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TNT and Gin Kings brace for Game 2 reversal

THE way Game 1 went down, there’s no doubt in the minds of TNT and Barangay Ginebra that their respective opponents will be out for blood in the second match.

And so the Tropang 5G and the Gin Kings are battening down the hatches as they attempt to make it 2-0 against Meralco and defending champion San Miguel Beermen (SMB) on Wednesday in the PBA Philippine Cup semifinals.

“We actually talked about it. We told them to put yourselves in the position of Meralco, put yourselves in their shoes. They are chomping at the bit to get back at us,” said TNT coach Chot Reyes ahead of the 7:30 p.m. duel at the Smart Araneta Coliseum.

The Tropang 5G had to climb out of an early 21-point hole then outwit the Bolts in a tight finish to steal the opener of the best-of-seven dispute, 100-95.

“We saw that with the kind of energy, execution, even their three-point shooting in the first half. They were really primed for it. We got a first hand taste of that. So hopefully in Game 2, we are more ready to play from the start because I don’t think we can bring this kind of game to Game 2 and expect to come up with the same result,” he said.

“We have to definitely be better in Game 2,” he added.

For Meralco’s Luigi Trillo, the challenge is how to match TNT’s intensity as well as adjust to the calls after giving up 47 free throws the first time around.

“Certainly we can be better. (But) this is a champion team and they’re playing very well the last few conferences. So we have our hands full,” he said.

The Gin Kings brace for a furious strike back from the Beermen in their 5:15 p.m. encounter.

“Game 2 is going to be a completely different game,” said Ginebra strategist Tim Cone, whose charges overcame the monster 27-point, 23-rebound double-double of June Mar Fajardo to draw first blood, 99-90. “This (SMB) is a great team. So we have to play it at the very top of our game to have a chance to beat them.”

The Gin Kings know from experience that getting the head start against the Beermen isn’t a guarantee. In the same stage last season, Ginebra won the opener, 73-71, but SMB quickly equalized in Game 2, 100-83, and ultimately won the series that went the full route, 4-3. — Olmin Leyba

Strong Group Athletics nets free agent middle blocker Imee Hernandez

STRONG GROUP ATHLETICS (SGA) added a talented Imee Hernandez on its free agent shopping spree as it continued its bid to make its two teams in Farm Fresh and ZUS Coffee formidable in the forthcoming PVL All-Filipino Conference.

The 5-foot-10 middle blocker will wear a new set of uniform this year after suiting up for the disbanded Crossovers for two years in a stretch that was mostly plagued by injuries.

She did return healthy in the PVL on Tour and should be a significant contributor to either the Foxies or the Thunderbelles.

“Strong will,” said the franchise on its social media account on Tuesday.

SGA has netted the most free agents thus far with eight acquisitions including Royse Tubino, Remy Palma, Chie Saet, Bia General, Cess Robles, Karen Verdeflor and Renee Penafiel.

Of the aforementioned, only Ms. Robles and Ms. Verdeflor have a specific team to land to — ZUS. — Joey Villar

Reset underway for six NFL teams starting offseason in search mode

AS THREE first-year coaches prepare their teams to kick off the playoffs this week, six franchises begin the offseason hoping to find the right man for their job.

Four head coaches — Kevin Stefanski (Browns), Jonathan Gannon (Cardinals), Pete Carroll (Raiders) and Raheem Morris (Falcons) — were fired since the regular season wrapped on Sunday. The Tennessee Titans and New York Giants had a head start because they dismissed coaches during the season, and both kept their existing general managers (GMs) in place.

For Joe Schoen, the general manager of a Giants’ franchise with only 22 wins in the past four seasons, there’s a sense of longing in seeing the Jaguars win the AFC South under new coach Liam Coen, and the Bears win the NFC North for first-time head coach Ben Johnson. Along with Patriots coach Mike Vrabel, the pilot behind New England’s worst-to-first flip in the AFC East, decision makers like Schoen have enough traits and characteristics to study before seeking out the “right” candidate.

Of course, all three of those teams are also fortunate to have the right fit at quarterback with top draft picks in Trevor Lawrence (Jaguars), Caleb Williams (Bears) and Drake Maye (Patriots).

The Giants (4-13 in 2025) might be ahead of the curve in Schoen’s estimation, with rookie Jaxson Dart already in the building.

