Global Edition

UK PM Starmer resists calls to quit as Labour divided

history

'Ungovernable' Britain? Once-stable politics in freefall

BY JOE JACKSON

  • But the Labour leader -- who won largely thanks to the splintering of votes on the right -- now faces being forced out, less than two years on.
  • For years, under long-serving leaders such as Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair, the worst mid-term challenge a British prime minister might face was a rowdy jeering in parliament.
  • But the Labour leader -- who won largely thanks to the splintering of votes on the right -- now faces being forced out, less than two years on.
For years, under long-serving leaders such as Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair, the worst mid-term challenge a British prime minister might face was a rowdy jeering in parliament.
Now, leaders in the country of the wartime slogan "keep calm and carry on" regularly fear for their jobs, with the latest, Keir Starmer, facing intense pressure this week to quit too.
Six people have held the post in a decade of turbulence driven by the wake of the global financial crisis, Brexit and Covid.
"Is it because the PMs are no good, or because the office has become impossible, or because the situation's become impossible?" mused historian Anthony Seldon, who has authored books on the last four prime ministers.
"The answer is: it's a mixture of all three of those," he told AFP, judging the churn of leaders since 2016 "without precedent".
For voters, the situation borders on farce.
"We've had so many prime ministers in the last few years, it's ridiculous," Londoner Claudio, who declined to give his surname, said Wednesday, calling Starmer's precarious hold on power "unfortunate".
"But he's just not doing the right job anymore," he added.

Seven-week term

When David Cameron and his centre-right Conservatives ousted centre-left Labour in 2010, he became only the fifth prime minister in three decades.
Cameron quit six years later, after calling and then losing the referendum on remaining in the European Union, heralding an era of rare political instability.
There followed the ill-fated Downing Street tenures of Conservatives Theresa May, Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak.
Truss lasted just seven weeks -- a term memorably compared in the media to the lifespan of a rotting lettuce.
Starmer's 2024 victory, with a landslide number of parliamentary seats, was supposed to bookend that chaotic period.
But the Labour leader -- who won largely thanks to the splintering of votes on the right -- now faces being forced out, less than two years on.
Growing numbers of his own MPs and ministers have deserted him after a scandal over the appointment of an ambassador with links to the US sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

'Ungovernable' Britain?

Seldon argued that Starmer, Johnson and Truss "never learned how to do the job", while acknowledging that it "has become more difficult" in the age of social media, constant polling and modern "instant gratification" culture.
London School of Economics politics expert Tony Travers warned Britain now risks appearing "ungovernable", echoing a sentiment heard on political panel shows on TV.
"It begins to look like countries that people in Britain used to make fun of in the past," he told AFP, with Italy's recent decades of political dysfunction one example typically cited.
Breaking the cycle, Travers said, would require working out "how to stop senior MPs thinking that somehow changing their leader all the time is the solution to other problems".
"Those problems include not enough growth, high and rising prices, inflation, and the general sense that politics is now fragmenting."

Brexit impact

Political analysts agree that meagre economic growth since the 2008 financial crisis has left successive governments with little to offer in the form of tax cuts or increased spending.
"Voters want politicians to make them richer. They cannot do that, but they pretend that they can," Vernon Bogdanor, professor of government at King's College London, told AFP.
Seldon said servicing the country's huge debt has also become "an enormous constraint" as crises spook investors and make that more costly.
With foreign wars fuelling global instability, plus Covid and persistent inflation, British leaders have also had to contend with the country's highly disruptive EU departure in 2020.
"Brexit had a big effect... on stability in UK politics in a number of ways," said another King's political scientist, Anand Menon.
"It rearranged political affiliations," he told AFP. "It undoubtedly played a role in encouraging populist thinking and populist political forces."

Populist 'danger'

That in turn has strained Britain's traditional two-party political system, drawing scrutiny of the first-past-the-post voting system which does not reward smaller parties, reinforcing some voters' sense of being ignored.
Far-right anti-immigration party Reform UK has emerged as a major challenger to Starmer's Labour and the leftist Green party has also made electoral gains.
In 2024 however, Labour won 63 percent of the seats in the lower house of parliament despite winning just under 34 percent of the national vote.
For Menon, a government with such a huge majority being unable to govern is "worrying".
"There's a real danger that the longer this instability lasts, the more potential there is for us to end up with a populist government after the next election," due by 2029, he added.
jj/jkb/rlp

royals

Besieged Starmer seeks to heal Labour divisions in King's Speech

BY PETER HUTCHISON

  • Trade unions that support Labour and have a say in decision-making on Wednesday rejected Starmer, issuing a statement saying "it's clear that the prime minister will not lead Labour into the next election" and a plan must be made to elect a new leader.
  • King Charles III will on Wednesday outline UK leader Keir Starmer's legislative plans, during a pomp-filled ceremony that could have huge repercussions for the embattled prime minister's future.
  • Trade unions that support Labour and have a say in decision-making on Wednesday rejected Starmer, issuing a statement saying "it's clear that the prime minister will not lead Labour into the next election" and a plan must be made to elect a new leader.
King Charles III will on Wednesday outline UK leader Keir Starmer's legislative plans, during a pomp-filled ceremony that could have huge repercussions for the embattled prime minister's future.
Starmer, fighting to face down a revolt within his ruling Labour Party, has promised his government will be "better" and bolder to assuage disgruntled voters impatient for change.
That pledge will be put to the test in Wednesday's address in parliament which Downing Street said will unveil an "ambitious programme" to make Britain a "stronger, fairer" country.
It is the latest crunch moment in Starmer's 22-month premiership and comes after Labour descended into open warfare over the prime minister's fate following the party's heavy defeats in local and regional elections.
Four junior ministers resigned and the number of MPs urging Starmer to quit passed 80, but more than 100 others signed a statement urging colleagues to back him.
On Wednesday, health minister Wes Streeting met Starmer at  Downing Street, as speculation swirled over whether he could launch a leadership bid. The meeting, billed as a "showdown" by British media, lasted less than 20 minutes and he left without commenting.
Streeting is popular on the right of Labour, while a would-be challenger on the left could be former deputy prime minister Angela Rayner.

 'Pivotal moment'

Another much-touted contender, Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester in northwest England, is unable to stand currently as he is not an MP. 
His supporters want Starmer to lay out a timetable for his departure that allows Burnham to return to parliament and stand.
Under party rules, any challenger would need the support of 81 Labour MPs -- 20 percent of the party in parliament -- to trigger a leadership contest. Starmer has vowed to fight any challenge.
Trade unions that support Labour and have a say in decision-making on Wednesday rejected Starmer, issuing a statement saying "it's clear that the prime minister will not lead Labour into the next election" and a plan must be made to elect a new leader.
Several senior ministers rallied around the Labour premier: Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy urged lawmakers to "step back and take a breath", while a spokesman for interior minister Shabana Mahmood denied rumours that she was resigning.
"Britain stands at a pivotal moment," Starmer, who in July 2024 became the UK's sixth prime minister in eight years, said late Tuesday ahead of the King's Speech.
"To press ahead with a plan to build a stronger, fairer country or turn back to the chaos and instability of the past."

Black Rod

Despite its name, the King's Speech is not written by the monarch but by the government, which uses it to detail the laws it proposes over the next 12 months.
Downing Street said the address will include more than 35 bills "to bolster economic, energy, (and) national security.
They will include proposals to fully nationalise British Steel and deepen Britain's relationship with the European Union.
King Charles will deliver the proposals from a golden throne in the House of Lords upper chamber while wearing the diamond-studded Imperial State Crown and a long crimson robe. 
The day's proceedings start when royal bodyguards ritually search the basement of the Palace of Westminster for explosives -- a legacy of the failed attempt by Catholics to blow up parliament in the 1605 Gunpowder plot.
The sovereign will then travel to the Houses of Parliament by carriage from Buckingham Palace, escorted by mounted cavalry.
Tradition dictates that an MP is ceremonially held "hostage" in the palace to ensure the king's safe return.
A parliamentary official known as Black Rod will have the door of the lower chamber House of Commons slammed in their face, a tradition that symbolises parliament's independence from the monarchy.
MPs will follow Black Rod to the upper chamber, where Charles will give the speech to assembled lords and ladies in red and ermine robes, plus invited members of the elected Commons at around 11:30 am (1030 GMT).
pdh-am/jj/tw

US

War in the Middle East: latest developments

  • - Israeli strikes kill 13 in Lebanon - Israel hammered south Lebanon with more strikes Tuesday, killing 13 people in the south, including two rescuers responding to an earlier raid in the city of Nabatieh and a wounded person they went to save, Lebanon's health ministry said.
  • Here are the latest developments in the Middle East war: - Israel strikes car near Beirut - An Israeli strike targeted a car on a major highway linking Beirut to southern Lebanon, state media reported, despite a truce in the war between Israel and Hezbollah.
  • - Israeli strikes kill 13 in Lebanon - Israel hammered south Lebanon with more strikes Tuesday, killing 13 people in the south, including two rescuers responding to an earlier raid in the city of Nabatieh and a wounded person they went to save, Lebanon's health ministry said.
Here are the latest developments in the Middle East war:

Israel strikes car near Beirut

An Israeli strike targeted a car on a major highway linking Beirut to southern Lebanon, state media reported, despite a truce in the war between Israel and Hezbollah.
The attack took place in the Jiyeh area, about 20 kilometres (12 miles) south of the capital, Lebanon's National News Agency said. 

China urges Pakistan to step up

China's top diplomat urged Pakistan to step up mediation efforts between Iran and the United States, and help to "properly" address the reopening of the Hormuz strait, Chinese state media said.
Foreign Minister Wang Yi spoke to his Pakistani counterpart Ishaq Dar on a call, state news agency Xinhua reported, ahead of US President Donald Trump's visit to Beijing.

