Nigeria’s Chibok girls: Parents of kidnapped children heartbroken


Ten years after Boko Haram gunmen abducted his daughter from her school in the Nigerian town of Chibok, Yama Bullum feels as if he has lost her once again.

His daughter, Jinkai Yama, was one of 276 girls kidnapped from the secondary school in the early hours of 14 April 2014 by the Islamist fighters.

Fifty-seven of them escaped shortly afterwards. Then between 2016 and 2018 an additional 108 were either rescued by the military or released through negotiations.

Ninety-one others remain missing, but Ms Yama is one of 20 “Chibok girls” rescued over the last two years from Boko Haram hideouts in Sambisa Forest in north-eastern Borno state, the epicentre of the 15-year insurgency.

But her father has been outraged to discover that like some of other recently freed women, she has decided to remain married to one of the fighters who once held her captive.

These couples now reside in the city of Maiduguri – Borno’s capital, 125km (78 miles) north of the remote town of Chibok – in housing organised by the state’s governor Babagana Umaru Zulum.

“I am not happy with what the governor did. The girls managed to come out of the forest and the governor married them off again. Her mother is very angry,” Mr Bullum said.

L: Jinkai Yama in 2022 R: Jinkai Yama pictured as a teenager

L: Jinkai Yama pictured after her release R: When a teenager she was part of the cadettes brigade and in the church brass band [PRNigeria.com/BBC]

He found out when his daughter called him up to tell him last August – and handed over the phone asking him to talk to her husband, the former insurgent.

Until then, Mr Bullum had assumed she was with other freed Chibok captives and her three children in a special welfare programme.

Like a number of other Chibok parents, Mr Bullum is disturbed by what seems to be the Nigerian government’s approval of marriages between their rescued daughters and the men who abducted them.

Allowing the freed women to live with their former captors as wives, while their accommodation is provided by the government, is perceived by the parents as Governor Zulum sacrificing their daughters in the quest for stability in the region.

They see these marriages as a way to appease the former militants.

Most of the girls taken from the Chibok school were Christian.

""Some people in Chibok are saying: 'How is it possible after the rescue of the girls they are still remaining in the Muslim faith?'", Source: Yakubu Nkeki, Source description: Chairman of the Association of Parents of the Missing Girls from Chibok, Image: Yakubu Nkeki

“”Some people in Chibok are saying: ‘How is it possible after the rescue of the girls they are still remaining in the Muslim faith?'”, Source: Yakubu Nkeki, Source description: Chairman of the Association of Parents of the Missing Girls from Chibok, Image: Yakubu Nkeki


The recent news of the continued “marriages” has further upset parents whose children were forced to convert to Islam during captivity.

“Some people in Chibok are saying: ‘How is it possible after the rescue of the girls they are still remaining in the Muslim faith?'” said Yakubu Nkeki, chairman of the Chibok parents’ association.

The state appears to be grappling with the dilemma of respecting the girls’ wishes while fulfilling the desires of their parents.

“My only interest is that we don’t want these girls to go back to the bush again,” Borno Governor Zulum told me.

“Even before they came out [of the Sambisa Forest], some of them gave us conditions – that they will not come without their husbands.”

Mary Dauda pictured at Maimalari Barracks in Maiduguri, Nigeria - 21 June 2022

Mary Dauda, pictured here just after she was found by the army, said she planned her escape with her militant husband [AFP]

One of these women, Aisha Graema, told me that she would not have left the forest if she could not be with the militant she married two years after being abducted from the Chibok school.

“We have been married for eight years,” said the mother of three.

“I first came out of the forest and then he followed me. There in the bush, we had no relative, no brother, no sister, that is why we decided to come out.

“He finished deradicalisation before we were allowed to stay together. The government welcomed us well, gave us food, shelter, everything.”

Another Chibok girl, Mary Dauda, explained to me that she would not have been able to escape from Sambisa without her husband, who helped her sneak away from the militants’ hideout.

