Bye from NPR News in Washington, I'm Janine Herbst.
Protesters gathered around the country today to voice their opposition to the Trump administration.
“It was the third no-kings protest since the start of President Trump's second term.”
And Piers Meg Anderson was at the movement's flagship protest in St. Paul, Minnesota, where demonstrators spoke often about the recent ice operation there. The mood at the Minnesota protest was joyful and festive. There were indigenous dancers, people wearing inflatable govers, a woman in a lady liberty costume, but a darker time was top of mind for a lot of people.
The aggressive ice surge here that left two U.S. citizens dead and sparked fear for many people in the community. Lorraine Shooter traveled to the protest from the monomony Indian reservation in Wisconsin. I'm proud of Minnesota. I'm proud of the indigenous community here. I'm proud of how they stand together and how they stand up and how they keep standing up against this
administration. She said she has family in the Twin Cities who carried their tribal IDs with them during the ice search. Meg Anderson and Piers News.
“Lovingies help officials say at least 47 people were killed today in Israeli attacks, including”
three journalists and nine paramedics. Two unofficials and humanitarian groups are criticizing Israel's conduct and if you're Lorraine Fraier has more from southern Lebanon. The head of the world's health organization calls it a tragedy. Nine paramedics killed in five separate attacks on a single day.
He says health workers are protected under international humanitarian law and should never
be targeted. Israel has intensified its attacks across Lebanon. Mostly here in the south where Israeli ground troops are moving northward to try to out his bullet militants. In one attack in Israeli military spokesperson says the target was journalists, accusing them
without providing evidence of propaganda for his bullet. But Lebanon's health minister called it a double attack with a second strike hitting first responders who tried to rescue the victims. Health officials say 51 Lebanese health workers have been killed by Israel so far this month.
Lorraine Fraier and PR News in Jezine Southern Lebanon. Ukraine's president Zelensky made unannounced visits to the United Arab Emirates and Qatar today. Offering to use its drone expertise to help Gulf states stem Iran's attacks during the U.S. Israeli war in Iran.
He says Ukraine has signed 10-year security agreements with Saudi Arabia and Qatar and expects to sign one with the UAE soon. In exchange to Zelensky wants more high-end air defense missiles it needs to counter Russia's attacks. Ukraine is one of the world's leading producers of battle-tested drone interceptors that
“are cheap and effective, they're playing a key role in Ukraine's defense against Moscow's”
war. You're listening to NPR News from Washington. Nestle says more than 413,000 Kit-Kat candy bars were stolen while en route from Italy to Poland. This was food giants as the candy in the truck are still missing.
But the things won't get far if they try to sell it, Nestle says all of the products can be traced using the unique batch code that's assigned to individual bars. A popular tutor turned influence in China died this week at the age of 41.
His fiery rhetoric on education and social issues attracted 27 million followers on China's
TikTok app, Duyin, and millions more on other platforms. And here's Jennifer Pack has more from Shanghai. Zhang Xiaofeng was known for giving frank and practical advice on college applications, which is big business in China. Once he was criticized for advising against useless majors, like journalism.
Many Chinese families trusted Zhang to guide their children because he too came from a humble background and worked his way up. Fans say their shock, he's died at the peak of his career. Zhang's company says he died from sudden cardiac arrest. He is survived by a daughter, age 11, and a wife.
Jennifer Pack and PR news, Shanghai. French police say they have once suspect in custody and they're searching for a second one. After they stopped a suspected bomb attack outside the bank of America headquarters building in Paris early today, police say they spotted two suspects carrying a shopping bag near the
bank and that one had a lighter and was allegedly trying to ignite the device. Officials say they're investigating it as terrorism related. I'm Jeanine Herbst and PR News in Washington. Newsmakers is NPR's newest podcast where you can find NPR's biggest interviews. We begin with Westmore, a rising star in the Democratic Party.
You're never going to win long-term on anger.
Westmore, Maryland, on the midterms and beyond, you've got to be able to show what an alternative looks like. That's this week on NPR's Newsmakers.


