博客

  • Telegraph and Politico owner says journalists must support Israel or resign

    Telegraph and Politico owner says journalists must support Israel or resign

    A fierce debate over journalistic independence has erupted across global media properties owned by German media giant Axel Springer, after CEO Mathias Dopfner explicitly told staffers that unwavering support for Israel is a non-negotiable core condition of employment at the company’s outlets, including Politico and the newly acquired Telegraph. The confrontation has thrown a harsh spotlight on the ideological direction of Axel Springer’s expanding international media empire, raising urgent questions about whether top-down political demands will skew impartial news coverage of the ongoing Israel-Gaza conflict.

    The controversy came to a head this week during a charged internal company meeting, convened after a group of Politico journalists submitted an open letter to incoming editor-in-chief Jonathan Greenberger. In the letter, the journalists accused Dopfner — a media magnate long nicknamed “Germany’s Rupert Murdoch” for his outsized political influence and consolidated media holdings — of leveraging the publication to advance his personal partisan political agenda. The letter noted that Dopfner’s recent public opinion pieces have already put Politico’s hard-won reputation as an impartial, trusted political news outlet at serious risk, according to reporting from Jewish Insider.

    Axel Springer first acquired Politico, the leading U.S. and European political news platform, in a 2021 deal, and only secured regulatory approval to purchase the iconic UK title The Daily Telegraph earlier this month. That acquisition has amplified industry and newsroom concerns that the ideological mandates set by company leadership will reshape editorial standards and coverage lines across all of Axel Springer’s properties, particularly its coverage of Israel. Israel is currently facing allegations of genocide at the International Court of Justice, stemming from its military campaign in Gaza that has killed at least 72,599 people and injured more than 172,410 others to date.

    During the meeting, Dopfner doubled down on his stance, framing loyalty to Israel as a central component of the company’s five publicly stated core values, which it calls the “essentials”: freedom, free markets, individual autonomy, freedom of speech, and explicit support for Israel. He placed support for Israel immediately after the four foundational principles, and made clear that anyone who questions this mandate is not aligned with the company’s identity. “If that is something that somebody wants to question, then we are really reaching the very fundamental principles of our values,” Dopfner told assembled staff. “And that then may lead simply to the decision that, because we are very transparent about it, it is then an individual decision whether Axel Springer and somebody who has so fundamentally different beliefs is really a good fit.”

    This mandate is far from an out-of-character statement for Dopfner: it follows a years-long pattern of provocative pro-Israel rhetoric that has sparked controversy. Last year, a leaked internal email published by German outlet Die Zeit ended with the line: “Zionism uber alles. Israel my country.” The phrase “Zionism uber alles” carries uniquely toxic baggage in Germany, as the identical wording opened the national anthem during the Nazi era, and became a symbol of ideological supremacism. The remark drew widespread condemnation across German political and media circles when it was leaked.
    The controversy has also drawn attention to Dopfner’s close ties to the Israeli government: in October 2023, Israeli President Isaac Herzog awarded Dopfner the Israeli Presidential Medal of Honor, alongside Miriam Adelson, a prominent casino billionaire, major pro-Israel political donor, and owner of the NHL’s Dallas Stars.

    During the internal meeting, journalists pushed back directly against Dopfner’s pattern of editorial intervention, calling for stricter fact-checking and evidentiary standards for opinion pieces written by the CEO himself. In one specific exchange, staffers criticized Dopfner for an opinion piece that referred to Iran as an aggressor systematically pursuing nuclear weapons, arguing the claim was misleading and required additional context and clarification. Iran has consistently and repeatedly denied any plans to develop a nuclear weapon, a fact that went unmentioned in Dopfner’s piece. Notably, while Dopfner described the claim that America is the world’s largest democracy as a self-evident fact that requires no proof, global demographic rankings widely recognize India, with a population of 1.4 billion, as the world’s largest democracy.

    Dopfner rejected the criticism entirely, arguing that his claims about Iran were beyond debate. “I think you have to qualify or prove arguments or points if they are new or if they are debatable – but for me at least, these two facts – that the Iranians are working on the nuclear bomb and that they are aggressors for decades – are so obvious, so proven for many times, they are almost – it’s like saying America is the biggest democracy in the world,” he said. “I don’t have to prove that.” He closed by confirming that he plans to expand his opinion writing, not scale it back, telling staff he intends to “write more in the future, not less.”

    The ongoing confrontation has intensified broader scrutiny of media consolidation and top-down ideological control in global news, as newsroom advocates warn that mandatory loyalty oaths for journalists set a dangerous precedent that undermines the public’s trust in independent news coverage.

  • Will UAE’s exit spell the end of OPEC?

    Will UAE’s exit spell the end of OPEC?

    After nearly six decades as a core member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), the United Arab Emirates’ decision to withdraw from the oil cartel is far more than a symbolic rupture. This unprecedented move lays bare a widening rift between major producing nations over how to adapt to a rapidly shifting global energy landscape, and it will fundamentally erode the bloc’s ability to regulate international crude supplies.

    In the immediate term, the practical impact of the UAE’s departure will remain muted. Global markets still crave every available barrel of oil, and the UAE accounts for just 3 to 4 percent of total worldwide output. But the underlying forces driving the decision carry far greater weight than the exit itself, shaped by a convergence of long-simmering economic tensions and shifting geopolitical priorities that have been accelerated by the ongoing war in Iran.

