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Venezuela commercial airspace to reopen weeks after Maduro raid, Trump says – National TenX News

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U.S. President Donald Trump said Thursday he has informed acting Venezuelan President Delcy Rodríguez that he’s going to be opening up all commercial airspace over Venezuela and Americans will soon be able to visit.

Trump said he instructed U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and U.S. military leaders to open up the airspace by the end of the day.

“American citizens will be very shortly able to go to Venezuela, and they’ll be safe there,” the Republican president said.

Venezuela’s government did not immediately comment on Trump’s announcement.

Earlier this week, Trump’s administration notified Congress that it was taking the first steps to possibly reopen the shuttered U.S. Embassy in Venezuela as it explores restoring relations with the South American country following the U.S. military raid that ousted then-President Nicolás Maduro.

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In a notice to lawmakers dated Monday and obtained by The Associated Press on Tuesday, the State Department said it was sending in a regular and growing contingent of temporary staffers to conduct “select” diplomatic functions.

“We are writing to notify the committee of the Department of State’s intent to implement a phased approach to potentially resume Embassy Caracas operations,” the department said in separate but identical letters to 10 House and Senate committees.

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Diplomatic relations between the two countries collapsed in 2019, and the U.S. State Department warned Americans shouldn’t travel to Venezuela, raising its travel advisory to the highest level.


Click to play video: 'Trump says ’50 million’ barrels of Venezuelan oil is ‘travelling nicely’ to U.S.'


Trump says ’50 million’ barrels of Venezuelan oil is ‘travelling nicely’ to U.S.


The State Department on Thursday still listed a travel advisory for Venezuela at its highest level, “Do not travel,” warning that Americans face a high risk of wrongful detention, torture, kidnapping and more.

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The State Department did not immediately respond to a message Thursday inquiring about whether it was changing its warning.

In November, as Trump was ramping up pressure on Maduro, he declared that the airspace “above and surrounding” Venezuela should be considered as “closed in its entirety.”

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, which has jurisdiction generally over the U.S. and its territories, then told pilots to be cautious flying around the country because of heightened military activity.


After that FAA warning, international airlines began canceling flights to Venezuela because of heightened military activity.

American Airlines, which was the last U.S. airline flying to Venezuela when it suspended flights there in March 2019, announced Thursday that it intends to reinstate nonstop service there from the U.S. in the coming months.

“We have a more than 30-year history connecting Venezolanos to the U.S., and we are ready to renew that incredible relationship,” Nat Pieper, American’s chief commercial officer, said in a statement. “By restarting service to Venezuela, American will offer customers the opportunity to reunite with families and create new business and commerce with the United States.”

American said it would share additional details about the return to service in the coming months as it works with federal authorities on security assessments and necessary permissions.

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AP reporters Matthew Lee in Washington and Regina Garcia Cano in Caracas, Venezuela, contributed to this report.

&copy 2026 The Canadian Press



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Transport Canada is ‘monitoring’ Boeing Dreamliner grounding by Air India – National TenX News

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Transport Canada says it is “monitoring the situation” after Air India announced Monday that it has grounded its Boeing 787 Dreamliner jets over reports of issues with a fuel control switch.

Canada’s aviation authority responded Tuesday to a Global News request for comment on the situation, which follows several high-profile challenges for Boeing aircraft, including the grounding of the 737 Max 8 fleet for two deadly crashes in 2018 and 2019 over a software issue and a door plug blowing off a 737 Max 9 aircraft in 2024.

“Transport Canada is aware of Air India’s grounding of its Boeing 787 fleet following reports concerning a potential defect in the fuel control switch. This decision applies to aircraft registered in India,” Transport Canada said in a written statement.

“As the State of Design authority, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) serves as the regulator with jurisdiction over Boeing Dreamliner aircraft. The FAA has the authority to investigate any concerns related to this aircraft type and to issue corrective actions to address identified issues.