“We had agreed that he would join me afterwards and present himself to the governor for rehabilitation,” said the 27-year-old.

Hajj Camp in Bulumkutu is the main rehabilitation camp for former Boko Haram fighters and their long-term captives, where they are taken directly after their rescue.

After going through weeks of rehabilitation there, the men are reintegrated into society under the government’s ongoing amnesty programme for repentant Boko Haram members. This has so far processed about 160,000 people, according to Mr Zulum.

"They are the ones that insisted that without their husbands, they will not stay in Maiduguri"", Source: Zuwaira Gambo, Source description: Borno state commissioner for women affairs and social development, Image: Zuwaira Gambo

“They are the ones that insisted that without their husbands, they will not stay in Maiduguri””, Source: Zuwaira Gambo, Source description: Borno state commissioner for women affairs and social development, Image: Zuwaira Gambo


The welfare of the 20 most recently freed Chibok girls falls under the remit of Zuwaira Gambo, the Borno state commissioner for women affairs and social development, who insists the women were in no way coerced into staying with their spouses.

“They are the ones that insisted that without their husbands, they will not stay in Maiduguri,” Ms Gambo said.

“I asked them: ‘How can you want to stay with this man who destroyed your life?’ and they told me: ‘You will not understand.'”

Rather than have the couples return to the forest, she said the authorities sought a different path.

The 20 women – along with 31 children – were moved to a secure facility in an affluent area of Maiduguri. Seven are with their Boko Haram husbands; some of the others are engaged to former fighters they met while in Bulumkutu.

Training is offered to the women in skills like tailoring and computer literacy.

They share a large mansion, surrounded by expansive grounds where they gather on mats beneath trees to chat while their children play in the sand.

Some of the freed Chibok girls with their children in their new accommodation in Maiduguri, Nigeria

The recently freed women share a large house in Maiduguri and often gather outside to socialise, along with their children [Yakubu Nkeki]

Each couple is provided with their own room.

The freed Chibok girls are not alone in wanting to stay with their Boko Haram husbands.

One 16-year-old told me back in 2016 that if she had had a gun, she would have shot the soldiers who came to rescue her from captivity.

Experts attribute this to several factors, including the sense of belonging fostered by being part of the insurgent group, indoctrination into its extremist beliefs, the development of romantic attachments over time and the formation of family bonds, particularly when they have children together.

Additionally, acts of kindness and care, such as showering them with gifts, by their captors may contribute to these feelings.

“These people took the time to convince them that what they had known before was the wrong way,” said Fatima Akilu, a psychologist who has worked with many freed captives taken in their formative years.

An aerial view of the burnt-out classrooms of a school in Chibok, Nigeria - March 2015

The secondary school in Chibok was destroyed by the militants on the infamous night of 14 April 2014 [AFP]

But the situation of the Chibok girls stands out because of the government’s active support for them and their husbands staying together.

Governor Zulum believes this will encourage those still in Sambisa to come out of hiding.

The chair of the Association of Parents of the Missing Girls from Chibok says he finds himself torn between the grievances of the parents and the rights of the young women.

“The girls told me that they can’t do without their husbands,” Mr Nkeki told me.

“Me, myself, I am a freedom fighter and I want them to be free from the Sambisa Forest regardless of the situation they find themselves when they come out, whether Muslim or married or not.”

He recounted being urgently summoned to the childhood home of Saratu Dauda, one of the recently rescued Chibok girls, last year during a heated argument between her and her parents regarding her decision to remain married to her former captor.

“They said: ‘Come and hear what this girl is saying. You were calling for them to be released, yet look at how they are behaving’. I told them it was not her fault, that they have to be patient.”

Aisha Muhammed-Oyebode from the Bring Back Our Girls activist group and head of the Murtala Muhammed Foundation, which supports both the parents and the freed girls, believes that issues like this might have been avoided if the government had been better prepared with comprehensive plans for the girls upon their release.