    For more than a decade, the UAE has poured roughly $150 billion into expanding its crude production capacity, pushing its maximum potential daily output to nearly 5 million barrels. Yet OPEC’s quota system, which is overwhelmingly shaped by de facto bloc leader Saudi Arabia, has barred the UAE from fully utilizing this expanded capacity. Restricted to a daily output of around 3.5 million barrels to keep global supplies tight and prices elevated, the country has been forced to leave more than 1.5 million barrels of daily production capacity idle.

    This mismatch between investment and output has created deep, unresolved tension within the cartel: why pour billions into expanding production if regulatory limits prevent you from selling the extra oil?

    Abu Dhabi’s approach to this question stems from its fundamentally different economic model compared to other major Gulf producers. Unlike Saudi Arabia, which requires an oil price of roughly $90 per barrel to balance its national budget, the UAE can balance its fiscal accounts at prices just below $50 per barrel. This lower break-even point removes much of the incentive for the UAE to support production caps. Instead, the country has centered its strategy on maximizing oil export volumes in the near term.

    This priority is also rooted in long-term projections for global energy demand. as major economies including China rapidly accelerate the transition to electric transportation, long-standing steady growth in oil demand is slowing and is projected to plateau in the coming decades. The UAE is also further along in its own energy transition planning than Saudi Arabia, with a net-zero emissions target for 2050 compared to Riyadh’s 2060 target. From Abu Dhabi’s perspective, the greatest long-term risk is not falling oil prices, but leaving valuable untapped crude in the ground that will never find a buyer as demand declines.

    The timing of the exit is not driven by economics alone. It also reflects a major shift in the UAE’s political and security calculations, particularly in the wake of sustained heavy attacks on the country’s energy infrastructure during the war in Iran. In Abu Dhabi, a growing consensus has emerged that key regional partnerships such as the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) offered very little tangible support to the country during this period of crisis.

    Anwar Gargash, a senior presidential adviser to the UAE government, framed this disillusionment publicly when speaking to reporters. “The GCC’s stance was the weakest historically, considering the nature of the attack and the threat it posed to everyone,” Gargash said, adding “I expected such a weak stance from the Arab League … But I don’t expect it from the GCC, and I am surprised by it.”

    This experience has reinforced the UAE’s push for a more independent foreign policy. Over recent years, the country has deepened security and economic ties with the United States and Israel, building on the 2020 Abraham Accords it signed alongside other Gulf states. Abu Dhabi views its relationship with Israel not only as a direct bilateral economic and security partnership, but also as a key channel for expanding its influence within U.S. political circles. At the same time, bilateral relations between the UAE and Saudi Arabia have grown increasingly strained, with public divisions emerging over both regional conflicts in Yemen and Somalia and conflicting national energy strategies. Against this backdrop, exiting OPEC serves both as an economic adjustment and a clear signal of the UAE’s growing geopolitical independence.

    The UAE’s departure also raises urgent questions about the future cohesion and relevance of OPEC itself. At the height of its power, the cartel controlled more than half of global crude production. Today, that share has fallen to no more than 35 percent, and internal disagreements over production quotas have grown far more pronounced. Quotas, which have long been the core of OPEC’s collective strategy, are increasingly viewed by smaller members as unfair, uneven constraints rather than shared commitments that benefit the entire bloc. Today, only Saudi Arabia holds significant spare production capacity, giving it disproportionate influence over the bloc’s decision-making. The result is an organization that still shapes global market sentiment, but is far less cohesive and unified than it was in previous decades.

    Contrary to some analysis, the UAE’s exit is not an unambiguous win for the United States. Many observers have framed the move as a victory for former U.S. President Donald Trump, who repeatedly criticized OPEC for keeping crude prices elevated. A weaker, more fragmented OPEC would likely lead to higher overall output and lower gasoline prices for U.S. consumers in the short term. However, sustained lower prices would also put significant pressure on higher-cost U.S. shale producers, which have emerged as one of OPEC’s most formidable competitors in recent years. U.S. producers actually benefited from the cartel’s production restraint, which kept prices high enough to support the high costs of shale extraction. What looks like a short-term geopolitical win could therefore turn into a major economic challenge for the U.S. oil sector over time.

    For the moment, the UAE’s exit will not dramatically reshape global oil markets. Current demand is strong enough to absorb the extra supply the UAE can bring online, particularly as global markets rebuild inventories following the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz after the war in Iran. But the deeper significance of the decision lies in what it reveals about the coming transformation of global oil markets.

    Oil producers are no longer united around a single collective strategy. Some, led by Saudi Arabia, continue to prioritize managing scarcity to keep prices elevated. Others, like the UAE, are racing to monetize their existing reserves before demand peaks and their oil becomes stranded, unusable assets. This strategic divergence is only expected to deepen in the coming years, and it may ultimately prove more consequential for global energy markets than any single country’s departure from the OPEC cartel.

    This analysis is by Adi Imsirovic, a lecturer in energy systems at the University of Oxford, republished with permission under a Creative Commons license.

