cruise

France blames stomach bug for new cruise outbreak, lifts lockdown

Global Edition

UK PM in peril as potential successors jockey for position

BY HELEN ROWE

  • Rayner, a left-wing figurehead hugely popular amongst Labour's grassroots activists, also called on Starmer to "reflect" on his position.
  • British Prime Minister Keir Starmer's future looked increasingly uncertain on Thursday as potential challengers positioned themselves for a possible leadership contest, including popular former deputy Angela Rayner.
  • Rayner, a left-wing figurehead hugely popular amongst Labour's grassroots activists, also called on Starmer to "reflect" on his position.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer's future looked increasingly uncertain on Thursday as potential challengers positioned themselves for a possible leadership contest, including popular former deputy Angela Rayner.
Starmer, who led his Labour party to victory in 2024 elections ending 14 years of Conservative rule, is fighting to save his job after disastrous local and regional polls last week.
Four junior ministers have resigned and more than 80 Labour MPs have urged him to quit, but he has vowed to cling on and more than 100 lawmakers from the ruling party have called for him to stay. 
Although no one has so far broken ranks to formally challenge him, media have widely reported that Health Minister Wes Streeting was preparing to resign on Thursday to run for the top job.
Rayner, meanwhile, announced that UK tax authorities had "cleared" her of deliberate wrongdoing in a tax affair, opening the way for her to compete in a potential leadership race.
The 46-year-old insisted that she would not be the one to trigger a contest, but told the Guardian newspaper she would play "whatever role I can" to "deliver the change".
Rayner, a left-wing figurehead hugely popular amongst Labour's grassroots activists, also called on Starmer to "reflect" on his position.
She was forced to step down in September for underpaying a property duty, but said on Thursday the UK tax authority HMRC had exonerated her of "the accusation that I deliberately sought to avoid tax".
Media reported she had paid off £40,000 ($54,000) in outstanding tax.
"I welcome HMRC's conclusion, which has cleared me of any wrongdoing," she said in a statement.
"I set out to pay the correct amount of tax. I took reasonable care and acted in good faith, based on the expert advice I received, and HMRC has accepted this."

Local poll drubbing

Streeting, 43, is popular on the right of Labour, but is disliked by MPs on the left who would prefer Rayner or Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham as leader.
Burnham is currently blocked from running as he does not have a seat in the Westminster parliament. His supporters want Starmer to set a detailed timetable for his departure that allows Burnham to stand.
Rayner quit as deputy PM and housing, communities and local government minister after an investigation found she had breached the ministerial code over the purchase of a flat in southern England.
Voters last week punished Starmer over his 22 months in power in local ballots which saw huge gains for the hard-right Reform UK party and the left-wing populist Greens at Labour's expense.
The Labour Party lost control of the devolved Welsh parliament for the first time and failed to make up ground on the pro-independence Scottish National Party (SNP) in the parliament in Edinburgh.
Rayner earlier stopped short of calling for Starmer to resign, but said voters were frustrated with the way the government was being run.
"What we are doing isn't working, and it needs to change," she said in a 1,000 word assessment of the party's electoral woes on Sunday.
Under party rules, any challenger would need the support of 81 Labour MPs -- 20 percent of the party in parliament -- to trigger a contest. 
Starmer has vowed to fight any contest and came out fighting on Monday, pledging to do better and prove his doubters "wrong".
Finance Minister Rachel Reeves, in her first comments on the turmoil, urged colleagues Thursday not to put the economy "at risk" by "plunging the country into chaos" with a leadership challenge.
har-pdh/jkb/pdw

aviation

US jury awards $49.5 mn damages to Boeing 737 MAX victim's family

  • In November, a Chicago jury awarded a widower of one of the MAX victims $28.45 million.
  • A US jury awarded $49.5 million in damages on Wednesday to the family of a 24-year-old American who perished in a 2019 Boeing 737 MAX crash.
  • In November, a Chicago jury awarded a widower of one of the MAX victims $28.45 million.
A US jury awarded $49.5 million in damages on Wednesday to the family of a 24-year-old American who perished in a 2019 Boeing 737 MAX crash.
The suit was brought by relatives of Samya Stumo, who died in the March 2019 Ethiopian Airlines crash which claimed a total of 157 lives.
The Chicago jury, which deliberated from around two hours, found that "the total amount of damages suffered by Plaintiff is $49.5 million", according to documents.
Nearly all of the civil lawsuits around the crash had been settled out of court. In Stumo's case, however, her family had been unable to reach an agreement with Boeing ahead of the trial, which began on Monday.
"We are deeply sorry to all who lost loved ones on Lion Air Flight 610 and Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302," Boeing said in a statement.
"While we have resolved nearly all of these claims through settlements, families are entitled to pursue their claims through the court process, and we respect their right to do so."
Stumo was killed en route to Kenya for her first assignment with ThinkWell, a public health NGO that aimed to increase access to health care in Africa and Asia.
But the plane went down shortly after taking off from Addis Ababa, killing everyone aboard. The Ethiopian crash followed a Lion Air crash about four and a half months earlier in Indonesia.
The two crashes claimed 346 lives in total.

'Negligent'

Boeing acknowledged that anti-stall software was implicated in both accidents.
Stumo's family and their lawyer Shanin Specter did not immediately reply to a request for comment from AFP.
Specter told the Chicago federal civil court that Boeing was "negligent", the aircraft was "unsafe" and that "Boeing caused this crash and these deaths."
The trial featured testimony from Stumo's relatives, including father Michael Stumo, who said the disaster still haunts the family.
"It feels like since she's been gone, we don't have permission to be happy," Michael Stumo testified. "Sometimes you catch yourself being happy, and you correct yourself, like you shouldn't be."
Speaking ahead of the verdict, the aviation giant's attorney, Dan Webb, expressed the company's sorrow at the crash.
He said that Boeing's "only disagreement" with the Stumo family was "on the exact amount of compensation."
A US judge dropped criminal charges against Boeing in 2025 over the deadly crashes as part of an agreement between the company and prosecutors.
In November, a Chicago jury awarded a widower of one of the MAX victims $28.45 million. A second trial, in January, was halted after an out-of-court settlement was reached after the second day. 
The next trial is scheduled for August 3 and focuses on the death of Michael Ryan of Ireland.
elm/cms/fox

corruption

South Africa court clears way for Zuma's arms graft trial

  • Once dubbed the "Teflon president", Zuma led South Africa from 2009 until 2018, when the ruling African National Congress (ANC) forced him out as graft scandals engulfed his government.
  • A South African court ruled Thursday that a long-running arms deal corruption case against former president Jacob Zuma and French defence giant Thales can proceed, rejecting bids to delay the trial.
  • Once dubbed the "Teflon president", Zuma led South Africa from 2009 until 2018, when the ruling African National Congress (ANC) forced him out as graft scandals engulfed his government.
A South African court ruled Thursday that a long-running arms deal corruption case against former president Jacob Zuma and French defence giant Thales can proceed, rejecting bids to delay the trial.
The case stems from a 1990s $2 billion arms deal to purchase fighter jets, patrol boats and other military equipment from five European defence companies.
Zuma is accused of taking bribes from Thales in exchange for protecting the firm from an investigation into the deal, when he was deputy president. 
The case has dragged due to judicial and prosecutorial recusals and other procedural challenges in what has become known as "Stop Stalingrad", in reference to a tactic aimed at wearing down proceeding through constant appeals. 
Sitting in the High Court in the southeastern city of Pietermaritzburg, judge Nkosinathi Chili said the "interests of justice" demanded that the case proceed. 
"Without this court's intervention, there is a likelihood of grave injustice or the administration of justice being brought into disrepute," he ruled.
He said there would be no "cognisable harm or grave injustice" if a trial went ahead. 
Zuma, 84, was not present for the judgement. A trial date has yet to be set.
Thales, formerly known as Thomson-CSF, and Zuma face more than a dozen charges of fraud, corruption and racketeering. They deny any wrongdoing.
Once dubbed the "Teflon president", Zuma led South Africa from 2009 until 2018, when the ruling African National Congress (ANC) forced him out as graft scandals engulfed his government.
He is separately accused of enabling the looting of state assets during his tenure.
In 2021, Zuma was sentenced to 15 months in jail after refusing to testify to a panel probing financial corruption and cronyism under his presidency.
He was freed on medical parole two months into his term.
The jailing sparked protests, riots and looting that left more than 350 dead, in South Africa's worst violence since its first democratic election in 1994.
ho/tw

US

Lebanon, Israel to hold new talks in US as ceasefire nears end

BY SHAUN TANDON

  • A Lebanese official told AFP that the country would seek "the consolidation of the ceasefire" during the talks in Washington.
  • Lebanon and Israel are to hold new peace talks in Washington starting Thursday, as their latest ceasefire -- considered to still be in place despite hundreds of deaths in Israeli strikes -- nears its end.
  • A Lebanese official told AFP that the country would seek "the consolidation of the ceasefire" during the talks in Washington.
Lebanon and Israel are to hold new peace talks in Washington starting Thursday, as their latest ceasefire -- considered to still be in place despite hundreds of deaths in Israeli strikes -- nears its end.
Israel's military said it was striking Hezbollah targets in south Lebanon on Thursday after warning residents of several towns and villages there and in the country's east to evacuate. It also said a Hezbollah drone fell in Israeli territory, wounding several civilians.
Lebanon's state-run National News Agency (NNA) reported Israeli airstrikes on the south and east, including in areas not covered by the warning, a day after the health ministry said intense raids killed 22 people, eight of them children.
Lebanese and Israeli representatives last met on April 23 at the White House, where US President Donald Trump announced a three-week ceasefire extension and voiced optimism for a groundbreaking agreement between the countries, which have technically been at war for decades.
Trump at the time made the bold prediction that during the three-week extension he would welcome Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun to Washington for a historic first summit between the countries.
The summit did not happen, with Aoun saying a security deal and an end to Israeli attacks were needed before such a landmark meeting.
Hezbollah lawmaker Ali Ammar on Thursday reiterated his group's rejection of the direct talks, saying they amounted to "free concessions" to Israel.
The ceasefire, which began on April 17, lasts through Sunday. 

