Govt approves imposition of additional electricity surcharges to meet IMF’s demand

IMF

ECC has approved a surcharge of Rs 335 billion for electricity consumers. Power tariffs would rise by Rs 1.55 per quarter. A uniform tariff for K-Electric customers is also being considered. The Government of Pakistan agreed to the International Monetary Fund‘s (IMF) demand on Wednesday and imposed a permanent electricity tariff of Rs3.23 per unit … Read more

Nithyananda’s Kailasa: UN to disregard fugitive India guru’s fictitious country remarks

UN
  • Representatives from the United States of Kailasa attended two UN committee meetings in Geneva in February.
  • Nithyananda, a self-styled guru, is wanted in India on multiple counts, including rape and sexual abuse.
  • The Indian government has yet to make a public statement on the situation.

The United Nations has stated that it will disregard claims made by representatives of a fugitive Hindu guru’s fictitious country at two official events.

In February, representatives from the United States of Kailasa attended two UN committee meetings in Geneva.

According to a UN official, their remarks were “irrelevant” and “tangential” to the topics being debated.

Nithyananda, a self-styled guru, is wanted in India on multiple counts, including rape and sexual abuse.

Nithyananda has rejected the allegations leveled against him, claiming that he created the United States of Kailasa (USK) in 2019.

This week’s attendance by USK at UN activities generated news in India. The Indian government has yet to make a public statement on the situation.

On February 22, the Committee for the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) hosted a discussion on the representation of women in decision-making institutions. On February 24, USK representatives also took part in a second discussion on sustainable development held by the Committee on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights (CESCR).

These general conversations are available to the public, according to Vivian Kwok, a communications officer of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Ms. Kwok said USK’s written submission to CEDAW will not be included in their report since it was “irrelevant to the issue of the general discussion”.

She also added that a statement made by a USK representative during the second debate would not be taken into consideration as its focus “was tangential to the topic at hand”.

A video on the UN website of the second session shows that when questions are invited from attendees, a woman introduces herself as Vijayapriya Nithyananda, “the permanent ambassador of the United States of Kailasa” and says she wants to ask a question about “indigenous rights and sustainable development”.

She describes USK as the “first sovereign state for Hindus” established by Nithyananda, the “supreme pontiff of Hinduism”. She also claims that USK has been “successful with sustainable development” because it provided necessities such as food, shelter and medical care for free to all its citizens. Her question is regarding what measures can be put in place to “stop the persecution” of Nithyananda and the people of Kailasa.

A representative from One Ocean Hub and an Essex University lecturer was among those who asked questions during the conversation.

Former Indian diplomat Preeti Saran, who represents Asia Pacific at the CESCR, was present for the conversation.

Nithyananda departed India in 2019 after being charged with rape. A female disciple had accused him of rape in 2010, following which he was briefly jailed before gaining release. In 2018, he was charged in court.

A separate police complaint filed days before he left the country accused him of kidnapping and confining youngsters at his ashram in the western state of Gujarat.

The same year, he claimed to have purchased an island off the coast of Ecuador and established a new country called Kailasa, named after a Himalayan mountain revered as the abode of the Hindu god Shiva.

At the time, Ecuador denied that he was in the country, and declared that “Nithyananda has not been awarded asylum by Ecuador or has been aided by the government of Ecuador”.

Nithyananda has not been in public since 2019, yet footage of his lectures is regularly posted on his social media accounts. According to the Guardian, Nithyananda’s UK representative attended “a spectacular Diwali celebration at the House of Lords” at the request of two Conservative members last year.

As Nithyananda’s Twitter account published a photo of Vijayapriya Nithyananda, news of the UN event began to circulate on Indian social media.

Afterward, a tweet thread appeared introducing USK’s ambassadors to various corners of the world, including the United Kingdom, Canada, and the Caribbean.

Kailasa is home to “two billion practicing Hindus,” according to its website. It also claims a flag, constitution, central bank, passport, and emblem.

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Meeting of US, Chinese, and Russian ministers in Delhi is a major test for Indian diplomacy

Delhi
  • India’s foreign minister will meet his American, Chinese, and Russian counterparts on Thursday.
  • The world’s largest democracy has been eager to position itself as a leader of emerging and developing nations.
  • Modi alluded to the Ukraine situation, saying it was producing “deep global divisions.”

Foreign ministers from the world’s largest economies have gathered in New Delhi, laying the groundwork for a major test of Indian diplomacy as it attempts to negotiate tensions over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, India’s foreign minister, will meet his American, Chinese, and Russian counterparts Thursday in the second high-level ministerial meeting under India’s Group of 20 (G20) presidency this year, hoping to find enough common ground to deliver a joint statement at the end of the summit.

With a population of more than 1.3 billion people, the world’s largest democracy has been eager to position itself as a leader of emerging and developing nations – often referred to as the global South – at a time when soaring food and energy prices as a result of the war are hammering consumers who are already dealing with rising costs and inflation.

Such views were front and center during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s opening speech on Thursday, when he spoke of the world’s various challenges, with less wealthy nations bearing the brunt of the burden.

“The experience of the last few years, the financial crisis, climate change, the pandemic, terrorism, and wars clearly shows that global governance has failed,” Modi said.

“We must also admit that the tragic consequences of this failure are being faced most over by the developing countries,” who he says are most affected by global warming “caused by richer countries”.

Modi alluded to the Ukraine situation, saying it was producing “deep global divisions.” But, he urged the foreign ministers to set aside their disagreements during their meeting on Thursday.

“We should not allow issues that we cannot resolve together to come in the way of those we can,” he said.

Analysts say India’s attempt to promote its agenda has been hindered by the war’s persistent fissures.

These disparities were on display last month in the southern Indian city of Bengaluru when G20 finance leaders failed to agree on a statement following their meeting. Russia and China both refused to sign the united declaration, which condemned Moscow’s invasion. It left India with the task of issuing a “chair’s report and outcome document” that summarised the two days of negotiations and recognized disputes.

According to analysts, New Delhi has skillfully handled its ties to Russia and the West throughout the war, with Modi emerging as a leader courted by all parties.

But as the war enters its second year, and tensions continue to rise, pressure could mount on countries, including India, to take a firmer stand against Russia – putting Modi’s statecraft to the test.

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Supreme Court sought response from Punjab government and ECP

Supreme Court
  • Petition was filed by Former provincial minister Muhammad Rizwan.
  • Abid Aziz Sheikh presided over the hearing of a petition.
  • The Lahore High Court has adjourned the hearing to March 2.

In response to the new local government rules, the Supreme Court was reported to have asked for a response from the Punjab government and the Election Commission.

The issue was brought before the Lahore High Court, where Justice Abid Aziz Sheikh presided over the hearing of a petition filed by Former provincial minister Muhammad Rizwan through the mediation of Qazi Mubeen Advocate, in which it was argued that the caretaker government issued a notification on 22 February 2023, restoring the old local government rules of 2013 and appointing new administrators.

The lawyer who took the position of filing the application said that the work of constituencies has been completed under the new local government laws, and once under the law, the appointments and the establishment of local bodies “cannot be suspended.”

