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  • How China quietly erased Taiwan from coffee’s world stage

    How China quietly erased Taiwan from coffee’s world stage

    In April 2026, barista Bala claimed the top prize at the World Latte Art Championship in San Diego, wowing judges with intricate latte art of a raccoon, giraffe, and red pandas to secure a winning score of 531 points. The event counted Chinese coffee chain Luckin Coffee as an official sponsor, and when Bala stepped onto the winner’s podium, competition organizers initially listed him as representing Taiwan.

    What followed just one week later was a quiet, unannounced revision that has exposed how geopolitical pressure can penetrate even niche, seemingly apolitical global cultural industries. The Specialty Coffee Association (SCA), which oversees the World Coffee Championships (WCC), altered Bala’s affiliation in official records, changing the listing from “Taiwan” to “Chinese Taipei” with no public explanation. The organization went further, removing older ranking documents from its website that had for years listed past Taiwanese champions under the same original designation.

    This small bureaucratic change is far more than a trivial footnote to broader geopolitical tensions between Beijing and Taiwan. It marks a clear signal that Chinese coercive pressure has expanded into an under-monitored domain: the global governance infrastructure of the international specialty coffee sector. The incident also lays bare a stark truth: when private non-governmental organizations that manage global cultural and industrial activities face large-scale geopolitical pressure, their long-proclaimed neutrality collapses almost immediately.

    Taiwan’s specialty coffee community climbed to global prominence gradually, building its legacy over more than two decades of competition. The World Barista Championship launched in 2000, but it was not until 2007 that the first Taiwanese competitor, national champion Lin Tung-Yuan (Van Lin), stepped onto the international stage. What came next was an extraordinary streak of success: Pang-Yu Liu took gold at the 2014 World Cup Tasters Championship, while Jacky Lai won the 2014 World Coffee Roasting Championship in the same year. Berg Wu became Taiwan’s first World Barista Champion in 2016, followed by Chad Wang’s win at the 2017 World Brewers Cup, and Xie Yi-chen claimed the 2024 World Latte Art Championship title. Bala’s 2026 victory was the latest milestone in this decades-long journey.

    As recently as 2022, the SCA itself celebrated Taiwan’s thriving specialty coffee scene when it announced it would bring the WCC event to Taipei, highlighting the island’s estimated 4,000 roasters and 16 world championship finalists, explicitly naming the island’s top competitors under their Taiwanese affiliations. Through 19 years of advocacy, the Taiwan Coffee Association had fought to retain the “Taiwan” designation for its competitors — a fight that ended in defeat with the 2026 revision.

    The name change did not occur in a vacuum. Just six months prior, in October 2025, the SCA made another consequential institutional shift: it absorbed the widely recognized Q Grader Program — a global certification for coffee quality assessment held by roughly 10,000 professionals worldwide — from the Coffee Quality Institute, which had managed the program for 20 years. The SCA restructured the certification around its 2023 Coffee Value Assessment (CVA) framework, which for the first time formally recognizes origin, processing method, and cultural context as core components of a coffee’s overall value, noting publicly that “coffee is more than a score — it is culture, craftsmanship and context.”

    The contrast between this rhetoric and the quiet renaming of Taiwan is not a contradiction, but a reflection of a single underlying logic. Once origin becomes a formal part of commercial coffee value, the question of who controls how an origin is named shifts from a mundane administrative task to an exercise of geopolitical power. The progressive language of respect for cultural context serves as a market positioning tool, while the renaming demonstrates how that power is actually exercised.

    In a May 1 statement, the SCA defended its decision, framing it as a routine administrative change and pointing to the naming conventions used by the International Olympic Committee and FIFA as precedent. That comparison confirms the core issue: like these large international sports bodies, the SCA is a private organization that governs a global cultural activity while remaining highly vulnerable to pressure from its largest single market, China. Its commitment to neutrality holds only until pressure becomes too great to resist.

