Boulder firebombing suspect due in federal court on hate crime chargesNew Foto - Boulder firebombing suspect due in federal court on hate crime charges

The suspect in a Boulder, Colorado,attack on a gathering to support Israeli hostagesin Gaza is due in federal court in an initial appearance on a hate crime charge. Mohamed Sabry Soliman, 45, is accused of targeting the group at a pedestrian mall with Molotov cocktails and a makeshift flamethrower on June 1, according to a criminal complaint. Officials said 15 people between the ages of 25 and 88 were injured with burns. He's due in federal court on the hate crime charge at 2 p.m. local time on June 6, court records show. Soliman, an Egyptian native who authorities said overstayed a tourist visa to the United States, also appeared in a state courtroom on June 5, where he wascharged with another 118 criminal counts, including attempted murder, using explosive devices, attempting to use an incendiary device, assault on someone over the age of 70 and other charges. He's expected back in court for the state charges in July. Attorney GeneralPam Bondisaid the attack was antisemitic. In a federal criminal complaint, authorities said Soliman admitted to investigators that "he wanted to kill all Zionist people" and wanted to stop them from taking over "our land," referring to Palestine. The federal hate crime charge could carry a sentence of up to life in prison if he is convicted. USA TODAY has reached out to Soliman's defense attorney for comment. 'We are better than this':Holocaust survivor burned in Boulder speaks after attack The attack happened the afternoon of June 1 at the Pearl Street Mall in downtown Boulder. The group Run for Their Lives was holding a weekly demonstration advocating for the release of Israeli hostages held in Gaza since the Oct. 7, 2023, attack by Hamas militants. Soliman, who told investigators he'd been planning the attack for a year, threw two lit Molotov cocktails into the crowd while yelling "Free Palestine," the federal criminal complaint said. When he was taken into custody, authorities found an additional 16 Molotov cocktails and a weed sprayer with gasoline. "As a result of these preliminary attacks, it is clear that this is a targeted act of violence and the FBI is investigating this as an act of terrorism," Mark Michalek, special agent in charge at the FBI's Denver field office, said after the attack. The injured victims had burns that ranged from minor to serious. Three were still hospitalized, Boulder County District Attorney Michael Dougherty said on June 5. Soliman, who lived in El Paso County, Colorado, has worked as an Uber driver and has five children. He told investigators that he waited for his daughter to graduate from high school before executing his planned attack, the criminal complaint said. Soliman entered the United States in August 2022 on a B-2 tourist visa that expired over two years ago, Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said. An affidavit said he was born in Egypt and lived in Kuwait for 17 years before moving to Colorado. McLaughlin said Soliman applied for asylum in September 2022 He tried to purchase a gun but opted to use the incendiary devices instead when he realized he couldn't buy a gun legally because of his citizenship status, according to the court records. He also said he learned how to make the Molotov cocktails online. Soliman told law enforcement he left an iPhone at the house, hidden in a desk drawer, with messages to his family. He also left behind a journal, the criminal complaint said. Soliman's wife and five children were detained by immigration officials after his arrest and faced immediate deportation, Trump administration officials said. A federal judgetemporarily blocked them from being deportedon June 4. U.S. District Court Judge Gordon Gallagher said deporting the family without adequate process could cause "irreparable harm." FBI and police officials said the family has cooperated with investigators, and Soliman said his family had no knowledge of his plans. The visas of his wife and five children have been revoked, multiple media outlets including theNew York Times reported. His daughter Habiba Soliman graduated from high school on May 29 and said she hoped to attend medical school. Her father told investigators he waited until after her graduation to carry out the attack. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Terror suspect Mohamed Soliman due in court on hate crime charges

Boulder firebombing suspect due in federal court on hate crime charges

Boulder firebombing suspect due in federal court on hate crime charges The suspect in a Boulder, Colorado,attack on a gathering to support I...
Hidden invasion: Rwanda's covert war in the CongoNew Foto - Hidden invasion: Rwanda's covert war in the Congo

