Trump gives EU until July 4 to ratify deal or face tariff hike
Business

Trump gives EU until July 4 to ratify deal or face tariff hike

US president said he gave EU chief Ursula von der Leyen ‘until our Country’s 250th Birthday’ or tariffs would jump to ‘much higher levels’ US President Donald Trump on Thursday said the European Union must ratify its trade deal with the United States by July 4 or face “much higher” tariffs, after European officials fell short of agreement on the pact. The US president said he spoke to EU chief Ursula von der Leyen about the issue and “agreed to give her until our Country’s 250th Birthday or, unfortunately, their Tariffs would immediately jump to much higher levels”. The Fourth of July holiday this year marks 250 years since the American colonies declared independence from British rule. The 27-member EU bloc and the United States struck a deal last July setting tariffs on most EU goods at 15 per cent, but a final version of the pact still needs to be agreed by member states - prompting frustration in Washington. Trump vowed last week to raise duties on EU cars and trucks to 25 per cent, accusing the bloc of failing to comply with the deal. Cyprus, which holds the rotating presidency of the Council of the European Union, said it wanted to maintain “positive momentum” at talks with MEPs on May 19.

White House calls Mark Hamill ‘sick’ after Star Wars actor posts Trump gravesite image
Business

White House calls Mark Hamill ‘sick’ after Star Wars actor posts Trump gravesite image

On Hamill’s Bluesky account, ‘If Only’ was written on the image of ‌Trump lying next to a gravestone inscribed ‘Donald J Trump 1946-2024’ The White House called Star Wars ⁠star Mark Hamill “one ⁠sick individual” on Thursday after ⁠an AI-generated image of US President Donald Trump in a shallow grave was posted on one of the actor’s social media accounts. “If Only” was inscribed on the image of ‌Trump lying with his eyes closed next to a gravestone, surrounded by daisies, with the inscription “Donald J Trump 1946-2024”. The image was posted on Hamill’s verified Bluesky account. Hamill, who played Luke Skywalker in the classic Star Wars films that debuted in 1977, wrote that Trump “should ⁠live long enough to witness his inevitable devastating loss in the midterms, be held ‌accountable for his unprecedented corruption, impeached, convicted & humiliated for his countless crimes”. “Long enough to realize he’ll be disgraced ‌in the history books, forevermore,” the actor added. The White House responded ⁠on X, ⁠calling Hamill “one sick individual”.

Paris public prosecutor opens judicial investigation into Elon Musk and X
Business

Paris public prosecutor opens judicial investigation into Elon Musk and X

Move is the latest step in a probe into suspected complicity in ⁠the distribution of child pornography and the creation of sexual deepfakes Paris’ public prosecutor has opened ⁠a judicial ⁠investigation into Elon ⁠Musk’s X social media platform, a new step in an investigation over alleged abuse of algorithms and fraudulent data, the prosecutor’s office said on Thursday. The latest legal development puts investigating judges in charge of the investigation and follows tech billionaire Musk’s failure to appear at an April 20 summons for questioning. The public prosecutor is requesting that judges place ⁠X.AI Holdings Corp, X Corp and xAI, as well as ‌Elon Musk and former X CEO Linda Yaccarino, under formal investigation. This would be achieved by ‌summoning them for that purpose, or, if they failed ⁠to appear, ⁠judges could issue a warrant which would be equivalent to putting them ‌under formal investigation, the statement said. Reuters could not immediately reach representatives for ‌Musk or X. Kami Haeri, a lawyer for X, did not ‌immediately respond to a request for comment.

Egyptian man who firebombed pro-Israel rally in Colorado sentenced to life in prison
Business

Egyptian man who firebombed pro-Israel rally in Colorado sentenced to life in prison

Mohamed Soliman, who killed 1 and injured others in the June 1 attack, said he wished to be executed for his anti-Islam crimes The man who threw petrol bombs at ⁠a pro-Israel rally last year in Colorado, setting several people aflame including a woman who later died from her burns, was sentenced on Thursday to spend the rest of his life in prison but said he wished to be executed. Mohamed Soliman, 46, an Egyptian national, pleaded guilty to 101 charges brought by state prosecutors, including first-degree murder, then apologised in court and decried his own crimes as contrary to “the teachings of Islam” in a statement before his sentence was pronounced. He still faces separate hate-crimes charges in federal court that carry a possible life sentence or the ‌death penalty. Seated beside his lawyer with his hands shackled in his lap, Soliman said he regretted that Colorado lacked capital punishment. “I ask the prosecution from the federal case to impose the death penalty,” he said in pre-sentencing remarks, delivered through an Arabic interpreter near the end of the three-hour proceeding live-streamed from the Boulder County District Court.