Ongoing strikes

Still, Israeli strikes have killed more than 400 people during the truce, according to an AFP tally of health ministry figures.
Israel has vowed to keep pursuing attacks against Hezbollah, the Shia armed group and political movement backed by Iran's ruling clerics.
Hezbollah drew Lebanon into the Middle East war on March 2 with rocket fire at Israel in retaliation for the killing of Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in US-Israeli strikes days earlier.
"Anyone who threatens the State of Israel will die because of his actions," Netanyahu said last week after an Israeli strike on Beirut's southern suburbs killed a senior Hezbollah commander.
A Lebanese official told AFP that the country would seek "the consolidation of the ceasefire" during the talks in Washington.
"The first thing is to put an end to the death and destruction," the official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
Iran has demanded a lasting ceasefire in Lebanon before any agreement to end the wider war in the region, and it has frustrated Trump by refusing his appeals for an accord on his terms.
The Middle East war has roiled the global economy and impacted hundreds of millions of people worldwide.
Israeli attacks since March 2 have killed more than 2,800 people in Lebanon, including at least 200 children, according to Lebanese authorities, a toll Hezbollah says includes its fighters.
Israel has pounded Hezbollah strongholds in the south and Beirut's southern suburbs, and has invaded the border region, parts of which Israel previously occupied for around two decades until withdrawing in 2000.

Disarmament push

Lebanon has repeatedly called for Israel to withdraw its troops from the south, and insists on extending state sovereignty over all its territory as part of a commitment last year to disarm Hezbollah. 
Washington has endorsed Beirut's commitment to do so, while pressing it to take more action.
The United States believes "comprehensive peace is contingent on the full restoration of Lebanese state authority and the complete disarmament of Hezbollah," a State Department statement said.
"These talks aim to break decisively from the failed approach of the past two decades, which allowed terrorist groups to entrench and enrich themselves, undermine the authority of the Lebanese state, and endanger Israel's northern border," it said.
Thursday's meeting will be the third round of talks between the two countries, which have no diplomatic relations.
Unlike the previous two rounds, neither Secretary of State Marco Rubio nor Trump will participate as both are on a state visit to China.
The US mediators for the two-day meeting at the State Department will include the ambassadors to Israel and Lebanon -- respectively Mike Huckabee, an evangelical pastor and staunch supporter of Israel's regional ambitions, and Michel Issa, a Lebanese-born businessman and golf partner of Trump -- as well as Mike Needham, a close aide to Rubio.
Lebanon will be represented by special envoy Simon Karam, a veteran lawyer and diplomat who has fiercely defended Lebanon's sovereignty, as well as its ambassador in Washington.
Israel's team will include its ambassador in Washington, Yechiel Leiter, a Netanyahu ally who is close with the Israeli settler movement in the occupied West Bank.
burs-sct/hol/lg/smw

diplomacy

Xi warns Trump on Taiwan at Beijing summit

BY DANNY KEMP, ISABEL KUA AND LUDOVIC EHRET

  • The Chinese president said pre-summit talks between top officials in South Korea on trade had "reached results that were generally balanced and positive". 
  • Chinese President Xi Jinping warned his US counterpart Donald Trump that missteps on Taiwan could push their two countries into "conflict", a stark opening salvo as they met in Beijing on Thursday at a superpower summit.
  • The Chinese president said pre-summit talks between top officials in South Korea on trade had "reached results that were generally balanced and positive". 
Chinese President Xi Jinping warned his US counterpart Donald Trump that missteps on Taiwan could push their two countries into "conflict", a stark opening salvo as they met in Beijing on Thursday at a superpower summit.
Trump had arrived in China with accolades for his host, calling Xi a "great leader" and "friend", as he predicted their countries would have "a fantastic future together".
But beyond the pomp as he welcomed Trump, Xi in less effusive tones said the two sides "should be partners and not rivals", while highlighting the issue of Taiwan -- which Beijing claims as its territory -- straight off the bat. 
"The Taiwan question is the most important issue in China-US relations," Xi said, according to remarks published by Chinese state media shortly after the start of the talks, which lasted two hours 15 minutes. 
"If mishandled, the two nations could collide or even come into conflict, pushing the entire China-US relationship into a highly perilous situation," Xi added.
Trump's trip to Beijing is the first by a US president in nearly a decade, with the grand reception belying a roster of unresolved trade and geopolitical tensions between the two countries.
Xi greeted Trump with a red-carpet welcome at the opulent Great Hall of the People, with military band fanfare, a 21-gun salute and a host of schoolchildren jumping and chanting "welcome!".
Seemingly enjoying the ceremony, Trump said "the relationship between China and the USA is going to be better than ever before".
Xi instead referenced an ancient Greek political theory about the risks of war when a rising power rivals a ruling power.
"Can China and the United States transcend the so-called 'Thucydides Trap' and forge a new paradigm for major-power relations?" Xi asked, adding that "cooperation benefits both sides, while confrontation harms both".
There has been plenty of the latter since Trump's last visit in 2017, with the two countries having spent much of 2025 embroiled in a dizzying trade war and at odds on many major global issues.

'Blunt language'

Taiwan is a longstanding sore point.
The United States recognises only Beijing but under domestic law is required to provide weapons to Taiwan for its defence.
China has sworn to take the self-ruled democracy and has not ruled out using force, ramping up military pressure in recent years.
Following Xi's Thursday comments, Taipei called China the "sole risk" to regional peace, and insisted "the US side has repeatedly reaffirmed its clear and firm support".
Trump had said Monday he would speak to Xi about US arms sales to Taiwan, a departure from Washington's historic insistence that it will not consult Beijing on the matter.
The White House said the initial talks on Thursday had been "good", though it did not mention Taiwan in the readout.
Adam Ni, editor of newsletter China Neican, told AFP that while Xi's "blunt language" was not uncommon in Chinese foreign policy, it was unusual coming from the leader himself. 
China has been "signalling a desire for US compromise on Taiwan", the National University of Singapore's Chong Ja Ian told AFP. 
Xi's demand could suggest "they see some opportunity to convince Trump", he said. 

Iran overshadows

In its brief readout, the White House said the leaders talked about the Iran war, an issue which analysts have said could weaken Trump's position, having already forced him to postpone this trip.
The two sides "agreed that the Strait of Hormuz must remain open to support the free flow of energy", the White House said. 
According to the Americans, Xi also said China was opposed to the militarisation of the vital waterway, or any attempt to charge for its use. 
The Chinese foreign ministry earlier said the Middle East had been discussed but did not give further details. 
The two men also discussed economic cooperation, with Trump hoping for business deals on agriculture, aircraft and other sectors. 
Elite businessmen in his delegation, including Nvidia's Jensen Huang and Tesla's Elon Musk, were at the welcome ceremony and joined for a portion of the Trump-Xi talks, the White House said. 
Xi told the executives China's "doors to the outside world will open wider and wider", state media reported. 
The Chinese president said pre-summit talks between top officials in South Korea on trade had "reached results that were generally balanced and positive". 
He urged both sides to "safeguard the current hard-won positive momentum", with the presidents set to discuss extending the one-year tariff truce reached during their last meeting in October.
The Ukraine conflict and North Korea were also discussed at Thursday's meeting, China's foreign ministry said. 
Taking a break from negotiating, the two men visited the Temple of Heaven, a World Heritage site where China's emperors once prayed for good harvests.
They will return to the Great Hall of the People this evening for a state banquet. 
dk-mya/reb/hmn