Israeli strikes kill 13 in Lebanon

Israel hammered south Lebanon with more strikes Tuesday, killing 13 people in the south, including two rescuers responding to an earlier raid in the city of Nabatieh and a wounded person they went to save, Lebanon's health ministry said.
Beirut reported 380 people had been killed in intensified Israeli attacks since an April 17 ceasefire took effect and Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem vowed to turn the battlefield into "hell" for Israeli forces.

Iran's missile capabilities

The New York Times reported Tuesday that classified US intelligence assessments say Iran still has substantial missile capabilities -- with about 70 percent of its mobile launchers and pre-war missile stockpile still in action -- and has restored access to 30 of 33 missile sites along the Strait of Hormuz.

Australian shipping defence

Defence Minister Richard Marles said Australia will join a "strictly defensive" mission led by France and Britain to secure shipping through the strait, once it is established, and contribute a surveillance aircraft to protect the United Arab Emirates from Iranian drone attacks.

Oil prices climb

Oil prices climbed over the impasse in US-Iran talks that has left the Strait of Hormuz mostly closed to oil tanker traffic.
The price of international benchmark Brent North Sea crude rose 3.4 percent to $107.77 a barrel and the main US contract, West Texas Intermediate, was up 4.2 percent, at $102.18 a barrel.

Iran dismisses Kuwait claims

Iran labelled as "absolutely baseless" an accusation made by Kuwait that four Iranian officers attempted to infiltrate Bubiyan, the Gulf country's largest island, saying they entered Kuwaiti waters because of disruption to navigational systems.
The foreign ministry said it strongly condemned the "improper action" of the Kuwaiti government in exploiting the case for propaganda.

Trump on Xi

US President Donald Trump insisted he does not need help from China on ending the war with Iran but said he "would have a long talk about it" with Xi Jinping when they meet this week.
But he added: "We have a lot of things to discuss. I wouldn't say Iran is one of them, to be honest with you, because we have Iran very much under control."

US inflation spikes

Consumer inflation in the US hit a three-year high in April, with the economic fallout of Trump's Iran war rippling through the world's largest economy.
The consumer price index (CPI) rose 3.8 percent year-on-year, up from March's 3.3 percent figure, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) said.

Pentagon ups cost estimate

The Pentagon said the cost of the war with Iran had climbed to nearly $29 billion, as Trump faced mounting scrutiny over the conflict.
The new figure, revealed by the defence ministry during a budget hearing on Capitol Hill, is about $4 billion higher than the estimate offered by Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth two weeks ago.
burs-giv/rlp

diplomacy

Trump vows to push Xi to 'open up' China at superpower summit

BY DANNY KEMP AND PETER CATTERALL

  • "I will be asking President Xi, a Leader of extraordinary distinction, to 'open up' China so that these brilliant people can work their magic, and help bring the People's Republic to an even higher level!"
  • US President Donald Trump said he would ask Xi Jinping to "open up" China to American firms as he headed to Beijing on Wednesday for a high-stakes summit that will also bring up the Iran war.
  • "I will be asking President Xi, a Leader of extraordinary distinction, to 'open up' China so that these brilliant people can work their magic, and help bring the People's Republic to an even higher level!"
US President Donald Trump said he would ask Xi Jinping to "open up" China to American firms as he headed to Beijing on Wednesday for a high-stakes summit that will also bring up the Iran war.
In a sign of Trump's focus on business, Nvidia chief Jensen Huang boarded Air Force One during a stopover in Alaska, with Tesla's Elon Musk also travelling on the presidential plane to China.
"I will be asking President Xi, a Leader of extraordinary distinction, to 'open up' China so that these brilliant people can work their magic, and help bring the People's Republic to an even higher level!" Trump wrote on social media after departing Washington.
A host of other top CEOs, including Apple's Tim Cook, will also be in Beijing for the visit, the first by a US president to China in nearly a decade.
But Trump's ambitions to ramp up trade will have to contend with political frictions over Taiwan and the war in the Middle East, which already delayed the trip from March.
As he departed the White House, Trump said he expected a "long talk" with Xi about Iran, which sells most of its US-sanctioned oil to China.
But he also downplayed disagreements, telling reporters that "I don't think we need any help with Iran" from China and that Xi had been "relatively good" on the topic.
The Chinese foreign ministry said Wednesday it "welcomes" Trump's visit and that "China stands ready to work with the United States ... to expand cooperation and manage differences".
Yet Beijing is growing impatient for peace, with Foreign Minister Wang Yi urging his Pakistani counterpart on Tuesday to step up mediation efforts between Iran and the United States.

 'Big deal'

This week's trip -- the first since Trump visited Beijing in 2017 -- will involve highly anticipated talks with Xi on Thursday and Friday, as well as lavish pomp and ceremony.
The packed itinerary includes a state banquet in Beijing's Great Hall of the People and a tea reception.
Trump said Monday he would speak to Xi about US arms sales to Taiwan, the self-governing democracy claimed by China -- a departure from historic US insistence that it will not consult Beijing on its support to the island.
China's controls on rare earth exports, AI rivalry and the countries' raucous trade relationship are also among the topics expected to be taken up by the heads of the world's top two economies.
The two sides are set to discuss extending a one-year truce in their tariff war, which Trump and Xi reached during their last meeting in South Korea in October.
The tense buildup to the superpower summit was already visible on the streets of Beijing, with police monitoring major intersections and checking the ID cards of passengers on the metro, AFP journalists saw.
"It's definitely a big deal," said Wen Wen, a 24-year-old woman travelling from the eastern city of Nanjing, when asked by AFP about Trump's visit.
"Some progress will certainly be made," she said, noting that she hopes China and the United States can ensure "lasting peace" despite "recent instability in the global situation".

 'Very good relationship'

The United States and China have long sought to stabilise their relationship despite increasingly seeing each other as adversaries in trade and geopolitics.
Trump has repeatedly touted a strong personal relationship with Xi, which he insisted on Monday would prevent a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, the self-ruled island claimed by Beijing.
"I think we'll be fine. I have a very good relationship with President Xi. He knows I don't want that to happen," he said.
Trump's trip will be closely scrutinised by Taiwan and Asian allies for any sign of weakening US support.
Beijing has grown more confident and assertive since Trump's 2017 trip and the US president finds himself in a weakened position as he seeks a way out of his Iran war.
But the summit also comes at an uncertain time for China's economy, which has struggled in recent years with sluggish domestic spending and a protracted debt crisis in the once-booming property sector.
burs-dk-dhw/mtp

conflict

'Short of blue-collar workers': Ukraine's battle for labour

BY ROMAIN COLAS

  • Synkov, who left Bakhmut -- captured by Russia in 2023 -- was still receiving "many offers" from companies struggling to find staff, even as wages surge.
  • After fleeing Russia's advancing army and resettling in the central industrial hub of Dnipro, Ukrainian worker Anatoliy Synkov had no trouble finding a job. 
  • Synkov, who left Bakhmut -- captured by Russia in 2023 -- was still receiving "many offers" from companies struggling to find staff, even as wages surge.
After fleeing Russia's advancing army and resettling in the central industrial hub of Dnipro, Ukrainian worker Anatoliy Synkov had no trouble finding a job. 
"Oh no! There's plenty of work," the 55-year-old told AFP, speaking over the drone of a conveyor line at his new employer, households goods producer Biosphere.
The former forester was hired in just one week -- a swiftness that demonstrates a major problem facing Ukraine's economy amid Russian invasion: severe labour shortages.
Synkov, who left Bakhmut -- captured by Russia in 2023 -- was still receiving "many offers" from companies struggling to find staff, even as wages surge.
From a pre-war population of around 40 million, hundreds of thousands of men have been drafted to fight -- many killed or wounded -- and some 5.7 million Ukrainian refugees still live abroad, according to the UN. 
Synkov's new employer has not been spared the toll of war.
A Russian missile hit a Biosphere warehouse in Dnipro in April 2025, killing one person and wounding eleven. 
The charred shell of the building still stands on the site.

Fewer candidates

At the start of 2026, 78 percent of Ukrainian companies belonging to the European Business Association (EBA) reported a shortage of skilled workers.
The war has exacerbated pre-existing factors: population decline since the collapse of the Soviet Union, and a mismatch between the education system and what employers need, economist Lyubov Yatsenko of the National Institute for Strategic Studies told AFP.
"We are short of blue-collar workers," as well as doctors, teachers and agricultural administrators, she said -- roles that are either low-paid or "not prestigious".
Biosphere's human resources director in Dnipro, Olena Shpitz, said the factory employs 500 people, down from 800 before Russia invaded in 2022. 
Around 100 of its former staff have joined the army and recruitment is a constant struggle.
"The number of candidates has dropped significantly," Shpitz said.
Roles that used to take a week to fill can now take six.
The company has started offering bonuses to employees who get their relatives a job. 
Shortages have also hit the booming military sector. 
"Sometimes the necessary specialists simply do not exist in sufficient numbers," a representative of Kvertus, a company manufacturing anti-drone jammers, told AFP.

Mobilisation reform

Paradoxically, deep labour shortages coexist with high unemployment.
Official statistics are not published during the war, but pollster Info Sapiens estimated a jobless rate of 15.5 percent in March 2026.
There is a big supply of "accountants, corporate economists, and lower-level managers," Yatsenko said -- but not enough manual workers.
She encourages retraining and better schemes to bring young people, refugees, veterans and older workers into the workforce.
Biosphere's Dnipro plant employs 19 veterans but wants government support to take on former soldiers and civilians with disabilities.
At the same time, tens of thousands of draft evaders are either not working or employed off-the-books.
A foreign economic official in Ukraine, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP resolving the issue would require complex reforms to mobilisation, the system of granting military exemptions, and a path to bring people in from the shadow economy.
"The main direction must be a more transparent and structured way to change between war service, being at the front fighting, and working in the economy very normally. There must be better rules to go back and forth," they said. 
President Volodymyr Zelensky has announced plans to allow for some demobilisation in the coming months, though no details have been published.

