Home Blog Page 608

Tyrese Haliburton drains winning 3 as Pacers finish off comeback vs Cavs

TYRESE HALIBURTON grabbed his own missed free throw and buried a 3-pointer with 1.1 seconds remaining, giving the visiting Indiana Pacers a 120-119 win over the short-handed Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference semifinals, taking a commanding lead in the series on Tuesday night.

The Pacers scored the final eight points after Donovan Mitchell made two free throws to push Cleveland’s lead to 119-112 with 57 seconds left. Baskets by Aaron Nesmith and Pascal Siakam made it a one-possession game, and Andrew Nembhard stole the subsequent inbounds pass from Max Strus.

Haliburton drew a foul with 12.4 ticks remaining, making his first free throw to make it 119-117, then grabbed his miss on the second. He dribbled beyond the arc before making the 3-pointer to complete Indiana’s comeback from 20 points down.

Mitchell amassed 48 points, nine assists, five rebounds and four steals for the top-seeded Cavaliers, who were without NBA Defensive Player of the Year Evan Mobley (left ankle sprain), All-Star point guard Darius Garland (left big toe sprain) and key reserve De’Andre Hunter (right thumb sprain).

Cleveland lost the first two games of a series at home for the first time since 1996, when it was swept by the Knicks in a best-of-three matchup. The Cavaliers have won just 7 of 13 home games during their current three-year playoff streak.

Nesmith and Myles Turner each scored 23 points and Haliburton had 11 of his 19 points in the fourth quarter. Bennedict Mathurin added 19 points and Nembhard collected 13 points, 13 assists and seven rebounds, along with eight turnovers, for fourth-seeded Indiana.

Mitchell, a six-time All-Star, scored 12 points in the first, 15 in the third and 12 in the fourth in an electrifying performance. He made 15 of 30 field goal attempts and was 17-of-21 on free throws, setting career highs in free throws made and attempted.

Strus had 23 points and Jarrett Allen posted 22 points and 12 rebounds for the Cavaliers, who led 81-61 midway through the third. Sam Merrill scored 14 off the bench.

Power forward Mobley and Hunter were both injured on Sunday in Game 1 on consecutive fourth-quarter possessions that were not deemed fouls. Garland has not played since April 23 against the Heat.

Mobley landed on the foot of Turner, who slid under him on a shot, while Hunter dislocated his thumb while falling after his dunk was blocked by Mathurin.

Atkinson, named NBA Coach of the Year earlier this week, expressed his displeasure in three-minute responses on Monday after practice and before the game, eliciting a response from Carlisle.

“Nobody wants to see players get hurt,” Carlisle said. “That disturbs the hell out of us.” — Reuters

Warriors lose Stephen Curry, still beat Timberwolves in Game One

BUDDY HIELD scored 24 points as the Golden State Warriors held on for a 99-88 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves in Game 1 of their Western Conference semifinals series on Tuesday night in Minneapolis, despite losing star Stephen Curry to injury.

Jimmy Butler notched a double-double with 20 points and 11 rebounds for the seventh-seeded Warriors, who won for the second time in three nights after eliminating the Houston Rockets in a seven-game, first-round series. Draymond Green finished with 18 points and eight rebounds.

Anthony Edwards missed his first 10 shots from the field but finished with 23 points and 14 rebounds for Minnesota, which appeared rusty after a five-day break between games. Naz Reid scored 19 points off the bench and Julius Randle finished with 18 points.

Curry left in the second quarter because of a left hamstring strain and did not return. Curry scored 13 points in 13 minutes on 5-for-9 shooting overall and 3-for-6 shooting from 3-point range before his injury.

Curry appeared to sustain the injury after driving for a layup. He favored his left leg after the shot and lifted his arm to signal to the bench that something felt wrong.

Minnesota trailed by as many as 23 points but pulled within single digits in the fourth quarter. A 13-2 run by the Timberwolves cut their deficit to 85-76 with 6:02 remaining.

On the next possession, Hield drilled one of his five 3-pointers from the left quarter to increase the Warriors’ lead back to 12 points. Butler followed with a driving jump shot to put Golden State on top 90-76 with 5:19 remaining and the Warriors maintained a comfortable lead the rest of the way.

Golden State held a commanding 80-60 advantage at the end of the third quarter.

Golden State led 44-31 at the half as Minnesota scored only 11 points in the second quarter. — Reuters

India launches strikes on Pakistan; Islamabad says Indian jets downed

INDIAN security force personnel stand guard near the site of a fighter jet crash in Wuyan in south Kashmir’s Pulwama district, May 7, 2025. — REUTERS

MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan/NEW DELHI — India attacked Pakistan and Pakistani Kashmir on Wednesday and Pakistan said it had shot down five Indian fighter jets in the worst fighting in more than two decades between the nuclear-armed enemies.

