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  • US, Iran and Pakistan say talks progressing towards agreement

    US, Iran and Pakistan say talks progressing towards agreement

    Fresh diplomatic momentum emerged Saturday as senior officials from the United States, Iran, and mediator Pakistan all reported encouraging steps toward a negotiated end to ongoing regional conflict, with a preliminary 30 to 60-day framework agreement reportedly close to finalization. Pakistan’s military, which has served as a critical go-between for Washington and Tehran amid heightened tensions, confirmed that Army Chief Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir held high-stakes talks with top Iranian leaders in Tehran over the past day. In an official statement, the military noted that negotiations centered on accelerating ongoing diplomatic consultations to bolster regional peace and stability, adding that the 24 hours of talks had yielded measurable, encouraging progress toward a final understanding.

    U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, speaking to reporters during an official visit to New Delhi, India, confirmed that a finalized agreement could come within days, as early as Saturday itself, though he declined to share further granular details. “There might be some news a little later today. There may not be. I hope there will be,” Rubio told reporters, adding that even as he spoke, diplomatic teams continued to work through remaining sticking points. “There is a chance that, whether it’s later today, tomorrow, in a couple days, we may have something to say,” he said.

    U.S. President Donald Trump told Axios Saturday that he would convene a meeting with his lead negotiating team later that day to review Iran’s latest formal proposal, with a final decision expected by Sunday: either sign off on what he called a “good” deal, or escalate ongoing U.S. military action against Iran. Trump framed the choice starkly, telling Axios he would opt between securing a negotiated agreement or “blowing them to kingdom come.”

    In Tehran, Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei confirmed to state television that Iranian negotiators are in the final stages of drafting a memorandum of understanding, which will act as the initial, temporary framework agreement spanning 30 to 60 days. The 14-clause draft, Baghaei explained, covers core sticking points including access through the Strait of Hormuz, the U.S. naval blockade on Iran, and a ceasefire ending hostilities across all regional fronts, including Lebanon.

    Baghaei acknowledged that diplomatic talks have moved the two long-standing adversaries toward a rapprochement, but cautioned that a final breakthrough on all core issues remains far from guaranteed. He added that Iran’s nuclear program will be excluded from the initial temporary framework, with negotiations on that dossier pushed to separate discussions at a later stage. Throughout the 30 to 60-day initial window, both sides will continue working toward a permanent, long-term agreement, he clarified.

    Separately, the Financial Times reported Saturday that diplomatic mediators are close to finalizing a deal to extend an existing ceasefire for 60 days, matching the timeline laid out by Iranian officials. Under the terms of the proposal seen by the outlet, the agreement would include the gradual reopening of the Strait of Hormuz—one of the world’s most critical global energy chokepoints—and talks on diluting or transferring Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium. In exchange, the U.S. would ease restrictions on Iranian ports, roll back some sanctions, and begin the phased release of billions of dollars in Iranian assets frozen in foreign accounts.

    “The deal seems to be going in the right direction. It’s with the Americans now for review,” a senior anonymous diplomat told the Financial Times. The diplomat added that Iran is willing to make broader concessions on its nuclear program, but will not do so while active hostilities continue, making the current preliminary framework a critical step to bridge gaps between the two sides.

