Flash floods in Nairobi kill 23, disrupt flights at major airport

By Thomas Mukoya and Monica Mwangi

Reuters A public transport bus known as matatu lies on top of a private car as a result of heavy rainfall in the Grogan area, popular for automotive workshops and secondhand spare parts, in downtown Nairobi, Kenya, March 7, 2026. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya A man looks through the wreckages of private vehicles destroyed following heavy rainfall in the Grogan area, popular for automotive workshops and secondhand spare parts, in downtown Nairobi, Kenya, March 7, 2026. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya People stand near a trench polluted with petroleum waste from the wreckages of vehicles destroyed following heavy rainfall in the Grogan area, popular for automotive workshops and secondhand spare parts, in downtown Nairobi, Kenya, March 7, 2026. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya People walk along a steel foot-bridge over the overflowing Nairobi River following heavy rainfall in the Grogan area, popular for automotive workshops and secondhand spare parts, in downtown Nairobi, Kenya, March 7, 2026. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya A woman walks past the wreckages of private vehicles destroyed following heavy rainfall in the Grogan area, popular for automotive workshops and secondhand spare parts, in downtown Nairobi, Kenya, March 7, 2026. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya People walk past the wreckages of public transport buses known as matatus, destroyed following heavy rainfall in the Grogan area, popular for automotive workshops and secondhand spare parts, in downtown Nairobi, Kenya, March 7, 2026. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya

Aftermath of heavy rainfall at Grogan area, in Nairobi

NAIROBI, March 7 (Reuters) - Aid workers pulled bodies from floodwaters across Nairobi on Saturday after flash floods that began ‌overnight killed at least 23 people, swept away dozens of cars and disrupted ‌flights at East Africa's biggest airport, authorities said.

Kenyan President William Ruto said he had deployed a team ​of emergency responders, including soldiers, to coordinate rescue efforts, while offering condolences to the affected communities.

"I have also ordered that relief food from our national strategic reserves be immediately released and distributed to families affected by the floods," he said in a statement on social ‌media.

In the industrial neighbourhood of ⁠Grogan, security guard John Lomayan, 34, looked at the body of an elderly man he recognised - a roadside egg seller - trapped beneath a ⁠car that had been washed away when the Nairobi River burst its banks.

"I saw him being carried by the water from up there," he said, gesturing up the road. "We didn't ​know where ​he had gone. It is only now ​that we see him under the ‌car".

Advertisement

Bus driver John Mwai recounted how he turned his bus into a rescue vehicle to move people to higher ground.

Kenya Airways said the rains had disrupted flights to Nairobi and forced some to divert to the coastal city of Mombasa.

Scientists say global warming is worsening floods and droughts across East Africa by concentrating rainfall into shorter, more ‌intense bursts. A 2024 World Weather Attribution study found ​climate change had made devastating rains in the ​region twice as likely as before.

A ​Reuters reporter saw three bodies pulled from underneath cars. Some of ‌the dead had been electrocuted by damaged ​power lines. National provider ​Kenya Power separately said the waters had damaged equipment at a substation, listing 14 neighbourhoods that had been affected.

"So many cars, so much stuff, I don't ​know. Everything was just (washed ‌away). All of the water (came) ... from that river," shocked resident Cedric Mwanza said, ​referring to the Nairobi River.

(Additional reporting by Humphrey Malalo in Nairobi. Writing ​by Tim Cocks. Editing by Mark Potter)

Flash floods in Nairobi kill 23, disrupt flights at major airport

By Thomas Mukoya and Monica Mwangi Aftermath of heavy rainfall at Grogan area, in Nairobi NAIROBI, March...
Traveling Soon? Here Are The Maps You Need

A large storm system will push into the East and South this weekend. Severe thunderstorms are possible from the northern Appalachians to Texas on Saturday. Rain will affect the Northeast hubs and the I-95 corridor Saturday night. Additionally, persistent showery weather is expected in the Pacific Northwest through the weekend.