India said it struck nine Pakistani “terrorist infrastructure” sites, some of them linked to an attack by Islamist militants on Hindu tourists that killed 26 people in Indian Kashmir last month.

Islamabad said six Pakistani locations were targeted, and that none of them were militant camps. At least 26 civilians were killed and 46 injured, a Pakistan military spokesperson said.

Indian forces attacked the headquarters of Islamist militant groups Jaish-e-Mohammed and Lashkar-e-Taiba, an Indian defence source told Reuters.

“India has demonstrated considerable restraint in selection of targets and method of execution,” the Indian defense ministry said in a statement.

Pakistan said Indian missiles hit three sites and a military spokesperson told Reuters five Indian aircraft had been shot down, a claim not confirmed by India.

However, four local government sources in Indian Kashmir told Reuters that three fighter jets had crashed in separate areas of the Himalayan region during the night.

All three pilots had been hospitalized, the sources added. Indian defence ministry officials were not immediately available to confirm the report.

Images circulating on local media showed a large, damaged cylindrical chunk of silver-coloured metal lying in a field at one of the crash sites. Reuters could not immediately verify the authenticity of the image.

Islamabad called the assault a “blatant act of war” and said it had informed the UN Security Council that Pakistan reserved the right to respond appropriately to Indian aggression.

“All of these engagements have been done as a defensive measure,” Pakistan military spokesperson Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry said. “Pakistan remains a very responsible state. However, we will take all the steps necessary for defending the honor, integrity and sovereignty of Pakistan, at all cost.”

The South Asian neighbors also exchanged intense shelling and heavy gunfire across much of their de facto border in the Himalayan region of Kashmir, police and witnesses told Reuters.

Hindu-majority India and Islamic Pakistan have fought two of their three wars since independence in 1947 over Muslim-majority Kashmir, which both sides claim in full and control in part.

‘OPERATION SINDOOR’
Since a 2003 ceasefire, to which both countries recommitted in 2021, targeted strikes between the neighbors are extremely rare, especially Indian strikes on Pakistani areas outside Pakistani Kashmir.

But analysts said the risk of escalation is higher than in the recent past due to the severity of India’s attack, which New Delhi called “Operation Sindoor”. Sindoor is the Hindi language word for vermilion, a red powder that Hindu women put on the forehead or parting of their hair as a sign of marriage.

US President Donald J. Trump called the fighting “a shame” and added, “I hope it ends quickly.” The State Department said Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke to the national security advisers of both nations, urging “both to keep lines of communication open and avoid escalation.”

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called for maximum military restraint from both countries, a spokesperson said. China, which neighbors both India and Pakistan, also called for restraint.

The Pakistani army’s shelling across the frontier in Kashmir killed seven civilians and injured 35 in the Indian sector of the region, police there said.

Indian TV channels showed videos of explosions, fire, large plumes of smoke in the night sky and people fleeing in several places in Pakistan and Pakistani Kashmir. Reuters could not independently verify the footage.

In Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistani Kashmir, damage from the Indian strike was visible at sunrise. Security forces surrounded a small mosque in a hill-side residential neighborhood which had been hit, with its minaret collapsed.

All schools in Pakistani Kashmir, the national capital Islamabad, and much of Indian Kashmir and the populous Pakistani province of Punjab were ordered closed on Wednesday in the aftermath of the strikes.

Imran Shaheen, a district official in Pakistani Kashmir, said two mortars landed on a house in the town of Forward Kahuta, killing two men and injuring several women and children. In another village, a resident had been killed in firing, Mr. Shaheen said.

Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said Islamabad was responding to the Indian attacks but did not provide details. Pakistan’s populous province of Punjab declared an emergency, its chief minister said, and hospitals and emergency services were on high alert.

A Pakistani military spokesperson told broadcaster Geo that two mosques were among the sites hit by India. The Pakistani defense minister told Geo that all the sites were civilian and not militant camps.

He said India’s claim of targeting “camps of terrorists is false”.

After India’s strikes, the Indian army said in a post on X on Wednesday: “Justice is served.”  

STOCK FUTURES, AIRLINES IMPACTED
A spokesperson for the Indian Embassy in Washington told Reuters that evidence pointed “towards the clear involvement of Pakistan-based terrorists in this terror attack,” referring to the April tourist killings.

India said two of three suspects in that attack were Pakistani nationals but had not detailed its evidence. Pakistan denied that it had anything to do with the April killings.