  • Turkey is Iran war’s biggest winner — without firing a shot

    Turkey is Iran war’s biggest winner — without firing a shot

    Two months after joint US-Israeli airstrikes on Iran that killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and eliminated much of Tehran’s senior leadership in late February, Ankara’s carefully calibrated response to the conflict has positioned Turkey to claim unprecedented regional influence in modern times — a shift that comes with substantial unresolved risks.

    When the strikes first occurred, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan drew a clear line: he condemned the attack as a blatant violation of international law, shut Turkish airspace to US military forces, and extended official condolences following Khamenei’s assassination. Yet Erdogan’s administration simultaneously moved to distance itself from the fallen Iranian regime, openly criticizing Tehran’s retaliatory strikes on Gulf states and blaming Iranian hardline intransigence for the collapse of diplomatic talks that predated the war. This deliberate, balanced stance — what senior Turkish officials privately term “active neutrality,” signaling Ankara opposed the war but would not align with either belligerent bloc — has delivered compounding strategic dividends as a fragile Pakistani-brokered ceasefire has held since early April.

    The most immediate and visible win for Turkey has been its new centrality in regional diplomacy. The four-nation de-escalation format convened in Islamabad on March 29, bringing together Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Pakistan, operates in practice as a Turkey-led initiative. Well before the summit, Reuters reported on March 25 that Ankara had already served as a secret intermediary for backchannel communications between Iran and the US, testing Washington’s negotiating positions while warning Tehran against expanding the scope of the conflict. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen publicly backed Turkey’s mediation efforts as early as March 1, and the long-standing personal rapport between Erdogan and former US President Donald Trump has lent Ankara’s mediating role a credibility that smaller Gulf hubs like Doha or Muscat cannot match. While Turkish leaders do not expect to broker a full, permanent regional peace settlement, the role of mediator grants Ankara permanent “right of access” to all high-level negotiations that will shape the post-war Middle East order.

    Beyond diplomatic clout, the conflict has triggered a deep structural shift in regional geopolitics that plays directly to Turkey’s advantage. For 40 years, Iran served as the core institutional anchor of the so-called “resistance axis” stretching across Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and the Gulf. After incremental Israeli dismantling of that network starting in 2023, the February decapitation strikes have left the axis completely eviscerated. Combined with Russia’s severely weakened global position following years of grinding attrition in Ukraine, the long-standing Russia-Turkey-Iran triangle that guided Syrian diplomacy through the Astana process has effectively collapsed. This leaves Turkey as the only functioning major power remaining in the format, a shift that has boosted Ankara’s diplomatic influence far beyond Syria’s borders.

    These changes are already visible on the ground. After the fall of the Assad regime in late 2024, Turkish-aligned political and military actors hold the central role in Syria’s post-war negotiations, and Ankara’s quiet deconfliction channel with Israel is now the primary mechanism preventing direct armed clashes in Idlib and northeastern Syria. In Iraq, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan has announced that Ankara will expand its regional focus beyond Syria to address control of the Qamishli–Sinjar corridor, where Iranian-backed militias have lost the political protection Tehran once provided. Critically, two major infrastructure and trade projects long held up by regional tensions are now newly viable: the $17 billion Development Road project through Iraq, which will connect Turkey and Europe directly to the Persian Gulf, and the Zangezur Corridor through the South Caucasus, which links Turkey to Central Asia while completely bypassing Iranian territory. Once completed, these corridors will redirect a significant share of global East-West trade through Turkish-controlled territory, representing a generational geopolitical realignment rather than a short-term tactical gain.

    The Iran war has also accelerated a shift in Gulf security planning that began years before the February strikes, opening new defense and economic opportunities for Ankara. After years of watching Iranian missiles strike civilian infrastructure in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar despite long-standing US security guarantees, Gulf monarchies have increasingly moved away from exclusive reliance on Washington and are diversifying their regional security partnerships. Turkey is the most natural alternative: over the past decade, Ankara has evolved from a major arms importer to a self-sufficient global defense exporter, with 80% of its military equipment produced domestically by 2026. Key Turkish defense exports include the widely popular Bayraktar unmanned aerial vehicles, the new KAAN fifth-generation fighter jet, and a growing fleet of advanced naval vessels built under the domestic MILGEM program. Multiple confidential defense agreements signed throughout March indicate Ankara is already converting Gulf security anxiety into long-term contracts and deep embedded political partnerships. This momentum is set to grow when Turkey hosts the July NATO summit, where Erdogan will arrive with far more leverage than he held in January: as the alliance’s most strategically exposed frontline state, an indispensable regional mediator, and a credible candidate for reintegration into Western defense-industrial frameworks from which Washington previously sought to exclude him.

    For all these structural gains, Turkey’s rising influence carries significant tactical and long-term risks that threaten to undo Ankara’s progress. In the immediate aftermath of the US-Israeli strikes, for example, the Borsa Istanbul stock exchange plummeted 7% on March 2 as global investors reacted to the conflict, and spiking energy costs have worsened Turkey’s already severe domestic inflation. Historically, Iran has supplied roughly 14% of Turkey’s total natural gas imports, and war-related disruptions to this supply have directly translated to rising domestic energy prices for Turkish consumers. By mid-March, NATO air defenses had already intercepted three Iranian missiles reportedly targeting Turkish territory, a stark reminder that Turkey’s geographic proximity to the conflict cannot be mitigated by diplomacy alone.

