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  • Higher proportion of pro-Palestine than Labour candidates won at local elections

    Higher proportion of pro-Palestine than Labour candidates won at local elections

    Exclusive new data obtained by Middle East Eye (MEE) has uncovered a striking electoral trend from England’s 7 May local elections: candidates who publicly backed Palestinian rights outperformed nominees from most major established parties, only trailing the right-wing Reform Party in win rates for contested seats.

    The data confirms that public opposition to ongoing British policy cooperation with Israel remains a deeply resonant political issue across England, and that running on a clear pro-Palestine platform has emerged as a measurable predictor of electoral success in dozens of local races.

    All candidates who signed the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC)’s widely supported “Pledge for Palestine” secured victory in 27% of the seats they contested. By comparison, Reform candidates posted a 30% win rate, while the Labour Party — the current national governing party — won just 22% of its contested seats, and the Liberal Democrats followed closely behind at 21%.

    More than 1,600 candidates across the political spectrum signed the pledge, which commits elected officials to use their local office to advance Palestinian human rights. Signatories vow to take all appropriate steps to uphold the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people, and to support efforts to secure accountability for what the pledge frames as Israel’s crimes of genocide, military occupation, ethnic cleansing and apartheid.

    The pledge also requires candidates to prevent their local councils from complicity in or normalization of Israel’s alleged violations of international law. Key commitments include divesting council pension funds and other publicly administered assets from companies that enable these violations, and aligning local procurement policies with these goals.

    Signatures came from a broad cross-section of political groups: more than 1,000 Green Party candidates, over 200 Labour candidates, more than 200 independent and small local party nominees, as well as a number of Liberal Democrat and Conservative candidates. Pro-Palestine candidates were particularly likely to run and win in seats with large youth, student, ethnic minority and Muslim populations.

    One of the most high-profile successes came in Hackney, east London, where 31 Green candidates signed the pledge, including mayoral candidate Zoe Garbett, who won her race. The Greens secured a dominant majority on Hackney Council, taking 42 of the body’s 57 total seats. In neighboring Haringey, north London, the Greens surged to 28 council seats, overtaking Labour and coming just short of a full majority, with 26 of the party’s successful candidates having signed the pledge. Across the Midlands, in Bradford and Birmingham, dozens of independent and Green signatories won their local council contests.

    Jeanine Hourani, a representative of Palestinian Youth Movement Britain — a partner in the Vote Palestine grassroots coalition that backed the pledge campaign — emphasized that the results confirm Palestine is a critical local issue for voters across England. “In the months leading up to election day, 16 local campaigns were launched, spending thousands of hours canvassing and organising dozens of local action days,” Hourani said. She added that the outcome highlights how essential grassroots community organizing is to the pro-Palestine movement, while sending a clear warning to mainstream elected officials: “Pledge signatories collectively outperformed almost every political party, and their successes will only grow as we look towards the 2029 general election.”

    Asma Alam, a newly elected Green councillor for Manchester’s Burnage ward, who won her seat after signing the pledge, framed Palestinian rights as an inherent local government responsibility. “If councils have power over pensions, procurement and public money, then Palestine is absolutely a local government issue,” she said. Alam pointed to Greater Manchester’s pension fund, the largest local government pension pool in England, valued at more than £31 billion. Campaigners have identified nearly £905 million in fund investments tied to companies that they say are complicit in Israel’s oppression of Palestinians. “We cannot pass motions, say the right things, and then carry on as normal,” Alam said. “For me, this is simple: I will not take a council pension while that pension is tied to Palestinian suffering. Divestment is not symbolic. It is about refusing to let public money bankroll injustice.”

    The electoral success of pro-Palestine candidates comes against a backdrop of growing tension between the national Labour government and pro-Palestine activists within and outside the party. In January, Communities Secretary Steve Reed issued a warning to all Labour-run local councils that they could face legal action if they move to boycott Israeli businesses, directing councils to a 2016 national government ban on procurement boycotts targeting Israeli firms and companies that trade with Israel.

    Over the past two years, dozens of local authorities have passed votes to boycott companies linked to Israeli war crimes, arms supplies to Israel, or economic activity in the occupied Palestinian territories. Multiple local council pension funds — including those in Islington, Lewisham, Wandsworth and Caerphilly — have already removed companies listed by the United Nations as operating in occupied Palestinian territories from their investment portfolios.

