Saturday, May 30, 2026

Ebola: outbreak outpaces response. Aid groups warn the response has not kept pace with one of the fastest-spreading outbreaks on record, with 906 suspected cases and 223 suspected deaths.

begin quote: 

4h ago

WHO chief lands in Congo, epicenter of Ebola, as outbreak outpaces response

WHO chief lands in eastern DR Congo, epicenter of Ebola, as outbreak outpaces response

Aid groups warn the response has not kept pace with one of the fastest-spreading outbreaks on record, with 906 suspected cases and 223 suspected deaths.
Get more newson

BUNIA, Democratic Republic of Congo — The head of the World Health Organization Saturday arrived in eastern DR Congo’s Bunia, a city at the heart of an outbreak of a rare type of Ebola, where the virus still spreads faster than the response, despite better-organized health facilities and new aid arrivals.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus is expected to visit a treatment center and meet local authorities, health workers and affected families in Bunia.

“The best way to address this is to provide all the necessary support to fight the disease at its epicenter and to continue offering every assistance needed,” Tedros told reporters late Friday.

The WHO said Friday authorities have reported 906 suspected cases and 223 suspected deaths. Neighboring Uganda has confirmed nine cases and one death, the Ugandan ministry of health said Friday.

The Bundibugyo virus, the current kind of Ebola, has no approved treatment or vaccine.

 

“This is a difficult situation, and we recognize that. But the Democratic Republic of Congo has faced the Ebola virus many times before. We are confident that it can once again bring this outbreak under control,” Tedros told reporters Friday after meeting with Congo’s Prime Minister Judith Suminwa Tuluka.  

00:0000:00

Trump administration avoids bringing Ebola patients to U.S.

03:18

Medical aid donated by the European Union arrived in Ituri, the heart of Congo’s Ebola outbreak, on Thursday, with more shipments expected over the next eight days. The U.S. announced $80 million in additional aid on the same day, bringing its total commitment to more than $112 million.

Response efforts at Bunia’s Rwampara and General hospitals appear more organized, with additional staff, protective gear and medical supplies, though patients continue arriving around the clock, an AP reporter observed on Friday.

The response has not kept pace with one of the fastest-spreading outbreaks on record, Doctors Without Borders, or MSF, warned on Saturday.

“Never before has an Ebola outbreak recorded so many cases so soon after its declaration,” Dr. Alan Gonzalez, MSF’s deputy director of operations, said in a statement.

“Nobody knows the true scale and severity of this outbreak,” Gonzalez said, calling for immediate expansion of testing, faster deployment of aid workers and sustained access for medical supplies.

Dangers faced by health workers have been heightened by anger among residents over the stringent medical protocols for handling the victims’ bodies, which clash with local burial rites. Residents have launched at least three attacks against health centers.

Attacks in Ituri by the Allied Democratic Force, a rebel group allied with the Islamic State group, and a coalition of ethnic militias have also hindered the response.

The illness also has been reported in the Congolese provinces of North Kivu and South Kivu, south of Ituri, where the Rwanda-backed M23 rebel group controls many key cities, including Goma and Bukavu. The rebels have reported two cases.

Uganda and Rwanda have closed their borders, while the Trump administration last week banned entry of non-U.S. passport holders who had recently visited Congo, Uganda or South Sudan.

Tedros on Friday called border closures and travel bans “not effective at all” in preventing the spread of the outbreak

“Closing borders, as some countries have done, only discourages transparency. The Democratic Republic of Congo is reporting the situation openly and transparently,” he said, urging countries to reconsider these measures.


Italy bans Kanye West and Travis Scott concerts over security concerns

begin quote: 

Italy bans Kanye West and Travis Scott concerts over security concerns

 

I was looking at the article on tomatoes costing 40% more than a year ago

And thinking how bad this is for people in the lower 50% of income in the U.S. In the 1980s I was raising at one point 4 children with most of them teenagers and a baby so I remember how expensive it was to feed everyone including my wife and I then.

However, now money isn't my problem it's mostly my health. It's interesting how everything changes in life isn't it?

Nothing really stays the same.

However, for me, I never expected to be as well off or as happy in my life as I am now when I was growing up in the 1950s.

In the 1950s people were pretty miserable generally speaking that I knew mostly because the people older then me (born around 1950) had had a really bad experience through the Great Depression and World war II and 900,000 Americans had died in that war. So, there were many broken people mostly wives and lovers, parents and grandparents and Aunts and Uncles. So, survival was more important then and being miserable was normal After World war II.