Former province minister Muhammad Rizwan, who filed the case, said that “the decision to enact new local government rules was a policy decision made by the elected government”.

“The Caretaker Government cannot suspend or reverse the decision of the elected government, and its actions are a violation of High Court decisions”, he added.

The petitioner’s counsel requested that the court annul the notification suspending the new laws and restoring the old local government system.

The Lahore High Court has adjourned the hearing to March 21 and has requested a re-evaluation of the case.

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US opposes Israel’s far-right minister’s request for a Palestinian town to be “erased”

US
  • US State Department spokesperson urged the Israeli PM to repudiate remarks.
  • During an attack on Nablus last week, Israeli forces killed 11 Palestinians.
  • Israeli Foreign minister made his comments just days after Israeli settlers attacked Huwara.

The United States has condemned a key Israeli minister for suggesting a Palestinian hamlet that had been attacked by settlers needs to be “wiped out”, calling his words “repugnant”.

US State Department spokesperson Ned Price also encouraged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to “publicly and explicitly” repudiate remarks made by his Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich against the West Bank town of Huwara.

“These comments were irresponsible. They were repugnant. They were disgusting,” Price told reporters on Wednesday. “And just as we condemn Palestinian incitement to violence, we condemn these provocative remarks that also amount to incitement to violence.”

Smotrich, a far-right Israeli lawmaker who also manages civil administration in the occupied West Bank, made his comments just days after Israeli settlers attacked Huwara and set fire to hundreds of cars and homes.

“I think the village of Huwara needs to be wiped out. I think the state of Israel should do it,” Smotrich was quoted as saying by Israeli media outlets on Wednesday.

One Palestinian was killed in the settlers’ raid on Huwara, near Nablus, which occurred during a period of increased violence in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories.

During an attack on Nablus last week, Israeli forces killed 11 Palestinians.

A Palestinian shooter killed two Israeli settlers on Sunday, while an Israeli-American motorist was killed earlier this week in a shooting attack in Jericho, deep inside the West Bank.

Price reiterated Washington’s desire for “equal measures of accountability for terrorist attacks whatever of the background of the perpetrators or the victims” on Wednesday.

Increasingly Critical

Israeli authorities had only arrested eight suspects out of hundreds who took part in the Huwara riot and had released all of them by Tuesday.

Washington has become increasingly critical of Netanyahu’s far-right government’s policies, especially the construction of Israeli settlements on occupied Palestinian territory.

Palestinian rights activists, on the other hand, have been pushing for tangible action from US President Joe Biden’s administration to deter further Israeli violations.

Israel receives at least $3.8 billion in American aid per year while being accused by top human rights organizations such as Amnesty International of implementing an apartheid system.

On Thursday, the advocacy group Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN) petitioned the State Department to put a visa suspension on Smotrich.

“The Biden Administration should not allow senior government officials inciting atrocities against Palestinian civilians to spread their violent and hateful rhetoric in the United States,” Sarah Leah Whitson, DAWN’s executive director, said in a statement.

“The ‘exceptional’ nature of the US-Israel relationship should have its limits, and banning Smotrich would send an important signal that the US will not tolerate such dangerous, reckless incitement to violence.”

Democracy for the Arab World Now

On Thursday, the advocacy group Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN) petitioned the State Department to put a visa suspension on Smotrich.

J Street, a Jewish-American organization that identifies itself as pro-Israel and pro-peace, called on Biden earlier this week to set “clear redlines and practical consequences” for Israeli government policies.

“Only then can the Biden Administration truly hope to halt the escalation of violence and terror, advance US interests, defend Israeli and Palestinian rights and lives, and help secure Israel’s future as a democracy,” J Street said in a statement on Monday.

Biden, a self-proclaimed Zionist, has repeatedly affirmed his “ironclad” commitment to Israel, dismissing calls for imposing conditions on US aid to the country.

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Greek transport minister resigns after train crash

Greek
  • At least 43 people died after the train crash.
  • Many of the passengers on the train were students.
  • Rescuers discovered victims’ bodies up to 40 meters away from the railway line.

Greek Transport Minister Kostas Karamanlis resigned after a freight train crashed with a passenger train on the country’s principal railway route from Athens to Thessaloniki, killing at least 43 people.

The Tuesday night tragedy, Greece‘s biggest railway crash in decades, occurred when two trains were apparently traveling in opposing directions on the same track.

Many of the passengers on the train were students returning after a lengthy Greek holiday weekend. According to survivors who spoke to Greek media, the impact of the accident was so powerful that it threw numerous passengers through the windows. Rescuers discovered victims’ bodies up to 40 meters away from the railway line.

According to Roubini Leontari, head coroner of Larissa’s general hospital, the majority of the dead were young people, and some would need to be identified via DNA.

‘Died so unfairly’

According to police officials, the stationmaster in the nearby city of Larissa was arrested on Wednesday and accused of misdemeanor and mass murders caused by negligence.

Karamanlis said he thought it was his “duty” to step down “as a basic indication of respect for the memory of the people who died so unfairly”.

He claimed that when his government took office in 2019, it inherited a railway system unsuited for the twenty-first century, but that his ministry’s efforts to repair it were insufficient to avert Tuesday’s catastrophe.

Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced three days of formal mourning while visiting the accident site on Wednesday, saying, “I can tell you that we will find out the causes for this tragedy and will do all possible so that this does not happen again.”

As part of the country’s Eurozone bailout program, the Greek railway known as TrainOSE sold its trains to the Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane group in 2017 and was rebranded Hellenic Train in 2021. It held control of the railway network.

The newly formed company was expected to invest hundreds of millions in needed infrastructure. In a statement on Wednesday, the company said it would “ensure the maximum support to the injured and their families”.

A fire brigade spokesperson said passengers were still being rescued on Wednesday afternoon under “difficult conditions” because of the severity of the crash. “We are living through a tragedy. We are pulling out people who are alive, injured . . . and there are many dead,” he said.

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen expressed her condolences to the Greek people, writing on Twitter, “The whole of Europe is mourning with you.”

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US airport, Man detained after explosive discovered in suitcase

US

TSA officials said they discovered the gadget during a regular inspection. Mark Muffley was arrested after reportedly bringing an explosive device to a Pennsylvania airport. He fled the airport as his name was yelled over the loudspeaker. A man was caught by FBI officials on Monday after reportedly bringing an explosive device to a Pennsylvania … Read more

Ukraine to take the stage at G20 foreign ministers conference in Delhi

G20

The platform would be used by Delhi to discuss issues concerning emerging countries. Splits within the group over the Ukraine conflict will put India’s diplomacy to the test. Experts predict that tensions over Ukraine will overshadow negotiations. Foreign ministers from the world’s most powerful economies have gathered in Delhi for the second high-level ministerial meeting … Read more

Fire destroys half of Argentina ‘s power grid

Argentina
  • Several important cities and significant expanses of the countryside are totally or partially affected.
  • Temperatures in several sections of South America are constantly above 35 degrees Celsius.
  • The energy ministry has stated that it is optimistic that power will be restored soon.