    Prominent veteran pollster Sir John Curtis noted after the elections that the Green Party, which drew the largest share of pro-Palestine candidates, inflicted far more damage to Labour’s vote share across England than the Reform Party, a shift that experts attribute in part to the Green Party’s clear embrace of pro-Palestine policy.

    MEE, which publishes independent, in-depth coverage of the Middle East, North Africa and global affairs, obtained the exclusive data for this report.

  • Suspensions, arrests, dissolutions: Tunisia intensifies its crackdown on NGOs

    Suspensions, arrests, dissolutions: Tunisia intensifies its crackdown on NGOs

    Across the sidewalks outside Tunis’s Court of First Instance, small, steady gatherings have become a routine sight in recent weeks. demonstrators from varying walks of life gather here: some demand safeguards for the democratic freedoms Tunisians have long fought for, while others push back against what they label arbitrary administrative suspensions that target their work. What unites all these protesters is a shared concern: the steady erosion of civic space in Tunisia, a shift that many activists and regional observers warn is growing into a permanent new reality.

    Over the past 24 months, dozens of non-governmental organizations across this North African Maghreb nation have been hit with 30-day administrative suspensions and court-ordered threats of full dissolution. The crackdown has accelerated in recent months, with some of the country’s most prominent and respected civil society groups landing in authorities’ crosshairs.

    Among the targeted organizations is the Tunisian League for Human Rights (LTDH), Africa’s oldest human rights group and a core member of the Tunisian National Dialogue Quartet. That quartet was awarded the 2015 Nobel Peace Prize for its foundational work steering Tunisia through its post-uprising democratic transition. Also targeted is Belgium-based Lawyers Without Borders (ASF). The Al Khatt foundation, owner of award-winning independent investigative media outlet Inkyfada, has also faced the same punitive measures. Inkyfada was initially suspended for 30 days and is now facing full dissolution, with a critical court hearing scheduled for Monday.

    “It all started in October 2025 with a sudden, one-month suspension designed to silence our publications,” Manel Lassoued, Inkyfada’s editorial director, told Middle East Eye. “But we didn’t stop. We kept working and appealed the decision, trusting in our fundamental right to a defense and an impartial justice system.”

    Lassoued’s outlet is far from alone. The Tunisian Association of Democratic Women, Aswat Nissa, Nawaat, the International Commission of Jurists and the World Organisation Against Torture are just a handful of the additional groups that have received court-ordered suspensions. The crackdown comes against a backdrop of steady erosion of the political and civil liberties gained after the 2011 Tunisian uprising, a shift that began five years ago when President Kais Saied seized sweeping executive power.

    On 25 July 2021, Saied dissolved the sitting government, froze parliamentary activity, and began ruling by decree—a move that rights organizations have characterized as a steady slide toward authoritarian rule. He later pushed through a new constitution that vastly expanded presidential authority, while increasing pressure on independent institutional checkpoints including the Supreme Judicial Council, which has been effectively stripped of all regulatory and oversight powers.

    This sweeping institutional overhaul has been paired with a wide-ranging campaign of arrests and administrative harassment targeting civil society groups working across nearly every sector, from human rights documentation and migration policy to anti-corruption investigation and social justice advocacy. Current reports indicate that roughly 600 organizations are now under formal government investigation.

    Tunisian authorities justify the crackdown by framing the measures as a crackdown on suspicious foreign funding and a defense of national interests. But international rights groups including Amnesty International dismiss this framing as a transparent excuse to intimidate independent NGOs and further narrow space for civic action.

    Amnesty’s analysis finds that what began as low-level intimidation, arbitrary regulatory restrictions, asset freezes and politically motivated prosecutions of NGO staff has now escalated into a coordinated effort to use the country’s judiciary to shutter independent civil society organizations entirely. Under current Tunisian law—specifically Decree-Law No 88, which regulates association activity—groups face a three-step punitive process: an initial administrative warning, followed by temporary suspension, and ultimately full dissolution. Multiple prominent organizations have already reached the final, permanent dissolution stage, including Inkyfada and Mnemty, a Tunis-based anti-racism association. Mnemty’s founder, Saadia Mosbah, has been in detention for two years and was recently sentenced to eight years in prison on financial misconduct charges that supporters call politically motivated.

    Lamine Benghazi, head of advocacy for the Euro-Mediterranean region at ASF, told Middle East Eye that the crackdown extends far beyond individual organizations. “The entire institutional framework inherited from the democratic transition has been targeted,” he explained. “But it is not only about institutions: these authorities want to erase the entire political system. They are trying to erase an entire political ecosystem – one that includes the media, associations and trade unions.”