    Coinciding with the SCA’s revision was another major shift in the global coffee industry that underscores growing Chinese influence. In late April 2026, just days before the name change was implemented, Centurium Capital — the controlling shareholder of Luckin Coffee, the official sponsor of Bala’s winning championship — announced it had acquired iconic American third-wave coffee chain Blue Bottle Coffee from Nestle in a deal worth under $400 million. While the two events have not been publicly linked, their timing tells a broader story: Chinese capital is not only lobbying for policy changes in global coffee governance, it is actively buying up the cultural infrastructure that these global bodies regulate.

    For analysts and policymakers tracking Chinese “sharp power” expansion, the incident carries a clear warning: coercive pressure has now reached niche global sectors that have flown under the radar of most monitoring efforts. The Taipei Times reported that the name change followed suspected behind-the-scenes political pressure from China, with sources noting Luckin’s role as a top championship sponsor points to implicit Chinese influence. If a global standards body for a cultural industry can be pressured into such a change with no public pushback, no similar private global governance body is immune to the same pressure — from industry consortia to certification groups to sports federations across the world.

    For consumers who see purchasing ethically sourced specialty coffee as a small political act of supporting producers and their identities, the lesson is equally sobering. The specialty coffee industry’s widely used progressive language of honoring origin, terroir, and cultural context did not protect Taiwan’s coffee community from erasure of its identity. In fact, it created the conditions for that erasure, by shifting authority over defining origin from producers themselves to global certifying bodies.

    In response to the change, Taiwan’s coffee community has launched a public pushback, organizing a “one-person-one-email” campaign calling on the WCC to reverse the revision. Berg Wu, the 2016 world champion, was among the first to speak out publicly. “Taiwan is not just a name,” he wrote on Facebook shortly after the change. “It is an identity and a shared memory built by many competitors, coaches, judges, cafes, roasters, and all the consumers who have supported us along the way.” That 26-year-old shared legacy was altered in just seven days, a quiet reminder of how geopolitical power can reshape even the most unexpected corners of global culture.

  • China calls for Strait to be reopened ‘as soon as possible’ in Iran talks

    China calls for Strait to be reopened ‘as soon as possible’ in Iran talks

    In a high-stakes diplomatic gathering in Beijing on Wednesday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi held talks with his newly appointed Iranian counterpart Abbas Araqchi, marking Araqchi’s first visit to China since the outbreak of the US-Israeli military conflict against Iran. At the top of the agenda was the ongoing crisis in the Strait of Hormuz, with Wang pressing for the immediate reopening of the critical global waterway that has been largely blocked by reciprocal restrictions from Iran and the US since the war began.

    As one of the world’s most vital chokepoints for global energy trade, the Strait of Hormuz carries roughly a fifth of the world’s daily crude oil supplies. Its prolonged closure has sent ripples through energy markets, leaving the international community on edge about potential price spikes and supply disruptions. Wang emphasized in the meeting that restoring safe and unobstructed navigation through the strait aligns with the shared interests of the entire global community, and he called on all relevant parties to answer the international community’s urgent call to lift the blockades without delay.

    On the broader conflict, Wang stressed that reaching a lasting, comprehensive ceasefire remains the world’s most urgent priority. He warned that any resumption of large-scale hostilities would only deepen the region’s crisis and bring more catastrophic harm to civilians and infrastructure. Reaffirming China’s consistent neutral mediation position, Wang noted that Beijing has long avoided direct entanglement in the conflict while working quietly behind the scenes to push all sides toward dialogue. He reiterated that China remains fully ready to facilitate further talks and support international efforts to de-escalate tensions across the Middle East.

    In a notable gesture of diplomatic engagement, Wang also publicly recognized Iran’s longstanding commitment to not developing nuclear weapons, a point that aligns with China’s broader efforts to preserve the non-proliferation framework in the region. According to Iranian state media readouts of the meeting, Araqchi used the occasion to reaffirm Iran’s commitment to deepening bilateral cooperation with China, telling Wang that partnership between the two countries will grow even stronger in the coming years.

    This meeting comes as the international community prepares for a landmark summit next week between US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, a meeting that was originally scheduled for March but postponed after the US and Israel launched their wide-ranging military strikes on Iran. If the summit proceeds as planned next week, it will mark the first visit by a sitting US president to China in nearly a decade, and the Iran conflict and the Strait of Hormuz impasse are widely expected to top the bilateral agenda.

