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Memorial in flood-ravaged Texas city becomes focal point of community’s grief

Memorial in flood-ravaged Texas city becomes focal point of community’s grief
On Friday night, a week after the flood hit, a vigil was held to honor those that died. (AFP)
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Updated 12 July 2025

Memorial in flood-ravaged Texas city becomes focal point of community’s grief

Memorial in flood-ravaged Texas city becomes focal point of community’s grief
  • Brooklyn Thomas, a Kerrville native, stopped by the memorial to affix flowers near a photograph of a high school friend who died in the flood
  • On Friday night, a week after the flood hit, a vigil was held to honor those that died

KERRVILLE: A chain-link fence that separates Water Street in the center of Kerrville from the Guadalupe River just a few hundred feet away has become a makeshift memorial, with the flower-covered stretch serving as a focal point for a grieving community.
As survivors in hard-hit Kerr County begin to bury their dead, the memorial has grown, covered with laminated photographs of victims of last-week’s deadly flood that roared through camps and homes, killing at least 120 people.
“I just feel like this is a beautiful remembrance of the individuals that were lost here,” said Brooklyn Thomas, 27, who graduated from high school in Kerrville with Julian Ryan, a resident of nearby Ingram who died in the flood trying to save his family. “I think it’s something really cool for the community to come to see, to remember their loved ones, to share memories if they want to.”
Thomas and her family affixed flowers to the wall near a picture of Ryan. The smell of fresh-cut flowers hung in the air as people placed candles and other mementos along the sidewalk next to the fence. Signs hanging from the fence read “Hill Country Strong” and featured an outline of Texas filled with rolling green hills. A large Texas flag stood on one end of the memorial, flapping in the breeze.
Debi Leos, who grew up in the Hill Country town of Junction, said she stopped by the memorial to leave flowers in honor of Richard “Dick” Eastland, the beloved director of Camp Mystic who died trying to save some of the young girls at his camp.
“Hill Country is near and dear to me, and we came down here to pay our respects,” Leos said. “As a parent, I can only imagine what the families are going through.”
Friday evening, about 300 people showed up at the memorial for a vigil with speakers that included faith leaders and some who told harrowing tales of narrowly escaping the flood.
Michelle McGuire said she woke up July 4 at her apartment in Hunt, Texas, to find her bed and nightstand floating and quickly found herself in deep flood waters, clinging to a tree for life.
“Thank God I’m a good swimmer,” she said. “I didn’t want my mom to have to bury me.”
Marc Steele, bishop-elect of the Anglican Diocese of the Living Word, said the memorial has become a place where people of all different faiths and backgrounds can come together and share their grief.
“We like to take opportunities like this to come together and pray to God,” Steele said, “and also Sunday mornings we come together and worship in prayer for our sorrow and thanksgiving for lives that were saved.”


Russian aircraft equipped with ballistic missiles fly over Barents Sea during ‘Zapad 2025’ drills, Ifax reports

Updated 17 sec ago

Russian aircraft equipped with ballistic missiles fly over Barents Sea during ‘Zapad 2025’ drills, Ifax reports

Russian aircraft equipped with ballistic missiles fly over Barents Sea during ‘Zapad 2025’ drills, Ifax reports
The Kinzhal is an air-launched hypersonic ballistic missile capable of carrying nuclear or conventional warheads

MOSCOW: Russians MiG-31 fighter jets equipped with hypersonic ballistic missiles completed a four-hour flight over the neutral waters of the Barents Sea as part of ongoing ‘Zapad 2025’ military exercises, the Interfax news agency reported on Saturday.
Russia and Belarus began the joint drills on Friday during a tense moment in the Russia-Ukraine war, days after Poland shot down suspected Russian drones over its airspace.
The Kinzhal, which means “dagger” in Russian, is an air-launched hypersonic ballistic missile capable of carrying nuclear or conventional warheads. Russia has previously used the weapons against Ukraine.

Ukraine aims to one day host Invictus Games after Harry visit

Ukraine aims to one day host Invictus Games after Harry visit
Updated 3 min 22 sec ago

Ukraine aims to one day host Invictus Games after Harry visit

Ukraine aims to one day host Invictus Games after Harry visit
  • Ukraine has been unable to host major international competitions since Russia invaded in 2022
  • The Invictus Games is among the highest-level sporting events for wounded soldiers and veterans

KYIV: Ukraine said Saturday that it aimed to one day host the Invictus Games, after the sporting event’s founder, Prince Harry, made a surprise visit to Kyiv.
The Invictus Games Foundation, which supports wounded veterans and military personnel, did not immediately respond to an AFP request for comment.
Ukraine has been unable to host major international competitions since Russia invaded in 2022, but wants to attract cultural events once the war is over.
The Invictus Games is among the highest-level sporting events for wounded soldiers and veterans, and has been held seven times since its inception in 2014.
“Now our dream is for the Invictus Games to come to Ukraine. We have the means to do this,” Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said Saturday following a meeting with Prince Harry in Kyiv the day before.
Ukraine has taken part in the games each year since 2017 and would like to host the event in 2029.
The country does not disclose how many of its soldiers have been wounded in combat, but independent estimates have put the number in the tens of thousands.
Ukraine fielded 35 athletes in the last Invictus Games held in Vancouver in February, its largest-ever team.