    The most dangerous threat, however, lies in emerging shifts around Kurdish autonomy. Recent reports indicate Washington is exploring new partnerships with Iranian Kurdish opposition groups, particularly the Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan (PJAK), an offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) — a development that strikes at the core of Turkey’s most sensitive national security concerns. In Ankara’s view, the establishment of a Kurdish autonomous zone in western Iran would complete a continuous arc of Kurdish self-governance stretching from the Mediterranean Sea to the Zagros Mountains, a development no Turkish government can accept. It would also likely collapse the fragile domestic peace process with the PKK, which had begun moving toward disarmament in 2025.

    The growing rivalry with Israel compounds these risks. In comments made in February 2026, former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett labeled Turkey “the new Iran” and warned of an emerging Turkish threat to Israeli regional security. While this framing has not become official Israeli government policy, it is no longer limited to fringe political rhetoric. With Iran reduced to a weakened state, regional observers increasingly view the next great Middle Eastern power rivalry as one between Ankara and Jerusalem.

    In sum, Turkey’s gains from the post-Iran war order are provisional. Ankara is unambiguously more powerful today than it was on February 27, the day before the strikes, but its new position depends entirely on outcomes outside of Turkish control: that Iran remains weakened but not fully fragmented, that Kurdish regional ambitions remain contained, and that the post-war order rewards neutral mediators rather than belligerent powers. Erdogan’s immediate priority between now and the July NATO summit is to lock in Turkey’s structural advantages — including new Gulf defense ties, control of key trade corridors through Iraq and the Caucasus, and permanent mediation status amid the power vacuum in Tehran — before uncontrollable geopolitical shifts undermine his gains. For the moment, though, a striking paradox remains: the country that most openly opposed the war, refused to join the fighting, and worked to prevent the conflict is the power that has clearly emerged stronger from its aftermath.

  • Why is China banning drone sales in Beijing?

    Why is China banning drone sales in Beijing?

    In recent weeks, new regulations restricting unauthorised drone operations and sales in Beijing have drawn international attention, with observers seeking clarity on the drivers behind the policy shift. Veteran BBC correspondent Laura Bicker has conducted on-the-ground reporting to unpack the motivations behind China’s decision to tighten drone oversight across the capital. According to Chinese authorities, the core impetus for the new rules is rooted in escalating public safety risks that have emerged as consumer and commercial drone ownership has skyrocketed across the country in recent years. Over the past decade, drones have moved from niche hobbyist equipment to widely accessible tools for photography, logistics, and industrial work, with millions of units now in operation nationwide. This rapid proliferation has brought growing safety challenges: unregulated drone flights have disrupted commercial air traffic at major airports, posed collision risks to manned aircraft, and enabled unauthorised surveillance that infringes on personal privacy. In densely populated urban areas like Beijing, the stakes of unsafe drone operation are even higher, with rogue units creating hazards for pedestrians and critical infrastructure. Bicker’s reporting notes that while the new restrictions have sparked some discussion among domestic drone hobby groups, the policy aligns with a broader global trend of governments updating aviation and technology regulations to address the risks posed by the fast-growing drone industry. Chinese regulatory bodies have emphasised that the restrictions are not a blanket ban on all drone activity in Beijing – rather, they are targeted at unregistered sales and unauthorised flights, with provisions for legitimate commercial and recreational operators who complete required registration and safety certification. As drone technology continues to advance and become more accessible, policymakers across the globe are grappling with how to balance innovation and public access with the need to protect communities and critical assets, and Beijing’s new regulatory framework represents one major government’s approach to that balancing act.

  • ‘Once in a lifetime opportunity’ – Kansas City readies for World Cup influx

    ‘Once in a lifetime opportunity’ – Kansas City readies for World Cup influx

    Tucked along the banks of the Missouri River, straddling the state line between Kansas and Missouri, the Kansas City metropolitan area stands as one of the smallest host cities for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, with a population of just 2.5 million. Though it does not rank among the 30 largest urban regions in the United States, this Midwestern hub punches far above its weight in the sporting world: it is home to the recently dominant Kansas City Chiefs NFL franchise, hosts the prestigious Big 12 college basketball tournament, and will take on a critical role in the planet’s biggest soccer tournament this summer.

    Kansas City will play host to six World Cup matches, including a round-of-32 fixture and a high-stakes quarter-final, and will serve as the training base for four competing nations: Algeria, defending champions Argentina, England, and the Netherlands. For long-time locals who have watched the region’s soccer culture grow from humble beginnings, this opportunity feels nothing short of historic.

    Héctor Solorio, a 26-year Kansas City resident and lifelong supporter of MLS side Sporting Kansas City, called the chance to welcome the world to his hometown a once-in-a-lifetime moment. “I never imagined the World Cup coming to my city,” he said, noting he is eager to prove Kansas City’s reputation as a globally recognized soccer city – even as he remains skeptical about the U.S. Men’s National Team’s tournament prospects. Fellow local Alejandro Cabero echoed that excitement, recalling how different the region’s soccer scene was when he first arrived: when the franchise, then called the KC Wizards, drew fewer than 3,000 fans to matches. “It’s amazing how far we’ve come,” he said.

