Yuma Sun

Nation & World Glance

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At least 27 people are reported killed in an attack on Donetsk in Russianocc­upied Ukraine

KYIV, Ukraine – Moscow-installed officials said Ukrainian shelling killed at least 27 people and wounded 25 on Sunday at a market on the outskirts of Donetsk, a Russian-occupied city in the eastern part of the country.

Among the injured in the suburb of Tekstilshc­hik were two children, said Denis Pushilin, the local leader.

Ukrainian officials in Kyiv did not comment on the incident, and the claims could not be independen­tly verified by The Associated Press. Both sides have increasing­ly relied on longer-range attacks this winter amid largely unchanged positions on the 1,500-kilometer (930-mile) front line in the nearly 2-year-old war.

The artillery shells that hit the area had been fired from the area of Kurakhove and Krasnohori­vka to the west, Pushilin said, adding that emergency services responded to the scene.

U.N. Secretary-general Antonio Guterres “strongly condemns all attacks against civilians and civilian infrastruc­ture, including today’s shelling of the city of Donetsk in Ukraine,” according to a U.N. spokespers­on, adding that all such attacks are prohibited under internatio­nal humanitari­an law.

Latest EPA assessment

shows almost no improvemen­t in river and stream nitrogen pollution ST. LOUIS – The nation’s rivers and streams remain stubbornly polluted with nutrients that contaminat­e drinking water and fuel a gigantic dead zone for aquatic life in the Gulf of Mexico, according to a recently released Environmen­tal Protection Agency assessment.

It’s a difficult problem that’s concentrat­ed in agricultur­al regions that drain into the Mississipp­i River. More than half of the basin’s miles of rivers and streams were in poor condition for nitrogen and phosphorus from fertilizer that drains into waterways, the agency found. For decades, federal and state officials have struggled to control farm runoff, the biggest source of nutrient pollution that is not typically federally regulated.

It’s a problem only expected to get harder to control as climate change produces more intense storms that dump rain on the Midwest and South. Those heavy rains flood farm fields, pick up commercial fertilizer­s and carry them into nearby rivers.

“It’s really worrying that we are clearly not meeting the goals that we’ve set for ourselves,” said Olivia Dorothy, director of river restoratio­n with the conservati­on group American Rivers.

The assessment is based on samples collected in 2018 and 2019 and it allows experts to compare river conditions from previous rounds of sampling, although different sampling sites were used. It takes years for the agency to compile the results and release the report, which is the most comprehens­ive assessment of the nation’s river and stream health. Phosphorus levels dipped slightly while nitrogen levels remained almost exactly the same.

North Korea stresses alignment with Russia against US and says Putin could visit at an early date

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea said Sunday that Russian President

Vladimir Putin expressed his willingnes­s to visit the North at an unspecifie­d “early date” as the countries continue to align in the face of their separate, intensifyi­ng confrontat­ions with the United States.

The North Korean Foreign Ministry highlighte­d Putin’s intent for a visit following North Korean Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui’s meetings with Putin and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Moscow last week. The ministry said in a statement published by state media that the two countries agreed to further strategic and tactical cooperatio­n with Russia to establish a “new multi-polarized internatio­nal order,” a reference to their efforts to build a united front against Washington.

Putin had already confirmed his willingnes­s to visit the capital, Pyongyang, at a convenient time during his meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Russia’s Far East in September. One of the few world leaders openly supporting Putin’s war on Ukraine, Kim has been actively boosting the visibility of his ties with Russia in an attempt to break out of diplomatic isolation and strengthen his footing, as he navigates a deepening nuclear standoff with Washington, Seoul and Tokyo.

In a separate statement on Sunday, the North’s Foreign Ministry condemned the U.N. Security Council for calling an emergency meeting over the country’s latest ballistic test, which state media described as a new intermedia­te-range solid-fuel missile tipped with a hypersonic warhead. The ministry said the test-firing on Jan. 14 was among the country’s regular activities to improve its defense capabiliti­es and that it didn’t pose a threat to its neighbors.

South Korea on Thursday urged the Security Council “to break the silence” over North Korea’s escalating missile tests and threats. Russia and China, both permanent members of the council, have blocked U.s.-led efforts to increase sanctions on North Korea over its recent weapons tests, underscori­ng a divide deepened over Russia’s war on Ukraine.

Man arrested near Taylor Swift’s NYC townhouse after reported break-in attempt

NEW YORK — Taylor

Swift’s townhouse in New York City appears to have been the target of another break-in attempt, this time by a man who was arrested near the singer’s Tribeca home Saturday as police responded to a report of a disorderly person.

Witnesses said the man tried but failed to enter the townhouse in the early afternoon, the New York Post reported.

Police would not confirm a break-in attempt at Swift’s home, but officers arrested a man on the same street when they were told he tried to open a door to a building, an NYPD spokespers­on said Sunday. The man was charged on an unrelated 2017 warrant out of Brooklyn for allegedly failing to answer a summons, the spokespers­on said.

Authoritie­s did not release the man’s name.

An email seeking comment was sent Sunday to a representa­tive for the “You Belong With Me” singer. It wasn’t clear if she was at the home at the time. She traveled Sunday to the Buffalo, New York, area, where her boyfriend, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, was set to play against the Buffalo Bills in an NFL playoff game in the evening.

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