UK report lays bare 'catastrophic' missed chances before stabbings at girls' dance class

LONDON (AP) — A mass killing bya British teenagerwho fatally stabbed three girls and seriously wounded 10 other people at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in 2024 “could and should have been prevented” if his parents and state agencies had acted as his well-known fixation on violence escalated, according to a report released Monday.

Associated Press FILE - Floral tributes are left at the site in Southport, England, Aug. 11, 2024 after three young girls were killed in a knife attack at a Taylor Swift-themed holiday club. (AP Photo/Scott Heppell, File) Chair Sir Adrian Fulford sits inside the hearing room, Sunday April 12, 2026, at Liverpool Town Hall ahead of the publication of findings of the inquiry into the three young girls killed in a knife attack at a Taylor Swift-themed holiday club in Southport on July 29, 2024. (Peter Byrne/PA Wire/PA via AP)

Britain Children Stabbed Inquiry

Adrian Fulford, a retired judge who led a nine-week inquiry, issued a 763-page report that cataloged the many times parents or authorities could have intervened in Axel Rudakubana's life to ultimately prevent him from carrying out killings that he said were unprecedented in the U.K. for their “extreme and very particular depravity.”

“One of the most striking conclusions from this inquiry’s extensive investigation is the sheer number of missed opportunities over many years to intervene meaningfully, which directly contributed to the failure to avert this disaster,” Fulford said. “The consequences were catastrophic.”

Rudakubana, who was 17 when he carried the attack in northwestern England, is serving alife sentencewith no chance of parole for 52 years for killing Alice da Silva Aguiar, 9, Elsie Dot Stancombe, 7, and Bebe King, 6, and wounding eight children and two adults.

The attack in the town of Southport triggered days of disorder after far-right activists seized on incorrect reports that the attacker was a Muslim migrant who had recently arrived in the U.K. Rudakubana was born in Wales to Rwandan Christian parents.

The report made 67 recommendations to prevent future atrocities and U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has promised changes to correct the “systematic failures that led to this terrible event.”

“The report today is truly harrowing and profoundly disturbing,” Starmer said. “While nothing will ever bring these three little girls back, I’m determined to make the fundamental changes needed to keep the public safe.”

Police, social workers and educators were well aware of problems with Rudakubana.

He was convicted in 2019 at age 13 of assaulting another child at school with a hockey stick and placed under supervision of a local service for youth offenders. He was referred to the government’s anti-extremism program, Prevent, three times between 2019 and 2021 for expressing interest in school shootings, the 2017 London Bridge attack, the Irish Republican Army and the Middle East. Each time, the case was closed because he wasn't considered susceptible to becoming a terrorist.

During that same period, local police were called to his home five times over unspecified concerns about his behavior. He was given mental health and educational support, but later appeared to have stopped engaging with social workers. He was expelled after taking a knife to school and hardly ever attended a subsequent school.

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“Far too often, AR’s ‘case’ was passed from one public sector agency to another in an inappropriate merry-go-round of referrals, assessments, case-closures and ‘hand-offs,’” said Fulford, who only used the killer's initials.

Fulford highlighted an incident in March 2022 when Rudakubana was caught on a bus with a knife and told police that he wanted to stab someone and admitted trying to make poison.

Taken together, they should have sparked an arrest that would likely have led to a search of his house that would have discovered he had bought seeds to make the biological toxin ricin and downloaded terrorist material on his computer, Fulford said.

Rudakubana wasn't arrested and was released to his parents, who feared him and repeatedly failed to report the various knives he had purchased, his troubling behavior and threats he had made.

While Fulford outlined several failings by Rudakubana's parents that could have prevented the tragedy, he said they shouldn't be vilified for what had become a challenging situation.

“Their life at home must have become little short of a nightmare given, to use the words of his own father, AR had turned into a ‘monster,’” Fulford said.

Following the Southport attack, police searched Rudakubana's home and discovered the ricin hidden under his bed and a downloaded document, which was described as an al-Qaida training manual.