US targets Cuba nickel operation in move with implications for China-linked supply chains
Business

US targets Cuba nickel operation in move with implications for China-linked supply chains

Marco Rubio revealed sanctions on Thursday, escalating Trump administration’s pressure campaign against Havana’s military-controlled economy Three Sherritt directors, including chairman Brian Imrie, also resigned with immediate effect. The South China Morning Post contacted Sherritt for comment but received no response. Sherritt said sanctions measures announced by Washington on May 1 had already “materially alter[ed]” its ability to operate normally in Cuba. In addition to the Moa joint venture, the company owns a one-third stake in Energas, which accounts for about 10 per cent of Cuba’s electricity generation capacity. Trump vows to ‘take’ Cuba as island reels from total power cut linked to oil embargo

Oritek Semiconductor Closes Series C, Achieves Mass Production Milestone for Automotive Chips
Technology

Oritek Semiconductor Closes Series C, Achieves Mass Production Milestone for Automotive Chips

Oritek Semiconductor has closed a new funding round to advance domestic production of high-performance automotive chips, a critical step in China's push for semiconductor self-sufficiency in the automotive sector.

Tech billionaire Chen Tianqiao’s MiroMind halts China services after Meta and Manus saga
Innovation

Tech billionaire Chen Tianqiao’s MiroMind halts China services after Meta and Manus saga

AI start-up MiroMind has relocated some staff to Singapore to divide operations for compliance amid heightened scrutiny In an email sent to select users on Wednesday, the company said that its MiroThinker services would stop operating in regions including mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau from May 12 because of “business adjustments”, with no timeline for resumption, according to a Beijing-based user who received the email. The company is offering refunds and data export options for affected users, it said in the email. A customer service representative at MiroMind confirmed the service suspension on Thursday in response to an inquiry from the South China Morning Post. A protocol to limit cross-border sharing of information or code was implemented after Beijing contacted Chen’s team in early March, cautioning against a unilateral technology transfer out of the country, he said in the interview.

Malaysia grapples with securing real-time payments in the AI era
Economy

Malaysia grapples with securing real-time payments in the AI era

ASEAN collaboration also in the spotlight as cross-border QR transactions surge QR payments in Malaysia surged to about 3.48 billion in 2024, up from 109 million five years earlier, a more than thirtyfold increase. They remain on the rise. © Visa Malaysia KUALA LUMPUR/SINGAPORE -- Malaysia's real-time payments system is entering a phase of greater complexity as artificial intelligence begins to take on a more active role in how money moves, raising concerns that fraud and systemic risks are evolving faster than safeguards.

Philippine GDP growth slows to 2.8% as Iran war batters economy
Economy

Philippine GDP growth slows to 2.8% as Iran war batters economy

Economist predicts further slowdown in Q2 as inflation soars Jeepney drivers gather to receive government cash aid in Manila on April 16. Transportation workers are among those hit hardest by soaring fuel prices in the Philippines, which imports 98% of its oil needs. © Reuters MANILA -- The Philippine economy grew 2.8% on an annualized basis in the January-March period, the slowest quarterly growth in five years, due to fallout from the Iran war, the government said Thursday.

AI threatens India’s software exporters and the middle class it built
Economy

AI threatens India’s software exporters and the middle class it built

Pathway to success and prosperity under software boom looks uncertain amid tech shift The arrival of artificial intelligence is threatening the core business model of manpower-based billing, as clients now gravitate towards rewarding impact over input. (Nikkei montage/Source photos by Reuters) BENGALURU -- In the mid-1990s, dinner table conversations at Rajdeep Palchowdhury's one-bedroom tenement in the eastern Indian city of Kolkata often revolved around his future. Almost every time, his parents concluded that he ought to work in software.

MediaTek launches Taiwan’s most advanced data center to maintain AI edge
Economy

MediaTek launches Taiwan’s most advanced data center to maintain AI edge

Chipmaker to use Nvidia-powered facility for own research and development work MediaTek took the wraps off its immersion-cooled AI data center on Thursday, with Taiwan's Gigabyte assembling its servers and key hardware coming from Intel and AMD. (Photo by Cheng Ting-Fang) MIAOLI, Taiwan -- MediaTek, the world's leading mobile chip developer, is building Taiwan's most advanced AI data center, as chipmakers increasingly invest in artificial intelligence infrastructure to maintain their technology edge.

Japan energy crises and the importance of having a Plan B
Economy

Japan energy crises and the importance of having a Plan B

PM Takaichi could learn from tough political choices during 1970s oil crunch Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka meets with U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. (Photo acquired by Nikkei) TOKYO -- As Japan faces its worst energy crisis since the 1970s due to the Iran war, a look back at how it weathered the last storm -- on the shoulders of a headstrong prime minister and finance minister and with a solid Plan B in hand -- could offer some lessons.