At Maui High School, class is out and the hallways are instead thronging with people who have evacuated, escaping the worst wildfire to hit the US for years.
The gymnasium has become a shelter, with families huddled in corners under duvets, and camp beds set up where the sports court would usually be.
Behind the building, volunteers serve Hawaiianstew and rice from huge silver trays. Benches are arranged around a big screen showing rolling local news, documenting the rising number of fatalities.
Most of the people here are either tourists or locals from the town of Lahaina, which was obliterated when wildfire ripped through Maui on Tuesday.
Here, trauma interacts with remarkable tales of survival.
Ydriss Nouara and his neighbour Damon McDonough jumped into the ocean to escape the flames which engulfed Lahaina. They spent three hours clinging to a jetty before they were rescued by a coastguard boat.
“It was hell,” says Ydriss. “Hell on earth, truly.”
The pair had both left their homes in the centre of Lahaina when the wildfires which had been visible on the crest of the hill quickly started moving their way, accelerated by the winds from a hurricane 800 miles off the coast.
“It was the afternoon but the skies were black from the smoke,” says Damon. They both headed down to the harbour area of town believing they would be safe there. But soon they were burning hot.
“We kept hearing explosions and screams like we were in a horror movie,” says Ydriss, “We heard people throwing up, we didn’t know where they were. I called the police and they said that they couldn’t get to us.
“The smoke was all black and we called the cops again and they said they couldn’t come and the third time they said you gotta go in the water. And I said ‘you want us to jump in the water in a hurricane? It’s black you know.’
“But we didn’t have a choice,” he adds, “it was either that or burn.”
Image: Pic: AP
Damon, an army veteran who moved to Maui from California, says he believes it was a miracle they survived.
“We would just keep hearing boats exploding and they were on fire and moving towards them as though someone was driving them. I was on my back trying to stay afloat and I was like saying to myself ‘please not today, God, not like this.”
Both Damon and Ydriss lost their homes and belongings to the fire. Most people in the shelters have just a small bag of belongings.
Christina and her family were on holiday at the luxury Pumana resort in Lahaina to celebrate her 10-year-old grandson, John, finishing cancer treatment.
They were evacuated two days ago and have not been allowed back by the authorities to retrieve their suitcases.
“My grandson had a tumour removed from his head and had five weeks of radiation treatment and we came to Hawaii after that,” says Christina.
“Thankfully we were evacuated and brought here,” she adds, tears filling her eyes, “The people are so kind. We have food and water and a place to shower and people who love us. We feel very lucky and very blessed.”
Some tourists chose to go straight to the airport to await flights out of Maui.
Image: Fires in Lahaina. Pic: AP
The partly covered concourse is peppered with people trying to get some sleep. Brian and his 16-year-old daughter Chiara are from Los Angeles so they are used to wildfires, but have never seen a blaze move so quickly.
“The alarms blared at the hotel, telling us to evacuate,” says Brian. “I had no clue of the devastation really until we hopped on the bus and we saw this carnage with all the homes burned and all the businesses burned down.
“I was just there, a couple of nights ago, picking up some shaved ice for my kids and to see it like that was just terrible.”
“It was like a bomb went off,” says Chiara. “All the cars with full gas tanks exploded when the fires reached them.”
As President Trump claims he is “close” to signing a mining deal with Ukraine, and his secretary of state Marco Rubio talks about a lack of “gratitude” from President Zelenskyy for US military assistance, our US correspondents Mark Stone, Martha Kelner and James Matthews discuss if this is the real reason Trump’s administration appears to have turned its back on Ukraine.
And, why Canada is taking its feud with Donald Trump on to the ice.
Donald Trump has purged top military figures in the Pentagon, including firing America’s most senior commander.
He also pushed out five other admirals and generals in an unprecedented shake-up of US military leadership.
The Pentagon had been bracing for mass firings of civilian staff as well as a dramatic overhaul of its budget and a shift in military deployments.
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Air Force General Charles ‘CQ’ Brown – America’s highest-ranking general and only the second black general to serve as chairman – was fired with immediate effect.
The president will also replace the head of the US Navy, a position held by Admiral Lisa Franchetti, the first woman to lead a military service, and the Air Force vice chief of staff, the Pentagon said.
