博客

  • Why Trump will ‘limp’ into China and likely leave empty-handed

    Why Trump will ‘limp’ into China and likely leave empty-handed

    As U.S. President Donald Trump prepares to arrive in Beijing for high-stakes talks with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, the global economic and geopolitical balance between the world’s two largest powers has shifted dramatically—far faster than anyone in Washington predicted 15 months ago, when the second Trump administration took office.

    When Trump’s second term began, his top advisors projected unbridled confidence that sweeping new tariffs on Chinese goods would force Beijing to make sweeping concessions, rewriting the terms of the $53 trillion U.S.-China economic relationship to overwhelmingly benefit Washington. Today, that narrative has flipped almost entirely: in the assessment of Chinese analysts and global economists alike, Xi now holds nearly all the leverage as the two leaders meet.

    China’s state-run Global Times has framed the moment bluntly, describing the U.S. as a “giant with a limp” heading into the summit. The label comes as Washington grapples with overlapping crises: an escalating conflict with Iran that has pushed oil prices above $100 per barrel, fractured alliances strained by Trump’s tariff policies, and a series of international court rulings that have eroded U.S. global leverage. Chinese state media has emphasized that it is Trump traveling to Beijing in search of a trade agreement, not the reverse, arguing Washington needs a deal far more urgently than Beijing does. Compounding this, any path to reopening the strategic Strait of Hormuz, disrupted by the Iran conflict, may hinge on Beijing using its longstanding diplomatic influence in Tehran—turning the tables on the leverage Trump once expected to wield over China.

    The shifting dynamic is on clear display in U.S. domestic economic data. April 2026 saw U.S. year-on-year inflation hit 3.8%, a three-year high, driven largely by energy price spikes stemming from the U.S.-Israeli strike on Iran. This inflation surge has dragged down Trump’s approval ratings and erased any chance the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates this year, a step Trump has repeatedly demanded. Even more consequential, analysts argue, is that Trump’s aggressive trade and technology policies have inadvertently accelerated China’s rise as a global leader in trade and high-value innovation.

    More than a decade after Xi launched a national strategy to revitalize China’s economic standing, and 11 years after the introduction of the “Made in China 2025” industrial upgrading initiative, the strategy is delivering tangible results. One prominent example is electric vehicle giant BYD, which has surged past Tesla in global sales and upended the long-dominant European auto industry. Other Chinese tech firms, from AI startup DeepSeek to telecom leader Huawei, have developed successful workarounds to U.S. export controls, proving that Washington’s decoupling efforts have only incentivized faster domestic innovation and self-reliance in China’s high-tech sector.

    Trump’s repeated attacks on the independence of the Federal Reserve, meanwhile, have undermined global trust in the U.S. dollar just as U.S. national debt approaches the $40 trillion mark. This erosion of confidence has given new momentum to Xi’s long-running campaign to internationalize the yuan, a goal that has gained unexpected traction amid Trump’s post-inauguration policy volatility. From broad-based tariffs to aggressive military adventurism in Venezuela and Iran, to unfettered fiscal expansion and attacks on independent U.S. institutions, every major policy move of Trump’s second term has weakened global trust in U.S. assets.

    As Middle Eastern Gulf states grow increasingly skeptical of U.S. security guarantees amid ongoing wartime disruptions to energy trade, Beijing sees a historic opening to build a yuan-denominated energy settlement framework once hostilities end. This could pave the way for the long-discussed “petroyuan” that Chinese leaders have long envisioned, though economists caution full global adoption of the yuan as a primary energy currency remains decades away.

    Union Bancaire Privee economist Carlos Casanova notes that while the trajectory of yuan internationalization is clear, broad adoption is unlikely in the near term. Gulf monarchies still rely on U.S. security guarantees and maintain deep financial ties to U.S. capital markets. For the yuan to become a dominant global energy currency, Casanova explains, Beijing would need to complete a demanding three-part agenda: deepen existing divides between the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, build up Iran’s military capacity to challenge U.S. regional security dominance (a step that would be destabilizing even for China), and fully liberalize China’s capital account while growing global demand for yuan-denominated assets. “Even under favorable conditions, this would likely take decades,” Casanova said.

    Still, Trump’s confrontational approach to the BRICS bloc—Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa—has only accelerated moves away from the dollar. After BRICS leaders moved forward with plans to develop a dollar alternative, Trump threatened to impose 100% tariffs on all BRICS imports, a move that reinforced global fatigue with Washington’s unilateral bullying. The policy chaos created by the Trump administration is already doing more to advance the BRICS’ de-dollarization agenda than the bloc could have achieved on its own.

    Even close U.S. allies are growing wary of Washington’s economic trajectory. During recent meetings between U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Japanese officials in Tokyo, the public agenda focused on the weak yen and Japan’s support for the U.S. in the Iran conflict. Behind closed doors, analysts say Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi almost certainly sought assurances about the safety of Japan’s $1.2 trillion holdings of U.S. Treasuries—the largest foreign stockpile of U.S. government debt in the world.

