Cheng said.

“I believe that through this journey for peace, everyone is even more eager to see the sincerity and determination of the CPC Central Committee to use peaceful dialogue and exchange to resolve all possible differences between the two sides,” she added, referring to the initials of the Communist Party of China.

A few dozen supporters and detractors of Cheng showed up at Taipei’s airport, chanting and holding signs.

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The Trump administration in December announceda massive package of arms salesto Taiwan valued at more than $10 billion that includes medium-range missiles, howitzers and drones, angering Beijing.

Beijing prohibits all its diplomatic partners, including the U.S., from maintaining formal ties with Taipei. The U.S. is the island’s strongest informal backer and arms provider, and the arms sale is expected to be discussed at the Xi-Trump summit.

In a call in February between Xi and Trump, the Chinese leader said that “Taiwan will never be allowed to separate from China,” according to a Chinese government statement about the conversation released at the time. “The U.S. must handle the issue of arms sales to Taiwan with prudence,” it added.

Beijing also said that the “Taiwan question is the most important issue in China-US relations.”

China has been sending warplanes and naval vessels toward Taiwan on a near-daily basis, and its military recently staged two major military exercises around the island. The most recent exercise was in December, after the U.S. announcement of the arms sales, and involved the deployment of air, naval and missile units for ajoint live-fire drill.

The U.S. State Department said such activities “increase tensions unnecessarily” and called on Beijing to cease military pressure against Taiwan.

China does not engage with Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te, describing him as a separatist.

Cheng will be in China at a time when the opposition-controlled parliament has stalled attempts by Taiwan’s government to pass a$40 billion special defense budget.

Taiwan opposition leader heads to China in what she calls a ‘journey for peace’

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Taiwan opposition leader Cheng Li-wun is heading to China on Tuesday at the invitation of President Xi Jinping, i...
Iran live updates: Casualties reported from missile strikes in Israel

President Donald Trump announced "major combat operations" against Iran on Feb. 28, with massive joint U.S.-Israeli strikes attack targeting military and government sites, officials said.

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Watch special coverage onNightline, "War with Iran," each night on ABC and streaming on Disney+ and Hulu.

Latest Developments

Apr 6, 2:42 AMSaudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE report fresh attacks

Attacks on U.S.-aligned Gulf nations continued on Monday.The Abu Dhabi Media Office in the United Arab Emirates reported that one person was injured by falling debris at the "Raneen Systems company in ICAD in the Musaffah area, following a successful interception by air defence systems."The Saudi Defense Ministry said in a post to X that its air defenses intercepted at least two drones on Monday morning.The Kuwait Army General Staff Head Quarters said in a Monday morning post to X that its air defenses were "confronting hostile missile and drone attacks."

-/AFP via Getty Images - PHOTO: This photograph shows the impact of a fire caused by a drone attack on a building of the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation, in Kuwait City on April 5, 2026.

Apr 6, 1:52 AMCasualties reported from missile strikes in Israel

Israel's Magen David Adom emergency service said in a post to X on Monday that at least four people were hospitalized for smoke inhalation after a missile impacted in the northern Israeli city of Haifa.The MDA also reported an impact in Tel Aviv, where it said it was treating a man who suffered glass shrapnel injuries. A woman also suffered serious shrapnel injuries in Petah Tikva to the east of Tel Aviv, MDA said.

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Shir Torem/Reuters - PHOTO: Emergency personnel work at the site of a projectile impact in Haifa, Israel, on April 6, 2026.

Apr 5, 10:03 PMAirstrikes hit university in Tehran

The Sharif University of Technology has been hit by airstrikes, according to Iranian state media.The strikes reportedly hit a gas station near the university gas station, causing a "temporary gas outage" in the Sharif neighborhood.

Apr 5, 9:55 PMIranian government minister dismisses Trump threat: 'Unstable, delusional figure'

Sayed Reza Salihi-Amiri, Iran’s minister of cultural affairs and tourism, reportedly said in an interview with the Associated Press, "Trump is an unstable, delusional figure marked by a set of contradictions."The comments come as President Donald Trump said Sunday that if no peace deal is reached with Iran in the next 48 hours, "we're blowing up the entire country."On March 26, Trump extended an ultimatum a second time in the same week for Iran to completely open the Strait of Hormuz to international shipping traffic.Over the weekend, Trump warned the Iranian government that if it doesn't fully open the critical maritime passageway for oil and trade by Tuesday, "you'll be living in Hell."Salihi-Amiri reportedly told the AP of the Strait of Hormuz, "it is open to the world, but closed to Iran’s enemies."

