- US newspaper popularized by 'The Sopranos' to cease printing
- World awaits Trump tariff deadline on Canada, Mexico and China
- Japan sinkhole grows to almost Olympic pool length
- Thousands of protesters call for VP Duterte impeachment
- Thailand orders stubble burning crackdown as pollution spikes
- Samsung operating profit hit by R&D spending, fight to meet chip demand
- Japan records biggest jump in foreign workers
- Asian markets mostly rise but worries over tariffs, AI linger,
- Investigators recover plane black boxes from Washington air collision
- 'No happiness': Misery for Myanmar exiles four years on from coup
- Ghosts of past spies haunt London underground tunnels
- Six Nations teams strengths and weaknesses
- Pressure on Prendergast as Ireland launch Six Nations title defence against England
- Scotland eager to avoid Italy slip-up at start of Six Nations
- Fonseca set for Lyon baptism against Marseille
- Hermoso: Spanish football icon against sexism after forced kiss
- Mbappe-Vinicius connection next goal for Liga leaders Real Madrid
- Leverkusen taking confidence from Champions League into Bundesliga title race
- Man City face Arsenal test as Bournemouth eye Liverpool scalp
- Trump's point man for drilling agenda confirmed by Senate
- Chipmaker Intel beats revenue expectations amidst Q4 loss
- Key nominees for the Grammy Awards
- Beyonce leads Grammys pack at gala backdropped by fires
- Samsung Electronics posts 129.85% jump in Q4 operating profit
- 'Shouldn't have happened:' DC air collision stuns experts
- Donald Trump: air crash investigator-in-chief?
- Nicaragua legislature cements 'absolute power' of president, wife
- McIlroy launches PGA season debut with hole-in-one
- Figure skating in shock as athletes, coaches perish in US crash
- Kim opens up four-stroke lead in LPGA's season opener
- Man Utd progress to Europa last 16 'really important' for Amorim overhaul
- Postecoglou hails Europa League win 'made in Tottenham'
- 'Not interested': Analysts sceptical about US, Russia nuclear talks
- Trump to decide on oil tariffs on Canada, Mexico
- MAHA Moms: Why RFK Jr's health agenda resonates with Americans
- Neymar, eyeing 2026 World Cup, announces return to Brazil's Santos
- 'The region will die': Ukraine's Donbas mines within Russia's grasp
- 'Campaign of terror': Georgia's escalating rights crackdown
- French luxury billionaire sparks tax debate with threat to leave
- Apple profit climbs but sales miss expectations
- Man Utd, Spurs advance to last 16 in Europa League
- Trump blames deadly Washington air collision on 'diversity'
- Itoje says England 'ready' for Six Nations kings Ireland
- Rennes sack Sampaoli, announce Beye as new coach
- Trump insists Egypt, Jordan will take Gazans
- Stones lead tributes to 'beautiful' Marianne Faithfull, dead at 78
- Washington midair crash: What we know so far
- Syria's new leader pledges 'national dialogue conference'
- McIlroy sinks hole-in-one at PGA Pebble Beach Pro-Am
- American skier Shiffrin remembers air crash victims on return from injury
Investigators recover plane black boxes from Washington air collision
Investigators on Thursday recovered the black boxes from a passenger plane whose mid-air collision with a military helicopter over Washington's Potomac river killed 67 people, as rescuers pulled victims' bodies from the freezing water.
US President Donald Trump launched a political attack blaming diversity and inclusion policies championed by his Democratic predecessors for causing the incident.
Trump's politicization of the tragedy came as the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said it had recovered the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder from the Bombardier jet operated by an American Airlines subsidiary that smashed into an Army Black Hawk helicopter late Wednesday.
"The recorders are at the NTSB labs for evaluation," the agency said in a statement to AFP.
According to a New York Times report, staffing was thin in the control tower at Reagan National Airport, where the airliner was about to land when the collision occurred.
One controller, rather than the usual two, was handling both plane and helicopter traffic, the Times quoted a preliminary Federal Aviation Administration report as saying.
A fireball erupted in the night sky and both aircraft tumbled into the icy Potomac, leaving rescue crews with the grim, difficult task of searching for bodies in the dark and cold.
Over 40 bodies had been recovered as of Thursday evening, according to US media reports.
- Trump politicizes crash -
Trump, who took office 10 days ago, turned a press conference on the disaster into a platform for his crusade against diversity, equity and inclusion or DEI -- a series of often decades-old measures meant to combat racism and sexism across the United States.
Accusing his Democratic predecessors Joe Biden and Barack Obama of having kept good employees out of the aviation agency in pursuit of DEI, he claimed: "They actually came out with a directive: 'too white.' And we want the people that are competent."
The passenger plane was carrying 64 people and the Black Hawk had three aboard.
The collision -- the first major crash in the United States since 2009 when 49 people were killed near Buffalo, New York -- occurred as American Eagle Flight 5342 from Wichita, Kansas came in to land.
Reagan National is a major airport located a short distance from downtown Washington, the White House and the Pentagon. The airspace is extremely busy, with civilian and military aircraft a constant presence.
Trump opened his White House press conference by speaking of the nation's anguish.
However, he then launched into an extended broadside against DEI, aiming directly at Biden's openly gay transportation secretary Pete Buttigieg.
"He's run it right into the ground with his diversity," Trump said.
The message was hammered home as Trump's vice president, JD Vance, and new defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, took turns at the podium to repeat -- without evidence -- the hard-right theory that diversity measures keep capable Americans out of responsible jobs.
Asked again by reporters whether he was blaming workplace diversity for the crash, Trump answered: "It could have been."
Buttigieg responded on X, calling Trump "despicable."
"As families grieve, Trump should be leading, not lying," he said.
Democratic Senator Chris Murphy posted that Trump's comments "blaming the FAA's hiring of women and black people for the crash -- was disgusting."
"He's in charge. This happened on his watch," Murphy said.
Trump doubled down, however, later issuing an official memo directing the government to investigate "deterioration in hiring standards" under Biden and "replacement" of anyone unqualified.
- Skaters among victims -
Among those on the airliner were several US skaters and coaches, US Figure Skating said. Officials in Moscow also confirmed the presence of Russian couple Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov, who won the 1994 world pairs title.
Two Chinese citizens were also among the victims of the crash, state news agency Xinhua reported Friday in Beijing, citing the Chinese embassy.
The force of the collision soon made it clear that survivors were unlikely.
"I just saw a fireball and it was gone," one air traffic controller was heard telling a colleague after communication with the helicopter was cut.
And Hegseth said the chopper had "a fairly experienced crew that was doing a required annual night evaluation."
F.Schneider--AMWN