    Those concerns are not unfounded. Recent U.S. data shows annual tax revenues fell 17% year-on-year in April, typically the peak month for tax collections. Nearly 17 months into the second Trump administration, policies from tariffs to inflated energy costs have left U.S. households under severe financial strain. A recent Gallup poll found 47% of Americans rate current economic conditions as “poor,” a seven-point increase since March, while 73% say conditions are worsening. A separate Fox News poll found 70% of respondents believe the economy is deteriorating, matching the record high set in 2023.

    A core flaw of Trump’s China strategy, analysts argue, is that it has failed to improve U.S. competitiveness at home. Tariffs, a blunt policy tool, have acted more as a political gimmick than a roadmap to revitalize U.S. innovation, strengthen human capital, and preserve the dollar and U.S. Treasuries as the foundation of the global financial system. In fact, Enodo Economics analyst Diana Choyleva notes that U.S. efforts to block China’s technological progress have had the opposite effect, speeding China’s shift up the global value chain toward greater self-reliance and innovation.

    Trump’s tariffs have also benefited China in unintended ways, by straining relations between Washington and key U.S. allies across the Indo-Pacific, including Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Southeast Asian nations. Growing distrust between Washington and these regional democracies has increased China’s diplomatic influence in the region, allowing Xi to position China as a more reliable steward of global free trade than Trump. The Chinese government continues to benefit from Trump’s first-term decision to withdraw from the U.S.-led Trans-Pacific Partnership, and the second Trump administration’s continued focus on narrow bilateral trade deals rather than building a multilateral bloc to counter Chinese influence.

    Far from curbing China’s trade ambitions, Trump’s tariffs have coincided with China posting a record annual trade surplus of $1.2 trillion in 2025. While the Xi administration has invested trillions over the past decade to dominate future-focused industries including electric vehicles, renewable energy, aerospace, artificial intelligence, biotechnology, green infrastructure and robotics, the Trump administration has laid out no comparable plan to boost U.S. competitiveness in semiconductors, infrastructure or climate action. In fact, Trump has rolled back support for clean energy sectors, dismissing electric vehicles, solar and wind power as “woke” policies while prioritizing fossil fuel development.

    To date, Trump’s economic strategy has relied almost entirely on tax cuts, expansionary fiscal policy and repeated demands for lower Federal Reserve interest rates to support growth. A recent Supreme Court ruling striking down Trump’s unilateral tariff authority has added new stress to U.S. government finances, pushing the national debt to over 100% of GDP. “Tariffs had been functioning as a shadow tax that helped fund spending without explicitly raising taxes,” explained Mark Malek, chief investment officer at Siebert Financial. “Remove that and the deficit widens, borrowing rises, and historically that is the type of development that leans on the bond market and pressures yields higher.”

    Given this shift in leverage, Xi is unlikely to grant Trump the sweeping “grand bargain” trade deal he is seeking ahead of 2026 U.S. midterm elections. Most economists predict Beijing will offer only small, symbolic concessions—such as new agreements to purchase Boeing aircraft and U.S. soybeans—with a commitment to continue talks later this year.

    Fidelity Investments economist Peiqian Liu notes this Beijing meeting is just the first of several planned encounters between the two leaders in 2026, with the APEC Summit scheduled for Shenzhen in November, the G20 meeting in Miami in December, and a potential reciprocal visit by Xi to the U.S. later this year, possibly before the midterm elections. “Given the array of issues pending discussion, including trade, technology, supply chain controls, and chokepoints — as well as other geopolitical issues such as Taiwan and Iran — we expect the leader-to-leader conversation to be more high-level and broad-based,” Liu said.

    The ongoing Iran crisis has created an awkward backdrop for the summit. “It’s awkward that, as the leaders meet, the U.S. Navy is blockading the Strait of Hormuz and intercepting tankers bound for China, Iran’s largest crude buyer,” noted Rush Doshi, an analyst at the Council on Foreign Relations. “Meanwhile, Beijing is providing political and possibly intelligence support to Tehran and could be seeking to renew flows of drone parts, air defense equipment, and missiles. Neither side is likely to make progress on this issue, but the fact that the summit appears ready to proceed despite this unusual situation is proof both leaders want the optics of stability even if its foundations are shaky.”

    It is important to note that China still faces significant domestic economic headwinds: the ongoing property sector crisis continues to erode business and household confidence, local government finances are severely strained, and youth unemployment remains stubbornly high. Even so, China’s export sector has held up remarkably well amid global economic weakness: April 2026 saw year-on-year export growth of 14.1%, with passenger vehicle exports surging nearly 85% from a year earlier.