Apr 5, 4:48 PMIran responds to Trump's threat of 'blowing up the whole country'

The Iranian government has responded to President Donald Trump's threat of "blowing up the whole country" if the regime fails to open up the Strait of Hormuz by Tuesday evening."Iran's reaction would be one of reciprocating any such attack," Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Ismail Baghaei said in a statement on Sunday afternoon. "Our armed forces have made it clear that in case Iran's infrastructure is attacked, we would react in kind."Baghaei said that if the United States carries out Trump's threat, Iranian forces would "target similar infrastructure that is owned or in any way or manner related to the United States or contributes to their act of aggression against Iran."Earlier Sunday, Trump told ABC News that if Iran doesn't strike a peace deal, including opening up the critical Strait of Hormuz, "we're blowing up the whole country."Also, in a post on his social media platform on Sunday, Trump said, "Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!!"The Iranian Mission to the United Nations also released a statement in reaction to Trump's statements, saying, the president "openly threatens to destroy infrastructure essential to civilian survival in Iran.""If the conscience of the United Nations were alive, it would not remain silent in the face of the overt and shameless threat by the war-mongering President of the United States to target civilian infrastructure. Trump seeks to drag the region into an endless war," the Iranian Mission to the United Nations said in a statement. "This is direct and public incitement to terrorize civilians and clear evidence of intent to commit war crimes."The Iranian Mission said the "international community and all States have obligations to prevent such atrocious acts of war crimes.""They must act now. Tomorrow is too late," the Iranian Mission's statement said.-ABC News' William Gretsky

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Iran live updates: Casualties reported from missile strikes in Israel

President Donald Trump announced "major combat operations" against Iran on Feb. 28, with massive joint U.S.-Israeli strikes a...
As Trump threatens Iran's infrastructure, a Tehran couple wonders how to prepare

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Zahra Arghavan and Mehdi Alishir stood on their balcony, watching the sun set over Tehran and bracing for thesound of airstrikes.

Associated Press Zahra Arghavan, left, and Mehdi Alishir check one of the windows at their home in Tehran, Iran, Sunday, April 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi) Zahra Arghavan works on her computer at home in Tehran, Iran, Sunday, April 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi) Mehdi Alishir looks at his laptop in his living room in Tehran, Iran, Sunday, April 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi) Zahra Arghavan, center, and Mehdi Alishir watch the news on TV in their living room in Tehran, Iran, Sunday, April 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi) Zahra Arghavan, right, and Mehdi Alishir look out over the city from the rooftop of their apartment in Tehran, Iran, Sunday, April 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)

Iran US One Couple's Fears

As time ticks down on U.S. President Donald Trump'slatest ultimatum, their thoughts were clouded by new fears: How long will the power be out if plants are bombed? How would they leave the city if the bridges are taken out?

Five weeks on, they have grown used to the roar of American and Israeli fighter jets, the sound of explosions and sleepless nights. Like many,they've left the capital and returnedin search of elusive safety. Married for over a decade, they made it through the COVID pandemic and the 12-day war last June.

They've used clear packing tape to lines the edges of their windows, a precaution against blasts. Mirrors and fragile objects have been moved or secured. A packed bag holds documents, medications and essentials, ready in case they need to leave quickly.

In an expletive-laden threat over the weekend, Trump vowed that “Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day,” and that Iran's leaders will be “living in Hell” if they don't open theStrait of Hormuz.

“Honestly, the situation is really unclear,” Arghavan said. “We don’t really understand things like how long the power might go out if it does, or what life without electricity would even look like.”

Alishir said he and his wife could handle life without power — and potentially without running water — for a week at most. “If it goes on longer, we’ll definitely run into problems,” he said.

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Their struggles began even before the first American and Israeli bombs slammed into Iran on Feb. 28.

The Iranian government's crackdown on nationwide protests in January severely limited internet access. The internet monitoring organization NetBlocks says it's the longest nationwide shutdown ever recorded.