  • France bans Ben Gvir after flotilla activists abuse video

    France bans Ben Gvir after flotilla activists abuse video

    A diplomatic storm has erupted across Europe after a widely circulated video exposed Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir overseeing the mistreatment of detained activists from a Gaza-bound humanitarian flotilla, prompting France to issue an entry ban on the senior official and throw its support behind EU-level sanctions.\n\nFrench Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot announced the measure Saturday in a post on X, framing the entry ban as a direct response to Ben Gvir’s “unacceptable conduct towards French and European citizens” during last week’s Israeli raid on the aid flotilla, which took place in international waters. Barrot clarified that while Paris does not endorse the activists’ mission to deliver humanitarian aid to blockaded Gaza, the harsh treatment the detainees received crosses a fundamental line. “We cannot tolerate French nationals being threatened, intimidated or subjected to violence in this way, especially by a public official,” he wrote. He added that Ben Gvir’s actions during the raid are only the latest in “a long series of shocking statements and actions, as well as incitement to hatred and violence against Palestinians.” Barrot also confirmed France backs an Italian call for the European Union to impose formal sanctions on the minister.\n\nThe incident that triggered the international backlash stems from last week’s Israeli naval intercept of the flotilla, which was carrying hundreds of activists attempting to deliver much-needed humanitarian aid to Gaza. Ben Gvir personally released a video of his presence during the detention of the activists, a move that made the incident unavoidable on the global diplomatic stage. The footage shows Ben Gvir waving an Israeli flag and taunting the detainees while Israeli security forces force hundreds of handcuffed activists to kneel with their faces to the ground.\n\nThe video has sparked widespread global condemnation, with multiple European governments summoning Israeli ambassadors to protest the treatment of their citizens. British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper called the captured scenes “totally disgraceful,” while Turkish officials accused Israel of demonstrating a “violent and barbaric mindset.”\n\nIn the aftermath of the raid, Israeli authorities detained more than 430 activists before deporting nearly all of them by Thursday, with only one Israeli citizen held. Multiple released activists have since come forward with detailed allegations of severe abuse, including torture and sexual assault, while in Israeli custody.\n\nItalian journalist Alessandro Mantovani, one of the deported activists, described his experience to reporters at Rome’s Fiumicino Airport: “We were taken to Ben Gurion airport in handcuffs and with chains on our feet and put on a flight to Athens.” He added that Israeli soldiers “beat us up… They kicked us and punched us and shouted ‘Welcome to Israel’.”\n\nMiriam Azem, a representative of the Israeli human rights organization Adalah, reported that one detainee “was forced to strip naked and run while guards were laughing.” Another female activist described being bound so tightly with handcuffs that she lost feeling in her hands, and recalled that Israeli soldiers “laughed all the time. Super sadistic. They took off my shirt, took pictures. Mistreated us all night long.”\n\nDr. Margaret Connolly, sister of Irish President Catherine Connolly and one of the detained activists, drew a sharp parallel while speaking to Ireland’s RTE Radio, saying the experience gave activists “a feeling of what the Jews felt like during the Second World War,” and that Israel was “now acting like a Nazi state.”

  • ‘I feel like I lost my life’: Gaza amputees fight for mobility amid shortages

    ‘I feel like I lost my life’: Gaza amputees fight for mobility amid shortages

    It was just after 10 p.m. on November 19, 2023, when 24-year-old Rozan Kheira was jolted awake from sleep by the roar of explosions, frantic screams, and widespread panic that tore through her family’s Gaza City home. An Israeli air strike had reduced the building around her to rubble before she could even register what was happening.

    When Kheira tried to scramble out of bed, her legs gave out immediately. She pushed herself up a second time, only to collapse again. Glancing down, she discovered a pool of blood spreading across the floor beneath her; her foot had been severed in the blast, held to her leg only by a thin strip of skin.

    “I had just woken up and couldn’t comprehend what was happening,” Kheira recalled in an interview with Middle East Eye. “At that moment, I forgot we were even at war.” Stuck frozen in shock, she waited helpless until her brother carried her out of the destroyed home. That single night would forever alter the trajectory of her life.

    In the wake of Israel’s military campaign that has destroyed Gaza’s hospitals, killed thousands of medical workers, and enforced a total blockade on fuel and life-saving medicine entering the enclave, injuries that would be easily treatable in any other context have become permanent, life-altering disabilities — and in thousands of cases, fatal. Kheira was rushed to Gaza’s Indonesian Hospital, where after hours of uncontrolled bleeding, surgeons were forced to fully amputate her leg.

    In the two years since the strike, Kheira has lived her life confined to a wheelchair, repeatedly displaced by advancing ground operations and unable to access even the most basic medical care. “I was in excruciating pain, and painkillers were unavailable in northern Gaza because of the Israeli siege,” she said. Even after the October ceasefire, which the international community heralded as a step toward easing humanitarian conditions for Gaza’s 2.2 million residents, little has changed for injured civilians like Kheira.

    Desperate to regain even a measure of independence, Kheira began a months-long search for a properly fitted prosthetic limb. When her family was forced to flee to Khan Younis in southern Gaza last June, she received her first prosthetic — but the device quickly proved unusable. “The prosthetic leg was extremely heavy, weighing five kilograms. It didn’t match my body and made my suffering worse instead of easing it,” she explained. After the ceasefire allowed her to return to Gaza City, the Artificial Limbs and Polio Centre fitted her with a second device, which was also far too heavy for her to use.