The Weather Channel

Travel Problems Over The Next Few Days

Showers and thunderstorms are possible across the South on Monday. Light snow showers are possible late Monday from the Northern Rockies to the Upper Midwest.

Delays are possible in Dallas, Houston, New Orleans, Atlanta, Nashville, New York and Boston through this weekend.

Delays are possible in Dallas, Houston, Memphis, Atlanta, Nashville and Seattle on Monday.

Advertisement

Current Weather

Current Winds At Cruising Altitude

Flyers will generally travel faster eastward with the jet stream and slower flying westward against strong headwinds in the jet stream. The jet stream is shown by the ribbons of faster moving air shaded in purple, pinks and whites on the map below.

Current Temperatures

Near-Term Forecast On The Roads

Forecast Weather

Below are the forecast conditions and high temperatures over the next six days.

Traveling Soon? Here Are The Maps You Need

A large storm system will push into the East and South this weekend. Severe thunderstorms are possible from the northe...
Where March Madness legends are today, from Kevin Pittsnogle to Jack Gohlke

Though theNCAA men's basketball tournamentis designed to produce a national champion, it's just as effective at creating stars.

USA TODAY Sports

The stakes and pressure of a single-elimination tournament can turn once-anonymous figures who spent much of their careers toiling in obscurity into celebrities in an instant, with the fame from theirone shining momentstaying with them long after they've finished playing.

It's not always players who are immortalized, either. There are coaches, of course, but also unsuspecting fans, student managers and even team chaplains.

REQUIRED READING:March Madness bracketology: Latest NCAA tournament bubble predictions

The2026 NCAA Tournamentwill tip off in just over a week, with 68 teams from across the country vying for a national championship — or, if not that, the chance to be remembered forever in the sport. Over three weeks of games, buzzers will be beaten, Goliaths will be toppled and cult heroes will be born.

As we prepare for the madness of this March, here's a look back at some of the biggest NCAA Tournament legends over the past 30 years and what they're up to now:

Biggest March Madness icons

Ali Farokhmanesh

Back then: Drained one of the biggest "no, no, yes!" shots in NCAA Tournament history, sinking a 3-pointer early in the shot clock rather than bleeding out the clock with a one-point lead and 35 seconds remaining in Northern Iowa's 69-67 second-round win against No. 1 overall seed Kansas in 2010.

Now: After spending 11 seasons as an assistant at Nebraska, Drake andColorado State, the 37-year-old Farokhmanesh is in his first season as Colorado State's head coach. TheRamsare 20-10 heading into their regular-season finale on Saturday, March 7.

Kris Jenkins

Back then: Jenkins delivered the exclamation point for maybe the most thrilling end to a national championship game in NCAA Tournament history, burying a 3-pointer as time expired to deliver Villanova a 77-74 victory over North Carolina in 2016. It was the Wildcats' first national title since 1985.

Now: After a brief professional career overseas and in the G League, Jenkins returned to Villanova in February 2020 in a student-athlete development role.

Bryce Drew

Back then: Drew hit one of the most famous buzzer-beaters ever in the NCAA Tournament, sinking a 3 following a great play off a full-court heave to lift No. 13 seed Valparaiso to a 70-69 upset over No. 4 seed Mississippi in 1998. He added 22 points in a second-round overtime win against Florida State, sending Valpo to its first and only Sweet 16 in program history.

Now: After playing six seasons in the NBA, he returned to Valparaiso, where he coached under his father, Homer, before succeeding him as head coach in 2011. He spent five seasons at Valpo before moving to Vanderbilt, where he was fired after three seasons. He's currently in his sixth season as head coach at Grand Canyon, where he has gone 139-51.

Kevin Pittsnogle

Back then: The 6-foot-11, tattooed West Virginia native won the hearts of millions during the 2005 NCAA Tournament, when he led his home state university all the way to the Elite Eight behind his rare blend of size and outside shooting touch, as well as his unforgettable last name that became a verb for fans across the country. He returned to the Mountaineers the following year, averaging nearly 20 points per game and earning All-American honors.

