博客

  • Along the river, before the fall: China pre-Renaissance city life

    Along the river, before the fall: China pre-Renaissance city life

    What begins as a seemingly tranquil snapshot of 12th-century Chinese urban life opens with a moment of unspoken tension: a heavy commercial river barge drifting toward an arched stone bridge, its crew shouting commands, ropes straining under tension, and a tall mast still in the process of being lowered as onlookers crowd the banks and railings, holding their breath. This opening moment, tucked at the heart of Zhang Zeduan’s iconic handscroll *Along the River During the Qingming Festival*, is far more than a decorative detail—it is the key to unlocking the work’s enduring, layered meaning, one that challenges common assumptions about one of China’s most celebrated cultural treasures.

    Housed today in Beijing’s Palace Museum, the Beijing scroll is widely recognized by scholars as the oldest surviving complete version of the Qingming Shanghe Tu composition. Historians broadly attribute the original work to Zhang, a Northern Song dynasty artist active in the early 12th century, who set out to capture daily life along the Bian River cutting through Kaifeng, the dynasty’s prosperous capital.

    To place this work in global context, the early 12th century was a period when nearly all high art in Western Europe centered on religious themes, from the Romanesque masonry of Durham Cathedral (under construction between 1093 and 1133) to the sacred metalwork of Ireland’s 1123 Cross of Cong. Gothic art, the first major shift toward more secular naturalism in Western art, would not emerge for another three decades, when the chevet of Saint-Denis was finally consecrated. It is this contrast that makes Zhang’s masterpiece so radical: when Western art prioritized divine salvation as its central subject, Zhang centered an entire living, breathing city.

    Commonly dubbed “China’s Mona Lisa” for Western audiences, the comparison falls flat. Where the Mona Lisa revolves around one individual’s quiet mystery, the Qingming Scroll is a living portrait of a complete urban ecosystem, mapping everything from the city’s semi-rural outskirts to its crowded commercial core, all anchored by the tense near-disaster at the central bridge. Its modern feel does not stem from its depictions of ancient architecture or costumes—it emerges from the work’s unflinching focus on logistics: the invisible systems that keep a great city alive.

    The Bian River is no decorative landscape feature; it is the capital’s lifeline. Grain, tax goods, and everyday supplies flowed into Kaifeng along its waters, moving from boat to cart to porter to shop stall in an unbroken rhythm of movement. Zhang’s genius lies in capturing that prosperity is not a static state of wealth—it is a constant, fragile process: loading, unloading, pulling, steering, buying, selling, navigating. Even the iconic arched bridge is more than a picturesque landmark; it is a pressure point where every part of the city’s interconnected system converges. Under its arch, the near collision of the barge condenses the core challenge of any great pre-modern metropolis: too many people, too much commerce, and almost no margin for error.

    This reading of the scroll as a subtle portrait of urban fragility, not just celebration, has been advanced by Chinese scholars including Palace Museum researcher Yu Hui. Yu argues that the work is laced with quiet signs of systemic unease that casual observers miss: an unmanned fire-watch tower, negligent slow-moving officials, weak city defenses, and commercial development encroaching on public space. Whether one accepts every element of this interpretation, it is impossible to view the scroll as a simple, flattering panegyric to imperial prosperity once these details are spotted. Zhang does not condemn the Northern Song state; he observes it too closely to merely glorify it.

    One easily overlooked detail elevates the scroll from a masterpiece of social observation to a critical document of global technical history: the yaolu, or yuloh, a specialized Chinese stern sculling oar. Most Western viewers fix their attention on the crowd and the endangered boat, missing the large oar mounted at the vessel’s stern. Unlike traditional rowing oars that lift repeatedly from the water, or simple steering oars, the yuloh operates with a steady lateral, push-pull motion that delivers continuous thrust and precise navigation, even in narrow, crowded waterways.