    Undeterred, Kheira set out on foot to Hamad Hospital for Rehabilitation and Prosthetics in northern Gaza’s Sudaniya district, a journey of more than six kilometers she completed on a single leg because no transport was available to her. After multiple medical assessments, she finally received a third prosthetic. Still, her struggles are far from over: the device only meets 30 percent of her medical needs, but it is the only option available to her amid Gaza’s catastrophic shortage of medical equipment. Doctors have warned her against walking on the ill-fitted limb, but Kheira has no other choice.

    Even the ongoing rehabilitation and maintenance she requires to use the prosthetic adds to her daily hardship. “I need weekly maintenance at Hamad Hospital, which means long walks on one leg just to get there,” she said. “There are no vehicles, not even donkey carts. Transport is scarce and extremely expensive.” This mobility crisis is not unique to Kheira: ongoing Israeli restrictions on fuel entering Gaza — a direct violation of the ceasefire agreement — combined with the destruction of 70 percent of Gaza’s civilian transport infrastructure, have left the entire enclave unable to move freely, cutting injured civilians off from life-saving care.

    The U.S.-backed October ceasefire was intended to end Israel’s military campaign and blockade, and allow unimpeded access for aid, medicine, and rehabilitation supplies to enter Gaza. But in practice, Israel has largely maintained its total blockade, permitting only a tiny fraction of the required aid into the territory, leaving fuel, food, and medical supplies at critically low levels. Air strikes and artillery shelling have also continued across the enclave, killing more than 800 people since the ceasefire was announced. In total, Israeli forces have killed more than 72,700 Palestinians in Gaza since October 2023, and wounded more than 172,000 others.

    According to data from the World Health Organization, roughly 43,000 Palestinians have sustained permanent, life-altering injuries during the current conflict, including around 10,000 children. While a small fraction of these injured people, like Kheira, have managed to secure basic, ill-fitted prosthetics, thousands more with upper-limb injuries have been left with no access to any assistive device at all.

    One of those people is 32-year-old Abdelsalam al-Bardawil, who lost his left hand in an Israeli strike that destroyed his Gaza City home, killing his mother and brother and injuring the rest of his family. “My hand could have been saved, but because hospitals were out of service, it was amputated,” al-Bardawil told Middle East Eye. “I didn’t receive physical therapy, and painkillers weren’t available. I remember jumping from the intense pain.”

    After being displaced to Deir al-Balah in southern Gaza, al-Bardawil traveled to the Jordanian Field Hospital in Khan Younis, where he was fitted with a prosthetic hand. But he was forced to remove it shortly after, because the device was heavy, rigid, and purely cosmetic, completely unable to assist him with daily tasks. He later reached out to the Red Crescent in Deir al-Balah and other humanitarian organizations, but received the same answer every time: no upper-limb prosthetics are available in Gaza.

    Unable to work or provide for himself, al-Bardawil now relies entirely on humanitarian aid to survive. “What saddens me most is my inability to work,” he said. “It forces me to depend on assistance.” He also struggles to access mental health care and pain treatment, with transport shortages making even routine clinic visits nearly impossible. “The problem isn’t just therapy,” he said. “I can’t reach clinics for medication or depression treatment.” The loss of his mother, who he turned to for help without shame, has left even small daily tasks a source of embarrassment and struggle. “The only person I could ask for help without shame was my mother,” he said. “Now I feel embarrassed asking my sister or relatives.”

    Al-Bardawil has received an official referral for life-saving treatment outside of Gaza, but like thousands of other injured Palestinians, he remains trapped on a waiting list, blocked by frequent closures and strict Israeli restrictions at Gaza’s border crossings. According to the Palestinian Ministry of Health, more than 20,000 patients are currently waiting for approval to leave Gaza for treatment abroad, with access repeatedly delayed or blocked entirely by Israeli officials.

    While Gaza’s local hospitals and rehabilitation centers have attempted to ramp up domestic production of prosthetics to meet the growing need, officials say they are completely overwhelmed by the unprecedented scale of casualties. Hosni Muhanna, media officer at the Gaza Municipality’s Artificial Limbs and Polio Centre, told Middle East Eye that registered amputations have reached roughly 6,000 since the start of the war, per joint data from the Palestinian Ministry of Health and the International Committee of the Red Cross.