    The April 2026 suspension of LTDH sparked widespread public outrage, with hundreds of demonstrators gathering on Tunis’s central Avenue Bourguiba to protest the decision. LTDH was one of the last independent organizations still granted access to Tunisian prisons, where dozens of dissidents, journalists and political opponents are currently detained.

    “We consider the suspension to be a political decision disguised as a judicial one as it comes within a context of restricting civic space and targeting independent organisations that are fighting for human rights in Tunisia,” LTDH president Bassem Trifi told Amnesty International. “Beyond targeting human rights organisations, human rights and freedoms are being severely undermined, especially the rights to freedom of expression, association and assembly.”

    Sihem Bensedrine, one of Tunisia’s most prominent veteran civil society leaders and a journalist who previously led the post-2011 Truth and Dignity Commission (IVD), was among the protesters who turned out to support LTDH. The IVD was the independent body tasked with investigating systemic human rights abuses committed under former presidents Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, as well as crimes committed during the 2011 uprising that ousted Ben Ali. Bensedrine was arrested in August 2024 on charges of falsifying the IVD’s final public report. She was released only in February 2025, after a months-long hunger strike that severely damaged her health. She still carries the physical and psychological scars of what she calls unjust detention, and currently faces multiple additional trials linked to her work with the IVD.

    “They are using new repressive techniques: they do not directly shut down associations, they suspend them,” she told Middle East Eye. “And this is even more insidious than simply banning activities, because it aims to spread fear and create a reflex of self-censorship.”
    Bensedrine, who has been politically active since the Bourguiba era and has survived multiple periods of detention under past authoritarian regimes, says authoritarian control has reached unprecedented levels under Saied. “I had the feeling that, for the current regime, imprisoning people who are considered troublesome has become a kind of royal lettre de cachet: they lock you up and you never get out,” she said. “I felt that I could remain there for a very long time. At a certain point I told myself: ‘No, I cannot accept this any more.’ There was absolutely no reason for me to be in prison.”

    As Bensedrine faced prosecution, a wider wave of arrests swept up other leading civil society and media figures, including prominent lawyer and television commentator Sonia Dahmani, and veteran columnist and radio commentator Mourad Zeghidi. In both cases, authorities relied on Decree-Law 54 of 2022, a controversial law the government has repeatedly used to prosecute people accused of spreading “false information” deemed harmful to public security. Their arrests have become emblematic of the government’s growing reliance on the judiciary to silence critical public voices.

    Dahmani was released in November 2025 after 18 months in detention, but was again sentenced to two years in prison earlier this week; she has filed an appeal against the new ruling. Zeghidi remains behind bars, facing additional charges including money laundering and corruption that his legal team describe as baseless and politically motivated.

    The steady erosion of press freedom in Tunisia is reflected in the 2026 World Press Freedom Index published by Reporters Without Borders (RSF), which ranks Tunisia 137th out of 180 countries, down seven spots from its 2025 ranking of 129th. “This decline reflects a deeper trend that RSF has been systematically documenting,” Oussama Bouagila, RSF’s regional advocacy officer and deputy bureau chief for North Africa, told Middle East Eye. “RSF recorded 39 prosecutions against journalists based on laws unrelated to journalism. President Saied has repeatedly called on public media to align themselves with what he describes as a war of national liberation.”
    Bouagila noted that the 2011 revolution opened an unprecedented era of media freedom in Tunisia, but that progress was abruptly halted after the July 2021 power grab and the subsequent concentration of all political authority in Saied’s hands.

    The case of Inkyfada stands as one of the most visible examples of this ongoing crackdown. Widely recognized across Tunisia and the international community for its hard-hitting investigations into Tunisian politics and society—including groundbreaking reporting on abuses targeting the sub-Saharan migrant community after Saied labeled migrants a “demographic threat”—the outlet remains a rare independent space for thousands of Tunisian readers.

    Ahead of Inkyfada’s 1 June dissolution hearing, Lassoued emphasized that the outlet has complied fully with all Tunisian regulatory requirements. “Looking ahead to 1 June, let us be clear: we have by no means broken the law or the norms of civil society work in Tunisia. We have done everything by the book, including the consistent declaration of all foreign funding. We expect nothing less than justice,” she said. Lassoued added that the crackdown represents a fundamental shift in the country’s political trajectory: “What we are witnessing in Tunisia is no longer just a shift in attitude; it is a systematic, structural crackdown on independent media and civil society.”

