Countries propose safe corridor to free 20,000 seafarers stranded in Gulf

By Jonathan Saul

Reuters

LONDON, March 18 (Reuters) - A proposal from the UN's shipping agency on Wednesday calls for a safe ‌maritime corridor to free some 20,000 seafarers stranded in ‌the Gulf by war in Iran.

Hundreds of vessels have dropped anchor since Tehran threatened ​to attack ships attempting to leave the Gulf via the Strait of Hormuz.

The proposal submitted by Bahrain, Japan, Panama, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates and backed on Wednesday by the United States ‌called for "a framework such ⁠as a safe maritime corridor".

It was submitted at a meeting of the UN's International Maritime Organization (IMO) governing ⁠council in London.

"The purpose of this framework would be to facilitate the safe evacuation of merchant ships," it said. "This measure aims to protect ​the ​lives of seafarers."

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At least seven merchant ​sailors have been killed ‌due to the conflict, IMO Secretary-General Arsenio Dominguez told delegates.

"They must not become victims of broader geopolitical tensions," he said, calling for de-escalation to allow the seafarers to leave the Gulf safely.

NATO countries are also looking at what can be done, Secretary General Mark ‌Rutte said on Wednesday.

U.S. President Donald ​Trump has asked nations to help ​police the strait to allow ​oil tankers and other vessels to pass in ‌and out. The strait normally transports ​a fifth of ​the world's oil and liquefied natural gas.

Iran said in a separate submission to the IMO that Iranian authorities continued ​to provide humanitarian assistance ‌and support to seafarers and vessels in the Gulf ​and strait.

The IMO Council session continues on Thursday.

(Reporting by ​Jonathan Saul; editing by Jason Neely)

Countries propose safe corridor to free 20,000 seafarers stranded in Gulf

By Jonathan Saul LONDON, March 18 (Reuters) - A proposal from the UN's shipping agency on Wednesday calls ...
Dancing robot seen dragged away by panicked restaurant staff after going haywire in bizarre video: 'Actually scary'

This machine rages against you.

NY Post A composite of photos showing employees dragging a robot away.

The rise of the machines could be closer than you think. A humanoid bot had to be "bounced" from a California restaurant after smashing tableware during a dance routine gone awry, as seen inviral X footage.

The smashing machine had reportedly been tasked with performing for patrons at the Haidilao hotpot restaurant in San Jose.

The robot busted moves and plates alike during this backfired dance sequence. Xiao Hong Shu

The clip, mistakenly labeled as transpiring in China, starts innocuously enough with said robot shaking its hands and twerking its hips while clad in an orange apron ironically labeled "I'm good."

Then, all of a sudden, the disco droid starts tearing up the dance floor.

The termi-waiter proceeds to start knocking over tableware, smashing plates and sending chopsticks flying, evoking one of the failed automated police prototypes from Robocop 2.

That's when waitstaff proceed to grab the dance machine by the scruff of its neck and haul it outside while it continues to bust moves a la an unruly St Paddy's Day reveler.

Commenters were bemused by the machine's malfunction.

"[It] broke free from the matrix,"quipped one, whileanother joked, "This is what happens when you don't pay your robots enough."

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However, some found the automated employee's tantrum somewhat dystopian withone critic warning, "the revolution is going to begin."

The bot

"It's all fun and games, till the robot doesn't find it funny anymore,"said another.

"This is actually scary,"declared a third. "Watch how hard three grown people have to wrestle this thing just to make it freeze."

"Now picture that same loss of control in a 100+ kg combat/security humanoid, or one carrying sharp tools in a kitchen/factory," they added, stressing the need for "emergency stop buttons" within arms reach.

It's yet unclear if the automaton was "terminated" following its dance dance revolution, but this isn't the first time a bot has lost control on the job.

In 2025,freaky footage showeda humanoid robot seemingly snapping and lashing out at its handlers at a Chinese factory like something out of a sci-fi thriller.

These shocking incidents comes as anthropomorphic-seeming machines are becoming more integrated into our everyday lives.

This past winter,Shanghai start-up DroidUPunveiled an eerily realistic humanoid service bot named Moya with camera eyes and warm skin.

