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  • The South Korean authors rising above a tide of hate to become bestsellers

    The South Korean authors rising above a tide of hate to become bestsellers

    Against a backdrop of rising anti-feminist pushback across South Korea, a growing cohort of female writers and storytellers are building a grassroots, community-centered movement to claim space for women’s unfiltered voices—a shift that author Eunyu describes as a “slow-but-sure revolution.”

    When Seen Aromi’s 2024 memoir celebrating the joys of intentional singlehood hit bookstores, it quickly climbed to the top of bestseller lists. *So What if I Love My Single Life!* resonated across generations and relationship statuses: women from all walks of life drew comfort from Seen’s unapologetic rejection of unsolicited social pressure, and many found validation in choosing a life centered on their own priorities. But the book’s runaway success also sparked a tidal wave of online vitriol, largely from male readers who attacked Seen, predicted she would die alone, labeled her selfish, and even accused her of betraying the nation for rejecting traditional marital and maternal norms.

    Gender-based discrimination, harassment, and sexual violence remain pervasive systemic challenges in South Korea, where the term “feminism” has become deeply polarizing, often wielded as a damning accusation that triggers online witch hunts and professional or social censure. As young men have led a widespread backlash against gender equality advocacy, openly embracing female independence has become increasingly risky. Yet even in this charged climate, women have carved out a growing, vibrant niche in the country’s literary landscape to share their lived experiences.

    The movement reached a historic milestone this year, when women took home top honors in all six categories of South Korea’s most prestigious literary honor, the Yi Sang Awards—a first in the prize’s history. Beyond institutional recognition, community-focused spaces for women writers and readers, called guelbang, have sprung up across the country. These reading and writing rooms offer women dedicated time and space to gather, connect, and grow as a collective. Even beyond the 2024 Nobel Prize in Literature won by iconic South Korean author Han Kang, which cemented Korean women’s writing on the global stage, women’s voices were long sidelined in the country’s mainstream literary scene. The 2016 South Korean MeToo movement, Eunyu notes, was a critical turning point that encouraged ordinary women to speak up about their experiences. Eunyu, who launched her own writing space back in 2011, says that even as backlash against feminist-aligned work grew, more women stepped forward to lead writing workshops and reading sessions, making these community spaces accessible to women who had never before shared their stories. “Many of the women who joined as attendees have gone on to become writers in their own right,” Eunyu explains. “I’ve seen countless instances of attendees digesting their pain, restoring their sense of self and confidence through the act of writing. While these shifts are deeply personal, when they unfold in a community they can often inspire a chain of reaction. In that sense, what we’re witnessing here is a slow-but-sure revolution.”

    Seen’s story of intentional singlehood represents a radical break from South Korea’s long-held social norms: at 39, she purchased a home in the countryside, bucking the national trend of concentrating population in the greater Seoul area, and chose to forgo marriage and children at a time when the government is scrambling to reverse one of the world’s lowest birth rates. She embraces the quiet joy of her self-designed life, from harvesting fresh vegetables for homemade salads to writing in a home decorated entirely to her taste. “I’m not claiming that everyone should abandon marriage or look down on married people in any way,” Seen clarifies. “I simply wrote about how making my own choices, prioritising my desires, has led me to truly enjoy my life. I felt that people were really waiting to hear stories like mine.” Readers have echoed that sentiment: “As someone who’s been questioning whether marriage is really right for me, this book made me tune into my inner voice,” one online reviewer wrote. Another commented, “My life might have been different if I’d read this book before I married. Back then, I never realised that marriage was optional.” The memoir’s success has earned Seen a six-figure international translation deal with Penguin Random House, placing her work in front of a global audience.

    Seen is far from alone in this breakthrough. Buoyed by swelling global interest in Korean culture, sales of translated Korean books more than doubled in 2024 compared to the previous year, opening new international doors for South Korean women writers. The resulting body of work is richly varied, spanning genres from thriller to sci-fi to memoir to historical fantasy: Gu Byeong-mo’s *The Old Woman With the Knife* follows a legendary 60s-year-old assassin navigating retirement and loneliness; Kim Cho-yeop’s sci-fi anthology *If We Cannot Go at the Speed of Light* tells the story of a stranded scientist dedicating her life to reuniting with her family light-years away; singer and author Lang Lee unpacks intergenerational trauma from the Korean War to domestic violence that haunted the women of her family after her sister’s suicide; and Esther Park’s *The Legend of Lady Byeoksa* reimagines the story of a cross-dressing Joseon-era demon slayer and her doomed love, echoing the popularity of hit K-culture projects like *Demon Hunters*.