More than half of Argentina is without power after a fire damaged the national power grid.

The metropolis of Buenos Aires, several important cities, and significant expanses of the countryside are totally or partly affected.

According to reports, the fire erupted in open fields, disrupting critical power cables in the coastal zone and knocking down a nuclear power facility.

Argentina is now experiencing a heatwave and drought.

Temperatures in several sections of South America are constantly above 35 degrees Celsius, despite the fact that the country is still in summer.

The extreme heat, combined with the power loss, has ground several areas to a halt, with courses suspended and businesses closed. Many others are also without air conditioning or refrigeration.

The hardest hit is major cities, with an estimated 150,000 people currently without electricity in the Buenos Aires Metropolitan Area.

The energy ministry has stated that it is optimistic that power will be restored soon.

Electricity outages are widespread throughout the country. In 2019 a catastrophic power failure put tens of millions of people in the dark in Argentina as well as bordering Uruguay.

In Buenos Aires, hundreds of thousands of houses will be darkened by 2020.

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Greece train crash catastrophe: Angry protests erupted

Greece
  • A train crash killed 43 people.
  • Rioters clashed with police outside the Athens headquarters.
  • Many of the 350 passengers were students in their twenties.

Protests have erupted in Greece in response to the rail crash that killed 43 people, with many viewing it as an accident waiting to happen.

Rioters clashed with police outside the Athens headquarters of Hellenic Train, the corporation in charge of maintaining Greece’s railways.

Protests were also organized in Thessaloniki and Larissa, both of which are close to where the accident occurred on Tuesday night.

According to the administration, an independent probe will bring justice.

Following the tragedy, in which a passenger train collided head-on with a freight train, causing the front cars to explode into flames, the country has announced three days of national mourning.

The passenger train’s front coaches were mostly wrecked.

Many of the 350 passengers were students in their twenties returning to Thessaloniki after a long weekend spent commemorating Greek Orthodox Lent.

Tragic human error

Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis stated “tragic human error” was to blame for the accident.

In Larissa, a 59-year-old station master has been charged with manslaughter by negligence. He has denied any misconduct and has blamed the catastrophe on a technological flaw.

Rail union members feel that safety measures were not functioning properly, despite repeated warnings over many years.

Rail workers intend to strike on Thursday in protest at what they see as official neglect of the railways.

“Pain has turned into anger for the dozens of dead and wounded colleagues and fellow citizens,” the workers’ union said in a statement announcing the strike.

Transport Minister Kostas Karamanlis resigned over the catastrophe, stating he would accept responsibility for the authorities’ “long-standing failings” to fix a railway system he said was not suitable for the 21st Century.

Nonetheless, a sign was erected outside a hospital where the bodies of the train crash victims were being taken, saying that any systemic flaws will be covered up in the official investigation currently underway.

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Ukraine clings to Bakhmut as Russians advance

Ukraine
  • Moscow claims that capturing Bakhmut would pave the door for full control.
  • Ukraine claims Bakhmut has little strategic relevance but has put up a strong fight.
  • Rakhmanin believes that no line of defense should be permitted to fail.

Ukrainian forces held out in the destroyed eastern city of Bakhmut early Thursday, under continual attack from Russian troops seeking their first significant win in more than a year.

Moscow claims that capturing Bakhmut would pave the door for full control of the vital Donbas industrial region bordering Russia, which was one of the main goals of its February 24 assault.

Ukraine claims Bakhmut has little strategic relevance but has put up a strong fight. Not everyone in Ukraine believes that the defense of Bakhmut can continue indefinitely.

“I believe that sooner or later, we will probably have to leave Bakhmut. There is no sense in holding it at any cost,” Ukrainian member of parliament Serhiy Rakhmanin said.

“But, for the time being, Bakhmut will be defended with three goals in mind, the first of which is to inflict as many Russian losses as possible and force Russia to exhaust its ammunition and resources.”

Rakhmanin believes that no line of defense should be permitted to fail.

“There are two ways to approach this – an organized retreat or simple flight. And we cannot allow the flight to take place under any circumstances,” he said.

The war for Bakhmut began around seven months ago, but Russian advances from three sides have left troops with only one way out to the west in recent weeks.

“There is a danger that our garrison in Bakhmut will be encircled,” military analyst Oleh Zhdanov said in a post on YouTube assessing the situation as “critical”.

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Greece PM – Human error to blame for train crash

Greece
  • At least 43 people died in a train crash.
  • Rescue personnel is still looking for survivors.
  • It’s unclear why the two services were sharing the same track.

One of Greece‘s deadliest rail disasters, which cost at least 43 lives, was caused by a “tragic human mistake,” according to the country’s prime minister.

Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis commented after visiting the scene of a head-on accident between a passenger train and a freight train on Tuesday night.

Manslaughter charges have been filed against the local stationmaster. The Greek transport minister has stepped down.

Rescue personnel is still looking for survivors.

The collision occurred shortly before midnight on Tuesday. A passenger train carrying 350 passengers collided with a freight train as it emerged from a tunnel after leaving Larissa.

It’s unclear why the two services were sharing the same track.

The stationmaster in charge of signaling denies any malfeasance and attributes the accident to a suspected technical breakdown.

After seeing the location, Mr. Mitsotakis said everything pointed to “a tragic human error”.

“Justice will do its work,” he remarked on television. “People will be held accountable, and the state will be on their side.”

Transport Minister Kostas Karamanlis announced his resignation, saying, “When something so awful happens, it is hard to continue and pretend it did not happen.”

According to trade unions, crashes are caused by a variety of circumstances, and the crash revealed persistent flaws such as a shortage of employees, faulty signals, and outmoded infrastructure.

The passenger train’s first four cars were derailed, and the first two caught fire and were “almost completely destroyed,” according to Thessaly regional governor Kostas Agorastos.

The train was traveling from Athens to Thessaloniki, which has a sizable student population, and it is believed that many of those on board were students returning from a Greek Orthodox lent vacation.

One scared passenger told that “people were panicked and yelling” following the incident.

Giannis Antonoglou, who escaped from the fifth compartment of the passenger train, stated the windows abruptly burst, and “we ended up being inclined 45 degrees as if going to tip”.

According to Stergios Minenis, a 28-year-old passenger who jumped to safety from the wreckage,

Stergios Minenis, a 28-year-old passenger who jumped to safety from the wreckage, told that: “The fire was immediate. As we were turning over we were being burned.”

Other passengers claimed that in order to escape the blazing wreckage, they were forced to break carriage windows with their bodies or bags.

According to Larissa’s mayor, some of those who died will only be identified through genetic testing.

Families of missing passengers have donated DNA samples to aid in the identification of bodies, according to a hospital in Larissa.

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India leads the globe in disrupting internet access, watchdog says

India
  • India topped the list for the fifth year in a row.
  • Ukraine was second on the list.
  • Authorities disrupted internet access at least 49 times in India’s illegally occupied Kashmir.