    Ultimately, the Beijing summit will underscore a core reality: Trump’s campaign to halt China’s economic rise has backfired dramatically, leaving Washington empty-handed in its quest to rewrite the U.S.-China trade relationship. While a public show of dialogue between Trump and Xi will be a welcome signal for global markets—any step that eases tensions between the two largest economies is an unqualified positive for the global economy—the idea that Trump will leave Beijing having imposed his will on China reads more as a political fantasy than a plausible outcome.

  • YouTuber Tyler Oliveira deported from Israel over ‘antisemitic content’

    YouTuber Tyler Oliveira deported from Israel over ‘antisemitic content’

    A prominent right-wing American YouTube creator has been barred from Israel and expelled back to the United States amid formal accusations of spreading antisemitic content, according to a public statement the influencer posted to the social platform X on Tuesday.

    In his announcement, Oliveira shared an image of the official deportation document issued to him by Israeli border authorities, which formally cites “prevention of illegal immigration” as the legal basis for his expulsion from the country. But Israeli officials have openly cited another motivation for the move: Diaspora Affairs Minister Amichai Chikli confirmed in an interview with Israeli outlet Channel 14 that the expulsion was a direct response to the hate speech Oliveira amplified in his online videos.

    “The party is over. Whoever comes here with the goal of sowing hatred can go back where they came from,” Chikli stated in the interview. “The rule is clear, whoever incites against us simply won’t be here.”

    Oliveira has built a large online following through a gonzo, on-the-ground style of independent journalism that centers largely on conservative and right-wing political issues, with a heavy focus on global and domestic immigration policy. His recent work has included on-the-ground investigations into alleged fraud claims involving Somali diaspora communities in Minnesota, as well as reporting he claims exposes widespread abuse of U.S. visa rules by Indian migrant workers. He also went viral in global conservative circles for a video covering a traditional cow dung-throwing festival in a rural Indian village, a segment that ultimately earned him fierce pushback from India’s domestic far-right movement.

    While much of Oliveira’s early content earned him praise among segments of the American right, multiple videos he published focusing on Jewish communities in New York and New Jersey later sparked widespread condemnation from Jewish advocacy groups, who accused the creator of using coded language to spread antisemitic rhetoric. In the contested videos, Oliveira publicly criticized the high birth rates of Orthodox Jewish communities, repeating conspiracy claims that Orthodox Jews exploit local public resources and intentionally segregate themselves from broader society.

    Oliveira has forcefully rejected claims that his coverage amounts to unfair targeting of Jewish communities, noting that he has published investigative content focused on a wide range of religious and demographic groups across the globe. Just last weekend, the creator appeared on a popular podcast hosted by veteran conservative commentator Tucker Carlson, where he pushed back against his critics by highlighting what he frames as hypocrisy in the accusations against him. During the interview, Oliveira also claimed that a number of Israeli residents had reached out to him privately to voice support for his criticism of Orthodox Jewish communities in the country.

    This report was originally published by Middle East Eye, a media outlet that provides independent, on-the-ground coverage of the Middle East, North Africa and surrounding regions.

  • Israel killing at least one Palestinian child a week in West Bank, Unicef says

    Israel killing at least one Palestinian child a week in West Bank, Unicef says

    On Tuesday, a spokesperson for the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) issued a stark, alarming report on the mounting humanitarian crisis facing Palestinian children in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, revealing that since the start of 2025, Israeli security forces have killed an average of no fewer than one Palestinian child every week.

    James Elder, the UNICEF spokesperson speaking on the crisis, confirmed that at least 70 Palestinian children have been killed since January 2025, with hundreds more left with life-altering injuries. He emphasized that children are paying what he called an “intolerable price” for the rapid escalation of Israeli military operations and repeated violent attacks carried out by Israeli settlers against Palestinian communities. To date, 850 children have been wounded in violence in the territory, and the vast majority of these injuries are the result of live ammunition fire, according to UNICEF data.

    In a breakdown of the threats facing children, Elder noted that the rising civilian casualties are unfolding alongside a historic surge in violent attacks by Israeli settlers against Palestinian communities. Documented assaults targeting children alone include a range of brutal acts: pepper spray attacks, severe beatings, stabbings and shootings. Beyond direct violence, children also face a growing risk of arbitrary arrest and prolonged detention by Israeli forces. Current data shows at least 347 Palestinian children are currently held in Israeli military detention, all detained on alleged security-related offenses.

    According to international children’s rights organization Save the Children, Palestinian children remain the only group of children globally that are systematically prosecuted through Israeli military court systems, rather than civilian juvenile justice frameworks. Of the 347 detained children, more than half – 180 – are being held under administrative detention, a long-controversial Israeli policy that permits the imprisonment of Palestinians without formal charge or public trial, with detention terms that can be renewed indefinitely.