    “This unprecedented figure reflects the massive scale of the humanitarian and health catastrophe,” Muhanna said. The centre relies on a small local workshop to produce prosthetics in-house, but a total ban on essential raw materials entering Gaza has crippled production capacity, particularly for upper-limb devices. “The ban on essential supplies since the start of the war has crippled production, particularly for upper-limb prosthetics, as raw materials have not been allowed in,” he explained.

    The blockade has created acute shortages of every type of prosthetic component and assistive device, leaving long waiting lists that grow longer every day as new amputations are recorded amid ongoing attacks. “Fitting a limb requires medical assessment, physiotherapy to prepare the muscles, and a full rehabilitation programme to train patients and restore independence,” Muhanna said. But many patients cannot complete these critical steps due to repeated displacement, transport shortages, and the total destruction of Gaza’s health infrastructure.

    Back at his displacement camp in Deir al-Balah, al-Bardawil continues to wait for a call that will allow him to leave Gaza for the treatment he needs to rebuild his life. “I feel like my life is completely on hold,” he said. “I didn’t just lose my hand. I feel like I lost my life.”

  • Red Cross volunteers die from suspected Ebola in DR Congo

    Red Cross volunteers die from suspected Ebola in DR Congo

    A devastating chapter of the ongoing Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has claimed the lives of three Red Cross volunteers, who likely contracted the virus while handling deceased bodies before public health officials identified the growing epidemic, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) has confirmed.

    The three volunteers – Alikana Udumusi Augustin, Sezabo Katanabo and Ajiko Chandiru Viviane – were working on a non-Ebola related community project in the conflict-affected eastern province of Ituri when they were exposed to the virus on March 27, weeks before the outbreak was formally detected. They passed away between May 5 and May 16 in Mongbwalu, the town now recognized as the epicenter of the epidemic, and are counted among the earliest recorded fatalities of this outbreak.

    As of the latest updates, the outbreak has been linked to more than 170 suspected deaths and over 750 suspected cases across eastern DRC. Paying tribute to the fallen workers, the IFRC honored them for serving their local communities “with courage and humanity” in a public statement.

    On May 24, the World Health Organization (WHO) upgraded the public health risk assessment of the DRC outbreak from “high” to “very high”, acknowledging the rapid spread of the virus. WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus noted that while the regional risk across the African continent remains categorized as “high”, the global risk level is still classified as “low”.

    A particularly challenging aspect of this outbreak is the Ebola strain involved: the rare Bundibugyo variant, which has no licensed, proven effective vaccine and carries a mortality rate of roughly one third of all confirmed infections. Health authorities have repeatedly emphasized that Ebola spreads easily through contact with bodily fluids of infected people, and remains highly contagious in deceased bodies even after death, making safe body management a high-risk task.

    The outbreak has already spread beyond DRC’s borders. Neighboring Uganda confirmed three new confirmed cases on May 24, bringing the country’s total to five confirmed infections. The Africa Centres for Disease Control (Africa CDC) issued an urgent alert the same day, warning that 10 additional African countries – Angola, Burundi, the Central African Republic, the Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania and Zambia – face significant risk of imported cases and local spread.

    Response efforts have been complicated by both community distrust and ongoing armed conflict in eastern DRC. On May 23, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) reported that an Ebola treatment tent it had set up in Mongbwalu was burned by local community members. The organization noted that the rapidly evolving outbreak has left many residents with deep uncertainty and fear, adding that the incident underscores the urgent need for sustained community engagement and trust-building to enable effective response.

    The unrest follows another incident a day earlier, when an angry crowd in a separate district of Ituri set fire to part of a local hospital after authorities blocked the family and friends of a young man suspected of dying from Ebola from taking his body for a traditional burial. Beyond Ituri, confirmed cases have also been detected in North Kivu and South Kivu, where large swathes of territory are controlled by the M23 rebel group. Ongoing armed conflict in these areas has severely restricted access for public health response teams, creating additional barriers to containing the spread of the virus.