Police concluded that his crimes shouldn't be classed as terrorism, because he had no discernible political or religious cause or motivation.

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said that new legislation would be introduced to address violent plots that aren't considered terrorism.

“Unlike terrorist attacks, if you are planning an attack without an underlying ideology, there is no crime on the statute book,” Mahmood said.

UK report lays bare 'catastrophic' missed chances before stabbings at girls' dance class

LONDON (AP) — A mass killing bya British teenagerwho fatally stabbed three girls and seriously wounded 10 other people at a Taylor Swif...
A Syrian man buries his wife and 4 children killed in Israeli strikes on Beirut

DEIR EL-ZOUR, Syria (AP) — A Syrian man on Saturday buried his wife and four of his five children, killed inthe massive wave of Israeli strikesthat pounded Beirut earlier this week, laying them to rest in Deir el-Zour province in northeastern Syria.

Associated Press Mourners pray over the six coffins of members of the Al-Jalib family, who were killed Wednesday in Israeli strikes in Beirut, during their funeral in the village of al-Sour, Deir al-Zour province, northeastern Syria, Saturday, April 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed) One of six members of the Al-Jalib family killed Wednesday in Israeli strikes in Beirut is covered after being placed in the grave during their funeral in the village of al-Sour, Deir al-Zour province, northeastern Syria, Saturday, April 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed) Mourners cover a grave with cloth during the burial of a woman from the Al-Jalib family, among six relatives killed Wednesday in Israeli strikes in Beirut, during their funeral in the village of al-Sour, Deir al-Zour province, northeastern Syria, Saturday, April 11, 2026. The cloth is held to preserve privacy and shield the body from view.(AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed) Mourners kneel by the graves of six people from the Al-Jalib family, who were killed Wednesday in Israeli strikes in Beirut, after their burial in the village of al-Sour, Deir al-Zour province, northeastern Syria, Saturday, April 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed) Two of the six coffins of members of the Al-Jalib family, who were killed Wednesday in Israeli strikes in Beirut, are carried for burial during their funeral in the village of al-Sour, Deir al-Zour province, northeastern Syria, Saturday, April 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed)

APTOPIX Syria Lebanon Israel War

It was not the homecoming they had anticipated when they fled to Lebanon six years ago.

The bodies, along with that of his six-month pregnant daughter-in-law, arrived in wooden coffins on a bus from Lebanon, their names scribbled on the sides. Men stood beside the bus crying before the burial procession in al-Sour town, as mourners gathered to offer condolences.

The remains of one of his two daughters were still missing, believed to be trapped under rubble, as search operations concluded Saturday, three days after the attacks.

The strike was one of roughly 100carried out by Israel on Wednesday without warning, targeting what the Israeli military said were Hezbollah-linked sites across Beirut and other parts of Lebanon. More than 350 people were killed that day, a third being women and children, making it the deadliest day in nearly six weeks of war.

Many of the strikes hit commercial streets and densely populated neighborhoods in central Beirut, far from conflict zones, where repeated Israeli evacuation warnings have been issued since March 2, when the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah fired missiles into Israel in retaliation for the U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran.

A father's grief

The father, Hamad al-Jalib, survived because he was away fetching a gas canister while working as the building’s concierge. When he heard that a strike had hit the Ain Mreisseh neighborhood, where he lives, he rushed back, only to see a plume of smoke rising from a building behind a mosque across from Beirut’s famous seaside promenade — usually crowded with people walking and exercising.

“The Israeli attack killed my girls, they are innocent, just sitting at home,” al-Jalib said. “They were having lunch.”

He said it took rescue teams three days to extract the bodies of his family from under the rubble. “And I still have a daughter missing, her name is Fatima Hamad al-Jalib.” She is 10 years old. His other daughter was 12 while his sons were 17, 14 and 13 years old.

Three other Syrian relatives were also killed in the Ain Mreisseh strike and were buried on Saturday in the town of al-Shuhail in Deir el-Zour, after the family split upon returning to Syria.

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Al-Jalib said his family had been displaced from their area and moved to Lebanon in 2020, as local tensions grew involving tribal groups and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces.