Advertisement

Now: Pittsnogle bounced between jobs after a brief professional basketball career before earning his master's degree in special education. He's currently the principal at North Middle School in his hometown of Martinsburg, West Virginia.

D.J. Burns

Back then: No player embodied NC State's stunning run to the 2024 Final Four as a No. 11 seed more than Burns, the 6-foot-9, 275-pound forward with a portly frame but immaculate footwork and touch around the basket. His March magic was highlighted by a 29-point performance against Duke in the Elite Eight, which sent the Wolfpack to their first Final Four since 1983.

Now: Despite his March Madness heroics, Burns went undrafted in the 2024 NBA Draft. He played last season with the Goyang Sono Skygunners in South Korea and is now in his first season with Bnei Herzliya in Israel.

God Shammgod

Back then: With one of the most unforgettable names in college basketball history, Shammgod piloted a Providence team that made the Elite Eight as a No. 10 seed in 1997. He's perhaps most known today for "the Shammgod," a dribbling maneuver that bears his name.

Now: Shammgod played professional basketball for 12 years, primarily overseas, and is in his first season as an assistant coach with the Orlando Magic. He was previously an assistant with the Dallas Mavericks from 2019-25.

Jack Gohlke

Back then: Only a year removed from playing Division III ball, Gohlke led No. 14 seed Oakland to a shocking 80-76 win over No. 3 seed Kentucky in the first round of the 2024 NCAA Tournament, scoring a season-high 32 points while making 10 of his 20 3s.

Now: Gohlke has been playing professionally since leaving Oakland and is currently in his first season with the Texas Legends, the G League affiliate of the Dallas Mavericks.

Tyus Edney

Back then: Edney was the catalyst of UCLA's national championship run in 1995, driving the length of the court in 4.8 seconds for a game-winning layup as time expired in a 75-74 victory against Missouri in the second round of the tournament. The 5-foot-10 point guard later averaged 21.5 points per game in the Elite Eight and Final Four.

Now: Following a 15-year professional career, Edney got into coaching, serving as an assistant at UCLA and San Diego. He's in his second season as an assistant at Pepperdine.

Spike Albrecht and Luke Hancock

Back then: Albrecht and Hancock traded baskets in a frenetic first half between Michigan and Louisville in the 2013 national championship game, combining for 33 points in the first half of the Cardinals' 82-76 victory. Hancock, who finished with 22 points for Louisville, was named the Final Four Most Outstanding Player.

Now: Albrecht played three more seasons for Michigan before transferring to Purdue for his final college season. He later served as a graduate assistant at Purdue and, interestingly enough, Louisville. He's now the director of franchise development with the REP'M Group. Though his Louisville team had its title vacated by the NCAA, Hancock and four of his teammates successfully had all of their records, including Hancock's Final Four MOP, restored in 2019 in a lawsuit settlement. He currently works as an analyst for the ACC Network.

Doug Edert

Back then: Edert averaged only 9.5 points per game for a Saint Peter's team that made the 2022 NCAA Tournament, but he quickly became one of the sport's biggest stars that March, when the 6-foot-2 guard with the wispy mustache came off the bench to score 20 points in the No. 15 seed Peacocks' first-round upset over No. 2 seed Kentucky. He later helped Saint Peter's become the first No. 15 seed to make the Elite Eight, where it fell to North Carolina.

Now: Edert transferred after the 2021-22 season and played his final two years of college ball at Bryant. He's currently working as a basketball coach and trainer.

Steph Curry

Back then: Over a thrilling couple of weeks in March 2008, Curry went from being Dell Curry's rail-thin son to one of the biggest, most recognizable stars in college basketball. The once-overlooked sharpshooter scored a combined 103 points while leading No. 10 seed Davidson to upset wins over Gonzaga, Georgetown and Wisconsin on its way to the Elite Eight, where it narrowly lost to eventual national champion Kansas in a matchup in which Curry had a game-high 25 points.

