"Live from MPR news on Giles Snyder is real as issue mass displacement orders...
an area of South Lebanon accounting for more than one-eighth of the country's land mass,
“as it intensifies its campaign against Hezbollah."”
Israeli forces have been carrying out broad strikes, especially around the city of Tyre, the BBC's John Sudworth, is in Beirut. "The strikes came less than two hours after Israel gave the evacuation order, with tens of thousands of residents facing the choice of taking their chances with the bombs, or rushing their families onto the crowded roads in search of scarce accommodation in a country already
in deep upheaval." Israel says its intensifying its military action in response to the use by Hezbollah of deadly new fibre optic drones. "Middi is really strikes and southern Lebanon, the U.S. military has targeted Iran
for the second time, in three days, the U.S. official says the latest strikes were conducted
on an Iranian drone operation near the Strait of Hermuz. Iran says it targeted a U.S. base after the strikes near the port city of Bondar Abbas. "Boters and taxes have set up a key Senate race advancing to November, the controversial state attorney general Ken Paxton, over long-time Senator John Corden, and Tuesday's Republican runoff, blaze Ganyas with the Texas newsroom."
“"You know, I think what it really says is that, you know, in a Republican primary runoff,”
it's going to be the most extreme voters that come on in vote, and therefore we get the most extreme candidate, which Paxton with the Trump endorsement sort of gets that nod. But the real question will be moving forward, whether or not Republicans as a whole will
choose the back and remember, this is a runoff, so only about 1.4 million people cast
ballots. In this race, in the general election, it'll be a lot closer to 8 million people. That's what we saw in 2022." Paxton will face Democrat James Telabriko this fall in what could end up being one of the most expensive and high-profile protests on the map. By the forecasters say the European heat wave is unprecedented, and its intensity and early
arrival in Piers' Eleanor Beardsley reports. "London hit 95 degrees Fahrenheit, and France has had temperatures over 100, what's known
“as a heat dome has trapped hot air coming from North Africa, causing the atmosphere to”
heat up day after day. It's a classic weather pattern, but scientists say it's being exacerbated by human-driven climate change. The European Union's Earth observation program, Copernicus, says Europe is heating twice as fast as the world average. For three reasons, it's next to the Arctic, which is the world's fastest heating region. Europe's melting glaciers accelerate global warming because snow and ice reflect the sun while the bare earth absorbs it,
and the changing atmospheric circulation around the continent, like the Gulf Stream, is intensifying heat waves, Eleanor Beardsley and Piers' news, Paris." "And you're listening to NPR news. Alabama is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to allow it to use a congressional map that favors Republicans in this year's elections. The state filed an emergency appeal Wednesday, a day after a lower courts ruling that the map intentionally
discriminates against black people. The appeal is the latest developments following last month Supreme Court's ruling that week in the landmark Boding Rights Act amid a broader push by President Trump to preserve the Republican House majority. Authorities and Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda continue to respond to the Ebola outbreak in their countries. Now neighboring nations say they are ramping up preparedness and monitoring efforts Michael Coloki
reports." Rwanda's government says its maintaining surveillance along its borders. This follows a recent announcement that it would deny entry to foreign nationals who had travelled to the Democratic Republic of Congo within 30 days prior to their arrival in Rwanda. In neighboring Tanzania, the government has put in place enhanced public health measures at border points, with authorities
in Kenya, Nzambia, and the taking similar actions. South Sudan's government recently said it is carrying out monitoring activities and has initiated response measures for any potential Ebola cases. Earlier this month, the regional economic block, the East African community, to which both affected countries hold membership, called on partnerships, to intensify cross-border coordination. For impairing use of Michael Coloki in Nairobi.
"Angla dashes in the middle of a measles outbreak. It's being called one of the worst outbreaks in the country in decades. There have been some 67,000 suspected cases and more than 500 deaths in mid-Barch. I'm Jail Snyder. This is NPR News." On consider this NPR's afternoon news podcast, we cover everything from politics to the economy to the world, but every story starts with a question.
NPR, we stand for your right to be curious to make sense of the biggest story of the day and what it means for you. Follow consider this wherever you get your podcasts.