    Historical records make this detail particularly significant. While Western vessels used basic steering and rowing oars in antiquity, the earliest written record of a stern sculling oar for propulsion in English dates to the 14th century, per both the Oxford English Dictionary and Merriam-Webster. By contrast, visual evidence of the Chinese yaolu dates back to at least the 10th century, centuries before the first Western written record, and the technology was widely documented as a mature system by medieval Chinese scholars and artists. That Zhang could seamlessly include the yuloh in his composition, as a routine, unremarked tool of river transport, proves that the technology was already standard for moving large craft through Kaifeng’s crowded waterways by the 12th century—a level of nautical innovation that is often overlooked in modern analysis of the work.

    For the scroll, the yuloh is more than a technical detail: it is evidence that Northern Song prosperity depended not just on poetry, politics, or markets, but on the skilled, uncelebrated labor of workers who kept the city’s supply lines moving. What makes Zhang’s approach so innovative is that he never treats technology as a separate, labeled diagram. He embeds it in daily life, where indispensable tools belong—doing their work quietly, without fanfare.

    Another radical choice that sets the scroll apart from medieval art across cultures is its rejection of power as a central subject. There is no emperor, no imperial palace, no grand ceremony, no divine mandate on display. Instead, civilization is revealed through the ordinary acts of ordinary people: a herder driving livestock, a vendor arranging his goods, a doctor seeing patients, a porter carrying a heavy load, a fortune-teller meeting with anxious imperial examinees, a crew of boatman fighting to avoid a collision. Zhang captures the full spectrum of Song society, from gentry and officials to beggars and homeless children, recording (not erasing) social hierarchy while capturing all lives in equal motion.

    Again, the contrast with iconic medieval Western works is striking. The 70-meter Bayeux Tapestry, one of Europe’s greatest secular medieval works, tells the story of conquest, royal succession, and war. Zhang’s scroll centers a completely different kind of drama: not the seizure of a kingdom, but the daily work of keeping a city alive. One celebrates the making of political power; the other exposes the quiet pressure that sits beneath every period of national prosperity.

    What adds a final layer of humility to the work is the near-complete disappearance of its creator. Unlike Renaissance masters such as Leonardo da Vinci or Michelangelo, who left behind detailed biographies and cultivated personal reputations, almost nothing is known for certain about Zhang Zeduan’s life. He vanishes almost entirely into the city he painted, leaving only his work to speak for him. The painter is gone, but the city he captured remains—not the physical Kaifeng, which was transformed and damaged by centuries of history, but the city as a universal idea: a living structure built on movement, labor, commerce, and constant risk.

    The later history of the work only deepens its meaning. Over the centuries, *Qingming Shanghe Tu* became one of the most copied and reimagined subjects in Chinese art, with roughly 100 different versions held in museums and private collections across the world. Later copies, particularly those produced during the Qing dynasty, often revised Zhang’s original to make the city cleaner, more orderly, more festive, and more palatable to imperial audiences. Where Zhang’s original exposes the strain and vulnerability beneath prosperity, copies flatter by erasing those tensions. This tradition of revision is no footnote—it is part of the work’s legacy, revealing how different generations have chosen to frame the idea of urban prosperity.

    Zhang’s original endures precisely because it refuses to settle for surface celebration. It does not only show a prosperous capital; it asks a question that remains urgent centuries later: what has to go right for prosperity to hold together? A mast must be lowered on time, a boat must be guided safely under a bridge, supplies must reach market, roads must stay passable, watchtowers must be guarded, officials must do their jobs, goods must keep moving, and citizens must trust that the city will function when they wake each morning.

    It is this universal question that lets the scroll speak across cultural divides. It is unmistakeably a product of 12th-century China, but its core subject is universal. Every great city, from medieval Kaifeng to modern New York, London, Shanghai, and Hong Kong, relies on the same fragile miracle: millions of independent individual actions held together just tightly enough to feel like order. The Qingming Scroll endures not because it shows a perfect world, but because it shows a living one—allowing us to see civilization before it becomes history: crowded, ingenious, commercial, anxious, beautiful, vulnerable, and unaware that the future is already approaching from beyond the frame.