    Local and tournament officials frame the 2026 World Cup as a transformative chance to showcase everything the Midwestern region has to offer beyond sports. “We’re a city that has always punched above our weight in barbecue, in African American music, in sports, in the warmth of our people,” Quinton Lucas, mayor of Kansas City, Missouri, told the BBC. “This summer is our chance to share that with the world on the biggest possible stage.”

    Anticipation has been building for months across the city, with locals already finalizing plans for match week. Solorio has secured a ticket to the opening group stage match between Argentina and Algeria on June 16, while Cabero – who owns a local empanada manufacturing business – is organizing a traditional Argentinian banderazo, a pre-game street celebration, the day before. He is preparing food for an estimated 600 attendees, but expects crowds as large as 10,000 fans to join the party.

    Beyond local fan events, organizers have rolled out large-scale preparations to welcome the expected influx of global visitors. Working in partnership with FIFA and officials from both Kansas and Missouri, KC 2026 organizers have planned a free, 18-day official fan festival at the National WWI Museum and Memorial, one of the city’s most iconic landmarks. The festival will feature live match broadcasts, community-led events, and neighborhood watch parties open to all attendees.

    To ensure small, locally owned businesses can capitalize on the surge in visitors, KC 2026 CEO Pam Kramer and her team launched the KC Game Plan initiative. The program provides a free playbook, available in both English and Spanish, that offers small business owners cyber security training, demographic data on projected visitors, and hospitality guidance, among other resources. “Our goal is to guarantee that when visitors arrive, they encounter Kansas City businesses that are ready to meet demand and confident in showcasing what makes them unique,” Kramer explained. For Cabero, that means crafting new empanada flavors inspired by the competing nations, including takes on paella, bratwurst, and shepherd’s pie, to welcome visiting fans.

    Over the past 15 years, the Kansas City metro has invested nearly $700 million into soccer-specific infrastructure, part of a long-term strategy to position the region as a major soccer destination. The recently renovated Berkley Riverfront esplanade, redeveloped in 2021 by Port KC and NWSL side KC Current, will serve as Argentina’s base during the tournament, and local leaders expect the presence of Lionel Messi and the world champions to deliver a major boost to the area’s economy, with increased foot traffic and sales for nearby local businesses. Port KC communications director Patrick Pierce projects that up to two million visitors will visit the riverfront in 2026, a surge driven largely by World Cup demand.

    Kansas City has also gone out of its way to welcome smaller, less high-profile nations competing in their first ever World Cup. Caribbean nation Curacao will play its group stage match against Ecuador in Kansas City on June 20, and will stay in the city for two nights during their historic tournament run. Curacao Football Federation president Gilbert Martina noted an unexpected cultural connection between the two regions: both share a deep love of jazz, with Curacao hosting the world-famous North Sea Jazz Festival. Martina added that the Midwestern values of resilience, community, and pride that define Kansas City are qualities that resonate deeply with the people of Curacao.

    For all the widespread excitement, not all locals share the confidence that Kansas City is fully prepared for the influx of fans and the economic and social impacts of the tournament. Local community leaders have raised three key concerns: a shortage of available hotel rooms, limited public transportation access to match venues for fans on the Kansas side of the Missouri River, and worries over increased immigration enforcement presence during the tournament.

    Most notably, Doug Langner, executive director of local homeless shelter Hope Faith and a lifelong soccer fan, warned that the city’s unhoused population of roughly 2,000 people could be pushed out of critical support systems. Many hotels that partner with the city to provide temporary housing for unhoused residents will be fully booked by traveling fans, he explained, leaving vulnerable populations without accommodation. With hundreds of millions of dollars invested in tournament infrastructure and security, Langner questioned why marginalized communities have not been prioritized to benefit from the event. “How do we connect the people who could use that bump the most to those opportunities?” he asked, adding that it remains unclear how working-class locals will share in the projected economic benefits of the tournament.

    While Mexico City will host the tournament’s opening match and New York will welcome fans for the final, Kansas City is poised to carve out its own unique place in the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The city’s challenge now is to deliver a world-class tournament that celebrates every competing nation, from global giants to first-time underdogs, while addressing the lingering concerns of local communities to ensure the tournament benefits all Kansas City residents.

  • Inflation hits 3% in Europe as Iran war spreads oil price shock

    Inflation hits 3% in Europe as Iran war spreads oil price shock

    FRANKFURT, Germany — The ongoing conflict between Iran and coalition forces has sent global oil markets into turmoil, creating a toxic economic mix for the 21-nation eurozone that pushes the bloc closer to stagflation, new official data shows.

    On Thursday, the European Union’s statistical body Eurostat released figures showing annual inflation across the euro currency area climbed to 3.0% in April, up from 2.6% recorded in March. The sharp uptick was almost entirely driven by a 10.9% month-over-month jump in energy prices, triggered by massive supply disruptions stemming from the Iran war. Since the outbreak of hostilities on February 28, international benchmark crude prices have surged from around $73 per barrel to above $120 a barrel, as Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz cut off a critical global oil chokepoint. Approximately 20% of the world’s total oil trade passes through the waterway, connecting Persian Gulf producing nations to global markets. The price shock has already hit consumers directly, with higher costs showing up immediately at gasoline pumps and in jet fuel prices for air travel.