A Bring Back Our Girls protest in Abuja, Nigeria - April 2014

The Bring Back Our Girls campaign garnered global attention [Reuters]

“Not having a structure around these kinds of situations is what is causing this kind of chaos,” she said.

After the explosive family argument, Ms Dauda cut short her visit to Chibok and returned to Maiduguri. Her father is so upset that he has chosen to no longer participate in the parents’ association or any events commemorating the anniversary of the abductions this year.

This includes the yearly gathering of parents of all the kidnapped schoolgirls, both free and missing, held at the school premises.

Ms Yama is also estranged from her family. Whenever they try to contact her, her husband answers her phone instead.

The 29-year-old has declined to respond to my questions about the situation, telling me that her relationship with her parents is no-one else’s business and how happy she is that her kidnapping led to her finding the “true religion”.

Her clearly distressed father said: “She doesn’t want to have anything to do with us at all.”

Map

Map


Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani is a freelance Nigerian journalist and novelist based in Abuja and London.

Find out more about the Chibok girls:



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Video shows kidnapped labourers in Ethiopia, not government soldiers held by rebel fighters


Claims of rebels capturing thousands of Ethiopian soldiers in the country’s restive Amhara region have become a popular disinformation topic on social media. One post recently featured a video of men in civilian clothes being marched down a mountainside by armed individuals. However, the captives in the footage were not Ethiopian troops: officials said the clip showed labourers from southern Ethiopia who had been snatched by militia in Amhara while heading to work on the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) in neighbouring Benishangul Gumuz region.

“Thousands of soldiers of the regime have been captured,” reads a line of Amharic text on a TikTok video posted to Facebook on March 1, 2024.

The video has since been removed from TikTok but garnered more than 110 shares and 1,300 likes on Facebook.

Another strip of text at the bottom of the footage reads: “Drive these invaders like cattle.”

<span>Screenshot of the false post, taken on March 25, 2024 </span>

Screenshot of the false post, taken on March 25, 2024

The name of the Facebook page where the video was posted translates from Amharic to “The Amhara Fano”.

The Fano are an Ethiopian rebel group in the Amhara region. They have been fighting Ethiopian troops — referred to as “invaders” in the text overlay of the misleading video — since July 2023.

Another Facebook post shared the footage on the same day, claiming it showed soldiers captured by Fano in the Gojjam zone in Amhara in what it termed an “Adwa victory”.

Adwa refers to a battle in 1896 when Ethiopia defeated invading Italian forces.

Conflict in Amhara 

The armed conflict in the Amhara region has caused civilian deaths and a severe humanitarian crisis. In February 2024, the Ethiopian parliament voted to extend a state of emergency first imposed in August 2023 across the region (archived here).

Local media reported that fighting recently intensified in many zones in Amhara, including Gojjam, North Shoa, Gondar and Wollo (archived here).

However, the claim that the footage shows government soldiers captured by Fano is false.

‘Labourers’ from Gardula

AFP Fact Check conducted a keyword search in Amharic for “people captured by armed groups in Amhara region”.

One of the results included this article reporting that the people shown in the footage were labourers from the Gardula zone in the Southern region who were “abducted” by Fano fighters while on their way to work on clearing forests for the GERD — a multibillion dollar hydro project on the Blue Nile nearing completion (archived here).

The Addis Stanard article, published on March 7, 2024, featured a screenshot from the video.

<span>Screenshot of the story by Addis Standard, taken March 26, 2024</span>

Screenshot of the story by Addis Standard, taken March 26, 2024

The GERD is located in the Benishangul Gumuz region, in an area bordering Amhara known as Guba.

Map of East Africa showing the Nile and the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (LAURENCE CHU, AUDE GENET, JANIS LATVELS / AFP)

Fano allegedly captured the workers near Debre Markos in Amhara’s Gojjam zone in late February 2024.

<span>Screenshot of a Google Map showing distance between Debre Markos and Guba, taken on March 26, 2024. </span>

Screenshot of a Google Map showing distance between Debre Markos and Guba, taken on March 26, 2024.

