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  • Kuwait seeking expanded defence agreement with Pakistan: Report

    Kuwait seeking expanded defence agreement with Pakistan: Report

    Shifting security dynamics in the Persian Gulf, fueled by escalating confrontation between the US-Israeli bloc and Iran, have pushed Kuwait to open early-stage negotiations for a broadened defense agreement with Pakistan, a deal that would be paired with expanded energy cooperation and Pakistani investment access, senior diplomatic sources cited by Reuters confirm.

    According to a senior Pakistani official who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity, Kuwait’s proposal calls for Islamabad to deploy a substantial security contingent to the Gulf state: thousands of ground troops, combat fighter jet squadrons, armed drone units, integrated air defense systems, and supporting defense infrastructure. While discussions have only just begun, the outreach underscores a profound reordering of Gulf security alliances amid rising regional fallout from the ongoing US-Israeli war on Iran.

    Kuwait has emerged as one of the highest-impact targets of retaliatory Iranian strikes launched in response to the war. Just last week, Kuwaiti government officials confirmed that a critical national power generation and water desalination facility suffered severe damage during one such Iranian attack, threatening core public services for the country’s 5 million residents.

    What makes Kuwait’s overture to Pakistan particularly notable is the Gulf state’s longstanding status as a major host for U.S. military forces. Currently, approximately 14,000 U.S. troops are based in Kuwait — a larger deployment than any other Middle Eastern nation — anchored by two large strategic American installations: Camp Arifjan, a major army logistics and command hub, and Ali al-Salem Air Base.

    Pakistan occupies a unique diplomatic position in the region that makes it an attractive security partner for Kuwait. It maintains formal security cooperation with the United States, with particularly deep ties built during the Trump administration, while also preserving cordial, open diplomatic relations with Iran. This balanced stance has allowed Islamabad to carve out a niche as a trusted mediator between competing regional powers. Most recently, Pakistan and Qatar co-brokered a ceasefire between Washington and Tehran, though that truce has come under severe strain as fighting has escalated in recent weeks.

    The talks with Kuwait also highlight a growing broader trend: Pakistan is emerging as an alternative or complementary security provider for Gulf states seeking to supplement their security arrangements with the United States. In September 2025, Saudi Arabia — the Arab world’s largest economy — signed a formal mutual defense pact with Pakistan, the only nuclear-armed state in the Muslim world. During the most intense wave of Iranian strikes on Gulf targets earlier this year, many Saudi public commentators framed the new defense pact as placing Riyadh under Pakistan’s nuclear deterrent umbrella. A U.S. official speaking to Middle East Eye at the time noted that Pakistani leadership was uncomfortable with that framing and held diplomatic discussions with Saudi officials to clarify the agreement’s scope.

    Beyond the defense pact, Pakistan has already leveraged its warm relations with Iran to lobby against attacks on Saudi Arabia, including strikes launched by the Iran-aligned Houthi movement in Yemen. As Reuters previously reported in May, Pakistan already deployed 8,000 troops, one full fighter jet squadron, and a Chinese-built air defense system to Saudi Arabia to bolster the kingdom’s security.

    Kuwait and Pakistan first signed a baseline security cooperation agreement in 2023, focused on mutual military training and joint exercises. Expanding that deal to include a formal mutual defense clause, modeled after the agreement Islamabad reached with Riyadh, would carry significant new risks for Pakistan. Unlike Saudi Arabia, which holds substantial regional diplomatic leverage over Iran thanks to its economic and political influence, Kuwait is a far smaller state with far less capacity to de-escalate tensions on its own.

    Geographically, Kuwait’s position in the northern Persian Gulf leaves it uniquely exposed to missile and drone attacks from both Iran and Iran-aligned militias based in neighboring Iraq, a vulnerability that has been amplified dramatically since the outbreak of the current regional war. The U.S. military established its permanent footprint in Kuwait only in the 1990s, following Saddam Hussein’s Iraqi invasion of the country that pushed Kuwait to align closely with Washington. Historically, during the Ottoman Empire, Kuwait was part of a provincial administrative district that also included Iraq’s Basra region.

    This reporting was compiled and distributed by Middle East Eye, an outlet that provides independent, in-depth coverage of the Middle East and North Africa region.

  • Israeli general praises illegal outposts driving Palestinian ethnic cleansing

    Israeli general praises illegal outposts driving Palestinian ethnic cleansing

    A senior Israeli military commander has publicly framed illegal settler outposts in the occupied West Bank as critical security assets, pulling back the curtain on explicit state support for a network that human rights and research groups say is a core tool for driving Palestinians off their ancestral land.

    Major-General Avi Bluth, commander of Israel’s Central Command which oversees the West Bank and a settler himself, made the remarks Wednesday during a conference hosted by the Israeli Farm Union. Bluth argued that so-called agricultural outposts are fully aligned with Israeli military security strategy, saying: “It integrates with it, provided that this is also reflected in operational conduct, as well as ethical conduct, and in accordance with the law.” The general went further to voice unreserved personal support for the settlers maintaining these outposts, stating: “All of this greatly strengthens security… I love you, I appreciate you and appreciate what you do.”

    Every Israeli settlement and outpost built in the occupied Palestinian territories is illegal under binding international law, and even violates Israel’s own domestic legal framework. This explicit endorsement by a top military official directly undermines the carefully crafted public narrative Israeli officials have promoted to global audiences, which frames violent extremist settlers as a small, unruly fringe unconnected to official state policy. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly echoed this framing, describing settler attacks on Palestinians as the actions of a “small minority” that do not represent the broader settler movement or official Israeli policy. Bluth’s comments mark a rare, unguarded admission that these outposts are integrated into official Israeli military strategy.

    Ori Goldberg, an independent Israeli political analyst and commentator, told Middle East Eye that Bluth’s remarks confirm outposts function as forward operating posts for the Israeli military rather than independent civilian settlements. “This indicates a complete submersion of settlements and these farms, as he calls them, but what they are violent, radical posts, they’re not even outposts, they are posts, and as he says, they serve the IDF [Israeli Defense Forces] agendas in that they control the tactical territory that the IDF can’t,” Goldberg explained. He added that these outposts are the primary actors behind targeted violence against Palestinians and play a central role in the ongoing ethnic cleansing of Palestinian communities from the West Bank.

