NPR News Now - NPR News: 11-21-2024 10PM EST
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Jack Spear Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Jack
Spear. Officials in Israel are largely condemning a decision by the International Criminal Court
in The Hague to issue arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
and former Defense Minister Yoav Galant.
The court has accused the leaders of war crimes related to the war in Gaza.
NPR's Scott Newman reports from Tel Aviv.
Netanyahu's office and several
government ministers labeled the decision anti-Semitic. Gallant's replacement, Defense
Minister Israel Katz, called it a quote, moral disgrace. The court says it has reasonable
grounds to find that Netanyahu and Gallant bear criminal responsibility for using starvation
as a method of warfare and for crimes including murder and persecution in Gaza.
However, the human rights group Bet Salam says the ICC's decision isn't surprising and called it,
quote, one of the lowest points in Israeli history. Enforcement of the warrants is dependent on the
ICC's 124 member states, which do not include Israel or its ally, the United States.
Scott Newman, NPR News, Tel Aviv.
With former Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz stepping aside as President-elect Donald
Trump's attorney general nominee, Trump has chosen another Floridian.
Trump announcing on his social media platform he's picking former Florida Attorney General
Pam Bondi.
Bondi is a longtime Trump ally and was one of the lawyers at his first impeachment trial. She spent more than 18 years as a prosecutor, has been chair of
the America First Policy Institute. Gates resigned his house seat this week
amid an investigation into allegations of sex with a minor and illicit drug use.
An atmospheric river is slamming the West Coast intermittently, leaving
thousands without power and closing some schools there. The National Weather Service warns Eureka in Northern California could
see flooding. Suki Lewis of Member Station KQED has more.
Nearly 12 inches of rain fell in the nearby coastal mountains in just 24 hours. James
White of the National Weather Service says the biggest area of concern is the Eel River
south of Eureka, which is expected to keep rising overnight and into tomorrow.
As it reaches major flood states, it's going to cut off a lot of roads and a lot of those
farmers need to move their livestock as the river rises.
And so that can always be a dangerous situation if people get trapped out there.
Transportation officials say they're preparing in case the rising water cuts off the small
northern California town of Ferndale. As rain continues to fall on already saturated ground, there's also a greater
risk of downed trees and mudslides.
For NPR News, I'm Suki Lewis in Eureka.
Marc Thiessen, The NPR News. President-elect Donald Trump's chief cost-cutters, billionaire
entrepreneur Elon Musk, and former presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy have big plans in
terms of downsizing, whether those efforts could run into a constitutional clash.
Proposal from the two, where they encouraged Trump to refuse
to spend money allocated by Congress,
could conflict with the 1974 law.
On Wall Street, the Dow was up 461 points.
This is NPR.
Bristol's former far-right president
has been indicted on charges of plotting
to overturn
the government after his re-election loss in 2022.
Federal police in the South American nation say Jair Bolsonaro and 36 others conspired
together to keep the former president in power, in Pierce Carey Kahn reports.
The nearly 900-page federal police report into the alleged coup involved what authorities
say was a far-reaching criminal
organization attempting a violent overthrow
of the Democratic state.
Indicted along with Bolsonaro as former defense minister,
who was his vice presidential running mate,
his former spy chief, and the president
of his political party.
It's now up to Brazil's attorney general
to decide whether charges will be pursued.
If convicted, Bolsonaro could face a lengthy prison term.
He has long denied any wrongdoing
and says he is being politically persecuted.
Bolsonaro has been barred from running for office until 2030.
Kari Kahn, NPR News, Rio de Janeiro.
Scientists say it's been a bad year for dolphin strandings
on Cape Cod with no clear idea what's causing
an unusually large number of beechings.
International Fund for Animal Welfare, which responds to marine mammal strandings, says
it has responded to 342 incidents involving dolphins.
That's five times the annual average.
It's hard to say.
Warming waters are changing the availability of the animals' food supply, as well as changes
in tides that can sometimes trap the animals.
Officials with the Center say the large number of incidents involving dolphins is also stretching
the organization's resources.
Crude oil futures prices moved higher today oil up $1.35 a barrel in New York.
I'm Jack Spear, NPR News in Washington.
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