Arghavan runs a small language school that teaches French to Iranians who want to live in the Canadian province of Quebec.

“We were basically an online school, and our students had classes with kids abroad,” she said. “Around 50% of our learners were outside the country. But now, with all these internet outages, it’s really disrupting our work.”

Iranians are divided over the war: Some take part in daily pro-government rallies; others quietly cheer the strikes against their leaders while condemning the deaths of civilians and damage to infrastructure.

The couple blames Israel and the U.S. for starting the war and hope for a diplomatic solution.

“I really hope an agreement is reached soon and that whatever happens, it ends up helping people, because right now people are the ones paying a heavy price,” Arghavan said.

As Trump threatens Iran's infrastructure, a Tehran couple wonders how to prepare

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Zahra Arghavan and Mehdi Alishir stood on their balcony, watching the sun set over Tehran and bracin...
Trump widens threat to all of Iran's power plants and bridges as his deadline for a deal approaches

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) —President Donald Trumpon Monday expanded his threat against Iran to include all power plants and bridges as his ultimatum to make a deal ticked closer, afterTehranrejected a 45-day ceasefire proposal and said it wants a permanent end tothe war.

Associated Press

“The entire country can be taken out in one night, and that night might be tomorrow night,” Trump said. He suggested that his Tuesday 8 p.m. ET deadline was final, saying he'd already given Iran enough extensions.

The U.S. has told Iran to open the crucialStrait of Hormuzto all shipping traffic or see power plants and bridges wiped out, sparking warnings aboutpossible war crimes.

Israel piled on pressure byattacking a major petrochemical plantand killing the intelligence chief for the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard.

Tehran with its rejection conveyed its own, 10-point plant to end the fighting through Pakistan, a key mediator, Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency said.

“We only accept an end of the war with guarantees that we won’t be attacked again,” Mojtaba Ferdousi Pour, head of Iran’s diplomatic mission in Cairo, told The Associated Press. He said Iran no longer trusts the Trump administration after theU.S. bombed the Islamic Republictwice during previous rounds of talks.

A regional official involved in talks said efforts had not collapsed. “We are still talking to both sides,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss closed-door diplomacy.

And even Trump said negotiations with Iran continued.

Trump says Iranians ‘willing to suffer’ for freedom

Trump has issued ultimatums to Iran before, only to find ways to back off. But he was more explicit this time on plans to follow through.

“Every bridge in Iran will be decimated by 12 o’clock tomorrow night,” he said, and all power plants will be “burning, exploding and never to be used again.”

Asked if he was concerned about accusations of war crimes, Trump responded, “No, not at all." He suggested that Iranians want the U.S. to carry out its threats because it could lead to the end of their current leadership.

Iranian citizensare “willing to suffer," he said, "in order to have freedom.” But there has been no sign of an uprising in Iran as residents shelter from bombardment.

International warnings piled up against expanded strikes. “Any attack on civilian infrastructure is a violation of international law and a very clear one,” United Nations spokesperson Stephane Dujarric later told journalists.

Egyptian, Pakistani and Turkish mediators had sent Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and U.S. Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff a proposal calling for the ceasefire and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, two Mideast officials told the AP. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private negotiations.

Iranian and Omani officials also were working on a mechanism for administrating the strait, through which a fifth of the world’s oil is shipped in peacetime. Iran’world economy.

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Tehran has refused to let U.S. and Israeli vessels through after they started the war on Feb. 28.

Iran's new supreme leader makes rare statement

Israel struck a key petrochemical plantin the South Pars natural gas field, saying it was aimed at eliminating a major source of revenue for Iran. The field, the world’s largest, is shared with Qatar and is Iran’s biggest source of domestic energy for its 93 million people.

The strike appeared to be separate from Trump’s threats. An earlier Israeli attack there in March prompted Iran to target energy infrastructure in other Middle East countries, a major escalation.

Israel also killed the head of intelligence for Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, Maj. Gen. Majid Khademi, according to Iranian state media. And Israel said it killed the leader of the Revolutionary Guard’s undercover unit in its expeditionary Quds Force, Asghar Bakeri.

“We will continue to hunt them down one by one,” Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said of top Iranian officials.

New Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, who still has not been seen or heard in public, issued a rare statement expressing condolences over Khademi. Israeli strikes have killed dozens of top Iranian leaders, including Khamenei’s father.