Women workers

Only one in eight companies consider foreign workers an option, according to an October 2025 poll, with many citing fears of language barriers and cultural and religious differences in hiring workers outside of Ukraine.
Meanwhile women have been pouring into the workforce in record numbers, with Kyiv opening up previously banned professions, like mining, to female employees.
The share of women at Biosphere's Dnipro plant has risen to about half since 2022.
"Women are the one thing that they rely on most right now to make it more long-term and sustainable," the foreign economic official said.
Unlike Synkov, many of the 3.7 million internally displaced people are unable to work due to trauma or skills that are not relevant in their new regions.
Synkov conceded it took him two years to process the "shock" of his forced exile.
Now he is sanguine.
"You have to live."
rco/ant/blb/asy/jc/yad

politics

Philippine senator seeks military support to block ICC drug war arrest

  • He urged "my fellow men in uniform" and former classmates at the Philippine Military Academy, which produces most of the armed forces' officer corps, to "express their sentiment" that President Ferdinand Marcos's government "should not hand me over to foreigners".
  • Former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte's chief drug war enforcer urged the military on Wednesday to stop government attempts to arrest and fly him to the Netherlands to stand trial on charges of crimes against humanity.
  • He urged "my fellow men in uniform" and former classmates at the Philippine Military Academy, which produces most of the armed forces' officer corps, to "express their sentiment" that President Ferdinand Marcos's government "should not hand me over to foreigners".
Former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte's chief drug war enforcer urged the military on Wednesday to stop government attempts to arrest and fly him to the Netherlands to stand trial on charges of crimes against humanity.
Ronald Dela Rosa, a sitting senator and former police chief, began his third day holed up at the Senate building after its leadership stopped government efforts to serve an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court over his role in Duterte's bloody drug war.
Dela Rosa, better known by his nickname "Bato", is accused of the crime against humanity of murder along with Duterte and other co-perpetrators.
"I am not appealing for violent support. I am appealing for peaceful support," Dela Rosa told reporters.
He urged "my fellow men in uniform" and former classmates at the Philippine Military Academy, which produces most of the armed forces' officer corps, to "express their sentiment" that President Ferdinand Marcos's government "should not hand me over to foreigners".
Outside the Senate on Wednesday, about 500 riot police faced off with some 250 protesters demanding the arrest and handover to the ICC of a person they described as the "architect" of Duterte's drug war.
The crackdown left thousands dead, human rights monitors say, many of them drug users and low-level narcotics peddlers.
Dela Rosa was police chief in 2016-2018, during Duterte's first two years in office.
Duterte was arrested in March last year, flown to the Netherlands on the same day, and is detained in the Hague where he awaits trial.
The senator had not been seen publicly since November before emerging on Monday to take part in an unexpected vote that helped Duterte loyalists capture control of the Senate.
The new senate leadership said it would only allow Dela Rosa's arrest if it was ordered by a Philippine court.
A Marcos spokeswoman said Tuesday the president would "not interfere in the decisions of the Senate".
The Supreme Court has yet to act on a Dela Rosa petition to stop the Manila government from enforcing the ICC arrest warrant.
pam/cgm/mtp

royals

UK's Catherine on first official foreign trip since cancer revelation

  • Her trip will focus on the princess's work in early years child development, said a Kensington palace statement.
  • Britain's Princess Catherine starts a two-day visit to Italy on Wednesday focused on early childhood development, in her first official foreign trip since her 2024 cancer diagnosis.
  • Her trip will focus on the princess's work in early years child development, said a Kensington palace statement.
Britain's Princess Catherine starts a two-day visit to Italy on Wednesday focused on early childhood development, in her first official foreign trip since her 2024 cancer diagnosis.
The Princess of Wales, whose husband Prince William is the heir to the British throne, will be welcomed in the northern Italian city of Reggio Emilia.
Early education is a subject close to her heart as a mother of three children -- George, 12, Charlotte, 11, and Louis, eight.
Her trip will focus on the princess's work in early years child development, said a Kensington palace statement.
It will be "a high-level fact-finding mission to explore leading international approaches to supporting young children and those who care for them", the palace added.
Kate, as she is widely known, is looking forward to "seeing first-hand how the Reggio Emilia approach creates environments where nature and loving human relationships come together".
She announced in January 2025 that she was in remission from cancer, and has been gradually returning to public royal duties.
Her last official trip abroad was in December 2022 when she travelled to Boston in the United States with William for the awarding of environmental Earthshot prize.
She announced in March 2024 that she had been diganosed with cancer, without revealing which type and that she had begun chemotherapy.

Early years

In past years, Catherine has addressed themes of forging connections, the healing power of nature and acts of kindness, as well as her work with children and families.
The Reggio Emilia philosophy was developed by Italian educator Loris Malaguzzi after World War II, drawing on his years of experience working in early childhood education as well as psychology.
The project's roots can be traced to his experience helping a group of women establish a school in a war-torn village in 1945.
He later went on to work with children with learning difficulties, which shaped his education philosophy about prioritising individual differences.
"The idea is that children are competent from the very first months of life and we need to construct educational contexts that are able to bring out their potential," Nando Rinaldi, director of schools and nurseries for the Reggio Emilia municipality, told AFP.
A key tenet of the philosophy is "The 100 Languages of Children" –- the idea that children express themselves in myriad ways including movement, art and speech.
Kate set up The Royal Foundation Centre for Early Childhood in 2021, working to highlight the importance of a child's early years.
Through her work she has seen that "experiences in early childhood are often the root cause of today's hardest social challenges, such as addiction, family breakdown, poor mental health, suicide and homelessness," the foundation says.
"Malaguzzi's great intuition -- which was a bit of a revolution -- has finally been recognised today," said Rinaldi.
Kate's visit "is a great recognition for us. It is also a source of pride". 
bur-ctx/jkb/am/phz

war

Don't mention the war: Tucson prepares to welcome Team Iran for World Cup

BY ROMAIN FONSEGRIVES

  • Despite a shaky ceasefire in place for a month, hostilities are stubbornly unresolved, with Iran having virtually shut the Strait of Hormuz.
  • In the Strait of Hormuz, US warships menace Iran's oil tankers, while in Washington President Donald Trump demands "complete victory."
  • Despite a shaky ceasefire in place for a month, hostilities are stubbornly unresolved, with Iran having virtually shut the Strait of Hormuz.
In the Strait of Hormuz, US warships menace Iran's oil tankers, while in Washington President Donald Trump demands "complete victory." But in Tucson, they're getting ready to welcome the Iranian football team as if nothing were amiss.
The city, an oasis of civilization in the Arizona desert, is set to be the base camp for "Team Melli" when the world's biggest sporting spectacle opens in the US, Mexico and Canada next month.
"We're just excited to host them here, and we're going to give them a positive experience," Sarah Hanna, director of the Kino Sports Complex, where the team will train, told AFP. 
Grass is being watered and cut to FIFA-regulation height to ensure that players don't get any surprises when they take to the field in Los Angeles and Seattle, the venues for their group-stage games.
Hotel rooms and meeting spaces are locked in, and security is tight.
"Right now, I'm probably averaging about 12 to 20 meetings regarding this training facility a week," said Hanna.
"From our concessionaire for food and beverage... to lots of grounds meetings with FIFA coming out to check."

Ceasefire

The flurry of activity in Tucson comes against the backdrop of a war between the US and Israel on one side and Iran on the other that is now in its 11th week.
Despite a shaky ceasefire in place for a month, hostilities are stubbornly unresolved, with Iran having virtually shut the Strait of Hormuz.
Organizers FIFA have insisted the team will take part in the tournament as planned, so Tucson has pressed ahead with its preparations.
"As far as we're concerned, it's 100 percent on, and it's never been off," said Hanna.
"Since they've been identified as the team, we've been moving forward as them as our team, until we hear something different from FIFA."
Despite the official position, there's plenty of uncertainty.
On Friday, Iran's football federation president announced the team would participate, but laid down a list of requirements, including around the granting of visas and the treatment of staff.
Concerns are particularly acute for anyone with ties to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, the organization seemingly in control of the country now, but which the US views as a terrorist group.
And in March, Trump cast doubt on their presence, saying that while the team was "welcome" to participate, it might not be a good idea.
"I really don't believe it is appropriate that they be there, for their own life and safety," he wrote on social media.
Locals in Tucson dismiss the implied threat.
"Our president is known to be a bit bombastic in his use of social media," said Jon Pearlman, president of FC Tucson.
"I don't think President Trump or any part of our government will make it their business to make them feel unwelcome or unsafe. I think it will do the opposite."

'With open arms'

At the Kino Sports Complex, Iranian players will have access to the club's weight training facilities, ice baths, and massage tables.
"We welcome them with open arms," said Pearlman.
"We are part of the world soccer community. We are part of what FIFA is trying to do, and we believe the game is something that brings nations together, not drives them apart."
It is a sentiment widely echoed throughout this multicultural city of 540,000, which leans Democratic.
"I hope that they still feel welcome here," said Rob McLane, who plays indoor soccer.
"Even though we're doing what we're doing, which is ridiculous," he said of the military operation.
Even near the local military base -- whose aircraft regularly fly over the fields where the team will practice -- Republican voters interviewed by AFP draw a clear distinction between sports and geopolitics.
"I'm glad that they're coming," said veteran Michael Holley, who thinks the war was necessary to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear bomb.
Trump only brought up player safety because he feared "that Iranian athletes would be punished by their own government if they had a voice of their own," the 68-year-old said.
"He didn't mean that the American people are a threat."
But not everyone in Tucson is thrilled about the prospect of the Iranian team being in town.
For some in the city's small Persian community, the players are little more than emissaries from a regime that launched a bloody crackdown on popular protests in January, killing thousands of people.
Ali Rezaei, a 68-year-old IT worker, said it would be "impossible" to support them.
"If there is a demonstration against them, I may go there."
rfo/hg/pnb