Now: Honestly not sure. Hopefully he still gets the chance to lace his sneakers up every now and then.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:March Madness legends: What happened to NCAA Tournament standouts?

Where March Madness legends are today, from Kevin Pittsnogle to Jack Gohlke

Though theNCAA men's basketball tournamentis designed to produce a national champion, it's just as effective at c...
No. 19 Miami (Ohio) edges Ohio in OT, completes perfect regular season

Eian Elmer scored a career-high 32 points and grabbed 12 rebounds as No. 19 Miami (Ohio) completed the first undefeated regular season in the 80-year history of the Mid-American Conference with a wild 110-108 overtime win over Ohio on Friday in Athens, Ohio.

Field Level Media

Trey Perry added 21 points off the bench, Brant Byers chipped in with 15 and Peter Suder added 13 as Miami (31-0, 18-0 MAC) joined Wichita State (2013-14), Kentucky (2014-15) and Gonzaga (2020-21) as the only teams this century to head into their conference tournament with a perfect record.

Jackson Paveletzke had a career-high 37 and Javan Simmons added 30 for Ohio (15-16, 9-9), which lost to Miami at home for the first time since a 92-88 triple-overtime setback on Jan. 9, 2011, snapping a string of 14 straight wins over their MAC archrival in Athens.

Ohio's Ajay Sheldon sank a 30-foot 3-pointer with 6:18 left in regulation to tie the game 88-88. Miami would take a 93-88 lead before the Bobcats rallied. Simmons found Aidan Hadaway on a cut to the basket to make it 95-93 in favor of Miami with 3:27 left. Paveletzke drained a rainbow trey from 5 feet beyond the arc to get Ohio within 97-96 with 2:33 left.

Simmons' dunk with 40.8 seconds remaining finally brought Ohio even at 100-100. Simmons blocked Suder's drive and the ball went out of bounds with 23.9 seconds left. After video review, possession was awarded to Miami with 12 seconds left on the shot clock. Luke Skaljac's 3-point shot was short from the right baseline and Ohio grabbed the loose ball with 13 seconds to go.

Paveletzke's floater in the lane just fell off the rim as regulation expired. Paveletzke's layup 45 seconds into overtime gave Ohio its first lead since midway through the first half before Suder's layup and free throw on a three-point play put Miami back on top 58 seconds into the frame.

Advertisement

After Miami took a 107-104 lead, Paveletzke hit a spinning layup and was fouled with 1:12 remaining. He missed the free throw and Miami clung to a one-point lead. Simmons put Ohio up 108-107 with 22 seconds left on a layup before Suder answered with two free throws 12.6 to put Miami up 109-108.

Paveletzke missed a layup with five seconds remaining and Justin Kirby grabbed the rebound to seal the game with 4.7 seconds left. Kirby hit 1 of 2 free throws before Paveletzke's trey was off the mark as time expired.

Miami claimed a 61-50 lead with just under 17 minutes remaining when Paveletzke led an Ohio charge, aided by Miami's second technical of the game. Brant Byers was called for the technical with 15:16 left and Paveletzke converted both free throws to draw Ohio within 65-62. Paveletzke then drained a mid-range jumper in the paint to cap a 14-4 run and cut the Miami lead to 65-64 with 15 minutes remaining.

But Miami answered with a Perry jumper in the paint to begin a 9-1 RedHawks spurt. Miami built its lead back to 10, 77-67, when the RedHawks were called for their third technical of the game, as Antwone Woolfolk and Ohio's Simmons exchanged shoves. After Ohio drained 3 of 4 free throws, Sheldon knocked down a 3 to complete the six-point possession and cut Miami's lead back to four.

Moments later, Elmer was called for a flagrant foul and Ohio hit 3 of 4 free throws to cap a nine-point surge in 50 seconds.