Syrian refugees among the dead and wounded

The casualties from Wednesday’s strikes and others across the country have pushed the death toll in more than a month of Israel’s war with Hezbollah to over 1,950 killed and more than 6,300 wounded, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry. The toll includes at least 315 Syrians killed and wounded.

It remains unclear how many of those killed on Wednesday were non-Lebanese, as the Health Ministry did not provide a breakdown by nationality. Officials have reported that at least 39 Syrians were among the dead.

Dalal Harb, a spokesperson for the U.N. refugee agency, said the family killed in Ain Mreisseh was not registered with the UNHCR. There are about 530,000 Syrians refugees registered with UNHCR in Lebanon, with hundreds of thousands more believed to be unregistered.

Whilehundreds of thousands of Syrians have returnedfrom Lebanon since the ouster of former Syrian President Bashar Assad in December 2024, many others remain reluctant to go back because of the lack of jobs and ongoing violence.

Al-Jalib’s brother, Jomaa, who also lived in Lebanon, said he was about 150 meters (500 feet) away at work when the first blast hit. “We ran and we ran, then the second strike happened.” He said he was arriving at the building as it began to collapse. “It was too late to get anyone out. We yelled for them, but no one answered.”

He said ambulances later recovered the bodies, which he identified at a hospital.

Following the burial on Saturday, men stood shoulder to shoulder in prayer over the fresh graves.

Associated Press writer Abby Sewell in Beirut contributed to this report.

A Syrian man buries his wife and 4 children killed in Israeli strikes on Beirut

DEIR EL-ZOUR, Syria (AP) — A Syrian man on Saturday buried his wife and four of his five children, killed inthe massive wave of Israeli...
UK report lays bare 'catastrophic' missed chances before stabbings at girls' dance class

LONDON (AP) — A mass killing bya British teenagerwho fatally stabbed three girls and seriously wounded 10 other people at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in 2024 “could and should have been prevented” if his parents and state agencies had acted as his well-known fixation on violence escalated, according to a report released Monday.

Associated Press FILE - Floral tributes are left at the site in Southport, England, Aug. 11, 2024 after three young girls were killed in a knife attack at a Taylor Swift-themed holiday club. (AP Photo/Scott Heppell, File) Chair Sir Adrian Fulford sits inside the hearing room, Sunday April 12, 2026, at Liverpool Town Hall ahead of the publication of findings of the inquiry into the three young girls killed in a knife attack at a Taylor Swift-themed holiday club in Southport on July 29, 2024. (Peter Byrne/PA Wire/PA via AP)

Britain Children Stabbed Inquiry

Adrian Fulford, a retired judge who led a nine-week inquiry, issued a 763-page report that cataloged the many times parents or authorities could have intervened in Axel Rudakubana's life to ultimately prevent him from carrying out killings that he said were unprecedented in the U.K. for their “extreme and very particular depravity.”

“One of the most striking conclusions from this inquiry’s extensive investigation is the sheer number of missed opportunities over many years to intervene meaningfully, which directly contributed to the failure to avert this disaster,” Fulford said. “The consequences were catastrophic.”

Rudakubana, who was 17 when he carried the attack in northwestern England, is serving alife sentencewith no chance of parole for 52 years for killing Alice da Silva Aguiar, 9, Elsie Dot Stancombe, 7, and Bebe King, 6, and wounding eight children and two adults.

The attack in the town of Southport triggered days of disorder after far-right activists seized on incorrect reports that the attacker was a Muslim migrant who had recently arrived in the U.K. Rudakubana was born in Wales to Rwandan Christian parents.

The report made 67 recommendations to prevent future atrocities and U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has promised changes to correct the “systematic failures that led to this terrible event.”

“The report today is truly harrowing and profoundly disturbing,” Starmer said. “While nothing will ever bring these three little girls back, I’m determined to make the fundamental changes needed to keep the public safe.”

Police, social workers and educators were well aware of problems with Rudakubana.