Over 7,000 dead. Hundreds raped. Displaced people's camps flattened. City centers looted. Prisons set ablaze. Businesses bankrupted. Nearly 5 million people on the move. The latest conflict in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo has brought horrific violence and suffering to innocent people for three and a half years. The war flared up in November 2021, when the March 23 Movement rebel group attacked military positions on the border between Congo and Rwanda. The conflict peaked this January and February when the rebels — and, notably, thousands of Rwandan soldiers fighting with them —seized the Congo's regional capitals of Goma and Bukavu, forcing the Congolese army to flee. The impact on civilians was devastating: Locals and journalists described how bodies lined the streets and the injured crowded the cities' hospitals, while hundreds of thousands fled their homes. But Rwandan President Paul Kagame has carefully and repeatedly denied any role in the conflict, despite accusations from the U.N. and Western governments. "Why are we being accused as Rwanda of supporting M23?" he asked at an April 2024 press conference commemorating the 30th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide. "They exist because they have been denied their rights as citizens." M23, Kagame maintains, is a homegrown Congolese rebel movement fighting for the rights of the country's threatened Tutsi minority. "It's as if they agree with the injustice that is being done to this community," he said of Rwanda's accusers. But evidence uncovered during an NBC News investigation definitively discredits Kagame's narrative. A four-month review of confidential military reports and hours of drone footage and satellite imagery, combined with interviews with Congolese and Rwandan military personnel, officials at United Nations agencies, aid workers, diplomats and residents, reveals a carefully concealed and high-tech operation by Kagame's armed forces to take control of a swath of Congolese territory that is home to more than 5 million people. These revelations come as President Donald Trump's administration says it is close to brokering a peace deal with the presidents of Congo and Rwanda that will give the U.S. access to Congo's minerals. Rwanda's very inclusion in these talks highlights the chasm between Kagame's public rhetoric and the reality on the ground. A possible deal being negotiated by Massad Boulos, Trump's senior adviser for Africa, would allow both Congo and Rwanda to benefit from U.S. investment in the region's mineral wealth, which includes deposits key to the production of electronics worldwide. "There are many U.S. companies that are keen to invest in both DRC and also Rwanda," Corina Sanders, the deputy assistant secretary of state for African affairs, told a conference in Washington last month. "It's a very exciting time and there's a lot of possibility right now." NBC News' investigation raises questions about Rwanda's credibility as a partner in a U.S.-mediated deal. NBC News' reporting shows "not only the extent of Rwandan involvement, but that Rwanda is not a good-faith actor when it comes to the peace process," says Jason Stearns, a professor at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada and the founder of the Congo Research Group. "What the U.S. underestimates is how much Rwanda has invested in this conflict and how much pressure, and not just carrots, it will require to get them to withdraw," Stearns said. The U.S. administration's ambition is "inspiring," he said. "But it's going to be extremely difficult to pull it off." Rwanda's involvement in Congo is partly driven by long-running ethnic tensions and its desire to contain the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), an extremist Hutu group fighting alongside the Congolese army. It is also keen to tighten control over the region's deposits of coltan, gold, tin, tungsten, lithium, copper and diamonds. The material NBC News has uncovered definitively shows the Rwandan military establishing field bases on Congolese soil starting in 2021, setting up a sophisticated operation for training and supplying M23, deploying artillery, guided mortar systems and drones, digging dozens of trenches and fortified positions for soldiers and arranging the removal of Rwandan dead. "Rwanda has repeatedly demonstrated its bad faith over the years," Patrick Muyaya, Congolese government's information minister, told NBC News. "The Congolese government was well aware this was happening." A State Department spokesperson did not respond to NBC News' questions about Rwanda's role in the conflict in eastern Congo, including evidence that its soldiers were fighting in the area disguised as M23 rebels. It did provide the following statement: "There is no military solution to the crisis in eastern DRC. … The president's selection of senior advisor Boulos to advance these efforts is a testament to President Trump's desire to find a peaceful solution to the decades-long conflict." Contacted for comment, Rwanda's government spokesperson declined to comment on the specifics of NBC News' investigation, stressing instead the purely "defensive" nature of Rwanda's activities on its border with DRC, allegedly prompted by FDLR actions. "These measures have been reinforced since 2021 to counter the threat of the spillover of the conflict in DRC," she said. From the start, Rwanda has gone to extraordinary lengths to conceal its intervention