    As South Korea’s public discourse around gender has grown increasingly hostile, the literary world has emerged as a critical outlet for conversations that can no longer safely happen in mainstream public spaces. In recent years, high-profile anti-feminist campaigns have targeted public figures ranging from A-list actors Gong Yoo and Bae Suzy to K-pop idols. Male fans have even burned merchandise from female artists after discovering they read feminist books or carried phone cases with pro-women messaging. In response, many South Koreans, both women and men, have embraced what they call “stealthy feminism” to avoid professional and social retaliation. For countless women, guelbang and other women-centered literary gatherings offer a much-needed escape from the suffocating pressure to self-censor.

    On a recent Saturday afternoon, 50 women lined up outside a repurposed old church on a quiet street in Daejeon, 160 kilometers south of Seoul, to attend a talk by feminist author Ha Mina. Attendees traveled from across the country, and one even brought her toddler daughter along. Ha, who leads the community writing workshops, explains that in a country defined by cutthroat competition and relentless social pressure, these gatherings offer something transformative: “We listen to each other’s stories here — and that experience can be transformative, especially amid Korea’s cut-throat competition and the immense pressure to succeed. But these workshops are a safe space for women to make mistakes and grow, perhaps for the first time in their lives.” Ha, an aspiring writer early in her career, recalls that toxic, predatory behavior was rampant in writing workshops led by male writers and poets. It was only when she joined a class led by a female mentor that she found her voice. Her first critically acclaimed book, *Crazy, Freaky, Arrogant and Brilliant Women*, draws on interviews with 30 young South Korean women to explore the link between widespread female depression and restrictive social expectations and gendered violence. Making these stories public, Ha says, was a deeply healing act: “I stopped having suicidal thoughts after publishing this book. Isn’t that incredible?”

    Beyond the push for systemic change, what unites most of the women drawn to this movement is a simple desire: a room of their own, a space where they can speak freely without fear of judgment or retaliation. “I don’t need to censor myself, whether we are talking about our experience of sexual violence, discrimination, or our desires and sexuality,” says 28-year-old Kim Gahyun, who traveled to Daejeon for Ha Mina’s talk. Meeting other women from varied backgrounds has shifted her perspective: “Womanhood is not a singular experience and we can’t be boxed into the same category.”

    That celebration of diversity resonates deeply with 36-year-old Choi Suwon: “It’s not just women, people of all sorts of minority backgrounds bring their unique stories to the table, and we listen to each other no matter how far they are from ‘the norm.’ Writing and sharing my stories in these spaces make me feel a deep sense of liberation.” For 29-year-old Lee Hae, who traveled two hours by bullet train from Daegu to attend author Lee Sulla’s “book concert” in Seoul, the gatherings are a much-needed personal joy. “I love reading Lee’s and other contemporary women writers’ works, because I can really empathise with these stories,” she says.

    Lee Sulla, whose subversive debut novel *In The Age of Filiarchy* was named the most popular work by a contemporary Korean writer in a 2023 poll by one of the country’s largest booksellers, reimagines traditional family dynamics in her bestseller. The novel’s protagonist, a successful independent publisher, becomes the head of her family, reversing generations of patriarchal structure: she hires her mother, Bokhee, as a paid chef and assistant, and her father as a paid driver and housekeeper. For the first time, Bokhee receives fair compensation for her lifelong domestic labor, while her father, stripped of his traditional patriarchal authority, finds contentment in his quiet daily routine of cleaning, caring for the family cats, and driving his daughter around the city. Lee’s understated, warm, humorous writing has made the book a nationwide hit, and she notes that even older men attend her talks. But it is her gentle reimagining of gender and family that has captured the hearts of so many women. “What I depict are not grand, ground-shaking events, only small shifts in the dynamics of a family,” Lee says. “But these can be potent enough to create a completely new order.”

  • Iran says to control traffic through Hormuz until war definitively ended

    Iran says to control traffic through Hormuz until war definitively ended

    TEHRAN – In a decisive statement released Saturday, Iran’s Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) has confirmed the country will maintain full control and regulatory oversight of all maritime traffic passing through the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz until a definitive end to regional hostilities and the establishment of a lasting regional peace.

    The official confirmation from Iran’s top security body comes only hours after the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, Iran’s primary military command, ordered the resumption of strict Strait of Hormuz controls, citing the unbroken implementation of a U.S. naval blockade targeting Iranian commercial and maritime activity.