“Caleb Williams and Chicago, what they were able to do,” Schoen said on Monday. “Each of those franchises brought in new head coaches and were able to turn it around rather quickly. Drake Maye is in the MVP race right now. Caleb Williams, we obviously played against him. He had a really good year and playing at a high level. That’s certainly an opportunity that you look at those franchises and how they put it together in a quick turnaround. In an ideal world, yeah, that would be it.”

The Raiders (3-14) have the first overall pick in the draft for the first time since drafting JaMarcus Russell in 2007. Las Vegas is a safe bet to consider quarterbacks given Geno Smith underperformed and is 35 years old, and the Browns and Cardinals are not settled at the position.

The Titans (3-14) hit the ground full stride on Monday with a series of official interview requests from general manager Mike Borgonzi, who used the top pick in the 2025 draft on quarterback Cam Ward last April. Tennessee fired Brian Callahan following a 1-5 start; he was 4-19 overall with the Titans.

“He has a vision, we do see eye to eye,” Ward said of Borgonzi. “He’s a GM that is connected to his players.”

In Arizona, Gannon had a 15-36 record and the Cardinals finished 3-14 in 2025 with Kyler Murray out for the majority of the season due to a foot injury. Murray, the No. 1 pick in the 2019 draft, has already played for two coaches with the franchise. Whether Murray will get a shot to return to a third coach — given his $19.5 million in guarantees and injury history — is not clear. — Reuters

Brutal AFC North

The AFC North has always been unforgiving, but its featured contest the other day managed to distill its cruelty into one final, unblinking moment. The Steelers escaped the Ravens, 26-24, through sheer endurance, absorbing every late shove until the clock expired and the division title finally settled in black and gold. For the hosts, it was a return to familiar territory, albeit far from guaranteed; they were champions and playoff-bound anew, but the path to success was replete with challenges. Meanwhile, the vanquished found the season compressed into a single breath held too long and released only after the cowhide drifted wide right.

To be sure, the set-to unfolded with expected tension. The Ravens struck first, assertive and efficient, leaning into their physical identity to briefly seize control. The Steelers answered in fragments, never quite smooth but decidedly stubborn, keeping the outcome in doubt even when it seemed to favor the visitors. Needless to say, the absence of order seeped into the fourth quarter; leads changed hands, nerves frayed, and execution grew more difficult with escalating consequence. They reclaimed the advantage late, leaning on calmness and confidence borne of equal parts defiance and experience.

The self-assurance was, not surprisingly, embodied by Aaron Rodgers, whose presence throughout their 2025 campaign had been debated more than celebrated. He was neither spectacular nor tentative the other day, but he did provide precision exactly when required. If nothing else, his touchdown pass in the crunch reminded all and sundry that time can still be tamed. The Steelers’ offense may not have dominated, but it trusted itself, and that trust proved decisive in the game’s final exchange.

Make no mistake. The Ravens did more than enough to claim victory. Lamar Jackson engineered the drive he needed, converting under pressure to push the purple and black into position for a seemingly surefire field goal. When the kick missed, however, there was no one to console and no explanation to offer. They had not been undone by a single play, but they were dismissed by the last all the same.

The National Football League is invariably brutal, of course, and none more so than the AFC North. The Steelers move forward because they were steadier in the waning moments. The Ravens head into winter forced to examine how a season with so much promise could end in disappointment. Once again, it turns out, fate proves that a title can simply by inherited by survivors.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Filipino scientist bags international award for marginalized community research 

Glenn S. Banaguas. — THE TOFIL LAUREATES

A Filipino scientist received recognition under the patronage of President Abdel Fattah El‑Sisi of Egypt for his work in advancing sustainability and innovation in marginalized communities in the Philippines. 

Glenn S. Banaguas, a science diplomat with advocacies on climate-disaster resiliency and environmental sustainability, was one of the first Laureates of the Bibliotheca Alexandrina International Award announced on Monday. 

“I really don’t know what I’m going to say…this particular award is under the patronage of the president of Egypt,” he told BusinessWorld in a Zoom interview on Tuesday. 

“I was speechless, and the only words that I would utter was just ‘Thank you so much’,” he added. 

Mr. Banaguas became known for his dedication to helping the disadvantaged through his Environmental & Climate Change Research Institute and its “Climate Smart Philippines: Science for Service” initiative. 