  • Israel’s Netanyahu orders army to seize 70 percent of Gaza

    Israel’s Netanyahu orders army to seize 70 percent of Gaza

    In a move that openly flouts the October ceasefire agreement brokered to end years of conflict in Gaza, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced Thursday he has instructed the Israeli military to expand its territorial control in the strip to 70 percent. Speaking at a leadership conference hosted by the pre-military Ein Prat academy, Netanyahu confirmed that Israeli forces currently hold sway over 60 percent of Gaza’s total territory, and that his official order is to push that figure to 70 percent in the coming phase of operations. When audience members called for full Israeli control over the entire enclave, Netanyahu responded that the expansion would proceed in stages, with the 70 percent target as the immediate next step.

    Netanyahu’s announcement came just 24 hours after Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz reaffirmed the country’s controversial plan to encourage what he framed as “voluntary emigration” of Palestinians from Gaza, a policy widely condemned as a push for ethnic cleansing. “Everything at the right time and in the right manner,” Katz stated of the plan.

    The ceasefire agreement, signed by Israel and Hamas with U.S. backing in October, was intended to end the two-year armed conflict in Gaza. The text of the deal includes explicit provisions banning any Israeli occupation or annexation of Gaza, and guarantees that no Palestinian resident will be forced to leave the territory. It also froze the military positions held by both parties at the time the agreement went into effect, with planned later phases that would require incremental Israeli withdrawal from captured areas.

    When the ceasefire first took effect, Israeli forces controlled approximately 53 percent of Gaza, including large swathes of the enclave’s northern, southern, and eastern regions. Since that time, Israel has already expanded its hold to reach the current 60 percent. A further expansion to 70 percent would leave Gaza’s 2.2 million Palestinian residents crowded into just 109 square kilometers of remaining land.

    This latest announcement of territorial expansion is far from the only violation of the ceasefire that Israel has been accused of committing over the seven months the agreement has been in place. Gaza’s Government Media Office reports that total Israeli breaches of the deal have surpassed 3,000. The Palestinian Ministry of Health records that Israeli forces have carried out near-daily air strikes and ground shootings targeting Palestinian civilians, killing more than 922 people since the ceasefire began. The United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef) confirms that at least 229 of those killed are children.

    Since the start of the latest conflict in October 2023, overall Palestinian deaths from Israeli attacks in Gaza have reached at least 72,800, with thousands more still trapped under rubble and presumed dead. The pace of attacks has accelerated this week, coinciding with the major Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha: the Palestinian health ministry recorded 16 Palestinian deaths at the hands of Israeli forces between Tuesday and Wednesday of this week alone.

    Israel has also failed to uphold key ceasefire provisions related to humanitarian aid access. The agreement required Israel to allow up to 600 aid trucks carrying food, fuel, medical equipment, shelter materials, and commercial goods into Gaza every day. But Gaza’s Government Media Office data shows the daily average over the life of the ceasefire has been just over 200 trucks. International aid organizations warn that this restricted flow of assistance has left Gaza’s catastrophic humanitarian crisis largely unaddressed, with severe, ongoing shortages of life-sustaining supplies across the entire enclave.

    In response to Netanyahu’s announcement and the ongoing pattern of Israeli violations, Hamas issued a formal warning Thursday that the entire ceasefire agreement is now at imminent risk of total collapse. The report was produced by Middle East Eye, an outlet that provides independent, in-depth coverage of the Middle East, North Africa and global regions affected by the conflict.

  • ‘Controversial’ North Korean invasion setting for next Call of Duty game

    ‘Controversial’ North Korean invasion setting for next Call of Duty game

    One of the gaming industry’s most anticipated annual releases has officially been unveiled, and the upcoming mainline entry in Activision and Infinity Ward’s blockbuster Call of Duty franchise is already drawing global attention – and heated discussion – over its core narrative premise. Slated for a worldwide launch on October 23, *Modern Warfare 4* centers its single-player campaign around a fictional resumption of full-scale armed conflict on the Korean Peninsula, following South Korean service members as they defend against a large-scale invasion from the North.

    The game’s reveal trailer, which racked up nearly 22 million views in just 24 hours after its debut, opens on a group of young South Korean conscripts conducting what looks to be a routine border patrol. The calm is quickly shattered by an incoming missile strike from North Korea, plunging the characters into all-out war. Alongside the Korean Peninsula-focused campaign, the title will also bring back one of the franchise’s most beloved characters, Captain Price, who will appear in multiple missions set across major global cities.