    Under the new control framework laid out by the SNSC, Iran will manage all transits through the strait by mandating pre-submission of vessel identification and cargo information, requiring official passage permits for all ships, collecting fees for the provision of regional security protections and environmental monitoring services, and directing all maritime movement in line with Iran’s domestic regulations and active wartime protocols.

    The statement clarified that any effort by adversarial forces to disrupt vessel transits, including the enforcement of a naval blockade that violates the existing two-week ceasefire agreement, will prompt Iran to abandon the conditional, limited reopening of the strait that was implemented during the truce.

    The SNSC further emphasized that a large share of military equipment for U.S. military bases across West Asia transits through the Strait of Hormuz, a flow of materiel that the council characterizes as a direct threat to both Iranian national security and broader stability across the Persian Gulf region.

    In a separate development included in the statement, the SNSC confirmed that Iran has received new diplomatic proposals from the United States, which were transmitted via Pakistani officials during a recent visit to Islamabad by Pakistan Army Chief Asim Munir. Iranian authorities are currently reviewing the terms of the new offers, the statement added, stressing that Iran’s negotiating team will refuse any concessions that compromise Iranian national interests and will defend the country’s sovereignty with full force.

    The current standoff over the Strait of Hormuz dates back to February 28, when Iran first tightened restrictions on transits through the waterway immediately after the United States and Israel launched joint airstrikes on Iranian territory. Tensions escalated further after preliminary peace talks held in Islamabad broke down, prompting the U.S. to formalize its naval blockade of vessels traveling to and from Iran.

    Just one day before Saturday’s announcement, Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi had confirmed that the Strait of Hormuz would remain fully open to commercial commercial shipping for the duration of the two-week ceasefire between Iran and the U.S. that took effect on April 8, aligned with the broader truce agreement reached between Israeli and Lebanese forces. The reversal of that temporary opening comes as direct violations of the ceasefire terms by the U.S. have prompted Iran to reimpose full military and regulatory control over the strategic waterway, through which roughly 20% of the world’s daily oil supplies transit.

  • Players, enthusiasts in New York mark 55th anniversary of Ping-Pong Diplomacy

    Players, enthusiasts in New York mark 55th anniversary of Ping-Pong Diplomacy

    On a crisp Friday in Manhattan, a diverse crowd of table tennis competitors, enthusiasts, and diplomatic figures filled SPIN New York Flatiron to commemorate a half-century of a people-to-people exchange that fundamentally altered the trajectory of China-US relations: the 55th anniversary of Ping-Pong Diplomacy.

    The event brought together a cross-section of global table tennis talent and community members, ranging from former United States national champions and a former Swedish national team competitor to amateur community players, college athletes, and legal and finance professionals who share a passion for the sport. All joined in honoring the small, accidental moment that opened a new chapter in bilateral ties five and a half decades ago.

    In her opening remarks at the celebration, Chen Li, China’s Consul General in New York, walked attendees through the unexpected origins of the historic diplomatic breakthrough. Fifty-five years earlier, an American table tennis player accidentally stepped onto the Chinese team’s bus during the 1971 World Table Tennis Championships in Nagoya, Japan. What began as a simple misstep quickly bloomed into an unplanned friendly exchange, sparking the series of interactions that became known as Ping-Pong Diplomacy and clearing the path for the first official visit by an American sports delegation to the People’s Republic of China.

    Chen recalled the enduring Chinese sports motto, “Friendship first, competition second,” noting that even in that first encounter, American athletes observed that Chinese spectators cheered for every outstanding shot, no matter which side scored the point. “They realized that rivals had become friends overnight. Few could have imagined that a friendly paddle volley would help turn the wheel of China-US relations,” Chen told the gathered crowd.

    Reaffirming the core role of ordinary people in shaping bilateral ties, Chen emphasized, “The foundation of our relations was built by the people, and its future rests with our youth. You are all ambassadors of friendship.”

    Across the club’s tables, players from every cultural background and skill level competed side by side, carrying on the spirit of exchange that defined the 1971 breakthrough. Among the attendees was Rory Hayden, who was just 20 years old when she served as a translator for the Chinese table tennis delegation during their historic first visit to the United States in 1972, bringing a direct personal link to the history the event honored.

  • 2026 Shanghai International Flower Show kicks off

    2026 Shanghai International Flower Show kicks off

    One of China’s most anticipated annual horticultural events, the 2026 Shanghai International Flower Show, officially launched its 2026 iteration on April 18, bringing together global horticultural experts, green space enthusiasts and casual visitors to celebrate the intersection of floral art, urban ecology and cross-cultural exchange.