Israel’s military also said it struck three Tehran airports overnight — Bahram, Mehrabad and Azmayesh — hitting dozens of helicopters and aircraft it said belonged to the Iranian Air Force.

A Tehran resident said “constantly there is the sound of bombs, air defenses, drones,” speaking on condition of anonymity for her safety. Another detailed taking sleeping pills to get through nightly bombardments, and said people worry about power, gas and water cuts.

Airstrikes kill more than 25 across Iran

Smoke rose near Tehran’s Azadi Square after an airstrike hit the grounds of the Sharif University of Technology. Multiple countries have sanctioned the university for its work with the military, particularly on Iran’s ballistic missile program.

Authorities and Iranian state media reported at least 29 people killed across the country by strikes.

In Lebanon, where Israel has launched air attacks and a ground invasion that it says target the Iran-linked Hezbollah militia, an airstrike hit an apartment in Ain Saadeh, a predominately Christian town east of Beirut. It killed an official in the Lebanese Forces, a Christian political party strongly opposed to Hezbollah, his wife and another woman.

More than 1,900 people have been killed in Iran since the war began, but the government has not updated the toll for days.

More than 1,400 peoplehave been killedinLebanonand more than 1 million peoplehave been displaced. Eleven Israeli soldiers have died there.

In Gulf Arab states and the occupied West Bank, more than two dozen people have died, while 23 have been reported dead in Israel and 13 U.S.service membershave been killed.

Weissert reported from Washington, Magdy from Cairo and Gambrell from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Munir Ahmed in Islamabad, Isabel DeBre in Ain Saadeh, Lebanon, Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations, Amir-Hussein Radjy in Cairo and Josh Boak and Michelle L. Price in Washington contributed to this story.

Trump widens threat to all of Iran's power plants and bridges as his deadline for a deal approaches

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) —President Donald Trumpon Monday expanded his threat against Iran to include all power plants and bridges as his ulti...
Iran war's shock waves threaten England's farms 6,000 miles away

GREAT HORKESLEY, England — Few places feel farther from theIran warthan the potato fields of eastern England, where pastoral landscapes and ancient forests have inspired romantic painters and poets for centuries.

NBC Universal Rix Farm in Great Horkesley, England, on Thursday. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

But this bucolic scene is not immune from the shock waves triggered by the American-Israeli assault — and it’sa story being repeated across farms all over the world.

Though much attention has been devoted to the oil shock brought on by the conflict, there is another, perhaps equally alarming crisis emerging for the global population: a looming shortage of fertilizer, which couldtrigger widespread food shortages.

Jumping down from his bright-green, 400-horsepower tractor, Stuart Josselyn wastes no time giving his view on geopolitics while standing on the plowed earth.

“Trumpy,” he said, using a nickname for the American president delivered with the elongated vowels of an East Anglian accent, “he is causing real problems for real people throughout the whole world.”

Stuart Josselyn, a machine operator at Rix Farms. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

At 51, Josselyn is one of the farm’s top machine operators — whom his boss calls “fighter pilots” — but his chuckling manner and hoodie-sweatpants combo belie a serious message for the American president: “This is going to affect us for a long time, even if the war stops right now.”

A chorus of expert voices warned this could happen: Iran retaliating by blockading the Strait of Hormuz. This vital but narrow waterway shepherds through a fifth of the world’s crude oil and a third of its granular urea, a type of nitrogen fertilizer. Oil prices of more than $100 a barrel have been headline news for weeks. Less noticed is that future deliveries of Middle Eastern granular urea have spiraled from $484 per ton on Feb. 27 to $750 per ton as of Friday.

Already,global food commodity prices have climbed to their highest levels since December, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization said Friday. And if the conflict stretches beyond 40 days, then “farmers will have to choose” — plant less or switch to less fertilizer-intensive crops, the organization’s chief economist, Máximo Torero,said in a video Q&A. “Those choices will hit future yields and shape our food supply” this year and next, he said.

After Brexit, the coronavirus pandemic, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the relentless impact of the climate crisis, this is just the latest turbulence to batter the machinery of global trade. It is how one blockaded 20-mile stretch of water can create a cascade of consequences touching not just fuel and food, but medicine, electronics and the panoply of consumer goods.