    Multiple testimonies collected by leading international and local human rights groups, corroborated by independent media reporting, detail consistent patterns of inhumane treatment against detained Palestinian children. Accounts from released detainees document widespread abuse including intentional starvation, physical beatings, sexual violence and other cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment. This systemic risk of detention was expanded further in late 2024, when the Israeli parliament passed a controversial piece of legislation that legally permits the detention of children as young as 12 years old.

    Elder stressed that the violent attacks and human rights violations targeting children are not random, isolated incidents. Instead, he argued, they form part of a deliberate, wider pattern of violations that target not just individual children, but their basic human rights, their homes, their schools and the critical infrastructure that their communities rely on to function. Over recent years, Israeli movement restrictions have progressively cut off Palestinian communities in the West Bank from access to basic necessities including clean water, education, safe shelter and emergency healthcare, while severely limiting freedom of movement across the territory.

    “What is unfolding is not only an escalation in violence against Palestinian children; it is the steady dismantling of the conditions children need to survive and grow,” Elder told reporters. Education, he added, has become a specific target of sustained assault, turning what should be a routine daily trip to school for thousands of West Bank children into a dangerous journey marked by constant fear.

    In 2025 alone, UNICEF has documented 99 separate incidents that have disrupted access to education across the West Bank. These incidents include the killing, detention and wounding of student and education staff, the forced demolition of school buildings, the repurposing of educational facilities for Israeli military use, and widespread restrictions that bar children from reaching their places of study. “Schools, which should be places of safety and stability, are increasingly becoming sites of fear,” Elder said. “Attacks on schools and the denial of children’s access to education are grave violations against children with long-term consequences for their safety, wellbeing, and future.”

    Beyond violence and restricted access to services, Elder also drew attention to the rapidly accelerating rate of forced displacement of Palestinian communities in the West Bank. Between January and April 2025 alone, more than 2,500 Palestinians have been forcibly expelled from their homes, over 1,100 of whom are children. This four-month total already exceeds the full-year displacement figures recorded for all of 2024. Critical Palestinian water infrastructure, including community sanitation systems and agricultural irrigation networks, has also been repeatedly targeted for destruction by Israeli forces and settlers.

    “This has serious implications for both the Palestinian economy and children’s health, hygiene, and dignity,” Elder said. “Taken together, these patterns reveal an overarching reality: children are being targeted both through direct violence, and through the dismantling of essential systems and services. Their suffering cannot be normalised.”

    This report was originally brought to audiences by Middle East Eye, a media outlet that provides independent, in-depth coverage of the Middle East, North Africa and surrounding regions.