    Notably, both US and Iranian officials have already credited Chinese diplomatic mediation for helping broker the April ceasefire between the two sides, which was formally arranged through Pakistan. China has also repeatedly criticized the US naval blockade of Iranian ports, describing the move as “irresponsible and dangerous” that risks unraveling the fragile ceasefire agreement that has been in place for months.

    For China, the stakes of the Strait of Hormuz reopening are deeply personal. China is one of the largest buyers of Iranian crude oil, even as the oil remains under US unilateral sanctions. Data from the Center on Global Energy Policy shows that China imported an average of 1.38 million barrels of Iranian crude per day in 2025, accounting for roughly 12 percent of China’s total crude imports. Despite this heavy reliance on energy supplies that pass through the strait, Trump told reporters at the White House earlier this week that Xi Jinping has acted with “very respectful” posture toward the US in recent months. He claimed that China has not challenged US positions on the conflict, adding that “Xi would not challenge the US because of me.”

    As diplomatic activity ramps up on multiple fronts ahead of the Trump-Xi summit, the outcome of the talks on the Strait of Hormuz could have far-reaching implications for global energy security, the future of the Iran conflict, and the trajectory of bilateral relations between the world’s two largest economies.

  • Evacuations ‘ongoing’ from hantavirus-hit cruise ship

    Evacuations ‘ongoing’ from hantavirus-hit cruise ship

    A rare, human-transmissible hantavirus outbreak on the Dutch-flagged polar expedition cruise ship MV Hondius has triggered an ongoing international public health response, with evacuations of infected individuals off the vessel underway Wednesday, the World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed. The ship, which carries 88 passengers and 59 crew members hailing from 23 different nationalities, has remained anchored off the coast of Cape Verde near the capital Praia since Sunday, after Cape Verdean authorities barred it from docking to contain the potential spread of the virus. As of Wednesday, three people believed to be infected — two crew members and one passenger — are being evacuated from the vessel, with all three currently in stable condition, and one showing no symptoms at all, according to Ann Lindstrand, WHO’s representative in Cape Verde. The crisis first emerged on Saturday, when global health officials were alerted that three people linked to the cruise had already died from suspected hantavirus exposure, marking the start of an international health scare that has stretched across four continents. The MV Hondius departed on its polar expedition from Ushuaia, Argentina on April 1, with the first infected person developing symptoms as early as April 6. Investigators are still working to trace the origin of the outbreak on the ship. Health officials have now confirmed the outbreak is caused by the Andes strain of hantavirus, the only known variant of the disease that can spread from person to person. “As we said, we want to repeat again, such transmission is very rare and only happens due to very close contact between people,” South African Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi told a parliamentary committee Wednesday. This confirmation was echoed by Geneva University Hospital, which added that the Andes strain is responsible for all three recorded deaths linked to the outbreak. Hantavirus is most commonly spread to humans from infected rodents via exposure to their urine, feces, or saliva, and human-to-human transmission has only ever been documented in previous Andes strain outbreaks in South America, where the virus circulates naturally in local animal populations. Concerns of wider community spread grew this week after it emerged that a symptomatic Dutch woman who disembarked from the cruise traveled on a commercial passenger flight to Johannesburg, South Africa, where she died on April 26. The flight, operated by South African carrier Airlink, carried 82 passengers and six crew members, and contact tracing efforts are now active to locate and test all people who shared the flight with the infected traveler. On Wednesday, Swiss health authorities also confirmed that a former passenger from the MV Hondius had been hospitalized with a confirmed hantavirus infection in Zurich. Earlier this week, the cruise line’s Dutch operator, Oceanwide Expeditions, announced that the three evacuated individuals would be airlifted to the Netherlands for treatment, after which the remaining passengers and crew would sail the ship to Spain’s Canary Islands, the closest location with adequate medical and public health facilities to support the response. Spanish health ministry officials confirmed Tuesday that the ship is expected to reach the Canary Islands in three to four days. To date, the WHO has confirmed two cases of hantavirus linked to the ship: the deceased Dutch woman and a British passenger who remains in intensive care in Johannesburg. Five additional suspected cases are still being investigated. Multiple passengers and crew have already entered isolation on board the anchored vessel to prevent further spread of the virus among people on the ship.

