This is NewsCard Daily for Saturday, November 28th, 2025 ... your briefing on the stories shaping our world. We begin in South Asia where disaster response teams are racing against time. Sri Lanka has shut down all government offices and schools as the death toll from devastating floods and landslides climbs to 56 people. Authorities say the natural disaster has swept across the island nation, destroying homes and displacing thousands. Rescue operations continue as heavy rains threaten to trigger more landslides in vulnerable areas. The government is mobilizing resources to reach isolated communities cut off by the flooding. ... Across the region in Indonesia, a similar tragedy is unfolding. Rescue workers are intensifying their search for survivors and recovering bodies after floods and landslides killed 49 people on the island of Sumatra. Entire villages have been devastated. Rivers are overflowing. The scale of destruction is massive. Rescuers are digging through rubble and searching waterways as families desperately wait for news of missing loved ones. ... Moving to Africa where Nigeria faces a security crisis. President Bola Tinubu has declared a national emergency following mass abductions of schoolchildren and coordinated attacks on civilians. Over 300 students were seized in the latest incident. Armed groups have terrorized communities across multiple regions. Parents say the government has provided them with almost no information about rescue efforts. The military is being mobilized to combat the threat and recover the abducted children. ... In Europe, diplomatic tensions are simmering. Tunisia's President Kais Saied has summoned the European Union's ambassador over what he calls a breach of diplomatic protocol. The move reflects rising friction between North African nations and Brussels over how international relationships are being conducted. It's part of a broader pattern of assertiveness by African leaders pushing back on perceived European overreach in regional affairs. ... And finally, in the Americas, Brazilian authorities are cracking down on organized financial crime. Police have launched a massive operation targeting a tax evasion and money laundering scheme in the fuel sector worth an estimated 4.8 billion dollars. The investigation reveals sophisticated networks moving illegal money through the economy. It's one of the largest financial crime operations authorities have dismantled in recent years and underscores Brazil's commitment to tackling corruption at scale. ... That's your NewsCard Daily briefing. For more top stories and quick summaries that keep you informed in just minutes, check out the NewsCard app, available in the App Store.