    Alongside the unwelcome inflation surge, the eurozone also delivered underwhelming growth figures for the first quarter of 2025. The bloc recorded only a marginal 0.1% increase in output compared to the final quarter of 2024, a result that fell far short of analyst expectations.

    This dual pressure of stagnant growth and above-target inflation has put the European Central Bank (ECB) in an extremely difficult policy position. The ECB has a long-standing inflation target of 2%, and conventional economic policy calls for raising benchmark interest rates to cool overheating prices. However, hiking borrowing costs would further dampen already weak economic growth, creating a risk of a full-blown recession.

    Policymakers widely expect the ECB to leave its key benchmark interest rate unchanged at its Thursday meeting, a position that aligns with other major global central banks that have also hit a policy pause amid the uncertainty. The U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of Japan both held interest rates steady at their respective monetary policy meetings earlier this week, and the Bank of England is also projected to keep rates unchanged as it assesses the ongoing fallout from the Iran war. The ECB has kept its main policy rate fixed at 2% since June 2025.

    The dilemma for central bankers hinges on whether the current inflation surge will prove temporary. If price pressures are transitory, moving to hike rates now would unnecessarily harm growth, as interest rate changes take months to filter through to the broader economy. But if policymakers wait too long, higher energy costs could push up prices for food, manufactured goods and prompt demands for higher wages, embedding persistent inflation into the economy. Once inflation becomes entrenched, central banks are forced to implement even more aggressive, economically painful rate hikes to bring prices back under control.

    Right now, major central banks around the world remain stuck in a holding pattern, cautiously monitoring the inflation shock as it works its way through the global economy, with no room to either cut or raise rates in the current uncertain environment.

  • The first direct US-Venezuela commercial flight in 7 years is to land in Caracas

    The first direct US-Venezuela commercial flight in 7 years is to land in Caracas

    After a seven-year indefinite suspension ordered by U.S. authorities over unsubstantiated security concerns, the first direct commercial flight connecting the United States and Venezuela is set to touch down in Caracas, Venezuela’s capital, on Thursday, marking a historic turning point in bilateral relations between the two nations.

    This long-awaited resumption of direct air links comes on the heels of a series of rapid diplomatic breakthroughs. Just months ago, the U.S. announced the formal reopening of its embassy in Caracas, a move that followed the restoration of full diplomatic relations between Washington and the South American country after years of severed ties.

    The inaugural flight, numbered AA3599 and operated by Envoy Air, a regional subsidiary of American Airlines, was scheduled to depart Miami International Airport at 10:16 a.m. local Florida time, with a planned three-hour flight time before arriving in Caracas. The aircraft is scheduled to make the return trip to Miami later the same afternoon. Per earlier announcements from the airline, a second daily nonstop flight between Miami and Caracas will launch on May 21 to meet growing travel demand.

    Direct commercial air travel between the U.S. and Venezuela has been frozen since 2019, when American Airlines — the last remaining U.S. carrier serving the country — suspended its routes between Miami, Caracas, and Venezuela’s key oil hub Maracaibo. Larger U.S. carriers Delta Air Lines and United Airlines had already exited the Venezuelan market two years earlier in 2017, amid a deepening political and economic crisis that drove millions of Venezuelans to seek refuge abroad. Over the past seven years, travelers between the two nations have been forced to rely on indirect connecting routes through neighboring Latin American countries, adding significant time and cost to cross-border journeys.

    In a late January statement, U.S. President Donald Trump announced he had notified Venezuela’s acting President Delcy Rodríguez that the U.S. would fully open commercial air access to Venezuela, clearing the way for U.S. citizens to travel to the country. “American citizens will be very shortly able to go to Venezuela, and they’ll be safe there,” Trump told reporters at the time. When American Airlines first announced the flight resumption plan in January, the carrier emphasized that the restored routes would create new opportunities for separated family members to reunite, while also opening new doors for cross-border commercial and economic activity.

  • Meta in row after workers who say they saw smart glasses users having sex lose jobs

    Meta in row after workers who say they saw smart glasses users having sex lose jobs

    A growing controversy surrounding Meta’s artificial intelligence training practices for its Ray-Ban and Oakley branded smart glasses has triggered regulatory investigations and competing claims over why the tech giant abruptly cut ties with its outsourced contractor Sama, leaving more than 1,100 Kenyan workers unemployed.

    In February, anonymous data annotators employed by Sama gave explosive interviews to two Swedish publications, Svenska Dagbladet and Goteborgs-Posten, revealing that they were forced to review deeply private and graphic footage captured by Meta’s consumer smart glasses. The workers described reviewing everything from users going to the bathroom to sexual encounters, and one account detailed footage of a woman undressing in a private bedroom, captured without her knowledge by her partner’s recording glasses. “We see everything – from living rooms to naked bodies,” one worker told the outlets.

    Less than two months after these allegations came to light, Meta announced it was ending its contracted work with Sama, a US-headquartered B Corp that brands itself as an ethical tech outsourcing provider. The termination left 1,108 Kenyan workers out of a job. The two sides have offered starkly conflicting explanations for the decision.