Indian jewelry exporters look to Saudi market to offset Trump’s tariff hit 

Indian jewelry exporters look to Saudi market to offset Trump’s tariff hit 
Updated 21 min 18 sec ago

Indian jewelry exporters look to Saudi market to offset Trump’s tariff hit 

Indian jewelry exporters look to Saudi market to offset Trump’s tariff hit 
  • US accounts for about a third of India’s annual $28.5 billion of gems and jewelry exports
  • Indian organizers aim to develop Saudi expo into Middle East’s ‘gem and jewelry trading hub’ 

NEW DELHI: More than 100 Indian jewelers traveled to Jeddah this week to participate in the inaugural ֱ Jewelry Exposition (SAJEX), as the industry looks to diversify export markets in response to US President Donald Trump’s hefty tariffs on goods from India.

As part of his ongoing global trade war, Trump doubled the total duty on Indian exports to 50 percent last month, citing New Delhi’s continued purchases of Russian oil as a reason. 

With the levies — the highest in Asia and among the greatest ever imposed on a major trading partner by any American administration — expected to hit labor-intensive sectors such as gems and jewelry, the industry’s apex body in India is now working to find alternative markets to offset their impact. 

“In our sector, the US accounted for 30 percent of our exports … because of the tariffs by the US, now all exporters are forced to look at new markets (to) offset the losses from the US,” Kewal Krishan Duggal, director of policy at India’s Gem and Jewelry Export Promotion Council, told Arab News. 

India’s annual gems and jewelry exports are worth about $28.5 billion, and constitute the country’s third-largest US export sector. The industry employs around five million workers. 

This week, GJEPC India launched SAJEX 2025, a three-day jewelry exhibition held at the Jeddah Superdome, in an effort to connect jewelry exports from India and other countries with Saudi buyers. 

“We have a good scope to capture that market … We see Saudi as a very big market and a gateway to the markets in Africa,” Duggal said.  

SAJEX, which concluded on Saturday, was organized in cooperation with the Consulate General of India in Jeddah and the Embassy of India in Riyadh and supported by Invest Saudi and the Chambers of Commerce of Jeddah and Makkah. 

“The Saudi market is opening up and it will be good for the local trade to network with our industry for growth prospects,” GJEPC chair Kirit Bhansali told Arab News, adding that his organization is hoping to develop SAJEX into the “gem and jewelry trading hub” of the Middle East.  

“We are looking at collaborations to explore the market. ֱ, with four billion dollars of jewelry demand, has the potential to double that in a very short time. Collaboration with leaders in gem and jewelry countries like India will help the Saudi industry too.” 

The Kingdom is a “very large market” for gems and jewelry, said Dr. Suhel Ajaz Khan, Indian Ambassador to ֱ. 

“From a (consumer) perspective, it is the largest market in the region. India is a leading exporter of gems and jewelry in the world, (but) currently India’s share in the Saudi market is modest,” he told Arab News. 

“SAJEX will help connect India’s jewelers and designers with Saudi buyers. It will enhance trade and joint collaborations,” he continued. “Such collaborations strengthen the overall economic partnership between India and ֱ.”


Twelve Pakistan soldiers killed in militants’ ambush, officials say

Twelve Pakistan soldiers killed in militants’ ambush, officials say
Updated 13 September 2025

Twelve Pakistan soldiers killed in militants’ ambush, officials say

Twelve Pakistan soldiers killed in militants’ ambush, officials say
  • The soldiers were moving in vehicles when they came under fire in the mountainous Badar area of South Waziristan near the border with Afghanistan

PESHAWAR, Pakistan; Twelve soldiers were killed in northwest Pakistan on Saturday in an ambush by Islamist militants on an army convoy, officials said.
The soldiers were moving in vehicles when they came under fire in the mountainous Badar area of South Waziristan near the border with Afghanistan.
Pakistan’s military said in a statement that 12 soldiers and 13 militants were killed in the clash “after an intense exchange of fire.”
At least four people were injured, security officials said.
The Pakistani Taliban, a jihadist group that Islamabad says is based in Afghanistan, claimed responsibility, saying it had also captured weapons and drones from the soldiers.
Residents said they saw helicopters in the air for hours after the early morning attack, taking the casualties to hospital and searching for the attackers.
Typically, a curfew is imposed and the route swept before military convoys move in the area, a focus for militants.
Islamabad alleges that the Pakistani Taliban is being harbored by the Afghan Taliban administration with the support of India, a source of tension with Kabul and New Delhi, which both deny the charge. The group is inspired by the Afghan Taliban.
The Pakistani group stepped up attacks, targeting Pakistani security forces since the Afghan Taliban swept to power in 2021.
“Pakistan expects the interim Afghan Government to uphold its responsibilities and deny use of its soil for terrorists’ activities against Pakistan,” Pakistan’s military said.


Turkiye orders detention of Istanbul district mayor, others in corruption probe, state media says

Turkiye orders detention of Istanbul district mayor, others in corruption probe, state media says
Updated 13 September 2025

Turkiye orders detention of Istanbul district mayor, others in corruption probe, state media says

Turkiye orders detention of Istanbul district mayor, others in corruption probe, state media says

ISTANBUL: A Turkish prosecutor ordered the detention of 48 suspects, including the mayor of Istanbul’s opposition-run Bayrampasa district, as part of a corruption investigation, state broadcaster TRT Haber said on Saturday.
The police carried out early morning raids at 72 locations to seize documents and detain suspects on charges including embezzlement, bribery, and tender rigging, according to TRT Haber.
In a post on X, Bayrampasa Mayor Hasan Mutlu, from the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), said he had nothing to hide and called the investigation “a political operation based on unfounded slander.”
The detentions come amidst a nearly year-long crackdown on the CHP and CHP-run municipalities, in which hundreds of party members have been arrested and jailed.
A court ruling due on Monday could remove the leader of the CHP in a case widely seen as a test of the country’s fragile balance between democratic institutions and centralized power, increasing the legal pressure on the party.