In a press statement (archived here) issued on Facebook a day before the Addis Standard article, local officials from Gardula said that footage was circulating showing “labourers being escorted to unknown locations by Fano militia fighters”.

On March 11, 2024, an independent Ethiopian journalist shared copies of official-looking documents on Facebook (archived here), which indicated that  a construction company had asked to hire several hundred labourers from the Gardula zone. Their demand had been approved by the labour and social affairs bureau.

<span>Screenshot of the official documentation published on Facebook by an independent journalist, taken on March 26, 2024</span>

Screenshot of the official documentation published on Facebook by an independent journalist, taken on March 26, 2024

 

Captives freed

The state-affiliated Fana Broadcasting Corporate (FBC) reported on March 23, 2024, that the army had freed “271 people who were kidnapped by Fano” (archived here).

The story included a picture of the freed labourers.

AFP Fact Check identified individuals wearing the same clothes in the FBC image published following after their release and in the footage of their capture.

<span>Screenshots of the false post (left) and the FBC’s picture, taken on March 25, 2024</span>

Screenshots of the false post (left) and the FBC’s picture, taken on March 25, 2024

<span>Screenshots of the false post (left) and the FBC’s picture, taken on March 25, 2024</span>

Screenshots of the false post (left) and the FBC’s picture, taken on March 25, 2024

On March 26, 2024, the Gardula Zone Administrator also confirmed in a statement that the labourers had returned to their homes (archived here).

The post also included images of the freed men.

AFP Fact Check has contacted the zone’s administration for further comment and will update the story accordingly.

We have previously debunked similar posts about Fano capturing government soldiers here and here.



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Fate of American nurse and daughter kidnapped by armed men in Haiti remains uncertain


PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — The fate of an American nurse and her daughter kidnapped in Haiti last week remains unknown Tuesday as the U.S. State Department refused to say whether the abductors made demands.

Around 200 Haitians had marched in their nation’s capital Monday to show their anger over an abduction that’s another example of the worsening gang violence that has overtaken much of Port-au-Prince.

Alix Dorsainil of New Hampshire was working for El Roi Haiti, a nonprofit Christian ministry, when she and her daughter were seized Thursday. She is the wife of its founder, Sandro Dorsainvil.

Witnesses told The Associated Press that Dorsainvil was working in the small brick clinic when armed men burst in and seized her. Lormina Louima, a patient waiting for a check-up, said one man pulled out his gun and told her to relax.

“When I saw the gun, I was so scared,” Louima said. “I said, ‘I don’t want to see this, let me go.’”

Some members of the community said the unidentified men asked for $1 million in ransom, a standard practice of the gangs killing and sowing terror in Haiti’s impoverished populace. Hundreds of kidnappings have occurred in the country this year alone, figures from the local nonprofit Center for Analysis and Research in Human Rights show.

The same day Dorsainvil and her daughter were taken, the U.S. State Department advised Americans to avoid travel in Haiti and ordered nonemergency personnel to leave, citing widespread kidnappings that regularly target U.S. citizens.

The violence has stirred anger among Haitians, who say they simply want to live in peace.

Protesters, largely from the area around El Roi Haiti’s campus, which includes a medical clinic, a school and more, echoed that call as they walked through the sweltering streets wielding cardboard signs written in Creole in red paint.

“She is doing good work in the community, free her,” read one.

Local resident Jean Ronald said the community has significantly benefitted from the care provided by El Roi Haiti.

Such groups are often the only institutions in lawless areas, but the deepening violence has forced many to close, leaving thousands of vulnerable families without access to basic services like health care or education.

Earlier this month, Doctors Without Borders announced it was suspending services in one of its hospitals because some 20 armed men burst into an operating room and snatched a patient.

As the protesters walked through the area where Dorsainvil was taken, the streets were eerily quiet. The doors to the clinic where she worked were shut, the small brick building empty. Ronald and others in the area worried the latest kidnapping may mean the clinic won’t reopen.