India imposed by far the most internet shutdowns in the world in 2022, according to internet advocacy monitor Access Now, as the country topped the list for the fifth year in a row.

According to a report released on Tuesday by the New York-based digital rights advocacy group Access Now, 84 of the 187 internet shutdowns reported globally occurred in India, including 49 in Indian-occupied Kashmir.

“Authorities disrupted internet access at least 49 times in India illegally occupied Kashmir due to political instability and violence, including a string of 16 back-to-back orders for three-day-long curfew-style shutdowns in January and February 2022,” the watchdog report added.

Kashmir has long been a source of contention between India and Pakistan, both of which claim the area but only rule parts of it.

In August 2019, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party government abolished the autonomy of the Muslim-majority state of Jammu and Kashmir, dividing it into two federally governed regions.

Since then, the government has regularly imposed communications restrictions on the region for security reasons, which rights groups have decried and portrayed as tactics to quell opposition.

Islamabad disputes the allegations

Militants have been fighting India’s rule in Kashmir for over three decades. The South Asian country accuses Pakistan of fomenting the uprising. Islamabad disputes the allegations.

Although India once again led the world in internet shutdowns, the country had less than 100 shutdowns for the first time since 2017, according to the watchdog.

Ukraine was second on the list, with the Russian military suspending internet connectivity at least 22 times since Moscow invaded Ukraine last February.

“During Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the Russian military cut internet access at least 22 times, engaging in cyberattacks and deliberately destroying telecommunications infrastructure,” the watchdog said in its report.

Ukraine was followed on the list by Iran, where authorities implemented 18 internet shutdowns in reaction to anti-government protests in 2022.

With the death of 22-year-old Kurdish Iranian lady Mahsa Amini in police detention on September 16, last year, nationwide anti-government protests erupted in Iran. Amini was arrested in Tehran by morality police for violating hijab standards, which demand women to cover their hair and bodies completely. She died in police custody.

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Adani receives $3 billion in credit from a sovereign wealth fund

Adani Group
  • India’s Adani Group has informed creditors that it has secured a $3 billion loan from a sovereign wealth fund.
  • Seven listed Adani Group companies have lost more than $140 billion in market value.
  • India’s banking and market regulators, as well as the government have launched investigations.

According to two sources familiar with the situation, India’s Adani Group has informed creditors that it has secured a $3 billion loan from a sovereign wealth fund, as the embattled conglomerate seeks to alleviate debt concerns following a short-seller attack.

According to the sources, the sovereign wealth fund’s credit line could be increased to $5 billion, citing a memo distributed to participants as one of the highlights of a three-day investor roadshow that concluded on Wednesday.

The identity of the sovereign wealth fund was not disclosed in the memo. According to a third person familiar with the situation, Adani’s management informed investors that it was from the Middle East.

The sources declined to be identified because they were not authorized to speak with the media. Adani’s spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Reuters.

Following the reports, shares in Adani group companies rose 14.7% and 4.9%, respectively, in a broader Mumbai market (.NSEI) that gained 0.9%.

Adani’s new credit comes just a day after group management told bondholders that it expected to prepay or repay share-backed loans worth $690 million to $790 million by the end of March.

These plans were revealed as the group held a fixed-income roadshow in Singapore and Hong Kong this week to reassure investors amid steep share price drops and regulatory probes.

Seven listed Adani Group companies have lost more than $140 billion in market value combined since a Jan. 24 report by sources alleged stock manipulation and improper use of tax havens, and flagged concerns over debt levels.

Adani, led by billionaire Gautam Adani, has denied all allegations of wrongdoing.

The short-seller attack has snowballed into Adani’s most serious business and reputational challenge yet. Adani’s fortunes have risen rapidly in recent years as he expanded his group’s business interests.

To reassure investors, India’s banking and market regulators, as well as the government, have launched investigations.

According to one of the sources, Adani management stated on the final day of the roadshow in Hong Kong that a portion of the $3 billion in credit from the sovereign wealth fund has already been used to repay some of Adani’s share-backed loans.

The management of the ports-to-airport conglomerate also sought to reassure investors that it has enough cash to prepay a large portion of its debts, including onshore bonds, and that it has already begun doing so, according to a source.

However, for offshore bonds, including some three-year US bonds, the group is not allowed to prepay and has no plans to buy them back because it needs to maintain a certain cash level to maintain credit ratings, according to the source.

Adani also held bondholder calls last month in an attempt to assuage investor concerns, during which group executives revealed refinancing plans for some of its units as well as plans to completely pre-pay all loans against shares.

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Taiwan reports 19 Chinese air force planes in its air defence zone

Taiwan
  • Taiwan’s defense ministry has seen 19 Chinese air force jets in its air defense zone.
  • 19 J-10 jets flew into the southwestern corner of the island’s air defense identification zone.
  • Taiwan has long complained about increased Chinese military activity near the island.

Taiwan’s defense ministry said on Wednesday that it has seen 19 Chinese air force jets in its air defense zone in the previous 24 hours, part of what Taipei deems Beijing‘s routine harassment.

Taiwan, which China considers its own territory, has long complained about increased Chinese military activity near the island as Beijing strives to assert its sovereignty claims.

Notwithstanding the indignation in Taipei, China has stated that its efforts in the area are appropriate in order to maintain its territorial integrity and to warn the US against “colluding” with Taiwan.

According to a map issued by Taiwan’s defense ministry, 19 J-10 jets flew into the southwestern corner of the island’s air defence identification zone, or ADIZ, though closer to the Chinese shore than Taiwan’s.

Taiwan’s military was monitoring the situation, including sending up its own air force planes, according to the ministry, which used standard language for its response to similar Chinese invasions.

The aircraft, however, did not violate the Taiwan Strait’s sensitive median line, which formerly acted as an unofficial boundary between the two sides but which China’s air force has been flying over practically daily since performing war games near Taiwan last August.

There have been no guns fired, and the Chinese aircraft have been flying in Taiwan’s ADIZ rather than its territorial air space.

The ADIZ is a larger area that Taiwan monitors and patrols, giving it more time to respond to any threats.

Taiwan’s democratically elected government has repeatedly offered discussions with China, but the island will defend itself if invaded, and only the Taiwanese people can decide their own fate.

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Moscow accuses Ukraine of attempting multiple drone strikes

Moscow
  • A Ukrainian drone crashed near the village of Gubastovo, southeast of the capital.
  • The facility was not damaged, according to state media, citing the region’s Energy Ministry.
  • Ukraine’s Defense Ministry made no comment on the strikes at the time.

After a fire broke out at an oil depot and authorities abruptly closed airspace above the country’s second-largest city, Russia’s Defense Ministry accused Ukraine of launching a wave of attempted drone strikes targeting infrastructure deep inside Russia, including near the capital.

Moscow metropolitan area According to Governor Andrey Vorobyov, a Ukrainian drone crashed near the village of Gubastovo, southeast of the capital. The drone was apparently aimed at “civilian infrastructure,” which was later confirmed to be a gas facility run by the state-owned company Gazprom.

