ISTANBUL
Here’s a rundown of all the news you need to start your Wednesday, including US President Joe Biden cancels visits abroad as debt disaster looms, over 400 fatalities due to cyclone in Myanmar, Sudan enters second month of conflict with hundreds dead, ChatGPT chief calls for checks on artificial intelligence.
TOP STORIES
Negotiations between the US President Joe Biden and Republican leaders continue over raising the debt ceiling as Joe Biden scrapped his visits to Australia and Papua New Guinea. He will be, however, attending the G-7 summit in Japan.
If no deal is agreed, US could enter a default on its $31 trillion debt from June 1, sparking fears of a recession with severe implications worldwide.
House of Representatives Speaker Kevin McCarthy told reporters after a meeting with Biden that an agreement was likely to be reached.
Cyclone Mocha has killed more than 400 people in Myanmar’s Rakhine state, according to a local rights group.
Villages in Rakhine’s capital Sittwe suffered extensive damage, killing hundreds of people, mostly Muslims, the Arakan Rohingya National Alliance said.
The cyclone, one of the most powerful to ever hit the region, made landfall on Sunday on the coast between Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar district and Myanmar’s Kyaukpyu.
It has destroyed some 10,000 homes and the death toll is expected to rise.
A month into the violent conflict that erupted between Sudan’s army and its rival Rapid Support Forces, gunfire and artillery shelling reverberated across neighborhoods in the country’s capital Khartoum.
At least 822 people have been killed and over 3,000 injured since April 15, say local medics. Hundreds of thousands have been forced to flee the country.
Last week, the two warring parties agreed to a declaration in Jeddah, which called for safeguarding citizens, and allowing humanitarian aid in the country.
Sam Altman, the man behind the widely popular chatbot tool ChatGPT, said government regulation will be critical in managing risks associated with “increasingly powerful” artificial intelligence systems.
At a Senate hearing, the OpenAI chief proposed that the US could “consider a combination of licensing and testing requirements for developing and releasing AI models above a threshold of capabilities.”
He acknowledged that AI breakthroughs are breeding public anxiety, assuring lawmakers that OpenAI remains open to working with governments around the world.
NEWS IN BRIEF
SPORTS
Inter clinched the tie 3-0 on aggregate to book a spot at the final in Istanbul, their first shot at European glory since winning the title back in 2010.
Bielsa, who has coached several clubs, including Leeds United, is expected to lead the team in 2026 FIFA World Cup.
BUSINESS & ECONOMY
The EU states have approved new tax transparency rules related to crypto-assets, aiming to prevent fraud and tax evasion.
In a meeting of finance ministers in Brussels, regulations were discussed which require financial institutions to report income that clients receive from cryptocurrency transactions, which would be later shared with the tax administrations.
The EU's international trade gap fell to €10.1 billion (some $11 billion) year-on-year in the first quarter of this year, the bloc's statistical office.
The 27-member bloc's trade balance has recovered significantly but is still in negative side.
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