"Life from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor Johnston.
Iran has carried out a series of drone and missile attacks on Poprain and Kuwait overnight
“and response to a new round of U.S. air strikes on Tehran.”
Speaking through a BBC interpreter, Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Iraqi called on all parties to abide by the memo of understanding signed with the U.S. "How would one of the highlight that in am?" "Any attempt to adopt new or separate arrangements from those currently being implemented by the Islamic Republic of Iran will only complicate the situation.
Delay the reopening of the straight-of-hormous and raise the level of tension. As we witnessed over the past two nights with incidents in the straight-of-hormous that let to increase tensions and clashes." Iran says any challenge to its control of the straight-of-hormous will jeopardize the reopening. After two major immigration victories at the Supreme Court last week, President Trump is moving
ahead with plans that it could lead to the deportation of as many as one million immigrants
who have been living and working legally in the U.S. and PR's Mar-Alias in reports.
“"It's not clear how fast the Trump administration will move to deport legal immigrants”
from Haiti, Syria and other countries who have what's called TPS or temporary protected status. The Supreme Court ruled that Trump can remove TPS from these immigrants because the executive branch controls the immigration system. Some of the TPS immigrants have been in the country legally for decades and are deeply integrated into the economies of some American cities, working in factories and nursing homes.
Trump has had a particular animus towards Haitians for years, falsely accusing them during the 2024 election of eating people's pet cats and dogs. Mar-Alias and PR news. A number of wildfires are burning across the Western United States, including in southern Utah, where the largest blazes burning in Colorado, three firefighters were killed on Saturday.
Colorado Public Radio Steena Sieg reports to other firefighters were injured in a blaze that's grown to more than 40 square miles.
“The U.S. wildland fire service has released few details on the deaths and says it's focused”
on supporting the loved ones of the firefighters. They died in a rugged rural area along the Colorado Utah border, where many smaller fires have merged into one. Governor Jared Polis has declared a state of emergency. Further south, another Colorado wildfire forced evacuations enclosed a vital highway
Saturday. Much of the state is facing elevated fire risk and is in the major drought following its lowest mountain snowpack level on record. I'm here news, I'm Steena Sieg, in Grand Junction, Colorado. You're listening to NPR news from Washington.
Parts of Central and Eastern Europe remain in the grips of a dangerous heat wave. Record temperatures have been set in Switzerland, the Czech Republic, and Denmark, while France and Italy remain under heat alerts. Soy Bazel is a French tourist who's visiting Rome. She says she only leaves her hotel in the mornings and at night.
"I always have the fan all the time and we drink a lot of water because it's impossible.
It's really hot." Forecaster say temperatures are beginning to ease in the UK, but much of continental Europe remains under extreme heat warnings. While makers in Australia say that are planning to double penalties for tech companies reaching the social media ban for children, Christina Cucula reports it's part of a move
to strengthen the ban after a new study found it had done little to reduce kids' access to restricted platforms. Well, then six months into the ban, the Australian government says too many children are still on social media and companies like Facebook, TikTok and YouTube are not doing enough to remove them from their sites.
In the statement it says penalties will be doubled to the equivalent of nearly $70 million for platforms found to be violating their obligations. The online safety regulators powers will also be increased to enforce restrictions and quote hold them to account. The move comes after a study published in the British Medical Journal found over 85% of children
under 16 were still using restricted platforms three months after the ban came into force. For NPR News I'm Christina Cucula in Melbourne, it's NPR. This is our glass. On this American life, when they mean like, it's a good mystery, sometimes about really big things, but most times, the little mysteries are the best.
Our lost and found is currently filled with pants, I don't know, I've never seen this
happen. This is true. Mysteries of every size each week, this American life, wherever you get your podcasts.