    Notably, this release marks a historic milestone for the Call of Duty franchise: it will be the first core mainline entry to skip last-generation consoles, the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One, launching exclusively on current-generation consoles, PC, and the newly released Nintendo Switch 2.

    As one would expect for a new Call of Duty drop, the announcement has already become a global viral cultural moment. Posts across major social platforms including Instagram, TikTok, X (formerly Twitter), and Facebook have generated more than 3 million user interactions in the first full day after the reveal. Reaction to the conflict setting has been deeply divided, particularly among Korean audiences.

    Many South Korean players have welcomed the choice to center the narrative on ordinary South Korean conscripts rather than framing the conflict through a foreign, Western perspective. Online reactions from Korean fans have leaned enthusiastic in many cases. One commenter noted that the character designs and in-game locations captured an authentic Korean atmosphere, saying “I’m genuinely excited.” Another shared that they initially expected South Korean troops would only be background extras, writing: “Then I heard they’re not just present but one of the playable protagonists? And not even special forces, handled from the perspective of an ordinary conscripted soldier, that’s what gets me.” Some even described the inclusion of Korea as a core setting for one of the world’s biggest gaming franchises as a landmark “symbolic moment.”

    However, academic experts and industry analysts warn the narrative choice could spark significant controversy, arguing that the franchise is turning a still-ongoing unresolved conflict into mass-market entertainment. The Korean War ended in 1953 with only an armistice agreement, not a formal peace treaty, meaning North and South Korea remain technically at war.

    Dr. Sarah Son, Senior Lecturer in Korean Studies at the University of Sheffield, explained that while fictional renewed inter-Korean conflict is not an unheard-of premise in South Korean popular culture, a global blockbuster franchise will face different standards of scrutiny. “It could be controversial, because it turns still-unresolved war into entertainment,” she said. “A global gaming franchise might be judged differently” than domestic Korean productions that explore similar themes.

    George Osborn, author of *Power Play: Video Games, Politics and the Battle for Global Influence*, told media the setting is almost certain to draw close examination in South Korea, pointing to previous video games that faced official pushback for their portrayals of the Korean Peninsula. The 2011 title *Homefront*, which depicted a unified Korea under Northern rule, was banned entirely in South Korea. Osborn warned that the development team will need to demonstrate extreme care in how it handles the conflict to avoid backlash. “The studio will have to show that it has handled possible conflict in the country with great care, or face significant backlash – and possible challenges selling the game – in South Korea specifically,” he noted.

    This is not the first time the *Modern Warfare* subseries has courted controversy for its portrayal of real-world inspired conflict. Past entries have sparked widespread public debate over the boundaries of realistic depictions of war in gaming, including the infamous 2009 “No Russian” mission that allowed players to participate in a civilian mass shooting at a Moscow airport, alongside later depictions of war crimes and terrorism.

    Beyond the controversial narrative setting, Infinity Ward has also announced a slate of major gameplay updates for the new entry. These include completely revamped movement mechanics, more destructible and interactive in-game environments, an overhaul of the fan-favorite extraction-style multiplayer mode DMZ, and a brand-new “Frontlines” system designed to make large-scale battles feel more dynamic and responsive to player actions than ever before.

  • Watch rescue after rollercoaster stalls 100ft in the air

    Watch rescue after rollercoaster stalls 100ft in the air

    A tense amusement park incident unfolded when a popular rollercoaster suddenly stalled mid-ride, leaving multiple passengers stranded 100 feet in the air, prompting an urgent large-scale rescue response. Emergency services, including local firefighting teams, were dispatched immediately to the scene after receiving distress calls from park staff and visitors. Over the course of four hours, first responders worked methodically at height to reach each stranded rider, navigating challenging conditions to bring every person back to safety safely. Officials from the amusement park have confirmed that despite the lengthy period of entrapment that left many shaken, no physical injuries were reported among any of the trapped passengers. The park has since launched a full safety inspection of the rollercoaster to identify the root cause of the mechanical failure, and the attraction remains closed pending the results of the review, with additional safety checks scheduled for all other rides as a precautionary measure.

  • Former US attorney general Pam Bondi testifies in congressional Epstein probe

    Former US attorney general Pam Bondi testifies in congressional Epstein probe

    A high-stakes congressional inquiry into the handling of records linked to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein gained traction on Wednesday, as former U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi appeared before the House Oversight Committee to answer questions about the Justice Department’s release of the long-sought Epstein files.

