The World Food Programme has halved rations since March and warned that without renewed US funding, all assistance could end by November.
The trade deal that Trump reached with the United Kingdom onhas been thrown into doubt following the trade court ruling.
That agreement, which has not yet been finalised, imposed a 10 percent tariff only on all imports from the UK.“A lot of governments will wait and see what happens now,” said Paulsen, suggesting that trade partners may now have a stronger hand in negotiations with the US.One in four foreign students in the United States is from China. These students and graduates bring billions of dollars to the US economy. Now their future is uncertain.
United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced on Wednesday that President Donald Trump’s administration will “aggressively” revoke the visas of Chinese students studying in the country.The move comes amid the Trump administration’s ongoing efforts to crack down on international students attending universities in the US, and at a time when Washington and Beijing are trying to negotiate a trade deal to end a spiralling tariff war between the world’s two largest economies.
While China hawks in the US have long called for greater oversight of the country’s students at American universities, alleging that some among them might secretly be Beijing’s spies, Rubio’s announcement is the most dramatic step ever taken by a US administration against students from any specific nation.
Here is how it could impact students, American universities, US-China relations, and the US itself:It was a final, parting victory for outgoing President
Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the political mentor of Mexico's current leader
Lopez Obrador had long clashed with Mexico's Supreme Court. During his six-year term, many of his signature policy proposals had come before the court.In 2023, for instance, it ruled that Lopez Obrador could not use "national security" as an excuse to fast-track the construction of