    The “farming outposts” model allows a small number of settlers to seize huge swathes of Palestinian land by grazing livestock across private and communal Palestinian property, blocking local Palestinian shepherds from accessing traditional pastures and carrying out sustained campaigns of intimidation and violence against nearby Palestinian villages. A July 7 joint report from Israeli peace and research organizations Peace Now and Kerem Navot found that 120 new farming outposts established since October 2023 have been linked to violence and harassment that forced 118 Palestinian communities to leave their land.

    Prime Minister Netanyahu’s far-right government has actively supported the expansion of these outposts, providing settlers with state-funded equipment, agricultural subsidies for livestock, and pushing through legislation to retroactively legalize the already built outposts. Human rights organization Amnesty International has repeatedly characterized these mass expulsions of Palestinian communities as a state-led campaign of ethnic cleansing, rejecting Israeli claims that violence is carried out only by isolated extremists or rogue ministers. Amnesty’s research confirms that settler outposts and farming operations operate as a deliberate strategic tool to displace Palestinian herding communities and expand Israeli state control over occupied Palestinian territory.

  • Israel advances crocodile plan to stop Palestinian prisoners escaping

    Israel advances crocodile plan to stop Palestinian prisoners escaping

    In a decision that has sparked fierce backlash from environmental, legal, and human rights advocates, Israel’s Environment Ministry has revoked the protected status of Nile crocodiles, clearing a legal path for a far-right minister’s extremist proposal to build a Palestinian detention facility ringed by the large predatory reptiles. Israeli public media first reported on the policy shift Thursday.

    Environment Minister Idit Silman signed the official decree Wednesday that reclassifies Nile crocodiles into a newly created legal designation: “specially managed wild animal.” This new category explicitly authorizes Israeli state bodies to hold the species for security uses, according to Israeli news outlet Ynet. The decree formalizes the change, granting Israeli security forces permission to keep crocodiles under loosely defined “specific conditions.”

    Multiple sources confirm the approval moved forward despite explicit opposition from the Environment Ministry’s own top legal advisor, the country’s leading wildlife conservation authority, and a coalition of Israeli environmental organizations. The policy shift comes after months of relentless lobbying from National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, the far-right leader who first unveiled the outlandish plan for a crocodile-encircled prison in December 2023.

    Ben Gvir, who directly oversees the Israel Prison Service (IPS), has openly stated he drew inspiration from Florida’s widely condemned “Alligator Alcatraz” immigration detention center, a facility that drew global outrage for its use of alligators as a natural deterrent to escape attempts.

    Prior to Silman’s decree, the Israel Nature and Parks Authority (INPA), Israel’s official wildlife management body, had long held that Nile crocodiles — a protected species in the country since 2013 — could only be held in captivity for educational and scientific research purposes. Neta Drori, the Environment Ministry’s in-house legal advisor, also formally opposed the reclassification, arguing the proposal lacked any solid legal or professional justification.

    The IPS attempted to defend the plan by claiming its staff could manage crocodiles based on their existing experience working with security attack dogs, an argument Drori rejected outright in her formal assessment. “The IPS does not appear to have expertise in raising dangerous wild animals such as crocodiles,” Drori wrote, adding that the proposal failed to meet basic legal requirements for the reclassification.

    Despite the unified opposition from legal and wildlife experts, Silman moved to approve the policy change this week. Ben Gvir quickly celebrated the decision on his official Facebook page Thursday, sharing an AI-generated image of himself holding a crocodile on a leash alongside a threatening message: “Damn terrorist, thinking of trying to escape? Think again.”

    The controversial plan comes amid a documented collapse of conditions for Palestinian detainees held in Israeli prisons since the start of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza in October 2023. Under Ben Gvir’s leadership, reports of torture, systematic starvation, and degrading treatment of detainees have skyrocketed. Leading international human rights organizations have accused Israeli authorities of widespread, systematic abuses against detainees, going so far as to label several Israeli detention facilities “torture camps.”

    Conservation groups and the INPA have doubled down on their opposition in the wake of Silman’s announcement, arguing the reclassification is unlawful and creates unnecessary risks for both the crocodiles and the general public. The INPA emphasized there is “no sufficient professional basis” to allow the Israel Prison Service to hold crocodiles at security facilities. The agency, which holds legal responsibility for protecting Israel’s native and protected wildlife, warned that housing crocodiles in prison facilities would create “significant risks” and expressed grave doubt that the IPS could meet the complex care requirements the species needs to survive in captivity.

    In a joint statement released after the decision, a coalition of Israeli environmental organizations said they “strongly object to the use of animals as a means of guarding and deterrence.” The groups noted that “crocodiles are sentient beings, with complex needs for space, water, temperature and natural behavior,” arguing that Israeli prison authorities should rely on proven, conventional security measures rather than experimental and unethical use of wild animals.

    The organizations also questioned the practical effectiveness of the proposal, pointing out that Nile crocodiles slow their metabolic rate during winter months, become extremely sluggish, and stop eating entirely — a biological trait that would render them useless as a deterrent to escape. “Security should be achieved through real means, not through animals,” the statement concluded.

    Nile crocodiles have held protected status across Israel since 2013. Prior to that designation, commercial crocodile farms operated primarily as tourist attractions, but many operations shifted to breeding the animals for their luxury skins after tourist numbers declined. The issue of crocodile management in Israel already made headlines last year, when the Israeli military killed more than 250 Nile crocodiles at a farm located in an Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank. That massacre drew widespread condemnation from global and local animal welfare groups, which accused the military of unlawfully killing a protected species.

    This report was originally sourced from independent coverage of the Middle East by Middle East Eye, a publication that specializes in independent, on-the-ground reporting of the region.

  • Palestine Action defendant ‘missed the last year’ of his mother’s life while behind bars

    Palestine Action defendant ‘missed the last year’ of his mother’s life while behind bars

    As a high-profile trial over a Palestine Action raid on an Israeli-owned arms factory unfolds, one defendant has shared devastating personal details about losing his terminally ill mother while he was held in pre-trial detention, opening a new chapter of debate over the case and its ties to the Gaza conflict.

    Thirty-five-year-old William Plastow, the grandson of Julius Nyerere — Tanzania’s revered first president — is one of eight people facing criminal charges linked to the August 2024 raid on an Elbit Systems facility in Filton, near Bristol. While none of the eight are accused of entering the factory premises during the action, prosecutors allege they coordinated the break-in by carrying out reconnaissance and purchasing necessary equipment. Last week, presiding judge Patrick Field acquitted Plastow of violent disorder, ruling the prosecution had failed to present sufficient evidence to support the charge; he remains formally charged with criminal damage.