  • Workstation dedicated to Nobel laureate unveiled at CQUPT

    Workstation dedicated to Nobel laureate unveiled at CQUPT

    On May 29, 2026, a landmark academic and industry collaboration took center stage in Southwest China’s Chongqing, as the inauguration ceremony for the Robert C. Merton Nobel Laureate Workstation was held at the Chongqing University of Posts and Telecommunications (CQUPT). The new initiative brings together leading academic expertise, pioneering technical strengths, and industry practice to advance innovation at the intersection of financial theory and digital technology.

    Robert C. Merton, the 1997 Nobel Laureate in Economic Sciences, is a globally respected pioneer whose work reshaped modern financial scholarship. A member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences and longtime professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Merton is widely recognized as a foundational figure in modern financial theory, earning the informal title of the “Father of Options Pricing” for his transformative contributions to the field.

    Speaking at the inauguration event, Merton shared his excitement for the collaborative project, emphasizing his commitment to bridging advanced research and real-world problem solving. “I’m looking forward to being a part of that and helping to see that happen here in western China, and beyond,” he said, expressing his anticipation of leveraging cutting-edge science and technology to tackle pressing practical challenges in the financial sector.

    The workstation is a tripartite partnership between CQUPT, Merton himself, and Chongqing Ant Consumer Finance Co., combining the strengths of academia, world-leading scholarship, and private industry to create a new hub for innovation. For CQUPT, a leading Chinese institution renowned as the birthplace of digital communication in China with more than 70 years of specialized experience in information and communication technology, the collaboration represents a strategic alignment of institutional strengths. The university’s pioneering work in granular computing theory has already earned significant global recognition, laying a solid foundation for integrating digital innovation with financial research.

    Li Lin, Party secretary of CQUPT, outlined the institution’s vision for the new workstation at the ceremony. “We will use this workstation as an opportunity to further integrate Professor Merton’s cutting-edge financial theories with our university’s strengths in disciplines like artificial intelligence,” Li stated. He added that the initiative will foster the development of a specialized talent hub for digital finance and an open platform for international academic dialogue, strengthen cross-border scholarly exchange and cooperation, deepen the integration of academic education and industrial practice, and contribute targeted expertise to the development of Chongqing’s ambition as a major financial center in Western China.

    Following the official unveiling of the workstation, a formal appointment ceremony was held. Merton was named an Honorary Professor of CQUPT, while Azita Sharif, a key member of Merton’s research team and a bioethics researcher at Harvard Medical School, was appointed as a Visiting Professor at the university.

    To coincide with the inauguration, CQUPT also hosted the Symposium on AI-Empowered Western Financial Center Construction, which brought together scholars and industry leaders to explore critical topics at the intersection of AI, finance, and regional development. The symposium featured keynote addresses from leading voices: Merton presented on the journey “From Finance Theory to Financial Innovation Practice”; CQUPT Professor Xia Shuyin shared research on “Granular Ball Computing Theory and Its Driven Merton Economic Theoretical Model”; and Liu Yi, Chief Information Officer of Chongqing Ant Consumer Finance Co., outlined the company’s “Exploration and Practice of AI-Enabled Financial Consumer Protection.”

    The launch of the workstation marks a key milestone in advancing digital finance innovation in Western China, creating new pathways for cross-sector collaboration between global academic expertise and domestic technological and industrial capabilities.

  • Syria says missing chess champion’s six children likely killed under Assad

    Syria says missing chess champion’s six children likely killed under Assad

    More than 12 years after a prominent Syrian dissident and her entire family vanished during a regime raid in Damascus, Syria’s official National Commission for Missing Persons has confirmed that her six children were killed by armed factions loyal to former President Bashar al-Assad shortly after their 2013 abduction.

    Rania al-Abbasi, a dual Syrian and Arab national chess champion and practicing dentist, was a well-known public critic of the Assad government before her detention. In March 2013, forces loyal to the then-ruling Assad regime stormed her Damascus family home, taking Abbasi, her husband Abdul-Rahman Yasin, and their six children — ranging in age from 2 to 10 years old at the time — into custody. The entire family disappeared without a trace in the years that followed, becoming one of the most high-profile symbols of the widespread forced disappearances that marked Assad’s 50-year rule over Syria.