The facility was not damaged, according to state media, citing the region’s Energy Ministry.

State media later released a photo of what they claimed was the crashed device, which resembled a Ukrainian-made UJ-22 attack drone.

The UJ-22 is a small and versatile aircraft that can fly through bad weather and travel up to 500 miles (800 kilometers). The location and date of the photo of the crashed drone are unknown.

The crash was allegedly one of several attempted strikes, with state media reporting a drone was shot down near the Belarus border and the defence ministry claiming two more strikes were thwarted in the Krasnodar and Adygea regions using drone-jamming technology.

“Both drones lost control and deviated from their flight path,” the defense ministry said in a statement. “One UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) fell in a field, and another UAV, deviating from the trajectory, did not harm the attacked civilian infrastructure facility.”

At least one drone appeared to have eluded Russian defences, with footage posted on social media overnight and showing a fire at Rosneft’s oil depot in Tuapse, on the Black Sea coast of Krasnodar.

Although it is unclear whether the facility was the intended target, Ukraine has previously targeted oil depots on Russian-controlled territory.

Sources has been unable to independently confirm each alleged attack, and Ukraine has yet to comment on the incident. Ukraine has previously declined to comment on internal Russian attacks.

Following the alleged attacks, Russia‘s second-largest city of St. Petersburg closed its airspace Tuesday within a 200-kilometer (124-mile) radius, briefly banning incoming flights, according to state media.

Russian President Vladimir Putin had been briefed about the closures – but Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov had declined to discuss whether it was related to the “incidents in St. Petersburg and Tuapse,” state media reported.

Strikes in December

Attacks on Russian infrastructure have highlighted Ukraine’s efforts to develop longer-range combat drones.

Russia reported multiple attacks by Ukrainian drones on military infrastructure, including air bases hundreds of miles inside Russian territory and beyond the reach of Ukraine’s declared drone arsenal, in early December.

At the same time, Ukraine’s state-owned weapons manufacturer Ukroboronprom announced that it is nearing completion of a new long-range drone, though there is no public evidence that such a device has been ready for deployment or has been involved in explosions within Russia.

Ukraine’s Defense Ministry made no comment on the strikes at the time, though a presidential adviser tweeted a cryptic message hinting that Kyiv was indeed behind the December attacks.

“The Earth is round – discovery made by Galileo. Astronomy was not studied in Kremlin, giving preference to court astrologers. If it was, they would know: If something is launched into other countries’ airspace, sooner or later unknown flying objects will return to departure point,” he said at the time.

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 Vietnam Communist Party has nominated Vo Van Thuong as its new president

Vietnam
  • Vo Van Thuong was elected as the country’s new president.
  • Thuong is the party’s youngest Politburo member.
  • Thuong’s nomination by the party’s Central Committee supports an earlier decision by the Politburo.

Vietnam’s Communist Party has chosen Vo Van Thuong as the country’s new president, two party sources said on Wednesday, following the surprise forced resignation in January of his predecessor as part of a comprehensive anti-corruption effort.

Thuong, 52, is the party’s youngest Politburo member, the country’s highest decision-making body, and is largely seen as close to General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong, Vietnam’s most influential person.

Trong is the principal architect of the party’s “blazing furnace” fraud drive, which has seen hundreds of officials investigated and many forced to resign, including former President Nguyen Xuan Phuc and two deputy prime ministers.

Thuong’s nomination by the party’s Central Committee supports an earlier decision by the Politburo and will need to be approved by the rubber-stamp National Assembly, which will conduct an extraordinary session on Thursday and a formal session in May.

Both the government and the Communist Party announced on Wednesday that the party’s Central Committee had decided on a presidential nomination without naming the candidate.

In Vietnam, the president is mostly ceremonial, but he is one of the country’s top four political figures, along with the party’s general secretary, the prime minister, and the head of the national legislature.

A former head of propaganda, “Thuong is a dyed-in-the-wool party apparatchik and a trusted member of Secretary General Trong’s inner circle,” said Carl Thayer, an expert in Vietnam‘s politics at the Australian Defence Force Academy in Canberra.

He is currently one of the Politburo’s 16 members and the secretary of the party’s Central Committee, one of the highest-ranking positions in the country.

Speaking at a party meeting last month, Thuong said: “The people’s lawful and legitimate interests must be the important starting point of all the Party’s guidelines and policies”.

According to Hanoi-based diplomats, the party’s decision to select Thuong as president is an attempt to advance a new generation of leaders and consolidate power in the event that Trong, 78, decides to step down before the conclusion of his third term in 2026.

The general secretary is often chosen from among one of the top leaders and Trong, who was reappointed for a third term in 2021, “is ensuring he has an acceptable successor in the mix,” one diplomat said.

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 Beijing: Putin ally Lukashenko meets Chinese leader Xi Jinping

Putin
  • Xi received Lukashenko in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People on Wednesday.
  • The two leaders agreed in September to strengthen their ties.
  • The meeting took place a day after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken made some of the bluntest remarks.

Chinese President Xi Jinping met with Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, a close supporter of Russian President Vladimir Putin, in a state visit that comes as the West warns China against providing military aid to Putin’s conflict in Ukraine.

Xi received Lukashenko in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People on Wednesday before the two began formal talks. Details of the conversations have yet to be published by either party.

It is their first face-to-face meeting since the two leaders agreed in September to strengthen their ties to an “all-weather comprehensive strategic cooperation” on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit in Uzbekistan, which Putin also attended.

The visit by Belarus’s president, who allowed Russian troops to stage their initial incursion into Ukraine last year, comes as tensions between the US and China have risen in recent weeks, with Washington concerned that Beijing is considering sending lethal aid to the Kremlin’s struggling war effort. Beijing has refuted these allegations.

The meeting took place a day after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken made some of the bluntest remarks to date on how the US would respond to any lethal support China provided to Russia.

During a visit to Kazakhstan, Blinken warned that Washington will pursue Chinese enterprises or citizens implicated in an effort to deliver lethal help to Moscow for its war in Ukraine.

Beijing – which professes to be a neutral party in the war – has pushed back on the American allegation that is considering sending lethal aid. According to the Foreign Ministry, China was “actively promoting peace talks and the political settlement of the crisis,” while the US was “pouring lethal weapons into the battlefield in Ukraine.”

In a paper pushing for peace negotiations to end the year-long war, Beijing presented a 12-point position on the “political solution” to the crisis last week. But, its release was attacked by Western officials, who accused China of already siding with Russia.

According to a statement from the Belarusian government, Lukashenko also met with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang on Wednesday and asked for the two countries to “intensify” their cooperation.

“We have no closed topics for cooperation. We cooperate in all avenues. Most importantly, we have never set ourselves the task of being friends or working against third countries,” Lukashenko told Li per the readout.

The deepening of ties between Minsk and Beijing comes alongside a years-long downturn in Belarus’ relations with the European Union and as it may seek to diversify its Russia-dependent economy.