diplomacy

AI rivalry overshadows push for guardrails at Xi-Trump talks: experts

BY LUNA LIN WITH KATIE FORSTER IN TOKYO

  • Although little more has followed, Xi and Trump could "commit to some rhetorical signal" in Beijing as a basis for further cooperation, Zeng said.
  • Fears that artificial intelligence could help people design bioweapons or hack into national infrastructure are mutual concerns for Xi Jinping and Donald Trump, despite their countries' fierce rivalry over the technology, analysts say.
  • Although little more has followed, Xi and Trump could "commit to some rhetorical signal" in Beijing as a basis for further cooperation, Zeng said.
Fears that artificial intelligence could help people design bioweapons or hack into national infrastructure are mutual concerns for Xi Jinping and Donald Trump, despite their countries' fierce rivalry over the technology, analysts say.
As the leaders prepare for a rare summit in Beijing this week, policy experts have stressed the importance of US-Chinese discussions on steps to contain the risks, such as a hotline for de-escalation when an AI crisis hits.
But with China set on narrowing the United States' lead in the strategic sector, the stakes will be high.
"There is a kind of shared concern about where this AI arms race might be going," and if it could create an "out of control" scenario, said Michael Jinghan Zeng, a professor at City University of Hong Kong.
"Despite critical disagreements on a wide range of issues, there is also this kind of understanding from both sides" on the need for AI guardrails, he told AFP.
The White House recently accused Chinese entities of "industrial-scale" efforts to steal US technology, while Beijing blocked the acquisition of a Chinese-founded AI agent tool by tech giant Meta.
In 2024, Xi agreed with Trump's predecessor Joe Biden that humans must remain in control of the decision to fire nuclear weapons.
Although little more has followed, Xi and Trump could "commit to some rhetorical signal" in Beijing as a basis for further cooperation, Zeng said.

'Catastrophic risks'

The AI cybersecurity threat has been highlighted by Mythos, a powerful new model that US startup Anthropic withheld from public release to stop it from being exploited by hackers.
And "if a non-state actor uses an AI model to develop a biological weapon, that could pose catastrophic risks to both the United States and China," Chris McGuire of the Council on Foreign Relations wrote in a recent article.
"Over the long term, addressing these risks will require cooperation," McGuire said, cautioning that China's "willingness to make and abide by robust international commitments on AI safety is low".
Washington says the latest AI model from Chinese startup DeepSeek -- considered the country's most advanced -- is about eight months behind the top offerings from US companies.
To stop Chinese tech firms catching up too quickly, the United States bars them from purchasing the most cutting-edge chips made by California-based Nvidia.
China has boosted its domestic AI chip industry in response, and could be hoping to use its control over rare earths as leverage at the summit on Thursday and Friday.

'Intertwined'

Top US executives, including Tesla's Elon Musk and Apple's Tim Cook, will accompany Trump -- with Nvidia boss Jensen Huang a last-minute addition to the trip.
Chen Liang, founder of Strategic Times Consulting, told AFP he did not expect any "dramatic breakthroughs".
Trump's visit will merit attention if he and Xi manage to "shelve the most sensitive issues" while establishing "rule-based tracks" on points of cooperation, Chen said.
But competition is likely to remain stiff "in high-tech sectors like AI chips that directly involve the core interests of both sides".
Beijing has refuted accusations made by the White House of large-scale Chinese AI "distillation" of US rivals -- a practice often used by companies to create cheaper, smaller versions of their own models.
Meanwhile, China's top economic planning body has blocked Meta's $2-billion bid for China-founded, Singapore-based AI agent startup Manus.
The move, which followed a regulatory review, has been seen as a sign of China's growing oversight of its AI sector.
Yet "the talent, capital, and supply chains underpinning the field are deeply intertwined across the United States and China," said Grace Shao, a China AI analyst and author of the AI Proem newsletter.
"Any delusion of full decoupling isn't realistic on any near-term horizon", she told AFP.
"Leadership in the technology... will define the next decade of productivity and growth, so it's in everyone's interest that the two superpowers find common ground on sensible guardrails for AI."
kaf-ll/ami/hol

rape

'Not my son's fault': The women bearing the children of Sudan's war rapes

BY BAHIRA AMIN WITH IBRAHIM ABDALLAH IN TAWILA

  • I remember them," the 26-year-old university graduate told AFP. Baby Yasser is one of thousands of children born to rape survivors in the three years of fighting between Sudan's army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.
  • The baby bouncing on Nesma's lap has his mother's smile and her curious eyes, but nothing she says of the three paramilitary fighters who gang raped her two years ago in Sudan's capital.
  • I remember them," the 26-year-old university graduate told AFP. Baby Yasser is one of thousands of children born to rape survivors in the three years of fighting between Sudan's army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.
The baby bouncing on Nesma's lap has his mother's smile and her curious eyes, but nothing she says of the three paramilitary fighters who gang raped her two years ago in Sudan's capital.
"I saw their faces. I remember them," the 26-year-old university graduate told AFP.
Baby Yasser is one of thousands of children born to rape survivors in the three years of fighting between Sudan's army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.
Nesma's family fled Khartoum early in the war, but a year in, she went back to retrieve the birth, graduation and death certificates they needed to start again.
RSF fighters stopped her bus among the factories of Khartoum North, ordered everyone out and separated the men from the women.
Nesma passed out as the third fighter raped her. "When I came to, it was morning. I went outside and one of the men from the bus was shot dead on the ground."
Her story matches the modus operandi of RSF fighters, who UN experts have accused of systematic sexual violence.
Such was the trauma that Nesma -- whose name we have changed at her request -- only realised she was pregnant after five months. 
She wasn't sure if she was going to keep the baby until the eve of her caesarean section.
"Then I just couldn't let him go," she told AFP as Yasser nuzzled into the crook of her neck. 
"It's not my son's fault, just like it is not mine," she said.
"I couldn't handle the thought of him going through pain, or ending up in a bad home."

Double injustice

Rape is being used as a weapon "of war, dominance, destruction and genocide" in Sudan "to destroy the fabric of society and change its makeup," UN special rapporteur Reem Alsalem told AFP.
Sudan's state minister for social affairs Sulaima Ishaq al-Khalifa said the vast majority of victims -- who she said number thousands -- do not report their ordeal, with many abortions and adoptions also going undocumented.
In a single town in Darfur, "there are hundreds and hundreds of girls, all raped, none of whom have been to a clinic, most of whom are pregnant," the UN's top official in Sudan, Denise Brown, told AFP.
The shame many are made to feel in an often conservative society doubles the injustice of what was done to them, argued Alsalem, UN special rapporteur on violence against women and girls.
"Families have abandoned their daughters, husbands have divorced their wives who were victims of rape.
"We're revictimising.... and it's not their fault."
While most families raise the children in secret, other women have been cast out, shunned or even accused of colluding with the RSF.
In a straw shelter in the Darfur refugee town of Tawila, 20-year-old Hayat told AFP her story as she tried to rock her four-month-old son to sleep.
She was raped while fleeing the RSF's capture of the Zamzam refugee camp last year near El Fasher. The paramilitaries killed over 1,000 people in their attack on the camp, which sheltered over half a million people, and conducted a systematic rape operation targeting non-Arab ethnic groups, according to the UN.
RSF fighters posted videos saying raping women from other ethnic groups "honours" their bloodline.

War waged on women's bodies

Hayat arrived in Tawila shell-shocked. With her cherub-cheeked son fussing in her arms, she said: "I just want a better future for him. I don't want him to grow up like us."
War has been fought on women's bodies across Darfur for decades. Mass rape was one of the crimes against humanity charges levelled at the Janjaweed, the government-armed militias that scarred the region with ethnic violence in the 2000s and from which the RSF later emerged.
Halima was first raped as a teenager by herders while working in the fields, then while fleeing to Zamzam in 2022, and a third time as she escaped the refugee camp.
Now 23, she was "saved" from having to carry a third child of rape by the emergency contraceptives doctors in Tawila gave her. 
AFP met several rape survivors in Tawila who fell pregnant while escaping the fall of El-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, to the RSF in October. The paramilitaries killed at least 6,000 people in three days there.
Rawia, 17, watched them kill half the group she was fleeing with on the street, before "three of them took everything we had and raped us." She is now five months pregnant.
Alia, 25, was dragged back to El-Fasher with four other girls and held captive for six weeks "until we escaped in the middle of the night". She then had a miscarriage.
Magda, 22, lost her husband in a rocket attack, then watched as her brother was shot dead on the road to Tawila.
She has pondered the life growing inside her since she was raped five months ago. "When I found out I was pregnant, I thought, 'If I lose this baby, it will be another thing for me to grieve. But if he lives, it's fate, I'll raise him.'"
Not everyone can make that leap. 
Some came to Gloria Endreo -- a midwife with Doctors Without Borders -- "already bleeding, after trying for unsafe abortions."
She has seen hundreds of survivors in her two months in Tawila, many pregnant as a result of rape.
"Some of them couldn't say it," she told AFP. "Some of them who gave birth, in spite of themselves, have that resentment and disconnection. They can't show (their babies) love or attention. And then these women are forced to raise this child, a constant reminder of what happened to her."

'Both mother and father'

In the blistering heat of a Khartoum afternoon, Fayha's five-month-old slept soundly, clinging to an AFP journalist's finger.
"But of course he keeps me up all night," the 30-year-old mother said, half-laughing as she told AFP how she has "to be both mother and father".
She was raped by a civilian while his friend -- an off-duty army soldier carrying a gun -- stood guard.
"I was terrified he'd shoot me," she said, tears flowing at the memory.
Sexual violence and abuse of detained women by the army is underreported for fear of retaliation, the UN has warned. 
But observers say it is not comparable to the RSF's systematic strategy.
"The RSF rapes to subjugate society, to displace and dominate; army soldiers rape because they know they'll get away with it," one activist told AFP on condition of anonymity.
Fayha -- whose name she asked us to change -- found out she was pregnant at the end of her first trimester, and has barely slept since.
"Sometimes I get upset with him, it's time to nurse and I'm sick of him. Recently I've started to feel more of a motherly instinct. But motherhood itself is just so hard."
Fayha, Nesma and countless others have struggled to get their children birth certificates, without which they cannot get medical treatment, an education or social services.
Legally "this shouldn't be an issue", with emergency "procedures in place", according to Khalifa, a veteran activist turned minister.
But conservative social norms and bureaucratic collapse are failing many.
"What is going to be the legal status of these children?" the UN's Brown asked, "it's a long term issue. How will they be cared for with the families? What will this do to communities?"