    Bondi, who was removed from her post as the nation’s top law enforcement official by former President Donald Trump in early April, was compelled to testify under a subpoena issued by the committee in March, just one week before Trump announced her ouster from the role. The closed-door session in Washington D.C. has sparked partisan friction already, with Democrats rejecting the decision to keep the deposition off-camera, while committee Republicans have pledged to leave no stone unturned in uncovering all unreleased records.

    In her prepared opening remarks to the panel, Bondi pushed back against months of bipartisan criticism of the Justice Department’s document release, defending her leadership’s work on the transparency effort. “We demonstrated an unprecedented commitment to transparency in the Department’s search for, collection, and review of the Epstein files, producing nearly 3 million pages of material, including thousands of videos and hundreds of thousands of images,” she stated.

    Committee Chairman James Comer, a Kentucky Republican, opened the inquiry to probe allegations of mismanagement of the Epstein investigation and evaluate the Justice Department’s compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act — a bill mandating public release of all unclassified Epstein records that Trump signed into law during his second term. Ahead of Bondi’s testimony, Comer told reporters that multiple consecutive administrations had failed the survivors of Epstein’s abuse, and that Bondi would face sharp questions about why additional records have not been made public. “We’re going to try to determine whether or not there could be more documents legally turned over,” Comer said. “I want every document. I don’t want anything held back and I think the majority of the committee feels the same way.”

    The committee’s top Democratic leader, Representative Robert Garcia of California, voiced frustration over the choice to hold the deposition behind closed doors without a public videotaped record. Garcia said his caucus was “incredibly disappointed” by the decision to block immediate public access to the testimony, a move that has fueled skepticism about the transparency of the inquiry itself.

    Bondi’s subpoena was first initiated in late winter after Republican Representative Nancy Mace of South Carolina publicly accused the Justice Department of orchestrating a cover-up in the Epstein file release, introducing a resolution to compel Bondi’s appearance. This is not Bondi’s first brush with Epstein-related controversy: long before her tenure as U.S. Attorney General, she served as Florida’s top prosecutor during Epstein’s 2008 plea deal, and later joined Trump’s 2020 impeachment defense team.

    The Trump administration and Bondi have endured sustained bipartisan pressure over their handling of the Epstein files, including widespread criticism of missteps that exposed the names of Epstein’s survivors to public view. Epstein, a wealthy financier convicted of sex trafficking offenses, died by suicide in a New York federal prison in 2019 while awaiting a new criminal trial, leaving a trove of unanswered questions about his high-profile connections.

    Controversy around Bondi’s handling of the files flared most recently in 2025: during a February 2025 interview on Fox News, she claimed a list of Epstein’s high-profile associates was “sitting on my desk right now,” only for the Justice Department to walk back the claim that July. Officials clarified at the time that no formal “client list” existed, and Bondi had misspoke when referencing the full case file sitting on her office desk.

    Beyond the Epstein controversy, Bondi’s tenure as Attorney General was marred by accusations from congressional Democrats that she weaponized the Justice Department at Trump’s direction, after the former president publicly called on her to launch aggressive investigations into his political opponents. She was replaced on an interim basis by Todd Blanche, Trump’s long-time personal defense lawyer.

    In a development announced earlier this week, the 60-year-old former AG revealed she has recently been diagnosed with thyroid cancer, and is currently undergoing active treatment that included surgery several weeks ago, she told CBS News, the U.S. media partner of the BBC.

    Following her departure from the Department of Justice, Bondi announced she planned to move into the private sector, but new details emerged this week confirming she has been appointed to the White House’s advisory group for artificial intelligence policy, the Presidential Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST). This appointment marks the first public confirmation of Bondi’s post-DOJ role in the Trump administration.

  • China’s Shenzhou 21 astronauts returns to Earth after nearly 7 months in space

    China’s Shenzhou 21 astronauts returns to Earth after nearly 7 months in space

    BEIJING – Three Chinese taikonauts from the Shenzhou 21 mission touched down safely on Friday evening at the Dongfeng landing site in northern China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, wrapping up a nearly seven-month stay aboard the country’s Tiangong Space Station and completing a formal handover to the newly arrived Shenzhou 23 crew earlier this week.