So, most people were just happy not to be shot or dying quickly or slowly from injuries (physical or mental) from World War II, The Great Depression and the Korean War. I was 10 in 1958 so I saw people pretty unhappy but many also just grateful to still be alive too then.

However that was then and this is now where tomatoes are up 40% in one years time which is awful for the average person not only here in the U.S. but also around the world.

If you can now might be the time to help give money to food banks. We try to do this ourselves because lately it really helps people too. And often local companies will match whatever you give with matching funds too so your donation doubles, triples or quadruples depending upon what companies are donating to the Food Banks. 

Prices for tomatoes are up 40% over the past year

begin quote: 

Tomatoes become latest symbol of America’s affordability squeeze

Prices for tomatoes are up 40% over the past year, the biggest increase tracked among products in the Consumer Price Index

ByMATT SEDENSKY AP national writer
May 28, 2026, 3:08 PM




NEW YORK -- Tomatoes, ubiquitous in everything from fast-food burgers to haute cuisine, are taking on a new role beyond the plate: A nagging reminder of rising costs.

Prices for those red orbs have soared more than any other food product over the past year to cement a spot as one of the consumer headaches du jour.

“The tomato has become a symbol of something much deeper,” says Isaac Bernal Carbajo, a New York City chef who lamented life's “simplest pleasures” falling victim to price increases. “Something as basic as buying fresh vegetables is starting to become a serious financial decision for many families.”

Tomato prices are up about 40% over a year ago, according to the latest Consumer Price Index, dwarfing increases for other groceries, including coffee (up 18.5%), beef roasts (up 17.8%) and frozen fish and seafood (up 12%), among other products that have become symbols of America’s affordability squeeze.

A separate inflation gauge released Thursday showed that overall prices increased 3.8% in April from a year earlier, the highest reading in nearly three years.

Alongside crop yields, experts blame price increases for tomatoes, in part, on two pillars of President Donald Trump’s second-term policies: the Iran war and tariffs. The war spiked gas prices and increased shipping costs. Meantime, the U.S. withdrew from a deal allowing duty-free imports of tomatoes from Mexico, which grows most of America's supply.

Usha Haley, a Wichita State University economist, says it's “a perfect storm of trade policy, extreme weather and Mideast policy.”

American tomato farmers cheered the withdrawal from the tomato deal last July, saying it would help rebuild their shrinking industry. But for consumers, it's been painful. Though the U.S. withdrew from the Mexico tomato deal in July, it took time to see the impact in the produce aisle, with more imports in late winter and early spring.

When the tomatoes arrived, they were slapped with a 17% tariff.

“Tariffs are undeniably a big driver of the price inflation,” says Brett Massimino, a Virginia Commonwealth University business professor. “Because the U.S. relies on Mexico for the majority of its tomato supply, any changes in trade policy can have a large impact.”

U.S. tariffs collected on tomatoes ballooned from just $16,424 in 2024 to nearly $4.6 million, according to federal data, a staggering 27,879% increase.

As the cost trickles down, outraged shoppers have pulled out their phones in the produce aisle, shooting videos lamenting costs they said quadrupled, with some vowing to plant a garden to avoid prices of up to $8 a pound. But the impact has been most pronounced for businesses that rely on tomatoes as a key ingredient in their kitchens.

MarginEdge, which tracks prices for restaurants, says grape tomatoes have increased most — 65% in just a month — but prices have gone up across all types of tomatoes.

Phillip Coles, a professor of supply chain management at Lehigh University, says prices should drop later in the year when domestically grown tomatoes are harvested. Higher prices, he says, will also “induce farmers to increase planting to meet the demand, but this takes longer because of the lead time.”

Meantime, it's translating to a big hit for businesses like Snarf’s Sandwiches, which puts a tomato in nearly every sandwich it makes.

Wayne Humphrey, chief operating officer of Snarf’s, which operates dozens of stores in Colorado, Missouri and Texas, said cases of tomatoes went from costing him $27 to $93 in the space of a year, piled on top of rising expenses for other ingredients including bread and beef, as well as increased labor costs.

“That single ingredient now costs us more than $1.7 million in additional spend annually,” says Humphrey. “The math is getting harder to ignore.”

___

Associated Press writer Dee-Ann Durbin contributed to this report. Matt Sedensky can be reached at msedensky@ap.org and https://x.com/sedensky

Related Topics

Kenyan court temporarily blocks US Ebola quarantine facility plan

 begin quote:

Kenyan court temporarily blocks US Ebola quarantine facility plan

Dead humpback whale brought to shore in Denmark, autopsy set

begin quote: 

Texas mom gives birth to twins during Memorial Day road trip

 begin quote:



Looking for Grizzly Bears isn't usually a good idea for most people

So, when these folks were actually looking for these two bears it was a mistake potentially. Because these two bears were likely fooling around or competing for food or whatever in this area. So, when they saw the first Grizzly fly by running from the other one this would have been a good time to walk not run away from this location before whatever was chasing the first bear showed up.