in the Kivu provinces in eastern Congo, which went from a couple of hundred soldiers in 2021 to an estimated 5,000 today. But there have been lapses in Rwanda's secrecy. In May 2022, Congolese forces announced they had captured two Rwandan soldiers who had entered the country. Rwanda denied this, claiming the soldiers were kidnapped across the border. NBC News obtained a Rwandan military report that admitted that these soldiers were captured while taking part in an M23 attack on barracks at Rumangabo military base. The internal report says members of the Rwanda Defence Force crossing the border were supposed to leave cellphones behind and strip identifying insignia from their uniforms. It recommends punishment for the soldiers' commander for failing to ensure the captured soldiers did so. In a bid to remove witnesses, Rwandan soldiers forced Congolese villagers to evacuate areas they occupied, according to a contractor hired to provide intelligence for the Congolese military. Operations like this drove hundreds of thousands from their homes. "This is not business as usual in the DRC," Antoine Sagot-Priez, Congo country director for the aid agency Concern Worldwide, said in March, commenting on the mass displacement. "We need people to know what is happening here." These villagers ended up living in 17 camps around the city of Goma, the capital of Congo's North Kivu province, that would eventually swell to hold 400,000 to 500,000 people. Reports drawn up by the same contractor state that Rwandan forces were moving their mortars in and out of Congo — sometimes each day — apparently to avoid detection. Rwandan soldiers also often don outfits usually worn by the M23 rebels. Much of the information used in this report was compiled by Western military experts, who included former French army officers, Romanians, Poles and Bulgarians, hired by Congo President Felix Tshisekedi in 2022 when he realized his army was disastrously losing ground. They were assigned the task of protecting cities in the east and providing Congo's artillery with key information — thanks to a small fleet of Chinese drones. In March 2023, these new hires helped turn the tables on the Rwandans attacking the town of Sake, west of Goma, by hitting their mortar positions with Sukhoi fighter jets. The entire Rwandan force in Congo withdrew the following day. Military contractors believe this was the moment Rwanda — one of Africa's poorest states and heavily dependent on foreign aid — went on an international military shopping spree, placing orders in Poland and Turkey for sophisticated anti-missile systems, drones and signal-jamming equipment. Then in late 2023, Rwandan forces began returning to Congo. This time the numbers were 10 times higher than before — 3,000 to 5,000 men, according to the same military contractor. The Congolese army put its new drones to devastating use. Satellite imagery shows a sudden, dramatic increase in the number of graves at Kanombe Military Cemetery, Rwanda's main military burial ground in the capital, Kigali. It expanded by some 350 graves between mid-2023 and early 2024, according to a manual count carried out by NBC News. The images also show that from late 2021 to today, the cemetery has added 900 graves, even though the country says it is not engaged in any military conflict in Congo. Rwanda's government spokesperson declined to comment on the fresh graves, saying: "Speculation about a military cemetery in Kigali has no basis in reality." The DRC's air superiority did not last long. According to senior Congolese army officers, Rwanda used the opportunity presented by a U.S.-negotiated truce to install Chinese-made Yitian anti-missile systems in Congo. The addition in early 2024 of GPS-jamming equipment turned the war's tide, making it nearly impossible for the DRC's hired contractors to deploy their drone fleet. "The new equipment changed everything," said Gen. Sylvain Ekenge, a Congolese army spokesman. "When we were asked by the Americans for a ceasefire to calm things down, the Rwandans used it as a chance to bring in these systems." The Rwandan military has gone to great lengths to conceal the casualties it has taken, with specialized teams assigned to recover the dead, according to the military contractor with the Congolese army. "We never managed to get hold of any RDF bodies," the contractor said, referring to the Rwanda Defence Force. "The [bodies of] officers were sent back, and as for the rank and file, when there were a lot of dead, they were buried in DRC, in zones where we didn't have access." Families of Rwandan soldiers who have died in Congo are forbidden from publicly discussing or mourning loved ones — and risk severe punishment for doing so. NBC News was nonetheless able to independently verify 91 examples of Rwandan families posting "RIP" notices for soldiers who had died fighting in Congo — often accompanied by weeping emoji — on TikTok and other social media. Funerals are tightly controlled events, with families getting just half an hour at the graveside and all photographs taken by army personnel. "They say 'only close family,'" said a former member of the Rwandan military who lost friends and family members in the DRC's drone strikes. "I attended some and it was total silence. You are not allowed to enter with your phone," said the former soldier, who spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear of being punished for discussing the secret war. "After, you