  • Foreign visitors return to Jewish pilgrimage in Tunisia under tight security

    Foreign visitors return to Jewish pilgrimage in Tunisia under tight security

    Nestled on Tunisia’s Mediterranean island of Djerba, the 2,600-year-old El-Ghriba Synagogue has long hosted one of Africa’s most enduring Jewish pilgrimage traditions. This year, the annual Lag B’Omer gathering welcomed a small but meaningful comeback of international worshippers, held under robust security measures one year after a fatal attack shattered the 2023 event.

    In the 2023 attack, a Tunisian national guardsman opened fire near the synagogue shortly after that year’s festival, killing five people — two French pilgrims and three local security officers. The violence sowed deep anxiety among Tunisia’s small, centuries-old Jewish community and diaspora pilgrims who travel to the site annually. This year, attendees included visitors from France, China, Ivory Coast, and Italy, among them France’s ambassador to Tunisia, a symbolic show of solidarity following the 2023 deaths of two French citizens in the attack.

    Organizers reported roughly 500 attendees for this year’s pilgrimage, which ran from April 30 to May 6. Jewish communities have existed in Tunisia since the Roman era, and the Ghriba gathering remains the centerpiece of religious and cultural life for the country’s long-standing Jewish population. Unlike the sharp decline in international attendance seen in 2024, this year marked the first resumption of cross-border participation, with many diaspora Jews returning to honor their ancestral roots.

    Inside the ancient synagogue, the mood blended quiet devotion and quiet celebration. Worshippers followed long-held traditions: lighting candles, reading sacred Torah texts, and writing personal wishes on eggs that are placed in a holy cave on the site, a custom believed to bring divine blessing. Redj Cahen, a Tunisian-Italian pilgrim who skipped the 2024 gathering, called his return this year deeply meaningful. “We are back, and we are proud to be Tunisian Jews,” he said. “It is a feeling you cannot explain. Only those who come here understand.”

    For decades, the pilgrimage has stood as a powerful symbol of interfaith coexistence in Tunisia, drawing Muslim visitors alongside Jewish worshippers from across the globe. Historically, the event attracted thousands of attendees each year, but numbers plummeted after the 2023 attack — and the site was already targeted in a 2002 al-Qaida truck bombing that killed roughly 20 people.

    To ensure participant safety this year, Tunisian authorities deployed a layered security operation. A visible but unobtrusive security cordon surrounded the synagogue, while intensified checkpoints, barricades, and vehicle searches were set up at all entry points to Djerba island. Extra security personnel were assigned to Hara Seghira and Hara Kebira, the island’s two historic Jewish quarters.

    In a key sign of cautious recovery, the iconic traditional Minara procession was held this year for the first time since the 2023 attack. The Minara — a pyramid-shaped tower crafted from gold and silver — sits at the heart of the synagogue. As part of the tradition, women drape the structure in colorful scarves, a ritual linked to wishes for good fortune, fertility, and marriage. A symbolic auction of artwork and religious artifacts follows, raising funds for the synagogue’s ongoing maintenance. The scarf-decorated Minara is then placed on a cart and paraded through the surrounding streets, accompanied by the rhythm of traditional darbuka drums, communal singing, and the throwing of candy to onlookers before being returned to the synagogue to close the ceremony.

    Local leaders and community members framed the 2025 gathering as a deliberate, gradual step toward normalcy. “This year’s Ghriba pilgrimage marks a gradual return,” said former Tunisian Tourism Minister René Trabelsi. “We are returning little by little.” Trabelsi noted that Tunisian officials prioritized keeping the tradition alive despite ongoing security challenges, emphasizing that the annual event provides critical economic support to Djerba’s local tourism and hospitality sectors.