Then the 2nd bear chasing the first one growled at them. Not running away at this point might have saved their lives. However, staring down a bear is never a good idea because when you stare at animals often it means (between animals at least) that you want to eat them or fight them. However, you don't want to make victim noises like a dying rabbit either because this could incite them to violence against you. This is also true especially with Mountain Lions "Don't make noises like a dying rabbit squealing or they might kill or eat you."

So, the best thing to do if there are prowling grizzly bears in your area is to walk the other way (don't run) because if you run from a bear or mountain lion often they will chase you down and harm or kill you.

However, I did see one Grizzly bear with many people watching this bear sitting in a meadow eating flowers which reminded me of "Flower Children" of the 1960s.

However, then someone ruined it and got too close to the bear so a Forest Ranger arrested them before the Bear harmed them or killed them.

So, keeping your distance (even if the bear is happy and eating flowers in a meadow) is really important because they need enough space between them and you not to kill you needlessly. 

Inner Tubing down the Sacramento River in the 1970s

 LIkely this was around 1970 when this happened. A friend of ours told us how they had fun getting a truck or car inner  tube and riding down the Sacramento from where Lake Siskiyou Dam is below that towards Dunsmuir. Of course I'm not sure where we thought we were going to stop going down the river maybe near Shasta Springs and then hike up a dirt road to the main highway (Interstate 5 I think). This wasn't that well thought out like many adventures in my teens and early 20s because we were immortal young men if you know what i mean.

Well. I realized that the rapids in one area were too rough for me to safely negotiate without harming my tail bone or spine especially at that level of the river with the speed of the river over this one location. So, I was to the west side of the river and so I decided to "Bail out" of doing this. 

I grabbed a limb of a tree but the current of the river washed away my inner tube down the river so I was pulled under the water by the current where I couldn't breathe at all.

So, the water was very cold being snow melt so somehow I held my breath and pulled myself arm over up arm up this limb of the tree until I could breathe again. So, I had survived being underwater and now I could breathe even though the water was snow melt which means around 34 to 38 degrees at that point.

I then finally climbed from that limb onto the Western Shore of the River. However, there are no even dirt roads in that direction for miles and miles. So, now I needed to cross the river to get out of there safely. We were in  cutoff Levi Jeans and tennis shoes so if I could just find a good crossing point where I might walk across the river without being washed over this particular rapids I might be okay. I think I found or broke off a large limb to use to keep me from being washed down the river and then I put it downriver down into the river as like a crutch or walking stick to finally successfully cross the river and then I found a dirt road heading towards Interstate 5 from there.

Also, I have a friend I went to high school with in Santa Fe, New Mexico that lived in Colorado after High School Graduation who died Kayaking one of the Colorado Rivers in his early 30s who was also my age.

So, dealing with moving streams and rivers can be fatal when you least expect it.

After that I gave up river inner tubing because of that close call and mostly just kayaked on Lakes like Castle Lake after that there in the Mt. Shasta area of California. 

12-year-old dies in rafting accident while on school trip, school says

 If you actually see or saw what looked most like a kayak or Canoe he was riding it it encountered a fallen tree. Normally this river looks pretty tame but the fallen tree across the river made it dangerous to someone inexperienced with riding rivers and likely sucked him under this Canoe or Kayak.

 Begin quote:

Devastating': 12-year-old dies in rafting accident while on school trip, school says

Hikers speak out after grizzly bear encounter caught on camera

begin quote: 

Hikers speak out after grizzly bear encounter caught on camera

Girl Scouts build 3D-printed wheelchair for child in need

begin quote: 

Girl Scouts build 3D-printed wheelchair for child in need

1 of 4 fallen climbers rescued from Mount McKinley

1 of 4 fallen climbers rescued from Mount McKinley

Alaska's Mount McKinley is the tallest peak in North America.

May 29, 2026, 1:25 PM




One of the four climbers who fell while ascending Mount McKinley in Alaska has been rescued from the 17,200-foot basin, according to the National Park Service.

The search for the remaining three climbers, who also fell while climbing Mount McKinley at 18,200 feet, is now a recovery mission, the NPS said.

The NPS said it does not know the status of the rescued survivor.