are all escorted home. After that, they follow up with the families, their conversations, if they're sharing what happened to them. They're supposed to stay silent." Members of the Rwandan diaspora and Rwandan military families who spoke with NBC News said the mounting death toll is causing widespread fear. Authorities have reduced cadet training from one year to a few months, with families back home receiving despairing phone calls from recruits who regard being dispatched to the Congo as akin to a death sentence. Desertions, they've noticed, are on the rise. The former Rwandan soldier recalled his last conversation with a cousin: "He said, 'The enemy is very dangerous here.' He said, 'We are very afraid.' And he said, 'If I had somewhere to run, I would run.'" "He was shaking, you know, the voice was shaking," the former soldier added. The cousin subsequently died in Congo. The war's impact on eastern Congo's population has been devastating. Before M23 seized the capitals of North and South Kivu in January and February, 4.6 million people had already been uprooted by three years of fighting, according to the U.N.'s refugee agency, UNHCR. Now, they are moving again. "It's a story of accumulated, multiple displacements," UNHCR spokeswoman Eujin Byun said. "These people are just done. Done." One of the first actions by a victorious M23 was to give residents of camps for people displaced by the violence 72 hours to leave, claiming it was safe to return home. They then flattened rows of tents, clinics and schools set up by U.N. agencies. Some 1.8 million tried to return home, according to the International Organisation for Migration. But since mid-2024, local organizations in the Kivu provinces have reported instances of displaced Congolese returning home to find their homes occupied and their land being worked by new arrivals. The UNHCR estimates that 140,000 displaced people who had been living in camps have crossed into Burundi and Rwanda, and another 70,000 have trekked northeast into Uganda. Many have clustered around the borders, without food, proper shelter or basic services, uncertain where to turn. Women and children become particularly vulnerable in these conditions. UNICEF has reported 10,000 cases of rape and sexual violence in North Kivu and South Kivu provinces in January and February alone, with children accounting for 45% of cases. Residents describe a state of near lawlessness in city centers, where gangs of armed men, some escaped from local prisons, prey on civilians using weapons left behind by the Congolese army. The Congolese Interior Ministry in Kinshasa reports scores of murders and says more than 4,000 men and boys were loaded onto trucks to an unknown destination in May.Human Rights Watchsaid M23's efforts to consolidate control of Goma have involved possible war crimes, including the summary execution of civilians in February. "The Rwandan government, as the direct supporter of the M23, may be complicit in the armed group's war crimes," said Clémentine de Montjoye, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch. Men and boys live in fear of forcible recruitment by either M23 or local Congolese militias. That concern is a key factor in driving many families to head for the borders. One of the biggest problems in areas captured by M23 has been a desperate shortage of liquidity, as banks remain closed on orders from the government in Kinshasa. So now a huge question mark hovers over Rwanda's plans for the giant swath of land its proxy currently controls. A wave of sanctions unveiled by Rwanda's Western allies following M23's capture of Goma and Bukavu prompted a defiant"Go to hell" response from Kagame. Boulos, Trump's adviser for Africa, will be hoping that Kagame and Tshisekedi can be persuaded that both their countries have more to gain from a series of investment deals aimed at boosting and regularizing Congo's minerals industry, characterized for decades by the systematic smuggling of ore into Rwanda. Boulos' team is looking for signs of good faith from Kagame, in the form of a pullback of M23 and Rwandan troops on the ground by early June, diplomats say. There were no signs of significant withdrawals at the time of publication. Negotiators see M23's retreat from Walikale in North Kivu province in mid-March — the first since the war's start — as a sign that sanctions unveiled by former Western allies, combined with pointed pressure from the U.S., have finally registered with Kagame. But fighting continues on the ground, and it's unclear whether the leader often described as"Africa's Putin,"who has put so much work into covering his tracks from the⁠ start of this war, will play ball. Kagame has been on the brink of signing peace deals before and balked, for example failing to show up for a key summit in Luanda, Angola, in December. Failing to clinch a deal would undermine Rwanda's carefully nurtured image as a reliable Western ally in a troubled region. But analysts note the self-defeating nature of Rwanda's history of aggressive military intervention in its own backyard. "They've sacrificed hundreds of their young men just to give the Congolese more reason to fear and hate them," says one Western diplomat who spoke on condition of anonymity. "For all their concern about root causes, the Rwandans have been remarkably shortsighted." With additional reporting by Frank Matt, Gabe Joselow, Abigail Williams, Marin Scott, Jean Lee and Tavleen Tarrant.

