Trump says one National Guard member has died

PALM BEACH, Florida (Reuters) ​-Sarah Beckstrom, ‌one of the two National ‌Guard members shot in Washington on Wednesday, has died, U.⁠S. ‌President Donald Trump said on Thursday.

"Sarah ‍Beckstrom of West Virginia, one of the guardsmen that ​we're talking ‌about, highly respected, young, magnificent person ... She's just passed ⁠away. She'​s no ​longer with us," Trump said in ‍his ⁠first live remarks since the shooting.

(Reporting ⁠by Jeff Mason and Ismail ‌Shakil; Editing by ‌Nia Williams)

Trump says one National Guard member has died

PALM BEACH, Florida (Reuters) ​-Sarah Beckstrom, ‌one of the two National ‌Guard members shot in Washington on Wednesday,...
Bamboo scaffolding, an iconic part of Hong Kong, faces scrutiny in deadly fire probe

HONG KONG — Kan Shui-ying was home alone on Wednesday, watching television at herHong Kongapartment while her husband and son were at work. It was around 3 p.m., she said, when she "smelled a strong burning odor."

She thought she might be boiling something, so she went to check.

"I opened the window to see if there was anything," Kan told NBC News. "Just then, a friend called me and said, 'Wang Fuk Court is on fire!'"

Grabbing only her phone, Kan went downstairs to see what was going on and found the fire was already "burning very fiercely."

"I thought I was just coming down to take a quick look," she said, not realizing "that it was such a serious disaster."

Kan and her family are among hundreds who lost their homes in thefire at the high-rise housing complexin Hong Kong's northern Tai Po district. At least 83 people are dead and dozens of others missing in the Chinese territory's deadliest blaze in seven decades.

Investigators are focusing on mesh netting on scaffolding that surrounded the eight towers at Wang Fuk Court, seven of which were engulfed in flames. Flammable styrofoam boards found inside the complex are also under scrutiny.

Three people from a contractor hired to carry out renovations have been arrested on suspicion of manslaughter, amid questions as to whether building materials failed to meet safety standards and helped spread the fire.

John Lee, Hong Kong's top leader, said Thursday night that the blaze was now "largely under control." He also said the city's Development Bureau had met with industry representatives to discuss gradually replacing the city's widely used bamboo scaffolding with metal.

Bamboo scaffolding, a tradition with roots in ancient Chinese architecture, is an iconic part of Hong Kong, an international financial hub where skyscrapers are the norm. Bound together by nylon cords, the lattices are used for new construction as well as buildings under renovation.

Construction workers with specialized training in bamboo scaffolding — known as "spidermen" — scramble hundreds of feet up the sides of gleaming buildings in Hong Kong, a densely populated city of 7.5 million people. The scaffolding is often covered in mesh safety nets in green and other colors to prevent debris from falling onto pedestrians below.

Hong Kong firefighters were scouring a still-burning apartment complex for hundreds of missing people on November 27, a day after the blaze tore through the high-rises, killing at least 44.  (Dale De La Rey / AFP - Getty Images)

While no officials have directly linked the fire to the bamboo itself, they have said that the rapid spread of the fire may be linked to the mesh netting used to cover the scaffolding.

"The protective netting, protective films, waterproof tarpaulins, and plastic sheets on the external walls of the building in question burned much more intensely and spread significantly faster than materials that meet safety standards. We find this to be unusual," the city's security secretary, Chris Tang, said early on Thursday.

Derek Armstrong Chan, deputy director of Fire Service operations, also said scaffolding falling from upper floors had complicated rescue efforts.

Asked about the role the netting played in the fire, he told a press conference on Thursday: "Our preliminary view is that the fire spreading so fast is likely related to these materials."

The tradition of bamboo scaffolding has endured in Hong Kong even after regulators in mainland China mandated decades ago that it be replaced with steel and aluminum.

"Bamboo scaffolding has its benefits," said Yau Yung, a professor at Lingnan University in Hong Kong who studies housing. "Not just because of the low cost, but also it can be flexible."

The practice has long been a source of cultural pride in Hong Kong, which featured bamboo scaffolding in its pavilion at this year'sVenice Biennale architecture exhibition. But it's a profession with an aging workforce, with only about 2,500 bamboo scaffolding masters currently registered in the city, according to official figures.

In March, the Hong Kong government's Development Bureau said that going forward, 50% of new public building projects would be required to use metal scaffolding. It said that although bamboo scaffolding that complies with regulations is structurally safe, metal scaffolding would "better protect the safety of staff" and bring Hong Kong in line with "advanced international and mainland cities."