    In an official statement posted to the social platform X on Saturday, Syria’s new interior ministry confirmed that evidence gathered from multiple detained former regime operatives confirms the six children were killed by militias tied to the former Assad government. The ministry added that supporting video evidence and case files provided by the National Commission for Missing Persons have further corroborated these findings, and that search operations to recover the children’s remains are still active. Per official protocol, the surviving extended family was notified of the investigative results before any public announcement to honor their right to information and protect their privacy and dignity.

    Investigators have also named Amjad Youssef, a former Assad regime intelligence officer infamously linked to the 2013 Tadamon massacre in southern Damascus, as a directly implicated perpetrator in the children’s killings. The Tadamon massacre gained global attention in 2022 when leaked footage shot by the perpetrators themselves showed blindfolded, bound civilians — including 15 children and seven women — being led to a mass grave pit and executed one by one. The footage became irrefutable documentary proof of systemic war crimes committed under Assad’s leadership.

    Youssef was captured by current Syrian government forces during a security sweep in the Ghab Plain of rural Hama in April 2025. A recorded confession released by the interior ministry after his capture saw Youssef admit to participating in the killing of roughly 40 detainees, claiming he acted on his own direction. Hassan al-Abbasi, Rania’s brother, told media the family was able to confirm the children’s identities from footage of Youssef’s interrogation, in which the former officer falsely labeled the young children as “major financiers of terrorism”. In an interview with Al Arabiya, Hassan al-Abbasi added that the children were killed the same day they were detained, most by strangulation with plastic cables.

    The fate of Rania al-Abbasi and her husband Abdul-Rahman Yasin remains unconfirmed as of Saturday’s announcement. Human rights organizations say it is likely the couple were also killed shortly after detention, though their remains have yet to be located.

    The al-Abbasi family’s case is far from an isolated tragedy. Between the start of the 2011 Syrian uprising and the collapse of the Assad regime in December 2024, tens of thousands of Syrians were detained or forcibly disappeared by regime forces. Data from the Syrian Network for Human Rights shows that between March 2011 and August 2025, more than 177,000 Syrians were forcibly disappeared, including over 4,500 children and nearly 9,000 women.

  • Israel seizes strategic castle as it expands invasion of south Lebanon

    Israel seizes strategic castle as it expands invasion of south Lebanon

    In a significant escalation of its ground campaign in southern Lebanon that defies an existing nominal ceasefire, the Israeli military announced Sunday it has seized control of the 900-year-old Beaufort Castle and the strategic high ground surrounding the historic site. The takeover pushes Israeli military presence deeper into Lebanese territory, extending well beyond the “Yellow Line” demarcation zone established under a ceasefire agreement in April.

    The capture of the castle, which bears the Arabic name Qalaat al-Shaqif, comes after days of brutal close-quarters combat and heavy Israeli airstrikes on nearby villages, where infantry forces have battled Hezbollah militants across the region’s rugged terrain. Sitting just five kilometers from Nabatieh, southern Lebanon’s major population center, the medieval fortress occupies a critical vantage point that overlooks vast swathes of both southern Lebanon and northern Israel. This is not the first time Israeli forces have held the site: troops first captured Beaufort Castle during the 1982 invasion of Lebanon, retaining control until Israel’s full withdrawal from the country in 2000.

    Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz confirmed he had explicitly ordered the military to widen the scope of its operations in Lebanon, cross the Litani River — which had previously served as a de facto boundary for Israeli forces — and seize control of the Beaufort Ridge. Following the castle’s capture, Katz announced Israeli troops would remain positioned at the site as part of a newly expanded Israeli “security zone” inside Lebanese territory.