conflict

Russia pummels Kyiv, killing three and denting peace hopes

BY STANISLAV DOSHCHITSYN AND SERHII OKUNEV

  • On Wednesday, an hours-long barrage of at least 800 Russian drones targeting mainly western Ukraine killed six people and wounded dozens of others.
  • Russia pummelled Kyiv for hours early on Thursday with hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles in an attack that killed at least three people, further shredding hopes of a halt to Moscow's grinding invasion.
  • On Wednesday, an hours-long barrage of at least 800 Russian drones targeting mainly western Ukraine killed six people and wounded dozens of others.
Russia pummelled Kyiv for hours early on Thursday with hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles in an attack that killed at least three people, further shredding hopes of a halt to Moscow's grinding invasion.
AFP journalists in the capital heard air raid sirens wailing before several hours of thunderous explosions sent Kyiv residents running to shelter in metro stations.
The Ukrainian air force said Russia had launched 675 attack drones and 56 missiles mainly at Kyiv, adding its air defence units had downed 652 of the drones and 41 missiles.
"Everything was burning. People were screaming... people were shouting. It was on fire," Andriy, a Kyiv resident still wearing a nightgown and with blood stains on his shirt, told AFP near a collapsed Soviet-era residential building.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said more than 20 locations in Kyiv had been damaged, including residential buildings, a school, a vet clinic and other civilian infrastructure facilities.
"These are definitely not the actions of those who believe the war is coming to an end. It is important that partners do not remain silent about this strike," he added.
At daybreak, AFP journalists witnessed chaotic scenes as rescue workers dug through the debris of a residential building gutted in the attack.
Emergency service workers were seen hauling from the site those wounded and killed in the strikes.
The mayor of Kyiv, Vitali Klitschko, said 40 people were wounded, including two children, while Ukrainian emergency services said three people had been killed.

Scaled-up attacks after truce

Russia has fired more than 1,500 drones at Ukraine over the last 36 hours, Kyiv's air force said.
The barrage is the latest major setback for efforts to end the conflict after US President Donald Trump raised faint hopes for peace by brokering a three-day ceasefire between Kyiv and Moscow last week, and Russia's leader Vladimir Putin suggested the war could be winding down.
That ceasefire -- put in place as Putin presided over a scaled-down military parade in Red Square to mark the anniversary of victory in World War II -- was marred by allegations of violations by both sides.
And both Ukraine and Russia launched long-range drone attacks immediately after it ended on Tuesday.
The Kremlin has poured cold water on the idea that Putin's vague comments, issued Saturday, about the war "heading to an end" could mean a softening in Moscow's position.
On Wednesday it repeated its demand that Ukraine fully withdraw from the eastern Donbas region before a ceasefire and full-scale peace talks can take place.
Kyiv has rejected such a move as tantamount to capitulation.
Russia has pounded Ukrainian cities for more than four years, but it usually launches large-scale drone and missile attacks at night.
On Wednesday, an hours-long barrage of at least 800 Russian drones targeting mainly western Ukraine killed six people and wounded dozens of others.
Zelensky has since urged Trump to discuss ending the conflict during his meetings in Beijing this week with Chinese leader Xi Jinping.
A senior Ukrainian presidency official told AFP the scale of Thursday's attacks was so large because there had been an earlier pause and linked its timing to the meeting between the US and Chinese leaders.
The official called it "a demonstration during Trump's talks in China", without elaborating.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 has spurred the worst conflict in Europe since World War II, killing hundreds of thousands of people and displacing millions more.
burs-jbr/jc/rlp

diplomacy

Subdued Trump left waiting for 'big hug' from Xi

BY DANNY KEMP

  • Standing stiff and unsmiling next to Chinese President Xi Jinping, Trump appeared unmoved by the former imperial temple in Beijing where emperors once prayed for good harvests.
  • Donald Trump paid a visit to the Temple of Heaven in the Chinese capital on Thursday, but the US president had a face like thunder.
  • Standing stiff and unsmiling next to Chinese President Xi Jinping, Trump appeared unmoved by the former imperial temple in Beijing where emperors once prayed for good harvests.
Donald Trump paid a visit to the Temple of Heaven in the Chinese capital on Thursday, but the US president had a face like thunder.
Standing stiff and unsmiling next to Chinese President Xi Jinping, Trump appeared unmoved by the former imperial temple in Beijing where emperors once prayed for good harvests.
The 79-year-old American leader, who rarely misses a chance to talk to reporters, arrived in Beijing the night before after a lengthy 16-hour flight, and was uncharacteristically subdued as he was guided around the temple by Xi.
Asked by reporters including AFP how earlier talks with the Chinese leader had gone, a seemingly tired Trump replied: "Great."
"Great place. Incredible. China's beautiful," he added.
But he ignored two questions on whether they had discussed Taiwan, after Xi warned that differences between the United States and China over the self-governing island claimed by Beijing could lead to conflict.
Trump had claimed before heading to China for the first time in nearly a decade that Xi would give him a "big, fat hug".
But that did not happen.
The atmosphere had been less frosty when Trump arrived at the dominating Great Hall of the People for the talks.
The Chinese were careful to appeal to Trump's love of pomp, greeting him with marching bands, soldiers in lockstep and a cannon salute that echoed through Tiananmen Square.
Trump beamed and applauded when hundreds of Chinese schoolchildren in brightly coloured outfits waved flags and flowers and chanted "welcome, welcome, warm welcome".
The two leaders shook hands warmly, Trump patting Xi's hand, and exchanged a few words on the red carpet before the cameras.
Trump -- who has insisted that his personal relationship with Xi will win business deals -- praised the Chinese president as a "great friend" and "great leader".

'Come into conflict'

But times have changed since he last visited Beijing in 2017, and he is now in a more assertive China -- one that did not immediately call Trump a friend in return.
Behind the scenes, it appeared that Xi had set out an uncompromising stance on Taiwan, according to comments released by state media.
Trump had also come looking for China's help to end the Iran war, and to extend a trade truce with Beijing, but there was no immediate sign of a breakthrough.
Instead, there was virtual silence from Trump, who refrained from commenting on his Truth Social platform that he normally posts on multiple times a day, and from the White House.
And as Xi warned that the world's two largest economies could "come into conflict" if Washington mishandles the Taiwan issue, minor skirmishes broke out on the sidelines of their meeting.
At the Great Hall of the People, journalists from both sides jostled each other to get a place before the meeting as US and Chinese officials tried to keep order.
Then at the Temple of Heaven, US and Chinese officials held a tense discussion after local security blocked a US Secret Service agent accompanying travelling journalists from entering the complex with his weapon.
As temperatures in Beijing creeped to above 30C, Chinese officials refused to allow US reporters, including an AFP journalist, to leave a side room where they were being held and join Trump's motorcade to his hotel.
Amid raised voices, White House officials and journalists eventually pushed past the Chinese officials to make it to their vans before the US president drove off without them.
dk/dhw/jm

diplomacy

Iran war and oil dominate BRICS meet in India

  • "Ongoing conflicts, economic uncertainties, and challenges in trade, technology, and climate are shaping the global landscape," Jaishankar added, saying many countries "continue to face challenges on energy, food, fertiliser and health security".
  • BRICS nations, including Iran and Russia, met in New Delhi on Thursday, where India warned of "considerable flux" in a world hit by conflict, economic uncertainty and energy insecurity.
  • "Ongoing conflicts, economic uncertainties, and challenges in trade, technology, and climate are shaping the global landscape," Jaishankar added, saying many countries "continue to face challenges on energy, food, fertiliser and health security".
BRICS nations, including Iran and Russia, met in New Delhi on Thursday, where India warned of "considerable flux" in a world hit by conflict, economic uncertainty and energy insecurity.
War in Iran and the related fuel crisis are dominating discussions in the two-day gathering.
India was hosting the foreign ministers from the expanded bloc that now includes Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates -- countries at odds over the conflict launched by the United States and Israel on February 28.
"We meet at a time of considerable flux in international relations," India's Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar said, in his opening speech, before closed meetings began.
Among the foreign ministers attending were Iran's Abbas Araghchi and Russia's Sergei Lavrov.
"Ongoing conflicts, economic uncertainties, and challenges in trade, technology, and climate are shaping the global landscape," Jaishankar added, saying many countries "continue to face challenges on energy, food, fertiliser and health security".
Disruptions around Gulf shipping routes and the Strait of Hormuz continue to drive volatility in oil and gas markets, increasing pressure on energy-importing economies, including India.
India's foreign ministry also condemned an attack on an Indian-flagged ship off Oman on Wednesday as "unacceptable" -- with all sailors rescued safely by Muscat.
"We deplore the fact that commercial shipping and civilian mariners continue to be targeted," the foreign ministry said, without giving further details of who launched the attack.
Araghchi, speaking in New Delhi, insisted that the Strait of Hormuz "is open for all" commercial vessels who "cooperate" with its navy.
"There is no such thing as a military solution to anything related to Iran," Araghchi said. "We Iranians never bow to any pressure or threat, but we reciprocate the language of respect."