News of the strikes impacted Indian stock futures mildly, with the GIFT NIFTY at 24,311, 0.3% below the NIFTY 50’s last close of 24,379.6 on Tuesday.

Several airlines including India’s largest airline, IndiGo, Air India and Qatar Airways cancelled flights in areas of India and Pakistan due to closures of airports and airspace.

Indian National Security Advisor Ajit Doval spoke to US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and other senior Indian officials briefed counterparts in Britain, Russia, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, an Indian source told Reuters.

The Indian strike goes far beyond New Delhi’s response to previous attacks in Kashmir blamed on Pakistan. Those include India’s 2019 air strike on Pakistan after 40 Indian paramilitary police were killed in Kashmir and India’s retaliation for the deaths of 18 soldiers in 2016.

“Given the scale of the Indian strike, which was far greater than what we saw in 2019, we can expect a sizable Pakistani response,” said Michael Kugelman, a Washington-based South Asia analyst and writer for the Foreign Policy magazine.

“All eyes will be on India’s next move. We’ve had a strike and a counter-strike, and what comes next will be the strongest indication of just how serious a crisis this could become,” he said. — Reuters

Vatican conclave to pick new pope; world awaits white smoke

A CHIMNEY is set up on the roof of the Sistine Chapel, ahead of the conclave, at the Vatican, May 2, 2025. — REUTERS

VATICAN CITY — Roman Catholic cardinals began the task on Wednesday of electing a new pope, locking themselves away from the world until they choose the man they hope can unite a diverse but divided global Church.

In a ritual dating back to medieval times, the cardinals filed into the Vatican’s frescoed Sistine Chapel after a public Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica and started their secret conclave for a successor to Pope Francis, who died last month.

No pope has been elected on the first day of a conclave for centuries, so voting could continue for several days before one of the red-hatted princes of the Church receives the necessary two-thirds majority to become the 267th pontiff.

There was only one ballot scheduled on Wednesday. Thereafter, the cardinals can vote as many as four times a day.

They will burn their ballots, with black smoke from a chimney on the roof of the chapel marking an inconclusive vote, while white smoke and the peeling of bells signaling that the 1.4-billion member church has a new leader.

The pope’s influence reaches well beyond the Catholic Church, providing a moral voice and a call to conscience that no other global leader can match.

At a Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica on Wednesday morning before entering the conclave, the cardinals prayed that God would help them find a pope who would exercise “watchful care” over the world.

In a sermon, Italian Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re told his peers they must set aside “every personal consideration” in choosing the new pontiff and keep in mind “only … the good of the Church and of humanity.”

Re, the dean of the College of Cardinals, is 91 and will not enter the conclave, which is reserved for cardinals under the age of 80.

Cardinals in recent days have offered different assessments of what they are looking for in the next pontiff.

While some have called for continuity with Francis’ vision of greater openness and reform, others have said they want to turn the clock back and embrace old traditions. Many have indicated they want a more predictable, measured pontificate.

A record 133 cardinals from 70 countries will enter the Sistine Chapel, up from 115 from 48 nations in the last conclave in 2013 -— growth that reflects Francis’ efforts to extend the reach of the Church to far-flung regions with few Catholics.

No clear favorite has emerged, although Italian Cardinal Pietro Parolin and Filipino Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle are considered the front-runners.

NO EAVESDROPPING
However, if it quickly becomes obvious that neither can win, votes are likely to shift to other contenders, with the electors possibly coalescing around geography, doctrinal affinity or common languages.

Among other potential candidates are France’s Jean-Marc Aveline, Hungary’s Peter Erdo, American Robert Prevost and Italy’s Pierbattista Pizzaballa.

Re suggested the cardinals should look for a pope who respected the diversity within the Church. “Unity does not mean uniformity, but a firm and profound communion in diversity,” he said in his sermon.

As in medieval times, the cardinals will be banned from communicating with outsiders during the conclave, and the Vatican has taken high-tech measures to ensure secrecy, including jamming devices to prevent any eavesdropping.

The average length of the last 10 conclaves was just over three days and none went on for more than five days. A 2013 conclave lasted just two days.

The cardinals will be looking to wrap things up quickly again this time to avoid giving the impression that they are divided or that the Church is adrift.

Some 80% of the cardinals who enter the Sistine Chapel on Wednesday were appointed by Francis, increasing the possibility that his successor will in some way continue his progressive policies despite strong pushback from traditionalists.

