"Live from NPR news in Washington," I'm Core of a Coleman.
President Trump says the U.S. will be hitting Iran "very hard tonight."
“He wrote online last hour, the U.S. has fired on Iran for two nights in a row already.”
Iran has attacked nearby U.S. allies. The Pentagon also says U.S. forces have disabled three oil tankers in the Gulf of Oman. The Indian government says three Indian sailors died after U.S. forces fired on the vessel they were aboard in the Gulf of Oman, and Piers Dia Hadid has more. "In the most serious incident U.S. Central Command said it had disabled an oil tanker
in the Gulf of Oman. The Palau flag set a bellow. It said the vessel was attempting to transport oil from Iran in violation of an American blockade. It was unclear if U.S. forces made any attempt to rescue the distress sailors or seek help for them. The Indian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that "Omanee Rescue Crew saved 21 sailors from the vessel, another three sailors died." The Indian Foreign Ministry also summoned the American
diplomat Jason Meeks to larger protest over the targeting of the ship. Millions of Indian nationals work in the Gulf, while thousands work as commercial sailors in the Gulf area. At least 12 Indian nationals have died or gone missing in the latest mid-East wall. Dia Hadid and Pianus. "Analysts have been reviewing the latest report on consumer inflation. It rose a little more than 4% of Maine compared to the same time a year ago. Most of the
increases were in gas and energy costs linked to the war in Iran. Economist Claudia Samb was formally with the federal reserve. She says that consumers are feeling real pain." "When we go to the store, we pay prices. We don't pay inflation." "Right?" And so it doesn't, you know, "Oh, it's been a whole bunch of one-off events."
“"Well, yes, that's true and I think that propolicy makers are important in how they respond,”
but the reality of where you are at the other end of this. The price levels quite a bit higher than what we would have expected five years ago. And wages haven't kept up with that." She spoke to NPR's morning edition. NPR has obtained a letter from ICE to members of Congress. It provides insight into the agency's data collection practices on protesters. NPR's Jude Jaffee Block has more.
Former acting director of ICE Todd Lyons has denied his agency has a database of protesters. Lyons recently departed his post, but after Florida Congressman Maxwell Frost and other Democrats posed additional questions earlier this year, Lyons wrote a response back in April that NPR
is the first media outlet to review. The letter indicates that ICE gives itself
wide latitude to collect biographic and biometric data on people who agents believe are
“threatening officer safety or impeding operations. Civil liberties advocates say it's the”
clearest official acknowledgement, yet that ICE may be routinely gathering and preserving information on protesters and observers who are not arrested. Jude Jaffee Block and Piano's. "You're listening to NPR." There's been a second night of riots in Northern Ireland, calls to violence have been amplified online by far-right social media accounts. This is after a stabbing in Northern Ireland's capital bell-fast earlier this week. The suspect in the
attack is a refugee from Sudan and Pierslorn Frayer reports from London. "Masked men with hit lists and Molotov cocktails have been going door-to-door in parts of East Bell-fast, hunting for foreigners or people of color in what the United Kingdom's minister for Northern Ireland calls racist thuggery. A black nurse and a two-month-old baby are among those evacuated to safety. Billionaire ex-owner Elon Musk is one of those sharing anti-immigrant material online.
Bell-fast police chief constable John Boucher urged people to ignore such posts. "Stop looking at this nonsense. Stop listening to these idiots. We will be going after them. The excitement that they've been doing." "Charred homes and torched cars are reminiscent of what rival paramilitaries did to Bell-fast a generation ago. During three decades of Catholic Protestant conflict known as the
troubles. Lauren Frayer and PR News London." In the U.S., the New York Nix beat the San Antonio Spurs 107 to 106 last night in game four of the NBA championships. The Nix were down 29 points in the third quarter before storming back to win. The Nix lead the series three games to one. In men's pro-hockey game five, but the Stanley Cup final is tonight in Raleigh, North Carolina. The Carolina Hurricanes will host the Vegas Golden Nights. I'm Core of a Coleman NPR News.
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