"A robot that truly serves human life should be warm, have a temperature, almost like a living being that people can connect with," said company founder Li Qingdu.

Dancing robot seen dragged away by panicked restaurant staff after going haywire in bizarre video: ‘Actually scary’

This machine rages against you. The rise of the machines could be closer than you think. A humanoid bot had to...
In a Cuban hospital, patients and doctors are hard hit by outages and fuel shortages

HAVANA — Yonelkys García, 44, a housewife and mother of two, finds it so difficult to travel to the hospital to treat her acute myeloid leukemia that she now stays at the facility one week at a time.

NBC Universal

García has been in treatment for over a year at the Institute of Hematology and Immunology and is thankful to have access to the hospital — one of the best on the communist-run island — but acknowledges that even there she faces constraints.

"It has been tough in every sense ... Sometimes the institute has been out of many medications, and I have had to call my friends and family in other countries to send me my medication," García said.

As Cuba's economic crisis deepens and amidthe fuel shortages and the blackouts,hospitals have been hard hit, leaving patients in the dark and medicine at risk of spoiling.

Cuba's government granted NBC News rare access inside the Institute of Hematology and Immunology, a research facility in the capital where they treat difficult cases from across the island that are referred there.

Even at this top hospital, which has more resources than others across the island, doctors and nurses are grappling with the complexities of treating patients under serious constraints.

"I haven't lost patients due to this situation," said Martin Hernández Isas, a hematologist at the institute who walks 20 miles from his home to get there.

"They have done the possible and the impossible to get here," he said of his patients. Staff at the hospital said that while their patients have been lucky, that may not be the case across the island.

Blackouts and shortages are not new to Cuba. A severe economic crisis has been unfolding since 2020, following President Donald Trump's tightened economic sanctions during his first term, the coronavirus pandemic which crippled the island's vital tourism industry, and fewer shipments of fuel from close ally Venezuela as they dealt with their own economic woes.

But in recent weeks Cuba's economy has taken a hit from Trump's oil blockade of the island,as his administration puts pressure on the Cuban government.

The lives of everydayCubans have been upendedand now revolve around when they have a few hours of power. But among the most vulnerable on the island are those who are dealing with illnesses.

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Staff at the Institute of Hematology and Immunology have had to strategize, reorganize and be flexible with schedules and work hours. The laboratories used to work five days a week. Now they're down to two days in order to save fuel.

One of the greatest challenges for patients is access to transport from their homes. Some rely on electric tricycles or are fortunate enough to have someone take them to the hospital. Others are forced to pay a taxi, but rides' prices are out of reach to the average Cuban.

Access to medication is a problem for patients. "We have to resort to them often asking their relatives [for medicine] or buying them on the black market," said Lucelia Leyva Calderón, a doctor and deputy director of the hospital.

It's common for Cuban Americans to send medicine, syringes and other supplies to hospitalized relatives on the island.

Some doctors make do with what they have.

"With 1 ml that a patient doesn't use, with 2 ml left over from another patient's vial, we pool it together so that no one is left without their medication," Hernández Isas said.

"The blackout affects us," said Hernández. He said that when they lose power at the hospital, they turn on a generator.

But there isn't always fuel available for the generator.

Norma Fernández, a nurse, said sometimes they lose power two or three times a day. The outages can last anywhere between one and 8 hours. She said this affects medication that needs to be refrigerated.

She said if the outage is only an hour long, the medications can stay cold enough, but when it's eight hours, "it's already difficult because there are patients who come to the institution, require some of the medications and, of course, the staff has to open the fridge and access medications," Fernández said.

While the hospital hasn't reported any deaths due to shortages, it's a fear on the minds of many.

"It is very difficult," said Leyva Calderon. "The hardest thing for a doctor is losing a patient. That is one of the hardest things I think there is, for everyone."

In a Cuban hospital, patients and doctors are hard hit by outages and fuel shortages

HAVANA — Yonelkys García, 44, a housewife and mother of two, finds it so difficult to travel to the hospital to treat her...
TSA warns some small US airports could close amid shutdown

Some smaller U.S. airports may be forced to shut down as the partial government shutdown drags on, according to Transportation Security Administration Acting Deputy Administrator Adam Stahl.