Among their considerations will be whether they should seek a pope from the global south where congregations are growing, as they did in 2013 with the Argentinian Francis, hand back the reins to Europe or even pick a first US pope. — Reuters

‘What’s left to bomb?’ Israel’s plan to expand campaign strikes fear into Gazans

A view shows houses and buildings destroyed by Israeli strikes in Gaza City, Oct. 10, 2023. — REUTERS

CAIRO — Israel’s plan to expand its Gaza offensive, displace people within the enclave and take control of aid distribution has horrified Gazans who already have endured multiple displacements and food shortages during 19 months of conflict.

Israel has been blocking all aid from entering Gaza since March 2 with the collapse of a two-month ceasefire with Hamas that had improved Gazans’ access to food and medicine and allowed many of them to go home.

For Aya, a 30-year-old Gaza City resident who returned home with her family during the ceasefire after months in the southern part of the strip, Israel’s announcement on Monday raised fears of being killed or indefinitely displaced.

“Are we going to die this time?” she said in a message on a chat app.

“Are they going to displace us again? Are we going to end up in Rafah, and will this be the last time, or are they going to force us out of Gaza after Rafah?” she said, referring to the Rafah area in southern Gaza, next to Egypt’s border.

Attending a funeral on Monday for several people killed in an Israeli airstrike on a building in Gaza City, Mohammed al-Seikaly said things were so dire it was hard to imagine how Israel could further intensify its assault.

“There is nothing left in the Gaza Strip that has not been struck by missiles and explosive barrels,” he said. “I’m asking in front of the whole world: ‘What’s left to bomb?’”

On Tuesday, Israeli military strikes killed at least 46 Palestinians across Gaza, local health authorities said. Medics said at least 29 people, including women and children, were killed at a school housing displaced families in the Bureij camp in the central Gaza Strip.

Medics said the school was hit twice within a few hours.

After the first airstrike, the Israeli military said it had struck terrorists operating from a command center used for storing weapons and planning and staging attacks against Israel. There was no immediate army comment after the second attack.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the expanded military operation would be “intensive” and involve holding seized territories and moving Palestinians “for their own safety.”

DEARTH OF FOOD
One Israeli official said the plan would involve moving the civilian population southward and controlling aid distribution to prevent food from falling into the hands of Hamas, the Islamist militant group whose attack on Israel in October 2023 triggered Israel’s military operation in Gaza.

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs rejected the plan on Tuesday as “the opposite of what is needed”.

Tamer, a man from Khan Younis in the southern half of the Strip, said he feared Israel could impose its own triage system to decide who would get food.

“Will they arrest people and kill others before they let the rest into the areas they designate?” he said.

Gaza’s 2.3-million people are struggling with a dearth of food, with many eating only once a day. The World Food Programme said on April 25 it had run out of food stocks in the Strip.

Flour often can’t be found, but when a rare sack is available it can cost as much as $500, up from 25 shekels ($7) before the war, Aya said.

“They are starving us so we can agree to anything. We want an end to the war. Let them take their prisoners (Israeli hostages) and end the war. Enough,” she added.

Some residents have been eating weeds or leaves, while fishermen have turned to catching sea turtles and selling their meat.

Israeli officials have said there is still enough food in Gaza, though the head of Israel’s military has warned the political leadership that supplies must be let in soon, public broadcaster Kan reported.

Hamas, which has run Gaza since 2007, accuses Israel of “using food as a weapon in its war against the people of Gaza.”

The war began on October 7, 2023, when Hamas killed 1,200 people and took 251 hostage, according to Israeli tallies.

Israel’s campaign has killed more than 52,000 Palestinians, mostly civilians, according to Hamas-run health authorities, and reduced much of Gaza to ruins. — Reuters

US, China to hold ice-breaker trade talks on May 10

COLLECTIONS - GETARCHIVE

WASHINGTON/BEIJING — US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and chief trade negotiator Jamieson Greer will meet China’s economic tsar He Lifeng in Switzerland this weekend for talks that could be the first step toward resolving a trade war disrupting the global economy.

News of the meeting announced by Washington late Tuesday, and later confirmed by Beijing, sent US equity index futures sharply higher, while stock markets in China and Hong Kong also rose as Asian trading began on Wednesday.

The talks come after weeks of escalating tensions that have seen duties on goods imports between the world’s two largest economies soar well beyond 100%, amounting to what Bessent on Tuesday described as the equivalent of a trade embargo.

The deadlock, alongside US President Donald J. Trump’s decision last month to impose sweeping duties on dozens of countries, has upended supply chains, roiled financial markets and stoked fears of a sharp downturn in global growth.

The negotiating teams convening in neutral Switzerland are expected to discuss reductions to the broader tariffs, two sources familiar with the planning told Reuters. The two sides are also expected to discuss eliminating duties on specific products, a US decision to end its so-called de minimis duty exemptions on low-value imports and US export controls, one of the sources said.

