Headline
We Would Have Killed Iran’s Supreme Leader If Given Opportunity – Israel

Defence Minister Israel Katz told media that Israel would have killed Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during the war between the two countries if the opportunity had presented itself.
“If he had been in our sights, we would have taken him out,” Katz told Israel’s public radio station Kan Thursday evening, adding that the military had “searched a lot”.
“Khamenei understood this, went very deep underground, broke off contact with the commanders… so in the end it wasn’t realistic,” Katz told Kan.
He told Israeli television Channel 13 Thursday that Israel would cease its assassination attempts because “there is a difference between before the ceasefire and after the ceasefire”.
READ ALSO:Israel-Iran War: Stranded Nigerians Cry For Help From Underground Shelters
Katz had said during the war that Khamenei “can no longer be allowed to exist”, just days after reports that Washington vetoed Israeli plans to assassinate him.
But on Kan, Katz advised Khamenei to remain inside a bunker.
“He should learn from the late Nasrallah, who sat for a long time deep in the bunker”, he said, referring to Lebanese militant group Hezbollah’s former leader Hassan Nasrallah, who Israel killed in a Beirut air strike in September 2024.
The movements of the supreme leader, who has not left Iran since he took power, are subject to the tightest security and secrecy.
READ ALSO:Iran Nabs 22 Suspected Israeli Spies Amidst Escalating Conflict
Katz said Thursday that Israel maintained its aerial superiority over Iran and that it was ready to strike again.
“We won’t let Iran develop nuclear weapons and threaten (Israel) with long-range missiles”, he said.
In his Channel 12 interview, Katz admitted that Israel does not know the location of all of Iran’s enriched uranium, but that its air strikes had destroyed the Islamic republic’s uranium enrichment capabilities.
“The material itself was not something that was supposed to be neutralised,” he said of the enriched uranium.
READ ALSO:Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, Deserves Not To Live – Israel’s Defence Minister
The impact of Israeli and US strikes on Iran’s nuclear programme has been a subject to debate.
A leaked US intelligence assessment estimated the programme to have set Iran back a few months, while Katz and other Israeli and US public figures said the damage would take years to rebuild.
Israel and Iran each claimed victory in a 12-day war that ended with a ceasefire on June 24.
The war erupted on June 13 when Israel launched a bombing campaign that it said aimed to stop Iran from developing a nuclear weapon — an ambition Iran has consistently denied.
Headline
‘Pioneer Of Cable TV News’: Key Facts About CNN Founder, Ted Turner

Ted Turner, the media businessman who founded CNN died at the age of 87. He died peacefully on Wednesday, surrounded by family, according to Turner Enterprises.
Contents
Launched 24-hour news television
Built a media network
Expanded through sports
Recognition and influence
Philanthropy and global causes
Environmental efforts
Health and later years
Early career path
Leadership and legacy
Personal life
Exit from business
Family
Below are key facts about his life and impact:
Launched 24-hour news television
Turner founded CNN on June 1, 1980, introducing the first 24-hour news channel and changing how audiences follow global events.
READ ALSO:CNN To Layoff 200 Staff Amid Attempts To Modernise Business
Built a media network
He moved from billboards into broadcasting, turning an Atlanta TV station into a national superstation in 1976. His business later grew to include CNN International, TNT, Turner Classic Movies and Cartoon Network.
Expanded through sports
Turner invested in sports broadcasting and owned teams including the Atlanta Braves and the Atlanta Hawks, using television to reach wider audiences.
Recognition and influence
In 1991, he was named Time magazine’s Man of the Year for his role in shaping modern news coverage.
Philanthropy and global causes
He founded the United Nations Foundation and supported campaigns against nuclear weapons. In 1997, he pledged $1 billion to the United Nations.
READ ALSO:CNN President, Jeff Zucker Resigns After Failing To Disclose Secret Affair With Colleague
Turner supported conservation work, including reintroducing bison in the United States, and backed environmental education through the “Captain Planet” cartoon.
Health and later years
In 2018, Turner revealed he had Lewy body dementia. He also recovered from a mild case of pneumonia in early 2025.
Early career path
He took over his father’s billboard company at 24 after his father’s death and later expanded into radio and television, despite limited experience in journalism.
“I worked until 7 o’clock, and when I got home the news was over,” he once said. “So I missed television news completely. And I figured there were lots of people like me.”
Leadership and legacy
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“Ted was an intensely involved and committed leader, intrepid, fearless and always willing to back a hunch and trust his own judgement,” Mark Thompson, Chairman and CEO of CNN Worldwide, said in a statement. “He was and always will be the presiding spirit of CNN. Ted is the giant on whose shoulders we stand, and we will all take a moment today to recognize him and his impact on our lives and the world.”
Personal life
Turner married actress Jane Fonda in 1991, and they later divorced after 10 years, though they remained close.
“I would never love anyone like I love him,” she said. “But I just couldn’t keep moving in his world, along the surface for the rest of my life. I knew that I would get to the end of my life and regret not doing the things that I also needed to do for me.”
Exit from business
He sold his company to Time Warner in 1996 and later stepped away following its merger with AOL.
Reflecting on his life, Turner once said: “I lost Jane. I lost my job here. I lost my fortune, most of it. Got a billion or two left. You can get by on that if you economize.”
Family
He is survived by his five children, 14 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
Headline
Iran’s Nationwide Internet Shutdown Hits 70 Days

NetBlocks, a monitoring group, has disclosed that an internet shutdown enforced by the Iranian regime has entered its 70th day, severing key access from swathes of the population under the shadow of war.
NetBlocks reported on Friday that the blackout has now surpassed 1,656 hours, marking more than two months since US-Israeli strikes pounded Tehran and escalated across the Middle East.
“Digital connectivity is vital in times of crisis,” NetBlocks said in a post on X. “Limiting service harms those most in need – people with disabilities, students, small businesses and the general public.”
READ ALSO:US Underestimated Iran Before War – France’s Bardella
According to CNN, Iran imposed a separate internet shutdown on the country’s 92 million people earlier this year, when it launched the most lethal crackdown on anti-government protesters since the Islamic Republic’s founding 47 years ago.
CNN further reports that the latest blackout has cut off another potential lifeline for Iranian residents faced with high unemployment and economic pressure exacerbated by the US-Israeli campaign.
(CNN)
Headline
Gas Prices In US Edge Down After Two Weeks Of Increases

The cost of a gallon of regular gas in the United States (US) has edged down a little more than a penny to $4.55.
According to AAA’s readings, this marks the first decline in the average gas price after 15 straight days of increases.
The decline is minuscule compared to the large increases in gas prices over the last two weeks.
According to CNN, gasoline costs rose an average of nearly 4 cents a day during that period and had several daily increases of between 7 and 9 cents.
READ ALSO:Gas Station Explosion Rocks Calabar, Scores Injured, Property Destroyed
Also Read: Trump insists US-Iran ceasefire intact despite recent exchange of fire
CNN also reports that based on past gas spikes, it will likely take weeks for gas prices to get down below $4 a gallon.
The report, however, states that a previous two-week stretch of gas price declines only shaved 14 cents off the average price, taking the average price to $4.02, before the recent 15-day run of increases.
READ ALSO:Tinubu Signs Executive Order To Protect Nigeria’s Oil & Gas Revenue
According to CNN, it could take months for the average price to fall below $3 per gallon, as it did before the war in Iran.
CNN further reports that only one state – Oklahoma – now has an average price of less than $4 a gallon, and its average stands at $3.98. California has the highest average price at $6.16.
(CNN)
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