“During the earliest times in 2010 up to the present, most of our research projects are focusing on this particular sector,” he said. “It’s a volunteer research organization so 90% of our projects in the Philippines are for free – it’s pro bono.” 

Some of his works include providing practical solutions such as biofuels, flood and drought forecasting devices, disaster-prediction systems, and sustainable energy and health systems. 

“Most of the research projects are concentrating on our farmers, fisherfolks, indigenous people, because I know that every time there is a disaster, the poor become poorer,” he said. “And every time there’s a disaster, these particular sectors suffer so much.” 

“What I really want to do is just do research because I know that this particular research will really create positive impacts in the lives of our people, and that’s really my goal,” he added. 

Before becoming a multi-awarded scientist, Mr. Banaguas first dreamt of becoming a priest. 

“I really wanted to become a priest, I really don’t want to become a scientist,” he said. “What I really wanted to do is to serve the Lord, serve God with all my heart.” 

“This particular vocation is not really meant for me, so I said all right, I will serve through our people,” he added. 

The Bibliotheca Alexandrina International Award aims to honor individuals with significant contributions on a specific theme determined by the Higher Committee of the Award. The field of the award’s first edition was “Green Technology Applications for Achieving Well-Being and Happiness for Humanity.” 

Award winners will receive a monetary value of one million Egyptian pounds (1.2 million pesos), along with a gold medal and an official certificate of excellence to be given in February in Cairo, Egypt. 

“The money that we get every time I win in a competition or in awards like this, we use it for research purposes,” he said. “Sometimes I also allot something for the orphans because part of my advocacy is to give it to the orphanage, a portion of it.” — Almira Louise S. Martinez

Maduro pleads not guilty to drug charges, saying he was ‘kidnapped’

A STILL IMAGE from a video posted by the White House’s Rapid Response 47 account on X.com shows Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro being walked in custody down a hallway at the offices of the US Drug Enforcement Administration in New York City, Jan. 3. — @RAPIDRESPONSE47/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

NEW YORK — Toppled Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro pleaded not guilty on Monday to narcotics charges after President Donald J. Trump’s stunning capture of him rattled world leaders and left officials in Caracas scrambling to regroup.

“I am innocent. I am not guilty. I am a decent man. I am still president of my country,” Mr. Maduro, 63, said through an interpreter, before being cut off by US District Judge Alvin Hellerstein in Manhattan federal court.

Mr. Maduro’s wife Cilia Flores also pleaded not guilty. The next court date was set for March 17.

Dozens of protesters, both pro- and anti-Maduro, gathered outside the courthouse before the half-hour hearing.

Inside, as he stood shackled at the ankles and wearing orange and beige prison garb, Mr. Maduro declared he had been “kidnapped” and remained president of Venezuela. He listened to an interpreter through headphones as Mr. Hellerstein summarized the charges.

Mr. Maduro is accused of overseeing a cocaine-trafficking network with international drug cartels and faces four criminal counts: narco-terrorism, cocaine importation conspiracy and possession of machine guns and destructive devices.

Mr. Maduro has long denied the allegations, saying they were a mask for imperialist designs on Venezuela’s rich oil reserves.

Mr. Maduro’s defense lawyer Barry Pollack said he anticipated voluminous and complex litigation over what he called his client’s “military abduction.”

SUCCESSOR SWORN IN
Hours later in Caracas, Mr. Maduro’s vice-president, Delcy Rodriguez, was sworn in as Venezuela’s interim president with words of support for Mr. Maduro but no indication she would fight the US move.

A recent US intelligence assessment determined Ms. Rodriguez would be best positioned to lead a temporary government in Mr. Maduro’s absence, finding that opposition figures such as Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Corina Machado or one-time presidential candidate Edmundo Gonzalez would struggle to gain legitimacy, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the classified report.

Asked by Reuters about the report, White House Spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said, “The President and his national security team are making realistic decisions to finally ensure Venezuela aligns with the interests of the United States.”

While many anti-Maduro activists had assumed this would be their moment, Mr. Trump appeared to have sidelined the Venezuelan opposition for now. Instead, he has suggested Ms. Rodriguez was willing to work with Washington.

Ms. Leavitt told Fox News that Secretary of State Marco Rubio was in “constant correspondence” with the remaining Maduro government, and that Washington maintained “leverage” over Caracas.