He was convicted in 2019 at age 13 of assaulting another child at school with a hockey stick and placed under supervision of a local service for youth offenders. He was referred to the government’s anti-extremism program, Prevent, three times between 2019 and 2021 for expressing interest in school shootings, the 2017 London Bridge attack, the Irish Republican Army and the Middle East. Each time, the case was closed because he wasn't considered susceptible to becoming a terrorist.

During that same period, local police were called to his home five times over unspecified concerns about his behavior. He was given mental health and educational support, but later appeared to have stopped engaging with social workers. He was expelled after taking a knife to school and hardly ever attended a subsequent school.

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“Far too often, AR’s ‘case’ was passed from one public sector agency to another in an inappropriate merry-go-round of referrals, assessments, case-closures and ‘hand-offs,’” said Fulford, who only used the killer's initials.

Fulford highlighted an incident in March 2022 when Rudakubana was caught on a bus with a knife and told police that he wanted to stab someone and admitted trying to make poison.

Taken together, they should have sparked an arrest that would likely have led to a search of his house that would have discovered he had bought seeds to make the biological toxin ricin and downloaded terrorist material on his computer, Fulford said.

Rudakubana wasn't arrested and was released to his parents, who feared him and repeatedly failed to report the various knives he had purchased, his troubling behavior and threats he had made.

While Fulford outlined several failings by Rudakubana's parents that could have prevented the tragedy, he said they shouldn't be vilified for what had become a challenging situation.

“Their life at home must have become little short of a nightmare given, to use the words of his own father, AR had turned into a ‘monster,’” Fulford said.

Following the Southport attack, police searched Rudakubana's home and discovered the ricin hidden under his bed and a downloaded document, which was described as an al-Qaida training manual.

Police concluded that his crimes shouldn't be classed as terrorism, because he had no discernible political or religious cause or motivation.

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said that new legislation would be introduced to address violent plots that aren't considered terrorism.

“Unlike terrorist attacks, if you are planning an attack without an underlying ideology, there is no crime on the statute book,” Mahmood said.

UK report lays bare 'catastrophic' missed chances before stabbings at girls' dance class

LONDON (AP) — A mass killing bya British teenagerwho fatally stabbed three girls and seriously wounded 10 other people at a Taylor Swif...
Judge told to reconsider national security implications of halting Trump's White House ballroom

WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge must reconsider the possible national security implications of halting construction of President Donald Trump’s $400 millionWhite House ballroom, anappeals courtruled on Saturday.

Associated Press Artist renderings of the new White House East Wing and Ballroom are photographed Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick) Work continues on the construction of the ballroom at the White House, Thursday, April 9, 2026, in Washington, where the East Wing once stood. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.) Work continues on the construction of the ballroom at the White House in Washington, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Allison Robbert)

Trump White House Ballroom

A three-judge panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit said it did not have enough information to decide how much of the project can be suspended without jeopardizing the safety of the president, his family or the White House staff.

The case was returned to the trial judge who,in a March 31 ruling,barred work from proceeding without congressional approval, but suspended enforcement of that order for 14 days. The appeals court extended that for three days, to April 17, to allow the Trump administration to seek Supreme Court review.

The panel instructed U.S. District Judge Richard Leon to clarify whether — and how — his injunction interferes with the administration’s plans for safety and security.

Government lawyers had arguedthat the project includes critical security features to guard against a range of possible threats, such as drones, ballistic missiles and biohazards and that holding up construction “would imperil the President and others who live and work in the White House,.”

Leon, in issuing the temporary pause, concluded that the preservationist group behind the legal challenge was likely to succeed because the president lacks the authority to build the ballroom without approval from Congress.

Leon exempted any construction work necessary to ensure the safety and security of the White House, but said he reviewed material the government privately submitted before determining that a halt would not jeopardize national security.

The Republican administration's appeal cited materials that would be installed to make a “heavily fortified” facility and said construction included bomb shelters, military installations and a medical facility underneath the ballroom.

The appeals panel noted that much of the government's concerns focused on that below-ground security work, which the White House argued was "distinct from construction of the ballroom itself and could proceed independently.”