He is also removing the judge advocates general for the Army, Navy and Air Force, critical positions that ensure enforcement of military justice.
The campaign to rid the military of leaders who support diversity and equity in the ranks has been condemned by Democrats.
There is nothing apolitical about Trump
By David Blevins, Sky News correspondent
The purge of America’s top military officials, carried out by President Trump and his Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, is unprecedented, writes Sky News correspondent David Blevins, in Washington.
Their dismissal late on Friday sent shockwaves through the defence establishment and raised concerns about the direction of military leadership.
General Charles Q Brown, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was abruptly removed two years into his four-year term.
America’s most senior military officer comes into office two years into a presidential term, meaning they serve under two presidents.
The role is intended to be apolitical but there is no such thing as non-partisan politics in the Trump playbook.
Brown’s tenure had been marked by a focus on diversity, equity and inclusion, putting him at odds with the administration.
Prior to his appointment as defence secretary, Hegseth questioned Brown’s promotion, hinting that it had been influenced by race.
In his book, The War on Warriors, Hegseth wrote: “The military standards, once the hallmark for competency, professionalism, and ‘mission first’ outcomes, have officially been subsumed by woke priorities.”
Supporters of the administration argue the changes are necessary to refocus military priorities in line with the president’s objectives.
But critics contend that such a sweeping overhaul of leadership undermines the apolitical nature of the military and unsettles the rank and file.
Rhode Island’s senator Jack Reed, the top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said: “Firing uniformed officers as a type of political loyalty test… erodes the trust and professionalism that our servicemembers require to achieve their missions.”
Representative Seth Moulton, a Massachusetts Democrat, said the firings were “un-American, unpatriotic, and dangerous for our troops and our national security.”
“This is the definition of politicising our military,” he said.
Senator Jack Reed of Rhode Island, the top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said: “Firing uniformed leaders as a type of political loyalty test, or for reasons relating to diversity and gender that have nothing to do with performance, erodes the trust and professionalism that our servicemembers require to achieve their missions.”
During the election, Mr Trump spoke of firing “woke” generals and those he saw as responsible for the withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Defence secretary and former Fox News personality Pete Hegseth has questioned whether General Brown would have got the job if he were not black.
There is no indication his appointment was not based on merit.
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On Friday, Mr Trump said: “I want to thank General Charles ‘CQ’ Brown for his over 40 years of service to our country, including as our current Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
“He is a fine gentleman and an outstanding leader, and I wish a great future for him and his family.”
It’s unclear who Mr Trump will choose to replace the judge advocates. Mr Hegseth previously criticised military lawyers, saying most “spend more time prosecuting our troops than putting away bad guys”.
Dozens of supporters were outside court as the man accused of fatally shooting the chief executive of UnitedHealthcare made his first appearance.
Luigi Mangione has pleaded not guilty to multiple counts of murder following the 4 December killing of Brian Thompson, 50, outside a midtown Manhattan hotel.
The 26-year-old is accused of ambushing and shooting the executive as he walked to an investor conference.
Image: Luigi Mangione supporters stand outside the Supreme Court. Pic: AP Photo/Stefan Jeremiah
Dozens of people who showed up in court to support the suspect including former army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning who was jailed for stealing classified diplomatic cables.
Dozens more queued in the hallway.
More on Luigi Mangione
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Mangione is also facing federal charges that could carry the possibility of the death penalty.
The judge set a deadline of 9 April to submit pre-trial motions.
Image: Luigi Mangione is accused of fatally shooting Brian Thompson. Pic: Steven Hirsch/New York Post via AP
In addition to the New York cases, Mr Mangione also faces charges of forgery, carrying firearms without a licence, and other counts in Pennsylvania, where authorities arrested him at a McDonald’s.
Police say he was in possession of a gun, bullets, multiple fake IDs and a handwritten document that expressed “ill will” towards corporate America.
He is being held in a Brooklyn jail alongside several other high-profile defendants, including music mogul and rapper Sean “Diddy” Combs, and disgraced crypto entrepreneurSam Bankman-Fried.
The killing prompted some to voice their resentment at US health insurers, with Mangione attracting a cult following.
A poll taken in the wake of the shooting showed most Americans believe health insurance profits and coverage denials were partly to blame for the incident.