At the time, the announcement prompted public laments that Hong Kong, aformer British colony turned Chinese territory, was losing another piece of its identity at a time when its freewheeling democracy and legal autonomy has already been eroded byBeijing's crackdown on dissentfollowing antigovernment protests in 2019.

It came amid wider concerns about a series of fatal accidents on Hong Kong construction sites, not all of them involving bamboo scaffolding. According to the Hong Kong Labor Department, there were22 deaths involving bamboo scaffoldingfrom 2018 to October 2024.

Though fire risk was not the emphasis of the Hong Kong government announcement, experts say it's a good reason to shift to metal scaffolding.

"Bamboo material is combustible," said Jiang Liming, an associate professor at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU) who focuses on fire safety engineering.

Image: Hong Kong Apartment Fire Kills At Least 44 With Hundreds Missing (Isaac Lawrence / Getty Images)

Surrounding buildings entirely in bamboo scaffolding "is like multiple buildings connecting together," he said.

The Wang Fuk Court fire follows several similar ones this year, including last month when bamboo scaffolding and mesh netting caught fire outside a building in Hong Kong's central business district, injuring four people.

"It seems to us that we haven't learned from the past," said Ho Wing Ip, an adjunct professor at PolyU and an electrical and building services engineer.

The latest fire has also drawn comparisons to the2017 inferno at Grenfell Towerin London, which killed 72 people in a single 24-story building. That blaze was found to have been caused by flammable cladding outside the tower, among other factors.

"Our hearts go out to all those affected by the horrific fire in Hong Kong," the Grenfell United survivors group said in a post on X. "To the families, friends and communities, we stand with you. You are not alone."

Aftermath of Hong Kong's Worst Fire in Decades Kills 44, Hundreds Missing (Lam Yik / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The fire is Hong Kong's deadliest in decades. The last major high-rise fire was in 1996 and killed 41 people.

"Fire safety in Hong Kong is pretty good," said Huang Xinyan, a combustion scientist and fire safety engineer at PolyU.

But it was unusual for all seven buildings at Wang Fuk Court to burn at the same time, he said.

"For the entire building [to be] covered with bamboo scaffolding, I think the risk is too high to be acceptable," he said.

Bamboo scaffolding, an iconic part of Hong Kong, faces scrutiny in deadly fire probe

HONG KONG — Kan Shui-ying was home alone on Wednesday, watching television at herHong Kongapartment while her husband and...
Putin sees US peace plan as a starting point as he warns Ukraine's army to withdraw

U.S. proposalsto endthe warbetween Russia and Ukraine offer a starting point for talks, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday, as he told Ukrainian forces to pull back or be overrun by Russia's bigger army.

"We need to sit down and discuss this seriously," Putin told reporters at the end of a three-day visit to Kyrgyzstan. "Every word matters."

He described U.S. President Donald Trump's plan as "a set of issues put forward for discussion" rather than a draft agreement.

"If Ukrainian troops withdraw from the territories they occupy, hostilities will cease. If they don't withdraw, we will achieve this by force," the Russian leader said.

Kremlin officials have had little to say so far about the peace plan put forward last week by Trump. Since Russia's invasion of its neighbor, Putin has shownno willingness to budgefrom his goals in Ukraine despite Trump's push for a settlement.

Putin has previously demanded that Ukraine completely withdraw from the entirety of Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhia regions before Russia considers any sort of "peace negotiations" — notably including areas of each of those oblasts that Russia does not occupy. He also wants to keep Ukraine from joining NATO and hosting any Western troops, allowing Moscow to gradually pull the country back into its orbit.

U.S. special envoySteve Witkoffis set to visit Moscow next week, the Kremlin says, while U.S. Army SecretaryDan Driscoll, who in recent weeks has played a high-profile role in the peace efforts, may be heading to Kyiv.

The initial U.S. peace proposals appeared heavilyskewed toward Russian demands, but an amended version emerged from talks in Geneva on Sunday between American and Ukrainian officials. Sidelined European leaders,fearing for their own securityamid Russian aggression, are angling for deeper involvement in the process.

Putin looks to outlast the West's commitment, analysts say

Analysts say Putin is attempting to outwait the commitment of Western countries to supporting Ukraine's war effort. Trump has previously signaled he could walk away from efforts to stop the fighting if there is no progress. European officials say Putin is stalling because Russia wants to grab more of Ukraine before accepting any deal.

Russian officials have claimed they havebattlefield momentumin Ukraine, even though their slow progress has been costly in terms of casualties and armor.

The Institute for the Study of War on Wednesday cast doubt on Russian claims that its invasion is unstoppable as it is still struggling to capturecities in the eastern Donetsk region.