--Field Level Media

No. 19 Miami (Ohio) edges Ohio in OT, completes perfect regular season

Eian Elmer scored a career-high 32 points and grabbed 12 rebounds as No. 19 Miami (Ohio) completed the first undefeate...
Olympic champion Pinheiro Braathen leads World Cup giant slalom with Odermatt fifth

KRANJSKA GORA, Slovenia (AP) —Olympic champion Lucas Pinheiro Braathenwas fastest in the first run of a World Cup giant slalom on Saturday with Marco Odermatt almost one second back in fifth.

Associated Press Brazil's Lucas Pinheiro Braathen competes during an alpine ski, men's World Cup giant slalom, in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia, Saturday, March 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta) Switzerland's Marco Odermatt competes during an alpine ski, men's World Cup giant slalom, in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia, Saturday, March 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Pier Marco Tacca) Switzerland's Loic Meillard competes during an alpine ski, men's World Cup giant slalom, in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia, Saturday, March 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta) Austria's Stefan Brennsteiner competes during an alpine ski, men's World Cup giant slalom, in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia, Saturday, March 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta) Croatia's Filip Zubcic competes during an alpine ski, men's World Cup giant slalom, in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia, Saturday, March 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta)

Slovenia World Cup Alpine Skiing

Pinheiro Braathen'shistoric gold-medal win for Brazillast month pushed Odermatt down to silver, and he is the Swiss star's closest challenger in theseason-long giant slalom standings.

On a sunny 4 Celsius (39 Fahrenheit) day in Slovenia, Pinheiro Braathen took a 0.14-second lead over Stefan Brennsteiner. Olympic bronze medalist Loïc Meillard was third with 0.35 to make up in the afternoon run.

Odermatt got the best snow conditions wearing the No. 1 start bib, but his time was 0.92 back.

The 28-year-old Swiss is chasing a fifth straight title in the giant slalom standings and started Saturday with a 103-point lead over Pinheiro Braathen and two races left.

Advertisement

Pinheiro Braathen is on track to earn 100 points for the win with just the season-ending race March 25 at Hafjell, Norway, left on the giant slalom calendar. Odermatt's fifth place would be worth 45 points, leaving him 48 ahead.

Odermatt already has effectively won a fifth straight overall World Cup title.

He began racing Saturday with a huge lead of 687, over Pinheiro Braathen, and his rivals don't compete in enough disciplines to close the gap over the next 2½ weeks.

AP skiing:https://apnews.com/hub/alpine-skiing

Olympic champion Pinheiro Braathen leads World Cup giant slalom with Odermatt fifth

KRANJSKA GORA, Slovenia (AP) —Olympic champion Lucas Pinheiro Braathenwas fastest in the first run of a World Cup giant s...
Trump's demands for ending Iran war shift as US military works through its target list

Inside the Oval Office this week, after a crowd of jostling reporters departed into the Rose Garden, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz tried to get an answer fromPresident Donald Trump: how, exactly, did he envision thewar with Iranending?

CNN President Donald Trump during a roundtable in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on Friday. - Aaron Schwartz/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Despite some pressing by the chancellor, the answer from the president — as it has been since the conflict began a week ago — wasn't quite clear, according to a person familiar.

As the US military operation against Iran shifts into a new phase following last Saturday's opening salvo, how the war ends remainsthe top questionfor many officials, lawmakers and US allies.

In briefings with lawmakers and congressional staff in recent days, Pentagon officials have leaned into the US military mission being narrowly focused on destroying Iran's ballistic missile launchers, people who attended the briefings said, rather than on targeting Iranian nuclear facilities or taking out regime figures or military personnel. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has spoken dismissively of repeating the "nation building" exercises of past administrations.

At the same time, Trump has offered far more expansive goals that appear to extend beyond the military's stated remit. On Friday, he lumped in the "UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER" of Iran's current regime as an additional requirement for the war to conclude.

The apparent disconnect has only fueled questions about where the conflict, which is alreadybroadly unpopularamong Americans, is headed. In conversations with their US counterparts, Arab and European officials say they haven't detected what exactly Trump's endgame looks like, or if it exists at all.