    The opening ceremony was held at the event’s main venue located in Dongtaili, Xintiandi, Shanghai’s dynamic Huangpu District. During the inaugural event, organizers showcased 18 newly developed flower varieties that have been bred for adaptability to urban growing conditions and aesthetic diversity, marking a key milestone for regional horticultural innovation. Attendees also witnessed the official launch of a customized digital map for the flower show, designed to help visitors navigate scattered exhibition sites across the city and access detailed information about featured displays and species.

    Tim Edwards, president of the Sino-European Horticultural Association, who attended the opening ceremony, shared his perspective on the event’s broader significance. “This is a celebration of plants, flowers, and green spaces, and this is a unique city,” Edwards said. He added that the flower show serves as a powerful global platform for cultural exchange: “This is a great opportunity to talk to the whole world about Shanghai and about China. Green spaces and flowers are an international language.”

    As a major international horticultural event hosted annually in Shanghai, the show has grown to become a highlight of the city’s cultural calendar, blending ecological development, creative horticultural design and cross-border cultural connection to showcase Shanghai’s commitment to building people-centered green urban spaces and opening up to the global community.

  • Hunan launches major recruitment drive to attract young talent

    Hunan launches major recruitment drive to attract young talent

    Central China’s Hunan province kicked off its 2026 large-scale talent recruitment initiative on Saturday, opening the campaign with a flagship job fair in its capital city Changsha that brings more than 12,900 open positions to young job seekers across the country.

    Designed to draw recent college graduates and early-career professionals to build careers or launch new businesses within the province, the recruitment event combines both in-person and online channels to expand reach for participants and employers alike.

    Organizers of the main Changsha job fair confirmed that 655 distinct employers from across the region’s key economic sectors took part in the opening event. Among the 12,900 available roles, more than 60 percent come with an annual salary package of 100,000 yuan (equivalent to roughly $13,700) or higher, addressing a top concern for young talent entering the workforce. Out of 12,000 enterprise-facing positions, 60 percent are technical roles, heavily concentrated in Hunan’s established competitive industries including engineering machinery and rail transit, as well as fast-growing emerging sectors such as digital economy, new energy, artificial intelligence, and quantum technology. This alignment of open positions reflects the province’s ongoing industrial upgrading and demand for skilled young workers to fuel long-term economic growth.

    To streamline the recruitment process for applicants, the fair integrated on-site interview booths and dedicated instant signing zones, allowing eligible candidates to complete the full hiring workflow from application to offer acceptance in a single stop. Beyond direct recruitment opportunities, event organizers also added value-added services for attendees, including one-on-one professional career counseling and immersive practical experience sessions focused on cutting-edge emerging fields such as artificial intelligence development and drone operation. These supplementary offerings are designed to help young talent better understand local industry needs and explore career paths that match their skills and interests.

  • Man Utd beat Chelsea as Spurs stunned by Brighton equaliser

    Man Utd beat Chelsea as Spurs stunned by Brighton equaliser

    The 2024-25 English Premier League matchday delivered a collection of dramatic twists and pivotal results that reshaped the fight for Champions League qualification and the battle for top-flight survival on Saturday. The most high-stakes outcome came at Stamford Bridge, where Manchester United edged out Chelsea 1-0 to put themselves firmly on course for a return to Europe’s elite club competition after two seasons outside the top four.

    Matheus Cunha scored the match’s only goal just before halftime, sweeping a clinical finish past Chelsea’s goalkeeper from Bruno Fernandes’ precise cross. The result leaves United third in the table, 10 points clear of sixth-placed Chelsea, whose own Champions League aspirations are now effectively ended after a fourth consecutive league defeat. Pochettino’s side were unable to capitalise on a United defensive unit depleted by a string of injuries and suspensions, wasting multiple chances to get back on level terms. For United, a remarkable turnaround under interim manager Michael Carrick has put a return to the Champions League within touching distance, with the club set to bank hundreds of millions in prize money and commercial revenue should they hold their position in the final weeks of the season.