    The latest territorial advance coincided with a new mass evacuation order issued by the Israeli military covering areas between the Zahrani River to the south and the Litani River to the north, a stretch of land extending roughly 40 kilometers from the Israel-Lebanon border. In a social media statement, Israeli military spokesperson Avichay Adraee warned: “Anyone present near Hezbollah elements, facilities, or combat means endangers their life. Any building used by Hezbollah for military purposes may become subject to targeting.” The Israeli military added in an official briefing: “A significant number of ground soldiers commenced offensive operations aimed at expanding the Forward Defense Line… The operation is currently expanding to additional areas.”

    Casualties continue to mount on both sides amid the escalating fighting. Lebanon’s health ministry reported Saturday’s Israeli strikes killed at least 16 people and injured 34 more, bringing the total death toll in Lebanon since the outbreak of hostilities in early March to 3,371, with an additional 10,129 people wounded. On the Lebanese side, Hezbollah continued to resist the advance Saturday, launching a series of attacks against targets in northern Israel and engaging Israeli troops in southern Lebanon. The militant group confirmed it was confronting Israeli forces on the outskirts of the towns Zawtar al-Sharqiyah, Yohmor al-Shaqif and Dibbine, noting Israeli troops “had not yet succeeded in taking control of the towns.”

    The Israeli military documented more than 25 projectiles fired from Lebanese territory into Israel on Saturday. Israel’s Home Front Command confirmed air raid sirens activated in the northern Israeli cities of Karmiel and Safad, marking the first time alerts have sounded in those urban centers since the April ceasefire took effect. On Sunday, the Israeli military also announced one of its soldiers had been killed a day earlier in a Hezbollah explosive drone attack, pushing the total number of Israeli troops killed in Lebanon operations since early March to 25. Hardline Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich doubled down on calls for escalated retaliation this week, demanding Israel “destroy one hundred buildings” in Lebanon for every drone strike that kills an Israeli soldier. A recent report from Israeli public broadcaster Kan found Hezbollah’s advanced drone capabilities are currently limiting 80 percent of Israeli ground assaults across southern Lebanon.

    Diplomatic efforts to de-escalate the conflict remain ongoing. Military delegations from both Israel and Lebanon held US-brokered security talks in Washington on Friday, with a new round of negotiations scheduled for next week. Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam acknowledged the outcome of the diplomatic process remains uncertain, but framed negotiations as the best available path forward. “It is not guaranteed, but it is the least costly path for our country and our people,” Salam said.

  • Aussies delaying retirement by years as cost of living ruins retirement plans

    Aussies delaying retirement by years as cost of living ruins retirement plans

    Years of relentless cost-of-living increases have upended decades of retirement planning for Australian workers, pushing the expected retirement age four years higher and driving the projected superannuation savings needed for a comfortable post-work life across the $1 million threshold for the first time, new industry research shows.

    In Colonial First State’s (CFS) 2024 Retirement Report, researchers found that while Australian workers still hold an ideal retirement age of 62, shifting financial realities have forced most to adjust their expectations: the average worker now anticipates they will need to remain in the workforce until age 66. The report, based on a broad survey of working Australians, paints a clear picture of widespread anxiety over retirement security amid persistent inflation.

    More than half of all respondents reported worry that they will not accumulate enough savings to fund a comfortable retirement, with half specifically citing fears of unplanned out-of-pocket health or aged care expenses. A further 37% shared concerns that they will outlive their superannuation savings entirely. Against this backdrop, the average amount workers now say they need in super for a comfortable retirement has jumped by $183,000 year-over-year, pushing the total target above $1 million for the first time since CFS began tracking the metric.

    Marissa Powe, CFS executive director for retirement and growth, framed the shift as a direct response to sustained cost increases that have eroded household savings and projected retirement balances. “Australians are understanding that cost-of-living continues to increase, there’s the cost of aged care and healthcare,” Powe told NewsWire. “They are just taking that all in knowing their retirement savings and super will need to go further than it ever has before.”

    The new research comes as official inflation data shows mixed signals for Australia’s economy. The Australian Bureau of Statistics recently reported that annual headline inflation eased to 4.2% in April, down from 4.6% in March, thanks to temporary federal government measures including a halving of the fuel excise and GST rebates that have softened near-term price pressures. However, core trimmed mean inflation — the metric closely monitored by the Reserve Bank of Australia that strips out volatile price shifts — rose to 3.4% for the 12 months to April, indicating underlying inflationary pressures remain entrenched in the economy.