In response to Moscow’s aggressiveness, the US and its allies imposed sweeping sanctions on the former Soviet state after Lukashenko authorized Russian soldiers to invade Ukraine via the 1,000-kilometer (621-mile) Ukrainian-Belarusian border north of Kyiv.

The European Union also does not recognize the results of Lukashenko’s 2020 election triumph – which provoked major pro-democracy riots in the country and were followed by a deadly government crackdown.

There have been fears throughout the conflict in Ukraine that Belarus will again be used as a launching ground for another Russian offensive, or that Lukashenko’s own troops would join the war. Before visiting Moscow earlier this month, Lukashenko claimed there is “no way” his country would send troops into Ukraine unless it is attacked.

Both China and Belarus have previously stated that the US does not want the conflict to end.

Earlier this month, before traveling to Moscow to meet with Putin, Lukashenko told reporters that he wished to see “peaceful dialogue” and accused the US of obstructing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky from negotiating.

Beijing has made similar assertions, with China’s top diplomat Wang Yi saying at a security conference in Munich earlier this month that China does not “add fuel to the fire,” and is “against reaping benefits from this crisis,” alluding to regular Chinese propaganda messaging that the US is intentionally prolonging the war to advance its own geopolitical interests and increase the profits of its arms manufacturers.

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Japan’s birth rate has reached an all time low

Japan
  • The number of births registered in Japan fell to a new low last year.
  • Last year, Japan reported a record number of post-war deaths, totaling more than 1.58 million.
  • Japan’s population has been steadily declining since the 1980s economic boom.

The number of births registered in Japan fell to a new low last year, continuing a decades-long decline that the country’s authorities have failed to reverse despite extensive efforts.

The country saw 799,728 births in 2022, the lowest number on record and the first ever dip below 800,000, according to statistics released by the Ministry of Health on Tuesday. That figure has nearly halved in the last 40 years; in 1982, Japan had more than 1.5 million births.

Last year, Japan reported a record number of post-war deaths, totaling more than 1.58 million.

For more than a decade, deaths have outpaced births in Japan, posing a growing problem for the leaders of the world’s third-largest economy. They now face an ageing population and a shrinking workforce to fund pensions and health care as demand from the ageing population rises.

According to the most recent government figures, Japan’s population has been steadily declining since the 1980s economic boom, and will stand at 125.5 million in 2021.

In the absence of immigration, its fertility rate of 1.3 is far below the rate of 2.1 required to maintain a stable population.

The country also has one of the highest life expectancies in the world; according to government data, nearly one in every 1,500 Japanese people was 100 or older in 2020.

These worrying trends prompted Prime Minister Fumio Kishida to warn in January that Japan is “on the brink of not being able to maintain social functions.”

“In thinking of the sustainability and inclusiveness of our nation’s economy and society, we place child-rearing support as our most important policy” he said, adding that Japan “simply cannot wait any longer” to solve its low birth rate problem.

Kishida stated in January that he wants the government to double its spending on child-related programmes, so a new government agency will be established in April to address the issue.

But money alone might not be able to solve the multi-pronged problem, with various social factors contributing to the low birth rate.

Japan’s high cost of living, limited space, and lack of child care support in cities make raising children difficult, resulting in fewer couples having children. Urban couples are also frequently separated from extended family members in other regions who could provide support.

According to sources, Japan will be one of the most expensive places in the world to raise a child in 2022. Nonetheless, the country’s economy has been stagnant since the early 1990s, resulting in depressingly low wages and limited opportunities for advancement.

According to Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare data for 2021, the average real annual household income fell from 6.59 million yen ($50,600) in 1995 to 5.64 million yen ($43,300) in 2020.

Marriage and family formation attitudes have also shifted in recent years, with more couples deferring both during the pandemic – and young people feeling increasingly pessimistic about the future.

It’s a familiar story in East Asia, where South Korea‘s fertility rate, which was already the lowest in the world, fell even further last year, thwarting the country’s efforts to increase its declining population.

Meanwhile, China is inching closer to officially losing its title as the world’s most populous country to India after its population shrank in 2022 for the first time since the 1960s.

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Iran is investigating the toxic gas poisoning of hundreds of schoolgirls

Iran
  • Since November, nearly 700 girls have been poisoned by toxic gas in Iran.
  • At least 194 girls are said to have been poisoned in the last week at four schools.
  • Some parents claim their children were sick for weeks following the poisoning.

Since November, nearly 700 girls have been poisoned by toxic gas in Iran, in what many believe is a deliberate attempt to force their schools to close.

Although no girls have died, dozens have experienced respiratory issues, nausea, dizziness, and fatigue.

“It became evident that some people wanted all schools, especially girls’ schools, to be closed down,” the deputy health minister said on Sunday.

However, he later stated that his remarks were misconstrued.

Last week, the prosecutor general announced the launch of a criminal investigation. However, he said that the available information only indicated “the possibility of criminal and premeditated acts”.

Meanwhile, public dissatisfaction is growing.

A protest outside the governor's office in Qom

On November 30, 18 students from the Nour Technical School in the religious city of Qom were poisoned and taken to the hospital.

Since then, more than ten girls’ schools in the surrounding province have been targeted.

At least 194 girls are said to have been poisoned in the last week at four schools in the western province of Lorestan’s Borujerd.

On Tuesday, 37 more students were poisoned at the Khayyam Girls’ School in Pardis, near Tehran.

Before becoming ill, the poisoned girls reported smelling tangerine or rotten fish.

At least 100 people protested outside the governor’s office in Qom earlier this month.

“You are obliged to ensure my children’s safety! I have two daughters,” one father shouted in a video widely shared on social media. “Two daughters… and all I can do is not let them go to school.”

“This is a war!” declared a woman. “They are doing this in a girls’ high school in Qom to force us to sit at home. They want girls to stay at home.”

Some parents claim their children were sick for weeks following the poisoning.

Another hospital video shows a teenage girl lying dazed on a bed, her mother beside her.

“Dear mothers, I’m a mother and my child is in a hospital bed and her limbs are weak,” says the distraught mother. “I pinch her but she doesn’t feel anything. Please don’t send your children to school.”

Heartland of religion

Deputy Health Minister Younes Panahi stated at a press conference on Sunday that the girls had been poisoned by chemicals that:

“are not military grade and are publicly available”.

“The pupils do not need any invasive treatment and it’s necessary to maintain calm,” he added.

Dr Panahi’s comment that it was “evident that some people wanted all schools… to be closed down” appeared to confirm the government believed the poisonings were premeditated.

His subsequent denial indicated disagreements among officials about how to deal with public outrage when no suspects have been identified.

The poisonings have been concentrated in Qom, a city that is home to important Shia Muslim shrines as well as the religious leadership that serves as the Islamic Republic’s backbone.

Since September, the clerical establishment has been challenged by the mass protests that erupted after the death in custody of a young Kurdish woman, Mahsa Amini, who was detained by morality police for allegedly failing to wear her headscarf “properly”.

Some Iranians believe the schoolgirls are being poisoned as “retaliation” for their role in the unrest. Videos of schoolgirls ripping off their headscarves and chanting anti-establishment slogans flooded social media.