'Volatile global environment'

The conflict involving Iran has added strain to India's economy, heavily reliant on Middle Eastern energy supplies and fertiliser imports, and has cast uncertainty over New Delhi's growth outlook.
India, the world's third-largest oil buyer, normally sources about half of its crude through the Strait of Hormuz, a vital waterway that has been repeatedly blocked since war began.
Ship‑tracking and import data show that India has partially plugged the gap by turning to old allies, expanding promising ties and reviving suppliers it had not tapped in years.
The biggest backstop has been Russian crude -- a fuel source New Delhi spent much of the past year trying to pivot away from under stiff US tariffs.
Jaishankar met with Lavrov on Wednesday evening.
"Our political cooperation is even more valuable in an uncertain and volatile global environment," Jaishankar said in remarks at the meeting, adding that discussions included "trade and investment, energy and connectivity". 
BRICS was created in 2009 as a forum for major emerging economies seeking greater influence in institutions dominated by Western powers.
The grouping, originally comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, has since expanded, as members sought to boost the bloc's global political and economic influence.
It now includes Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia and the United Arab Emirates.
China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi was not attending -- with US President Donald Trump in Beijing on Thursday.
India will hold a leaders' summit later this year, and the foreign ministers will also meet with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the foreign ministry said.
With deep divisions among some members, including over the Middle East war and criticism of Western powers, it was not clear whether a joint statement would be released at the meeting's end.
burs-pjm/jm

politics

Ex-Philippine drug war enforcer flees Senate refuge

  • Dela Rosa, the police chief from 2016-2018 during the first two years of former president Rodrigo Duterte's anti-narcotics crackdown that killed thousands, disappeared from public view in November last year.
  • The chief enforcer of former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte's deadly drug war has fled the Senate, where he had sought refuge this week to escape arrest for crimes against humanity, the chamber's president said on Thursday.
  • Dela Rosa, the police chief from 2016-2018 during the first two years of former president Rodrigo Duterte's anti-narcotics crackdown that killed thousands, disappeared from public view in November last year.
The chief enforcer of former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte's deadly drug war has fled the Senate, where he had sought refuge this week to escape arrest for crimes against humanity, the chamber's president said on Thursday.
"The sergeant at arms has confirmed that Senator Bato is no longer in the building," Senate President Alan Peter Cayetano told a news conference, referring to Senator Ronald Dela Rosa by his nickname.
Dela Rosa, the police chief from 2016-2018 during the first two years of former president Rodrigo Duterte's anti-narcotics crackdown that killed thousands, disappeared from public view in November last year.
He showed up at the Senate on Monday and narrowly evaded arrest by government agents who chased him up the stairs.
Dela Rosa said he would fight efforts to arrest him and turn him over to the Netherlands-based International Criminal Court (ICC).
Duterte was arrested in March last year and flown to the Netherlands, where he is being held in The Hague awaiting trial.
Cayetano said Dela Rosa's wife sent him a message confirming that her husband had left the building.
He did not say where Dela Rosa had gone and angrily denied accusations that the Senate leadership had helped Dela Rosa leave and evade government agents seeking to arrest him.
The ICC confirmed it had issued an arrest warrant for Dela Rosa, accusing him of the crime against humanity of murder.
Police and a National Bureau of Investigation employee both fired into the air during a tense confrontation at the Senate complex on Wednesday night, forcing legislators to take cover inside their offices.
Cayetano said Dela Rosa's disappearance was discovered earlier on Thursday, shortly after police announced the arrest of the government agent alleged to have fired warning shots on Wednesday night.
Police seized live ammunition from the man they arrested, who was being tested for gunshot residue.
cgm/pbt

Global Edition

Asia stocks uneven as investors assess high-stakes Trump-Xi talks, AI rally

  • The cautious mood came after another tech-led rally on Wall Street, where the Nasdaq and S&P 500 hit record highs, driven by continued enthusiasm for artificial intelligence investment.
  • Asian markets were mixed Thursday as investors weighed high-stakes US-China talks and persistent inflation concerns, which tempered optimism fuelled by record highs on Wall Street.
  • The cautious mood came after another tech-led rally on Wall Street, where the Nasdaq and S&P 500 hit record highs, driven by continued enthusiasm for artificial intelligence investment.
Asian markets were mixed Thursday as investors weighed high-stakes US-China talks and persistent inflation concerns, which tempered optimism fuelled by record highs on Wall Street.
US President Donald Trump and Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping met in Beijing for a closely watched summit that covered thorny issues including Taiwan, but yielded few concrete outcomes in its opening phase.
The cautious mood came after another tech-led rally on Wall Street, where the Nasdaq and S&P 500 hit record highs, driven by continued enthusiasm for artificial intelligence investment.
Trump praised Xi as a "great leader" and "friend", predicting a "fantastic future together" in talks lasting more than two hours at the Great Hall of the People.
Xi, however, delivered a blunt warning on Taiwan -- which Beijing claims as its territory -- saying missteps could push the two powers into conflict.
Accompanying Trump was a US delegation including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and high-powered business leaders such as Nvidia's Jensen Huang, Apple's Tim Cook and Tesla's Elon Musk.
"China's doors to the outside world will open wider and wider... American companies will enjoy even brighter prospects in China," Xi told the business executives, according to Chinese state media.
Experts said the presence of top executives underscored the deep economic interdependence between the two nations despite years of tensions and talk of decoupling.
SPI Asset Management's Stephen Innes said in a comment that Beijing used the summit to project "stability, strategic coexistence, and economic interdependence".
"The presence of top US corporate leaders highlighted how deeply connected the American and Chinese economic systems still remain," he added.
He warned the key risks facing markets were increasingly intertwined.
"Rare earths, AI, Taiwan, and the Strait of Hormuz are now interconnected strategic pressure points shaping the next phase of global market risk," Innes said.
The meeting in Beijing took place against the backdrop of conflict in the Middle East, which has disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and driven energy prices higher.
International benchmark Brent crude hovered just above $105 a barrel on Thursday.
Across Asia, Seoul led gains as the Kospi climbed 1.75 percent, nearing the 8,000 mark. Taipei, Mumbai, Bangkok and Manila also advanced.
Shanghai, Tokyo, Jakarta, Wellington and Singapore slid. Hong Kong was flat.
Following Wall Street's lead, Taiwanese tech giant Foxconn reported a 19-percent jump in quarterly net profit, fuelled by booming demand for AI servers, and forecast strong growth in shipments this year.
But there were signs of strain elsewhere. 
Japanese automaker Honda announced a $2.6 billion operating loss, its first since 1957, after a sweeping overhaul of its electric vehicle strategy in the United States, citing heavy charges and policy shifts under the Trump administration.
Honda blamed tariffs and the removal of EV incentives, as well as intensifying competition in China.
London, Paris and Frankfurt opened on the front foot, tracking the positive lead from Wall Street.
The Nasdaq led major US indices Wednesday, piling on 1.2 percent behind big gains in most tech giants, including Nvidia and Google parent Alphabet.
That came despite a US wholesale inflation report that greatly exceeded expectations, following Tuesday's rise in the consumer price index.
Wholesale prices rose six percent for the 12 months ending in April, according to US Department of Labor data.
Month-on-month increases greatly exceeded expectations and were at their highest level since March 2022.

Key figures at around 0820 GMT

Brent North Sea Crude: UP 1.20 percent at 106.90 a barrel
West Texas Intermediate: UP 1.20 percent at 102.18 a barrel
Tokyo - Nikkei 225: DOWN 1.0 percent at 62,654.05 (close)
Hong Kong - Hang Seng Index: FLAT at 26,389.04 (close)
Shanghai - Composite: DOWN 1.5 percent at 4,177.92 (close)
London - FTSE 100: FLAT at 10,321.42
Pound/dollar: DOWN at 1.3514 from $1.3522 on Wednesday
Euro/pound: UP at 86.65 from 86.59
Euro/dollar: DOWN at 1.1709 from $1.1714
Dollar/yen: UP at 157.89 from 157.87 
New York - DOW: DOWN 0.1 percent at 49,693.20 (close)
New York - S&P 500: UP 0.6 percent at 7,444.25 (close)
New York - Nasdaq Composite: UP 1.2 percent 26,402.34 (close)
abs/fox

television

Denmark, Australia in the spotlight in Eurovision second semi

BY ROBIN MILLARD

  • This year, the semi-finals are being decided by public vote and also by professional juries.
  • The last 10 places in the Eurovision final are up for grabs in Thursday's second semi, with Denmark and Australia hotly tipped to make it through once the votes are counted.
  • This year, the semi-finals are being decided by public vote and also by professional juries.
The last 10 places in the Eurovision final are up for grabs in Thursday's second semi, with Denmark and Australia hotly tipped to make it through once the votes are counted.
Fifteen countries will do battle at the Wiener Stadthalle for the remaining spots in Saturday's showpiece at Austria's biggest indoor arena.
Eurovision is the world's biggest live televised music event, typically reaching more than 150 million viewers, and Vienna 2026 is the 70th edition of the glitzy show where spectacle and drama go hand in hand.
Denmark's Soren Torpegaard Lund, whose background is in musical theatre, is gaining traction with "For Vi Gar Hjem" ("Before We Go Home"), a pop song tinged with electro.
"I'm a big fan of the show and I have been since I was a kid. So, it's crazy to me that I'm here now," he told AFP on Sunday.
Australia has appeared at Eurovision by invitation since 2015, finishing runner-up in 2016.
But the country could go one better this time around thanks to established star Delta Goodrem.
The 41-year-old had a string of international hits in the early 2000s and is singing "Eclipse", evoking a romantic alignment of the planets.
"For those who might have had my music many years ago in their hearts and they've just rediscovered it again, I hope that they would join me in this moment," she told AFP.
"And for those who I've just met, just know that my heart is open to all to be there and to be able to enjoy this timing and music and empower the listener."