    The successful return of crew members Zhang Lu, Wu Fei and Zhang Hongzhang marks another key milestone for China’s expanding human spaceflight program, which is currently accelerating development work ahead of the country’s planned first crewed lunar landing by the end of the 2020s. According to official statements from the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) carried by China’s national news agency Xinhua, the Shenzhou 21 team checked off a full roster of technical and scientific objectives during their orbital mission.

    Beyond maintaining the space station’s operational systems, the crew processed and transmitted a large volume of data from ongoing on-orbit experiments, coordinated the transfer of leftover supplies to the incoming crew, and conducted in-depth experience sharing sessions with the three Shenzhou 23 astronauts, who arrived at Tiangong on Monday. Prior to their departure, the crew also completed three extravehicular activities (EVAs), more commonly known as spacewalks.

    CMSA spokesperson Zhang Jingbo noted that mission commander Zhang Lu, who previously flew on the Shenzhou 15 mission to Tiangong, has now completed seven spacewalks across his career — a new record for the most spacewalks by any Chinese astronaut. This achievement underscores the growing experience and expertise of China’s astronaut corps as the program takes on more ambitious deep-space objectives.

    The handover to Shenzhou 23 opens a new chapter for Tiangong operations: one of the incoming crew, Lai Ka-ying (also transliterated as Li Jiaying from Mandarin), a native Hong Konger, made history as the first astronaut from Hong Kong to participate in a Chinese space station mission. Additionally, one Shenzhou 23 crew member is scheduled to remain on orbit for a full 12-month stay, a first for China’s human spaceflight program that will generate critical data on long-duration human exposure to microgravity.

    China’s Tiangong Space Station was developed and constructed independently after the country was barred from participating in the International Space Station (ISS) over national security concerns raised by the United States, which has since emerged as China’s primary competitor in the 21st-century space race. Currently, NASA is pursuing its own Artemis program objectives, targeting a crewed lunar landing for 2028, two years ahead of China’s planned touchdown.

  • What does Blue Origin rocket mishap mean for Nasa’s Moon mission?

    What does Blue Origin rocket mishap mean for Nasa’s Moon mission?

    In September 2024, an unexpected explosion during a Blue Origin rocket test sent ripples through the global space exploration community, raising urgent questions about the timeline and future of NASA’s ambitious Artemis program, which aims to return humans to the lunar surface for the first time in over half a century. As science correspondent Pallab Ghosh has outlined, the incident is more than a minor technical hiccup: it represents a significant, tangible setback for the collaborative effort between the private aerospace firm and the U.S. space agency to establish a sustainable human presence on the Moon.

    Blue Origin holds a key contract with NASA to develop the Blue Moon lander, a core component of the Artemis III mission that is scheduled to carry the first woman and first person of color to the lunar surface. The test failure, which involved the upper-stage BE-4 engine that powers the company’s New Glenn rocket, has exposed unforeseen technical vulnerabilities that will require extensive debugging, redesign, and retesting. Aerospace industry analysts note that private space development relies heavily on iterative testing, but high-stakes government contracts come with non-negotiable deadlines that leave little room for major delays.

    The broader implications of this mishap extend beyond NASA’s lunar timeline. It has reignited debate over the growing reliance of public space programs on private sector partners, highlighting the risks that private development setbacks can derail long-planned public scientific goals. While Blue Origin has emphasized that engineering failures are a normal part of rocket development and that their team is already working to address the root cause, the incident has injected new uncertainty into a program that has already faced multiple prior delays. For space exploration advocates who have waited decades for a return to the Moon, the explosion is a disappointing reminder of how unforgiving the challenge of deep space travel remains, even as private space technology advances at a rapid pace.

  • Canadian man who allegedly sold lethal chemical will not be tried in UK

    Canadian man who allegedly sold lethal chemical will not be tried in UK

    Across the United Kingdom, dozens of bereaved families are reeling from anger and grief after British prosecutors announced they will not pursue criminal charges against a Canadian man linked to the deaths of 73 UK residents. The accused, Kenneth Law — a former chef facing prosecution in his home country for his alleged role in a global assisted suicide network — is set to enter a plea on 14 counts of assisting suicide during a scheduled court appearance in Ontario Friday.

    Law was first arrested in 2023 following a years-long cross-border investigation that involved 11 law enforcement agencies and investigators from more than a dozen nations, including the UK, the United States and Italy. Canadian prosecutors allege Law built an online operation marketing and shipping lethal quantities of a banned chemical to roughly 1,200 people across the globe. Of those shipments, UK authorities confirm Law is expected to admit he sent 330 packages directly to addresses in the UK, connecting those shipments to 73 confirmed deaths of British citizens. Originally, British detectives had linked 88 deaths to Law’s network, but that number was revised down in official documents shared with affected families.