For the United States and Europe, this threatens expensive groceries. For some parts of Africa, South America and Asia, it could mean acute shortages if the war lasts months rather than weeks.

Clockwise from top left: John Rix; machinery on Rix Farms; onion packaging at Stourgarden. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

The chaos is already creeping into the balance sheet of large businesses like P.G. Rix Farms, which employs around 40 people some 90 minutes’ drive east of London.

It grows mainly onions and potatoes, supplying industry giants such as McDonald’s and Tesco, Britain’s largest supermarket chain. It also plants sugar beets, cereals and willow trees, whose fibrous wood is used to make cricket bats.

NBC News visited the farm on an overcast morning this Thursday. It sits just outside Colchester, which claims to be the country’s oldest town and was the Romans’ first capital in Britain.

Today, the farm’s maze of tracks, rolling fields and water meadows are near a government-protected “Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.” It is the kind of scene that stirs something deep in a certain English imagination: a landscape out of John Constable, the 19th-century Romantic painter whose work came to embody the nation’s ideal vision of itself.

This is no mom-and-pop operation, rather an empire of alliums and tubers. Rix Farms made 1.2 million pounds ($1.6 million) after taxes last year, filings show, and is among the country’s largest 10% of farms.

The war has prompted an uncomfortable realization for its chairman, John Rix, an affable farmer and businessman in fleece and a checked shirt.

“You think, hang on a minute, this isn’t going to add up,” he said while giving an impromptu tour of his 6,500 acres in a muddy 4x4.

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Rix Farms chairman John Rix. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

“There does come a point where you have to go back to your customers and say, ‘Look —” he said. He trails off but the implication is clear: Prices will have to rise.

That means people doing their weekly grocery shopping will end up footing part of the bill, as they did afterRussia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. (U.K. food inflation topped out at 19.1% in March 2023, but is currently back down at 3.3%.)

“Suddenly you’ve got this horrible inflation figure,” he said, playing out the consequences of this upheaval. “The economic cost across the globe is already fantastic, absolutely fantastic.”

Rix has seen a 44% price increase for diesel fuel, which powers the machines that sow and harvest 44 fields of potatoes and around 60 fields of onions. Together with natural gas, used to dry millions of onions each week, that will add 649,000 pounds to the farm’s costs this year, he said. Rix believes they are covered for this year’s fertilizer, but if the conflict and blockade drags on much longer, this will become another pain point when they buy next year’s supply in October.

“I wake up each morning thinking, ‘It’s got to be over,’” said Rix, who at 68 says he is all but retired, his son Sam, 35, now managing director. “But so far it hasn’t been.”

That morning, he rose to find that President Donald Trump claimed overnight he was going to bomb Iran “back to the Stone Age.”

“It’s not very statesmanlike is it?” said Rix with a sigh.

Asked for comment on the farmers' criticisms, White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly said that the “administration's detailed planning process” meant it was “was prepared" for any action taken by Iran.

Trump knew “Iran would try to stop the freedom of navigation” and “he has taken action to destroy over 40 minelaying vessels,” Kelly said. “The President is confident that the Strait will be opened very soon, and he has been clear about the consequences if it is not.”

He and his workers talk about how unnerving it feels to have their livelihoods subject to the whims of a man 3,700 miles away in the White House.

“I do think about it all the time,” said Michael Bloomfield, 37, another “fighter pilot” tractor driver.

Michael Bloomfield, a 37-year-old tractor driver for Rix Farms. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

“If the field needs a second pass, I’m thinking, ‘Well that’s going to cost X amount more to go over again,’” he said, wearing a high-visibility tunic and black baseball cap.

One silver lining he and other staffers foresee is that the public might become more aware about what it actually takes to put food on their plates.

Ultimately, all crops need nitrogen to grow. They get this either from the soil or, as with modern farming, through added fertilizer. One of the easiest ways of producing nitrogen fertilizers such as urea is by using natural gas, which the Persian Gulf has in abundance.

Unlike oil, fertilizer is not generally backed by large strategic public stockpiles that can be rapidly released in a crisis. It’s only needed for a few specific months of the year, so it’s usually sold and shipped quickly as needed. It is also not easy to store, and some of it can explode — like the ammonia nitrate blast that rocked Beirut in August 2020.