'Bangaranga'

Along with Denmark and Australia, Romania and Ukraine are the favourites to progress to the 70th Eurovision Song Contest grand final.
But it could be Goodnight Vienna for Azerbaijan, Luxembourg, Armenia and Switzerland, according to the bookmakers.
Bulgarian pop singer Dara is set to get Thursday's concert under way with "Bangaranga", opening the extravaganza with the lines: "Come alive / Surrender to the blinding lights / No one's gonna sleep tonight / Welcome to the riot."
"Bella" is Malta's first entry to contain the Maltese language since a few lines were used in 2000.
Norway's Jonas Lovv will round out proceedings with "Ya Ya Ya".

Fanzone fun

The 11,200 tickets for each concert were snapped up by fans from more than 75 countries.
The song contest has a hardcore following and the Eurovision village erected in front of Vienna City Hall has been drawing in fans, with karaoke and photobooths among the attractions.
"I've been a few times and I just love it. We usually go and just make costumes of the people who we like the best," said Croatian fan Sasha.
"Everybody's here for Eurovision and everybody loves it so much. There's no crazy people, there's no idiots who will just like get drunk and make problems. It's always fun, fun, fun," he told AFP.
Austrian fan Markus said part of the joy was "listening to music from countries that we don't usually listen to".

Finland, Greece through

Ten countries made it through from Tuesday's first semi-final.
They included overall favourites Finland, plus Greece, Israel, Sweden and Moldova.
Five countries pulled out of this year's Eurovision over Israel's participation -- the biggest political boycott in the show's history dating back to 1956.
A pro-Palestinian demonstrator who heckled during Israel's performance was thrown out on Tuesday, while three others were also ejected for disruptive behaviour.
Protests are planned in Vienna city during the rest of Eurovision week.
This year, the semi-finals are being decided by public vote and also by professional juries.
Eurovision major financial backers Britain, France, Germany and Italy have guaranteed spots in Saturday's 25-country final, alongside hosts Austria.
bur-rjm/jxb

Israel

US court suspends sanctions on UN expert on Palestinians

  • In his court order Wednesday, US District Judge Richard Leon granted a preliminary injunction against the sanctions, according to a court filing seen by AFP. "Protecting the freedom of speech is 'always' in the public interest," Leon wrote in an opinion accompanying the order.
  • A US judge on Wednesday imposed a temporary injunction on sanctions imposed last year by Washington on a United Nations expert on the occupied Palestinian territories.
  • In his court order Wednesday, US District Judge Richard Leon granted a preliminary injunction against the sanctions, according to a court filing seen by AFP. "Protecting the freedom of speech is 'always' in the public interest," Leon wrote in an opinion accompanying the order.
A US judge on Wednesday imposed a temporary injunction on sanctions imposed last year by Washington on a United Nations expert on the occupied Palestinian territories.
UN Human Rights Council Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese was sanctioned in July 2025 after she publicly criticized Washington's policy on Gaza.
In announcing the sanctions, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio slammed the UN expert's criticism of the United States and said she recommended to the International Criminal Court that arrest warrants be issued against Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The Italian-born expert, who assumed her mandate in 2022, has faced harsh criticism by Israel and some of its allies over her relentless criticism and long-standing accusations that Israel is committing "genocide" in Gaza.
In his court order Wednesday, US District Judge Richard Leon granted a preliminary injunction against the sanctions, according to a court filing seen by AFP.
"Protecting the freedom of speech is 'always' in the public interest," Leon wrote in an opinion accompanying the order.
Albanese, who said the US sanctions were "calculated to weaken my mission" when they were first imposed, and celebrated the ruling on social media.
"Thanks to my daughter and my husband for stepping up to defend me, and everyone who has helped so far," Albanese said in a statement on X. "Together we are One."
UN special rapporteurs like Albanese are independent experts who are appointed by the UN rights council but do not speak on behalf of the United Nations.
jgc/sla

US

'Promised to us': The Israelis dreaming of settling south Lebanon

BY ALICE CHANCELLOR

  • In the occupied West Bank, the government has greenlit a major expansion of Israeli settlements and far-right ministers have openly called for the territory's annexation.
  • From her home in an Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank, Anna Sloutskin yearns to expand her country's borders and one day move to southern Lebanon.
  • In the occupied West Bank, the government has greenlit a major expansion of Israeli settlements and far-right ministers have openly called for the territory's annexation.
From her home in an Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank, Anna Sloutskin yearns to expand her country's borders and one day move to southern Lebanon. And she is not alone.
With fighting between Israel and Hezbollah displacing more than a million Lebanese, a far-right fringe of Israel's settler movement is turning its gaze northwards.
Uri Tzafon, or "Awake, North Wind", comprises dozens of families, according to Sloutskin, a 37-year-old research biologist who says the movement has seen growing traction since she co-founded it in 2024.
The group envisages Israel's northern border extending to at least the Litani river, which runs some 30 kilometres (19 miles) deep into Lebanese territory, and aims to establish a permanent Israeli civilian presence in the area.
"The idea is that most of the population flees, we move the border, and we do not let that population return, and it remains a part of the State of Israel by declaration," said Sloutskin, who formed the movement in memory of her brother Israel Sokol, an Israeli soldier killed in Gaza in 2024.
"He dreamed of settling in Lebanon," she told AFP from a hilltop lookout dedicated to Sokol near the settlement of Karnei Shomron in the northern West Bank.
"He said he wanted to live in a place that is green in the summer and white in the winter."
The Israeli government has given no public political support to the movement to settle southern Lebanon.
In the occupied West Bank, the government has greenlit a major expansion of Israeli settlements and far-right ministers have openly called for the territory's annexation.
Excluding east Jerusalem, more than 500,000 Israelis live in the occupied West Bank in settlements that are illegal under international law, among some three million Palestinians.
Sloutskin insisted that Jewish settlement in southern Lebanon was key to Israel's security and ending the cycle of conflict with Iran-backed Hezbollah.
"What the IDF is doing right now is the first stage," Sloutskin said, referring to the Israeli military.
"The IDF goes in, conquers, and clears. And afterwards we must not withdraw, but settle."
Following its invasion of parts of southern Lebanon, the Israeli military said forces may have to remain in the area without specifying for how long.
A ceasefire has been in place since mid-April, and Israeli and Lebanese negotiators are holding a new round of talks in Washington.

'Nile to the Euphrates'

On a WhatsApp channel with more than 600 members, Uri Tzafon posts invites to online meetings and maps showing supposedly ancient Jewish settlements in southern Lebanon.
On Telegram, their number of followers sits at over 900.
Contract farmworker, Ori Plasse, joined the group in its early days after being actively involved in settlements in both the West Bank and Gaza.
The 51-year-old, who emigrated from Manhattan in the 1990s, told AFP that he and a group of others drove into Lebanon through an open border gate a year and a half ago.
The intention, he said, was to set up a tent, plant trees and "start something that would pick up momentum."
He was soon escorted out by Israeli soldiers but described the experience as "amazing".
"You feel like you're home, you feel it's your country," he said from his house in Moshav Sde Yaakov in northern Israel.
In February, Uri Tzafon organised another tree-planting trip to the border, publishing photos of children smiling alongside Israeli flags and placards erected next to the wall.
The Israeli military condemned the incident in which it said two civilians crossed the fence, constituting a criminal offence endangering civilians and troops.
In his garden, Plasse enthusiastically opened an old shipping container holding supplies to build settlements -- including mattresses, sleeping bags and plastic sheets.
Inside, he flicked through a book with maps showing Israel's borders spanning from parts of modern-day Egypt to Iraq.
"Anybody who follows the Old Testament... should know that the land of Israel is promised to us from, basically most people say it's the Nile and to the Euphrates River," said Plasse.