  • Trump and Xi: a path to US-China rivalry without war

    Trump and Xi: a path to US-China rivalry without war

    Ahead of U.S. President Donald Trump’s scheduled visit to Beijing this week, international relations scholars have laid out a pragmatic framework for preventing the world’s most impactful bilateral great power rivalry from spiraling into catastrophic conflict. While the summit may produce incremental steps to ease surface-level tensions between the two nations, analysts Kai He and Huiyunanga Feng emphasize a core, unchanging reality: the structural rivalry between Washington and Beijing is unavoidable, and no side can achieve a decisive, lasting victory. The central challenge facing both leaders, they argue, is not eliminating competition altogether, but safeguarding this dynamic relationship from devolving into open conflict — a outcome that is not inevitable, but becomes far more likely without intentional, coordinated guardrails. To keep competition peaceful, the scholars outline three core actionable priorities that both governments must embrace. First, they must uphold credible military deterrence without crossing into deliberate provocation. Second, they should channel competitive energy into institutional engagement and the provision of global public goods, rather than military posturing. Third, they must prevent ideological friction from turning every policy disagreement into an unwinnable zero-sum confrontation. The first core step is establishing deliberate mutual restraint, backed by clear political reassurance, rather than one-sided concessions. Both nations will continue to build military capabilities and balance one another’s influence globally, but the greatest risk stems from repeated misinterpretation: each side frames its own military moves as defensive deterrence, while the other reads the same actions as deliberate provocation. No region embodies this danger more acutely than the long-running impasse over Taiwan. For Beijing, Taiwan is an non-negotiable core sovereignty issue that tests national resolve. For Washington, the island is tied to its credibility as an Indo-Pacific security guarantor, regional stability, and deterrence of any coercive unification process. Both sides claim to defend the existing status quo, both accuse the other of eroding that balance, and both have taken actions that have eroded overall stability in the strait. Instead of demanding unilateral concessions from either side, He and Feng argue for coordinated mutual restraint paired with clearer communication. For example, China could reduce the scale and frequency of coercive military operations near Taiwan, including combat aircraft sorties, naval patrols and drone operations near the island’s air defense identification zone. In exchange, the United States could avoid taking steps that blur the line between longstanding policy of strategic ambiguity and explicit support for Taiwanese formal independence. Contrary to common assumptions, the scholars note that mutual trust is not a prerequisite for stability — clarity and intentional restraint are. To embed this restraint, both sides need a formal, sustained framework for deterrence management that includes ongoing efforts to clarify mutually accepted red lines, reduce misperceptions of each other’s strategic intentions and resolve, and prevent competitive signaling from spiraling into unintended confrontation. During the Cold War, Washington and Moscow eventually learned that an unregulated arms race posed too great a risk to sustain, and built systems to manage competition. He and Feng stress that Washington and Beijing have not yet reached this level of strategic maturity, and must prioritize building these guardrails urgently. The second core priority is channeling rivalry into safer, even productive arenas, rather than forcing confrontation on military or high-stakes geopolitical terrain. Rivalry does not have to be entirely destructive: when guided into institutional competition, it can even deliver collective benefits for the broader global community. Today, this dynamic is already emerging: the U.S. competes through frameworks like the Quad and AUKUS, while China advances its interests through blocs including BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. Both sides work to shape the rules, membership and agendas of global and regional institutions to expand their own influence and limit the other’s. While this dynamic is often framed as a new Cold War, institutional competition is inherently one of the safest forms of great power rivalry. Competition pushes institutions to adapt rather than stagnate, encourages new models of regional cooperation, and incentivizes both powers to deliver global public goods — including infrastructure investment, development financing, technological innovation and climate action — to win support from third countries. The competition surrounding global infrastructure financing offers a clear example: China has expanded its global influence through the Belt and Road Initiative and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, while the U.S. and its allies have launched rival infrastructure initiatives to counter that growth. This competition has ultimately benefited developing nations, expanding the range of financing and development options available to them. This dynamic also explains why a sweeping push for full economic decoupling would be a dangerous mistake, the scholars argue. While targeted restrictions in sensitive strategic sectors may be unavoidable, a full break in economic ties would eliminate one of the most critical existing guardrails in the bilateral relationship. As long as the two economies remain deeply intertwined, both sides retain strong incentives to prioritize stability and avoid open conflict. The third core priority is lowering the ideological temperature that has amplified friction across all areas of the relationship. The U.S. and China do not only clash over material interests: they hold fundamentally different political and historical narratives that shape how they interpret every interaction. U.S. policymakers often frame the rivalry as a defense of the liberal international order against authoritarian revisionism, while Chinese leaders frame it as a struggle against foreign containment, historical humiliation and unacceptable interference in their domestic affairs. These are not just rhetorical differences: they shape what each side views as threatening, acceptable, or non-negotiable, and have turned the relationship into an increasingly emotionally and politically charged confrontation. Ideological competition is safest when it remains indirect, He and Feng argue. Neither side is going to convert the other to its political system, and neither will win broad global support through lectures on ideological superiority. A far more effective strategy is competing by example: for the U.S., this means demonstrating that democratic governance can still deliver effective policy, social cohesion and long-term economic vitality. For China, this means proving that its governance model can deliver sustained growth, social stability and productive international cooperation. Both sides must also recognize that ideological overreach carries severe risks. The more Washington frames the rivalry as a global struggle between democracy and autocracy, the more Beijing will view any compromise as an act of capitulation. Similarly, the more Beijing wraps its foreign policy in narratives of anti-hegemony struggle, the more Washington will interpret U.S. restraint as a sign of weakness. Sustained diplomatic engagement remains critical for this reason: if the two powers stop talking, ideological competition will harden and become far more dangerous. The greatest long-term risk in U.S.-China rivalry, the scholars conclude, is that both sides will eventually come to view restraint as weakness, compromise as surrender, and peaceful coexistence as impossible. Once that tipping point is reached, catastrophic conflict becomes far more likely. The most realistic and important goal for bilateral relations right now is not warm friendship, or even full reconciliation. Instead, it is a harder, more modest objective: sustained, managed competition without war. This analysis comes from Kai He, Professor of International Relations at Griffith University, and Huiyun Feng, Professor in the School of Government and International Relations at Griffith University, republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

  • Criminalising protest: Pro-Palestine students in France face increased repression

    Criminalising protest: Pro-Palestine students in France face increased repression

    In the wake of the outbreak of hostilities between Israel and Hamas in October 2023 and the subsequent large-scale Israeli military campaign in Gaza, French university campuses have become flashpoints for escalating government and institutional repression targeting students who publicly advocate for Palestinian rights and demand an end to military action. The crackdown, which activists and scholars warn is eroding long-held protections for academic freedom and political speech on campus, has pushed many young organizers to choose between their deeply held political beliefs and continued access to higher education.

  • Alleged scammer extradited after  hacking attempt on BTS star

    Alleged scammer extradited after hacking attempt on BTS star

    In a high-profile cross-border cybercrime case that has drawn international attention, a 40-year-old Chinese national accused of masterminding a multi-million dollar hacking operation that counted BTS member Jungkook among its high-profile victims has been handed over to South Korean authorities following extradition from Thailand.