    Khedir Hnaia, who has worked at the El-Ghriba Synagogue for more than 30 years, expressed hope that the gathering will regain its former vibrancy. “We would like to reflect a good image to the world, to bring back the glory of Ghriba and make it even better than how it used to be,” he said. Haim Haddad, a member of the pilgrimage organizing committee from the Tunisian city of Zarzis, reaffirmed the community’s commitment to their home country. “We need to stand up for our country, we love Tunisia very much and in the same way our country stood up for us we will always stand up for it,” he said.

  • $44k fines for dogs left in hot cars in biggest update to NSW animal cruelty laws in 45 years

    $44k fines for dogs left in hot cars in biggest update to NSW animal cruelty laws in 45 years

    New South Wales (NSW), Australia is set to introduce the most sweeping overhaul of its animal cruelty legislation in 45 years, a reform package that introduces steep new penalties for high-risk pet care negligence, bans controversial training equipment, and cracks down on the linked criminal activity of dog fighting.

    The Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (Enforcement and Operational Powers) Bill 2026 will be tabled before the NSW state parliament on Thursday, following years of extensive parliamentary inquiries, public consultation that drew more than 7,000 community submissions, and collaborative negotiations with major animal welfare groups and agricultural stakeholders. If passed, the bill will mark the most significant expansion of animal protection standards in the state since 1981, creating new illegal offences, raising outdated penalties to match modern community expectations, and closing regulatory gaps that have long hampered law enforcement action against animal abusers.

    One of the most high-profile new rules establishes a clear offence for leaving dogs in dangerously overheated environments: it will be illegal to leave a dog confined in a vehicle without sufficient cooling or ventilation for longer than 10 minutes when outdoor temperatures climb above 28 degrees Celsius. The same ban applies to dogs left unsecured on the open tray of a utility vehicle under identical hot conditions. Anyone convicted of this offence will face a maximum fine of AU$44,000, one of the heaviest penalties for this form of animal neglect in the country.

    Additional key animal welfare updates include a full ban on the possession and use of painful prong collars for dog training, and a new mandatory requirement that all sheep undergoing mulesing must receive appropriate pain relief, regardless of the animal’s age. The reforms also grant new operational powers to animal welfare inspectors, allowing them to administer sedation or emergency pain relief to animals experiencing immediate acute suffering, a change designed to prevent unnecessary prolonged pain during intervention operations.

    NSW Agriculture Minister Tara Moriarty explained that the new legislation delivers on a key election commitment made by the state’s Labor government to upgrade outdated animal protection rules. “Over the past three years, our government has pushed forward common-sense animal welfare reforms, from banning commercial puppy farms to increasing core funding for RSPCA NSW and the Animal Welfare League, to barring people convicted of animal cruelty from owning or working with animals,” Moriarty said. “This legislative update continues that work: it strengthens protections for vulnerable animals, closes loopholes that have frustrated enforcement efforts for years, and brings NSW into alignment with other Australian jurisdictions on core animal welfare standards.”

    Moriarty added that the extensive co-design process with all stakeholders has produced a balanced, practical framework that reflects public values. “This broad consultation gives me confidence that the changes we are introducing are practical, enforceable, and aligned with what the community and everyday people want to see for animal welfare in our state,” she said.

    A central focus of the reform package is a major crackdown on illegal dog fighting, an activity that law enforcement has repeatedly linked to broader organised criminal networks. The bill strengthens existing animal fighting offences by explicitly outlawing the manufacture, transportation, and possession of specialized equipment designed for dog fighting. It also expands the scope of prohibited activities to cover training animals for fighting, breeding or selling animals for fighting, and even attending pre-fight preparation events, activities that were previously unregulated under state law. The maximum penalty for dog fighting offences will also be increased, rising to a AU$110,000 fine, two years of imprisonment, or both penalties for convicted offenders.

  • Russia snubs Ukraine’s unilateral ceasefire, firing dozens of drones

    Russia snubs Ukraine’s unilateral ceasefire, firing dozens of drones

    As the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine entered its third year, hopes for a temporary halt to hostilities collapsed almost immediately this week after Russia launched a massive overnight drone assault that defied Ukraine’s unilateral ceasefire declaration, Ukrainian authorities confirmed Wednesday.