Crops are sprayed at Rix Farms in Great Horkesley, England, on Thursday. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

Another perverse kind of benefit that today’s farmers believe they have is becoming accustomed to a world shaped by regular upheavals, such as GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic, which they believe are behind declining sales of their spuds.

“Trump adds an element of uncertainty,” said George Rix, 38, John Rix’s nephew and the managing director of the farm’s sister company Stourgarden, which packs the produce after it has been harvested. “All we can try to do is build a model that’s resilient against those changes.”

He had to shout above a warehouse full of packing machines and — installed just 18 months ago — three large robotic arms lifting heavy boxes. One line was clear above the din: “We live in an uncertain world.”

Rix Farms chairman John Rix. (Andrew Testa for NBC)

Iran war's shock waves threaten England's farms 6,000 miles away

GREAT HORKESLEY, England — Few places feel farther from theIran warthan the potato fields of eastern England, where pastoral landscapes...
Iran rejects latest ceasefire proposal as Trump's deadline approaches

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) —Iranon Monday rejected a 45-day ceasefire proposal and said it wants a permanent end tothe war, whilePresident Donald Trumpappeared to widen his threat from civilian targets to the whole Islamic Republic and his ultimatum ticked closer.

Associated Press

“The entire country can be taken out in one night, and that night might be tomorrow night,” Trump told a news conference at the White House. He has called his Tuesday 8 p.m. deadline for Iran to make a deal final.

The U.S. stepped up threats against Iran to open theStrait of Hormuzor face a barrage of attacks on civilian targets. “Today will be the largest volume of strikes since day one,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said. “Tomorrow, even more than today.”

Asked about accusations of war crimes if the U.S. widens attacks against Iran's bridges and power plants, Trump responded, “No, not at all.” Asked why Iranians would want him to carry out the threat, he said citizens are “willing to suffer...in order to have freedom.”

Israel piled on pressure byattacking a major gas fieldthat is Iran’s biggest source of domestic energy.

Tehran conveyed its 10-point response through Pakistan, a key mediator, including proposals on reconstruction and the lifting of sanctions, Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency said.

“We only accept an end of the war with guarantees that we won’t be attacked again," Mojtaba Ferdousi Pour, head of Iran’s diplomatic mission in Cairo, told The Associated Press. He said Iran no longer trusts the Trump administration after theU.S. bombed the Islamic Republictwice during previous rounds of talks.

And yet a regional official involved in talks said efforts had not collapsed. “We are still talking to both sides,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss closed-door diplomacy.

Iranian and Omani officials were working on a mechanism for administrating the strait, through which a fifth of the world’s oil is shipped in peacetime. Iran’s grip on it has shaken theworld economy. Tehran has refused to let U.S. and Israeli vessels through after they started the war on Feb. 28.

Israel strikes massive gas field

Israel struck a key petrochemical plantin the South Pars natural gas field and killed two paramilitary Revolutionary Guard commanders, including its intelligence chief.

The gas field attack aimed at eliminating a major source of revenue forIran, Israel said. The field, the world’s largest, is shared with Qatar. It is critical to electricity production for Iran's 93 million population, but the strike appeared to be separate from Trump’s threats.

An earlier Israeli attack on the field in March prompted Iran to target energy infrastructure in other Middle East countries, a major escalation.

Trumphas warned Iran that the U.S. could set the country “back to the stone ages," including targeting power plants and bridges.

Earlier Monday, Trump addressed an Easter event on the White House lawn and suggested that future attacks could go further. "If I had my choice, what would I like to do? Take the oil,” he said, suggesting it could be done easily, but “unfortunately the American people would like to see us come home.”

Asked if Tuesday at 8 p.m. Washington time was his final deadline, Trump replied simply, “Yeah."

Proposal had called for a 45-day ceasefire

Egyptian, Pakistani and Turkish mediators had sent Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and U.S. Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff a proposal calling for the ceasefire and the strait's reopening, two Mideast officials told the AP. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private negotiations.

Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei earlier told journalists that “negotiations are entirely incompatible with ultimatums, crimes and threats ofwar crimes.”

Former Iranian foreign minister Ali Akbar Velayatir urged Arab countries to discourage Trump from striking power plants, warning the entire region would go “dark” if that happens.