Hidden invasion: Rwanda's covert war in the Congo

Hidden invasion: Rwanda's covert war in the Congo Over 7,000 dead. Hundreds raped. Displaced people's camps flattened. City centers ...
As UN climate talks loom, Brazil's Amazon forest loses in May an area larger than NYCNew Foto - As UN climate talks loom, Brazil's Amazon forest loses in May an area larger than NYC

MANAUS, Brazil (AP) — Brazil's environmental goals suffered a major setback in May asdeforestation in the Amazonsurged 92% compared to the same month last year, according to official monitoring data released Friday. Forest loss reached 960 square kilometers (371 square miles) during the period, an area slightly larger than New York City. It was the second-highest total for May since the current monitoring system was implemented in 2016. The increase risks reversing the year-over-year decline in forest clearance since 2023, when Brazil'sPresident Luiz Inácio Lula da Silvabegan his third term. During his campaign, the leftist leader had pledged to end deforestation by 2030. Brazil's monitoring system tracks deforestation from Aug. 1 to July 30. Over the past 10 months, deforestation has risen 9.7% compared to the same period a year earlier. The 2025 deforestation rate, tracked by the National Institute for Space Research, is expected to be announced just before theU.N. climate talks, scheduled for November in the Amazonian city of Belém. Brazil is one of the world's top 10 emitters of greenhouse gases, contributing about 3% of global emissions, according to the nonprofit Climate Watch. Almost half of those emissions come from deforestation, making efforts to halt it critical to meeting Brazil's commitments under the2015 Paris Agreement. The Amazon, an area almost twice the size of India, contains the world's largest rainforest, about two-thirds of it within Brazil. It stores vast amounts of carbon dioxide, holds about 20% of the world's freshwater and is home to hundreds of Indigenous tribes, some living in isolation, and 16,000 known tree species. ____ The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

As UN climate talks loom, Brazil's Amazon forest loses in May an area larger than NYC

As UN climate talks loom, Brazil's Amazon forest loses in May an area larger than NYC MANAUS, Brazil (AP) — Brazil's environmental g...
What Jonathan Joss' alleged shooter told policeNew Foto - What Jonathan Joss' alleged shooter told police

The man charged with murdering actor Jonathan Joss told police "I shot him," according to a police report detailing the incident. Joss, 59,was fatally shot near his home on Sunday, according to police in San Antonio, Texas. A witness, whose name is redacted in the report, told police she drove Joss to the site of his previous home to check his mail. Joss had said previously the home had been destroyed by fire. The witness said after arriving at the property, the suspect, Sigfredo Ceja, pulled in behind her before getting out of his car and beginning to argue with Joss. The witness told police she heard Ceja tell Joss he had a gun and would shoot. The incident report describes the weapon as a rifle. Ceja has been arrested on suspicion of murder. An investigation is ongoing. CNN has attempted to reach Ceja for comment. San Antonio Police call for service logs show numerous calls to both the addresses of Joss and Ceja, who was his neighbor, over the past year. Officers were called to Joss's home dozens of times, in some instances multiple times in a single day. Many of the calls are characterized as "Disturbance Neighbor." Other calls appear to be welfare checks to the home that property records show is owned by Joss. Police were dispatched Sunday to a location on Dorsey Drive for a reported shooting in progress, where officers found Joss "near the roadway of the location" and "attempted life saving measures," authorities said. The actor was pronounced dead by emergency service responders. Joss' husband Tristan Kern de Gonzales told theAssociated Pressthey were approached and threatened by a man with a gun while checking the mail at Joss's home, which in January was damaged by a fire that also killed their three dogs. "Jonathan and I had no weapons. We were not threatening anyone. We were grieving. We were standing side by side. When the man fired Jonathan pushed me out of the way. He saved my life," de Gonzales said. He and Joss, who married in February, had previously faced "openly homophobic" harassment, de Gonzales said. The person who killed Joss yelled "violent homophobic slurs" before opening fire, he added. "He was murdered by someone who could not stand the sight of two men loving each other," de Gonzales said. "Despite online claims of this being a hate crime, currently the investigation has found no evidence to indicate that the Mr. Joss's murder was related to his sexual orientation," San Antonio police said in astatement posted to social mediaon Monday night. Joss was known for his performance in "Parks & Recreation" as a tribal elder of the Wamapoke Native American tribe and owner of the Wamapoke Casino. His co-star Nick Offerman has spoken out about Joss's death. "The cast has been texting together about it all day and we're just heartbroken," Offerman said in a statement toPeople. "Jonathan was such a sweet guy and we loved having him as our Chief Ken Hotate. A terrible tragedy." CNN has reached out to representatives for Offerman for additional comment. Beyond his work on "Parks and Recreation," Joss voiced the character of John Redcorn on "King of the Hill." Some of his other credits include appearances in "Ray Donovan," "Tulsa King" and the 2016 film "The Magnificent Seven." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