    At the other end of the table, Tottenham Hotspur suffered another gut-wrenching setback in their fight to avoid relegation, blowing a two-goal advantage twice to concede a 2-2 draw at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium against Brighton & Hove Albion. The result leaves Spurs still stuck in the relegation zone, one point behind 17th-placed West Ham United, who hold a game in hand that will see them extend their advantage if they pick up three points against Crystal Palace on Monday. A win for Tottenham would have broken a 14-match winless run in the league for the north London side, and looked increasingly likely after Xavi Simons scored a stunning long-range strike with 13 minutes remaining to restore their lead. But five minutes into second-half stoppage time, Georginio Rutter blasted home a squared pass from Jan Paul van Hecke, who outmuscled defender Kevin Danso to create the equaliser. The late blow leaves Tottenham on the cusp of dropping out of the top flight for the first time in nearly 50 years, but new interim manager Roberto De Zerbi, in his first home match in charge, remained defiant after the final whistle. “Everyone of us knows it’s a tough moment, it’s a difficult situation, but we have another five games, 15 points,” De Zerbi told reporters. “And this team is able to win five games in a row.”

    Brighton’s late equaliser had an unexpected knock-on effect for Wolverhampton Wanderers, who avoided official relegation on Saturday despite a 3-0 heavy defeat to Leeds United at Elland Road. Wolves’ eight-year run in the Premier League is still all but certain to end this season, but the draw at Tottenham delayed the confirmation of their drop to the Championship. For Leeds, the result is near enough enough to secure their top-flight survival in their first season back after promotion, compounding Wolves’ misery. Fresh off their first away win against Manchester United at Old Trafford since 1981 the previous week, Leeds got two goals in two first-half minutes from James Justin and Noah Okafor to take full control, before a stoppage-time penalty from Dominic Calvert-Lewin rounded off the scoring.

    Leeds’ successful survival bid bucks a recent Premier League trend that has seen all three newly promoted clubs relegated straight back to the Championship in each of the last two seasons. Daniel Farke’s side have not only secured their long-term future in the top flight, but also have a chance to reach their first FA Cup final since 1973 when they face Chelsea in the semi-final next weekend. Fellow promoted side Sunderland have also impressed this season, putting in a far stronger campaign than most pre-season predictions expected.

    Elsewhere, Eddie Howe’s position as Newcastle United manager came under further pressure after Bournemouth secured a 2-1 win at St James’ Park, extending the Cherries’ unbeaten Premier League run to 13 matches. The result came despite confirmation earlier this week that Bournemouth manager Andoni Iraola will leave the club at the end of the season. Goals from Marcus Tavernier and Adrien Truffert earned the south coast side all three points, lifting Bournemouth to eighth in the table, just four points adrift of the top four Champions League places. Newcastle, by contrast, remain stuck in 14th place, with their own hopes of qualifying for European football next season all but over.

    In west London’s local derby, Brentford missed a golden chance to jump above Chelsea into the top six after being held to a goalless draw by Fulham at Craven Cottage. All eyes now turn to Sunday’s title decider, where league leaders Arsenal travel to the Etihad Stadium to face second-placed Manchester City. Mikel Arteta’s side hold a six-point lead at the top of the table, but City hold a game in hand and home advantage, meaning the clash could effectively decide who lifts the Premier League trophy at the end of the campaign.

  • ‘I thought I might die’: A Palestinian mother’s account of Israeli detention

    ‘I thought I might die’: A Palestinian mother’s account of Israeli detention

    Even months after walking free in the Gaza Strip, Saeda al-Shrafi cannot outrun the nightmares of her 46 days in Israeli detention. Every night, she finds herself pulled back to the cramped, cold cell of Damon prison: the thud of military boots echoing down corridor concrete, shouted headcounts cutting through the dark, the bitter chill that seeped into her bones and never truly left. For the Palestinian mother of two, the trauma of her arrest and abuse remains an inescapable part of daily life.

    Shrafi’s ordeal began in late 2023, amid the mass forced displacement of civilians from northern Gaza following the outbreak of Israel’s military campaign. Like tens of thousands of other residents, she followed Israeli military instructions to travel south along what the army had advertised as a “safe corridor”, fleeing relentless air strikes that had already destroyed her home. She set out with her two young children — three-year-old Zain al-Din and one-year-old Adam — and her brother-in-law Youssef, desperate to reach safety. Before the war, she had lived a quiet life in the Jabalia refugee camp; her husband Mohammed, a local musician, had gone missing in the early weeks of the conflict.

    When the group reached an Israeli military checkpoint on Salah al-Din Street, a soldier called her out over a loudspeaker, singling her out by her purple shawl and ordering her to leave her children with Youssef and approach. “My one-year-old son, Adam, clung to my clothes in terror until I was forced to hand him to Youssef,” Shrafi told Middle East Eye in an account of her detention. “I began to cry, fearing it might be the last time I would see my children. I promised to return, not knowing if I could keep that promise.”