Now, however, the White House seems to suggest those security upgrades are “inseparable” from the project as whole, the appeals court said, making it unclear “whether and to what extent” moving forward with certain aspects of the ballroom is necessary for the safety and security of those upgrades.

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Carol Quillen, president and CEO of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, said in a statement that the organization awaited further clarification from the district court. She said the group was committed “to honoring the historic significance of the White House, advocating for our collective role as stewards, and demonstrating how broad consultation, including with the American people, results in a better overall outcome.”

The organization sued in December, a week after the White House finisheddemolishing the East Wingfor a 90,000-square-foot (8,400-square-meter) ballroom that Trump said would fit 999 people. The administration said aboveground construction on the ballroom would begin in April.

Leon concluded last month that the lawsuit was likely to succeed because “no statute comes close to giving the President the authority he claims to have.”

“The President of the United States is the steward of the White House for future generations of First Families. He is not, however, the owner!” wrote Leon, who was nominated by President George W. Bush, a Republican.

Two days after Leon’s ruling, the ballroom projectwon final approvalfrom a key agency that Trump had stocked with allies. Another oversight entity constituted with Trump loyalists hadapproved the projectearlier this year. But the president had proceeded withthe biggest structural change to the White Housein more than 70 years before seeking input from the commissions.

Trump says the project is funded by private donations, although public money is paying for construction of underground bunkers and security upgrades.

The three-judge appeals court panel was made up of Patricia Millett, Neomi Rao and Bradley Garcia. Millett was nominated by President Barack Obama, a Democrat. Rao was nominated by Trump. Garcia was nominated by President Joe Biden, a Democrat.

Rao wrote a dissenting opinion, which cited a statute that allows the president to undertake improvements to the White House.

“Importantly, the government has presented credible evidence of ongoing security vulnerabilities at the White House that would be prolonged by halting construction,” Rao wrote, adding that such concerns outweigh the “generalized aesthetic harms” presented in the lawsuit.

Associated Press writer Darlene Superville contributed to this report.

Judge told to reconsider national security implications of halting Trump's White House ballroom

WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge must reconsider the possible national security implications of halting construction of President Dona...
Israeli strike kills infant girl in south Lebanon during father's funeral

By Thomas Suen and Louisa Gouliamaki

Reuters A member of civil defence personnel holds the body of Taleen Saeed, 1.5 years old, killed in an Israeli strike in the village of Srifa, at the Al Kharab mosque in Tyre, Lebanon, April 12, 2026. REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki Aunt of Aline Saeed, 7, stands by the bed of Aline's mother Ghinwa (not pictured), as they are treated for injuries from the recent Israeli strike in Srifa village, which killed four members of the family, at the Jabal Amel Hospital in Tyre, Lebanon, April 11, 2026. REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki Nasser Hussein Saeed, 64, kisses the body of his daughter, Fatima, 39, during the funeral service of four members of his family, including his 1.5-year-old granddaughter Taleen, killed in an Israeli strike in the village of Srifa, at the Al Kharab mosque in Tyre, Lebanon, April 12, 2026. REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki Mourners attend the funeral service of four members of the Saeed family, Taleen (1.5 years old), Qassem (26), Khalil (60) and Fatima (39), killed in an Israeli strike in the village of Srifa, at the Al Kharab mosque in Tyre, Lebanon, April 12, 2026. REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki Aunt of Aline Saeed, 7, stands near her bed, as Aline is treated for injuries from the recent Israeli strike in Srifa village, which killed four members of her family, including her 1.5-year-old sister, and wounded her mother and grandparents, at the Jabal Amel Hospital in Tyre, Lebanon, April 11, 2026. REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki Aline Saeed, 7, is treated for injuries from the recent attacks in Srifa village in southern Lebanon, at the Jabal Amel hospital in Tyre, Lebanon, April 10, 2026. REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki/File Photo

Funeral service of four members of Saeed family, including 1.5-year-old Taleen, killed in Israeli strike, in Tyre

TYRE, Lebanon April 12 (Reuters) - Wrapped in bloodied bandages, Aline Saeed, seven, barely survived the Israeli strike on her home in south Lebanon last week. She was there to bury her father as hopes of a ‌truce spread across the region, but a new strike killed her infant sister and other relatives.