What Jonathan Joss’ alleged shooter told police

What Jonathan Joss' alleged shooter told police The man charged with murdering actor Jonathan Joss told police "I shot him," a...
Are Tom Cruise and Ana de Armas Dating? Here's What We Know About Their Rumored RelationshipNew Foto - Are Tom Cruise and Ana de Armas Dating? Here's What We Know About Their Rumored Relationship

Shane Anthony Sinclair/Getty ; Jeff Spicer/Getty Tom Cruise and Ana de Armas have been seen together multiple times since February 2025, fueling dating rumors A source told PEOPLE they're just friends, and the actress later confirmed that they're collaborating on multiple projects Cruise has publicly gushed about de Armas' acting skills, calling her "very, very talented" Tom CruiseandAna de Armashave been spending a lot of time together. TheMission: Impossiblestar and the Oscar-nominated actress firstsparked dating rumorsin February 2025, when they were photographed during a night out in London. Though they've been seen together multiple times since then —including on de Armas' birthday— a source told PEOPLE that they're "just friends." In May 2025, theKnives Outactress confirmed that she wasworking on multiple projectswith Cruise. That same month, hegushed over her performancein the 2025John WickspinoffBallerina. "[Ana is a] very, very talented, great dramatic actress, comedic, tremendous ability, learns quickly," theTop Gunactor toldExtra. Reps for Cruise and de Armas have not responded to requests for comment from PEOPLE about their relationship. So, are Tom Cruise and Ana de Armas dating? Here's everything to know about their rumored relationship. Karwai Tang/WireImage ; Raymond Hall/GC Images In February 2025, Cruise and de Armas were spotted having dinner together in London, per theDaily Mail. They were photographed chatting with fans and posing for photos before they hopped into a taxi together. Though the outing prompted speculation that the two were dating, a source told PEOPLE at the time that the dinner was purely professional. The insider said that both Cruise and de Armas were accompanied by their agents and discussed "potential collaborations down the line." The source added that they "appeared to have no romantic connection, just friends." Ana de Armas/ Instagram After that first outing, the pair wereseen together againin London in March 2025 — only this time they arrived in true action hero style on a helicopter. However, a source later told PEOPLE that the meeting was againabout their upcoming projectand that directorDoug Limanjoined them. Cruise and de Armas tookanother helicopter ridein April 2025, landing in London from Madrid. This time, the actress brought along her two dogs, Elvis and Salsa. Liman also joined. The following day, the pair were spotted taking a walk through a park on de Armas' 37th birthday. A few days later, in May, they were seenleaving a party togetherforDavid Beckham's 50th birthday in Notting Hill, in photos shared by theDaily Mail. Alamy At the New York City premiere ofMission: Impossible — The Final Reckoningin May 2025, Cruise complimented de Armas' acting chops when speaking to multiple outlets. He toldExtrathat she was a "very, very talented" actress and voiced similar sentiments toAccess Hollywood. "Her ability is incredible," Cruise said. "There's an actress that has dramatic chops, someone who's comedic, very, very talented. You see her inBallerina... just a great actress." Inan Instagram clipposted that same month, the actor said that he sawBallerinaand it "kicks a--." Weeks later, at the June 3 premiere ofBallerina, de Armas toldVarietythat Cruise's support for the movie has been"unbelievable" and "really amazing." "But you know what, he supports every movie. He really wants the industry and cinema to go well and people going to the theaters," de Armas said. "We're working together, so he got to seeBallerinaand he actually really liked it. He loved theJohn Wicks." "It is very special that someone like him is supporting [Ballerina]," she added. "It is really special in general to have other actors and people supporting each other. We can do well all together." Pascal Le Segretain/Getty ; Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty In an April 2023 interview withUSA Today, the actress praised Cruise for doing his own stunts inMission: Impossiblefollowing the stuntwork she did inGhosted. "It's demanding and painful and your body is hurting everywhere, but it's also very rewarding as I saw myself getting better at it," de Armas said, adding that she was "not at a Tom Cruise level yet." She continued, "But I can appreciate what he does 100% now, and I totally get why he does it. He's so mind-blowing." Raymond Hall/GC Images ; Lia Toby/Getty After months of speculation, de Armas confirmed in May that she was working on "a few projects" with Cruise. "We're definitely working on a lot of things," she said in an interview onGood Morning America. "Not just one but a few projects with Doug Liman andChristopher McQuarrieand, of course, Tom. And I'm so excited." In 2020, Cruise teased that he was working with Liman on an astronaut movie that would include shooting in outer space with the cooperation of NASA and SpaceX. Whether or not this is the same movie that Cruise and de Armas are working on has not been confirmed. Liman is also working with the action star in a supernatural thriller titledDeeper, perDeadline. Read the original article onPeople