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“It is the responsibility of Canadian air operators of US State of Design aircraft to obtain and comply with any airworthiness directives that may be issued by the FAA and to ensure that Canadian-registered 787 family aircraft are safe for flight prior to operation.

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“Transport Canada is monitoring the situation and maintaining close communication with Canadian air operators and the FAA.”


Click to play video: 'Investigation into Air India plane finds fuel was cut off moments before crash'


Investigation into Air India plane finds fuel was cut off moments before crash


India’s aviation regulator said on Tuesday that its investigation determined the fuel switches on the grounded Air India Dreamliner jet were found to be “satisfactory,” according to a statement.

Transport Canada said Tuesday in a followup to Global News that it has seen this update, and “our previous response remains unchanged.”

“It is ultimately the responsibility of Canadian air operators operating U.S.-registered aircraft of the State of Design to obtain and comply with any airworthiness directives issued by the FAA, and to ensure that Canadian-registered 787 family aircraft are safe for flight prior to operation,” Transport Canada said.

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Global News has sent separate requests for comment to Air Canada and WestJet, which both fly Boeing Dreamliner aircraft, but did not receive a response by publication.

Air India’s decision to ground its fleet of Boeing 787 Dreamliner jets comes less than a year after a deadly crash involving one of the Dreamliners flown by the airline in June 2025 killed 260 people, including one Canadian.

An investigation into the crash determined that the fuel was cut off in the moments before the crash.


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Death toll of Iran protests mounts as families learn of loved ones killed by regime forces TenX News

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The last time Ottawa resident Mahnoosh Naseri spoke to her father, he had decided to take to the streets of Tehran to protest the Iranian regime.

It was Jan. 7 and Iranians fed up with the corruption, economic mismanagement and repressive religious rules of the regime were rallying like never before.

Two days later, her father left his apartment to join the demonstrators and never came home. It took his family four days to find him. He had been shot dead.

“He didn’t care anymore about his safety. What he cared about was the future of Iranian children,” Naseri told Global News in an interview.

Almost a month after Iranians mounted their biggest challenge to the Islamic regime that has ruled them for a half century, the shocking death toll is becoming more clear.

The protests began in late December and were growing by the day on Jan. 8, when Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of Iran’s deposed Shah, called for mass demonstrations.

Millions marched in major cities, reassured by U.S. President Donald Trump, who had vowed that if Iran killed protesters, he would “come to their rescue.”

The uprising was the largest since the 1979 Islamic revolution, and fighters loyal to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei responded with predictable violence. Activists say tens of thousands may have been killed.

To cover up the carnage, the regime cut off internet access, but as the bodies have piled up, families like Naseri’s have been finding out just how bad it was.


Hossein Naseri, seen here in Canada in 2025, was killed by Iran’s regime forces on Jan. 9.

Handout

“This has touched a lot of people in the community,” said Ali Ehsassi, an Iranian-Canadian and the Member of Parliament for the Willowdale riding in Toronto.

Ehsassi said he had been hearing from community members whose friends and relatives had been detained or killed, and that Jan. 8 and 9 were “particularly bloody.”

While he did not know the Canadian government’s casualty estimates, the regime’s own figures mean it ranks as one of the bloodiest confrontations of its type in modern history.

“I have no doubt that the number of people who have died is very, very high, even by the standards of the Iranian regime,” the MP said in an interview.

In recent interviews, Global News spoke to Iranian-Canadians about the fate of those close to them who participated in the anti-regime events of Jan. 8 and 9.

“Slowly we learned the truth, and the truth was a massacre had taken place,” said Azam Jangravi, a tech industry professional in Toronto.

Among the casualties were 10 family members, Jangravi said, including one who was shot in the chest at a demonstration in Iran’s third-largest city, Esfahan.

The relative did not die at first but was afraid to seek medical help because the security forces were trolling hospitals to arrest protesters, she said.

After hiding in a house for two days, he succumbed to his injuries, said Jangravi, who fled Iran after she was convicted of showing her hair in public.


