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NPR News: 04-22-2026 1PM EDT

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Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Libby Casey.

President Trump is extending a ceasefire with Iran indefinitely, while maintaining the U.S. Naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. Iran now says it has seized two ships and fired on a third in the Strait. NPR's A.A. Batrawi has more from Dubai.

The two vessels were seized by Iran's revolutionary guard in the Strait of Hormuz.

That's the key waterway through which a fifth of the world's oil was passing before the

war began early two months ago. Iran, which is blocking most ships now from transiting through the Strait, says the seizure of today's vessels is in response to the U.S. seizing an Iranian cargo ship and its crew on Sunday. They called it an "i" for an "i" and "oil tanker" for an "oil tanker."

The U.S. Navy is positioned in the Arabian Sea, blocking Iranian ships from entering or exiting the Strait. Iran said the seizure of the ship violates the ceasefire, and there's no word yet on whether the two sides plan to meet again for another round of talks. A.A. Batrawi and Pyrenees, Dubai

Health Secretary Robert of Kennedy Jr. faced questions from Senators this morning about

vaccines, a measles outbreak in South Carolina, and Medicaid.

He's on Capitol Hill for two budget hearings today, starting with the Finance Committee. But Senators are hitting on a wide range of controversial health policies. Massachusetts Democrat Elizabeth Warren pressed Kennedy on the one-off deals that the

Trump administration has signed with individual drug companies, saying the U.S. needs

a comprehensive approach. "It's these deals with big pharma are so great for Americans than we should be able to see what promises have been made." "You have the power to make this deal yourself. Why don't you do that?

Why did you weed it this because you were used to doing?" "What we've got is Trump." "You have a lot more power to negotiate than we do." "Stakes." This afternoon, Kennedy goes before the Senate Health Committee.

The big tech company, Meta, says it will soon begin tracking its employees' digital movements to train its artificial intelligence. As NPR's Bobby Allen reports, the surveillance has been met with blowback from workers who say that's intrusive. Meta-toll employees, new logging software, record keystrokes, mouse movements, and even

take snapshots of employees' screens. Meta made the announcement to its 78,000 employees in an internal memo that was reviewed by NPR. In response to employees' concerns, Meta-leadership wrote in another internal message, quote, "The model will not be able to memorize any of the screen content at Cs, adding that

all the data will be disconnected from employee names." Meta is ramping up AI across its workforce, just as it plans the layoff about 10% of its staff next month. The new surveillance will not apply to employees in Europe where the practice would violate data privacy laws, Bobby Allen and PR news.

At this hour, stocks are trading up the NASDAQ saw a surge today in the Dow and S&P 500 are both higher and PR. 18 members of the Congressional Democratic Women's Caucus are calling on the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to drop its lawsuit against a Coca-Cola Bottler and Distributor. NPR's Andrea Xu reports the EEOC is suing the company over an off-site networking event

for female employees. The lawsuit alleges that Coca-Cola beverages northeast, discriminated against male employees by excluding men from the event in 2024. EEOC chair Andrea Lucas told NPR, "Such opportunities must be provided to everybody regardless of their sex."

In an open letter to Lucas, the Democrats wrote that efforts to create forums for professional development are, quote, "a measured and necessary response to the stark realities women face in the workplace." The female lawmakers noted that many of them have been the only woman at the table during meetings and experienced harassment on the job.

The characterized the lawsuit as a waste of resources and said it undermines the very progress the EEOC has historically helped advance in reassue and PR news. The UK Parliament has passed a bill aimed at banning cigarettes for future generations. People born after 2008 would not be able to legally buy cigarettes under the new tobacco and vape spill.

The legislation awaits formal approval by King Charles and is one of the toughest anti-smoking measures globally. A two-month-old Asian elephant is making her public debut today at this Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington, Lin Mai is the first Asian elephant born at the zoo in nearly 25 years. She's about three feet tall and weighs 298 pounds.

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