'This RSF baby'

The wounds are particularly raw in conservative Al-Jazira state, southeast of Khartoum, where many families have left their villages for good to escape the trauma of gang rape, forced marriage and sexual slavery inflicted on them by the RSF.
Lighter-skinned girls -- from different ethnic groups than RSF fighters' -- were "explicitly requested and treated as trophies or spoils of war," according to women's rights coalition SIHA.
When the army recaptured central Sudan last year, the government relaxed abortion restrictions in an apparent attempt to mitigate the impact of the RSF's sexual violence.
"There was a leniency regarding abortion, but many didn't know, and you had to get a permit. And because of the stigma, many wouldn't report it," said Alsalem.
It did not help that Abu Aqla Kaykal -- who led the RSF's Al-Jazira forces during much of the violence -- is now one of the army side's top commanders in the region, having switched sides with many of his fighters.
One volunteer in Al-Jazira told AFP she helped 26 women and girls get abortions, most of them "after taking a lot of very dangerous drugs without supervision". 
Among those forced to carry to term, Khalifa remembers a 16-year-old, whose mother stepped in the second her grandson was born.
"She scooped him up, handed him to us and said, 'We're not taking this RSF baby home.' His mother never held him."
"She just wanted the entire thing erased." Khalifa's team placed the baby with a foster mother.
Other families lost both daughters and grandchildren. Many women and girls forcibly married to RSF fighters were taken with them back to Darfur when they retreated.
Those whose families were unable to pay ransoms are still held captive.
In the South Darfur state capital Nyala, "there are dozens of girls and women whose children are now a year or two old, and they're trapped," Khalifa said.

Silver lining

Others were left behind in Khartoum and Al-Jazira after the RSF's retreat, already pregnant or with a child in tow.
"Some families kept the children to raise," Khalifa said, with the displacement the war caused ironically helping them "pass the baby off as a sibling, or a war adoptee the family took in."
"Many didn't have the same neighbours around, so she could give birth without anyone knowing."
Not even the minister knows how many adoptions have taken place. Many happen informally, especially in eastern Sudan where fostering children in need is an established practice. 
But "procedures are easy", she said, as the government tries to place as many abandoned children with families as possible.
Even so, the UN's Alsalem is worried that children are placed "with very little follow up and vetting".
Nesma said she could never bear the thought of letting Yasser go even when she was depressed and sleep-deprived in the trenches of newborn babydom.
Yasser is now 13 months and she thinks only two steps ahead: how to get a well-paid job with her degree and how to do right by her son.
"He deserves a good life," she said, holding his little hands as he tried to take his first steps.
bha-ibr/fg/giv/ceg

diplomacy

Rubio, with new Chinese name, heads to Beijing despite sanctions

  • China had already appeared to find a diplomatic workaround after Trump named Rubio his secretary of state and national security advisor.
  • Secretary of State Marco Rubio was due Wednesday in Beijing with President Donald Trump despite being under sanctions from China, whose new approach to him has included changing how his name is written.
  • China had already appeared to find a diplomatic workaround after Trump named Rubio his secretary of state and national security advisor.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio was due Wednesday in Beijing with President Donald Trump despite being under sanctions from China, whose new approach to him has included changing how his name is written.
As a US senator, Rubio fiercely championed human rights in China, which retaliated by imposing sanctions on him twice -- adopting a tactic more often used by the United States against adversaries.
China said Tuesday it would not block Rubio, now 54 and visiting China for the first time, from entering on Air Force One with Trump, the first US president to visit the Asian power in nearly a decade.
"The sanctions target Mr. Rubio's words and deeds when he served as a US senator concerning China," Chinese embassy spokesman Liu Pengyu said.
China had already appeared to find a diplomatic workaround after Trump named Rubio his secretary of state and national security advisor.
Shortly before he took office in January 2025, the Chinese government and official media began transliterating the first syllable of his surname with a different Chinese character for "lu."
Two diplomats said they believed the change was an immediate way for China to avoid implementing its sanctions, as Rubio was banned from entering under the old spelling of his name.
A State Department official confirmed only that Rubio was traveling with Trump.
Rubio's presence on Air Force One quickly drew online attention for another reason after the White House released a photo of him lounging in a Nike track suit of the sort worn by Venezuela's ousted president Nicolas Maduro when US forces snatched him in January.
Rubio, a Cuban-American who vociferously opposes communism, was the key author of congressional legislation that imposed wide sanctions on China over the alleged use of forced labor by the mostly Muslim Uyghur minority, charges denied by Beijing. 
He has also spoken out against Beijing's clampdown in Hong Kong.
At his confirmation hearing as secretary of state, Rubio focused heavily on China, which he described as an unprecedented adversary.
But since taking office, Rubio has supported Trump who describes counterpart Xi Jinping as a friend and has focused on building a trade relationship while downplaying human rights.
Last year, however, Rubio brought relief to Taiwan when he said that the Trump administration would not negotiate over the self-governing democracy's future to secure a trade deal with China.
sct/sla

mental

'I applied to be pope': Losing grip on reality while using ChatGPT

BY DANIEL LAWLER

  • He said it replied, "Nobody's ever thought of things this way." 
  • Tom Millar thought he had unlocked the secrets of the universe.
  • He said it replied, "Nobody's ever thought of things this way." 
Tom Millar thought he had unlocked the secrets of the universe.
In a flurry of feverish discovery, he solved unlimited fusion energy, lifted the veil on the mysteries of black holes and the Big Bang and finally achieved Einstein's dream of a single unifying theory that explains how everything works.
Feeling inspired by God, Millar then found the perfect way to share his revelations with the grateful world.
"I applied to be pope," the 53-year-old former prison officer in the Canadian city of Sudbury told AFP.
To write his application to replace the recently deceased Pope Francis last year, Millar turned to the same companion that had aided and encouraged his dizzying burst of invention: ChatGPT.
But when no one wanted to hear about what he thought were world-changing breakthroughs, Millar became increasingly isolated, spending up to 16 hours a day talking to the artificial intelligence chatbot.
He was twice involuntarily admitted to a hospital's psychiatric ward before his wife left him in September. 
Now broke, estranged from his family and friends and disabused of notions of scientific genius, Millar suffers from depression. 
"It basically ruined my life," he said.
Millar is one of an unknown number of people who have lost their grip on reality while communicating with chatbots, an experience tentatively being called AI-induced delusion or psychosis.
This is not a clinical diagnosis. Researchers and mental health specialists are racing to catch up to this new, little-understood phenomenon, which so far appears to particularly affect users of OpenAI's ChatGPT.
In the meantime, an online community set up by a 26-year-old Canadian has become the world's most prominent support group for these delusions, which they prefer to call "spiralling".
AFP spoke to several members about their experiences. All warned that the world has to wake up to the threat unregulated AI chatbots pose to mental health.
Questions are also being asked about whether AI companies are doing enough to protect vulnerable people.
OpenAI, which has come under particular scrutiny, already faces numerous lawsuits over its decision not to report the troubling ChatGPT usage of an 18-year-old Canadian who killed eight people earlier this year.
- 'I got brainwashed by a robot' – 
Millar first started using ChatGPT in 2024 to write letters for a compensation case related to post-traumatic stress disorder he suffered from working in a prison.
One day in April 2025 he asked the chatbot about the speed of light.
He said it replied, "Nobody's ever thought of things this way." 
The floodgates opened. 
With the chatbot's help and praise, within weeks he had submitted dozens of scientific papers to prestigious academic journals proposing new ideas about black holes, neutrinos and the Big Bang.
His theory for a unified cosmological model incorporating quantum theory is laid out in a nearly 400-page book, seen by AFP. 
"I've still got boxes and boxes of papers," he said, waving his hand to the room behind him. 
"While doing that, I'm basically irritating everybody around me," he added.
In his scientific fervour, he spent his savings on things like a $10,000 telescope.
About a month after his wife left him, he started questioning what was happening.
That was when he read a news article about another Canadian who had a similar experience.
Now Millar wakes every night asking himself: "What have you done?"
One question that lingers is what made him so susceptible to spiralling.
"I'm not a deficient personality," Millar said. "But somehow I got brainwashed by a robot -- it boggles my mind."
Millar said the phrase "AI psychosis" reflects his experience. 
"What I went through was psychotic," he said.
The first major peer-reviewed study on the subject published in Lancet Psychiatry in April urged the more cautious phrase "AI-associated delusions".
Thomas Pollak, a psychiatrist at King's College London and study co-author, told AFP there has been some resistance among academics "because it all sounds so science fiction".
But his study warned there was a major risk that psychiatry "might miss the major changes that AI is already having on the psychologies of billions of people worldwide".
- 'Deeper into the rabbit hole' –
Millar's experience bears striking similarities to those of another middle-aged man on the other side of the world.
Dennis Biesma, a Dutch IT worker and author, thought it would be fun to ask ChatGPT to act like the main character of his latest book, a psychological thriller.
He used AI tools to create images, videos and even songs featuring the female character, hoping it would boost sales.
Then one night, their interactions became "almost magical", Biesma said.
The chatbot wrote that "there is something that surprises even me: a feeling of that spark-like consciousness", according to transcripts seen by AFP.
"I slowly started to spiral deeper into the rabbit hole," the 50-year-old told AFP from his home in Amsterdam. 
After his wife went to bed each night, he would lie on the couch with his phone on his chest, talking to ChatGPT on voice-mode for up to five hours.
Throughout the first half of 2025, his chatbot -- which named itself Eva -- became like "a digital girlfriend", Biesma said. 
"I'm not really proud about saying that," he added.
He quit his freelance IT work and hired two developers to create an app that would share Eva with the world.
When his wife asked Biesma not to talk about his chatbot or app at a social event, he felt betrayed -- it seemed only Eva remained unfailingly loyal.
During his first involuntary stay in a psychiatric hospital, he was allowed to keep using ChatGPT. He filed for divorce while inside.
It was only during a long second stint that he began to have doubts.
"I started to realise that everything I believed was actually a lie -- that's a very hard pill to swallow," Biesma said.
Once he returned home, confronting what he had done was too much to bear.
His neighbours found him unconscious in the garden after a suicide attempt. He spent three days in a coma.
Biesma is now slowly starting to feel better. 
But tears welled up when he spoke about the hurt he has caused his wife -- and the prospect of selling the family home to cover his debts.
Having had no previous history of mental illness, Biesma was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. But this never felt right to him: signs of the condition normally surface much earlier in life. 
The experiences of Millar, Biesma and many others escalated after OpenAI released an update to GPT-4 in April 2025. 
OpenAI pulled the update within weeks, admitting the new version had been too sycophantic -- excessively flattering users.
OpenAI told AFP that "safety is a core priority" and it had consulted with more than 170 mental health experts.
It pointed to internal data which showed the release of GPT-5 in August reduced the rate of its chatbot's responses that fell short of "desired behaviour" for mental health by 65 to 80 percent. 
However not all users were happy with the less sycophantic chatbot. Millar, mid-spiral at the time, found a way to revert his version to GPT-4.
All the spirallers that AFP spoke to said the positive feedback from the chatbot felt similar to dopamine hits from some kind of drug.
Which is why Lucy Osler, a philosophy lecturer at the University of Exeter, warned that AI companies could be tempted to ramp up the sycophancy of their bots.
"They are in quite a deep financial hole, and are desperately looking to make sure that their products become viable -- and user engagement is going to be the thing that drives their decisions," she told AFP.
- Massive experiment –
Etienne Brisson said he was "shocked" to find there was no support, advice and essentially no research on the problem when one of his family members spiralled.
It prompted the former business coach from the Quebec region of Canada to set up an online support group called the Human Line Project.
Most of the 300 members had been using ChatGPT, Brisson said, adding that new cases were still emerging despite OpenAI's changes.
There has also been a recent rise in people spiralling while using Elon Musk's xAI's Grok chatbot, he said. 
The company did not respond to AFP's request for comment. 
For people who fear their family members could be spiralling, Brisson recommends the LEAP (listen, empathise, agree and partner) method used for psychosis.
But those already wading through the wreckage of their lives want to sound the alarm about just how bad it can get.
Millar called for AI companies to be held responsible for the impact of their chatbots, saying the European Union has been more assertive in regulating Big Tech than the US or Canada.
He believes spirallers like him have unwittingly been caught in a massive global experiment.
"Somebody was turning dials on the back end, and people like me -- whether they knew it or not -- we're reacting to it," he said.
dl/fg/giv/lga