Emerging from briefings with senior administration officials this week, lawmakers similarly professed little understanding of how Trump will know he has achieved all his goals in Iran, or whether he has a plan for what comes afterward. Some lawmakers also appeared unnerved by the fact that Hegseth would not rule out putting US troops on the ground in Iran.

Who will take over?

The US has so far rejected Iranian overtures to begin talks that could suss out ways to end the conflict. Iranian intelligence sent word this week to the US it could be prepared to open talks on how to endthe war, according to people familiar with the indirect messages, but US officials say there were no negotiations underway and that potential "off-ramps" are unlikely to materialize in the near term.

"Since this thing went kinetic, we've had a number of reach-outs," a senior Trump administration official said this week, putting the number of nations at nearly a dozen. "It's not dissimilar to what we had before, people wanting to see if they can help solve it, and we've talked to them."

To date, that has not resulted in any robust exchange of messages between the United States and Iran. "We're not using anyone as an interlocutor. This is a military action, and it's got to run its course," the official said.

Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said Trump alone would determine when Iran was in a state of "unconditional surrender."

"What the president means is that when he, as commander in chief of the US Armed Forces, determines that Iran no longer poses a threat to the United States of America and the goals of Operation Epic Fury has been fully realized, then Iran will essentially be in a place of unconditional surrender, whether they say it themselves or not," she told reporters on Friday in the White House driveway.

"Frankly," she went on, "they don't have a lot of people to say that for them, because the United States and the state of Israel have completely wiped out near more than 50 leaders of the former terrorist regime, including the supreme leader himself."

Trump said he expects to be heavily involved in choosing Iran's next leader. But US intelligence agencies have long warned it is difficult to assess the outcome of a regime change scenario, and some US and European officials do not see a clear option for replacing the current regime.

Multiple sources said Trump appears content with allowing an Iranian government led by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps — a similar model to what the administration used in Venezuela in replacing Nicolás Maduro with his Vice President Delcy Rodríguez.

"It's gonna work very easily. It's going to work like did in Venezuela," Trumptold CNN's Dana Bashin a brief phone interview on Friday.

But that option risks installing a potentially more extreme power center — something Trump suggested earlier this week would amount to the "worst case scenario." US and foreign officials have also cast doubt on the viability of establishing some kind of coalition government, believing that option could quickly turn Iran into a failed state akin to Iraq in the early 2000s, sources said.

Advertisement

"We've heard…mixed messages about what the strategy is here, what the endgame is here, and how we're going to get out of Iran," Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said this week. "No one in the free world misses the ayatollah," the New Hampshire Democrat said. "But what is not clear is how long this is going to go on, the extent to which it's escalating."

And across the board, the Trump administration has not clearly articulated an end game or an off-ramp, according to four sources from allied countries.

"We have no idea what they actually want to accomplish when this war is over. It doesn't seem like Trump even knows," said one European diplomat.

That has fed concerns the war could drag on for weeks or months — a timeline the president, in many telephone calls to news outlets this week, hasn't explicitly shrugged off.

Instead, Trump has focused on the immediate successes, including degrading Iran's missile capabilities, sinking its ships and taking out its senior leaders.

Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters on Wednesday that as the war enters a new phase, the US will begin "striking progressively deeper into Iranian territory and (create) additional freedom of maneuver for US forces."

Caine also claimed that Iran's ballistic missile launches have plummeted by 86% since the operation began, and that their one-way attack drone launches are down 73%. One person familiar with the matter, however, said those drops can largely be attributed to the US' destruction of Iranian command and control centers in the opening hours of the war.

But while the US military is narrowly focused, there is also an increasing recognition among military planners that destroying Iran's enriched uranium stockpile, which Iran would need to produce a nuclear weapon, would require US forces on the ground to find, exfiltrate and destroy it since it is buried so deeply underground — out of reach even of US bunker-buster bombs, sources said.