    The CFS report also highlighted a major gap in retirement preparedness tied to access to professional financial advice. More than 75% of workers who have engaged a financial adviser reported feeling prepared for retirement, compared to fewer than 50% of workers who have never accessed professional advice. CFS Superannuation chief executive Kelly Power argued that expanding access to affordable advice is critical to closing this preparedness gap. “Planning for retirement is complex, but the path forward becomes much clearer with the right support in place,” Power said. “That’s why improving access to financial advice is critical. We strongly believe that reducing barriers to advice, like cost, will help more Australians get the support they need to plan and retire with confidence.”

    There is no consensus among industry bodies on how much super Australians actually need to retire comfortably, with estimates varying based on factors including home ownership, access to the age pension, and individual spending habits. The Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA) confirms that persistent cost pressures have made a comfortable retirement harder to achieve for all cohorts. ASFA estimates that a single 67-year-old homeowner now needs a $630,000 lump sum to retire comfortably, while a retired couple needs a minimum of $730,000, up from $690,000 previously. Even for Australians seeking a more modest retirement, required lump sums have risen to $110,000 for singles and $120,000 for couples, up from $100,000 for both groups. All ASFA estimates assume the retiree owns their home outright, a key caveat that excludes a growing share of younger Australian workers.

    By contrast, Super Consumers Australia (SCA) notes that survey data from current retirees shows most end up spending less than expert industry estimates suggest. SCA calculates that a typical single retiree only needs $322,000 in super to support $44,000 in annual post-work spending, while a couple needs a combined $432,000 to fund $64,000 in annual retirement expenses.

    The report also confirmed that retirement anxiety disproportionately impacts women, with the gender gap in preparedness showing little sign of closing despite years of awareness efforts. Nearly two-thirds of women (62%) reported worry about having insufficient retirement savings, compared to just 48% of men. Women are also more likely to fear unexpected health and aged care costs (41% versus 34% of men) and to worry about outliving their super savings. While both genders have seen modest gains in self-reported preparedness over the past three years of CFS surveys — with women’s preparedness rising from 29% to 43% and men’s from 44% to 59% — the gap between the two groups has remained largely unchanged.

  • Spain’s Lamine Yamal says he was scared of missing the World Cup after he injured his hamstring

    Spain’s Lamine Yamal says he was scared of missing the World Cup after he injured his hamstring

    Rising Spanish football prodigy Lamine Yamal has opened up about the terrifying weeks he spent fearing his dream of featuring at the 2026 FIFA World Cup would be shattered by a sudden hamstring injury, revealing he clung to hope through prayer as he worked to beat his recovery timeline. The 18-year-old Barcelona forward, who is widely tipped to be one of the breakout stars of this summer’s tournament in North America, suffered the damaging strain to his left hamstring during a La Liga fixture against Celta Vigo on April 22, just moments after converting a first-half penalty for his club.

    In a candid interview published by the Royal Spanish Football Federation on Sunday, Yamal admitted the injury was the most serious setback he has faced in his young career, and that uncertainty about his recovery left him deeply anxious in the immediate aftermath. “I never had a hamstring injury like that but I knew that it wasn’t going to be a short recovery time,” Yamal said. “I was afraid that it was something serious or that it could relapse and that I would miss the World Cup.”

    Witnesses to the incident confirmed the moment the teen’s joy at scoring turned to concern: he immediately gestured to the Barcelona bench signalling pain before collapsing to the ground as teammates rushed in to celebrate, clutching the back of his left leg in clear discomfort. Yamal recalled that even in that moment, his first thought was of the upcoming World Cup, saying, “I was praying inside for it not to be serious, for it to be a cramp or something like that, because I knew the World Cup was very close.”