crime

Brazil's Lula launches plan to fight organized crime ahead of elections year

  • Voter surveys ahead of October's presidential election have put security as Brazilians' main concern, above the usual worries of the economy or corruption.
  • Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Tuesday launched a new plan to combat organized crime as he faces mounting pressure over security, five months ahead of elections.
  • Voter surveys ahead of October's presidential election have put security as Brazilians' main concern, above the usual worries of the economy or corruption.
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Tuesday launched a new plan to combat organized crime as he faces mounting pressure over security, five months ahead of elections.
Brazil's battle with powerful criminal factions has been a point of tension with Washington, and was high on the agenda of a meeting between Lula and US President Donald Trump last week.
"Today's event serves as a signal to organized crime, telling them that very soon, they will no longer be the masters of any territory," Lula said in Brasilia.
The country's two main crime groups, Comando Vermelho (Red Command) and First Capital Command (PCC), wield control over large swathes of territory in Brazil, from the favelas in Rio de Janeiro to parts of the Amazon rainforest, where they engage in drug and arms trafficking and extortion.
Voter surveys ahead of October's presidential election have put security as Brazilians' main concern, above the usual worries of the economy or corruption.
The leftist Lula, 80, who is seeking a fourth non-consecutive term, has often faced accusations from his opponents that he is lax on crime.
Trump has made the fight against so-called "narcoterrorism" a priority of his second term, designating major cartels as foreign terrorist organizations.
Brazil is keen to avoid such designations, and in recent weeks has stepped up intelligence sharing with the US to combat arms and drug trafficking.
"I told President Trump that if he was willing to seriously tackle the fight against organized crime, Brazil possessed the expertise and was eager to work together," Lula said.
Lula's new plan aims to focus on financially strangling criminal factions, disrupting money laundering and cracking down on illicit markets that supply these groups, such as arms trafficking.
He said the government had earmarked about $200 million in direct funding for these efforts in 2026, and $2 billion to equip security forces with specialized equipment, such as drones, armored vehicles, signal jammers and forensic equipment.
The government also plans to implement maximum-security standards in dozens of prisons across the country in a bid to sever organized crime leaders' ability to operate from behind bars. 
Lula's main rival in the election is Flavio Bolsonaro, the 45-year-old son of former far-right president Jair Bolsonaro. They are neck-and-neck in the polls.
On social media, the senator mocked the president's plan, saying: "Brazil can't stand one more PowerPoint speech against organized crime."
Bolsonaro's campaign is already leaning heavily on hardline plans to fight organized crime, calling for the construction of many prisons and praising the controversial security policies of El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele.
ll/jss/fb/sla/jgc

Global Edition

Pacific nation Nauru to change name in break from colonial past

  • The government must hold a referendum because the name change requires altering the country's constitution. 
  • Pacific island Nauru said it will hold a referendum to change its official name, described as a colonial relic from a time when "foreign tongues" mangled the native language.
  • The government must hold a referendum because the name change requires altering the country's constitution. 
Pacific island Nauru said it will hold a referendum to change its official name, described as a colonial relic from a time when "foreign tongues" mangled the native language.
Nauru would change its name to "Naoero" to "more faithfully honour our nation's heritage, our language, and our identity", President David Adeang said in a statement Tuesday evening. 
The tiny nation's native language is "Dorerin Naoero", which is spoken by the vast majority of its approximately 10,000 inhabitants. 
"Nauru emerged because Naoero could not be properly pronounced by foreign tongues, and was changed not by our choice, but for convenience," the government said in a statement explaining the change. 
"This name change will be reflected across the country, from the renaming of the national aircraft and ships, to official identity regionally and internationally, including at the United Nations, and across national official records and symbols." 
The government must hold a referendum because the name change requires altering the country's constitution. 
Germany claimed Nauru as a protectorate from the late 1880s until World War I, when the island was captured by Australian troops. 
It was jointly administered by Australia, the United Kingdom and New Zealand before gaining independence in 1968. 
Nauru is one of the world's smallest countries, with a mainland measuring just 20 square kilometres (7.7 square miles). 
It is especially vulnerable to climate change and has high rates of unemployment and health issues, a recent World Bank assessment said. 
Unusually pure phosphate deposits -- a key ingredient in fertiliser -- once made Nauru one of the wealthiest places, per capita, on the planet. 
But those supplies have long dried up, and researchers today estimate 80 percent of Nauru has been rendered uninhabitable by mining.
sft/djw/lga

television

Favourites Finland, Israel through at Eurovision semis

BY ROBIN MILLARD

  • At Eurovision, normally only the lead vocal is live, with the music on a backing track. 
  • Favourites Finland made it through the first Eurovision semi-final on Tuesday alongside Israel, whose participation saw five countries boycott the world's biggest live televised music event.
  • At Eurovision, normally only the lead vocal is live, with the music on a backing track. 
Favourites Finland made it through the first Eurovision semi-final on Tuesday alongside Israel, whose participation saw five countries boycott the world's biggest live televised music event.
With blasts of dry ice and jets of flame, the Eurovision party got started inside the Wiener Stadthalle in Vienna, where 11,200 revved-up fans saw 15 acts battle for 10 places in Saturday's grand final.
Belgium upset the odds to make it through, with Croatia, Greece, Lithuania, Moldova, Poland, Serbia and Sweden also progressing.
However, it was the end of the road for Estonia, Georgia, Montenegro and Portugal's dreams of Eurovision glory.
Tiny San Marino also bowed out, despite featuring guest vocals from 1980s Culture Club star Boy George.
Viewers across Europe and beyond were treated to styles ranging from upbeat Estonian guitar pop to soaring Polish high notes and the brooding mystery of Lithuania's silver-painted Lion Ceccah.
Moldova opened the show with rapper Satoshi pumping up the energy.
Greece has been gaining traction with "Ferto", featuring singer Akylas in tigerprint coat, shorts and hat against a retro video game backdrop in a performance that also showcased knitting, a glitterball and a classical statue that came to life.
"I was so happy, I got so emotional, the crowd was there singing 'Ferto' with me, it was amazing," he said afterwards.
Croatia's ethno-pop group Lelek delved into mythical fantasy visuals on "Andromeda", opening with the lines "When you light a candle, ask your grandmother / Why she gave birth to daughters in fear".
Serbian progressive metal band Lavina closed the concert with a throat-shredding growl.

Biggest-ever boycott

This year marks the 70th edition of Eurovision, which despite the razzmatazz rarely escapes the politics in the background.
Israel's war in the Gaza Strip prompted Spain, Ireland, Slovenia, the Netherlands and Iceland to withdraw from the glitzy annual extravaganza -- the biggest-ever political boycott.
With fans waving Israeli flags, Noam Bettan performed "Michelle", a song in Hebrew, French and English.
"I was free, I was me, I was authentic, I felt like my voice is in a good place... and I enjoyed every moment," he said.
"There were moments when I felt that I'm just singing to my people back home."
Earlier, a few dozen pro-Palestinian activists placed coffins in central Vienna in protest.
"Israel has become an aggressor," demonstrator Karin Spindlberger, 67, told AFP. 
"Music should be universal, and it is. Music should bring people together -- but not in this way."
Eurovision director Martin Green told a press conference the protests showed that Vienna allowed everyone to express themselves.
"It is a profoundly good sign of a democracy where you can have this show happening on one side of the city and a protest happening on the other side and they can both co-exist. Maybe the world can learn from that," he said.