Others believe the poisonings were carried out by hardliners seeking to “copy” the Taliban in Afghanistan and the militant Islamist group Boko Haram in Nigeria by terrorising parents into not sending their daughters to school.

“Has Boko Haram come to Iran?” former Vice-President Mohammad Ali Abtahi asked in an Instagram post.

The reformist politician also warned that “extremists will interpret the boundaries of government and religion in their favour”.

Iran’s leaders have traditionally dismissed criticism of its gender restrictions, such as the mandatory headscarf, and instead boasted about the number of women attending university. College, on the other hand, is a pipe dream for young girls who do not complete high school.

The comments of one schoolgirl, who claims to have been poisoned twice, during a meeting with Qom’s governor earlier this month highlighted how ambiguous and misleading some of the authorities’ statements have been.

“They [officials] tell us: ‘All is good, we’ve done our investigation.’ But when my father asked at my school, they told him: ‘Sorry, the CCTV has been down for a week and we can’t investigate this,'” she said.

“And when I was poisoned for the second time on Sunday, the school principal said: ‘She has a heart condition, that’s why she is hospitalised.’ But I don’t have any heart condition!”

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Survivors of a train crash in Greece describe “nightmarish seconds”

Greece
  • At least 36 people were killed and dozens more were injured in a head-on collision between two trains.
  • Rescuers have been searching for survivors all night.
  • People have described having to crawl through windows and over broken glass in order to escape.

Survivors described a “nightmarish 10 seconds” as their train carriage overturned and caught fire in a crash in northern Greece.

At least 36 people were killed and dozens more were injured in a head-on collision between two trains on Tuesday night near the city of Larissa.

Destroyed train carriages are seen at the site of a crash, where two trains collided, near the city of Larissa, Greece, March 1, 2023.

Rescuers have been searching for survivors all night.

”We heard a big bang,” said 28-year-old passenger Stergios Minenis, who jumped to safety from the wreckage.

“We were turning over in the carriage until we fell on our sides and until the commotion stopped. Then there was panic. Cables, fire. The fire was immediate. As we were turning over we were being burned. Fire was right and left,” Mr Minenis was quoted as saying by Reuters news agency.

“For 10, 15 seconds it was chaos. Tumbling over, fires, cables hanging, broken windows, people screaming, people trapped.”

People have described having to crawl through windows and over broken glass in order to escape.

According to one shaken passenger who spoke, “the windows suddenly exploded” and “people were screaming and were afraid.”

“Fortunately, we were able to open the doors and escape fairly quickly. In other wagons, they did not manage to get out, and one wagon even caught fire.”

Survivors claimed they were forced to break carriage windows with their bodies or luggage in order to escape the burning wreckage.

Passenger Angelos Tsiamouras told Greek television station that the crash felt like an earthquake, and that he smashed the train window with his suitcase. “We broke the windows with our backs,” another unnamed passenger said.

Lazos, one of the survivors, told the newspaper: “I wasn’t hurt, but I was stained with blood from other people who were injured near me.”

The train was on its way from Athens to the northern city of Thessaloniki when it collided with another freight train, causing a fire in at least one of the carriages.

It is being described as the worst train crash in Greek history, but the cause of the collision is unknown. According to local media, an investigation has been launched to determine the cause of the crash.

Sixty-six people were also injured in the collision, with reports indicating that many of the passengers were young people returning to Thessaloniki after a Greek Orthodox Lent holiday.

According to Greek emergency services, approximately 150 firefighters and 40 ambulances were on the scene, with cranes also being used to remove debris.

“It was a very powerful collision,” the regional governor of the Thessaly region, Kostas Agorastos, told state-run television.

“This is a terrible night… It’s hard to describe the scene.”

He said the first four carriages of the passenger train were derailed, and the first two carriages caught fire and were “almost completely destroyed.”

“They were travelling at great speed and one (driver) didn’t know the other was coming,” the governor said.

Footage of the collision’s aftermath showed thick plumes of smoke rising from derailed carriages.

Because of the “severity of the collision,” conditions for rescue workers were “very difficult,” according to fire service spokesman Vassilis Varthakoyiannis.

“I’ve never seen anything like this in my entire life. It’s tragic. Five hours later, we are finding bodies,” an exhausted rescuer emerging from the wreckage told a news agency.

“We are living through a tragedy. We are pulling out people alive, injured… there are dead. We are going to be here all night, until we finish, until we find the last person,” According to Reuters, another volunteer rescue worker told the state broadcaster.

Passengers rescued from the train crash arrive at Thessaloniki railway station, Greece

The tragic incident has prompted the government to declare three days of national mourning.

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Italy migrant boat shipwreck: Police detained three for alleged smuggling

Italy
  • At least 64 migrants died in a shipwreck off Italy’s southern coast.
  • Authorities have cautioned that the final death toll might exceed 100.
  • A Turkish male and two Pakistani nationals were apprehended.

Following the deaths of at least 64 migrants in a shipwreck off Italy‘s southern coast on Sunday, police arrested three persons on suspicion of people smuggling.

A Turkish male and two Pakistani nationals were apprehended.

The majority of persons aboard the 200-person wooden boats were claimed to be from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria, Iraq, and Iran.

Authorities have cautioned that the final death toll might exceed 100.

On Tuesday morning, rescuers recovered another body from the sea: that of a guy.

Despite terrible weather, the three men apprehended are reported to have sailed the boat from Izmir, Turkey, to Calabria, Italy.

Authorities claim they reportedly requested the migrants for roughly €8,000 (£7,000; $8,500) each to make the arduous journey.

The ship is said to have sunk after colliding with rocks in heavy weather while attempting to land in Crotone.

The coastguard said that 80 passengers were found alive, “including some who managed to reach the land after the sinking,” implying that many more were still missing.

The coffins of the victims found so far have been put out in a sports hall in Crotone – little white caskets for the younger victims and brown ones for the elderly – to allow people to pay their condolences. At least 12 children, including an infant, have been killed.

Families of the victims from Northern Europe have gathered to try to find out what happened to their loved ones and identify bodies where needed.

Several of the migrants on board had come from Afghanistan, according to rescuers, and Pakistan has confirmed that 16 of its residents survived the accident, with four still missing.

Since 2014, more than 20,000 people have died or gone missing at sea in the central Mediterranean, according to monitoring organizations.

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Covid: FBI Director Christopher Wray believes leak from Chinese laboratory is “most likely”

FBI
  • FBI’s top-secret assessment of how the pandemic virus spread.
  • China has denied the existence of a lab leak in Wuhan, calling the claim slanderous.
  • Several US government agencies have reached conclusions that differ from the FBI’s.

FBI Director Christopher Wray has claimed that the bureau believes Covid-19 “most likely” originated in a “Chinese government-controlled lab”.

“The FBI has for quite some time now assessed that the origins of the pandemic are most likely a potential lab incident,” he told Fox News.

It’s the first public confirmation of the FBI’s top-secret assessment of how the pandemic virus spread.

China has denied the existence of a lab leak in Wuhan, calling the claim slanderous.