“If they leave, everything (the aid group’s programs) will shut down,” Ronald worried. “The money they are asking for, we don’t have it.”

State Department spokesman Matthew Miller wouldn’t say Monday if the abductors had made demands or answer other questions.

“Obviously, the safety and security of American citizens overseas is our highest priority. We are in regular contact with the Haitian authorities. We’ll continue to work with them and our US government interagency partners, but because it’s an ongoing law enforcement investigation, there’s not more detail I can offer,” Miller wrote in a statement Monday.

In a video for the El Roi Haiti website, Alix Dorsainvil describes Haitians as “full of joy, and life and love” and people she was blessed to know.

Dorsainvil graduated from Regis College in Weston, Massachusetts, which has a program to support nursing education in Haiti. Dorsainvil’s father, Steven Comeau, reached in New Hampshire, said he could not talk.

In a blog post Monday, El Roi Haiti said Alix Dorsainvil fell in love with Haiti’s people on a visit after the devastating 2010 earthquake. It said the organization was working with authorities in both countries to free her and her daughter.

“Please continue to pray with us for the protection and freedom of Alix and her daughter. As our hearts break for this situation, we also continue to pray for the country and people of Haiti and for freedom from the suffering they endure daily.”

___

AP journalists Megan Janetsky in Mexico City and Pierre Richard Luxama in Port-au-Prince contributed to this report.



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Kidnapped American nurse “fell in love with the people” of Haiti after 2010 quake


The American nurse kidnapped with her child near Haiti’s capital of Port-au-Prince Thursday first visited the country soon after the 2010 earthquake and “fell in love with the people,” according to the nonprofit organization where the woman works and where her husband serves as director. 

El Roi Haiti, a Christian humanitarian organization, has identified the woman as Alix Dorsainvil. She and her child were kidnapped from the organization’s campus near Port-au-Prince on Thursday morning “while serving in our community ministry,” the organization said. Her husband and the child’s father, Sandro Dorsainvil, is the organization’s founder and director of operations in Haiti. 

Originally from New Hampshire, Dorsainvil has lived and worked as a nurse in Port-au-Prince since 2020 at the school run by El Roi Haiti, which aims to expand access to affordable education and teaches a faith-based curriculum, according to the nonprofit. 

“We are now entering day 5 since our dear friend Alix and her child were kidnapped,” the organization said Monday. “As our hearts break for this situation we also continue to pray for the country and people of Haiti and for freedom from the suffering they endure daily.”

cbsn-fusion-what-we-know-about-the-two-americans-kidnapped-in-haiti-thumbnail-2169052-640x360.jpg
Alix Dorsainvil, photographed on an unspecified date.

El Roi Haiti


Dorsainvil first visited Haiti while she was in college, not long after the devastating 2010 earthquake killed thousands of people and caused widespread destruction. She spent her breaks and summers returning to the country, El Roi said. Once she started her career as a nurse, she would fund her own trips and travel to Haiti as often as she could. She married her husband in 2021.

“She had lived in Haiti for multiple years, showing love and care in a variety of ways before coming on staff with us, but has had a heart for the hurting since she was a child,” the organization said.

News of the kidnapping comes at a time when gruesome crimes and gang violence are rising in the city.

Federal officials in the United States confirmed they are aware of the kidnapping report and in contact with Haitian authorities.

“We are aware of reports of the kidnapping of two U.S. citizens in Haiti,” a spokesperson for the State Department said in a statement to CBS News on Friday night. “We are in regular contact with Haitian authorities and will continue to work with them and our U.S. government interagency partners. We have nothing further to share at this time.”

The State Department advises Americans not to travel to Haiti. The agency last updated its travel advisory for the country at the end of July, maintaining its Level 4 risk assessment —meaning “do not travel”— while noting that kidnapping in Haiti “is widespread, and victims regularly include U.S. citizens.”

El Roi reiterated its request that people refrain from speculating about the kidnapping on social media and direct all questions to the organization’s board instead of Dorsainvil’s friends and family.