Scripps News

Stahl told Fox News the agency is stretched thin, with employees calling out because they cannot afford gas to get to work.

"So at this point, we're fully stretched," he told "Fox & Friends." "Frankly, there's not much else we can do. As the weeks continue, if this continues, it's not hyperbole to suggest that we may have to quite literally shut down airports, particularly smaller ones, if callout rates go up... A lot of those officers can't afford to come in."

One example: Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, the busiest in the United States, is seeing callout rates of 30% to 36%. The airport is providing food vouchers and free parking to help workers.

RELATED STORY |Airport security lines grow as DHS shutdown enters fourth week

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Stahl added that some workers are sleeping in their cars to make ends meet.

Scripps News spoke to a TSA agent from Boise about his experience during the shutdown.

"We're talking with our officers every day worried about what's going to happen with their rent, their child care, how to pay for food, all sorts of things like this," said Cameron Cochems, vice president of AFGE Local 1127. "Passengers are being very supportive. People are donating food to our airports, gift cards, gas cards, things like that. But at the end of the day, canned green beans is not going to pay my rent."

RELATED STORY |TSA disruptions set to snarl spring break travel as partial government shutdown continues

The shutdown comes as the Department of Homeland Security has not been funded for nearly a month. Democrats have demanded administrative changes for immigration enforcement before fully funding DHS.

Democrats have offered proposals to fund parts of DHS, including TSA, but those have stalled.

TSA warns some small US airports could close amid shutdown

Some smaller U.S. airports may be forced to shut down as the partial government shutdown drags on, according to Transport...
Rory McIlroy's Masters Champions Dinner: Wagyu filet, elk and more deliciousness

It took Rory McIlroy a long time to win the Masters. He's prepared a Champions Dinner that's worth the wait.

Yahoo Sports Golf: The Masters: Rory McIlroy victorious after winning sudden death playoff round to win the tournament on Sunday at Augusta National. Sequence.Augusta, GA 4/13/2025CREDIT: Erick W. Rasco (Photo by Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images) (Set Number: X164712 TK4 )

McIlroy claimed his first Masters last year in one of the most stirring triumphs in golf history. Already one of the game's greatest players, McIlroy had fought for well over a decade to win the elusive green jacket, and with it an array of honors and perks. Among those: the right to host a Champions Dinner the next year for past winners of the Masters.

[Yahoo Fantasy Bracket Mayhem: Make your picks for $50K in total prizes]

Each year's champion has the honor of choosing the menu for his dinner, and McIlroy has created a masterpiece. Unveiled Wednesday morning, it's a combination of his favorite dishes, a few nods to local Georgia culture, and a collection of fine wines to complement the meal.

Appetizers include Grilled Elk Sliders, Bacon-Wrapped Dates, Rock Shrimp Tempura and Peach & Ricotta Flatbread. A first course of Yellowfin Tuna Carpaccio precedes a main course of Wagyu Filet Mignon or Seared Salmon, with Sticky Toffee Pudding for dessert.

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"In the buildup to the Masters last year, I was eating a lot of elk," McIlroy said Wednesday. "I got this big shipment of elk and I was eating a lot of that. I didn't want elk to be the main course, because I didn't know if everyone would like that, so I incorporated it into the appetizers."

The Yellowfin Tuna dish comes from one of McIlroy's favorite restaurants, Le Bernardin in New York. Sides include Irish champ, a mashed potato dish McIlroy loved growing up, and Vidalia onion rings from nearby Vidalia, Georgia. Wine includes a 1990 Chateau Lafite Rothschild from Pauillac, Bordeaux.

"That is the wine that I drank the night that I won the Masters," McIlroy said, "so obviously brings back some great memories."

McIlroy conceded that he never thought of an exact menu before winning the Masters — "It would be pretty presumptuous to have a menu in your head before you actually win the tournament" — but did want to put together a menu to honor his own favorites and satisfy all the past champions.