The strike on the Saeed family ‌home in the village of Srifa took place on Wednesday, the first day of a U.S.-Iran ceasefire https://www.reuters.com/world/iran/ that many in Lebanon hoped would apply to their country, too. ​Instead, Israeli strikes killed more than 350 across Lebanon and left the Saeed family with four more relatives to bury.

"They said it was a ceasefire. Like all these people, we went up to the village. We went to the casket to read the prayers and walk home... suddenly we felt like a storm was landing right on us," said Nasser Saeed, Aline's 64-year-old grandfather, who also survived.

On Sunday, he joined other relatives in the southern port ‌city of Tyre to pick up the bodies ⁠wrapped in green cloth. One of them, a fraction the size of the rest, contained his granddaughter Taleen, Aline's sister.

She had not yet turned two.

With bandages to his head and right hand and scratches on his face, Saeed mourned ⁠in silence as the women around him turned their faces up to the sky and screamed in agony.

TALEEN 'BORN IN WAR AND DIED IN WAR'

The latest war in Lebanon began on March 2, when Lebanese armed group Hezbollah fired onto Israeli positions in support of its patron Iran.

Israel has since escalated its air ​and ground ​campaign in the country where its operations have killed more than 2,000 people, ​including 165 children and nearly 250 women.

Pope Leo on ‌Sunday said how close he felt to the "beloved Lebanese people" and called for a ceasefire.

In his weekly address to the faithful in St. Peter's Square the pope said there was "a moral obligation to protect the civilian population from the horrific effects of war."

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Wednesday was one of the deadliest days in Lebanon's recent history.

"This isn't humanity. This is a war crime," Saeed told Reuters at the hospital where Aline's mother, Ghinwa, was still being treated.

"Where are the human rights? If a child - a child! - is wounded in Israel, the whole world jumps up. Are we not people? ‌Are we not humans? We're like them!" he said.

Asked about the incident, the ​Israeli military said it was looking into the report of the Srifa strike.

Taleen was born ​in 2024, in the last round of fierce clashes between ​Hezbollah and Israel.

"She was born in the war and died in the war," said Mohammed Nazzal, Ghinwa's father.

FIERCE ‌BOMBARDMENT CONTINUES

Iran wants a ceasefire for Lebanon as part of ​talks with the United States, which ​concluded on Sunday without a breakthrough. But Israel wants to pursue talks with Lebanese officials through a separate track https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/lebanon-heads-historic-israel-talks-with-few-hopes-except-staunch-bloodshed-2026-04-10/.

Heavy bombardment on Lebanon has continued, with nearly 100 people killed on Saturday.

Dr. Abbas Attiyeh, head of emergency operations at Tyre's Jabal Amel hospital, said ​last week's bombardment was one of the heaviest ‌in recent years and many of the patients arriving at his hospital were children.

"The challenges we're facing now are the ​numbers of wounded that come at the same time, within the same 30 minutes or hour," Attiyeh told Reuters.

(Additional reporting ​by Gavin Jones in Rome, writing by Maya GebeilyEditing by Christina Fincher)

Israeli strike kills infant girl in south Lebanon during father's funeral

By Thomas Suen and Louisa Gouliamaki Funeral service of four members of Saeed family, including 1.5-year-old Taleen, killed ...
Cuba's president says 'we would die' to defend against U.S. invasion

President Miguel Díaz-Canel stood by Cuba’s leadership and didn’t concede a need for any changes to its government amid President Donald Trump’s pressure campaign against the communist country.

NBC Universal

In a wide-ranging interview with NBC News’ “Meet the Press” moderator Kristen Welker in Havana on Thursday, Díaz-Canel said there’s no “justification for the United States to launch a military aggression against Cuba.”