    Giving evidence to the court this week, Plastow laid out a personal and political context for his actions. Raised as an only child by his mother Jane Plastow in Leeds, he recalled childhood trips to Eritrea and Ethiopia, where his mother ran community theatre outreach programs for war veterans and children living in poverty. These experiences, he said, shaped his lifelong commitment to social justice. That commitment deepened dramatically after the October 7 2023 attacks and the subsequent Israeli military campaign in Gaza. “My awareness of Israel’s actions in Gaza increased vastly,” he told the jury. “I saw those images every day of kids being blown into pieces, massacres, buildings being knocked down with everyone inside them. How is anyone supposed to feel about seeing dismembered children and not being able to do anything about it?”

    Plastow explained that he first turned to conventional forms of activism: joining mass protest marches, writing to his Member of Parliament, signing public petitions. But he soon came to see these actions as futile. “It felt very obvious that all of that was pretty futile,” he said. It was around this time that he first encountered Palestine Action, a direct-action group targeting companies linked to Israeli arms supplies. The group first caught his attention after a successful rooftop protest that forced a property owner to cut ties with Elbit, and he noted the group had already managed to shut down multiple facilities supplying what he described as “genocidal machinery to slaughter children in Gaza”. He compared the discovery of Elbit’s UK operations to learning that Zyklon B gas for Auschwitz was being manufactured 10 minutes from his home, with no public pushback.

    After attending a Palestine Action training session, where he heard firsthand accounts of “unimaginable suffering” from a Gaza native, Plastow said he agreed to participate in a low-profile lock-on protest at an Elbit drone factory in Leicester in April 2024. He was convicted of criminal damage for that action. He emphasized that the group operates on a strict “need to know” basis, with very little information shared with participants ahead of actions, and described the loosely affiliated network as “chaotic” rather than the tightly organized conspiracy prosecutors have described. “Nothing about Palestine Action could be described as highly organised,” he said. “It’s a bunch of loosely connected people scrabbling around.”

    Following the Leicester action, Plastow said he had no interest in participating in further on-the-ground direct actions due to work commitments, but agreed to purchase equipment for the group when asked in early August 2024. Co-defendant Sean Middlebrough contacted him via the encrypted messaging app Signal to request he buy rucksacks, protective gear, and crowbars, but never disclosed what the equipment would be used for. “It was a very busy time for me, a play I’d been trying to put together was falling apart,” Plastow told the court. “I was just paying attention to the things I’d been asked to buy and get them ready in as time-efficient a way as possible.” He told the jury he never heard of the Filton site before the day of the raid, and had no idea the equipment was destined for the action.

    Days later, when a Palestine Action activist named Charlotte Head — part of the on-the-ground team that entered the Filton factory — arrived at his Manchester home in a distinctive prison van to collect the equipment, Plastow said he was caught completely off guard. Head appeared frazzled, he said, after being told she could not go to the pre-planned staging location she expected. She had nowhere to go, so Plastow allowed her to stay the night, and when Middlebrough and co-defendant Ian Sanders arrived the next day, the three left together in the van. Prosecutor Harry Warner suggested that by hosting Head, Plastow was knowingly assisting the group’s plan to damage Elbit property. Plastow pushed back on this: “I was trying to assist a young woman who was stressed out to have a place to stay for the night and not have to sleep in a van.”

    Plastow only learned of the Filton raid on the morning of August 6, when he saw a public post from Palestine Action on X (formerly Twitter) announcing the action. The post stated that activists had “directly intervened in Elbit’s genocidal supply chain” by dismantling weapons and machinery inside the factory. After seeing a subsequent BBC News report confirming the raid and the arrest of multiple activists, Plastow said he strongly suspected the equipment he had purchased had been used for the action — and that he felt “duped”. He told the jury he would never have agreed to participate had he known the scope of the operation.

    Five days after the raid, on August 9, Plastow was arrested by roughly 20 counter-terrorism police officers. He told the court he was held for six days in a windowless white cell where the lights stayed on 24 hours a day, conditions he compared to the treatment of fictional serial killer Hannibal Lecter. What made this timing even more devastating, he said, was that this period of detention was the final days he could have spent with his mother, who was in the end stages of terminal cancer. He was denied bail for 18 months following his arrest, only granted release on compassionate grounds to spend the final four days of his mother’s life at her bedside. “I missed the last year of her life,” he told the court.

    Forensic analysis of Plastow’s phone and laptop, conducted by investigators, has backed up his account of no prior knowledge of the Filton operation. His defense lawyer Alex Rose told the jury that no evidence was found of Plastow accessing the encrypted planning document for the Filton raid, no history of searching for the Filton site or related planning materials, and no record of him joining group Signal calls related to the action. The only reference to the raid found on his devices before August 6 was the public Palestine Action post he viewed on the morning of the action.

    When pressed by prosecutors that he must have known the equipment he bought would be used to damage Elbit property, Plastow acknowledged he knew the items would serve Palestine Action’s core goal. “I knew they were going to be used towards the aims of Palestine Action, which were ultimately to save lives,” he said.

    The trial against the eight defendants is ongoing.

  • Moroccan whistleblower reveals how Rabat used Israel’s Pegasus spyware for surveillance

    Moroccan whistleblower reveals how Rabat used Israel’s Pegasus spyware for surveillance

    A decades-long insider from Morocco’s domestic intelligence apparatus has blown the whistle on the North African kingdom’s years-long use of sophisticated surveillance tools, including Israel’s infamous Pegasus spyware, to target domestic critics, journalists, and even high-ranking foreign officials from allied nations. The explosive new disclosures from the anonymous whistleblower, codenamed Safir, form the core of a major new collaborative investigation published Thursday by a global consortium of press freedom and human rights groups, including Forbidden Stories, Amnesty International, and 13 additional independent media organizations.

    Safir, who spent nearly 10 years as an officer with Morocco’s Direction Generale de la Surveillance du Territoire (DGST), the country’s primary domestic intelligence agency, offers a firsthand, on-the-ground account of Morocco’s entire relationship with Pegasus, from the tool’s initial introduction to senior Moroccan officials to its repeated deployment against surveillance targets. His firsthand testimony is backed by a mountain of corroborating evidence compiled by the investigative consortium: leaked internal correspondence, targeting logs linked to Pegasus and other surveillance tools, statements from targeting victims, internal agency training documents, and leaked datasets analyzed forensically by Amnesty International’s specialized Security Lab.