China’s State Council did not immediately reply to a faxed request for comment.

“My sense is this will be about de-escalation,” Mr. Bessent told Fox News Channel’s “The Ingraham Angle” after the announcement. “We’ve got to de-escalate before we can move forward.”

A Chinese commerce ministry spokesperson later confirmed that China had agreed to meet the US envoys.

“On the basis of fully considering global expectations, China’s interests, and the appeals of US industry and consumers, China has decided to re-engage the US,” the Chinese statement said.

“There is an old Chinese saying: Listen to what is said, and watch what is done. … If (the US) says one thing but then does another, or attempts to use talks as a cover to continue coercion and blackmail, China will never agree.”

This is the first meeting between senior Chinese and US officials since US Senator Steve Daines met Premier Li Qiang in Beijing in March.

As tensions with the United States ratcheted up, Beijing has largely adopted a fiery rhetoric, repeatedly refusing to engage in negotiations with Washington unless it withdrew its “unilateral” tariffs.

However, on Friday last week it signaled increasing openness with its commerce ministry saying Beijing was “evaluating” an offer from Washington to hold talks.

The stakes for China’s economy are high, with its vast factory sector already facing the brunt of the tariffs. Many analysts have downgraded their 2025 economic growth forecast for the Asian giant, while investment bank Nomura has warned the trade war could cost China up to 16 million jobs.

China’s central bank on Wednesday ramped up monetary stimulus, flagging rate cuts and a liquidity injection into the banking system, among other easing measures aimed at mitigating the economic impact of the duties.

Mr. Bessent told Fox News the two sides would work out during their meeting on Saturday “what to talk about.”

“Look, we have a shared interest that this isn’t sustainable,” Bessent said. “And 145%, 125% is the equivalent of an embargo. We don’t want to decouple. What we want is fair trade.”

Bo Zhengyuan, partner at Shanghai-based policy consultancy Plenum, said Saturday’s talks are aimed at easing tensions but it remains unclear how substantive they could prove.

“For more comprehensive geopolitical negotiations to be possible, tariffs would need to be lowered first — the key is whether both sides can agree on the extent and scope of tariff rollbacks, as well as on follow-up talks,” Bo said.

MIXED SIGNALS
US officials have held a flurry of meetings with trading partners since the president announced a 10% tariff on most countries on April 2, along with higher tariff rates that will kick in on July 9, barring separate trade agreements.

Mr. Trump has also imposed 25% tariffs on autos, steel and aluminum, 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico, and 145% tariffs on China, with further duties expected on pharmaceuticals in coming weeks.

China responded by boosting its tariffs on US goods to 125%. The European Union is also readying countermeasures.

Mr. Trump and his trade team have sent mixed signals over progress in talks with major trading partners rushing to cement agreements with Washington and avoid the imposition of hefty import taxes on their goods.

Mr. Bessent told lawmakers earlier in the day that the Trump administration was negotiating with 17 major trading partners, but not yet China, and could announce trade agreements with some of them as early as this week.

Mr. Trump told reporters before a meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney that he and top administration officials will review potential trade deals over the next two weeks to decide which ones to accept, triggering a slide in stocks.

US and Britain have made progress towards a trade deal, a British official said, while Mr. Bessent told Fox News that many other countries including Indonesia had come with good offers to reduce tariffs and non-tariff barriers, such as subsidies.

Mr. Trump’s moves on tariffs, which he says are aimed in part at reducing the US trade deficit, are so far having an opposite effect, with the gap hitting a record in March as businesses rushed to import goods ahead of the levies. The data highlighted a dynamic that helped drive gross domestic product into negative territory in the first quarter of 2025 for the first time in three years.

In particular, an effort by drug makers to beat tariffs that Mr. Trump has threatened to impose on the sector led to a record surge in pharmaceutical imports. Notably, though, the US trade deficit with China narrowed sharply as the crushing levies Mr. Trump has imposed cut deeply into Chinese imports. — Reuters

What’s in a papal name? An agenda for the Catholic Church

An image of Pope Francis and information including his year of death and birth is displayed, at the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore, in Rome, Italy, April 21, 2025. — REUTERS

VATICAN CITY — When Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio emerged onto the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica after the conclave of March 2013, few outside his native Argentina knew who he was or what kind of pope he might be.

When his papal name was announced, things became much clearer.

Taking the name of the 13th century St. Francis of Assisi, Bergoglio laid out a plan for his papacy.

St. Francis had rejected wealth and wanted to care for the poor. He had taken care of animals and the environment and appealed movingly against the wars of his time. These traits would become key themes of the 12-year papacy of Pope Francis.