“An invasion to Cuba would have costs. ... It would affect the security of Cuba, the United States and of the region,” he said through a translator in his first American broadcast interview.

“If that happens, there will be fighting, and there will be a struggle, and we will defend ourselves, and if we need to die, we’ll die, because as our national anthem says, ‘Dying for the homeland is to live,’” the Cuban president said.

“Before making that decision, which is so irrational, there is a logic, that is, the logic of dialogue, to engage in discussions, to debate and try to reach agreements that would move us away from confrontation,” Díaz-Canel said.

Welker asked Díaz-Canel whether he was willing to commit to responding to “key demands” from the U.S., including releasing political prisoners, scheduling multiparty elections and recognizing unions and a free press.

“Nobody has made those demands to us, and we have established that in respect to our political system or constitutional order, these are issues that are not under negotiations with the United States,” Díaz-Canel answered, adding that those issues are “extensively manipulated.”

Welker then pressed Díaz-Canel on the issue of political prisoners, asking whether Cuba would commit to their release and specifically naming Cuban rapper Maykel Osorbo,a Latin Grammy winner who has been in prison since 2021for writing a protest songafter thousands of Cubans took to the streetsto protest conditions and shortages during the Covid pandemic.

Díaz-Canel did not commit to releasing political prisoners and rejected their characterization as such, saying there are people in Cuba who are not in favor of the revolution “and manifest themselves on a daily basis” who are not in prison.

“This narrative that has been created, that image that anyone who speaks against a revolution is thrown into jail, that’s a big lie, that’s a slander, and that’s part of that construct in order to vilify and to engage a character assassination of the Cuban Revolution,” Díaz-Canel said.

International human rights organizationslike PEN InternationalandAmnesty Internationalhave called for Osorbo’s release.

There is evidence that the Trump administration’s pressure campaign has been felt in the country. Around mid-March, Cuban officials took a sharp turn in their tone toward the U.S., saying they are prepared to confront any attacks from the U.S. The government ordered an increase in military exercises that often air during national newscasts.

Díaz-Canel has insisted Cuba’s position is “entirely defensive and not aggressive,” and he’s made similar remarks in recent speeches and interviews.

“Again, let me repeat. This is not what we want. We don’t want war. We don’t want an attack,” he said.

Díaz-Canel urged a dialogue based on “respect” between the two countries’ forms of government.

Welker asked if it was possible to “get a deal with President Trump.”

“I think dialogue and deals with the U.S. government are possible,” Díaz-Canel answered, “but they’re difficult.” He said he had not spoken to Secretary of State Marco Rubio and he doesn’t know him.

Kristen Welker and Miguel Díaz-Canel speak to each other while walking inside of a building (NBC News)

Trump said last month when asked about Cuba that theremay be “a friendly takeover, it may not be a friendly takeover.”Rubio told reporters on March 27, “You have to change the people in charge,” adding the country was a “disaster” because its economic system didn’t work.

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In response to Díaz-Canel’s comments to NBC News, a White House official on Thursday said that the administration is talking to Cuba, adding its leaders want to make a deal and should make a deal, which Trump believes “would be very easily made.”

“Cuba is a failing nation whose rulers have had a major setback with the loss of support from Venezuela,” the White House official said Thursday.

Throughout the interview, Díaz-Canel blamed the 67-year-old U.S. economic embargo when he was asked about Cuba’s existing conditions, including its electricity crisis as well asongoing supply shortages and poverty.

When asked whether Cuba would “take some responsibility” and change its economic system to relieve suffering in the country, Díaz-Canel said, “That’s got nothing to do with the political system.”

The U.S. imposed theembargo in 1962as a response to Fidel Castro’s confiscation of American businesses and properties on the island following the 1959 revolution.

Díaz-Canel called the embargo “genocidal and cruel” and said that even during the Covid pandemic, the policy prevented the country from accessing certain components — though he touted his country’s ability to manufacture a Covid vaccine and other equipment.

“I think the U.S. government should review how cruel and how mean they’ve been to Cuba and to the Cuban people,” he said.