    According to the investigation’s reconstruction of events, Pegasus made its debut with Moroccan intelligence in 2017, during a closed-door presentation held at a luxury private villa in Rabat, the country’s capital. The villa, nicknamed the “FSSYS villa” for its ties to FSSYS Maroc, the Moroccan subsidiary of Emirati surveillance intermediary al-Fahad, hosted senior NSO Group representatives, the Israeli cyber firm that developed the Pegasus tool, who walked a group of high-ranking Moroccan intelligence leaders and technical specialists through the spyware’s full capabilities.

    In his testimony, Safir made a startling claim about the origins of Morocco’s access to the extremely expensive tool: he says Pegasus was gifted to Moroccan intelligence by the United Arab Emirates, drawing a comparison to popular streaming subscriptions to explain the arrangement. “Millions for the Emiratis, that’s nothing,” Safir told investigators. “The Emirates bought it and redistributed it to friendly services. You could say it’s like Netflix: a friend pays for the subscription, and the others use their account.”

    The investigation notes that even with this donated access, the high cost of operating Pegasus led the DGST to reserve the tool only for high-priority targets, deploying it only after exhausting far cheaper, traditional surveillance methods. These older tactics included compromising devices at public internet cafes and convincing local shop owners to sell pre-infected mobile phones to political dissidents, Safir explained. “We never start with Pegasus,” he said. “It’s the monster’s weapon.”

    Data from the investigation confirms that just months after the 2017 Rabat presentation, the DGST began using Pegasus against Moroccan journalists and domestic human rights defenders. While domestic dissidents were the first targets, they were far from the only ones. Prominent Western Sahara human rights activist Aminatou Haidar and Spanish journalist Ignacio Combrero were both named among more than 200 Spanish mobile numbers selected for targeting by what investigators confirmed was a DGST-linked Pegasus user.

    The targeting extended even to senior serving Spanish government officials, including Spain’s then-Defense Minister Margarita Robles and then-Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska, the investigation confirms. In a particularly striking revelation, the investigation found that Moroccan intelligence also deployed Pegasus against Spanish Civil Guard officers who traveled to Morocco to share counterterrorism training and expertise with their Moroccan counterparts. Spanish National Police typically take extra security precautions during trips to Morocco, but the Civil Guard officers skipped these measures, seeing Morocco as a trusted counterterrorism ally. One senior Civil Guard officer told the consortium, “We didn’t do it because we didn’t suspect we would be spied on.”

    Notably, the investigation found no evidence of Pegasus deployment by Moroccan intelligence after late 2021. This gap lines up with major shifts in global regulation of the NSO Group: that same year, the United States added the Israeli cyber firm to its commerce blacklist, a move that reportedly prompted Israel’s then-defense minister to ban exports of Israeli cyber-surveillance technology to multiple countries, including Morocco and the UAE.

    This new investigation marks the most detailed on-the-record account of Moroccan Pegasus abuse to date, five years after initial 2021 reporting first accused Rabat of using the spyware against domestic critics and allied foreign officials — claims Moroccan authorities flatly denied at the time.

  • How Bristol’s tallest tower will be tied to Israel’s atrocities

    How Bristol’s tallest tower will be tied to Israel’s atrocities

    Against the backdrop of Bristol’s historic city centre skyline, two new high-rise towers are climbing steadily skyward. The St James House development, now under construction in southwest England’s largest urban hub, pairs a 28-story purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA) block with an 18-story co-living space targeted at young working professionals. When complete, the student tower will become the tallest structure in a city whose skyline has long been defined by modest, low-rise architecture – and it will also tie Bristol’s legacy of mercantile capitalism and radical grassroots activism directly to Israeli financial networks, pro-Israel lobbying in the UK, and the ongoing genocide in Gaza.

    The £1 billion+ development portfolio that includes St James House is backed by two major investors: global real estate investment firm Cain International and Menora Mivtachim, one of Israel’s largest pension and insurance groups. This project is far from an isolated investment: it is part of a growing flood of global capital pouring into UK student housing, a sector that has boomed alongside decades of expansion in Britain’s higher education system. At the turn of the 21st century, roughly 2 million students were enrolled in UK universities; today that number sits close to 3 million, with international students accounting for nearly a quarter of all enrolments. Severe cuts to public university funding starting in 2010 and a cap on domestic undergraduate tuition fees have left British institutions increasingly dependent on high-fee paying overseas students, the majority of whom in Bristol come from China and India. This group overwhelmingly prefers premium purpose-built accommodation over alternative housing options, creating a lucrative market for global investors.

    For financial backers like Cain and Menora Mivtachim, the UK student housing sector offers uniquely stable, high returns: lower regulatory space standards, consistently high occupancy rates, annual rent adjustments, and the ability to house large student populations at high densities all reduce investment risk. Bristol offers particularly favorable conditions: the city’s student population has grown by 50% over the past decade, while purpose-built housing supply has failed to keep pace, creating one of the largest accommodation shortfalls in the UK. This gap has simultaneously driven up rental costs across the city’s broader housing market, pushing home ownership and even private rental out of reach for growing numbers of Bristol residents. Just steps from the St James House construction site, unhoused people camp in a central roundabout plaza; encampments also dot city parks and green spaces, and rising numbers of people living in vehicles have forced the local council to develop dedicated overnight parking sites.

    Neither Cain International nor Menora Mivtachim responded to detailed requests for comment from Middle East Eye for this reporting. For both firms, investment in UK student housing marks a shift from their core business lines. Founded in 2014, Cain focuses primarily on luxury real estate investments in major global cities alongside private equity holdings in lifestyle, hospitality, and entertainment brands. The firm manages roughly $14 billion in global assets, with flagship projects including luxury Dubai hotels and the $billion-plus One Beverly Hills development anchored by the Beverly Hilton hotel in Los Angeles. Tel Aviv-based Menora Mivtachim, by contrast, is one of Israel’s oldest and largest financial services groups, managing retirement savings, insurance reserves, and investments for 2 million Israeli customers.

    According to Israeli research centre Who Profits, Menora Mivtachim is a major investor in Israeli military infrastructure projects in the Negev Desert via public-private partnership agreements. These investments include the sprawling “City of Training Bases,” built to house 10,000 permanent Israeli military personnel, and Kiryat HaModi’in, a massive intelligence and cyber campus for the Israeli military’s elite intelligence units. The firm also holds a substantial stake in Shikun and Binui, a construction firm deeply involved in building occupation and settlement infrastructure in the occupied West Bank, and is a major shareholder in G1 Secure Solutions, one of Israel’s largest private security and electronic surveillance companies.