— Emily Mae Czachor contributed to reporting.



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American nurse and daughter kidnapped in Haiti


American nurse and daughter kidnapped in Haiti – CBS News

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The State Department says it is in contact with Haitian authorities regarding the kidnapping of American nurse Alix Dorsainvil and her daughter.

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What we know about the American mother and child kidnapped in Haiti


What we know about the American mother and child kidnapped in Haiti – CBS News

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Authorities in Haiti are searching for an American nurse and her young child, who were kidnapped last week near Port-au-Prince. The abductions come as Haitian authorities grapple with a rise in violent crimes and kidnappings fueled by gang violence. CBS News correspondent Roxana Saberi has the latest.

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Search continues for U.S. mother and child kidnapped in Haiti


Search continues for U.S. mother and child kidnapped in Haiti – CBS News

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An American nurse working in Haiti and her child were kidnapped last week near Port-au-Prince, as the country continues to see an increase in gang violence and crime. The nurse was identified as Alix Dorsainvil. CBS News correspondent Roxana Saberi has more on the search for Dorsainvil and her child. And Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Garry Pierre-Pierre, founder and publisher of the Haitian Times, joined CBS News to talk about the state of unrest in the country.

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Americans kidnapped in Haiti, DeSantis under fire. and Cardi B throws mic at fan: Weekend Rundown


Vladimir Putin bids for influence with African leaders, but the showing underwhelmed. Two Americans were kidnapped in Haiti amid civil unrest. And Ron DeSantis feels the heat from fellow Republicans on Florida’s Black history standards.

Here’s the biggest news you missed this weekend.

Drones target Moscow ahead of parade attended by Putin

Russian officials said they shot down three Ukrainian drones targeting Moscow early Sunday, hours before the start of a major military parade attended by President Vladimir Putin.

Images from a crash site in the Russian capital showed the façade of a skyscraper damaged on one floor, with glass shattered and structural beams snapped and deformed.

This is the Weekend Rundown. Sign up here to get the Morning Rundown direct to you inbox on weekdays.

The alleged attacks forced the closure of airspace over Moscow and an hour’s delay in takeoffs and and landings at Vnukovo International Airport, according to TASS. Read the full story here.

Pakistan bombing kills 55, injures 135 more

A suspected suicide bombing in the Bajur District of Pakistan killed at least 55 people and wounded 135 more Sunday. A senior police officer told NBC News that a workers’ convention organized by the Jamiat Ulema Islam was underway when the explosion took place.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.

Cardi B throws mic at fan who doused her

Cardi B wasn’t having it with a fan who appeared to douse her with a drink during a performance in Las Vegas on Saturday. Video posted on TikTok shows the rapper performing her hit “Bodak Yellow” during a scheduled performance at Drai’s Beachclub, when someone holding a large cup near the stage flings the drink at her.

Cardi B looked stunned for a brief moment before the rapper threw her mic in the direction of the drink thrower.

The incident made Cardi B the latest in a recent spate of performers hit by objects thrown at them by concertgoers.

Two Americans kidnapped in Haiti

An American nurse and her child were kidnapped in Haiti on Thursday morning, a nonprofit connected to the woman said Saturday.

The kidnappings took place the same day the State Department ordered nonemergency U.S. government employees and families to leave Haiti, citing risks of kidnapping and civil unrest. The State Department said it’s aware of reports of the kidnapping and is in contact with Haitian authorities.

Parents speak out on teen daughter’s murder

The parents of Lily Silva-Lopez, a 15-year-old Colorado girl allegedly killed by her 16-year-old ex-boyfriend, say that police should have arrested him after their daughter filed a domestic violence complaint alleging that he punched her in the face six days before she died.

Alma Lopez and Hector Silva told NBC News in an exclusive interview they believe their daughter would still be alive if the police had done more. “They didn’t do much, and it’s not ok, and I lost my daughter because of that,” Lopez said.