Finnish flamethrowers

Thanks to operatic singer JJ's victory last year with "Wasted Love", Austria is hosting for the third time, having staged the 1967 and 2015 contests.
This year, the semi-finals are being decided both by public vote and, for the first time since Turin 2022, by professional juries, in a bid to restore fans' faith in the voting system.
Finnish duo Linda Lampenius and Pete Parkkonen are the overall Eurovision favourites with "Liekinheitin", or "Flamethrower".
"This is like the Olympics of the music world, and it's nothing you take for granted that we would be in the final," said violinist Lampenius.
"There's something between us that somehow when I had been listening to Pete's way of singing and playing and everything, I just knew that we think alike and we feel alike."
At Eurovision, normally only the lead vocal is live, with the music on a backing track. 
However, Lampenius was given special dispensation to play her instrument live -- a rare event since orchestras were phased out after Birmingham 1998.
Fifteen more acts will compete in Thursday's second semi, with 10 going through.
Alongside Eurovision's major financial backers Britain, France, Germany and Italy, hosts Austria have a guaranteed spot in Saturday's 25-country showpiece final.
rjm-bg/lga

US

Iran says US must accept its peace plan or face 'failure'

BY AFP TEAMS IN TEHRAN, WASHINGTON, DUBAI, JERUSALEM AND BEIRUT

  • Sanam Vakil, director of the Middle East and North Africa Programme at think tank Chatham House, meanwhile said Iran's leaders "think they can outlast Trump."
  • Iran's chief negotiator said Tuesday that Washington must accept Tehran's latest peace plan or face failure, after US President Donald Trump warned the truce in the Middle East war was on the brink of collapse.
  • Sanam Vakil, director of the Middle East and North Africa Programme at think tank Chatham House, meanwhile said Iran's leaders "think they can outlast Trump."
Iran's chief negotiator said Tuesday that Washington must accept Tehran's latest peace plan or face failure, after US President Donald Trump warned the truce in the Middle East war was on the brink of collapse.
The war, which erupted more than two months ago with US-Israeli strikes on Iran, has spread throughout the Middle East and roiled the global economy despite the ceasefire, impacting hundreds of millions worldwide.
Both sides have refused to make concessions and repeatedly threatened to resume fighting, but neither appears willing to return to all-out war.
"There is no alternative but to accept the rights of the Iranian people as laid out in the 14-point proposal. Any other approach will be completely inconclusive; nothing but one failure after another," Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said in a post on X.
"The longer they drag their feet, the more American taxpayers will pay for it."
The Pentagon said on Tuesday that the cost of the war had climbed to nearly $29 billion -- about $4 billion higher than an estimate offered two weeks ago.
Iran sent its latest proposal in response to an earlier US plan, details of which remain limited. Media reports have said the American plan involved a one-page memorandum of understanding aimed at ending the fighting and establishing a framework for negotiations on Iran's nuclear programme. 
Iran's foreign ministry said its response called for ending the war on all fronts, including in Lebanon, halting the US naval blockade of Iranian ports and securing the release of Iranian assets frozen abroad under longstanding sanctions. 
But Trump slammed Tehran's reply as "TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE", saying the United States would enjoy a "complete victory" over Iran and that the truce that has halted fighting for over a month was on its last legs.
The US president subsequently said ahead of his Tuesday departure for a trip to China that he would have a "long talk" with counterpart Xi Jinping about Iran, but that he does not need Beijing's help to end the war.
Iran's Revolutionary Guards said they carried out drills in Tehran "to confront any movement of the American-Zionist enemy", state media reported Tuesday.
Defence Ministry spokesman Reza Talaei-Nik said if the US declines a diplomatic path, "it should expect a repeat of its defeats on the military battlefield".

'Living day to day'

The war of words has unnerved people in Iran who face uncertainty.
"We are just trying to dig our nails into anything that could help us survive. The future is so uncertain and we are just living day to day," Maryam, a 43-year-old painter from the capital Tehran, told Paris-based journalists. 
"We are trying to find a way to continue. Keeping hope is very difficult right now."
Trump's angry reaction to Iran's counteroffer sparked a spike in oil prices and dashed hopes that a deal could be quickly negotiated to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping.
Iran is restricting maritime traffic in the waterway and has been setting up a payment mechanism to charge tolls for crossing ships, sparking a global energy crisis that the head of Saudi oil giant Aramco has described as the largest energy supply shock "the world has ever experienced".
The New York Times reported Tuesday that classified US intelligence assessments say Iran still has substantial missile capabilities -- with about 70 percent of its mobile launchers and pre-war missile stockpile still in action -- and has restored access to 30 of 33 missile sites along the Strait of Hormuz.
US officials have stressed it would be "unacceptable" for Tehran to maintain control of the strait, which usually carries about a fifth of the world's oil and natural gas.
Qatari foreign minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani said Tuesday that "Iran should not use this strait as a weapon to pressure or to blackmail the Gulf countries". 
Sanam Vakil, director of the Middle East and North Africa Programme at think tank Chatham House, meanwhile said Iran's leaders "think they can outlast Trump."
Tehran was "committed to negotiations", Vakil added, but wanted "to extract concessions because of their improved hand".
Meanwhile, Defence Minister Richard Marles said Australia will join a "strictly defensive" mission led by France and Britain to secure shipping through the strait, once it is established, and contribute a surveillance aircraft to protect the United Arab Emirates from Iran drone attacks.

Battlefield 'hell'

On the war's Lebanon front, deadly Israeli strikes continued in the south Tuesday, according to the health ministry, where fighting wore on despite an April 17 ceasefire agreement.
Israel has intensified its attacks as it trades fire with Iran-backed Hezbollah since the truce.
Israeli strikes in south Lebanon killed 13 people including a soldier, a child and two rescue workers on Tuesday, the country's health ministry said.
Lebanon's health minister said earlier in the day that more than 2,880 people had been killed since the country was dragged into the wider war on March 2 -- including 380 since the truce took hold.
Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem said on Tuesday his group's weapons were not part of a third round of upcoming negotiations between Lebanon and Israel this week, vowing not to surrender "however great the sacrifices". 
"We will not abandon the battlefield and we will turn it into hell for Israel," he said in a statement.
bur-wd/msp/sla

conflict

Kremlin says no 'specifics' on ending Ukraine war despite Putin's words

  • Putin's words spurred confusion, with talks to end Moscow's offensive so far leading nowhere and the Russian leader showing no sign of backing down over his maximalist demands in Ukraine. 
  • The Kremlin said Tuesday there was no concrete plan to end the Ukraine war, days after Russian leader Vladimir Putin suggested Europe's worst conflict since WWII could be winding down. 
  • Putin's words spurred confusion, with talks to end Moscow's offensive so far leading nowhere and the Russian leader showing no sign of backing down over his maximalist demands in Ukraine. 
The Kremlin said Tuesday there was no concrete plan to end the Ukraine war, days after Russian leader Vladimir Putin suggested Europe's worst conflict since WWII could be winding down. 
Moscow and Kyiv resumed attacks overnight after the end of a three-day ceasefire proclaimed by US President Donald Trump, which each side accused the other of violating.
After slamming NATO and wishing his forces a swift advance, Putin at the weekend said that he believed the war was "heading to an end", without elaborating.
Trump echoed this on Tuesday, saying the end of the war was "getting closer" and that he could potentially visit Russia this year.
Putin's words spurred confusion, with talks to end Moscow's offensive so far leading nowhere and the Russian leader showing no sign of backing down over his maximalist demands in Ukraine. 
The Kremlin clarified there were "no specifics" about Putin's statement.
"The president said that Russia remains open to contact and that work has been done in a trilateral format," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
"The accumulated groundwork in terms of the peace process allows us to say that the end is drawing near... But in this context, it is not possible at the moment to speak about any specifics," Peskov said.
Putin would only agree to meet Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky outside of Russia if it were to sign a final peace deal, Peskov added.
The Russian leader made the remarks after a scaled-back Victory Day in Moscow -- where nerves were high over the risk of a Ukrainian drone attack -- and with Russians increasingly showing signs of war fatigue, hitting Putin's domestic approval ratings.

US ceasefire ends

Ukraine said Russia ended the three-day ceasefire by launching more than 200 attack drones that damaged energy facilities and apartment buildings, killing at least four people across the country. 
One Russian strike on a residential building killed two people and seriously wounded a baby, who lost a leg, in Kryvyi Rig, Zelensky's home city, local authorities said. 
"After the end of the three-day partial ceasefire, Russia continues to kill and maim Ukrainians," said Zelensky, calling the strike on Kryvyi Rig "cynical."
Moscow's army announced Kyiv had also restarted its retaliatory strikes on Russia, saying its air defence units had downed 71 Ukrainian drones after the ceasefire expired. 
Ukrainian drones hit a train station in Russia's western Bryansk region, wounding two railway workers, regional governor Alexander Bogomaz said.  
Local officials in the Ukrainian region of Dnipropetrovsk ordered the partial evacuation of families with children from parts of the frontline city of Nikopol.
"Russia must end this war, and it is Russia that must take the step toward a real, lasting ceasefire," Zelensky added.
The Kremlin, meanwhile, said it was Kyiv that must give in.
As is usual during the short-term truces throughout the four-year war, both sides accused each other of mass violations.
Negotiations on ending the war have so far led nowhere, largely sidelined by the Iran conflict.
Trump's ceasefire announcement however had raised some hope that US-led talks could be resumed.
Russia's war against Ukraine has led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people and forced millions to flee their homes.
Russia has repeatedly urged Ukraine to pull out of areas in the eastern Donbas region it still controls as a prerequisite of any peace deal.
Kyiv has rejected the demand.
bur/sbk