As 133 Catholic cardinals started their conclave on Wednesday to elect Francis’ successor, the world awaits the moment when the new pontiff emerges onto that balcony. What name will be announced? What signal will it send?

John, the most common name chosen by past popes and a name Francis often suggested as one for his successor, would evoke a major figure of the 1960s.

Pope John XXIII (1958 to 1963) was known as a gregarious, smiling man, often referred to as “The Good Pope.”

He helped work behind the scenes to de-escalate the Cuban Missile Crisis and called the Second Vatican Council, a three-year assembly of the world’s Catholic bishops that led to major reforms for the global institution.

Choosing the name Paul could honor Pope Paul VI (1963 to 1978), who came after John XXIII and was widely seen as a more cautious figure. He is generally seen as a careful consolidator, who firmed up some of John’s reforms but also gave clear doctrinal answers.

Paul VI, for instance, was the author of a 1968 letter that broadly banned Catholics from using birth control.

Some cardinals say quietly that after Pope Francis, a new Pope Paul is exactly what is needed. Francis, the first pope from the Americas, was not always focused on clear doctrine and even made controversial decisions like allowing priests to bless same-sex couples on a case-by-case basis.

ANOTHER DOUBLE PAPAL NAME?
Other popular papal names have included Gregory, Clement, Leo and Pius.

There is also Benedict, which could honor Francis’ conservative predecessor, Benedict XVI. Or it could honor Benedict XV (1914 to 1922), who spent his papacy pleading with European leaders to end the bloodshed of World War One.

A new pope could decide to be called Francis II, which would be taken as a clear signal that the new pontiff planned to continue with a similar agenda to the late pope.

Cardinal Albino Luciani, elected pope in 1978, decided he could not pick just one name. He chose John Paul, to honor both of his immediate predecessors.

When Luciani died only 33 days later, the next pope, Cardinal Karol Wojtyla, chose John Paul II (1978-2005), honoring all three most recent popes.

The new pope could also choose a double name. Something like John Francis would evoke the reforms of the 1960s and the global attraction of Francis, whose funeral and burial procession brought out crowds in Rome of some 400,000. — Reuters

Complete Home 2025: Budols that bring joy to your home

SM Hypermarket’s Complete Home is Back — where incredible savings and home upgrade inspiration come together for an unforgettable shopping experience!

Running from May 1 to June 30, Complete Home brings back the best deals on must-have kitchen gadgets, home organization ideas, everyday home essentials, and more — everything you need to elevate your living space. Whether you’re organizing, decorating, or simply upgrading your home, there’s something for everyone.

This year’s event is made even better through our partners Nido, Purefoods, Ariel, Tide, Surf, Creamsilk, Colgate, Palmolive, Nivea, CDO, Eden, Marby, Jolly, Cimory, Del Monte, Knorr, UFC, Jolly, Silver Swan, Barrio Fiesta, Coca-Cola, UCC, Lactum, Baygon, Sanicare, and many more.

Best Buys For Your Home

From fresh finds to home essentials, your home deserves a little upgrade — and now, it comes with perks! During the Complete Home event from May 1 to June 30, SMAC members can get exclusive discounts on select items:

Available in select stores:

  • Free gift: Get a free gift for every purchase of select Complete Home participating items.

Available in all SM Hypermarket online stores:

 

  • Free items: Shop at smmarkets.ph with a minimum P1,500 spend, inclusive of any Complete Home items and get free Watts Japan Home Organizer for the month of May and SM Bonus Bundle for June.

Complete Your Home with Extra Exclusive Perks

But wait, there’s more! The Complete Home Expo is back with ultra-exclusive deals and exciting activities in select SM Hypermarket stores — starting at SM Hypermarket Fairview from May 2 to 4, 2025. Last year’s hits like the Complete Ref and Mystery Bag made waves, and this year, they’re making a comeback with fun new twists, surprises, and even more promos.

  • Mystery Bag: Add some thrill to your haul! For every minimum ₱5,000 single-receipt grocery purchase (inclusive of any Complete Home items), you can grab a Mystery Bag filled with surprise home essentials and goodies.
  • Buy 1, Take 1 Promo: Double the value, double the budol! Spend at least ₱3,000 on groceries (with Complete Home items included) and score exclusive Buy 1, Take 1 offers on select appliance.
  • Complete Ref: Get ₱2,000 worth of FREE groceries when you purchase a Hanabishi 2-Door Mini Refrigerator — perfect for organizing and upgrading your kitchen setup.
  • Complete Washing Machine: Buy a Hanabishi Twin Tub Washing Machine (7kg) and receive FREE laundry essentials to complete your cleaning corner at home.
  • Play to Win: Bring home instant prizes! With a minimum ₱500 purchase of Complete Home items, you get a chance to play a fun in-store game and win rewards on the spot.