There are no plans for that right now, so sources said the administration has steered clear of discussing it.

Kurdish involvement

At the same time, the Trump administration has quietly tried to enlist the help of Iranian and Iraqi Kurdish opposition groups. For months, the CIA has been in discussions with multiple Iranian Kurdish groups about carrying out a potential ground offensive intended to help foment a popular uprising inside the country, multiple sources told CNN.

The CIA is working to arm some of those groups and the US has discussed providing air-support for Kurdish ground forces if they were to launch an offensive,CNN previously reported.

Discussions between the CIA and Iranian Kurdish groups have also included political proposals for if the regime ultimately does collapse, according to Amir Karimi, co-chair of the PJAK, which is one of the Kurdish groups in talks with the US.

PJAK is supportive of the US-Israeli operations but has reinforced to the CIA that overthrowing the regime can't be done by military force alone, Karimi told CNN in an interview this week. The group has also told the CIA it wants a political relationship with the US and Trump administration — which includes having a say in who would ultimately become Iran's next leader.

"We believe it is a legitimate war, however we want support for forces on the ground who are fighting for democracy in Iran. This is not something that can be done by bombardment alone," Karimi said, adding that the US could help unite Kurdish groups so they can fight the regime together.

Trump appears to be working to do that, holding multiple calls with the leaders of Iraqi and Iranian Kurdish groups in recent days. But during at least two recent calls, he's grown frustrated with the Iraqi Kurdish leaders — who are keenly aware that participating in a US-backed offensive carries significant risks — telling them to "pick a side," according to a source familiar with the discussions.

Karimi also said his group has made clear to the Trump administration they do not believe anyone from outside Iran should be "helicoptered in to lead this fight," and voiced strong opposition to any efforts that involve backing exiled Iranian activist Reza Pahlavi, the son of the last shah, in the short or long term.

Trump himself downplayed him as an option earlier this week, saying, "It would seem to me that somebody from within maybe would be more appropriate."

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump’s demands for ending Iran war shift as US military works through its target list

Inside the Oval Office this week, after a crowd of jostling reporters departed into the Rose Garden, German Chancellor Fr...
Roche chairman still expects diagnostics hit from US tariffs

ZURICH, March 7 (Reuters) - Roche expects its agreement with the U.S. government will keep its medicines exempt from the ‌current round of import tariffs, but its diagnostics division ‌remains exposed and could face renewed duties after an initial 150-day period, Chairman ​Severin Schwan said on Saturday.

Reuters

Roche was one of nine major pharmaceutical companies that agreed a deal with U.S. President Donald Trump in December to cut the prices of their medicines in return for ‌removing the threat of ⁠tariffs for three years.

"As far as pharmaceuticals are concerned, we assume our agreement with the government is ⁠binding and that we will continue to be exempt from tariffs on the import of medicines," Schwan told Swiss newspaper Neue Zuercher Zeitung.

"But ​our ​diagnostics business continues to be significantly ​affected," he added.

Roche's diagnostics ‌division, which generated sales of nearly 14 billion Swiss francs in 2025, exported a large share of its tests and instruments from Switzerland and other European countries to the United States, Schwan said.

Advertisement

Roche also produced diagnostics products in the U.S., which faced import ‌tariffs from China, he said.

"But because China ​has introduced retaliatory tariffs, we end ​up, as a U.S. ​net exporter, paying tariffs twice. That's absurd," he ‌said.

Schwan said he expected the U.S. ​government to impose ​import tariffs again under a different legal basis after the 150-day limit on tariffs expires.

Roche had no plans to split ​off its diagnostics ‌division, he said. "That is not a topic at all. ​We are sticking with it," he told the newspaper.

(Reporting by ​John RevillEditing by Tomasz Janowski)

Roche chairman still expects diagnostics hit from US tariffs

ZURICH, March 7 (Reuters) - Roche expects its agreement with the U.S. government will keep its medicines exempt from the ...

 

SnS MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com