    Meta has publicly maintained that it cut ties because Sama failed to meet its internal operational standards. “We take [the worker allegations] seriously. Photos and videos are private to users. Humans review AI content to improve product performance, for which we get clear user consent,” a Meta spokesperson told the BBC, adding that the company had paused work with Sama while it investigated the claims.

    Sama has forcefully rejected Meta’s claims, noting that it never received any prior notification of performance issues. “Sama has consistently met the operational, security and quality standards required across all our client engagements, including with Meta,” the company said in an official statement. “At no point were we notified of any failure to meet those standards, and we stand firmly behind the quality and integrity of our work.”

    Kenyan worker advocacy groups have put forward a third, far more critical explanation: that Meta terminated the contract to punish workers for speaking out about the privacy violations and harmful working conditions. Naftali Wambalo of the Africa Tech Workers Movement, who is already involved in ongoing legal action against Sama and Meta over a past toxic content moderation contract, says workers on the smart glasses project confirmed the same pattern of exploitation. “What I think are the standards they are talking about here are standards of secrecy,” Wambalo told the BBC.

    This is not the first time Meta’s partnership with Sama has resulted in public scandal. A previous contract for Sama to moderate Facebook content drew widespread condemnation after former workers described chronic trauma from constant exposure to graphic, violent and extreme content, leading to legal action. Sama later stated it regretted taking on that work.

    Following the February revelations, regulators on two continents have opened investigations into Meta’s practices. The UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) wrote to Meta shortly after the Swedish investigation was published, raising concerns over the reported privacy breaches. Kenya’s Office of the Data Protection Commissioner has also launched a formal probe into the privacy risks posed by the smart glasses content review process. Non-consensual recording of women using the devices has already been linked to incidents in Kenya, amplifying local privacy concerns.

    Meta first unveiled its line of AI-powered smart glasses in partnership with luxury eyewear brands Ray-Ban and Oakley in September 2023. The devices offer AI-powered features including real-time text translation and visual question answering, a tool that is particularly helpful for users who are blind or partially sighted. As the devices have grown in popularity with consumers, concerns over misuse and privacy violations have grown in lockstep.

    The Kenyan workers who spoke to the Swedish outlets were employed as data annotators, a role that involves manually labeling content captured by smart glasses to help train Meta’s AI systems to correctly interpret images. They also reviewed transcripts of user interactions with the glasses’ built-in AI to check that responses were accurate. Meta has stated that human review of content is an industry standard practice intended to improve user experience, and that the practice is disclosed in the company’s terms of service.

    Mercy Mutemi, a lawyer representing the Kenyan worker petitioners and executive director of advocacy group the Oversight Lab, said the controversy should serve as a warning to the Kenyan government, which has positioned outsourced AI work as a pathway into the global tech economy. “We’ve been told that this is our entry route into the AI ecosystem,” she said. “This is a very flimsy foundation to build your entire industry on.”

    The BBC has requested additional comment from Meta on the secrecy allegation, and has not yet received a response.

  • Myanmar reduces ousted leader Suu Kyi’s prison term in new amnesty

    Myanmar reduces ousted leader Suu Kyi’s prison term in new amnesty

    BANGKOK – In a move tied to a major Buddhist religious observance, Myanmar’s military-installed administration has slashed the prison term of ousted democratically elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi, marking the second mass prisoner pardon issued by the regime in just two weeks, according to anonymous legal sources and official state media reports.

    The latest commutation, announced Thursday to mark the full moon day of Kason – the holiday that commemorates the birth, enlightenment, and passing of the Buddha – applies a one-sixth sentence reduction to all remaining convicted prisoners across the country, in addition to the full amnesty granted to 1,519 incarcerated people, 11 of whom hold foreign citizenship. It remains unclear how many of the thousands of people detained for opposing military rule are included in the most recent round of clemency.

    Two legal officials, speaking on condition of anonymity out of fear of retaliation from state authorities, confirmed that the 80-year-old Nobel Peace Prize recipient would see her sentence reduced by an additional one-sixth under the new order. No official confirmation of her remaining term has been released, but calculations based on prior sentence cuts show she is still expected to serve more than 13 years behind bars.

    This latest amnesty follows a broader pardon issued on April 17 that released more than 4,500 prisoners and cut sentences for inmates serving terms under 40 years, which already shaved more than four years off Suu Kyi’s sentence. The sequence of clemency measures comes three weeks after Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, the head of Myanmar’s military, was sworn in as the country’s president. His appointment followed a 2025 election widely dismissed by international observers and critics as neither free nor fair, widely seen as a carefully orchestrated move to cement the military’s authoritarian grip on national power. In his inauguration address, Min Aung Hlaing stated the amnesty program was designed to advance national reconciliation, social justice, and peace across the country.

    Suu Kyi’s current detention stretches back to February 1, 2021, when the military seized power in a coup that ousted her democratically elected civilian government. By the end of 2022, she was convicted on a slate of politically charged charges and handed a 33-year prison sentence. Supporters and global human rights organizations have consistently characterized these convictions as a manufactured effort to discredit Suu Kyi, legitimize the 2021 coup, and permanently remove her from Myanmar’s political landscape. Her sentence was first reduced to 27 years in August 2023, before the additional cuts announced in April 2025.