    As soon as she reached the soldiers, they bound her hands in shackles. Two female soldiers escorted her to a makeshift canvas search area, where they forced her to strip and subjected her to a violent, humiliating search. “They told me to take off my clothes, threw me to the ground, blindfolded me and beat me,” she recalled. When she repeatedly begged for information about her children, Israeli interrogators used them as leverage, telling her the children would only be returned to her if she confessed to involvement in the October 7 attacks — a claim Shrafi, a civilian housewife, immediately denied. After repeated beatings, she was dragged by her limbs and thrown onto a truck packed with other detained Palestinian civilians, beginning a journey that would end in months of abuse.

    Shrafi remained blindfolded through multiple transfers, enduring ongoing beatings and verbal insults from soldiers, before she was placed in a crowded holding cell with six other Palestinian women. The number of detainees grew steadily in the small space, and for a full week, she was given no information about where she was being held or what charges she faced. Her thoughts never strayed far from her children, and interrogations brought new threats: when Shrafi stuck to her denial of any militant ties, interrogators threatened to kill her children and bomb her extended family still in Gaza. By the end of repeated questioning, she says she was on the edge of psychologically breaking, telling a interrogator her children were already dead just to end the pressure.

    Instead of being released as they had been promised after interrogations, Shrafi and the other detainees were transferred to Dimona prison, a maximum-security facility in Israel’s Negev Desert. On arrival, guards made clear the brutality that awaited them. “You are in Dimona. You are in hell,” one guard whispered to her as she was processed. “They didn’t order us to move. They moved us by beating us and pulling our hair. I thought I might die under the torture,” Shrafi said.

    Conditions in the cell were catastrophic. Shrafi was placed in a cell roughly 2.5 meters long by 1.5 meters wide, a space that eventually held 12 Palestinian women detainees. The group was given barely enough food to survive, access to unclean drinking water, only one shared toilet for all the prisoners, no access to medical care, and a total ban on speaking to one another. “It was unbearable,” she said. During her time there, she witnessed a 24-year-old pregnant detainee from Gaza suffer a miscarriage in the cell’s toilet; the woman’s husband had already been killed by Israeli forces, and prison staff refused to provide her any medical care, leaving only the other detainees to comfort her.

    Frequent cell searches brought new psychological abuse. Guards mocked Shrafi when she cried, falsely telling her her entire family had been killed in Gaza, taunts that escalated until she collapsed from a panic attack. Promises of release were used repeatedly as a tool of torture: guards would tell the women they would be freed in days, only to reverse the decision, breaking down detainees’ sense of hope. When Shrafi was finally told she would be released, she did not believe the announcement at first.

    Even the days leading up to her release brought more abuse. After being ordered to hand back their prison uniforms, the women were transferred to another facility in Beersheba, where they spent three days blindfolded, forced to sit prostrate on the ground and beaten repeatedly. Shrafi says she was struck with military boots, while another woman beside her fainted from the physical strain of being held in the painful position for hours.

    On the morning of January 12, 2024, Shrafi and the other released women were handed over to the International Committee of the Red Cross in southern Gaza, and transported to Rafah, where dozens of families had gathered to wait for their loved ones. When she was reunited with her aunt, she learned the devastating scale of loss her family had suffered while she was detained: more than 50 of her relatives had been killed, including her brother Mansour and the brother-in-law she had travelled south with. The one piece of good news was that her two children were alive and safe. When they walked into the room, she held them close, barely able to believe she was seeing them again. Her youngest son Adam, who had been just a year old when she was taken, did not recognize her, and flinched away in fear.

    Shrafi’s experience is far from an isolated case. Since the start of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza in October 2023, Israeli forces have detained thousands of Palestinian civilians from Gaza during displacement operations and ground incursions. In the occupied West Bank, Israeli forces have also ramped up daily arrest raids, detaining dozens of Palestinians every week. As of April 2024, more than 9,600 Palestinian and Arab detainees are held in Israeli prisons, around half of them held without formal charge or trial. This figure does not include hundreds of civilians detained in temporary military facilities since the outbreak of the war.

    Marking Palestinian Prisoners’ Day on April 17, the Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association and other leading Palestinian human rights organizations released a statement warning that detainees currently held by Israel are facing “the harshest levels of torture, abuse, and extermination in the history of the Israeli occupation”. Over the past three years, the group reported, Israeli prison authorities have overseen “severe and widespread crimes” against thousands of Palestinian detainees. At least 89 detainees have been confirmed dead in custody since that period began, but rights groups say the true number of deaths caused by torture and neglect is far higher. Dozens of detainees taken from Gaza since October 2023 remain forcibly disappeared, with no information released to their families about their whereabouts or status.