Meet the Press

Florida’s new public school standards, which teach that some Black people benefited from slavery because it taught them useful skills, have come under fire from several Black Republicans. Three members of the work group that developed the standards told NBC News a majority opposed the sections that have drawn criticism.

On “Meet the Press” Sunday, former Texas Rep. Will Hurd, a Republican presidential contender, slammed Gov. Ron DeSantis for defending the curriculum.

“Real leadership would have stepped up and said, ‘Hey, there is no upside to slavery. Slavery was not a jobs program,'” Hurd said. “But this is one more part of a fact pattern of Ron DeSantis being mean and hateful.”

Hurd also responded to getting booed at a Republican event in Iowa Friday night. You can watch the full interview here.

Politics in Brief

2024 election: Out of the dozens of people who served in former President Donald Trump’s cabinet, only four have publicly supported his bid to return to the White House.

Trump’s rivals: Most of the 2024 Republican field has struggled to make the case against Trump to voters. But after validating, or turning a blind eye, to his false election claims, they may in part have themselves to blame.

Screaming on the Hill: Rep. Derrick Van Orden, a freshman Republican lawmaker, received bipartisan condemnation after he allegedly yelled at a group of high-school-age Senate pages. One source who witnessed the interaction told NBC News the congressman was “physically aggressive” and “screaming inches from the pages’ faces.”

Culture & Trends

Some online creators have embraced a concept called “race change to another,” or RCTA, purporting to be able to manifest physical changes in their appearance and even their genetics by tuning into subliminal videos that claim to be able to give then an “East Asian appearance” or “Korean DNA.”

Experts are troubled by the trend, contending that it’s impossible to change your race because race is a combination of inherited characteristics and cultural traditions passed down through generations. Some members of the East Asian community view RCTA as fetishistic and harmful.

In Case You Missed It

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com



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Cardi B throws mic at fan, Americans kidnapped in Haiti and DeSantis under fire: Weekend Rundown


Vladimir Putin bids for influence with African leaders, but the showing underwhelmed. Two Americans were kidnapped in Haiti amid civil unrest. And Ron DeSantis feels the heat from fellow Republicans on Florida’s Black history standards.

Here’s the biggest news you missed this weekend.

Drones target Moscow ahead of parade attended by Putin

Russian officials said they shot down three Ukrainian drones targeting Moscow early Sunday, hours before the start of a major military parade attended by President Vladimir Putin.

Images from a crash site in the Russian capital showed the façade of a skyscraper damaged on one floor, with glass shattered and structural beams snapped and deformed.

Sign-up here to get the Morning Rundown, a weekday newsletter to start your day in the know.

The alleged attacks forced the closure of airspace over Moscow and an hour’s delay in takeoffs and and landings at Vnukovo International Airport, according to TASS. 

Read the full story here.

Putin in search of allies

Pakistan bombing kills 55, injures 135 more

A suspected suicide bombing in the Bajur District of Pakistan killed at least 55 people and wounded 135 more Sunday. A senior police officer told NBC News that a workers’ convention organized by the Jamiat Ulema Islam was underway when the explosion took place.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.

Cardi B throws mic at fan who doused her

Cardi B wasn’t having it with a fan who appeared to douse her with a drink during a performance in Las Vegas on Saturday. Video posted on TikTok shows the rapper performing her hit “Bodak Yellow” during a scheduled performance at Drai’s Beachclub, when someone holding a large cup near the stage flings the drink at her.

Cardi B looked stunned for a brief moment before the rapper threw her mic in the direction of the drink thrower.

The incident made Cardi B the latest in a recent spate of performers hit by objects thrown at them by concertgoers.

Two Americans kidnapped in Haiti

An American nurse and her child were kidnapped in Haiti on Thursday morning, a nonprofit connected to the woman said Saturday.

The kidnappings took place the same day the State Department ordered nonemergency U.S. government employees and families to leave Haiti, citing risks of kidnapping and civil unrest. The State Department said it’s aware of reports of the kidnapping and is in contact with Haitian authorities.