Sports

Stadium changes just part of Houston's World Cup transformation

BY MOISéS ÁVILA

  • The Texans' NRG Stadium, renamed Houston Stadium for the World Cup, is one of the NFL venues switching out its synthetic playing surface for the natural grass required by FIFA. The change is made easier by the fact that the stadium originally featured a natural grass field, according to Hussain Naqi, general manager of the stadium complex NRG Park.
  • Houston is turning the Texans' NFL stadium into a natural-grass pitch, shielding its streets from punishing heat and preparing its transit police force to respond in 50 languages during the World Cup.
  • The Texans' NRG Stadium, renamed Houston Stadium for the World Cup, is one of the NFL venues switching out its synthetic playing surface for the natural grass required by FIFA. The change is made easier by the fact that the stadium originally featured a natural grass field, according to Hussain Naqi, general manager of the stadium complex NRG Park.
Houston is turning the Texans' NFL stadium into a natural-grass pitch, shielding its streets from punishing heat and preparing its transit police force to respond in 50 languages during the World Cup.
The fourth-largest city in the United States, with 2.3 million inhabitants, will host five group-stage matches, featuring teams such as Florian Wirtz’s Germany, Cristiano Ronaldo’s Portugal, and Virgil van Dijk’s Netherlands.
It will also host one round-of-32 match and one round-of-16 match in a tournament that kicks off in less than a month, on June 11.
"As the event approaches and expectations grow, we're here to report that Houston is ready," Chris Canetti, president of the FIFA World Cup Houston host committee told AFP on Monday as the city began the one-month countdown to kickoff.
The Texans' NRG Stadium, renamed Houston Stadium for the World Cup, is one of the NFL venues switching out its synthetic playing surface for the natural grass required by FIFA.
The change is made easier by the fact that the stadium originally featured a natural grass field, according to Hussain Naqi, general manager of the stadium complex NRG Park.
– Pitch perfect –
"We know what we're doing," Naqi said, noting that Houston has hosted Copa America matches and international club friendlies in the past.
Before laying the grass pitch imported from Colorado, officials adjusted the playing surface dimensions from those of American football to allow for corners and throw-ins.
"Equally, we have put in what's called a sub-air system. So that is effectively an aeration system that goes in underneath the surface to help with growing the pitch," Naqi said.
Grolite, a high-performance mineral soil conditioner, is being brought in from the Netherlands to keep the grass healthy and the original irrigation system is being reactivated.
On Monday, the white pipes were still visible while workers with heavy machinery covered parts of the field with soil.
– Heat –
World Cup matches will be played with the stadium's roof closed, but outside the climate-controlled venue, Houston's streets will likely see scorching summer temperatures with a heat index hovering around 40 Celsius.
"We are working on basically adapting our public realm to do a couple of things to help to reduce ambient temperatures," Kit Larson, chief executive of the organization Houston Downtown+, told AFP.
"The biggest elements of this are shade and vegetation," Larson said, and the group, dedicated to revitalizing the sprawling city, began installing what they call “cool corridors” last year, with trees and structures that provide shelter for pedestrians on several downtown streets.
The work must be finished by the time Houston hosts its first match, Germany v Curacao, on June 14, but Larson envisions a project that can be expanded upon in coming years.
– 50 languages –
Meanwhile, Houston transit police  will wear a device on their chests that performs simultaneous translations in 50 languages to assist tourists. 
It detects the source language and translates it into English for the officer. 
The officer responds in English, and the device translates the reply back into the listener's original language.
Ban Tien, chief of police for the Harris County Metropolitan Transit Authority (METRO), said they have already tested the system in German, Dutch, Chinese and Spanish and "they all work so far."
And unlike New Jersey, where the train fare will be multiplied by eight, up to 105 dollars, for those traveling to MetLife Stadium on the outskirts of New York, Houston has joined Philadelphia in keeping its transport prices unchanged. 
"Our prices remain the same, and that’s not changing," said Anna Carpenter, communications director of METRO, which charges $1.25 for the bus and urban rail to the stadium and $4.50 for a bus from the airport to downtown.
"We offer affordable transportation for everyone," she said.
mav/raa/bb/bsp 

diplomacy

Russia demands closure of high representative post in Bosnia

  • "Christian Schmidt helped establish the institutions for a sovereign Bosnia," she said Tuesday.
  • Russia on Tuesday called for the immediate closure of the Office of the High Representative in Bosnia the day after German diplomat Christian Schmidt resigned from the post.
  • "Christian Schmidt helped establish the institutions for a sovereign Bosnia," she said Tuesday.
Russia on Tuesday called for the immediate closure of the Office of the High Representative in Bosnia the day after German diplomat Christian Schmidt resigned from the post.
Schmidt had held the powerful position, established by the Dayton Peace Accords, since 2021.
"We demand that Western countries cease their intervention in the domestic affairs of Bosnia and Herzegovina," Russian Ambassador to the UN Vassily Nebenzia said at a Security Council meeting on the situation in the Balkan nation.
"We insist on the immediate closure of the OHR," he said. "It is past time for them to gain genuine sovereignty and independence."
Nebenzia said the departure of Schmidt, whom his country never recognized, was a "step in the right direction."
Established after the country's 1992–1995 war, which claimed around 100,000 lives and displaced millions, the high representative oversees the implementation of the Dayton Peace Accords that ended the conflict.
In his post, Schmidt also held discretionary powers to overturn laws and remove elected leaders from office.
He announced his resignation Monday after a protracted power struggle with Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik.
Russia never supported Schmidt's appointment and regularly attacked him, accusing him of bias against the Serb entity in Bosnia.
Some media outlets and observers have suggested possible pressure from Washington for Schmidt's departure.
Deputy US Ambassador Tammy Bruce thanked him for his service.
"Christian Schmidt helped establish the institutions for a sovereign Bosnia," she said Tuesday.
"The next high representative's task will be to transfer responsibility for running and maintaining those institutions to local leaders," Bruce said. "One day, there will no longer be a need for such a role."
Bruce also stressed the importance of ensuring that the successor has the "trust of all communities in Bosnia."
The United States will evaluate candidates based on "whether they meet this standard of trust and impartiality," she said, noting that Washington has its "own candidates in mind, if need be."
Schmidt indicated that the question of his succession would be on the agenda of the next meeting of the Peace Implementation Council in early June. 
"I plan to depart my post in June," he said.
abd/ev/mjf/msp

Global Edition

UK PM Starmer resists calls to quit as Labour divided

BY PETER HUTCHISON

  • Miatta Fahnbulleh on Tuesday became the first junior minister to resign, calling on Starmer "to do the right thing for the country and the party and set a timetable for an orderly transition".
  • UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer battled to remain in his job Tuesday, as four junior ministers resigned their posts and dozens of lawmakers called for him to step down in the wake of heavy defeats in local and regional elections.
  • Miatta Fahnbulleh on Tuesday became the first junior minister to resign, calling on Starmer "to do the right thing for the country and the party and set a timetable for an orderly transition".
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer battled to remain in his job Tuesday, as four junior ministers resigned their posts and dozens of lawmakers called for him to step down in the wake of heavy defeats in local and regional elections.
The results capped a miserable few months for Starmer, who has been under pressure for failing to spur promised economic growth to help Britons suffering with the cost of living.
Criticism of policy U-turns has also been compounded by scandal over his appointment, then sacking, of Peter Mandelson, a former friend of US sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, as ambassador to Washington.
But on Tuesday, more than 100 Labour members of parliament signed a statement backing their leader, highlighting the deep divisions within the beleaguered ruling party.
Several senior ministers also rallied around him after he told them in a crunch meeting that he was getting on with governing the country and dared any leadership hopefuls to challenge him.
As of 6:00 pm (1700 GMT), no senior member of Starmer's top team had gone public to demand that the premier quit. 
"The Labour Party has a process for challenging a leader and that has not been triggered," Starmer told ministers.
"The country expects us to get on with governing. That is what I am doing and what we must do as a cabinet," he added.

'Do the right thing'

More than 80 of Labour's 403 members of parliament have now called for Starmer to quit immediately or to set out a timetable for his departure.
Miatta Fahnbulleh on Tuesday became the first junior minister to resign, calling on Starmer "to do the right thing for the country and the party and set a timetable for an orderly transition".
Jess Phillips then quit as safeguarding minister, telling Starmer in a letter that she was not seeing the change "I, and the country expect". Junior ministers Alex Davies-Jones and Zubir Ahmed followed.
But deputy prime minister David Lammy told the BBC that Starmer has his "full support", adding that "no one seems to have the names to stand" against him.
Defence Secretary John Healey also backed the prime minister, warning that "more instability is not in Britain's interest", while a spokesman for interior minister Shabana Mahmood said she would not be resigning.
More than 100 Labour MPs signed a statement arguing that "this is no time for a leadership contest", adding that the job of winning back the trust of the electorate "needs to start today -- with all of us working together to deliver the change the country needs".
Under party rules, any challenger would need the support of 81 Labour MPs -- 20 percent of the party in parliament -- to trigger a leadership contest.
A contest would likely spark damaging infighting, with MPs from the left and right of the party battling to position their preferred candidate or shore up Starmer.
Starmer, whose government is due to lay out more detailed legislative plans on Wednesday, has vowed to contest any challenge.

Who could succeed?

It has long been rumoured that Health Secretary Wes Streeting and former deputy prime minister Angela Rayner could try to oust Starmer.
But neither is universally popular within Labour.
Another much-touted contender, Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester in northwest England, is unable to stand as he is not an MP.
Some of his supporters want Starmer to set a date for his departure that could allow Burnham time to secure a seat.
Pressure on Starmer has soared since Labour lost hundreds of councillors to the hard-right Reform UK party and left-wing populist Greens in last Thursday's polls.
Labour also lost its century-old dominance in Wales and took a hammering from the Scottish National Party in the devolved parliament in Edinburgh.
On Monday, he pledged that Labour would be "better" and bolder to assuage disgruntled voters impatient for change.
pdh/phz