    Today, even back with her surviving children, Shrafi carries the trauma of her detention with her constantly. She thinks daily of the hundreds of Palestinian women and men still held in Israeli prisons, enduring the same abuse she survived. “Palestinian prisoners live in a dark world of torture that can break a person’s mind,” she said. “I still hold on to the same wish I had in prison: that Palestinian prisoners will not be forgotten, and that they will be free soon.”

  • Kitten’s time-travel journey through Pudong’s 36-year transformation

    Kitten’s time-travel journey through Pudong’s 36-year transformation

    Three and a half decades of explosive growth have reshaped Pudong, turning what was once a low-key, underdeveloped riverside district on the banks of the Huangpu River into one of the world’s most dynamic financial centers and global innovation hubs. To capture this extraordinary evolution in a refreshing, approachable way, a new creative video project frames Pudong’s 36-year journey through the whimsical perspective of an adventurous, curious kitten. This feline guide embarks on a magical time-travel trip, stepping across different eras of the district’s development to show audiences the dramatic shift from dusty early construction sites to the cutting-edge connected metropolis that stands today. Along the journey, the kitten visits landmark milestones that have become synonymous with Pudong’s rise: from the groundbreaking construction of the iconic Oriental Pearl Tower, the first major skyline-defining structure that signaled Pudong’s opening-up to the world, to the modern-day expansion of high-tech digital infrastructure that has turned the district into a leading model for smart and sustainable urban development. Seen through the playful, wide-eyed lens of this time-traveling kitten, Pudong’s decades-long transformation does not just tell a local success story — it mirrors the broader, rapid evolution of Shanghai across key sectors, including global finance, cutting-edge technological innovation, and forward-thinking sustainable urban planning. For viewers curious to trace the steps of this unique tour and see how Pudong continues to grow and adapt to new global challenges, the full video is available to watch online, offering a lighthearted yet compelling look at one of the most famous urban development success stories in modern history.

  • England thrashes Scotland as record Murrayfield crowd watches a Women’s Six Nations rout

    England thrashes Scotland as record Murrayfield crowd watches a Women’s Six Nations rout

    On a sun-soaked matchday across the United Kingdom and Ireland, the second round of the 2024 Women’s Six Nations delivered lopsided results that kept the tournament’s biggest anticipated showdown firmly on schedule, while continuing to break fan attendance records for women’s rugby.

    England, the tournament’s dominant defending champions, delivered a staggering 84-7 blowout over host Scotland at Edinburgh’s Murrayfield, a result that stretched their unmatched winning streak to 35 consecutive test matches. Entering the match with significant disruption to their roster — three additional World Cup winners sidelined by injury just one week after a rusty 33-12 win over Ireland at Twickenham — coach John Mitchell was forced to reshuffle his starting lineup: back-rower Abi Burton shifted to an unfamiliar lock position, 19-year-old Demelza Short made her senior international debut, and Emma Sing earned a start at fullback that moved regular Ellie Kildunne out to the wing.

    That reshuffled side put on a masterclass of attacking rugby, crossing the try line 12 times — all converted — from 18 attacking entries into Scotland’s 22-meter zone. Number 8 Maddie Feaunati turned in a Player of the Match performance as an unstoppable attacking force, supported by standout displays from Sadia Kabeya, prop Maud Muir (playing in her 50th test match), scrumhalf Lucy Packer, flyhalf Zoe Harrison, captain Megan Jones, and Sing. Ten different players notched tries for England, including a double from Kildunne that pushed her career test try total to 50 in just 59 appearances, former captain Marlie Packer’s 53rd career try, and scores for replacement players Sarah Bern, Mia Venner and Haineala Lutui.

    Mitchell praised his side’s adaptability after the final whistle, noting “That was a special performance. There’s been a lot of moving parts over the last few weeks, with some serious injuries.” The 84-point result marked the seventh time England has hit the 80-point mark in Six Nations history — no other team has ever done so — and ranks as the fourth-highest single-game score in the tournament’s history, the third time England has put 80 or more points on Scotland. Scotland captain Rachel Malcolm acknowledged the gulf in quality between the two sides, saying “Where we are in our cycle, England aren’t a team that we are ready to compete with. We created some pretty cool chances but we didn’t stop them enough times.”