'Under the table' support

Ahead of elections due later this year, Plasse said Uri Tzafon would try to get support from politicians, but admitted their responses had so far been "vague".
Sloutskin, however, insisted there was backing from some lawmakers and even ministers.
"Some say it openly, some say it under the table, but there is definitely support," she said.
Last month, Uri Tzafon published a photo of Sloutskin meeting with Environmental Protection Minister Idit Silman, captioned: "During the meeting with the minister, the issue of taking the territory was raised."
The dream of settling Lebanon sits on the ultra-nationalist margins of Israeli society, but both Sloutskin and Plasse were certain their views would become more mainstream with time.
In his sparsely decorated home, Plasse proudly displayed a certificate of appreciation for Gaza settlement activists, signed by far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and deputy speaker of the Israeli parliament Limor Son Har-Melech.
"Ultimately, it has to be the people who want it," Sloutskin said. "The people must lead."
acc/jd/ser/hol

aviation

Historic Swiss solar-powered plane crashes into sea

  • Skydweller Aero said Solar Impulse 2 took off from Stennis, Mississippi on April 26 but crashed into the Gulf of Mexico on May 4.
  • The experimental plane Solar Impulse 2, which completed a historic round-the-world trip in 2016 without using jet fuel, crashed into the Gulf of Mexico recently, its owner revealed.
  • Skydweller Aero said Solar Impulse 2 took off from Stennis, Mississippi on April 26 but crashed into the Gulf of Mexico on May 4.
The experimental plane Solar Impulse 2, which completed a historic round-the-world trip in 2016 without using jet fuel, crashed into the Gulf of Mexico recently, its owner revealed.
Flown by Swiss pilots Bertrand Piccard and Andre Borschberg, Solar Impulse 2 circumnavigated the globe in 17 stages, covering a remarkable 26,700 miles (43,000 kilometers) across four continents, two oceans and three seas, in 23 days of flying without using a drop of fuel.
Three years after the globe-trotting flight, the solar-powered vessel was sold to Skydweller Aero, which converted the aircraft into a drone to carry out "controlled ditching," the company said in a press release issued Tuesday.
Skydweller Aero said Solar Impulse 2 took off from Stennis, Mississippi on April 26 but crashed into the Gulf of Mexico on May 4.
"Ultimately, a record-breaking flight of 8 days and 14 minutes validates the reality of perpetual, solar-powered flight in a military mission-relevant environment," the company said, in reference to a US Navy exercise in which the vessel was used.
The US National Transportation Safety Board said it was investigating the accident.
bar/jgc/sla

candidate

A woman UN leader is 'historical justice,' says Ecuadoran contender for top job

BY AMéLIE BOTTOLLIER-DEPOIS

  • "Some people say it is time" that a woman leads the UN, "and I believe it is a matter of historical justice," she told AFP.  "But I think it's also an issue of merit, of having the full pool of merit, experience and knowledge to the service of the United Nations."
  • The appointment of a woman to the UN's top job is a question of "historical justice" according to Maria Fernanda Espinosa, who is seeking to become the organization's first female leader.
  • "Some people say it is time" that a woman leads the UN, "and I believe it is a matter of historical justice," she told AFP.  "But I think it's also an issue of merit, of having the full pool of merit, experience and knowledge to the service of the United Nations."
The appointment of a woman to the UN's top job is a question of "historical justice" according to Maria Fernanda Espinosa, who is seeking to become the organization's first female leader.
The Ecuadoran former minister of foreign affairs and defense professed her "deep love" for the UN as she unveiled her bid to lead it from 2027, joining a growing field of four contenders -- including two other women.
"Some people say it is time" that a woman leads the UN, "and I believe it is a matter of historical justice," she told AFP. 
"But I think it's also an issue of merit, of having the full pool of merit, experience and knowledge to the service of the United Nations."
"We cannot leave half of the world's population outside of that possibility. And I think if we really want change and transformation why not to have, after 80 years, a woman and the right woman leading the organization," she added, pointing to a need for "different perspectives" in dangerous times.
While the world is experiencing a surge of wars in the post-Second World War era, the current selection process is playing out against a backdrop of political and financial crisis, and accusations of inaction.
Espinosa said that in that context "the UN has to adapt to the times we live in right now. It's not the other way around," calling for more ambitious reforms than those announced by outgoing UN boss Antonio Guterres.

'Difficult job'

"What we need is a leader that is hands-on, that has a lot of energy, that knows the system, that can be the first to arrive to prevent a conflict," she said.
She proposed the creation of an "early warning" system to detect and flag signals of impending conflicts and intervene before they erupt, which she laid out in her "vision" document, submitted with the backing of Antigua and Barbuda.
While she is pushing for a new approach, she is careful not to throw the previous Secretaries-General under the blue bus.
"We should be respectful and careful to say 'the past doesn't work and now...I'm a magician'," she said.
"It's a difficult job, but when you know how to do the job, if you are confident about your leadership style, I think the UN can...look at the 21st Century with more hope and with this sense of possibility."
She is adamant that transformation must not be the job of just one individual, but the result of "political momentum" under "assertive leadership."
Despite mounting attacks on multilateralism, Espinosa says "the UN is the one and only universal platform to address the shared challenges of humanity."
Espinosa points to her experience of the UN machine as she gets her bid underway. 
She was Ecuador's ambassador to the UN in New York and then in Geneva, before being elected president of the UN General Assembly -- one of only five women to hold that role. 
But she is at pains not to compare herself to her rivals in this race, Chile's Michelle Bachelet, Argentina's Rafael Grossi, Costa Rica's Rebeca Grynspan, and Senegal's Macky Sall.
abd-gw/sla

drugs

Indian pharma fuels Africa's 'zombie drug' and opioid crisis

BY ARUNABH SAIKIA WITH LESLIE FAUVEL IN ABUJA, KADIATOU SAKHO IN LAGOS AND SAIDU BAH IN FREETOWN

  • "Consumers (in west Africa) are much more naive than in other parts of the world," he said, and there is little government regulation or enforcement on the ground to protect them.
  • They come in blister packs of 10 like any normal painkiller and you can buy them easily in roadside kiosks and street pharmacies across west Africa. 
  • "Consumers (in west Africa) are much more naive than in other parts of the world," he said, and there is little government regulation or enforcement on the ground to protect them.
They come in blister packs of 10 like any normal painkiller and you can buy them easily in roadside kiosks and street pharmacies across west Africa. 
Millions of tapentadol tablets from India are helping drive a deadly opioid epidemic ravaging the region, with officials and researchers telling AFP that they are also being added to the "zombie drug" kush.
The cheap pills are so strong that no regulatory authority in the world has approved them.
Yet an AFP investigation found Indian pharmaceutical firms were flooding west Africa with the pills despite New Delhi vowing to crack down on the trade. Some shipments were even labelled "Harmless Medicines for Human Consumption".
Customs records show millions of dollars' worth of the high-strength synthetic opioid being shipped from India every month to Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Ghana, where even low doses of the drug are not permitted.
With opioids now heavily regulated in wealthier nations after being linked to one million deaths in the United States alone, some manufacturers in India -- the world's biggest producer of generic drugs -- are pushing hard into Africa.
And in a frightening development, tapentadol is now being added to the "zombie drug" kush, health chiefs and researchers told AFP.
Kush, infamous for the speed with which it hollows out its victims, has already been declared a national emergency in Liberia and Sierra Leone.

Bodies on the streets

The tapentadol twist on the ferociously addictive synthetic cocktail is "very alarming", Ansu Konneh, director of mental health at Sierra Leone's social welfare ministry told AFP. 
Bodies are being picked up from "the streets, markets and slums on a daily basis", he said -- with more than 400 corpses collected over three months in the capital Freetown alone.
"They grind and mix it with kush," Freetown-based public health researcher Ronald Abu Bangura told AFP, with tapentadol now "being misused all over the place".
The impoverished nation is struggling to tackle the death and misery. AFP visited addicts in informal detox houses who are sometimes chained up for months to go cold turkey.
Konneh said 90 percent of those admitted to the country's few official rehab centres had smoked kush mixed with tapentadol or other powerful opioids such as nitazenes.
New Delhi declared a "zero-tolerance" crackdown on illegal drug trading in February 2025, banning export of tablets that mixed tapentadol with the muscle relaxant carisoprodol after a BBC investigation exposed the damage they were doing in Ghana.
India's drug regulator, the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO), later said it was withdrawing all export clearances for "combinations of tapentadol... which are not approved by an importing country".
But the main trade was always in pure tapentadol tablets, say researchers.
Shipment records reviewed by AFP show that millions of dollars worth of the high-strength pills are still being exported from India to west Africa every month.
The vast bulk are so strong India officially does not even allow their production without special permission.
Yet AFP matched high-strength tapentadol tablets seized in at least four west African countries with Indian export records through their makers' licence numbers.
This was established using commercial shipment data, government seizure records, interviews and documents obtained under India's Right to Information transparency law.