  • Bordeaux rout Leinster in Champions Cup final and seal a French treble of European titles

    Bordeaux rout Leinster in Champions Cup final and seal a French treble of European titles

    On a rainless Saturday at Bilbao’s iconic San Mamés Stadium in northern Spain, French rugby union side Bordeaux Bègles delivered a devastating first-half performance to crush Irish powerhouse Leinster 41-19, claiming the 2024 European Rugby Champions Cup title and cementing France’s total dominance of men’s top-tier European rugby this season. The victory marks the second consecutive Champions Cup crown for a French club, and completes a historic hat-trick of major European titles for French sides in 2024, following France’s Six Nations championship win over Ireland in March and Montpellier’s lopsided 59-26 victory over Ulster in the second-tier Challenge Cup final the previous night. This historic win also extends France’s unprecedented streak to six consecutive European Cup titles, a run of continental dominance that has few parallels in modern rugby. From the opening kickoff, the match took an unexpected turn when Leinster starting wing Tommy O’Brien, who earned a starting nod over Irish international star James Lowe, crossed the try line for an early score to put the Irish side up 7-0. What followed over the next 28 minutes was a masterclass in offensive rugby from Bordeaux, as the French side ran in five converted tries to put the match almost out of reach before the halftime whistle. Scrumhalf and team captain Maxime Lucu got Bordeaux on the board with a sharp sniping try from close range, before breakout star wing Louis Bielle-Biarrey notched two tries, pushing his tournament total to 10 for the campaign. Bielle-Biarrey’s standout form throughout the competition earned him player of the tournament honors, adding to his player of the Six Nations award earned earlier this year, capping a breakout season for the young French talent. Just before the first half wrapped up, Bordeaux put the final nail in the first-half coffin when center Yoram Moefana intercepted a pass from Leinster fly-half Harry Byrne and sprinted the length of the pitch to score, pushing the French lead to a commanding 35-7 at the break. Lucu turned in a player-of-the-final winning performance, orchestrating Bordeaux’s lethal attack and nailing all seven of his kicking attempts, including a long-range penalty from his own half. Even a first-half yellow card for a hair-pulling incident on Leinster lock Joe McCarthy did little to slow Bordeaux; Leinster managed only one try during Lucu’s time in the sin bin, with McCarthy diving over for a score that remained the only Irish points of the opening 40 minutes. Speaking after the match, Bordeaux assistant coach Noel McNamara highlighted the team’s hunger to back up last year’s Champions Cup win, drawing inspiration from golf legend Rory McIlroy to motivate the squad ahead of the knockout rounds. “We spoke about Rory McIlroy in the lead-up to the quarterfinal against Toulouse. Good players win one green jacket, great players win two. We have fantastic players. They made the decision that one Champions Cup is not enough,” McNamara told the BBC. Leinster captain Caelan Doris credited Bordeaux’s dominant first-half display as the difference in the match. “You have to credit Bordeaux. Some of their attack in the first half was incredibly hard to deal with,” Doris told Premier Sports after the full-time whistle. The result extends a painful run of final heartbreak for Leinster, which has now lost five Champions Cup finals since claiming its fourth and most recent European title in 2018, falling once again to the dominant French side that have ruled European club rugby for the past half-decade.

  • Nascar champion Kyle Busch died of pneumonia and sepsis, family says

    Nascar champion Kyle Busch died of pneumonia and sepsis, family says

    Beloved two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Busch has passed away at the age of 41, his family confirmed in an official statement shared with sports outlet The Athletic. The racing icon’s death followed a progression from severe pneumonia to sepsis, with the medical outcome triggering rapid, unmanageable organ complications that overwhelmed his body, according to the family’s announcement.

    Busch’s sudden passing on Thursday came just days before he was scheduled to compete in the iconic Coca-Cola 600 at North Carolina’s Charlotte Motor Speedway, a race he had been preparing for as part of his 22nd consecutive season competing in NASCAR’s top racing division.

    In the wake of the news, NASCAR leadership paid heartfelt tribute to one of the sport’s most recognizable figures. NASCAR CEO Steve O’Donnell described Busch as a generational talent, a rare competitor whose skill and charisma transformed how fans engaged with stock car racing. Over his two-decade career, Busch claimed 63 race victories and two Cup Series championship titles, cementing his place as one of the most successful drivers in modern NASCAR history.

    O’Donnell announced that the weekend’s Coca-Cola 600 would proceed as planned, explaining that the decision honored what Busch would have wanted. “Kyle Busch lived just about every chapter of what you could do in NASCAR,” O’Donnell said, remembering the driver as a fiercely competitive racer with a sharp wit and a penchant for memorable, unfiltered interviews. Ahead of the race, local media reported that Busch’s race car and iconic driver number were put on public display at the speedway as a temporary memorial to the late star.