Parents speak out on teen daughter’s murder

The parents of Lily Silva-Lopez, a 15-year-old Colorado girl allegedly killed by her 16-year-old ex-boyfriend, say that police should have arrested him after their daughter filed a domestic violence complaint alleging that he punched her in the face six days before she died.

Alma Lopez and Hector Silva told NBC News in an exclusive interview they believe their daughter would still be alive if the police had done more. “They didn’t do much, and it’s not ok, and I lost my daughter because of that,” Lopez said.

Meet the Press 

Florida’s new public school standards, which teach that some Black people benefited from slavery because it taught them useful skills, have come under fire from several Black Republicans. Three members of the work group that developed the standards told NBC News a majority opposed the sections that have drawn criticism.

On “Meet the Press” Sunday, former Texas Rep. Will Hurd, a Republican presidential contender, slammed Gov. Ron DeSantis for defending the curriculum.

“Real leadership would have stepped up and said, ‘Hey, there is no upside to slavery. Slavery was not a jobs program,'” Hurd said. “But this is one more part of a fact pattern of Ron DeSantis being mean and hateful.”

Hurd also responded to getting booed at a Republican event in Iowa Friday night. You can watch the full interview here.

Today’s Talker

An American doctor scrubs in…

… to help the wounded in Ukraine. Since arriving at Mechnikov Hospital in Dnipro, less than 70 miles from the front line, Connor Berlin has witnessed dozens of bloodied soldiers brought in on gurneys, water bottles used as IV bags and overflowing intensive care units. The New York-based neurosurgery resident feels called to serve in Ukraine, where his Jewish ancestors fled a murderous, antisemitic pogrom more than 100 years ago.

Politics in Brief

2024 election: Out of the dozens of people who served in former President Donald Trump’s cabinet, only four have publicly supported his bid to return to the White House.

Trump’s rivals: Most of the 2024 Republican field has struggled to make the case against Trump to voters. But after validating, or turning a blind eye, to his false election claims, they may in part have themselves to blame.

Screaming on the Hill: Rep. Derrick Van Orden, a freshman Republican lawmaker, received bipartisan condemnation after he allegedly yelled at a group of high-school-age Senate pages. One source who witnessed the interaction told NBC News the congressman was “physically aggressive” and “screaming inches from the pages’ faces.”

Culture & Trends: Controversial race concept

Some online creators have embraced a concept called “race change to another,” or RCTA, purporting to be able to manifest physical changes in their appearance and even their genetics by tuning into subliminal videos that claim to be able to give then an “East Asian appearance” or “Korean DNA.”

Experts are troubled by the trend, contending that it’s impossible to change your race because race is a combination of inherited characteristics and cultural traditions passed down through generations. Some members of the East Asian community view RCTA as fetishistic and harmful.

In Case You Missed It

NBC News got rare access to the CDC’s insect lab in Colorado, where entomologists are concerned about an uptick in West Nile virus cases this summer.

China’s reliance on exit bans and arbitrary detentions to crack down on dissent leaves foreign citizens and businesses wary of traveling in the country.

As the Hollywood strikes continue, a handful of actors with big followings are going viral for showing off some of their low residual checks. Meanwhile, Sony has already delayed several high-profile films, including “Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse.”

A small but growing number of U.S. airports are pushing to offer convenient and affordable child care to help attract and retain employees in the post-pandemic economy.

Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, was unsuspended from X, formerly known as Twitter, on Saturday after his suspension in December over a post showing an image of a swastika inside a Star of David.

Artificial intelligence commentators are edging into roles in sports broadcasting — and were introduced in at least three major sports tournaments for the first time this year. 

The Biden administration seeks to jumpstart carbon recycling with a $100 million grant program aimed at helping U.S. communities invest in more sustainable products and materials.

The Federal Reserve raised a key interest rate earlier this week to the highest it’s been in 22 years. That’s going to make everything much more expensive.



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