    For David Parfett, the news of no UK charges brings only fresh pain. Parfett lost his 22-year-old son Thomas in 2021, after Thomas accessed the lethal chemical Law is accused of selling. In an emotional interview with the BBC, Parfett remembered his son as a warm, vibrant young man who found joy in every corner of life. “Tom was somebody who really saw the joy in life. He would find humour in the weirdest places. I often think about his laugh,” Parfett said. A passionate and skilled football fan and player, Parfett said he grieves not just the loss of his son, but the small, future moments they will never share: “I miss the opportunity to enjoy the 2026 World Cup with him.”

    The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), the UK’s chief public prosecution body, confirmed in a letter shared with the BBC that Law will not face charges in the UK, citing complex overlapping legal barriers between the two countries. A CPS spokesperson added that Canadian authorities have committed to accounting for the harm done to UK victims and their families during Law’s domestic prosecution. But that assurance has done little to soothe the anger of bereaved relatives, who say the decision leaves their loved ones without justice under UK law.

    Parfett, who has joined other families in demanding accountability, said Law “caused devastation” across dozens of UK communities and has every right to answer for those deaths in British courts. “I had wanted Law to face charges in the UK… he really needed to face justice over here,” Parfett said. He is now calling on the UK government to launch a full public inquiry into the deaths, arguing that cross-government failure has allowed the crisis of unregulated online distribution of lethal substances to continue unaddressed. “I think that a public inquiry is needed because we need action across multiple government departments and unfortunately, we are not seeing that coordination and that understanding of how to address the problem today,” he said. “Fundamentally, the government is failing in its duty to protect life.”

    The BBC has reached out to the UK Home Office for official comment on the families’ demands and the CPS’s decision. For anyone affected by the issues raised in this reporting, support and resources are available through BBC Action Line.

  • France asks prosecutors to investigate Israel’s treatment of Gaza flotilla activists

    France asks prosecutors to investigate Israel’s treatment of Gaza flotilla activists

    PARIS – In a sharp escalation of diplomatic tension between Paris and Jerusalem over the treatment of Gaza-bound activists, the French government announced Friday it has formally referred the case of alleged violent abuse of French nationals to national prosecutors, clearing the way for potential criminal proceedings against Israeli actors connected to the incident.

    The move comes two weeks after France enacted an indefinite entry ban on Itamar Ben-Gvir, Israel’s far-right national security minister, labeling his public taunting of detained flotilla activists as “unspeakable” and unacceptable. The confrontation traces back to this month’s interception of the Global Sumud Flotilla, a 50-vessel humanitarian convoy attempting to break Israel’s long-standing naval blockade of the Gaza Strip. Israeli forces intercepted the flotilla in international waters roughly 250 miles off Israel’s coast, detained hundreds of activists, and later deported most of the group to Turkey.

    Multiple activists from the convoy have leveled serious allegations against Israeli forces and officials, claiming they endured beatings, taser attacks, intimidation by attack dogs, and degrading treatment while in Israeli custody. Israel has repeatedly denied all claims of mistreatment. The situation sparked global public outrage after Ben-Gvir published a video of himself verbally harassing the detained activists, a step that drew immediate condemnation from the French government.

    In an interview with public radio outlet France Inter on Friday, French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot confirmed the formal referral to prosecutors, saying the decision followed a detailed report from French diplomatic staff based in Turkey. The report documented what Barrot described as severe abuses against French citizens: sexual violence, prolonged exposure to freezing temperatures, physical assault, and ongoing public humiliation. “All acts that could constitute criminal offenses,” Barrot noted.

    “I decided yesterday to refer the matter to the public prosecutor,” he said. “This case is now in the hands of the justice system.” Under French criminal procedure, prosecutors will first review the evidence presented to determine whether there is sufficient grounds to pursue formal criminal charges and move forward with an investigation.

    In a May 23 statement announcing the entry ban on Ben-Gvir, Barrot had already made clear France’s firm stance on the incident. “We cannot tolerate that French nationals can be threatened, intimidated or brutalized in this way — all the more so by a public official,” he said at the time. The latest decision to launch a criminal probe marks a further intensification of France’s criticism of Israel’s actions surrounding the flotilla interception.