Are Tom Cruise and Ana de Armas Dating? Here’s What We Know About Their Rumored Relationship

Are Tom Cruise and Ana de Armas Dating? Here's What We Know About Their Rumored Relationship Shane Anthony Sinclair/Getty ; Jeff Spicer/...
Lil Wayne new album drops, treating fans to highly anticipated 'Carter VI'New Foto - Lil Wayne new album drops, treating fans to highly anticipated 'Carter VI'

After years of anticipation,"Tha Carter VI"is finally here. The sixth installment inLil Wayne'ssignature musical series, which dropped Friday, June 6, is a 19-track opus, flexing the rapper's tongue-twistingly fast rhymes and dirty South style. Blending soulful background vocals with a high-pitched trill, Wayne name-drops everything from Taco Bell to Tupac. His verses are chock-full of vivid imagery and double entendre, and his feature list is a mile long with artists from in and outside the genre, including BigXthaPlug,Jelly Roll,Big Sean,Bonoand2 Chainz. Lil Wayne 2025 tour to kick offsame day 'Carter VI' drops: How to get tickets After releasing the original "Carter" album in 2004,Waynehas followed up the project every two to three years since with a new release, with the exception of "Carter V" which was delayed a number of years. Fans have waited almost seven years for "Carter VI." Wayne will waste no time promoting the album – he is expected to hit the Madison Square Garden stage June 6, his first time ever headlining the historic arena. In support of his new project,Wayneis headed out on a 34-stop tour, treating fans to a set list that celebrates many of the biggest songs from his two-decade "Carter" album series. Rappers Tyga and Belly Gang Kushington will open forWayne. Tickets for Lil Wayne's tour stops will go on sale at 10 a.m. ET June 6 through Ticketmaster, following various presale windows that startedJune 4. Both the artist and VIP presale kicked off June 4 at 10 a.m. ET, while the Live Nation presale began June 5 at the same time. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Lil Wayne drops 'Carter 6' album, treating fans after long wait

Lil Wayne new album drops, treating fans to highly anticipated 'Carter VI'

Lil Wayne new album drops, treating fans to highly anticipated 'Carter VI' After years of anticipation,"Tha Carter VI"is f...
Russia launches one of war's largest air attacks days after Ukraine's bomber raidNew Foto - Russia launches one of war's largest air attacks days after Ukraine's bomber raid