    Menora Mivtachim first entered Cain’s UK student housing platform in September 2023, injecting £500 million ($670 million) into a joint portfolio with developers Fusion Group and Olympian Homes. Cain expanded the portfolio through further acquisitions – including the St James House site in Bristol – throughout 2024, and Menora Mivtachim added additional capital later that year, pushing the portfolio’s total gross development value past $1 billion. Today, the portfolio includes student developments across Liverpool, Nottingham, Manchester, Leeds and York, with Cirrus Point, a 45-story, 660-bed tower nearing completion in Leeds, ranking as both the city’s tallest building and the tallest purpose-built student accommodation tower in the world.

    Cain’s founder and CEO Jonathan Goldstein is a leading figure in UK pro-Israel lobbying, having previously served as chair of the pro-Israel Jewish Leadership Council (JLC). Goldstein played a central role in the high-profile 2010s campaign against former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, which centered on accusations that Corbyn failed to address antisemitism within the party. In 2021, Goldstein stated that if Corbyn had become prime minister and the pro-Israel lobby had not mounted its campaign, “we’d never have forgiven ourselves.”

    Goldstein began his career as a corporate solicitor and counted prominent pro-Israeli property tycoon Gerald Ronson – a key figure in UK pro-Israel institutions including the JLC, Community Security Trust (CST), and Bicom – as his “unparalleled mentor.” During the Corbyn era, Goldstein labeled the Labour leader “un-British” and argued he had made British Jews feel unwelcome in the UK. Today, he is a close ally and backer of current Labour leader Keir Starmer, hosting Starmer in the directors’ box at Chelsea Football Club, in which Goldstein holds a co-ownership stake, in 2022.

    Goldstein’s ties to the current Labour leadership stretch back years. Alongside fellow pro-Israel businessman Trevor Chinn – a primary funder of Labour Together, the internal faction that worked to oust Corbyn and install Starmer – Goldstein donated to David Lammy’s 2015 campaign for London Labour mayoral candidate. Lammy’s campaign director was David Mencer, a former employee of Ronson and former director of Labour Friends of Israel who has since become a high-profile, belligerent spokesperson for the Israeli government during its military campaign in Gaza. As UK Foreign Secretary, Lammy has repeatedly rejected claims that Israel is carrying out genocide in Gaza.

    As JLC chair, Goldstein has held multiple meetings with senior Israeli political figures including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former minister and diplomat Gilad Erdan. Following the October 7, 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel, Goldstein wrote in the *Times of Israel* that “We must give our unstinting and total support to whatever action Israel determines in its absolute discretion as an appropriate response to this atrocity.” In a November 2023 interview with Piers Morgan, he condemned the large pro-Palestine protests that swept British cities, defended Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, and repeated the unsubstantiated claim that Hamas’ senior leadership command center was located beneath a Gaza hospital. Declassified diary entries from former Israeli ambassador to the UK Tzipi Hotovely confirm that Goldstein met with Hotovely for strategic discussions while the Gaza genocide was already underway.

    Bristol’s modern identity is shaped by two conflicting historical legacies: once England’s second city, its position as a major Atlantic port allowed 18th-century merchants to amass enormous wealth from the transatlantic slave trade, tobacco, and sugar, while it also emerged as a historic hub for radical political dissent that challenged British establishment power. These competing currents are on stark display in the city’s current response to Gaza: Bristol is one of the UK’s most active centers for Palestine solidarity, hosting regular marches, vigils, fundraisers, and boycott campaigns, and is home to the UK’s only Palestine Museum and Cultural Centre, located in the heart of its Old City. Direct action campaigns targeting Israeli weapons manufacturer Elbit Systems, which operates a facility in the city’s northern defence industrial cluster, have drawn nationwide attention. In the 2024 general election, Bristol Central – a constituency with a large university population – elected Green Party MP Carla Denyer, who defeated incumbent Labour MP Thangam Debbonaire on a platform driven by widespread anger at Labour’s complicity in Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.

    It is a deep historical irony, rooted in Bristol’s longstanding internal tensions, that the city’s new tallest building will be anchored to the global financial and political networks that sustain Israel’s campaign in Gaza and enable its impunity in Western political circles. These networks extend far beyond the UK, connecting Cain and Menora Mivtachim to a broader web of Israeli, Gulf, and American interests that span politics, diplomacy, and real estate speculation. Menora Mivtachim provided a $30 million investment to Jared Kushner’s Kushner Companies in 2017, just before Kushner began his role as then-President Donald Trump’s Middle East envoy. Though Jared stepped down as CEO to take the role, he retained significant ownership stakes in the family firm; his father Charles Kushner, a convicted felon pardoned by Trump who now serves as US Ambassador to France, has longstanding close personal ties to Netanyahu, who frequently stayed at the Kushner family home during visits to the US when he was a rising political figure.

    Earlier this year, Cain launched a joint venture with Kushner Companies to finance luxury residential and mixed-use developments in South Florida, tying the firm directly to a family that played a central role in negotiating the 2020 Abraham Accords between Israel, the United Arab Emirates, and other Arab states. After leaving the White House, Kushner founded private equity firm Affinity Partners, which received a $2 billion commitment from Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) in 2022 to build an “investment corridor” between Gulf capital and Israeli businesses. Cain already operates within this same Gulf sovereign capital ecosystem: in 2022, the firm joined PIF in a $900 million joint investment in Aman Group, the global luxury hotel and resort brand. In 2025, Cain opened an office in Abu Dhabi and formed a partnership with Mubadala Capital, the private equity and asset management arm of the Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund, to deploy billions of dollars in luxury real estate investments. Mubadala has emerged as a leading global investor and a key vehicle for Emirati investment in Israel’s technology sector in the wake of the Abraham Accords.

    As the original reporting notes, the overlapping logics of speculative real estate investment and Israeli occupation stretch from New York’s skyscraper corridor to Gulf desert metropolises, through the post-Abraham Accords investment framework and the controversial “Gaza Riviera” development plan, and now to British university cities like Bristol. St James House is scheduled to open in time for the 2028/29 academic year, and will stand as a permanent monument to the flows of financial and political capital that sustain Israel’s expansionist policies and enable ongoing impunity for its actions in Gaza. Where 18th-century Bristol’s merchant elite could separate their city’s streets from the suffering of enslaved people transported across the Atlantic, the glass-and-steel exterior of Bristol’s new tallest tower cannot obscure the reality of ethnic cleansing and genocide that it underwrites.

