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Plane crashes in Karachi with at least 99 aboard

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Fri, May 22, 2020 02:18 PM

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A Pakistan International Airlines plane with 99 passengers and crew crashed into a residential area

A Pakistan International Airlines plane with 99 passengers and crew crashed into a residential area of the city of Karachi on Friday. Coronavirus cases surpass 5 million [Forward to a friend]( | [Subscribe]( | [View in your browser]( [Top of The World]( Many are feared dead after a plane with 99 passengers and crew crashed into a residential area of Karachi in Pakistan, officials said. And, Jamal Khashoggi's children said they have "pardoned" the Saudi agents who killed and dismembered their father in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in October 2018. Also, US President Donald Trump said the US will withdraw from the Open Skies Arms Control Treaty. It'sTrump's third major withdrawal from arms control agreements. Editor's note: With Memorial Day on Monday, we'll be taking the day off. Enjoy the holiday! --------------------------------------------------------------- In the news today Plane crashes in Pakistan with at least 99 aboard, many feared dead Credit: Akhtar Soomro/Reuters A Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) plane with at least 99 passengers and crew [crashed]( into a residential area of the city of Karachi on Friday, with many feared dead, officials said. The jet, which tracking website FlightRadar24.com identified as a 15-year-old Airbus A320, was flying from the eastern city of Lahore to Karachi in the south just as Pakistan was resuming domestic flights in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic. Jamal Khashoggi's children ‘pardon’ their father’s killers A son of slain Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi said on Friday that he and his siblings had forgiven the men who killed their father, ending the prospect that the government agents would face the death penalty. Khashoggi, a prominent critic of the Saudi government and its powerful crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, was killed and dismembered in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul by Saudi agents in October 2018. "On this virtuous night of (Ramadan), we recall the words of God Almighty ... whoever pardons and makes reconciliations, his reward is from Allah," the son, Salah Khashoggi, said in a [statement posted on Twitter](. “So we, the sons of the martyr Jamal Khashoggi, announce that we have pardoned (those) who killed our father.” But in a separate Twitter statement, Khashoggi’s fiancée Hatice Cengiz expressed her [disapproval](. And the United Nations rapporteur for extrajudicial executions, Agnès Callamard, who led a high-profile investigation into Khashoggi's murder, [called the pardon]( the “final act of the parody of justice played in front of a global audience.” Also: [After years apart, this Syrian doctor in New York is finally celebrating Ramadan with his family]( Trump will withdraw from Open Skies Arms Control Treaty The Trump administration on Thursday announced plans for the US [to withdraw]( from the 35-nation Open Skies treaty allowing unarmed surveillance flights over member countries. The retreat is President Donald Trump’s [third major withdrawal]( from arms control agreements. The administration said Russia has repeatedly violated the pact's terms. Senior officials said the pullout will formally take place in six months based on the treaty's withdrawal terms. NATO allies — and other countries like Ukraine — have been pressing Washington not to withdraw from the treaty, and Trump's decision could aggravate tensions within the alliance. From The World: [China seeks to limit freedoms in Hong Kong]( Guatemalans deported from US shunned at home over coronavirus fears The US has deported some 20,000 people to other countries since the coronavirus pandemic began. Many of them have gone to Central American nations that tried to suspend deportation flights over coronavirus fears. Now, the Guatemalan government has reported at least 115 returning deportees have tested positive for the coronavirus upon arrival. Overall, there were 2,265 confirmed cases of the coronavirus in the country as of Thursday — and many blame the deportees, The World reports. They have been [shunned, threatened or chased away]( by neighbors who fear they are bringing back the virus with them. Madrid residents are restless for green space during city park closures [A woman wearing a protective face mask runs near Madrid Rio park, but not inside it, because all of Madrid's major parks are closed amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Madrid, Spain, May 2, 2020.] Credit: Juan Medina/Reuters The coronavirus hit Madrid harder than anywhere else in Spain. Madrid Mayor José Luis Martínez-Almeida has kept parks closed to stop large gatherings. [Enter Jose Luis Mazón Costa](, a lawyer who calls himself a Don Quixote for the 21st century. Mazón Costa deliberately tried to enter a closed park in early May and was quickly stopped by the police. He returned home with a possible fine of approximately $1,640. Now, Mazón Costa has filed two legal complaints against the mayor of Madrid. “When I want to use my exercise time, the six hours a day the government gives me to leave my prison — that’s my house — I find that the mayor of Madrid has closed all the parks? Well, that seems absurd to me,” [he told The World](. Saudi Arabia raises taxes at home while making big investments abroad One of the world's richest nations, Saudi Arabia, is calling for shared economic sacrifice. The country’s economy has been hit hard by the coronavirus. That’s because it relies so much on one commodity: Oil. And, the price of oil has [dropped to dramatically low levels](. Now, Saudi Arabia has announced a 15% value-added tax on all goods and services. It is also cutting down some benefits for state employees. Meanwhile, the kingdom has been on a shopping spree with its Public Investment Fund, dropping roughly $7.7 billion on stakes in Facebook, Boeing and Starbucks, among other companies. But in Saudi Arabia, it’s the royal family who is in charge. So, [the public doesn’t have a say on how government money is spent](. The Number in the News: 3 Massimo Bottura, chef and owner of the three-Michelin-starred restaurant Osteria Francescana in Modena, Italy, has been taking to Instagram during lockdown and broadcasting live cooking classes from his kitchen. [The Number in the News]( is The World’s daily smart speaker show. You’ll learn one number you won’t forget and why it’s in the news today. [Click here]( to add The Number in the News to your Amazon or Google flash briefing and hear a new episode seven days a week. --------------------------------------------------------------- Morning meme Mark this one in the "What did he say?" category. US President Donald Trump has a little fun trying to rephrase his "very positive" test for the coronavirus into something less positive and more negative. [A screengrab from Twitter shows tweet from CBS reporter Vladimir Duthiers with a video of President Donald Trump.]( [Credit: Screenshot from Twitter]( Reuters contributed reporting. --------------------------------------------------------------- In case you missed it on The World - [1 in 8 museums may close due to coronavirus, new report warns]( - [Lunches in London for vulnerable kids]( - [Polish radio station faces criticism for removing a song with anti-government lyrics]( - [Burundi elections]( - [Jamaica's slow reopen to tourists]( - [Curtains for London's West End]( - [Cyclone puts refugee camps in Bangladesh at risk]( - [Indian government touts malaria drug for COVID-19, but not its physicians]( - [In search of the Titanic's last message]( - [International students in the US job market]( - [Migrant children and teens halted at US border]( - [Problems facing immigrant communities]( Don't forget to subscribe to The World's Latest Edition podcast using your favorite podcast player: [RadioPublic](, [Apple Podcasts](, [Stitcher](, [Soundcloud](, [RSS]( [The World logo]( [The World on Facebook]( [The World's Twitter account]( [Donate]( | [Forward to a friend]( | [Subscribe]( | [Edit your subscription]( | [Unsubscribe]( | [View in your browser]( Top of the World is written weekday mornings by the team at [The World](. [The World]( is produced by [PRX](, [WGBH](, and the [BBC](.

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