    The match also made off-field history: a sellout crowd of 30,498 fans packed Murrayfield, the largest standalone crowd for any women’s sporting event in Scottish history. That record attendance continues a tournament-wide trend of growing fan support for the Women’s Six Nations.

    Across the border in Cardiff, second-ranked France pulled away from a stubborn first-half fightback to beat Wales 38-7 at Cardiff Arms Park, keeping their unbeaten record intact and setting up a potential Grand Slam decider against England in the final round of the tournament in Bordeaux. France got off to a disastrous start: prop Yllana Brosseau was sin-binned for four early penalties inside the opening 14 minutes, and scrumhalf Pauline Bourdon Sansus soon joined her for collapsing a Welsh rolling maul, which gifted Wales a penalty try that left the two sides tied 7-7 at halftime with France down to 13 players.

    Playing a man down actually focused the French side, who crossed for their first try through lock Madoussou Fall Raclot before halftime while Wales held firm defensively. The deadlock broke completely after the break, when French captain Manaé Feleu finished off a break from Aubane Rousset to retake the lead. When Wales’ Gwen Crabb was yellow-carded mid-way through the second half, France capitalized in quick succession: Bourdon Sansus set up Léa Murie for a try before crossing for one of her own just five minutes later. Wing Anaïs Grando, playing in just her second test match, closed out the scoring with two late tries to push the final score to 38-7.

    Fall Raclot noted after the match that the slow start was a concern for the side ahead of their tough upcoming fixture: “We need to better prepare our starts. We’ve had two close games now that can’t happen again. We were able to talk to each other, get back together, and in the end we got the job done.”

    In Galway, Ireland kept the pressure on France with a record-breaking 57-20 win over Italy, putting Ireland in position to upset France’s Grand Slam hopes when they face Les Bleues in Clermont-Ferrand next weekend. The result marked a major rebound for Ireland after a tight, low-scoring opening round loss to England, and drew a crowd of 9,206 to Connacht Rugby’s 12,500-capacity stadium — a sellout for Ireland’s first ever test match hosted in Galway.

    Winger Beibhinn Parsons, who made her international debut at just 16 years old in 2018, seized the opportunity to play her first senior test in her home region, scoring a hat trick of tries. Fellow winger Robyn O’Connor, called up from the national sevens program, scored a try on her debut, crossing for the bonus-point fourth try as early as the 23rd minute. Last year’s Six Nations MVP, number 8 Aoife Wafer, bounced back from a quiet opening round to put on a dominant display: 12 carries, eight tackles, one turnover and a try in just 53 minutes of play.

    Ireland held a commanding 45-10 lead at halftime, and while Italy rallied in the second half to score four tries and earn a bonus point, Ireland’s nine tries pushed their final total past the previous record of 54 points against Italy set one year ago. After the match, Ireland coach Scott Bemand said his side was already focused on the huge upcoming test against France, adding “There are some things to tidy up from today but if we get those bits right we know we can put in a performance to compete with the French. We think we are getting better.”

    With two rounds complete, England and France remain the only two unbeaten sides, on a direct collision course for a Grand Slam decider in the final round in a month’s time. If Ireland can pull off an upset over France next weekend, they will throw the tournament table wide open heading into the final matches.

  • Iran’s supreme leader says navy ready to inflict ‘new bitter defeats’ on enemies

    Iran’s supreme leader says navy ready to inflict ‘new bitter defeats’ on enemies

    TEHRAN – On Iran’s annual Army Day, April 18, Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei delivered a stark message warning the United States and Israel that the Islamic Republic’s naval forces are fully prepared to deliver crippling new defeats to the nation’s adversaries, according to Iran’s official state news agency IRNA.

    In his public address marking the holiday, Khamenei heaped praise on Iran’s military for its persistent resistance against what the regime frames as hostile foreign powers, specifically highlighting the military’s successful drone operations targeting U.S. and Israeli-linked assets as a demonstration of the country’s growing defensive and offensive capabilities.

    The comments come amid long-running regional tensions that have kept relations between Iran, the U.S. and Israel at historically low levels, with heightened military posturing across the Persian Gulf and wider Middle East in recent years. Already, the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global energy chokepoint that accounts for roughly a fifth of the world’s oil shipments, has emerged as a frequent flashpoint between Iran and Western powers, with a U.S. blockade on the waterway contributing to heightened frictions. Khamenei’s remarks mark the latest high-profile escalation of rhetoric between Tehran and its Western and regional foes, underscoring the Iranian leadership’s commitment to maintaining a robust military deterrent in the face of sustained external pressure.