  • Trump spins China meddling intel to justify election takeover bid

    Trump spins China meddling intel to justify election takeover bid

    Four months ahead of the high-stakes November U.S. midterm elections, former President Donald Trump took to primetime television on July 16 to deliver an address that reignited fierce debate over election integrity, repeating long-debunked falsehoods about his 2020 electoral loss and leveling unsubstantiated claims of a large-scale Chinese plot to interfere in American voting. The speech, which aligned with the declassification of purported intelligence documents detailing what Trump called China’s “sinister” election interference scheme, also repeated his call for federal control of U.S. elections — a power currently held by individual U.S. states — and attacked the FBI and intelligence community for allegedly suppressing information about Beijing’s activities.

    In his address, Trump claimed the U.S. voting system has been left open to manipulation and theft by his political opponents, repeating a baseless accusation that China illicitly obtained 220 million American voter files to undermine his candidacy in 2020. He also attacked major broadcast networks for declining to air his speech live and in full, claiming outlets were complicit in a cover-up and calling for the broadcast licenses of NBC and ABC to be revoked. That threat drew immediate condemnation from across the political spectrum, with independent Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders calling the move “insane” and a clear attack on constitutional press freedoms.

    Critics and independent policy experts have widely rejected Trump’s narrative, arguing he selectively cherry-picked incomplete intelligence findings to advance a self-serving political agenda designed to build support for the SAVE America Act, a piece of legislation widely characterized as a voter suppression measure that Trump has aggressively pushed through Congress. House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence senior member Representative Raja Krishnamoorthi, a Democrat from Illinois, issued a statement noting that even the declassified documents released by Trump do not support his false claims that the 2020 election was stolen. “Even his own document release does not support his claim that the 2020 election was stolen. It confirms what we’ve long known: Foreign adversaries targeted our democracy, but there is no evidence they changed a single vote or altered the casting or counting of ballots,” Krishnamoorthi said. He added that Trump’s push to place unqualified political loyalists in top intelligence roles weakens the very agencies tasked with protecting U.S. elections from foreign interference, and that the president’s real goal is to lay the groundwork for a unprecedented federal takeover of state-run election systems to suppress turnout and advance his political power, while ignoring pressing economic and social challenges facing American households.

    Trump’s address claimed that unprocessed “raw intelligence” proves China manufactured illegal ballots for his 2020 opponent, former President Joe Biden, and that career bureaucrats deliberately buried the evidence. But a breakdown from The Washington Post notes that raw intelligence is frequently incomplete, inaccurate, or contradictory, requiring rigorous vetting by expert analysts before conclusions can be drawn. A 2021 declassified intelligence report confirmed the longstanding consensus that no foreign power, including China, altered any votes or tampered with vote counting in the 2020 election, and the hundreds of pages of documents released by the White House alongside Trump’s speech do not back up his claims of a cover-up by intelligence officials.

    Advocacy group leaders and pro-democracy organizations have echoed these criticisms, framing the speech as a deliberate distraction from the Trump administration’s widely unpopular policy failures and plummeting public approval ratings. Robert Weissman, co-president of Public Citizen, argued that Trump is using the election conspiracy talk to draw attention away from ongoing economic struggles for working Americans, a controversial conflict with Iran that has driven up energy prices, tax cuts skewed heavily toward wealthy Americans that have been paid for by cuts to healthcare and food assistance for low-income households, and the expansion of unaccountable paramilitary law enforcement. “Trump’s delusional rantings tonight are a transparent effort to distract from these realities,” Weissman said.

    Pro-democracy group Living United for Change in Arizona went further, warning that Trump’s speech is a deliberate step toward dismantling American democratic norms. “Tonight Donald Trump stood before the nation and attempted to rewrite history, erase the will of the voters, and prepare the country for his next assault on American democracy,” the organization said in a statement. “Donald Trump is laying the groundwork to dismantle our elections, overturn results he does not like, cancel the will of the people, and hold onto power by any means necessary.”

  • Argentines and Spaniards face divided loyalties ahead of Spain-Argentina World Cup final

    Argentines and Spaniards face divided loyalties ahead of Spain-Argentina World Cup final

    The 2026 FIFA World Cup’s final showdown between Spain and Argentina is far more than a battle for soccer’s biggest global prize — it is an unexpected emotional test for hundreds of thousands of people with deep ties to both Spanish-speaking nations, whose shared histories and cultures have bound their communities together for centuries. This historic match, set to take place in New Jersey, marks the first time two Spanish-speaking countries have met in a World Cup final since the very first tournament in 1930, where hosts Uruguay defeated Argentina 4-2 in Montevideo.

    The bond between Argentina and Spain stretches back to the founding of Argentina’s capital, Buenos Aires, by Spanish explorer Pedro de Mendoza in the mid-1500s. Even after Argentina won its independence from Spanish rule, the Iberian Peninsula’s cultural influence persisted and grew, amplified by massive waves of Spanish immigration to Argentina in the first half of the 20th century. Today, millions of Argentines can trace their lineage to Spanish ancestors, while reverse migration over the past 50 years has made Spain home to more than 450,000 Argentine-born people, according to 2025 Spanish census data. This interconnectedness extends to soccer itself: Argentine legends Alfredo Di Stéfano and Lionel Messi became global icons playing for Spain’s most storied clubs, Real Madrid and FC Barcelona respectively.

    Unlike many high-stakes international soccer matchups, this final does not grow out of a long-standing bitter rivalry. In fact, the two nations have only faced off once before in World Cup history, a 1966 group stage match that ended in an Argentine victory. That lack of history has not eased the internal conflict for fans with split loyalties, however.

    For long-term Argentine residents born in Spain, the choice between supporting La Furia Roja (Spain’s national team) or La Albiceleste (Argentina’s national team) feels like an impossible choice between two family members. Juan Manuel Posada, a 75-year-old originally from Asturias who moved to Buenos Aires in 1968, summed up the conflict: “It feels like being caught between a rock and a hard place.” Though his heart remains tied to his native Asturias and the Spanish national team — and he supports Spanish club Sporting de Gijón alongside Argentina’s Independiente de Avellaneda — he says he will not be heartbroken if Argentina claims the trophy. Posada laughed as he recalled a deal he struck with his Argentine grandson: the pair will celebrate no matter who wins, but he doubts they would risk wearing a Spanish jersey to celebrate at the Obelisk, Buenos Aires’ iconic central gathering spot for Argentine national team victory parties.

    Eighty-one-year-old Manuel Fernández Acevedo, who moved from Galicia in northern Spain to Argentina as a young child, echoed that balanced perspective. “May the best team win. If Spain wins, that’s great, and if it’s Argentina’s turn, that’s fine too,” he said.