"Can't wait to host the dinner on Tuesday night," he added, "and obviously be a part of that dinner for many, many years to come."

Unfortunately, the only way into this dinner is to win a green jacket of your own. So, no luck this year, but if you workreallyhard, maybe there'll be a seat for you at the table in 2028.

Rory McIlroy's Masters Champions Dinner: Wagyu filet, elk and more deliciousness

It took Rory McIlroy a long time to win the Masters. He's prepared a Champions Dinner that's worth the wait. ...
Venezuela's tears of joy: Why the team that cared the most won the World Baseball Classic

It doesn't mean anything in the grand scheme of things thatTeam USA— the United States ofAmerica,as in the birthplace ofbaseballand the home to the highest-caliber league on the planet — lost one game against Team Venezuela.

CNN The Venezuela team celebrates after defeating the United States in the championship game of the World Baseball Classic in Miami on March 17, 2026. - Rebecca Blackwell/AP

Except to theVenezuelan players and their fans, to whom it means everything. And, after two weeks of some of the most joyous and exuberant baseball that anyMarch has ever seen, that is the beautiful thing about the World Baseball Classic.

When Bryce Harper – with his distinct brand of humorless flamboyance – broke a 12-inning scoreless streak for Team USA with a game-tying, two-out, 432-foot home run in the bottom of the eighth inning, it was the sort of storybook sports moment that makes big games worth staying up late for. It gave American fans and Philadelphia Phillies fans and baseball fans who were promised a power-packed lineup something to leap up off their couches and cheer about.

Javier Sanoja of Team Venezuela steals second base in front of the tag by Brice Turang of Team United States during the ninth inning. He'd go on to score the winning run. - Megan Briggs/Getty Images

It also set up an even more dramatic ninth-inning victory for the Venezuelans. When Eugenio Suárez drove in the go-ahead run, it was a moment that mattered more to an entire nation than sports should have to.

It gave the sold-out stadium something to party about because, even here in America, the crowd at loanDepot Park in Miami was overwhelmingly full of Venezuelan fans. For those back home, it was a moment of catharsis for a nation that has been racked by political upheaval, economic uncertainty, isolation on the world stage and increasing emigration to other nations in the Western Hemisphere.

That was surely part ofMLB's calculus in deciding to host the latter rounds of the WBC in South Florida, where the heavily Latino population showed up to support Team Venezuela and, through its semifinal elimination, Team Dominican Republic. This is for them. And for the fans in Japan, where practically the entire country tuned in to see some part of Samurai Japan's run to the championship three years ago. And for the small contingent of baseball fans eager to grow the game in Italy andthe new Italian fansthis year's team attracted.

In previous iterations, when Team USA was clearly not as competitive as it could have been given the domestic talent that exists in Major League Baseball, it was not terribly difficult to understand why foreign-born players were more motivated to participate. American players return to their hometowns – or at least the closest major-league city – regularly. They leave extra tickets for family and friends and perhaps the broadcast highlights their local connection.

Venezuela enters the field at the start of the championship game of the World Baseball Classic against the United States in Miami on March 17, 2026. - Lynne Sladky/AP

International players leave behind those familiar people and places to be part of MLB. They travel thousands of miles away from those support systems to give themselves the greatest opportunity, and also to give the game the best possible competition. The WBC doesn't necessarily bring them home, but it connects them to their heritage.

This year, the Americans were more formidable. The roster looked like it might steamroll the whole tournament.

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Team USA didn't because baseball doesn't always behave like you expect it to in small sample sizes. Take Aaron Judge for example. The American captain was 0-for-4 with three strikeouts in the championship game, and yet he remains arguably the best hitter anyone alive today has ever seen. Every baseball fan in the world should want him to suit up for the next WBC.

In truth, the USA didn't lose because the team was overconfident. Or because of their bloviating military cosplay. Or because, by the end, they started to seem like joyless bad guys in a tournament full of teams having fun playing a kid's game. They lost because they batted a collective .156 with 24 strikeouts over the final two games.

And because Team Venezuela was talented, too.