"Data on Russian forces' rate of advance indicates that a Russian military victory in Ukraine is not inevitable, and a rapid Russian seizure of the rest of Donetsk Oblast (region) is not imminent," the Washington-based think tank said. "Recent Russian advances elsewhere on the front line have largely been opportunistic and exploited seasonal weather conditions."

In the latest example of tension between Moscow and European countries, Russia's Foreign Ministry said Thursday that it had ordered the closure of Poland's Consulate General in the eastern city of Irkutsk.

The tit-for-tat move follows the closure of Russia's Consulate General in the Polish city of Gdansk in November. In a statement, the Russian Foreign Ministry said that Moscow would not "allow such actions to go unanswered."

Poland announced the closure of the Gdansk consulate after a railway line close to Warsaw was sabotaged in mid-November. Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk later said that two Ukrainian citizens working for Russia were suspected of carrying out the attack.

Long-range attacks continue

The diplomatic developments have come against a backdrop of continued fighting.

A 53-year-old man was killed in a Russian drone attack in Ukraine's northern Sumy region, officials said Friday. Also, Russia attacked Ukraine's Odesa and Dnipropetrovsk regions early Thursday, injuring three people and starting fires, local authorities said. Russia launched 142 drones at Ukraine overnight, according to Ukraine's air force.

Meanwhile, Russian air defenses downed 118 Ukrainian drones overnight above various Russian regions and the Black Sea, the Russian Defense Ministry said.

Ukraine's army isn't only under pressure on the battlefield. Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's government is mired in amajor corruption scandaland is short of money.

In a development offering some relief, Ukraine reached an agreement for the International Monetary Fund to provide $8.1 billion over four years, according to a statement by the institution. The money comes from a fund that helps countries facing medium-term payment difficulties.

But Ukraine's state budget and military needs for 2026 and 2027 are estimated at $153 billion.

Sam McNeil contributed to this report from Brussels.

Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine athttps://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Putin sees US peace plan as a starting point as he warns Ukraine's army to withdraw

U.S. proposalsto endthe warbetween Russia and Ukraine offer a starting point for talks, Russian President Vladimir Putin ...
Brooke Sutton/Getty Kris Boyd

Brooke Sutton/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • New York Jets cornerback Kris Boyd says that he's back in the hospital

  • Boyd was shot in New York City earlier in November and the bullet became lodged in his lung

  • Boyd has already undergone multiple surgeries after the shooting

New York Jets cornerbackKris Boydsays that he's back in the hospital, days after a shooting that left a bullet lodged in his lungs.

Boyd, 29, shared the health update on Wednesday, Nov. 26. "Please bare with me, l haven't been in communication much..." Boyd began in an Instagram Stories post. "l was released but had to return to the hospital due to my health issues...l love and appreciate everyone of yall dearly who has prayed/reached out even if I can't get back to you!"

The post concluded, "Head HIGH, God is not through with me yet!" followed by green heart emojis.

Kris Boyd/Instagram Kris Boyd's Instagram

Kris Boyd/Instagram

The NFL player was most recently hospitalized on Nov. 17, after being shot in New York City on Nov. 16. The bullet went through his abdomen and became stuck in his right lung,ABC 7 NYandABC Newsreported on Nov. 17.

He has undergone multiple surgeries following the shooting, the outlets reported.

In anInstagram Storiespost on Nov. 19, the NFL star shared a photo of himself laying in a hospital bed, appearing to be in good spirits.

"God is real, God is powerful!," Boyd wrote on the top of the photo. Below, he wrote, "I'm sorry I have no words at the moment….Just grateful! I'm coming along, starting to breathe on my own now. Sincerely appreciate everyone!"

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

The incident occurred in N.Y.C. at approximately 2 a.m. local time on Nov. 16 at at Sei Less, an Asian fusion restaurant on West 38th Street. Boyd was there with two teammates. The NYPD did not immediately respond to PEOPLE's request for comment.

Although a motive remains unclear, authorities believe the altercation could have occurred after the suspect allegedly tried to steal Boyd's necklace, according to ABC 7 NY. The news station also sharedsurveillance footageof the suspect, whose identity has not yet been made public.

"Once I heard about the situation, the first thing I thought about was he just had a kid," Jets Coach Aaron Glenn said of Boyd's health amid the shooting. "I'm thinking about his wife. I'm thinking about his kid. I want to make sure that he's okay. That's the only thing that really went through my mind. And anybody else that was involved, make sure those guys are okay."

Read the original article onPeople

Jets Player Kris Boyd Back in the Hospital After Surviving Shooting That Left Bullet Lodged in His Lung

Brooke Sutton/Getty NEED TO KNOW New York Jets cornerback Kris Boyd says that he's back in the hospital Boyd was shot in New York Cit...

 

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