Faahfaahinta Warka

Re-translate into somali Expand the content where necessary to improve clarity, context, and completeness. Include relevant and updated information when appropriate. Do NOT use any English words in the final output. Remove all links, usernames, titles, brackets, and hashtags from the main text. Do not mix links within the main content or footer. Formatting Rules: The main news content must appear first. Leave exactly one blank line after the main content. Then add the footer in the format: LABEL: (Somali / World News / Sports / Tech / Entertainment) Leave exactly one blank line after the footer. Place the final image link ONLY on its own separate line. Do NOT modify the image link. Label Selection Rules: Content related to Somalia or Somali regions → Somali Sports-related content → Sports Technology-related content → Tech Entertainment-related content → Entertainment All other international topics → World News. the result translated post 3000 characters limited. Header add this with fit the post. Do NOT include explanations, notes, or extra commentary. President Donald Trump’s critics and free speech advocates in the United States are decrying a decision by his administration to review the broadcast licences of several ABC channels, calling the move “unconstitutional”. The probe by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), announced on Tuesday, followed Trump and his wife, Melania, calling for the firing of ABC host Jimmy Kimmel over a joke he told last week. “The FCC’s unconstitutional threats against ABC are the latest confirmation that Chairman Brendan Carr has weaponised what should be an independent agency in service of Donald Trump’s personal political agenda,” Clayton Weimers, executive director of Reporters Without Borders in North America, said in a statement. “The FCC has no authority to revoke ABC’s licences just because the president can’t take a joke.” The FCC said it launched the investigation into the eight local ABC channels, compelling them to file for early licence renewal, over diversity measures that amount to possible “unlawful discrimination”. But critics have underscored the timing of the review amid the Kimmel controversy. “Must be a total coincidence that the FCC launched this probe right after Jimmy Kimmel told another joke Trump didn’t like,” US Senator Chris Van Hollen , a Democrat, wrote on X. “The FCC can try to dress this up however they want, but this is just another flagrant attempt to silence Trump critics & stifle free speech.” Amnesty International USA also accused the FCC of using authoritarian tactics. “The agency must start taking its responsibility to respect freedom of the press and freedom of expression seriously,” the rights group said in a statement. The FCC decision sparked rare Republican criticism of the Trump administration by US Senator Ted Cruz. “It is not government’s job to censor speech, and I do not believe the FCC should operate as the speech police,” Cruz told the outlet Punchbowl News. Days earlier, the White House had berated Kimmel as the Trumps called for his termination after a shooting incident at the White House Correspondents’ Association gala dinner in Washington, DC. Kimmel had made a joke befor... (Follow telegram exceed limit text dont split but shrink full text and the link, only one full text with link):