When asked why Cuba hasn’t made reforms like other communist or one-party countries like Vietnam and China, Díaz-Canel cited the embargo as well as the fact that Cuba is an island 90 miles from the U.S.

Cuba produces less than 40% of the fuel it needs and relies on imports to operate its crumbling electric grid. Venezuela was Cuba’s main supplier of oil until it was cut off following the U.S. capture of former President Nicolás Maduro.

Trump then threatened to impose tariffs on any country that sells or supplies oil to Cuba, though he recently said he had “no problem” with a Russian oil tanker delivering relief to the island.

People were already dealing with inflation, shortages and blackouts, and the shortage hasexacerbatedan already dire situation.

Amid the massive fuel shortage, Díaz-Canel said Cuba was open to doing business with U.S. companies.

“We’re open for foreign investment in Cuba in oil exploration and drilling. And that’ll be an opportunity for American businessmen and firms who can come and participate in Cuba in the energy sector,” Díaz-Canel said.

It is against U.S. law for Americans (individuals and companies) to invest in Cuba’s oil sector, but the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control can issue a license allowing an American company to do so.

Díaz-Canel cited collaborations between the U.S. and Cuba such as medical research and combating drug trafficking as he agreed there’s a need to engage in dialogue.

But he also alluded to the war in the Middle East — and the Trump administration’s previous calls for dialogue.

“The U.S. has been engaged in talks with other countries, and while these negotiations are underway, they have attacked those countries, and all of this creates a lot of distrust,” Díaz-Canel said.

Nicole Acevedo reported from New York, Carmen Sesin from Miami and Orlando Matos from Havana.

Cuba's president says 'we would die' to defend against U.S. invasion

President Miguel Díaz-Canel stood by Cuba’s leadership and didn’t concede a need for any changes to its government amid President Donal...
At least 30 dead in stampede at Haiti’s historic Laferriere Citadel

By Harold Isaac

Reuters

April 12 (Reuters) - At least 30 people were killed on Saturday in a stampede in the northern countryside ‌of Haiti, authorities said, warning that the death toll could ‌rise.

Jean Henri Petit, head of Civil Protection for Haiti's Nord Department, said the stampede ​occurred at the Laferriere Citadel, an early-19th-century fortress built shortly after Haiti's independence from France.

One of Haiti's most popular tourist attractions, the fortress was packed with students and visitors on Saturday who had come to ‌participate in the annual celebration ⁠of the UNESCO World Heritage site, Petit added.

The Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé said in a statement that ⁠he "extends his sincere condolences to the bereaved families and assures them of his profound solidarity during this time of mourning and great suffering."

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He added ​that "many ​young people" were in attendance at ​the Citadel's celebrations, although it ‌is unknown who died and the prime minister's statement did not give an estimate of the death toll.

Petit said the stampede occurred at the entrance to the site, adding that the rain further exacerbated the disaster.

The deadly stampede comes as Haiti is grappling with widespread violence ‌by gangs https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/gangs-tighten-grip-haiti-despite-more-aggressive-policing-un-report-finds-2026-03-24/ that have massacred civilians, ​as well as an increasingly deadly crackdown ​https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/hundreds-killed-haiti-drone-strikes-including-60-civilians-human-rights-watch-2026-03-10/ by security forces.

The ​island nation has also been the site of various ‌disasters in recent years, including a ​2024 fuel tank ​explosion that killed two dozen people https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/haiti-gas-truck-explosion-leaves-15-dead-pm-says-2024-09-14/, another fuel tank blast in 2021 that killed 90 people and an earthquake that ​left some 2,000 ‌people dead that same year.

(Reporting by Harold Isaac in Port-au-Prince, ​Haiti, writing by Laura Gottesdiener in Monterrey, Mexico; Editing by ​Daina Beth Solomon and Thomas Derpinghaus)

At least 30 dead in stampede at Haiti’s historic Laferriere Citadel

By Harold Isaac April 12 (Reuters) - At least 30 people were killed on Saturday in a stampede in the northern countryside ‌of Hai...

 

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