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“Any attack on civilian infrastructure is a violation of international law and a very clear one,” United Nations spokesperson Stephane Dujarric later told journalists.

Brent crude oil, the international standard, rose to $109 in early Monday spot trading, about 50% higher than when the war started, then wavered. U.S. stocks mostlyheld steady.

Israel threatens to ‘hunt’ Iranian officials

Explosions boomed in Tehran, and low-flying jets could be heard for hours.

The head of intelligence for Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, Maj. Gen. Majid Khademi, was killed, according to Iranian state media and Israel’s defense minister. Israel said it also killed the leader of the Revolutionary Guard’s undercover unit in its expeditionary Quds Force, Asghar Bakeri.

“We will continue to hunt them down one by one,” Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said of top officials.

New Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, who still has not been seen or heard in public, issued a rare statement expressing condolences over the death of the Revolutionary Guard’s intelligence chief.

Israeli strikes have killed dozens of top Iranian leaders, including Khamenei’s father.

Israel’s military also said it struck three Tehran airports overnight — Bahram, Mehrabad and Azmayesh — hitting dozens of helicopters and aircraft it said belonged to the Iranian Air Force.

A Tehran resident said “constantly there is the sound of bombs, air defenses, drones," speaking on condition of anonymity for her safety. Another resident said he takes sleeping pills to get through nightly bombardments, and said people worry about power, gas and water cuts. “Stop this war,” he said.

Separately, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia activated air defenses to intercept Iranian missiles and drones. Tehran has kept up pressure on Gulf neighbors.

In Israel, Iranian missiles hit the northern city of Haifa, where four people from one family were found dead in the rubble of a residential building.

Airstrikes kill more than 25 across Iran

Smoke rose near Tehran’s Azadi Square after an airstrike hit the grounds of the Sharif University of Technology. Multiple countries have sanctioned the university for its work with the military, particularly on Iran’s ballistic missile program.

Authorities and Iranian state media reported at least 29 people killed across the country by strikes.

In Lebanon, where Israel has launched air attacks and a ground invasion that it says target the Iran-linked Hezbollah militia, an airstrike hit an apartment in Ain Saadeh, a predominately Christian town east of Beirut. It killed an official in the Lebanese Forces, a Christian political party strongly opposed to Hezbollah, his wife and another woman.

More than 1,900 people have been killed in Iran since the war began, but the government has not updated the toll for days.

More than 1,400 peoplehave been killedinLebanonand more than 1 million peoplehave been displaced. Eleven Israeli soldiers have died there.

In Gulf Arab states and the occupied West Bank, more than two dozen people have died, while 23 have been reported dead in Israel and 13 U.S.service membershave been killed.

Weissert reported from Washington and Magdy from Cairo. Munir Ahmed in Islamabad, Isabel DeBre in Ain Saadeh, Lebanon, Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations, Amir-Hussein Radjy in Cairo and Josh Boak and Michelle L. Price in Washington contributed to this story.

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The Latest: Airstrikes kill more than 25 people in Iranian cities as Trump's deadline looms

Strikes on cities across Iran have killed more than 25 people Sunday into Monday, while in Israel's Haifa two people were found dead and two others were missing in rubble a day after an Iranian attack.

Associated Press Israeli security forces and rescue teams work amid the rubble of a residential building struck by an Iranian missile in Haifa, Israel, Sunday, April 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit) A commercial plane is preparing to land at Beirut Airport as smoke rises from Israeli airstrikes in Dahiyeh, a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, Sunday, April 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) Rescue workers search for victims at the site of an Israeli airstrike that hit a crowded neighbourhood south of Beirut, Lebanon, Sunday, April 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) A picture of the late Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei hangs on the side of the road in the outskirts of Tehran, Iran, early Sunday, April 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco) Women hold Iranian flags during a pro-government gathering in a square in Tehran, Iran, Sunday, April 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)

APTOPIX Israel Iran War

U.S. President Donald Trumpon Sunday stepped up his threat to hit Iran's critical infrastructure hard if the country's government doesn't reopen the Strait of Hormuz by his Tuesday deadline.

Trump punctuated his threat with profanity in a social media post, saying Tuesday will be "Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran."

