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Heartbroken Father Discovers Lifeless Bodies Of Teenage Daughters After Fatal Car Accident

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Heartbroken Father Discovers Lifeless Bodies Of Teenage Daughters After Fatal Car Accident

A Devastating Car Accident Claims the Lives of Two Sisters, Leaving Their Family and Community in Mourning. In a tragic incident, a father from upstate New York discovered the lifeless bodies of his two teenage daughters, Hailey (19) and Shelby (17), after tracking their phones to a crash site. Brian Trumble had been trying to reach his daughters, who had failed to return home from a trip to Seabreeze Amusement Park in Rochester. Using the Find My Friends app, he located their phones and drove to the site, where he found the devastating aftermath of a fatal car accident.

The sisters were traveling in a Chevy Cobalt when their car crested a hill, crossed into the opposite lane, and collided with another vehicle. Both Hailey and Shelby succumbed to their injuries at the scene. The other driver, 59-year-old Robin Latham, was seriously injured and remains in stable condition at Syracuse University Hospital.

The cause of the crash remains unclear, and authorities are examining every piece of evidence to determine the factors involved. Sheriff Brian Schneck emphasized that it’s too early to say exactly what happened, but they are exploring all possibilities.

Hailey and Shelby were described by their parents as simple country girls who loved animals and the outdoors. They had recently graduated from high school and were volunteers with the CNY Cat Coalition. The sisters were incredibly close, enjoying activities like painting each other’s nails, watching TV shows together, and rescuing animals.

Brian Trumble finds comfort in the fact that his daughters were together when they passed away. “It gives me some kind of peace , it makes me happy that they were together,” he said. The family and community are mourning the loss of these two vibrant young lives, and an investigation is ongoing to determine the circumstances surrounding the tragic accident.

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Court, Congress Pile Pressure on DHS Over Minnesota Operations

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US Congress to Review Relations with South Africa, Sudan

Court, Congress Pile Pressure on DHS Over Minnesota Operations

 

US House Democrats have threatened to begin impeachment proceedings against Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem over her handling of the immigration crackdown in Minnesota, unless President Donald Trump removes her from office.

 

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries warned that Democrats could proceed “the easy way or the hard way,” describing the actions of Noem’s department as “disgusting.”

 

The crisis follows the fatal shooting of US citizen Alex Pretti by a federal agent, which has triggered backlash in Minneapolis and led to the planned departure of Border Patrol Chief Gregory Borvino and some agents from the city.

 

Trump has deployed his “border tsar,” Tom Homan, to take charge of on-the-ground operations, while a Minnesota judge has ordered acting ICE director Todd Lyons to appear in court over alleged violations of court orders.

 

Trump has distanced himself from claims by senior adviser Stephen Miller that Pretti was a “would-be assassin,” saying he did not believe the victim was acting as one.

 

Video footage shows Pretti holding a phone while filming agents, not a gun, although police say he was a legal firearm owner.

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UN Raises Alarm Over ‘Spare No-One’ Rhetoric by South Sudan Army Chief

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Trafficking: Libya Deports 700 Sudanese Migrants

UN Raises Alarm Over ‘Spare No-One’ Rhetoric by South Sudan Army Chief

 

The United Nations has expressed concern after South Sudan’s Deputy Army Chief, Gen. Johnson Oluny, was heard urging troops to “spare no-one,” including children and the elderly, ahead of military operations in opposition-held areas of Jonglei State.

 

In a video posted on Facebook, Oluny, addressing members of his Agwelek militia, called for total destruction during the deployment.

 

The UN Mission in South Sudan condemned the remarks, describing them as “utterly abhorrent,” and warned that inflammatory rhetoric targeting civilians must stop immediately.

 

South Sudan’s government, however, said the statement did not amount to an official order, insisting it remains committed to protecting civilians.

 

Minister of Information Ateny Wek Ateny said civilians were being warned only to avoid being caught in crossfire.

 

The development comes amid escalating fighting in Jonglei, where forces loyal to suspended Vice-President Riek Machar have seized several areas.

 

The military has ordered civilians, UN personnel and aid workers to evacuate three counties—Nyirol, Uror and Akobo—ahead of an imminent operation.

 

The UN says more than 180,000 people have been displaced by the renewed violence.

 

Meanwhile, tensions remain high as opposition forces threaten to advance towards the capital, Juba, a claim dismissed by the army.

 

South Sudan has been unstable since a 2018 peace deal ended a five-year civil war that killed nearly 400,000 people, but lingering political rivalry and ethnic tensions continue to threaten fragile peace.

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Diplomacy

Rwanda sues UK over scrapped migrant deal payments

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Rwanda sues UK over scrapped migrant deal payments

 

The Rwandan government has initiated arbitration proceedings against the United Kingdom, seeking payments it says are owed under the now-abandoned asylum partnership agreement between both countries.

 

Rwanda has filed the case at the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) in The Hague, arguing that the UK failed to honour financial commitments contained in the deal signed under the former Conservative government.

 

The agreement, designed to relocate some asylum seekers from the UK to Rwanda, was scrapped in 2024 by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, with the Home Office saying about £220m in future payments would no longer be made.

 

UK authorities insist the policy was costly and ineffective, pledging to defend the case to protect taxpayers’ funds.

 

Rwanda, however, says the arbitration concerns unmet treaty obligations and is seeking a legal determination of both parties’ rights under international law.

 

The PCA lists the case as pending, with no timetable yet announced for hearings or a ruling.

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