In Caracas, senior officials from Mr. Maduro’s 13-year-old government remained in charge of the South American oil producer of 30 million people, alternating between angry defiance and possible cooperation with the Trump administration.

The intelligence assessment concluded that Ms. Rodriguez was among the few Venezuelan leaders capable of maintaining order, along with the interior and defense ministers, in a government dominated by ideological opponents of the US, the Wall Street Journal said.

Mr. Trump told NBC News the US was not at war with Venezuela but rather, “we’re at war with the people that sell drugs.”

The US would need to help address the South American country’s problems before any new elections, Mr. Trump said, calling a 30-day timeline for a vote unrealistic.

“We have to fix the country first. You can’t have an election. There’s no way the people could even vote,” Mr. Trump told NBC.

QUESTION OF LEGALITY
The US has considered Mr. Maduro an illegitimate dictator since he declared victory in a 2018 election marred by allegations of massive irregularities.

At the same time experts in international law have questioned the legality of the raid, with some condemning Mr. Trump’s actions as a repudiation of a rules-based international order.

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, who previously served as Mr. Trump’s criminal defense lawyer while in private practice, told NBC News the Trump administration “did everything within the law,” and that the United States has an “absolute legal right to go and arrest people charged with horrible crimes.”

As world leaders and US politicians grappled with the extraordinary seizure of a head of state, the United Nations Security Council debated the implications of the raid, which was condemned by Russia, China and leftist allies of Venezuela.

The future governance of Venezuela also remained uncertain, after Mr. Trump asserted on Sunday that “we are in charge.” White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller reiterated to CNN on Monday that “the United States of America is running Venezuela.”

“We set the terms and conditions. We have a complete embargo on all of their oil. So for them to do commerce, they need our permission,” Mr. Miller said.

Mr. Rubio, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and other top administration officials spent more than two hours briefing congressional leaders and the heads of national security committees about the Venezuela operation on Monday evening.

Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the Senate’s Democratic leader, told reporters the briefing was extensive but posed more questions than it answered. “Their plan for the US running Venezuela is vague, based on wishful thinking, and was unsatisfying,” Mr. Schumer said, adding that Trump officials would not rule out similar interventions in other countries.

Meanwhile, Mr. Trump has made no secret of wanting to share in Venezuela’s oil riches, telling reporters on Air Force One on Sunday that American oil companies will return to Venezuela and rebuild the sector’s infrastructure.

He told NBC News on Monday that the US may subsidize the rebuilding of the country’s oil infrastructure by US companies, a project he said could be completed in less than 18 months.

CBS News, citing two unnamed sources, said representatives of oil majors Exxon Mobil, ConocoPhillips and Chevron Corp. would meet with Energy Secretary Chris Wright on Thursday. — Reuters

US cuts broad recommendation for four childhood vaccines including flu

FREEPIK

WASHINGTON — The United States ended on Monday its longstanding guidance that all children receive vaccines against flu and three other diseases, a sweeping change that advances one of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s long-term goals.

Public health experts warn the latest rollback could lead to preventable hospitalizations and deaths.

The action, which removes the recommendation for rotavirus, influenza, meningococcal disease and hepatitis A, and states that parents should consult healthcare providers under what it calls shared clinical-decision-making, was approved by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Acting Director Jim O’Neill without the agency’s usual outside expert review. It advances Mr. Kennedy’s campaign to pare back childhood vaccinations.

Last month, President Donald J. Trump urged the US to “align with other developed nations” by reducing the number of shots for children.

Mr. Trump said the new schedule was “rooted in the Gold Standard of Science” and aligns the United States with other developed nations. In a post on his Truth Social platform, the president congratulated Mr. Kennedy and other health officials on the change.

“Many Americans, especially the ‘MAHA Moms,’ have been praying for these COMMON SENSE reforms for many years. Thank you for your attention to this matter!” he wrote, referring to Mr. Kennedy’s Make America Healthy Again movement.

Mr. Kennedy, a prominent vaccine critic, has previously led efforts to drop universal recommendations for COVID-19 and hepatitis B shots for children, citing links to autism that scientists have repeatedly debunked.

AMERICAN CHILDREN AT RISK
Vaccine experts decried the changes they said put American children at risk.