Muhammad Reza Madani was killed by Iranian security forces, according to his family in Ottawa.

Handout

Another Iranian-Canadian, Pieman Azimi, said his nephew, a 20-year-old mechanic, had been gunned down during the demonstration.

His family searched police stations and hospitals for a day until finding him among the sea of bodies, said Azimi, who lives in Ottawa.

Another Ottawa resident described the shooting of a friend, who survived a bullet to the waist. Later, the friend told her how the suppression tactics had escalated.

“The first two days, they were shooting with paintballs,” said Nona Dourandish. “And then they decided to bring in military powers and their special units.”

The authorities used drones to monitor the city, and when a crowd gathered to chant anti-regime slogans, gunmen were quickly on the scene, she said, relaying her friend’s account.

“He said basically they were shooting people in their face, in their chest, so they would not get up. So they would not survive,” Dourandish said.

A retired accountant, shot dead

Naseri was close to her father, Hossein. “I can’t believe that my dad is gone,” she said. Harder still to believe was that he was among so many killed that day.

When Naseri was growing up in Tehran, she said she was repeatedly taken into custody for violating the regime’s strict dress code for women.

Her infractions included not covering all her hair with a headscarf and wearing shirts and pants that were deemed too short or too tight, she said.

Following the regime’s brutal crackdown against women’s rights advocates in 2022, she joined her brother in Ottawa in September 2023.


Hossein Naseri, seen here in Ottawa last year, joined the protests in Iran and was shot dead, family members said.

Handout

A 73-year-old retired Tehran accountant, her father visited her in Ottawa last summer. He spent three months in the capital, attending her wedding and her brother’s graduation ceremony.

“I’m so glad that I had the chance to show him some cities in Canada. He really loved the nature here, the museums and the freedom,” Naseri said.

Although he disliked the Islamic government, Hossein had previously refrained from taking part in protests, fearing that it could impact his two children.

But early last month, Naseri spoke to him on WhatsApp, and he had decided that it was time to go out to support the demonstrations.

“He told me, ‘I know you are safe. You are there. There is no danger for you two. And right now I feel free to go and, like others, ask for what we want,’” she said.

Hossein left home at about 7 p.m. on Jan. 9, she said.

Videos and eyewitness testimony amassed by Amnesty International show that, on that night, security forces positioned themselves on rooftops and opened fire.

The “deadly crackdown” was carried out primarily by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and Iranian police, the human rights organization said.

Thousands died, making last month “the deadliest period of repression by the Iranian authorities in decades of Amnesty’s research,” according to the group.


Anti-government protest in Tehran, Iran, Jan. 9, 2026. (UGC via AP, File).

Naseri began to worry when she didn’t hear from her father. She sent a message to a friend who had internet access. A week later, her aunt called.

The family had searched through bodies until finding Hossein. He had been shot in the main artery in his leg, his daughter said.

Communicating with her family has been a challenge, amid fears that international calls are being monitored. Naseri still knows very little about what happened, but she believes her father could have been saved had made it to a hospital.

She blames the Revolutionary Guard, whose mission is to defend the Islamic government from both internal and external threats. “The IRGC has long experience killing protesters.”

The Mujahedin-e-Khalq, an anti-regime militant group, announced Hossein’s death, calling him one of the “martyrs of the heroic nationwide uprising.”

Canada joined Australia and the European Union on Jan. 9 in condemning “the killing of protestors, the use of violence, arbitrary arrests, and intimidation tactics by the Iranian regime against its own people.”

But Deputy Conservative leader MP Melissa Lantsman said the federal government had to do more than issue statements.

“Canada must exploit the regime’s fragility,” she said in a statement to Global News that called on the government to set up a registry for those engaged in foreign interference.

She also urged Ottawa to expel members of Iran’s regime who have arrived in Canada, and to “work with allies to keep information flowing freely to the brave Iranian people.”