    Today, Suu Kyi is being held at an undisclosed location in Myanmar’s capital Naypyitaw. Unconfirmed reports circulated last week suggesting the regime planned to transfer her to house arrest as part of the latest clemency, but no official confirmation of this move has emerged. Information about her current health and well-being remains tightly controlled by state authorities. Unverified reports published in 2024 and early 2025 have documented declining health, including recurring low blood pressure, dizziness, and heart complications. Notably, Suu Kyi’s legal team has not been allowed to meet with her in person since December 2022.

    The 2021 military coup sparked widespread popular resistance across Myanmar, which the regime responded to with brutal violent repression. The conflict has escalated into an ongoing bloody civil war that has killed thousands of civilians and displaced millions. As of the latest data from the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, a Thailand-based human rights monitoring group, more than 22,000 people remain in detention for their opposition to military rule since the coup.

    For decades, Suu Kyi has stood as the global face of Myanmar’s pro-democracy movement. The daughter of Aung San, Myanmar’s assassinated founding independence leader, she spent nearly 15 years under house arrest as a political prisoner between 1989 and 2010. Her unwavering nonviolent resistance to military authoritarianism earned her international acclaim and the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize, cementing her status as a global symbol of democratic struggle.

  • UK vows to tackle antisemitism ‘emergency’ as police probe double stabbing attack

    UK vows to tackle antisemitism ‘emergency’ as police probe double stabbing attack

    LONDON – In the wake of a fatal terror stabbing last year and a double stabbing that left two Jewish men seriously injured this week, the British government formally declared antisemitism a national emergency on Thursday, committing £25 million ($34 million) to boost security at Jewish community sites across the country.

    The latest violent incident unfolded Wednesday in Golders Green, a northwest London neighborhood widely recognized as one of the hubs of British Jewish life, home to dozens of synagogues, Jewish schools, and kosher businesses alongside diverse Asian and Middle Eastern communities. Two men, aged 34 and 76, were stabbed in the attack; both remain in stable condition as of Thursday.

    Counterterrorism police took a 45-year-old suspect into custody on suspicion of attempted murder, and have officially classified the stabbing as a terrorist act. Law enforcement officials confirmed the suspect, who has not been publicly identified, has a documented history of severe violence and mental health conditions. Detectives executed a search warrant at a property in southeast London Thursday, following reports the suspect was involved in a local altercation in the area hours before the Golders Green attack. Investigators are still working to confirm a definitive motive, and are assessing unverified claims of responsibility and potential links to Iranian-backed proxies.

    The stabbing is also being examined for possible connections to a recent string of arson attacks targeting synagogues and other Jewish sites across London, which began after the outbreak of the Iran war on February 28. No injuries have been reported in the arson incidents, and multiple suspects ranging from teenagers to people in their 40s have been arrested and charged in connection with the attacks. A little-known group calling itself Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamia (Islamic Movement of the Companions of the Right) has claimed responsibility for the arsons online, and also claimed the Golders Green stabbing. Israeli officials describe the group as a newly formed militant organization with ties to an Iranian proxy, which has also carried out synagogue attacks in Belgium and the Netherlands. Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood noted Thursday that authorities are still working to determine whether the group’s claim is legitimate or an opportunistic false claim of responsibility.

    For the British Jewish community, which numbers roughly 300,000 people – less than 0.5% of the UK’s total population – this recent violence marks the latest escalation in a surge of antisemitic activity that began nearly two years ago. Data from the Community Security Trust (CST), a charity that monitors antisemitism and protects Jewish communities, shows reported antisemitic incidents jumped from 1,662 in 2022 to 3,700 in 2025, a surge that followed the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on southern Israel and the subsequent Gaza war. The violence reached a deadly peak in October 2025, when an attacker drove a vehicle into a crowd gathered outside a Manchester synagogue on Yom Kippur, fatally stabbing one person; a second person died during the response after being inadvertently shot by police.

    The sharp rise in antisemitic hostility has ignited fierce political debate over the role of widespread pro-Palestinian protests held across the UK since the Gaza war began. While the vast majority of these demonstrations have remained peaceful, many Jewish community members and political leaders argue that some rhetoric and chants used at the protests – most notably the slogan “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” – cross the line from criticism of Israeli policy to open incitement of antisemitic hatred. A small number of protesters have been arrested for openly expressing support for Hamas, which is classified as a banned terrorist organization in the UK.

    Jonathan Hall, the UK’s former independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, has publicly called for a temporary ban on large pro-Palestinian marches, arguing that the demonstrations have created an environment that “incubates” antisemitic violence. Kemi Badenoch, leader of the opposition Conservative Party, has backed the call for a ban, claiming the protests are routinely used as cover for violence and intimidation targeting Jewish communities.

    Speaking Thursday, Mahmood emphasized that the government is treating the current antisemitism crisis as a top national security priority. “I am treating antisemitism as an emergency – it is the top pressing issue in relation to security that I face,” she said. The new £25 million security funding will be used to expand visible police patrols and upgrade physical protection at synagogues, Jewish schools, and Jewish community centers across the UK. In addition to the new security investment, the government announced Thursday it will introduce new legislation to allow prosecution of individuals and groups that operate on behalf of state-sponsored terrorist organizations, a move widely seen as targeted at Iranian-linked groups operating in the UK.