"Due to terrain and conditions at the site, a high-altitude helicopter was unable to land and instead conducted the evacuation using a long-line extraction. The climber was transported to the Kahiltna Base Camp and then transferred to a LifeMed air ambulance for transport to a hospital," the NPS said Friday.

North America's tallest peak, seen on Aug. 12, 2025, in Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska.
Becky Bohrer/AP Photo

Mount McKinley -- located in Alaska's Denali National Park and Preserve -- is the tallest peak in North America, according to the NPS.

The climbers, part of a seven-member climbing team, fell in the vicinity of Denali Pass, according to the NPS. 

The NPS received a report of the incident at around midnight Thursday after two other climbers were evacuated by helicopter from the mountain at around 11 p.m. Wednesday, as part of a separate incident, the NPS said. 

Three members of the climbing team returned to High Camp at 17,000 feet after attending to their fallen partners, the NPS said. 

Mt. Mckinley in Denali National Park, Alaska.
Steven Schremp/Adobe Stock

The NPS said it is actively responding to the incident. Weather conditions on the mountain are improving and will soon enable helicopter operations, the NPS said. 

The extent of the climbers' injuries and their condition remains unknown, the NPS said. 

Trump says 'no interest' in Kennedy Center overhaul after judge orders his name removed

Trump says 'no interest' in Kennedy Center overhaul after judge orders his name removed

The judge ruled it can't be named for anyone else unless Congress approves it.

May 29, 2026, 3:48 PM




President Donald Trump says he has "no interest" in continuing his overhaul of the Kennedy Center after a federal judge ruled he couldn't rename the Washington, D.C., performing arts venue or close its doors for lengthy renovations unless Congress approves the plans.

In a social media post Friday evening responding the judge's ruling, Trump said that he wants to turn decision-making about the future of the center over to Congress.

"Unless I am free to do what I do better than anyone else, bring this Institution back, physically, financially, and artistically, I have no interest in continuing what could only be a hopeless journey into "NEVER NEVER LAND," Trump said in the post.

"Therefore, based on the fact that the Radical Left Democrats care more about opposing your favorite President, ME, than saving a dying Performing Arts Center, almost all of which lose large amounts of money throughout the Country, we are going to be working with Congress to transfer this failing Institution back to them so they can make a determination as to what to do with it," Trump said in the post.

Earlier Friday, U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper ruled

ruled that the rebranding of the Kennedy Center as the "Trump Kennedy Center" violates the law, and ordered that Trump's name be removed from the building within two weeks.

Cooper wrote that the administration "violated the Kennedy Center's organic statute in purporting to rename the Center for President Trump, and in taking steps to effectuate that official renaming, such as installing signage with Donald J. Trump's name on the front portico of the Center, altering the Center's website to name the Center for President Trump, and in issuing official materials naming the Center for President Trump."

Cooper also wrote "Congress gave the Kennedy Center its name, and only Congress can change it."

Congress created the famed cultural institution in a federal statute, designating it as a living memorial in 1964 shortly after President John F. Kennedy's death.

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts is seen, April 22, 2026, in Washington.
Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP Photo

Trump announced in December that the Kennedy Center's Board of Trustees, which the president himself now chairs and filled with his hand-picked appointees, had voted "unanimously" to rename the building. Workers added signage with his name shortly after.

Trump also announced earlier this year that the Kennedy Center would be closed for two years starting in July for major renovations.

Cooper blasted the board for making an "ill-informed" and "seemingly preordained" decision to close the center.

"Finally, the Court is preliminarily persuaded that the Board's March 16 vote to close the Kennedy Center pending a years-long renovation represents a dereliction of its common-law- derived duty of prudence," Cooper wrote. "The current record reveals that the Board rendered this ill-informed and seemingly preordained decision without regard for how it would accomplish its full array of statutory responsibilities. The trustees might have assessed the propriety of closure in a number of prudent ways. This was not one."

The changes are being challenged in court by Democratic Rep. Joyce Beatty, who sits on the Kennedy Board of Trustees as one of its ex-officio members.

"Today's ruling rightly affirms that this administration's efforts to rename and close the Center have no basis in law," Beatty said in a statement Friday. "The Kennedy Center is an institution that belongs to the American people, not to Donald Trump. He has desecrated this sacred memorial for his own vanity. I am proud to have fought for the rule of law and to protect this sacred institution."

The Trump administration has defended the renovation as fulfilling the board's "responsibilities to repair and improve the Center."

ABC News' Peter Charalambous and Steven Portnoy contributed to this report.

Related Topics