The war began with joint U.S.-Israel strikes on Feb. 28 and has killed thousands, shakenglobal markets, cut off key shipping routes andspiked fuel prices. Both sides have threatened and hit civilian targets, bringing warnings ofpossible war crimesfrom the United Nations and international law experts.

Here is the latest:

South Korea spy agency sees no signs of North Korea supplying Iran

South Korea's National Intelligence Service says there are no signs North Korea is providing Iran with weapons or other war-related supplies.

The spy agency's officials told lawmakers Monday that North Korea may be taking a cautious approach to preserve the possibility of dialogue with the Trump administration, according to two lawmakers who attended the closed-door briefing.

North Korea's Foreign Ministry has condemned the U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran as illegal, but the NIS said Pyongyang has not sent an official condolence message over the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's late supreme leader.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in recent years has embraced the idea of a "new Cold War" and attempted to expand cooperation with countries confronting the U.S., including an economic delegation sent to Iran in April 2024.

South Korea plans to send ships and special envoys to Saudi Arabia

South Korea plans to send at least five ships to Saudi Arabia's Yanbu port in the coming weeks to establish new oil transport routes in the Red Sea.

The Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources said Monday the ships will be deployed in phases beginning in mid-April and the number of vessels could increase depending on contracts with Saudi partners.

Officials did not disclose the companies involved but said some domestic refiners may use non-Korean shipping firms.

South Korea also plans to send special envoys to Saudi Arabia, Oman and Algeria to step up diplomatic efforts to secure alternative fuel supplies, ruling party lawmaker Ahn Do-geol said.

The foreign ministry did not immediately reveal when the envoys would be sent.

Iran executes man over January protests

Iran has executed another man convicted over charges stemming from the nationwide protests that swept Iran in January.

The judiciary's Mizan news agency identified the man hanged as Ali Fahim in a report Monday.

It was unclear when he was executed.

Fahim had been convicted of allegedly storming a military base to seize weapons.

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Amnesty International said Fahim and others convicted in the case "were subjected to torture and other ill-treatment in detention, including beatings, floggings, prolonged solitary confinement, and death threats at gunpoint before being convicted in grossly unfair trials that relied on forced 'confessions' extracted under torture and lasted only a few hours."

The Human Rights Activist News Agency had said Fahim and others had entered a Tehran base of the all-volunteer Basij militia, an arm of the Revolutionary Guard, after it had been burned, then had been forced into confessions.

Iranian missiles hit central Israel

Israel rescue services reported Monday morning several sites were hit by missiles launched from Iran toward multiple cities in the center of Israel.

In Petah Tikva, paramedics provided medical treatment to an injured woman in serious condition with a chest injury from shrapnel and evacuated her to the Beilinson Hospital.

Fire fighters in that city are handling cars on fire and continue searching to ensure there are no people trapped in the rubble.

In Tel Aviv, a man slightly injured by glass shrapnel was evacuated to the Ichilov Hospital.

Footage provided by rescue service Magen David Adom shows damage to residential buildings due to the attack.

Meanwhile, Israel's military warned the public Monday morning of another missile barrage coming from Iran, the fourth-such alert of the day.

Iranian missiles strike several locations in Haifa

Israel's Magen David Adom and Fire and Rescue services said early Monday that there are several reported sites of Iranian missile hits in the northern city of Haifa.

In one site, four people were slightly injured, including two children.

The missile attacks hit residential areas and a factory in the city.

The factory was hit by shrapnel from an interception.

It is unclear if all the reported hits were caused by shrapnel from interception or direct hits.

Video footage provided by Magen David Adom of the affected sites show active fire and bombed cars in what appears to be a residential area.

The missile strikes come a day after another attack from Iran also hit a Haifa residential area, killing two people and injuring others.

Two other people remain missing under the rubble caused by Sunday's strike and their fate is still unknown.

1 person wounded in UAE after missile interception

In the United Arab Emirates' capital of Abu Dhabi, authorities said a Ghanaian man suffered wounds from shrapnel after the interception of an Iranian missile over the city's Musaffah neighborhood.

That's near Al Dhafra Air Base, which hosts U.S. forces and has been repeatedly targeted by Iran in the war.

The Latest: Airstrikes kill more than 25 people in Iranian cities as Trump’s deadline looms

Strikes on cities across Iran have killed more than 25 people Sunday into Monday, while in Israel's Haifa two people ...

 

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