Dr. Michael Osterholm, director of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, said there should have been public discussion on the risks and benefits of the potential impact of dropping the recommendations.

Dr. Sean O’Leary, chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said other developed countries face different disease risks and have different healthcare systems than the United States. Unlike the US, which depends on private healthcare, most countries provide basic universal healthcare that is paid for by the government.

“Any decision about the US childhood vaccination schedule should be grounded in evidence, transparency and established scientific processes, not comparisons that overlook critical differences between countries or health systems,” he said.

IMMUNIZATION POLICY OF 20 NATIONS CONSIDERED
For the change in policy, two leading officials of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Martin Kulldorff and Tracy Beth Hoeg, reviewed vaccine protocols in 20 other developed countries — all of which have universal healthcare — and made the recommendations to change the US schedule, the agency said.

In a report, HHS wrote that the level of risk varies by disease and child.

The vaccine schedules of the 20 reviewed countries show that the flu shot is recommended universally in four countries and a shot against hepatitis A is universal only in Greece. The rotavirus shot is recommended for all children in 17 of the 20 countries and shots against meningococcal disease are recommended in 16.

Each of the four vaccines prevents diseases that once caused unnecessary hospitalizations and death in children, said Dr. Jesse Goodman, a Georgetown University professor and former US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) chief scientist.

Flu shots can help prevent pediatric deaths from flu, which killed 288 children in the 2024-25 season, according to the CDC. Hepatitis A, which infects the liver, usually resolves on its own but can lead to hospitalization and lifelong liver damage.

Rotavirus, which causes severe diarrhea and dehydration, used to send tens of thousands of children to the hospital each year, but vaccines have made this extremely rare, Mr. Goodman said.

While meningitis, a bacterial infection of the brain, is rare in children, some 15% of those infected do not respond to antibiotics and die, he said. “If you can safely prevent it, it makes total sense.”

The updated recommendations maintain immunizations for 11 diseases, including measles, mumps, and varicella, while categorizing others as either targeted for high-risk groups or subject to the shared-decision-making category, HHS said.

Insurance providers will continue covering immunization costs regardless of the category, senior HHS officials told reporters on a call.

The new schedule also recommends US children receive a single dose of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, rather than a two-dose course. Recent studies have concluded that a single dose is not inferior to the longer course and noted the World Health Organization also backs a single-dose schedule.

Merck, which makes Gardasil, the only US-approved HPV vaccine, was not immediately available for comment. The drugmaker has said that since there is not sufficient data for the US FDA to license the shot as a single-dose regimen, the CDC’s recommendations should be in line with the agency’s approval.

Merck recorded $2.4 billion in US Gardasil sales in 2024. — Reuters

Flash floods in Indonesia’s North Sulawesi kill 14, four still missing

STOCK PHOTO | Image by jorono from Pixabay

JAKARTA — At least 14 people were killed after being swept away by flash floods in Indonesia’s North Sulawesi, an official said on Tuesday, as the search for the missing continued.

Heavy rain early on Monday triggered flash floods on the island of Siau, located in the region of Siau Tagulandang Biaro, said Nuriadin Gumeleng, a spokesperson for the local rescue agency.

Sixteen rescuers have been deployed to search for four people who remain missing on Tuesday, Mr. Gumeleng told Reuters, adding that 18 people had been injured so far.

“We continue to collect data from local residents in case there are more missing people,” he said.

As of Tuesday, main roads in the affected areas were still covered by rocks, debris and thick mud, Mr. Gumeleng said.

At least 444 people have been evacuated to local schools and churches after the flash floods, the country’s disaster mitigation agency spokesperson Abdul Muhari said in a statement.

Authorities have deployed excavators to clear roads that have been blocked by the debris and mud, he said.

The floods also destroyed hundreds of houses and government buildings, North Sulawesi Governor Yulius Selvanus said.

The flash floods took place in the peak of the wet season in Sulawesi island, as forecast by Indonesia’s weather agency.

The islands of Java, Sulawesi, Maluku, and Papua are expected to experience their peak wet seasons over January and February this year, bringing more risks of floods, the weather agency had said.

Rain in other parts of Indonesia like Sumatra and Borneo reached its peak in November and December last year.