    Beyond his achievements on the track, Busch leaves a legacy of charitable work. O’Donnell highlighted the foundation Busch founded alongside his wife, which works to expand awareness of and access to in vitro fertilization (IVF) and infertility treatments for families struggling to conceive. Known for his brash, high-energy racing style, Busch earned the widely loved nickname “Rowdy” among fans and peers, building a larger-than-life public persona that extended far beyond the race track.

  • US military conducts a rapid response exercise at embassy in Venezuela’s capital

    US military conducts a rapid response exercise at embassy in Venezuela’s capital

    Four months after former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro was removed from power, the United States military has carried out a rapid response drills in Venezuela’s capital Caracas, involving Marine Corps personnel and hybrid military aircraft.

    The exercise centered on two MV-22 Osprey aircraft — tiltrotor vehicles that combine the vertical takeoff and landing capabilities of a helicopter with the long-range, fuel efficiency of a fixed-wing plane. The aircraft flew over the recently reopened U.S. Embassy in Caracas before touching down in the embassy’s parking lot, where strong downdrafts from their rotors sent tree branches swaying across the area. After landing, uniformed Marine personnel exited the aircraft to complete the exercise’s operational drills.

    In a public statement posted to its official Instagram account following the drill, the U.S. Embassy emphasized that maintaining sharp, rapid response military capabilities is a core pillar of operational readiness for U.S. forces, both deployed in Venezuela and across all global U.S. mission locations. Venezuela’s interim government had pre-announced the exercise earlier in the week, with Foreign Minister Yván Gil clarifying that the drill was framed as a preparation to respond to potential medical or large-scale catastrophic emergencies in the capital.

    This military exercise comes just two months after the U.S. formally reopened its diplomatic mission in Caracas. The embassy reopening marked the full restoration of bilateral diplomatic ties between Washington and Caracas, a step that followed Maduro’s ouster from office in early January. The last time U.S. military aircraft operated over Caracas was on January 3, when U.S. elite special operations forces rappelled from military helicopters to capture Maduro and his wife. The pair were subsequently extradited to New York to face international drug trafficking charges, and both have entered formal pleas of not guilty to the allegations against them.

    The drill drew mixed reactions from local residents on Saturday. Dozens of Caracas locals gathered near the embassy compound to observe the aircraft and exercise activity, while a separate group of several dozen protesters assembled at another location across the city to demonstrate against the U.S. military operation. Protesters carried a large Venezuelan flag emblazoned with the phrase “No to the Yankee drill” to voice their opposition to the deployment of U.S. forces on Venezuelan territory.

  • India’s parody ‘cockroach party’ claims website has been blocked

    India’s parody ‘cockroach party’ claims website has been blocked

    A satirical Indian political parody movement that has taken social media by storm is facing unexpected digital crackdowns, just days after its official website went live. The Cockroach Janta Party (CJP), which started as an internet joke following a controversial comment from India’s chief justice about unemployed youth, has already accumulated more than 20 million followers across its social media platforms, outpacing the reach of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party by a wide margin.

    The movement traces its origins to a public comment from India’s top judge, who reportedly compared unemployed young people to cockroaches. He later walked back the remark, clarifying that he was targeting only individuals holding fraudulent academic credentials rather than the broader Indian youth population. Even so, the offhand comparison struck a chord with millions of young Indians grappling with systemic unemployment, and the CJP was born as a tongue-in-cheek response.

    The parody group deliberately names itself to echo Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s long-ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), positioning itself as a satirical opposition. Its mission statement, delivered with dry humor, claims it is the voice of “the lazy and unemployed,” with membership requirements that include being constantly active online and having the “ability to rant professionally.” To expand its online reach, CJP has leveraged AI-generated imagery for promotional content and sparked the viral hashtag #MainBhiCockroach, which translates to “I too am a cockroach,” that has spread widely across Indian social media.

    Founded by Abhijeet Dipke, a political communications strategist and Boston University graduate student, the movement has grown far beyond a simple joke. Its Instagram account alone boasts more than 22 million followers — more than double the follower count of the official BJP Instagram page. In recent weeks, young supporters have even appeared at public clean-up drives and protest events dressed in full cockroach costumes, turning the online meme into a visible offline movement.