Catch the next legs of the expo at SM Hypermarket Baliwag from May 30 to June 1, SM Hypermarket Clark from June 13 to 15, and SM Hypermarket Bicutan from June 27 to 30. It’s the perfect opportunity to give your home the upgrade it deserves while having fun and saving more.

Complete Home is the shopping adventure your space has been waiting for. Complete your home, complete the experience — only here at SM Hypermarket.

 


Spotlight is BusinessWorld’s sponsored section that allows advertisers to amplify their brand and connect with BusinessWorld’s audience by publishing their stories on the BusinessWorld Web site. For more information, send an email to online@bworldonline.com.

Join us on Viber at https://bit.ly/3hv6bLA to get more updates and subscribe to BusinessWorld’s titles and get exclusive content through www.bworld-x.com.

Philippines central bank chief open to 75bps more cuts for 2025

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Eli M. Remolona Jr. Photographer: Lam Yik/Bloomberg

The Philippine central bank is open to cutting its key interest rate by a further 75 basis points for the rest of the year as inflation continued to ease, according to Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Eli M. Remolona, Jr.

“On the table, yes,” Mr. Remolona said in a mobile-phone message on Wednesday when asked if it’s possible for the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas to reduce the benchmark rate by 75 basis points more this year after inflation further slowed in April.

The BSP has been signaling a readiness to further lower borrowing costs after a quarter-point cut last month to support the economy amid the global trade uncertainty.

Easing price pressures and the peso’s strength against the US dollar have given monetary authorities leeway for further easing.

Mr. Remolona earlier on Wednesday also signaled that authorities are unlikely to intervene to curb the peso’s appreciation. — Bloomberg

COVID was Splash Island’s biggest challenge

“It was the local government that offered support to Splash Island when the pandemic hit, Benedicto C. Torres, Jr., president of Global Gutz Parks Philippines, Inc., said.

Interview by Patricia Mirasol
Video editing by Arjale Queral

Few doctors, throttled aid: How Myanmar’s junta worsened earthquake toll

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

Burmese academic Sophia Htwe spent hours desperately trying to call home from Australia after the 7.7 magnitude earthquake struck her hometown in Myanmar in late March, learning that a childhood friend had been trapped in the rubble.

Friends from the central-northwestern region of Sagaing told her that she had been freed but died from her injuries after receiving no medical treatment.

“That just really broke me… This is actually the failure of the military junta and the military coup,” she said, referring to the junta’s attacks on healthcare since seizing power in February 2021.

The earthquake, which killed more than 3,700 people and injured 5,000, quickly overwhelmed a severely depleted health system in which the number of doctors and nurses had fallen dramatically under military rule, according to World Health Organization figures.

Many blame the situation on attacks on healthcare facilities as the military administration sought to root out opponents to its rule, after medics took a prominent role in the anti-junta movement that emerged after the coup.

That meant many victims of the earthquake went without immediate medical attention or had to wait a long time to receive the care they needed, according to two doctors who worked in the quake zone, two opposition activists and two human rights groups monitoring the response to the disaster.

Rights groups Human Rights Watch and Physicians for Human Rights said doctors had described medicine and staff shortages and patients whose wounds had rotted in the absence of medical care. In a joint statement on April 29 they said the military’s “years of unlawful attacks on healthcare facilities and workers” had severely hindered the emergency response.

The situation was compounded, they said, because some medical workers were too afraid of arrest to operate in junta-controlled areas or scared of passing through checkpoints to reach areas where they were needed. Some areas affected by the earthquake are contested by both rebel and junta forces and their affiliated militias, creating an environment of tension and suspicion.

Despite declaring a ceasefire on April 2, the junta has continued daily aerial attacks that have killed civilians, according to a Reuters analysis of data. More than 172 attacks have occurred since the ceasefire, 73 of them in areas devastated by the earthquake.

A spokesman for the junta did not respond to several requests for comment.

 

WORKFORCE SHORTAGES

Before the coup, which toppled the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi and ignited a civil war, the number of healthcare workers was growing.

It surged 13.3% between 2016 and 2020 to about six doctors and nine nurses per 10,000 people, the WHO said.

That figure fell to 1.01 doctors and 1.96 nurses in 2022 – far short of the recommended WHO minimum standard of 22.8 healthcare workers per 10,000 – as medical workers joined the anti-junta Civil Disobedience Movement, refusing to work for government-run clinics.