Last November, cyclone-induced floods and landslides killed more than 1,000 people in Sumatra, with hundreds still missing. Green groups say deforestation linked to mining and logging exacerbated the impact of the floods. — Reuters

Over a dozen media workers detained in Venezuela, says national press association

A person holds a Venezuelan flag as government supporters gather after US President Donald Trump said the US has struck Venezuela and captured its President Nicolas Maduro, in Caracas, Venezuela, January 3, 2026. — REUTERS/GABY ORAA

More than a dozen media workers were detained on Monday while covering events in the Venezuelan capital Caracas, including a march in support of ousted President Nicolas Maduro and the swearing-in of the country’s new legislature, the South American nation’s press association said.

All 14 of those detained were later released, the press association (SNTP) said on X, though one was a foreign journalist who was deported.

SNTP said that those detained included 11 people working with international media outlets and one with a national outlet.

Reuters was unable to independently confirm all of the detentions.

China’s foreign ministry said on Tuesday that all Chinese reporters in Venezuela were safe.

Venezuela’s information ministry, which handles all contact with the government, did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the detentions. Venezuela’s Ministry of Communications also did not respond to requests for comment.

The Associated Press, Agence France-Presse and CNN did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Reuters also did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The press detentions come after the US military detained Maduro in an overnight operation this weekend. On Monday the deposed leader pleaded not guilty to narcoterrorism charges in a New York court.

His vice president, Delcy Rodriguez, has since taken the reins as interim leader. — Reuters

Pope Leo, closing Catholic Holy Year, urges kindness to foreigners

POPE LEO XIV waves as he leaves the basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls in Rome, Italy, May 20, 2025. — REUTERS

VATICAN CITY — Pope Leo closed the Catholic Church’s Holy Year on Tuesday by sealing shut the special “Holy Door” in St. Peter’s Basilica and urging Christians worldwide to help those in need and treat foreigners with kindness.

Leo, who has made care for immigrants a central theme of his early papacy, said at a Vatican ceremony that the record 33.5 million pilgrims who visited Rome during the Holy Year should have learned not to treat humans as mere “products”.

“Around us, a distorted economy tries to profit from everything,” said the pope. “After this year, will we be better able to recognize a pilgrim in the visitor, a seeker in the stranger, a neighbor in the foreigner?”

Holy years, or jubilees, typically occur every 25 years and are considered a time of peace, forgiveness, and pardon. Pilgrims to Rome can enter special “Holy Doors” at four Rome basilicas, and can attend papal audiences throughout the year.

At 9:41 a.m. (0841 GMT) on Tuesday, Leo, dressed in gold-trimmed robes, pulled shut the special bronze door at St. Peter’s, officially ending the year.

The next jubilee is not expected before 2033, when the Church may have a special one to mark 2,000 years since the death of Jesus.

Vatican and Italian officials said on Monday that pilgrims to Rome for the 2025 jubilee came from 185 countries, with Italy, the United States, Spain, Brazil, and Poland leading the pack.

The 2025 jubilee was marked by an historical rarity not seen for 300 years. It was opened by one pope, Francis, and closed by his successor, Leo.

Francis died in April after 12 years leading the 1.4-billion-member Church. The last jubilee held under two popes was in the year 1700, when Clement XI closed a holy year opened by Innocent XII.

Leo, who has pledged to keep Francis’ signature policies such as welcoming gay Catholics and discussing women’s ordination, echoed the late pope’s frequent criticisms of the global economic system on Tuesday.

Leo, the first US pope, lamented that the markets “turn human yearnings of seeking, traveling and beginning again into a mere business.” — Reuters

UN chief Guterres raises concerns about instability in Venezuela, legality of US operation

United States Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz addresses a Security Council meeting to discuss 'ongoing US aggression' against Venezuela at the UN headquarters in New York City, US, Dec. 23, 2025. — REUTERS

UNITED NATIONS — United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres raised concerns on Monday about greater instability in Venezuela after the US capture of President Nicolas Maduro, while the United States said it does not plan to occupy the Latin American country.

The 15-member Security Council met at UN headquarters in New York just hours before Maduro was due to appear in a Manhattan federal court on drug charges including narco-terrorism conspiracy.  Mr. Maduro has denied any criminal involvement.

“I am deeply concerned about the possible intensification of instability in the country, the potential impact on the region, and the precedent it may set for how relations between and among states are conducted,” Mr. Guterres said in a statement delivered to the council by UN political affairs chief Rosemary DiCarlo.