“Anything would be a step above nothing.”


Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei at a graduation ceremony for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Tehran, Oct. 13, 2019. Photo by SalamPix/ABACAPRESS.COM.

Liberal MP Ehasassi said the government was working on a collective response together with allies, and that Canada had already listed the IRGC as a terrorist group.

But Ehsassi said Canada has been “well ahead” of other countries in adopting measures against Iran, including banning senior regime members from the country.

Last week, the European Union followed suit, sanctioning the Revolutionary Guard, saying that “Repression cannot go unanswered.”

“Our officials in various departments are in touch with each other, deciding what there is that we can possibly do,” Ehsassi said. “Obviously, I would like to see us do a lot more. I think the Iranian-Canadian community would like to see that,” he said.

“And I have every confidence that there are going to be a suite of measures.”

The U.S. has been moving military assets to the Middle East, and on Monday, Trump warned Iran of “bad things,” but he has so far refrained from an attack and Khamanei said an American strike would trigger a regional war.

Naseri thinks the era of an Iran run by extremist mullahs has come to an end. “This protest shows that the people of Iran, they don’t accept this regime anymore.”

“They don’t want it.”

Stewart.Bell@globalnews



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13-year-old Australian boy makes ‘superhuman’ swim to save stranded family – National TenX News

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A 13-year-old Australian boy is being praised for completing a heroic four-hour swim to save his mother and siblings from being swept out to sea in Western Australia, state police said in a statement on Monday.

The family was on vacation in Quindalup, on Geographe Bay, about 250 kilometres south of Perth, on Friday, when strong winds blew their inflatable paddleboards and a kayak offshore.

The boy attempted to paddle back to shore in his kayak before it began taking on water, so he swam four hours back to the beach in fading daylight, where he alerted authorities that his two siblings and mother were stranded.

Naturaliste Marine Rescue commander Paul Bresland told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) that the boy’s 47-year-old mother, 12-year-old brother and eight-year-old sister were found at about 8:30 p.m. on Friday, clinging to a paddleboard about 14 kilometres offshore.

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Bresland said the boy’s efforts were “superhuman.”

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“He swam in, he reckons, the first two hours with a life jacket on,” he said.

“And the brave fella thought he’s not going to make it with a life jacket on, so he ditched it, and he swam the next two hours without a life jacket,” Bresland told the Australian outlet.

Naturaliste Volunteer Marine Rescue Group, which aided in the rescue effort, told the BBC, “The bravery, strength and courage shown by this family were extraordinary, especially the young fella who swam four kilometres to raise the alarm.”

Once he reached land, a multi-agency effort was launched to rescue the boy’s family members, comprising WA Water Police, local volunteers and a helicopter.

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A volunteer marine rescue vessel was directed to their location, and all three were successfully rescued and returned to shore, police confirmed.

Insp. James Bradley said the incident should serve as a reminder of how quickly conditions at sea can shift and of the importance of taking safety precautions.

“This incident is a reminder that ocean conditions can change rapidly. Thankfully, all three people were wearing lifejackets, which contributed to their survival,” he said. “The actions of the 13-year-old boy cannot be praised highly enough — his determination and courage ultimately saved the lives of his mother and siblings.”


Bresland said the boy’s description of the colour of the kayak and paddleboards was crucial in directing a successful search effort.

“Within an hour, we found the kayak,” Bradley told ABC.

He said the family had kept themselves afloat in rough seas for hours before they were rescued, and that the mother managed to keep the other two children safe with the help of the paddleboard.

“Physically, she just said, ‘I’m struggling, I can’t,’ but she just said they’re looking her in the eye, and she just kept going and kept them together,” Bresland added.

The trio were assessed by St John WA paramedics before being conveyed to Busselton Health Campus for medical assessment.

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ABC said the family was discharged from the hospital over the weekend and visited the rescue crews who saved their lives to thank them for their efforts.

&copy 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.



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