    The same divided excitement holds for the hundreds of thousands of Argentines who have built new lives in Spain, driven to leave their home country by decades of political instability and repeated economic crises. Nineteen-year-old Nahuel Barreta, who has lived in Málaga for a year, says he views the match as a respectful contest between family. “It feels like home here. We’re going to watch the match at a downtown bar with friends — it’s our usual ritual. I’ve never experienced a World Cup like this,” he said.

    In recent days, this unique final has spawned viral humor across social media, with thousands of users sharing stories of Argentine-Spanish couples declaring temporary “divorces” until the final whistle, and playful battles to convince children to root for their preferred side. For a match that pits two deeply connected nations against each other for soccer’s highest honor, there is no doubt: this is a World Cup final that feels like a truly family affair.

  • Many Ukrainian soldiers outraged over removal of defence minister, troops tell BBC

    Many Ukrainian soldiers outraged over removal of defence minister, troops tell BBC

    On Thursday, thousands of demonstrators filled central Kyiv’s streets, their anger simmering after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky removed the popular, reform-minded Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov in a sweeping cabinet reshuffle. The decision has split the country’s military community, sparked open accusations of authoritarian drift from critics, and raised urgent questions about the future of Ukraine’s military innovation agenda amid ongoing war with Russia.

    For many of Ukraine’s frontline soldiers and wounded veterans, the removal of the 35-year-old Fedorov feels like a personal betrayal. A disfigured infantry soldier, recovering from combat injuries ahead of scheduled reconstructive surgery, captured the widespread despair in a viral Telegram video. “I hope when I wake up after the anaesthetic, Fedorov will be back at the Ministry of Defence,” he said. “Otherwise, everything I was fighting for will have been in vain.”

    Maryna, an active-duty soldier who spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid disciplinary action, called the decision a deliberate insult to all Ukrainian service members. “It is a blatant slap in the face to all service members,” she told reporters. “It is truly difficult to put this into words without venting in frustration.” Like many critics, she fears the reshuffle signals a growing authoritarian turn in Kyiv: “A dictatorship is already unfolding here, with its own petty tyrants who think they have caught God by the beard.”

    Military leadership has reportedly ordered rank-and-file soldiers to avoid public political commentary, forcing most serving personnel to speak only under pseudonym. Opinion even among soldiers is not uniform: Natasha, a frontline servicemember stationed near the Donbas front, noted that daily Russian multiple launch rocket system attacks on Ukrainian positions leave little bandwidth for political outrage over cabinet changes. Even so, she acknowledged widespread respect for Fedorov’s work, and blamed entrenched old-guard military leadership for his ousting. “If you can’t come to an agreement with the old fossils, they’ll eat you alive,” she said.

    That old guard, in the view of many of Fedorov’s supporters, is led by 60-year-old Commander-in-Chief Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi, a veteran officer shaped by the Soviet-era top-down military system. Once celebrated as a national hero for leading the 2022 defense of Kyiv, Syrskyi has become increasingly unpopular among frontline troops for his human-cost-heavy approach to warfare, earning him derogatory nicknames like “General 200” (a reference to the Soviet military code for combat casualties) and “The Butcher.” Still, some military insiders defend him: Andrii, a former frontline soldier now serving on the General Staff, argues there is currently no qualified replacement for Syrskyi’s experience leading large-scale combat operations.

    What is undeniable is that the rift between Fedorov and Syrskyi had grown unresolvable ahead of Zelensky’s decision. Zelensky himself acknowledged the two men could no longer even share a room, while Fedorov has openly blamed Syrskyi for systematically blocking all his military reform and modernization efforts. “It was snowballing. Everyone knew about it. Zelensky had to make a decision,” Andrii said.

    The generational and ideological clash between the two men encapsulates a broader divide running through modern Ukraine. Military analyst and former intelligence officer Ivan Stupak framed the divide in starkly technological terms: “Fedorov is an iPhone 16, Syrskyi is a telephone from the 1980s. You know, the same purpose but with different approaches.”

    Fedorov first rose to prominence as Ukraine’s Minister of Digital Transformation, where he built a reputation as a relentless innovator committed to modernizing Ukraine’s public and military institutions. During his six-month tenure as Defense Minister starting in January 2026, he delivered a string of high-impact wins: he negotiated with Elon Musk to cut Russian frontline forces off from Starlink satellite internet, a move that disrupted Russian command and control and helped Ukrainian forces repel major Russian advances. He accelerated the integration of artificial intelligence and low-cost drone interception systems to defend Ukrainian cities from Russian drone attacks, and launched a sweeping bureaucratic overhaul of the Ministry of Defense to cut red tape and speed up weapons procurement. His signature “Army of Drones: Bonus” program, which offered frontline units financial incentives for destroying Russian equipment and personnel, was widely credited with boosting troop initiative and accelerating innovation in drone warfare, a capability that has allowed Ukraine to gain an edge over its much larger Russian adversary.

    But even before his removal, Fedorov faced deep institutional resistance from the decades-old military bureaucracy. Stupak described the Ministry of Defense as a “swamp” resistant to change: “It’s made of very solid material and it’s very difficult to establish new technologies because lots of people have been there for decades and they don’t share his vision of digitalisation.”

    Critics and observers now warn that Fedorov’s departure risks halting his ambitious modernization agenda entirely, despite Zelensky’s public assurances that reforms will continue. With autumn and winter approaching, Russia is widely expected to launch a new large-scale assault on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, leaving the country more vulnerable without Fedorov’s leadership on drone and air defense innovation. Daria Kaleniuk, executive director of Ukraine’s Anti-Corruption Action Centre, called the decision a devastating setback for Ukraine’s war effort. “I’m very upset that all this progress, which was built by Fedorov, will be just destroyed and reversed in one of the most critical periods of the war,” she said. She also argued the move reveals a troubling authoritarian streak in Zelensky’s leadership, saying it sends a message that the president does not care about public opinion and rejects independent, effective leaders within his government: “That is very destructive for Ukraine.”

    The decision to oust Fedorov fits a pattern of Zelensky sidelining or removing popular, effective officials, leading many critics to accuse him of concentrating power and moving toward authoritarian rule. Stupak noted the irony: as a comedian before entering politics, Zelensky built his career lampooning the authoritarian, self-serving post-Soviet political elite. Now, Stupak says, he has adopted the very traits he once mocked: “He’s collected all the factors which were the subject for his jokes. Maybe it’s because he’s been in his position for seven years.”