Russia launched a barrage of drones and ballistic missiles across broad swaths of Ukraine early Friday, killing at least three people and injuring dozens of others, days after Kyiv launched a daring raid on Moscow's fleet of strategic bombers. For residents of Kyiv, the night's soundtrack was familiar: the shrieking whir of drones, air raid sirens and large explosions overhead – whether from air defenses successfully downing missiles, or projectiles puncturing the capital. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia had used more than 400 drones and 40 missiles in the overnight attack, making it among the war's largest. He said Moscow's attack killed three people, injured another 49, and targeted "almost all" of Ukraine, listing nine regions, from Lviv in the west to Sumy in the northeast. Although Russia has pummeled Ukraine almost daily over three years of full-scale war, Ukrainians had been bracing for retaliation since Sunday, when Kyiv launched an audacious operation that struck more than a third of Russia's strategic cruise missile carriers. In a call with his US counterpart Donald Trump on Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that Moscow would have to respond to Kyiv's assault. Russia's Ministry of Defense said its strikes were in response to what it called Kyiv's "terrorist acts." It was not immediately clear if the attack was the extent of Russia's pledged retaliation, or if Putin intends to escalate further. After the embarrassment of Kyiv's operation, there was a chorus of bellicose calls from pro-Kremlin pundits for a severe – potentially nuclear – response. Meanwhile, Ukraine's general staff on Friday said it launched overnight strikes on two Russian airfields, where it said Moscow had concentrated many of the aircraft that had not been damaged in Kyiv's "Spiderweb" operation last weekend. Ukraine stressed that the operation, which blindsided the Kremlin, had targeted the planes that Russia uses to launch missile strikes on Ukrainian cities and kill civilians. After Russia's large-scale attack Friday, Ukraine's Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said Moscow had "responded" to its destroyed aircraft by once again "attacking civilians in Ukraine." As daylight broke, images from Kyiv showed flames rising over apartment buildings and firefighting crews at work, with residents picking through the debris of damaged apartments. Several cars parked in the streets below were covered with shards of glass and slabs of masonry torn from the walls of residential buildings. Of the 452 drones and missiles fired by Russia, Ukraine's air force said it had downed 406. It said Russia had used 407 drones, six ballistic missiles and 38 cruise missiles. Ukraine's air force said Russia's barrage comprised 407 drones, six ballistic missiles, 38 cruise missiles and an anti-radar missile. Of those 452 projectiles, the air force said it had downed 406, including 32 of the cruise missiles and four of the ballistic missiles. The other two ballistic missiles did not reach their targets, it added. Although Zelensky said that three people had been killed in the attacks, Vitali Klitschko, the mayor of Kyiv, said that four people had been killed in the capital alone. It was not immediately clear what accounted for the discrepancy between the two tolls. The strikes also hit Chernihiv, near the border with Belarus, which was rocked by 14 explosions from drones and ballistic missiles, including cruise missiles and Iskander-M missiles, local officials said. Five others were wounded in strikes in the northwestern city of Lutsk, near the border with Poland. Footage geolocated by CNN showed at least four missiles slamming into the city, kicking up fiery explosions on impact. The Russian Ministry of Defense said it had also intercepted and destroyed 174 Ukrainian drones from Thursday evening to early Friday morning, and had destroyed three Ukrainian Neptune-MD guided missiles over the Black Sea. All week, Ukrainians have been bracing for Russia's retaliation to last weekend's drone attack, which struck 34% of Moscow's nuclear-capable bombers stationed at airfields as far away as Siberia. On Tuesday, Ukraine also launched an attack on theKerch Bridge, the only direct connection point between Russia and the annexed Crimean Peninsula, with 1,100 kilograms of explosives that had been planted underwater. After Trump's call with Putin on Wednesday, the US president said that his Russian counterpart had told him that Moscow would have to respond to Ukraine's assaults. Trump's account of the call gave no indication that he had urged Putin to temper his response, to the dismay of many in Ukraine. "When Putin mentioned he is going to avenge or deliver a new strike against Ukraine, we know what it means. It's about civilians," Ukrainian lawmaker Oleksandr Merezhko told CNN earlier this week. "And President Trump didn't say, 'Vladimir, stop.'" Despite Trump's support for recent peace talks in Istanbul between Ukraine and Russia, on Thursday he signaled that he may be adopting a more hands-off approach, likening the war to a brawl between children. "Sometimes you see two young children fighting like crazy," Trump said in the Oval Office, while German ChancellorFriedrich Merzlooking on silently. "They hate each other, and they're fighting in a park, and you try and pull them apart. They don't want to be pulled. Sometimes you're better off letting them fight for a while and then pulling them apart." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Russia launches one of war’s largest air attacks days after Ukraine’s bomber raid

Russia launches one of war's largest air attacks days after Ukraine's bomber raid Russia launched a barrage of drones and ballistic ...

 

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