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It still feels a bit surreal to me that I got to spend an hour talking with filmmaker
David Lynch in the last year of his life.
Life is such a gift and can be enjoyed and it's all okay.
Nothing to worry about, really.
I'm Rachel Martin.
My conversation with the legendary filmmaker David Lynch is on the Wild Card Podcast, the
show where cards control the conversation. Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Noor
Rahm. Three women are back on Israeli soil after being held by Amas in Gaza for 15 months.
Their release was part of a ceasefire that went into effect today, pausing the war that's
killed tens of thousands of people. As Israeli troops pulled back, NPR's Ayah Betraoui reports,
many Palestinians are rushing to assess the damage.
NPR producer in Gaza, Anas Baba, saw people in cars and many on foot,
celebrating their return to the southern city of Rafah
for the first time in eight months.
Mohammed Abou Mohsen was among those running to enter Rafa, the keys of his house in hand.
Though it was unclear if his home was still standing, Rafa, like other areas of Gaza,
has been mostly leveled by Israeli airstrikes and controlled demolitions.
There are bodies and unexploded ordnance buried in the rubble, local officials say, making
recovery and rebuilding a difficult task.
Israel and Hamas agreed to an initial six-week ceasefire to allow for hostages and detainees
to be released.
The deal also calls for a surge in needed humanitarian aid into Gaza.
Eya Batraoui and Per News Dubai with reporting by Anas Baba in Gaza.
President Biden said the agreement that he first put forward in May has finally come
to fruition.
I've worked in foreign policy for decades,
and this is one of the toughest negotiations
I've been part of.
Many of you who follow these negotiations
will attest that the road to this deal
has been not easy at all and a long road.
But we've reached this point today
because of the pressure Israel built on a mosque
backed by the United States.
Biden also referenced the Trump team's involvement in the final days of the negotiations, saying
he was pleased the U.S. spoke as one voice.
He urged the incoming administration to support U.S. allies in the region.
Donald Trump becomes the 47th president of the United States tomorrow.
Trump and his border czar, Tom Homan, are planning raids to round up and deport
people in the country illegally.
Congressman Jim Jordan, the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, says improving
border security is a top priority because that's what the voters support.
They want the border secure.
They want people who broke the law, particularly ones who came here and did bad things.
They want those people repatriated
back to their native country.
And then you go to the 1.3 million who've been in front of a judge, in front of a court,
and the court has said, you do not qualify under our asylum laws.
That's where Tom Homan's going to start.
And I think that's exactly what the election was about and appropriate and consistent with
the rule of law.
Jordan was interviewed on CNN.
The video sharing app TikTok is crediting Trump
for its restoration on millions of mobile devices.
It was shut down last night in response to a law
requiring it be sold by its Chinese parent company.
Trump says he'll issue an executive order
to delay the ban.
The app remains unavailable
in the Google and Apple app stores.
This is NPR News.
The Justice Department has filed a lawsuit
against Fayette County in western Tennessee,
claiming it's violating the Voting Rights Act.
It alleges the county's map of voting districts
dilutes the votes of black residents
in violation of federal law.
The DOJ is asking a federal court
to order the county to draw a new voting map.
This is one of three voting rights lawsuits filed in the first final days of the Biden administration.
U.S. homes and businesses are going to need a lot more electricity in the coming years.
As NPR's Michael Copley reports, that could make it harder to rein in climate change.
Power demand is rising because companies are building
new data centers and factories,
and because homes and businesses are buying things
like cars and heat pumps that run on electricity.
And more homes need air conditioning.
For utilities that have to keep the lights on,
the fossil fuel natural gas looks like a good way
to meet that growing demand.
And that could mean decades of additional emissions
that are raising global temperatures.
Market analysts say that may not lead to a spike in climate pollution since coal plants
keep retiring, but scientists say the world needs to move a lot faster to cut heat-trapping
emissions to avoid even more extreme impacts from climate change.
Michael Copley, NPR News.
Today is the Orthodox Christian feast day of Epiphany.
Thousands of Russians observe the day by cutting holes through ice in lakes and rivers
and taking a bath in the frigid water.
The Associated Press is reporting that some communities are canceling the tradition this
year because of the weather.
An unusually warm winter has left the ice too thin for participants to bathe safely.
I'm Nora Rahm, NPR News in Washington.