    For activists like Kaleniuk, the recent street protests evoke a strong sense of deja vu. Exactly one year ago, massive anti-government protests – the first since Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion – forced Zelensky to backtrack on a bill that would have gutted the power of two leading Ukrainian anti-corruption agencies. Today’s protesters are hoping for a similar reversal, even though Zelensky has already appointed acting Security Service head Yevhenii Khmara as interim defense minister.

    While current protests are smaller in scale than last year’s demonstrations, Kaleniuk says the stakes are far higher: “These events are even more dangerous, because they directly impact our war effort.”

    Maria Berlinska, founder of an NGO that trains volunteer aerial reconnaissance teams, summed up the widespread fear among reformists that even the most successful, loyal leaders are not safe from political sidelining. “You can become a key architect of the strategy of technological victory over the enemy,” she wrote in a Facebook post. “No matter how cool you are, it will not help you. At some point, you will simply be removed from the field.”

  • In East India, a Marian shrine draws in Christian, Hindu and Muslim pilgrims

    In East India, a Marian shrine draws in Christian, Hindu and Muslim pilgrims

    Nestled along the tree-lined banks of West Bengal’s Hooghly River, 50 miles north of state capital Kolkata, the 16th-century Basilica of the Holy Rosary—known locally simply as Bandel Church—has emerged as an unlikely beacon of interfaith harmony amid rising religious polarization across India. For 13 consecutive years, 28-year-old devout Hindu Rimpa Chowdhury has made a weekly pilgrimage to the shrine of Our Lady of Happy Voyage, the iconic statue of the Virgin Mary that draws thousands of cross-faith visitors each year. For Chowdhury and countless other non-Christian devotees, the church is far more than a historic Catholic site: it is a space of healing, community, and quiet peace that transcends religious boundaries.

    Decades of interfaith devotion to the shrine are rooted in what visitors call the power of the divine feminine, a shared belief that aligns Mary’s protective energy with the long-standing Bengali tradition of revering female goddesses as the universe’s primordial life force. The church’s history stretches back to the late 1500s, when Catholic Augustinian friars and Portuguese colonial traders settled the Bengal riverfront, tying Marian devotion to Portuguese imperial expansion by placing all regional outposts under Mary’s protection. The original 1599 structure was destroyed twice—first in a 1632 invasion of the Portuguese settlement, then later in a major earthquake—but local legend cemented Mary’s enduring reputation as a divine protector after her statue was recovered intact from the depths of the Hooghly River. In 1988, Pope John Paul II formalized the shrine’s spiritual significance by granting it status as a minor basilica.

    Today, the sprawling riverside grounds of the basilica serve as the core of a cross-faith community that spreads across nearby villages, many of which bear informal names honoring Marian apparitions ranging from Our Lady of Fatima to Our Lady of Good Health. Since the 1950s, Catholic nuns from five separate religious congregations have stewarded the shrine, prioritizing community outreach that serves people of all faiths while actively smoothing sectarian tensions. Their work spans far beyond spiritual care: Missionaries of Charity nuns founded by Mother Teresa (who visited Bandel Church in 1995, two years before her death) provide critical health services to surrounding local populations; the Auxilium Convent Sisters run a boarding school for underprivileged young girls, offering full education and support to help them live independently after graduation; and other congregations host retreats, counseling, and community education initiatives focused on women’s rights and tribal welfare.

    Father John Chalil, Bandel Church’s lead priest, explained that the region’s long history of religious coexistence laid the groundwork for this shared spiritual space. “In Bengal, the goddess is revered as the ultimate primordial force in the universe,” he said. “Devotees from all over India come here seeking sanctuary, and the nuns cater to their various needs.” Sister Nirmala, who has worked in spiritual ministry at Bandel for more than 15 years, added that religious identity has never stood in the way of devotion. “Religious differences have not interfered with people’s faith in Mary,” she said.

    This culture of pluralism faces growing pressure, however, as rising religious polarization and anti-Christian violence have spread across India since Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) took national power in 2014. Hindu nationalist vigilante groups have increasingly targeted Christian communities, disrupting prayer services, vandalizing church properties, and assaulting clergy and nuns on unsubstantiated claims of forced conversion of Hindus. The United Christian Forum, a New Delhi-based human rights coalition advocating for religious minority rights, recorded 831 anti-Christian attacks across India in the past year alone. AC Michael, the forum’s national coordinator, said the violence has evolved from isolated local incidents to a systemic, networked campaign of persecution.

    For decades, West Bengal was a relative safe haven for religious minorities compared to other Indian states, but the recent election of a BJP state government has sparked growing anxiety among local faith communities, and anti-Christian attacks in the region have already begun to rise. While Bandel itself has not yet experienced large-scale targeted violence against religious minorities, nearby areas have seen repeated communal clashes linked to political and religious events. In July of this year, a mob stormed a newly built church south of Kolkata, threatening congregants and destroying religious symbols. Mother Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity, which operates service programs in the region, has also been a high-profile target of Hindu nationalist scrutiny: in 2021, India’s Ministry of Home Affairs revoked the organization’s operating license over unproven conversion claims, only reversing the decision after widespread public pushback.

    Despite these growing threats, the nuns who steward Bandel Church say they remain committed to upholding the site’s centuries-long tradition of pluralism. “We’re willing to confront anyone who obstructs the peace and harmony in this region,” said Sister Philomena Mathew, a member of the Missionary Sisters of Mary Help of Christians. Sister Jesline Rose, who serves with the Missionary Sisters of Mary Immaculate, added that the community will carry forward the vision of interfaith solidarity forged by past saints. “No doubt the political landscape in Bengal is changing, but we’ll keep our pluralistic spirit alive,” she said. Rose and her fellow sisters regularly make home visits to Hindu and Muslim families across the neighborhood, offering spiritual support and practical aid to people navigating personal and medical hardship.

    For devotees like Chowdhury, who lives in a nearby mixed-faith neighborhood of narrow alleyways behind the church, the nuns embody the enduring protective power of the site they steward. Like many pilgrims, Chowdhury leaves her prayer intentions on slips of paper in the wish box beside the Virgin Mary’s statue, joining thousands of other cross-faith visitors who gather on the church grounds for festivals and annual winter pilgrimages. Though Chowdhury shares widespread anxiety that rising national religious intolerance will eventually reach West Bengal, she says the community at Bandel Church gives her hope. The nuns, she says, “embody the power of Mother Mary, who is the protector of all devotees at our church. Together, the community draws strength from the shared reverence for the divine feminine—from Mary to Hindu goddesses Kali and Durga—to push back against extremist attempts to divide people along religious lines.”