According to Insecurity Insight, a Swiss non-governmental organization, that tracks attacks on healthcare across the world. Soldiers have killed at least 74 health workers, attacked at least 263 health facilities, and arrested and prosecuted more than 800 since the coup.

While some who left have since returned to work, the shortage of health workers remains “very serious”, said Dr Thushara Fernando, the WHO’s Myanmar representative.

In January this year, junta leader Min Aung Hlaing acknowledged in state media that some hospitals did not have a single doctor.

Non-government medical facilities were “severely restricted”, the WHO said, by a lack of skilled health workers and difficulties imposed by the junta in importing medical supplies – restrictions that have created a shortage of life-saving medicines.

Before the quake, the military shut at least eight private hospitals in Mandalay, one of the cities devastated by the disaster, according to the National Unity Government, a parallel civilian administration, while the quake destroyed at least five health facilities and partially damaged 61, according to the WHO.

Healthcare workers aligned with the opposition are providing lifesaving care through underground networks, but “they are operating with extremely limited resources, and their safety remains a serious concern,” said an NUG official who requested anonymity due to the sensitivity of the situation.

The junta has detained doctors aligned with the opposition, which it characterizes as “terrorists”.

The two doctors who travelled to the earthquake zone and asked not to be named for fear of retribution also described manpower problems.

One said medics treating quake victims lacked triage expertise because the senior doctors who once led training had been imprisoned or feared arrest if they travelled to the disaster zone.

The other said people with chronic illnesses had been unable to access vital medications, and quake survivors were suffering from diarrhea, skin-related diseases and heat-stroke as temperatures climb to about 40 degrees Celsius (104°F).

“During the earthquake, people didn’t receive the immediate aid they desperately needed,” he said, adding that authorities frequently questioned people helping survivors.

 

UNDERGROUND RESPONSE

The military, which controls most but not all of the areas worst hit by the quake, has not eased its communications bans or stringent customs rules since the disaster happened, said James Rodehaver, Myanmar head for the United Nations Office on Human Rights.

He said a requirement by the junta that all organizations working on earthquake relief register with authorities had driven some Burmese humanitarian responders underground, while there was no evidence the military – fighting across multiple frontlines – was deploying troops to help deliver aid.

In 2022, state media reported the junta diverted funds from the natural disaster management budget to provide loans in a bid to boost the sluggish economy, a move Win Myat Aye, the top official for disaster management under the former civilian government, says left a shortage of emergency supplies, logistical support, and recovery programs.

In Sagaing, Nyi Nyi Tin, whose home was damaged by the quake, said there was no official support beyond an offer of about $61 to the families of the dead and some compensation for the injured.

As the monsoon rains loom, tens of thousands are still living in makeshift tents and the WHO says it fears the spread of communicable diseases.

In comparison with massive community responses to past disasters, including the COVID-19 pandemic, there were only small teams of people helping and little cooperation between civil society and authorities, Nyi Nyi Tin said.

“That sense of unity is gone. I think it’s because people are afraid,” he said. – Reuters

UN chief concerned about Indian military actions in Pakistan, urges restraint

REUTERS

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was very concerned about Indian attacks in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir, his spokesperson said on Tuesday while calling for maximum military restraint from both nuclear-armed Asian neighbors.

 

WHY IT’S IMPORTANT

Mr. Guterres said earlier this week even before India’s military actions that tensions between India and Pakistan were “at their highest in years” after an April 22 Islamist militant attack in India-administered Kashmir in which 26 people were killed and which the U.N. chief condemned as an “awful terror attack.”

India attacked Pakistan and Pakistani Kashmir on Wednesday Asia time and late Tuesday U.S. time, while Pakistan said it had shot down some Indian fighter jets in the worst fighting in more than two decades between the countries.

 

KEY QUOTES

“The Secretary-General is very concerned about the Indian military operations across the Line of Control and international border. He calls for maximum military restraint from both countries,” the U.N. chief’s spokesperson said on Tuesday.

“The world cannot afford a military confrontation between India and Pakistan.”

 

EARLIER COMMENTS

“Tensions between India and Pakistan are at their highest in years. I strongly condemn the awful terror attack in Pahalgam on 22 April. It is essential – especially at this critical hour – that India and Pakistan avoid a military confrontation that could easily spin out of control,” Mr. Guterres said on Monday.

Late last month, Mr. Guterres spoke separately with Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shebaz Sharif and India’s Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar and offered to support de-escalation efforts, his spokesperson said.

 

CONTEXT

Muslim-majority Kashmir is claimed in full by both Hindu-majority India and Islamic Pakistan, with each controlling only part of it and having fought wars over it. – Reuters