    South Korea’s Ministry of Justice has laid out detailed charges against the unnamed suspect, accusing him and his criminal network of stealing a total of 38 billion won, equal to approximately $25.4 million or £18.8 million, from a wide range of targets. The group’s illegal activities included breaking into digital accounts tied to both government agency websites and the personal profiles of prominent public figures, according to official allegations.

    One of the most high-profile attempted heists targeted the BTS vocalist: the hacking ring gained unauthorized access to a securities account registered under Jungkook’s name, and attempted to siphon off 8.4 billion won worth of shares the K-pop star holds in Hybe, BTS’s parent entertainment and management company. Local South Korean media outlets confirmed that the suspicious transfer was halted before it could be completed, after Hybe’s internal security team moved quickly to freeze the compromised account.

    Court and law enforcement records show the string of cyberattacks linked to the group took place over a 20-month period, running from August 2023 through April 2025. Beyond the Jungkook case, the criminal network also targeted other high-profile individuals across South Korea, including the chair of a large domestic conglomerate and the chief executive of a local venture capital firm, reporting from Agence France-Presse confirmed.

    Prior to his extradition, the suspect had been residing in Bangkok, Thailand. This is not the first extradition connected to the same hacking ring: back in August 2024, a 36-year-old Chinese national also linked to the group was extradited to South Korea from Thailand. That defendant was formally indicted in September 2024 and is currently on trial facing cybercrime and theft charges in a South Korean court.

    South Korean law enforcement officials confirmed that following the suspect’s arrival in the country, investigators will first conduct a formal interrogation and process evidence collected from across the investigation. After completing this initial phase, police announced they intend to submit an application for an arrest warrant to formally detain the suspect ahead of upcoming judicial proceedings.

  • Urgent search underway after swimmer ‘in distress’ vanishes 100m offshore from Trigg Beach in Perth

    Urgent search underway after swimmer ‘in distress’ vanishes 100m offshore from Trigg Beach in Perth

    A large-scale coordinated search operation is entering its second day after a swimmer was spotted in trouble 100 meters off the shore of one of Western Australia’s most popular surf beaches, Trigg Beach, before disappearing from view entirely.

    The emergency response was first triggered just after 5:15 p.m. on Tuesday, when witnesses called local services to report a swimmer struggling in rough offshore conditions. According to an official statement released by Western Australia Police, the individual vanished from sight shortly after the distress call was placed.

    Within hours, multiple law enforcement and volunteer groups deployed to the coastal area to launch the search. Initial teams included officers from Mirrabooka Police District, WA Water Police, the Police Air Wing, and members of Volunteer Marine Rescue, who scoured the waters and coastline through Tuesday evening as first light faded.

    When sunset halted progress for the day, search operations resumed at first light on Wednesday, with additional resources joining the effort. Mounted Police patrols, ground search crews, and volunteers from Surf Life Saving WA expanded the sweep of the surrounding coastline and offshore areas, but by Wednesday afternoon, the missing swimmer had still not been located.

    “Our inquiries are continuing to both confirm the swimmer’s identity and determine their current welfare,” a WA Police spokesperson said in an update Wednesday. As of the latest official briefing, no missing person reports have been filed that connect to the incident. Police have issued an appeal to any member of the public who may have been the distressed swimmer and managed to self-rescue to contact authorities immediately to clarify the situation.

    Trigg Beach, a well-known surf spot in the Perth area, carries public safety warnings for less experienced ocean users. Surf Life Saving WA’s official guidance notes that the beach is best suited to swimmers with moderate to high levels of ocean experience, due to consistent large swells and persistent strong rip currents that form along the coastline. The organization’s website specifically emphasizes extra caution during north-westerly wind conditions, noting that waves can be deceptively large and the stretch of water becomes particularly treacherous during these weather patterns.

  • Police confirm protest charges may be dropped after court strikes down NSW anti-protest laws

    Police confirm protest charges may be dropped after court strikes down NSW anti-protest laws

    A landmark court ruling has upended the legal outcome of a high-profile Sydney protest against the Israeli president’s Australian visit, after judges struck down as unconstitutional the police legislation that authorities relied on to break up the gathering and make multiple arrests.

    The February demonstration, which drew hundreds of participants to Sydney Town Hall to oppose the presidential visit, saw New South Wales Police move to block the group’s planned march route, disperse sections of the crowd, and take dozens of protesters into custody. Officers based their actions on the Public Assembly Restriction Declaration (PARD), a sweeping post-terror attack law that granted police broad power to restrict public gatherings for up to 90 days following a major extremist incident.