    Now, just days after launching its official website, CJP has been hit with widespread digital access restrictions. The site is completely unavailable to users within India, and it appears to be unreachable from other global locations as well. The movement’s official X page, which had accumulated more than 200,000 followers, is also blocked for Indian users, who are shown a notice stating the page has been withheld “in response to a legal demand.” Dipke has also alleged that both his personal Instagram account and the group’s official account have been targeted by hackers.

    In a post on his personal X account following the block, Dipke accused Indian officials of deliberately taking down the group’s platform. “They have taken down our iconic website,” he wrote, adding the pointed question: “why are they so scared of cockroaches?” He confirmed that the group, which is not registered as an official political party, is already in the process of building a new online home, closing with a defiant catchphrase: “Cockroaches never die.”

    Political analysts say the rapid rise of CJP reflects deep-seated frustration among India’s large youth population. India is home to 1.4 billion people, nearly half of whom are under the age of 30, making it one of the youngest countries in the world. Despite this demographic reality, formal political representation for young people remains limited, and widespread unemployment has left many feeling disenfranchised by mainstream political parties. Dipke previously told the BBC that the movement’s overwhelming popularity is a direct reflection of this widespread discontent, noting that young Indians feel their concerns are being ignored by the country’s established political leadership.

  • Ebola claims more lives, other African countries seen at risk

    Ebola claims more lives, other African countries seen at risk

    A worsening Ebola outbreak across central Africa has triggered new alarm this week, with Uganda reporting three fresh confirmed cases and the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) announcing three volunteer deaths in the neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo. Health authorities are now warning that the deadly, highly contagious virus could extend beyond the two most affected nations to reach multiple other countries across the continent, pushing global health bodies to label the outbreak an international public health emergency.\n\nSpeaking over the weekend, Jean Kaseya, director of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), confirmed that 10 additional African nations have been flagged as at immediate risk of transmission: Angola, Burundi, the Central African Republic, the Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania and Zambia. Kaseya cited two major structural challenges fueling the outbreak’s spread: high cross-border population mobility across the region and widespread persistent insecurity that complicates outbreak response efforts.\n\nThe three new cases confirmed by Ugandan health officials on Saturday bring the east African nation’s total confirmed infections to five since the outbreak was first detected in both Uganda and the DRC on May 15. To date, Uganda has recorded one fatality from the virus, and the three newly confirmed patients – a Ugandan commercial driver, a Ugandan frontline health worker, and a Congolese woman – all remain alive as of Saturday’s update. Contact tracing has linked all three new cases back to initial cross-border infections originating in the DRC: the driver was operating the vehicle that carried the first confirmed Congolese patient into Uganda, the health worker was exposed while treating that infected patient, and the third case is a Congolese woman who crossed into Uganda for travel before returning to the DRC and testing positive.\n\nEbola is a lethal viral hemorrhagic fever that spreads through direct contact with infected bodily fluids, and can progress to severe internal bleeding, multi-organ failure, and death in a large share of untreated cases. The current outbreak is centered in conflict-ravaged eastern DRC, where the virus was first detected in Ituri province before spreading to the neighboring South Kivu region. Updated data from the World Health Organization (WHO), released Friday, puts the DRC’s current outbreak at 82 confirmed cases and seven confirmed deaths, alongside nearly 750 suspected cases and 177 suspected deaths that have yet to be formally verified.\n\nThe three Red Cross volunteers who died were Congolese staff deployed to Ituri for a humanitarian mission unrelated to Ebola response. On March 27, the group was tasked with managing the collection and burial of deceased community members, when the outbreak was still circulating undetected in the region. The IFRC confirmed Saturday that the three volunteers are among the first known fatalities linked to the current outbreak. Since the first recorded Ebola outbreak in 1976, the virus has killed more than 15,000 people across Africa over the past 50 years.\n\nLast Friday, the WHO upgraded the DRC’s national risk level for the outbreak to its highest classification: “very high”, while labeling the regional risk for central Africa “high” and maintaining the global risk classification at “low”. Unlike better-known Ebola strains, the current outbreak is caused by the rare Bundibugyo strain, for which no widely approved vaccines or targeted antiviral treatments are currently available. Outbreak investigators also suspect the virus was spreading undetected across the DRC for weeks before it was formally identified, allowing transmission to accelerate across border areas.\n\nFollowing confirmation of its first two cases, Uganda implemented a full suspension of public cross-border transport with the DRC last Thursday to slow transmission. The outbreak has laid bare the structural challenges of responding to a major epidemic in eastern DRC, a region that has faced decades of persistent conflict controlled by dozens of armed non-state groups. State health and administrative services have been largely absent from rural areas of Ituri for generations, and much of South Kivu is currently controlled by the Rwandan-backed M23 armed group, which has no prior experience managing large-scale public health emergencies like Ebola.\n\nAddressing a joint press conference in Addis Ababa alongside Kaseya, Congolese Health Minister Samuel Roger Kamba framed the outbreak as a shared global and regional responsibility. “This is everyone’s problem,” Kamba said, adding that the Congolese national government requires full territorial control across eastern DRC to implement effective outbreak containment measures and stop the virus from spreading further across the continent.