Members of Team United States react after being defeated 3-2 by Team Venezuela. - Al Bello/Getty Images

What will surely be a WBC-record setting audience tuned in to see Team USA's offense choke in the championship game. As the tournament built up momentum over the past two weeks, a line of discourse emerged pitting the WBC against theWorld Series— which is "better," which would mean more to win?

There have been 121 World Series in baseball history. This was the sixth WBC. It's crazy that they're comparable. But to watch Team Venezuela descend into tearful revelry after the final out is to believe that they are.

MLB can, and should, thank international players and fanbases for giving the tournament such instant legitimacy. It's only because they care as much as they do – and, perhaps, this year, the Venezuelans most of all – that the WBC was so competitive.

By caring so much, Team Venezuela made the American team better. And then they beat them.

This story has been updated with additional information.

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Venezuela’s tears of joy: Why the team that cared the most won the World Baseball Classic

It doesn't mean anything in the grand scheme of things thatTeam USA— the United States ofAmerica,as in the birthplace...
Tramon Mark, Texas sink NC State in last seconds at First Four

DAYTON, Ohio -- Tramon Mark capped his team-leading 17-point effort by sinking a pull-up jumper with 1.1 seconds remaining, lifting Texas past North Carolina State 68-66 in an NCAA Tournament First Four thriller on Tuesday in Dayton, Ohio.

Field Level Media

Matas Vokietaitis had 15 points while Chendall Weaver had 11 points and 10 rebounds for Texas (19-14), which advances as the No. 11 seed in the West Region to face No. 6 BYU on Thursday in Portland, Ore.

Dailyn Swain (13 points, eight rebounds) blocked a potential 3-pointer at the buzzer to preserve the game for the Longhorns.

The two teams faced off at the Maui Invitational in November, and Texas won that meeting 102-97.

"Today it was very slow and very different," Texas coach Sean Miller said of the game's tempo. "One thing about the tournament, it can bring some anxiety and probably (to) both teams. I just thought like we missed a few easy shots, and we weren't who we've been all season on offense but thrilled we were able to win."

Tre Holloman converted a three-point play with 1:48 remaining to draw NC State within 62-56. After a pair of Swain free throws, Paul McNeil Jr. drained a deep 3-pointer from the left baseline to bring NC State within 64-59 with 1:30 remaining. Another McNeil 3-point heave from the opposite baseline with 1:06 left cut Texas' lead to 64-62.

Mark's turnaround in the lane with 36.8 seconds remaining put the Longhorns up 66-62 before Darrion Willams answered with a trey to make it 66-65 Texas with 29.4 seconds left. Swain was double-teamed in the corner after receiving the inbounds pass and lost it out of bounds with 20.3 seconds to go.

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Holloman drove to the basket and was fouled and given two free throws with 18.3 seconds left. He missed the first but hit the second for a 66-66 tie, and setting the stage for Mark's game-winner.

"I got a great look," Mark said. "I looked at the clock, and I just sized them up and got a great look at the rim. I practice those shots every day, so just got a great look at it."

It was the second straight First Four for Swain and Miller. In the 2025 First Four, the two of them helped Xavier beat Texas on the same court and advance to the field of 64, where the Musketeers lost to Illinois.

Williams had 21 points and Quadir Copeland added 16 points and eight rebounds for NC State (20-14), which ends its season losing eight of the final 10 games.

"Disappointing end to a pretty disappointing season for us, the way I look at it," NC State coach Will Wade said. "We haven't been very good in close games. We hadn't earned the right to win in close games, and our season ended very similar to the reason we're sitting in Dayton.

"You are who you are in pressure moments, and we tried to mask some stuff and we couldn't do it. That's why we're here, and that's why we're heading home."

Texas dominated most of the game on the boards, outrebounding NC State 45-33. The Wolfpack took advantage of an eight-minute Texas field-goal drought to close the first half down just 30-29 after trailing by 10.

--Mike Petraglia, Field Level Media

Tramon Mark, Texas sink NC State in last seconds at First Four

DAYTON, Ohio -- Tramon Mark capped his team-leading 17-point effort by sinking a pull-up jumper with 1.1 seconds remai...

 

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