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Turkey’s president calls Netanyahu the “butcher of Gaza”

The President of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, described the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, as the “butcher of Gaza” and said that his government will not remain silent in the face of what he considers a “genocide.”

“Hitler and the Nazis of our time are the murderers who have killed more than 15,000 children in Gaza. Netanyahu, like the criminals before him, has left his name shamefully in history as the butcher of Gaza,” Erdogan said in a speech in Ankara.

“No one can expect us to remain silent in the face of a genocide,” added Erdogan, who insisted that the Islamist organization Hamas for Turkey is not a terrorist group but “the Palestinian national resistance.”

Last weekend in Istanbul, the Turkish president received the political leader of Hamas, Ismail Haniye, whose organization is described as a terrorist by the European Union and the United States, among others.

Erdogan accused Israel of “mercilessly killing” 35,000 Gazans since October 7, when Israel launched an offensive after the terrorist attack by the Islamist group Hamas on Israeli territory, which caused about 1,200 deaths and the kidnapping of 250 people.

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Erdogan has maintained a critical stance with Israel since the beginning of the war in Gaza and, on March 5, accused the Netanyahu government of committing “a genocide against the Palestinian people” in the Strip and compared the prime minister on several occasions with the Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler.

Israel withdrew its ambassador in Ankara last October after Erdogan compared the situation in Gaza with the Holocaust, and Turkey called for consultations with its ambassador in Tel Aviv in November.

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International

DHS Secretary Kristi Noem’s Purse Stolen in D.C. Restaurant Heist

The purse of Kristi Noem, Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, was stolen on Sunday night at a restaurant in Washington, D.C., Fox News Digital confirmed through several agency sources.

The handbag, taken by a white male wearing a mask, reportedly contained $3,000 in cash along with personal documents, including her passport, keys, driver’s license, and DHS badge, according to an agency spokesperson.

“Her entire family was in town, including her children and grandchildren. She was celebrating her retirement by treating them to dinner, activities, and Easter gifts,” the spokesperson added.

Crime continues to be a significant issue in the U.S. capital, particularly theft. However, violent crime reached its lowest level in 30 years last year, according to the Office of the Attorney General at the time.

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International

Pope Francis: The Quiet Architect Behind the U.S.-Cuba Thaw

When then-U.S. President Barack Obama and Cuban President Raúl Castro announced the reestablishment of diplomatic relations in December 2014—after decades of hostility—there was a third figure present in both speeches: Pope Francis.

This thaw in U.S.-Cuba relations—later reversed by Donald Trump—was the result of behind-the-scenes negotiations personally encouraged by Pope Francis, who passed away on Monday at the age of 88, just over a year after becoming head of the Catholic Church.

Upon learning the news of the breakthrough, the pontiff humbly stated, “This was made possible thanks to the ambassadors and to diplomacy,” which he called “a noble, very noble job.”

In 2015, months after the announcement, Raúl Castro visited the Vatican and met with the pope. Over time, Castro developed a fondness for Francis that he never had for his predecessors, Benedict XVI and John Paul II. “If the Pope continues talking like this, sooner or later I’ll start praying again and return to the Catholic Church—and I’m not joking,” said the younger Castro, who, like his brother Fidel (1926–2016), had been educated by Jesuits—the same order to which Pope Francis belonged.

Pope Francis visited Cuba later that year. Just days before his arrival, the Cuban government announced the pardon of 3,522 common prisoners as an act of clemency.

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While in Havana, the pope met with Fidel Castro, who gave him a first edition of the book Fidel and Religion by Brazilian friar and liberation theologian Frei Betto.

Criticism from the Opposition

Francis’s diplomatic approach also drew criticism from parts of the Cuban opposition. In a 2022 interview with Univision, the pope revealed he had “a human relationship” with Raúl Castro.

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International

Dominican Republic Declares Three Days of Mourning for Pope Francis

Dominican Republic President Luis Abinader has declared three days of national mourning starting Tuesday following the death of Pope Francis, who passed away on Monday at the age of 88 in his residence at the Casa Santa Marta.

In an official decree, Abinader highlighted the pope’s legacy “as a global leader who promoted significant reforms within the Catholic Church and was known for his humility, openness to dialogue, and commitment to peace among nations.”

During the mourning period, the national flag will be flown at half-staff at military facilities and public buildings.

According to a statement from the Office of the Presidency, although Pope Francis never visited the Dominican Republic during his papacy, he maintained a close relationship with the country. He expressed solidarity and empathy during difficult times, including offering prayers for the victims of the recent tragedy at a Santo Domingo nightclub on April 8, which claimed 232 lives and left more than 180 injured.

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