    Kyiv’s ceasefire, which came into force at midnight on Wednesday, was a reciprocal response to Russia’s own planned two-day truce scheduled for Friday and Saturday to mark the 81st anniversary of Nazi Germany’s defeat in World War II. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had announced the unilateral pause, warning that any violation of the truce would draw a swift military retaliation from Kyiv’s forces. But the truce was breached before it could even take full hold.

    Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha confirmed that Russian forces launched 108 drones and three guided missiles across Ukrainian territory, with attacks running continuously through the night and into Wednesday morning. In an official post on social platform X, Sybiha condemned Moscow’s choice to ignore a de-escalatory proposal that had garnered backing from multiple states and global governing bodies. “Moscow once again ignored a realistic and fair call to end hostilities, supported by other states and international organizations,” Sybiha wrote, adding that Russia’s overnight attacks exposed the insincerity of its own upcoming planned May 9 ceasefire. “Putin only cares about military parades, not human lives,” he said.

    In Moscow’s official response to the strikes, the Russian Defense Ministry claimed that it was Ukraine that had violated the truce. The ministry asserted that Russian air defense systems intercepted and shot down 53 Ukrainian drones across multiple Russian regions, the illegally annexed Crimean Peninsula, and Black Sea waters between Tuesday evening and early Wednesday dawn.

    Prior to the launch of Kyiv’s ceasefire, Moscow had given no public indication it would respect the pause in fighting. Analysts and diplomatic observers have held little optimism for any de-escalation of the conflict in the near term, as the war shows no sign of abating and a full year of U.S.-led diplomatic efforts to end the hostilities have produced no breakthroughs.

    The overnight assault comes just one day after a previous round of Russian strikes across Ukraine left at least 22 civilians dead and more than 80 others injured, according to Ukrainian emergency officials. This sequence of events follows a long-established pattern throughout the war: Russia has repeatedly announced short unilateral ceasefires timed for major national and religious holidays, including most recently Orthodox Easter, but these temporary pauses have never led to lasting de-escalation, undermined by deep mutual distrust between the two warring nations.

    In the wake of Russia’s violation of Kyiv’s ceasefire, Sybiha called for the international community to ramp up pressure on the Kremlin. His demands include the imposition of new economic sanctions, broader diplomatic isolation of Moscow, formal accountability measures for alleged war crimes committed by Russian forces, and increased military and humanitarian aid for Ukraine.

    The Associated Press continues ongoing coverage of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, with full reporting available at its dedicated war hub.

  • Two teens arrested after Aussie tourist allegedly stabbed and robbed in Thailand

    Two teens arrested after Aussie tourist allegedly stabbed and robbed in Thailand

    A violent criminal incident has shaken one of Thailand’s most popular coastal tourist destinations, leaving an Australian visitor injured and thousands of dollars in stolen cash, with two teenage suspects now facing formal armed robbery charges.

    According to official statements from Pattaya Police and local Thai media, the confrontation unfolded on Monday, when 45-year-old Australian national Alikosh Ghulam invited two people he believed were women back to his hotel room in the city. When Ghulam learned the pair were transgender individuals, a heated argument quickly broke out between the two sides, escalating into a brutal attack.

    Witnesses and official accounts confirm one of the suspects forced Ghulam into the hotel’s bathroom before stabbing him in the torso and shoulder with a pair of scissors. The attack left the Australian tourist bleeding heavily and disoriented, before the two offenders fled the scene with approximately $6,000 in cash taken from the victim. After the attack, Ghulam managed to escape and seek emergency medical care for his injuries, then filed an official report with local law enforcement.

    Using security camera footage from the area, investigating officers tracked the two suspects to a high-end condominium located in Pattaya, where they executed an arrest of the two accused, a 16-year-old and a 17-year-old. During the raid on the condominium, police recovered both the scissors used in the attack and the majority of the stolen cash. Law enforcement officials confirmed that both teens have since admitted their involvement in the robbery and stabbing, and have been formally charged with armed robbery.

    In comments following the arrests, Pattaya Police noted that this type of hidden, indoor criminal incident poses a unique challenge to local tourist security. Similar attacks targeting foreign visitors have already harmed Pattaya’s global reputation as a safe, top-tier beach travel destination, officers added, because these crimes take place behind closed doors in private hotel rooms, making proactive prevention far more difficult than street-level crime.