Labelled 'harmless medicines'

Tapentadol tablets seized in Sierra Leone in December marked "Made in India" had a manufacturing licence number that corresponds to Gujarat Pharmaceuticals, a company based in Godhra, Gujarat, according to images of the boxes photographed by AFP.
The firm was listed in the export monitoring database Volza as an exporter of tapentadol to west Africa. Its manufacturing licence number appeared on tablets seized last June in Guinea.
A second licence number on tablets seized in the same Guinean operation corresponds to Merit Organics, another Gujarat-based company in the database. 
Senegalese authorities seized high-strength 250mg tapentadol tablets in November with a licence number registered to McW Healthcare, a Madhya Pradesh-based company.
A fourth company, PRG Pharma, also made several shipments after New Delhi's ban last February, labelling them as "harmless medicines".
Its director Manish Goyal is a shareholder in Maiden Pharmaceuticals -- a company controlled by his father -- whose cough syrup Gambian authorities blamed for the death of 69 children in 2023. 
The Volza database shows McW Healthcare shipped dozens of consignments of 250mg tablets worth more than $1 million to Sierra Leone and Nigeria after the February crackdown.
AFP found a camera repair shop at the Nigerian importer's address in Lagos. Health authorities there said it had no pharmaceutical permit and called the imports "illegal".
Kuwait Customs intercepted tapentadol tablets in January carried by a Beninese traveller. Their packaging bore the licence number of Syncom Formulations. AFP's analysis identified the company as the largest tapentadol exporter to west Africa by value, having shipped consignments worth nearly $15 million after February, many declared as "Harmless Medicines for Human Consumption".
Benin is among the declared destinations for Syncom's shipments. 
The Indian Drug Manufacturers' Association -- the largest industry body -- defended the trade, saying "a legitimate manufacturer who has followed the procedures cannot be held responsible for what happens later in the supply chain." 
But government officials in Nigeria and Sierra Leone told AFP tapentadol was illegal, while Ghana said it has never been permitted there.

 'Get people hooked'

Most people in Africa take tapentadol not to get high but to do brutal back-breaking work, experts say.
It "energises my body to ride day and night", said motorbike taxi rider Abubakar Sesay, who earns a pittance bumping over the bone-rattling backroads of Freetown. "Without it, I can't survive." 
Market porters and gold miners from Lagos to Mali use tapentadol pills to push through the pain, according to NGOs.
"It's used as a performance enhancer to enable people to do long hours of hard work," said medical anthropologist Axel Klein of the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime.
Opioids are now the second most used drug in Nigeria after cannabis. Femi Babafemi of the country's NDLEA anti-drug agency said it had seized two billion high-strength pills in 2023 and 2024 alone.
"Kidnappers, terrorists and bandits use these drugs so they can carry out their nefarious activities," he added, with police saying jihadist fighters like Boko Haram also take it "for courage".
The pills are also used as a form of currency in ransoms for kidnappings, Babafemi said.  
A tablet is cheaper than a meal in the poor and dusty suburb of the capital Abuja where Boluwatife Owoyemi of YouthRISE Nigeria works with drug users.
As well as "giving them lots of strength... they are those who use it as an appetite suppressant... until they have the money to get food," she said.
With brands like TramaKing, Super Royal 200 and Tamol-X, the pills are "made to look like a medicine", said Klein.
"Consumers (in west Africa) are much more naive than in other parts of the world," he said, and there is little government regulation or enforcement on the ground to protect them.
"This creates opportunities for unscrupulous Indian companies to sell products that are problematic, dangerous, harmful or outright illegal to African countries," Vanda Felbab-Brown, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, who has long studied opioid flows, told AFP.
"Africa is a market that provides opportunities at a low end," she said.
"It's a prime situation for trafficking networks from India to try to get people hooked."

A 'sense of impunity'

Ninety percent of the world's seizures of tramadol over the last decade have been in west and central Africa, according to a new report by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime.
India declared the opioid a controlled narcotic in 2018.
But the report said tapentadol has now "replaced or supplemented" tramadol in many west African countries. Lab tests showing pills sold as tramadol in Sierra Leone were all tapentadol.
While tapentadol is often sold on the streets as tramadol, it is actually two to three times stronger and even more dangerous, experts say.
"Indian pharmaceutical companies began exporting vast quantities of tramadol to west Africa, often at potency levels far beyond what was considered safe for human consumption" about 15 years ago, said Felbab-Brown.
"Domestically they could not sell such potent tramadol but they were indifferent to what was well known to stimulate substance-use disorders in their export markets."
Now the pattern is being repeated with even stronger tapentadol, she added, driven by "poor law enforcement and regulatory controls" and a "sense of impunity". 
Tapentadol's tongue-twister name and the confusion with tramadol has further helped it slip under the radar. 

'Bypassing restrictions'

Nearly three-quarters of tapentadol exports to west Africa since India's crackdown have been high-strength 225mg and 250mg pills, according to AFP's analysis. 
Andrew Somogyi, professor of pharmacology at the University of Adelaide, told AFP he did not know of any country that had approved 225mg tapentadol tablets. He questioned "why a country would want that strength except to bypass regulatory and commercial restrictions".
Dr Viranchi Shah of the Indian Drug Manufacturers' Association said there was a "shared responsibility of all key stakeholders" to stop misuse of the drug.
India's drug regulator, the CDSCO -- which is responsible for issuing export clearances -- told AFP it had "no record" of issuing them for consignments of 225 and 250mg tapentadol. It did not respond to follow-up queries.
Jaydip Patel, of Gujarat Pharmaceuticals, whose tapentadol tablets were seized in Sierra Leone, said their exports were conducted legally.
"The importer gave us an authorisation letter," he said. "After that we got the permission here."
He said Indian manufacturers had switched from exporting tramadol to tapentadol because "tapentadol is easier to export because it is not classified as a narcotic".
When AFP visited Gujarat Pharmaceuticals' premises in Godhra in January, the building appeared deserted and charred tablets lay scattered on the ground alongside piles of ash from a fire.
The other Indian firms did not reply to AFP's questions.

Children now taking it

Ghana's Food and Drugs Authority told AFP it had "never issued any permit for the manufacture or importation of tapentadol of any strength".
Nigeria's National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) said tapentadol was neither registered nor approved in the country. "Any tapentadol product found within Nigeria is unauthorised and illegal," it added.
Sierra Leone's Health Minister Austin Demby told AFP that only 50mg tramadol administered in recognised health facilities was legal.
"Anything outside of that is illegal," he added.
Yet police there said there had been an "unprecedented increase" in tapentadol use by young people, including schoolchildren and university students.
"The suffering is too much," said Hassan Kamara, a traditional healer who runs an informal detox house an hour from Freetown where kush addicts -- who are sometimes psychotic -- lie chained to the floor for months.
Manso Koroma, 31, started taking the "zombie drug" for the pain when he lost his leg after a traffic accident, his body haggard and scarred.
"When I came here I was really violent," he told AFP last year.
"I am OK with the treatment," he said, chained to the bed, the windows and doors barred. "I've recovered. I'm just waiting for my sister to come and I can leave here." 
In a country where the scars of a long civil war marked by terrible atrocities are still to heal, even the very young are now taking tapentadol, said mental health chief Ansu Konneh.
"What is worrying is that young children in primary schools are now taking the pills," splitting them into two or four pieces to "mix with energy drinks to increase potency".
The fact that tapentadol looks like a medicine and is sold as one, masks its danger.
The tragedy, said Konneh, is that even addicts seeking help "tell us, 'I've stopped taking kush, I'm just taking tapentadol tablets.' They don't see that to be a problem to their health."
sai-fvl-ks-sb/pa/fg/jj

US

Lebanon, Israel to hold new talks in US as ceasefire nears end

BY SHAUN TANDON

  • The summit did not happen, with Aoun saying a security deal needed to be in place and Israeli attacks needed to end before such a landmark symbolic meeting.
  • Lebanon and Israel are to hold new peace talks in Washington starting Thursday, as their latest ceasefire -- considered to still be in place despite hundreds of deaths in Israeli strikes -- nears its end.
  • The summit did not happen, with Aoun saying a security deal needed to be in place and Israeli attacks needed to end before such a landmark symbolic meeting.
Lebanon and Israel are to hold new peace talks in Washington starting Thursday, as their latest ceasefire -- considered to still be in place despite hundreds of deaths in Israeli strikes -- nears its end.
The two countries last met on April 23 at the White House, where US President Donald Trump announced a three-week ceasefire extension and voiced optimism for a historic agreement.
Trump at the time made the bold prediction that within the latest ceasefire period, he would welcome Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun to Washington for a historic first summit between the countries.
The summit did not happen, with Aoun saying a security deal needed to be in place and Israeli attacks needed to end before such a landmark symbolic meeting.
The ceasefire had been extended through Sunday. Since it first went into effect on April 17, Israeli strikes have killed more than 400 people, according to an AFP tally based on figures from Lebanese authorities.
Israel has vowed to keep pursuing attacks against Hezbollah, the Shia armed group and political movement backed by Iran's ruling clerics, despite the ceasefire.
Hezbollah began a campaign of firing into Israel in retaliation for the killing of Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, at the start of the US-Israeli war on February 28.
"Anyone who threatens the State of Israel will die because of his actions," Netanyahu said last week after an Israeli strike in the heart of Beirut killed a senior Hezbollah commander.
A Lebanese official told AFP that the country would seek "the consolidation of the ceasefire" during the talks in Washington.
"The first thing is to put an end to the death and destruction," the official told AFP on custom of anonymity.
Iran has demanded a lasting ceasefire in Lebanon before any agreement to end the wider war, as it frustrates Trump by refusing his appeals for an accord on his terms.