NO OCCUPATION

US Ambassador to the UN Mike Waltz told the Security Council the United States carried out “a surgical law enforcement operation facilitated by the US military against two indicted fugitives of American justice,” referring to Mr. Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores.

“As Secretary (of State Marco) Rubio has said, there is no war against Venezuela or its people. We are not occupying a country,” said Mr. Waltz, as he laid out the US case against Mr. Maduro at the Security Council.

“We’re not going to allow the Western Hemisphere to be used as a base of operation for our nation’s adversaries,” Mr. Waltz said. “You cannot continue to have the largest energy reserves in the world under the control of adversaries of the United States, under the control of illegitimate leaders, and not benefiting the people of Venezuela.”

Venezuela’s UN Ambassador Samuel Moncada called the US operation to capture Mr. Maduro “an illegitimate armed attack lacking any legal justification.” Mr. Moncada told the council that Venezuelan institutions are functioning normally, constitutional order has been preserved, and the state exercises effective control over all of its territory.

Mr. Guterres called on all Venezuelan actors to engage in an inclusive and democratic dialogue, adding: “I welcome and am ready to support all efforts aimed at assisting Venezuelans in finding a peaceful way forward.”

INTERNATIONAL LAW
Mr. Guterres also expressed concern that the US operation to capture Mr. Maduro in Caracas on Saturday did not respect the rules of international law. The UN Charter states that members “shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state.”

The United States has cited Article 51 of the UN Charter, which says that nothing “shall impair the inherent right of individual or collective self-defense if an armed attack occurs against a member of the United Nations.”

Russia, China, and Colombia condemned the US military operation as illegal. Most remaining council members did not directly criticize the United States and instead stated the importance of abiding by international law and the UN Charter.

“Unintelligible murmurings and attempts to avoid principled assessments by those who in other circumstances froth at the mouth and demand that others respect the UN Charter today seem particularly hypocritical and unseemly,” said Russia’s UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia.

Russia has been denounced by the United Nations for its 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

China drew comparisons to the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq and more recent attacks on Iran’s nuclear facilities.

“The lessons of history offer a stark warning,” said Sun Lei, the charge d’affaires of China’s Permanent Mission to the United Nations. “Military means are not the solution to problems, and the indiscriminate use of force will only lead to greater crises.”

Colombia, which requested Monday’s meeting, condemned the US operation as a clear violation of the sovereignty, political independence and territorial integrity of Venezuela. Russia, China, and Venezuela called on the United States to release Mr. Maduro and his wife.

The United States cannot be held accountable by the UN Security Council, which is charged with maintaining international peace and security, for any such violation. The United States wields a veto – along with Russia, China, Britain, and France – so it can block any action. — Reuters

Philippines raises alert level at restive Mayon volcano

Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS) Director Dr. Teresito Bacolcol (right) and Volcano Monitoring Eruption and Prediction Division Chief Ma. Antonia Bornas give updates regarding the raising of Alert Level 3 for the Mayon Volcano during a press conference on Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2026. — PHILIPPINE STAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

MANILA — The Philippines on Tuesday raised its alert level for the Mayon volcano in the central province of Albay, warning of “potential explosive activity” in the coming days or weeks and advising people to stay outside of a 6-kilometer (3.7 miles) danger zone.

The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, also known as PHIVOLCS, raised the alert to level three on a five-level scale, which means magma is pushing up inside the volcano and forming a lava dome at the summit.

PHIVOLCS urged residents within the 6-km no-go zone to evacuate because of risks like lava flows, falling rocks, and other hazards.

Mayon is the most active of 22 volcanoes in the Philippines, having erupted more than 50 times in the last four centuries. Its last magmatic eruption was in June 2023 when it spewed lava and noxious gases.

The most destructive eruption came in February 1841 when lava flows buried an entire town and killed 1,200 people.

The Philippines lies on the “Ring of Fire”, a belt of volcanoes circling the Pacific Ocean that is also prone to earthquakes.

PHIVOCLS urged civil aviation authorities to advise pilots to avoid flying near Mayon’s summit because ash from a sudden eruption can be hazardous to aircraft.

Since January 1, 2026, PHIVOLCS has recorded 346 rockfalls and 4 volcanic earthquakes, compared to 599 rockfalls in November–December 2025. — Reuters

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