    Last month, the NSW Court of Appeal delivered a decisive ruling on the law, siding with a legal challenge mounted by the Palestine Action Group and Blak Caucus. Judges found PARD unlawfully overreached executive power by expanding police authority far beyond what the state constitution allows, invalidating the entire legislative framework.

    The law had been rushed into passage by state authorities after the deadly December Bondi Beach terror attack, which left 15 people dead and more than 40 injured when two attackers opened fire during a Hanukkah gathering at the coastal site.

    On Wednesday morning, NSW Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon confirmed to ABC Radio that all charges laid directly under PARD for the Town Hall protest will be dropped pending a formal departmental review. Of the 29 protesters facing charges connected to the demonstration, it remains unclear how many will see their cases dismissed, as many accused face additional unrelated offences including assaulting police, offensive conduct, and throwing projectiles, which are being processed separately through the courts.

    Legal advocates have raised further questions about whether all police directions issued during the protest operation, including charges for failing to comply with officer instructions, were rooted in the now-invalidated framework, casting doubt over a broader range of charges. State Premier Chris Minns had previously argued that many charges could still stand under a separate major events declaration, a regulation typically used for large-scale sporting and entertainment gatherings that was active during the Israeli president’s visit. But the Palestine Action Group has already signaled it intends to launch a new legal challenge to that framework, arguing it was also improperly used to suppress peaceful political protest.

    Greens Member of Parliament and solicitor Sue Higginson welcomed the announcement of charge reviews, saying the commissioner’s confirmation that charges were laid under an unconstitutional law proves the entire police operation was legally flawed. “People were wrongfully arrested and brutally assaulted because the Minns Labor Government chose to impose unconstitutional anti-protest laws on the people of NSW,” Higginson said in a statement, calling for all charges connected to the night of protest to be dropped entirely.

    The Human Rights Law Centre also added its voice to calls for sweeping change after last month’s court ruling, noting that judges found PARD unlawfully restricted protected political communication and exceeded the state government’s constitutional authority. The organization is calling for all remaining charges to be dismissed and for a full overhaul of NSW’s protest-related legislation to bring it into line with constitutional protections for peaceful assembly and free speech.

  • India’s aspiring doctors heartbroken by exam paper leak

    India’s aspiring doctors heartbroken by exam paper leak

    For millions of young Indians, securing a spot at a top government medical college depends entirely on one make-or-break test: the National Eligibility Entrance Test (Undergraduate), better known as NEET-UG. This year, however, the high-stakes exam has become the center of a national controversy after widespread claims that its question paper was leaked in advance to select candidates. On Tuesday, India’s National Testing Agency (NTA) — the federal body tasked with administering the exam — officially canceled the May 3 test, amid an ongoing investigation into the leak allegations. The agency has confirmed that a new date for a retest will be announced publicly next week, leaving nearly 2.28 million registered candidates across the country in limbo.

    For test-takers like Manas Sharma, a Delhi-based aspirant who has dedicated two full years to preparing for the exam, the announcement came as a gut punch. “Since October, I have been studying 12 hours a day — not watching films or even hanging out with friends. That’s what it takes to get into a good medical college,” Sharma explained. Based on unofficial answer keys released by private coaching institutes after the original exam, he projected he would score 615 out of a possible 720 marks, a result that would have qualified him for admission to one of India’s top medical institutions. Like many aspirants, Sharma has reoriented every part of his life around this single test, and the sudden cancellation has upended years of careful planning. Yet he says he is choosing to frame the retest as an opportunity to improve his score, rather than an unmitigible setback. “I can’t lose hope. I look forward to increasing my score if a retest happens,” he added.

    Sharma’s shock and uncertainty are shared by countless other aspirants across the country, who endured months of intense preparation to sit for the exam at more than 5,000 test centers nationwide. In the northeastern state of Assam, 20-year-old aspirant Sumi, who has long dreamed of becoming a doctor, said she initially could not believe the news of the cancellation. The added stress of the announcement has already hampered her ability to refocus on studying, even after she built a new preparation schedule and restarted her work. For 22-year-old Anamika from Bihar, eastern India, this year’s exam was already her sixth attempt at securing a medical seat. She had given up family gatherings, social outings, and personal time to study, even enrolling in a nursing course to satisfy her parents after five previous unsuccessful attempts, while continuing to prepare for NEET in her spare time. After finding this year’s exam manageable and projecting a score of 640 — enough for a spot at a top college — Anamika said she had finally felt her years of sacrifice would pay off. After processing the initial stress of the cancellation, she has resigned herself to restarting preparation once again.