Pressure on Hezbollah

More than 2,800 people have died since Israel launched the strikes in early March, including at least 200 children, according to Lebanese authorities.
Hezbollah says that toll includes its fighters.
Israel has pounded areas of Lebanon with large Shia populations including Beirut's southern suburbs and has invaded the border region, seizing control in an area it occupied from its 1982 Lebanon war until withdrawing in 2000.
The United States has backed Lebanon's calls to maintain sovereignty over all its territory but also repeatedly pressed it to take action against Hezbollah.
The United States "recognizes that comprehensive peace is contingent on the full restoration of Lebanese state authority and the complete disarmament of Hezbollah," a State Department statement said.
"These talks aim to break decisively from the failed approach of the past two decades, which allowed terrorist groups to entrench and enrich themselves, undermine the authority of the Lebanese state, and endanger Israel's northern border," it said.
It will be the third round of talks between the two countries, which have no diplomatic relations.
Unlike the last round, which Trump brought to the White House, or the first round, neither Secretary of State Marco Rubio nor Trump will participate as the president is on a state visit to China.
The US mediators for the two-day meeting at the State Department will include the ambassadors to Israel and Lebanon -- respectively Mike Huckabee, an evangelical pastor and staunch supporter of Israel's regional ambitions, and Michel Issa, a Lebanese-born businessman and golfing partner of Trump, as well as Mike Needham, a close aide to Rubio.
Lebanon is represented by special envoy Simon Karam, a veteran lawyer and diplomat who has fiercely defended Lebanon's sovereignty, as well as its ambassador in Washington.
Israel's team includes its ambassador in Washington, Yechiel Leiter, a close Netanyahu ally who is close with the Israeli settler movement in the occupied West Bank.
burs-sct/sst

cruise

France blames stomach bug for new cruise outbreak, lifts lockdown

BY CAROLE SUHAS AND THOMAS SAINT-CRICQ

  • But health authorities said the man had suffered a heart attack and that his death appeared unrelated to the illnesses.
  • French authorities on Wednesday allowed asymptomatic passengers to leave a British cruise ship, saying a gastrointestinal virus was behind an outbreak of sickness that came after an elderly man died of a heart attack.
  • But health authorities said the man had suffered a heart attack and that his death appeared unrelated to the illnesses.
French authorities on Wednesday allowed asymptomatic passengers to leave a British cruise ship, saying a gastrointestinal virus was behind an outbreak of sickness that came after an elderly man died of a heart attack.
Earlier, authorities had ordered a lockdown for the more than 1,700 passengers and crew on the vessel, but insisted there was no connection with the hantavirus outbreak suspected of killing three people on the Dutch-flagged MV Hondius cruise ship, which has sparked international alarm.
Testing confirmed the outbreak on the Ambition, a cruise ship anchored in the port of Bordeaux in western France, was "a gastro-intestinal infection of viral origin", the local government and regional health agency said in a statement.
They said there were no severe cases, and that asymptomatic individuals were now free to disembark, but that those infected were required to remain in isolation on board.
News that a 92-year-old British passenger had died on the ship as dozens of others suffered upset stomachs initially caused concern.
But health authorities said the man had suffered a heart attack and that his death appeared unrelated to the illnesses.
"At this stage, no link has been established with the gastroenteritis episode," they said.
Port authorities said his body remained on board, "in accordance with international conventions".

Bingo on board

Authorities said that since Monday, 80 people on the ship had suffered from "symptoms consistent with an acute digestive infection".
They said the lockdown order had been issued as an "abundance of caution" and to "avoid psychosis", given international worry over the hantavirus outbreak on the Hondius, which set sail from Argentina and is now heading back to the Netherlands after being evacuated.
The Ambition, which is operated by the UK-based Ambassador Cruise Line company, arrived in Bordeaux on Tuesday with 1,233 passengers, mostly from Britain and Ireland, and 514 crew.
One passenger enduring the lockdown on Wednesday, Seos Guilidhe, a 52-year-old from the Northern Irish capital Belfast, sent AFP a message via Facebook as he was "playing bingo".
"We are onboard with extra sanitation guidelines in place. It is not as bad as it was during Covid. People just going about as normal," he wrote, referring to lockdowns during the coronavirus pandemic.
Passengers could be seen taking pictures of the French city from the deck.
Guilidhe later messaged: "We are allowed off the ship, restrictions lifted."
Others were less fortunate.
"Two of us in one cabin with the bug is a challenge," an infected passenger posted on Facebook.

Waiting for 'clearance'

Passengers on board the Ambition showed peak symptoms on Monday, when the ship was docked in Brest, officials said.
The deceased man died before the cruise liner arrived at the port in France's northwestern Brittany region.
The ship, which left the Shetland Islands in the north of Scotland on May 6, stopped in Belfast and Liverpool in England before reaching Bordeaux, from where it was scheduled to depart for Spain.
It was initially supposed to dock back in Liverpool on May 22.
The cruise line company said on its Facebook page its figures showed an increase in cases of illness after guests embarked in Liverpool on Saturday.
cas-ppy/ah/jhb/ach 

Global Edition

Iran holds World Cup send-off for national football team

  • "Our national team is the national football team of wartime," he said, adding that the team would be a "pillar of authority and resistance".
  • Iran held a send-off ceremony Wednesday for the national football team as it prepared to play in the 2026 World Cup, co-hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada.
  • "Our national team is the national football team of wartime," he said, adding that the team would be a "pillar of authority and resistance".
Iran held a send-off ceremony Wednesday for the national football team as it prepared to play in the 2026 World Cup, co-hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada.
The players, dressed in red and black tracksuits, were presented at a stage in the central Tehran square of Enghelab, where crowds of people cheered for them, according to videos aired on state TV.
Coach Amir Ghalenoei and the president of Iran's football federation, Mehdi Taj, were also present.
"The national team players in the World Cup will represent the people, the country's fighters, the leader (supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei) and the country," said Taj.
"Our national team is the national football team of wartime," he said, adding that the team would be a "pillar of authority and resistance".
People at the ceremony waved flags and belted out chants and slogans, some holding placards and pictures of late supreme leader Ali Khamenei, killed during the US-Israel attacks on Iran that triggered the Middle East war.
"For the blood of the martyrs, sing the national anthem with firmness and without hesitation," read one placard.
Iran, who are due to be based in Tucson, Arizona during the World Cup, face New Zealand, Belgium and Egypt in Group G.
The Iranians open their World Cup campaign against New Zealand in Los Angeles on June 15.
pdm/jhb

murder

US children's book author sentenced to life after poisoning husband

  • She said her children's book, titled "Are you with me?"
  • An American woman who made headlines by writing a children's book about grief after poisoning her husband was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole Wednesday, US media reported. 
  • She said her children's book, titled "Are you with me?"
An American woman who made headlines by writing a children's book about grief after poisoning her husband was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole Wednesday, US media reported. 
Kouri Richins was found guilty of murder in March, and Judge Richard Mrazik ruled the mother of three is "too dangerous to ever be free," the Salt Lake City Tribune reported.
Prosecutors said Richins killed her husband, Eric Richins, in 2022 by serving him a cocktail laced with five times the lethal dose of fentanyl -- allowing her to inherit $4 million and get another $2 million from life insurance policies she secretly took out on him. 
She had tried to lace his sandwich with the same powerful synthetic opioid a few weeks earlier, making him severely ill.
She said her children's book, titled "Are you with me?" was penned after her husband's death, to help her three sons cope.
The case has stirred Utah, a state in the western United States. 
Kouri Richins, 36, maintained her innocence throughout the proceedings.
"I'm broken, broken without your dad, broken without you boys," she said in court Wednesday, the Tribune reported.
She also acknowledged infidelity in their marriage.
"Secrets diminish self respect," she said, according to the Tribune. "I fell in love with someone who wasn't your dad. Your dad fell in love with someone who wasn't me." 
In statements read by therapists in court, one of her sons said "I will not feel safe if you are out," the newspaper reported,  and another child said she was "always drunk" and he did not miss her.
"I miss my dad, but I do not miss how my life used to be," the child's statement said.
rfo/bar/sla/msp