  • An Ebola treatment tent set ablaze again in eastern Congo with 18 suspected cases escaping

    An Ebola treatment tent set ablaze again in eastern Congo with 18 suspected cases escaping

    BUNIA, Democratic Republic of Congo — A growing wave of community distrust around the ongoing Bundibugyo Ebola outbreak in eastern Congo has boiled over into a second arson attack on a public health facility in less than a week, triggering a dangerous escape of infected patients and deepening concerns over virus containment efforts. Local hospital director Dr. Richard Lokudi, head of Mongbwalu General Reference Hospital, confirmed to the Associated Press that unidentified assailants targeted an MSF (Doctors Without Borders) isolation tent late Friday. The tent had been purpose-built to house both confirmed and suspected cases of the rare Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, which is currently driving the outbreak centered on the Mongbwalu area.

    In the wake of the attack, 18 patients being monitored for possible Ebola infection fled the facility into the surrounding community, a development that public health officials warn drastically elevates transmission risks. “We strongly condemn this act, as it caused panic among the staff of the Mongbwalu Referral Hospital and also resulted in the escape of 18 suspected cases into the community,” Lokudi said. The attack marks the second targeting of Ebola response infrastructure in the region this week: just two days prior, a separate treatment center in nearby Rwampara was burned to the ground by community members after authorities blocked family members from recovering the body of a local man who had died from the virus.

    This tension stems from a critical point of conflict between public health guidelines and local cultural practices: Ebola corpses are extremely contagious, and traditional funeral gatherings and body preparation are among the most common pathways for large-scale secondary spread. To curb transmission, authorities manage burials of confirmed and suspected Ebola victims whenever possible, a policy that frequently sparks pushback from grieving family and community members.

    As community tensions mount, regional authorities have implemented strict new public health measures to slow the outbreak. On Friday, officials in northeastern Congo announced a ban on funeral wakes and all public gatherings of more than 50 people. The World Health Organization has also upgraded its risk assessment for the outbreak, raising the domestic risk level from “high” to “very high” while noting that the risk of global spread remains low at this stage.

    As of Friday, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus reported that 82 confirmed cases and seven confirmed deaths have been recorded, but he warned that the actual size of the outbreak is far larger than official confirmed counts. Currently, surveillance systems are tracking 750 additional suspected cases and 175 suspected deaths, numbers expected to rise as public health workers expand monitoring across the region.

    A unique factor complicating the response to this outbreak is the lack of an approved vaccine for the Bundibugyo strain. The virus spread undetected for weeks across Ituri province after the first recorded death, when initial testing incorrectly targeted the more common Zaire Ebola strain and returned negative results, delaying the activation of a full response. Most recently, the revelation that three International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies volunteers died from the virus in Mongbwalu after contracting it during a non-Ebola body management mission on March 27 has pushed back the estimated timeline of the outbreak. Previously, the first confirmed death was dated to late April in Bunia, Ituri’s capital.

    Top African public health leaders have emphasized that repairing community trust is a core component of any effective response. “A response to the outbreak must include building trust with communities,” said Dr. Jean Kaseya, director-general of the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. On Saturday, a burial for Ebola victims in Bunia proceeded only under heavy armed security, a stark indicator of the ongoing friction between response teams and local communities. The Red Cross has confirmed that three of its volunteers have died from the virus linked to this outbreak, marking a major loss for the humanitarian effort working to contain the spread.