  • Australian sharemarket surges as banks and miners rally on US optimism

    Australian sharemarket surges as banks and miners rally on US optimism

    The Australian equities market has booked its most robust single-day gain since mid-April, fueled by market optimism triggered by new comments from former U.S. President Donald Trump that eased geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. Both the benchmark ASX 200 and the broader All Ordinaries notched double-digit percentage gains, alongside a four-year high for the Australian dollar, as leading banking and mining stocks powered the market uptick.

    On the day, the ASX 200 climbed 112.10 points, a 1.30% jump that closed the index at 8796.60, while the All Ordinaries rose 112.80 points (1.27%) to settle at 9016.10. The Australian dollar also advanced to 72.47 U.S. cents, its highest level in four years. Despite the headline market rally, only five of the ASX’s 11 industry sectors finished the trading day in positive territory, with the country’s largest retail banks and major mining operators leading the upward charge.

    Market analysts attributed the broad positive momentum to Trump’s announcement that he would pause Operation Freedom, a planned naval blockade of the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz. The waterway is one of the world’s most vital chokepoints for global energy shipments, and a blockade had threatened to disrupt international oil supplies and trigger a major global economic shock.

    “Keeping the Strait open is critical, because a closure would stifle global energy supply and raise the risk of the global economy falling off a steep, damaging supply cliff,” noted Capital.com analyst Tim Rodda. “Still, markets are holding out hope that this worst-case outcome will be avoided — and crucially, that it won’t erode the exceptional corporate profits that have lifted Wall Street to recent record highs.”

    Trump’s comments pulled global oil prices down 2% to $107 U.S. dollars per barrel, a shift that delivered immediate benefits to Australia’s major mining firms, which count energy costs among their largest operating expenses. On the ASX, BHP shares rose 3.05% to close at $56.39, Rio Tinto gained 2.30% to settle at $174.60, and Fortescue Metals added 3.15% to finish at $20.65. The falling oil prices hit Australia’s domestic energy sector, however: Woodside Petroleum shares slumped 2.66% to $31.84, Santos dipped 0.25% to $7.89, and Ampol fell 1.24% to close at $35.02.

    Easing geopolitical tensions also lifted gold prices, which pushed above $4600 U.S. dollars per ounce, according to Vivek Dhar, head of commodities and sustainability at Commonwealth Bank. Dhar explained that gold futures have moved inversely to the intensity of Middle East tensions since the outbreak of regional conflict in late February, a dynamic that may seem counterintuitive to many investors.

    “Gold is widely viewed as a safe-haven asset, so many would expect prices to rise when tensions spike, but the historical correlation between broad market risk and gold prices is actually very weak,” Dhar added.

    Among the country’s major banking stocks, which also posted strong gains, Commonwealth Bank climbed 2.96% to $177.98, Westpac rose 3.48% to $38.94, National Australia Bank gained 2.77% to $40.03, and ANZ rose 3.12% to close at $37.07. Judo Bank also notched a 3.55% gain to $1.46 after the regional lender confirmed it remains on track to hit its full-year pre-tax profit guidance of $180 million to $190 million.

    Not all stocks gained ground on the day, however. Leading consumer electronics retailer JB Hi-Fi saw its shares drop 6.28% to $72.98 after the company warned of significant rising component costs and ongoing stock availability shortages. The firm did report modest comparative sales growth for the March quarter: 4% growth for its core brand, and 2.5% growth for its subsidiary The Good Guys.

    One of the day’s biggest single-stock gains came from infrastructure investor Infratil, whose shares surged 14.95% to $12.07 after the company announced that its 49.8%-owned data center subsidiary CDC had secured Australia’s largest ever data center contract, a 555MW deal that will drive years of future revenue growth.