    NEET-UG is the sole gateway to undergraduate medical programs at all public and elite private medical colleges in India, a system that creates extreme competition for just a fraction of the limited seats available each year. Most aspirants attend after-school coaching classes on top of their regular school coursework, adding extra hours of daily study, particularly on weekends, to keep up with the rigorous test content. While thousands of students are reeling from the cancellation, a small number of aspirants say the NTA’s decision was a necessary step to protect the integrity of the exam. “The NTA has taken a good decision because what happened was an injustice to hardworking candidates,” one aspirant told Indian news agency ANI. “Those who cheated should not get admission in medical colleges.” Some lower-scoring candidates also welcomed the opportunity for a retest to improve their results.

    The cancellation has reignited long-simmering criticism of India’s national entrance exam system, which has been plagued by repeated paper leak scandals and administrative irregularities over the past several years. This is not the first controversy to hit NEET: in 2024, the exam faced nationwide protests after thousands of candidates received suspiciously high scores amid claims of widespread fraud and institutional irregularities. Garima Shukla, spokesperson for the Federation of Resident Doctors’ Association, called repeated incidents of this nature a clear administrative failure that undermines the foundation of India’s medical education system. “The repeated occurrence of such incidents is not only an administrative failure but also a direct blow to the morale of millions of hardworking students,” Shukla told ANI. “If the credibility of the examination system is questioned, it will impact not only students but the reputation of the entire healthcare system.”

    Indian media reports have cited early investigative findings suggesting the alleged leak originated in the northern state of Rajasthan, days before the May 3 exam was held. India’s federal investigative body, the Central Bureau of Investigation, has launched a formal probe into the incident. But even as investigators work to hold those responsible accountable, many students remain skeptical that a retest will fix the systemic issues that allowed the leak to happen. “But what is the guarantee that another paper leak won’t happen?” asked Tejaswini Vijay, a candidate who spent two years preparing for the original exam. Many students, including Vijay, have criticized the NTA’s decision to cancel the exam nationwide rather than only in regions where irregularities were confirmed, arguing that the blanket cancellation inflicts unnecessary stress on aspirants who did nothing wrong. “That would have been better,” Vijay said. “Not everyone can deal with such level of stress.”

  • Ghana to evacuate 300 from South Africa over anti-immigrant protests

    Ghana to evacuate 300 from South Africa over anti-immigrant protests

    A spreading wave of anti-foreign-national protests across major South African cities has triggered a regional diplomatic crisis, with Ghana launching an emergency evacuation plan for hundreds of its citizens trapped in the unrest.

    Ghana’s Foreign Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa announced via a post on X Tuesday that the country’s president has formally signed off on the immediate evacuation of 300 at-risk Ghanaians. All the affected, described as “distressed” by the foreign ministry, have already registered with Ghana’s Pretoria embassy to arrange for safe passage back to their home country. The evacuation follows a formal travel advisory Ghana issued last week after the latest round of xenophobic violence targeting foreign residents.

    Thousands of South African demonstrators have joined the recent protests, rallying against unregulated illegal immigration. Protesters argue that undocumented migrants have strained local access to employment, affordable housing, and contributed to rising community crime rates, amplifying long-simmering public frustration and pushing demands for mass deportations of people without legal residency.

    In response to escalating tensions, the Ghanaian embassy in Pretoria issued an updated safety warning Tuesday, urging all Ghanaian citizens in South Africa to exercise extreme caution, avoid all large public gatherings, and close all businesses in the coastal city of Durban ahead of a planned anti-immigration protest scheduled for Wednesday.

    South African officials have pushed back against widespread claims of targeted attacks, denying that any xenophobic violence has occurred in recent weeks and asserting that viral videos circulated online showing purported attacks are fabricated. In a public address Monday, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa acknowledged that recent “protests and criminal acts directed at foreign nationals” do not align with the country’s official government policy, framing the unrest as isolated criminal activity rather than coordinated, systemic hostility. Ramaphosa also reaffirmed the government’s commitment to migration regulation, border security, and consistent enforcement of national immigration laws. The South African government added that it has “nothing to hide” and condemned the spread of disinformation via fake visual content.

    The diplomatic fallout has already spread across the continent. Both Ghana and Nigeria have summoned South African diplomatic envoys in their capitals to formally protest the mistreatment and harassment of their citizens living in South Africa. Ghana has also taken the extra step of formally requesting the African Union place the issue on its agenda for discussion, arguing that the ongoing unrest poses an unacceptable “serious risk to the safety and wellbeing” of African residents in South Africa.

    Ghana is not alone in issuing warnings: Kenya, Malawi, Lesotho, and Zimbabwe have all followed suit, urging their citizens residing in South Africa to take extra safety precautions amid the unrest.

    Official demographic data puts the total foreign-born population in South Africa at more than 3 million, accounting for roughly 5% of the country’s total population. However, analysts estimate that a far larger number of undocumented migrants currently reside within South Africa’s borders, a reality that has kept anti-immigration sentiment a persistent flashpoint in national politics. Xenophobic hostility has a long history in the country, with sporadic deadly attacks on foreign nationals recorded over the past several decades.