Mr. Wray’s remarks came a day after the US ambassador to China urged the country to “be more honest” about the origins of Covid.

Mr Wray stated in his interview on Tuesday that China “has been doing its best to impede and distort” efforts to pinpoint the origins of the worldwide pandemic.

“And that’s unfortunate for everybody,” he said.

According to some investigations, the virus spread from animals to humans in Wuhan, China, probably through the city’s seafood and wildlife market.

Conclusions that differ

The market is a 40-minute drive from a world-leading virus laboratory, the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which conducts research into coronaviruses.

Several US government agencies have reached conclusions that differ from the FBI’s, with varied degrees of certainty in their findings.

The Chinese government has yet to reply to Mr. Wray’s remarks. On Monday, however, it denied media claims that the US Energy Department had “low confidence” that Covid had leaked from a lab. The government previously stated that it was unsure how the infection originated.

Beijing further referenced a 2021 World Health Organization (WHO) assessment that declared the lab leak allegation “very implausible”.

“Certain parties should stop rehashing the ‘lab leak’ narrative, stop smearing China, and stop politicizing origins-tracing,” said foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning.

The WHO investigation was deeply criticized and its director-general has since called for a new inquiry, saying: “All hypotheses remain open and require further study.”

Mr. Wray’s remarks came a day after the US ambassador to China urged the country to “be more honest” about the origins of Covid.

Mr. Wray stated in his interview on Tuesday that China “has been doing its best to impede and distort” efforts to pinpoint the origins of the worldwide pandemic.

“And that’s unfortunate for everybody,” he said.

No legitimacy

Following his remarks, Mao Ning, a spokesman for China’s foreign ministry, stated, “The conclusions they have reached have no legitimacy to speak of.”

According to some investigations, the virus spread from animals to humans in Wuhan, China, probably through the city’s seafood and wildlife market.

The market is a 40-minute drive from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, a world-class virus laboratory that conducts coronavirus research.

According to White House National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby, US President Joe Biden supports “a whole-of-government effort” to figure out how Covid got started.

“We’re simply not there [at agreement] yet,” he explained. “If we have something ready to brief the American people and Congress on, we will do so.”

Tensions in bilateral relations between the United States and China have risen in the aftermath of the recent spy balloon scandal.

This week, a bipartisan panel of US senators launched a series of hearings on the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s “existential” danger.

The first session of the House Select Committee on Strategic Competition between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party focused on issues such as human rights and the US economy’s dependence on Chinese manufacturing.

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Miley Cyrus’ ‘Flowers’ nearly cost Liam Hemsworth his contract

Miley Cyrus

According to rumours, Liam Hemsworth plans to sue Miley Cyrus for her song Flowers. Flowers by Miley Cyrus is about self-love, and the lyrics are allegedly directed at her ex-husband. Meanwhile, neither Miley nor Liam have made any official announcements or clarifications. According to rumours, Liam Hemsworth plans to sue Miley Cyrus for her song … Read more

Greece train crash: At least 32 dead, 85 injured as trains collide

Greece
  • The collision between two trains in central Greece killed dozens.
  • The crash occurred after a weekend carnival that finished with a public holiday on Monday.
  • The passenger train had been heading from the capital Athens to Thessaloniki.

Greece: Rescue personnel is searching for survivors after a head-on collision between two trains in central Greece killed dozens and injured many more.

According to the Greek Fire Service, at least 32 people were killed and more than 85 were injured when a passenger train carrying more than 350 people crashed with a freight train on Tuesday evening, soon before midnight, in Tempi, central Greece, near the city of Larissa.

“There was a bang… “The (train) vehicle began spinning before we were able to evacuate,” one male passenger explained.

“It was 10 nightmarish seconds with fire, you couldn’t see much from the smoke,” said a second passenger.

According to the Greek Fire Service, recovery efforts are ongoing, with a focus on the first two carriages of the passenger train. It is likely that the death toll will grow.

The passenger train had been heading from the capital Athens to Thessaloniki, Greece’s second-largest city, which is famed for its festivals and strong cultural life. The crash occurred after a weekend carnival that finished with a public holiday on Monday.

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Bola Tinubu defeats Atiku Abubakar and Peter Obi in Nigeria’s presidential election

Bola Tinubu
  • Bola Tinubu won the presidential election.
  • Atiku Abubakar, received 29% of the vote, while Labour’s Peter Obi received 25%.
  • He was not expected to win the party primary, yet he won.

Nigeria’s disputed presidential election has been declared won by ruling party candidate Bola Tinubu.

According to official findings, the 70-year-old experienced lawmaker received 37% of the vote.

His primary rival, Atiku Abubakar, received 29% of the vote, while Labour’s Peter Obi received 25%. These parties had already called the election a fraud and requested a rerun.

Mr. Tinubu is one of Nigeria’s wealthiest politicians, and his candidature is predicated on his record of rebuilding the country’s largest metropolis, Lagos, while he was governor.

He was ultimately beaten in the city by Mr. Obi, a relative newcomer who mobilized the support of many young people, especially in urban areas, shaking up the country’s two-party system.

Mr. Tinubu won the majority of the other states in his home region of the southwest, where he is renowned as a “political godfather” – someone who helps others get elected.

He campaigned for the presidency using the slogan: “It’s my turn”.

Mr. Tinubu urged reconciliation with his opponents in his acceptance address.

“I take this opportunity to appeal to my fellow contestants to let us team up together. It is the only nation we have. It is one country and we must build it together,” he said in a televised speech to the nation.

He said that they had the right to challenge the results in court but said that the lapses in the election “were relatively few in number and were immaterial to affect the outcome of this election”.

President Muhammadu Buhari is leaving office after two terms marked by economic stagnation and escalating insecurity across the country, ranging from an Islamic insurgency in the north-east to a statewide problem of abduction for ransom and separatist strikes in the south-east.

Mr. Tinubu now has the burden of tackling these problems, among others, in Africa’s most populous nation and greatest oil exporter.

Mr. Tinubu would believe that he was destined to become president after opposing military rule in Nigeria, fleeing into exile, and becoming one of the founding members of the country’s democracy in 1999.

He was always the favorite to succeed Mr. Buhari, whom he assisted in becoming president, and the obstacles he overcame to get here will make this victory more sweeter for him.

He was not expected to win the party primary, yet he won.

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Tom Holland once lost the billion dollar ‘Star Wars’ franchise

Tom Holland

Tom Holland once revealed that he lost his role in Star Wars. Tom has worked on a number of prestigious projects. Emma Watson regrets not doing La La Land. Tom Holland once revealed that he lost his role in Star Wars because he couldn’t control his laughter. Tom Holland is one of the actors who … Read more

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Megan Fox

Machine gun and Meghan Fox’s  relationship has taken a severe hit. Fox and Kelly eventually decided to work things out amongst themselves. Megan deleted all of her and MGK’s photos together before deactivating her social media account. Machine gun and Megan Fox’s relationship has taken a severe hit, and the couple were rumoured to be heading … Read more