  • China’s top envoy tells his Iranian counterpart a ‘comprehensive ceasefire’ is needed

    China’s top envoy tells his Iranian counterpart a ‘comprehensive ceasefire’ is needed

    BEIJING – In a high-profile diplomatic meeting marked by growing international concern over protracted military hostilities, China’s top foreign policy official Wang Yi conveyed deep unease Wednesday about the more than two-month-long conflict involving Iran, Israel and the United States, while stressing that an immediate full cessation of fighting is the only acceptable path forward.

    The talks held in Beijing marked a significant milestone: it was the first in-person visit to China by Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi since active hostilities broke out between the three parties on February 28. The face-to-face engagement comes as global pressure mounts for major powers to step in and de-escalate tensions that threaten to spiral into a wider regional conflict.

    Captured on video from the closed-door meeting, Wang laid out China’s clear stance on the escalating crisis. “We believe that a comprehensive ceasefire is urgently needed, that a resumption of hostilities is not acceptable, and that it is particularly important to remain committed to dialogue and negotiations,” Wang stated, emphasizing Beijing’s long-held position that diplomatic negotiation is the only sustainable solution to protracted international conflict.

    The meeting comes amid heightened global attention on China’s role in Middle Eastern diplomacy, as the country has positioned itself as a neutral broker working to reduce tensions across the region. The in-person talks between the two top diplomats signal ongoing diplomatic outreach to bring all parties back to the negotiating table amid months of stalled de-escalation efforts.

  • Cruise ship with hantavirus outbreak to sail to Canary Islands

    Cruise ship with hantavirus outbreak to sail to Canary Islands

    A deadly hantavirus outbreak onboard the Dutch-operated cruise vessel MV Hondius has triggered an international emergency response, with Spanish health authorities confirming the ship will reroute to the Canary Islands for coordinated medical care and passenger repatriation. The outbreak, which has already claimed three lives since the ship departed Argentina on a transatlantic voyage roughly one month ago, has prompted urgent evacuation plans for multiple people needing immediate treatment.

    On Tuesday, a medical evacuation aircraft was scheduled to transfer three people from the ship, which was originally docked in Cape Verde, to the Canary Islands. Among those being evacuated are two crew members: one of them is the ship’s British doctor, who requires urgent medical attention. The third evacuee is a close contact of the deceased German national who died earlier this month.

    As of the latest update from the World Health Organization (WHO), seven cases of hantavirus have been recorded onboard: two confirmed infections and five suspected cases. One confirmed case is a Dutch woman who is counted among the three fatalities, while the other is a 69-year-old British national who was already evacuated to South Africa for emergency care. The two additional deaths include the Dutch woman’s husband (who was never tested to confirm an infection) and the German national, who passed away on May 2. A Reuters report citing South African health officials confirms the two confirmed cases are linked to the Andes strain of hantavirus, a variant that is documented to spread from person to person among individuals in close contact.

    At the time of rerouting, 149 passengers and crew representing 23 nationalities remained onboard the MV Hondius, held under strict precautionary isolation measures, according to the ship’s operator, Oceanwide Expeditions. In addition to the affected British crew member, 22 other British citizens are still onboard the vessel.

    Spanish health authorities explained that Cape Verde lacked the specialized public health infrastructure to manage the large-scale outbreak response, leading to the decision to redirect the ship to the Canary Islands, the closest territory with sufficient medical capabilities. “Spain has a moral and legal obligation to assist these people, among whom are several Spanish citizens,” an official government statement noted. The vessel is expected to reach the archipelago within three to four days, with a final port of call yet to be confirmed; Oceanwide Expeditions says the leading options are Gran Canaria or Tenerife.

    Once the ship docks, all passengers and crew will undergo comprehensive health screenings, receive any required medical treatment, and then be cleared to travel back to their home countries. Spanish health authorities emphasized that all interactions with people from the MV Hondius will be limited to purpose-built isolation spaces and dedicated medical transports to prevent any potential spread to local communities. “These protocols are designed to avoid all contact with the local population and ensure the full safety of healthcare personnel,” the ministry added.

    Public health experts note that hantavirus is most commonly transmitted to humans through contact with infected rodents and their excretions. However, the WHO has confirmed that limited spread may have occurred between close contacts onboard the crowded cruise vessel, though the overall risk to the general public remains low, per the organization’s assessment.