    Fortunately for the young star and Spanish football fans, his recovery has proceeded according to plan, and national team head coach Luis de la Fuente gave supporters a positive update last week when he named Yamal to Spain’s final 2026 World Cup squad. De la Fuente confirmed the forward is on track to be fit for selection for either La Roja’s opening group stage match or their second outing of the tournament.

    Spain will kick off their 2026 World Cup campaign against debutants Cape Verde on June 15 in Atlanta, before facing Saudi Arabia on June 21 at the same venue, and wrapping up group play against Uruguay on June 26 in Guadalajara, Mexico. As the reigning European champions, Spain enter the tournament with high hopes of claiming their second World Cup title, their first coming in South Africa back in 2010. Yamal, who is expected to be a key attacking leader for the side, says the entire squad has been eagerly anticipating the tournament since their European Championship triumph.

    “The moment has finally arrived,” Yamal said. “I think that ever since the European Championship ended, we’ve all been thinking about this day, and we are all very excited. We will enter the tournament as the European champions, and we are going to give it everything we have.”

    Spain officially kicked off their pre-World Cup preparations in Madrid on Saturday, with roughly 2,000 passionate supporters turning out to watch the squad’s first public training session on Sunday, eager to catch a glimpse of the team ahead of their North American departure.

  • War or peace? Colombians choose destiny in high-stakes vote

    War or peace? Colombians choose destiny in high-stakes vote

    On Sunday, millions of Colombian voters flocked to polling stations across the country to cast ballots in what is widely described as one of the most consequential presidential elections in the nation’s modern history. The contest boils down to a stark, defining choice: continue the outgoing government’s left-wing push for negotiated dialogue with armed drug-trafficking guerrilla groups, or swing sharply to the right to launch an all-out military crackdown on insurgent and criminal organizations.

    Pre-election opinion surveys place left-wing senator Ivan Cepeda, the hand-picked successor of outgoing President Gustavo Petro — Colombia’s first progressive head of state — in the lead, buoyed by modest economic gains delivered during Petro’s term. But Cepeda faces stiff competition from two hard-right challengers: wealthy lawyer Abelardo de la Espriella and conservative senator Paloma Valencia, who have centered their campaigns on widespread voter anger over rising insecurity.

    As no candidate is projected to win an outright majority in Sunday’s first round, a run-off election between the two top-performing candidates is scheduled for June 21. The entire race has become a de facto referendum on Petro’s flagship “total peace” initiative, an effort to convince holdout guerrilla groups that rejected a landmark 2016 peace agreement to disarm that ultimately failed to curb violence.

    “Even though Petro is not on the ballot this cycle, the entire campaign revolves around him,” explained Yann Basset, a political science professor at Bogota’s University of Rosario. “He remains at the center of every policy debate and every attack from rival candidates.”

    Petro’s four-year term was marked by persistent unrest: car bombings, drone attacks on civilian and government targets, and the assassination of a sitting presidential candidate. Independent security analysts widely note that guerrilla groups used the window of peace talks to strengthen their territorial positions and expand their illegal operations, which include cocaine trafficking, unregulated mining, and widespread extortion of local businesses.

    Whoever claims the presidency will inherit a fragmented security landscape dominated by a patchwork of competing criminal and insurgent groups, all fueled by Colombia’s position as the world’s top producer of cocaine. For Cepeda, the son of a communist leader assassinated by right-wing paramilitaries and one of the architects of the 2016 FARC peace deal, the path forward is to double down on dialogue. He has pledged to continue the “total peace” framework and expand social safety net programs to address the deep inequality that has long fueled insurgency in the country.

    “Today, power is in our hands, the hands of the people,” said Jose Cruz, a 60-year-old former left-wing militant and Cepeda supporter. “We will not accept the return of oligarchic and bourgeois rule.”

    Cepeda’s economic progressive platform has gotten a boost from recent gains under Petro: unemployment has fallen over the past four years, and the government has implemented significant increases to the national minimum wage, improvements that have resonated with low-income and working-class voters.

    But for right-wing candidates, continued dialogue with armed groups is a non-starter. They have weaponized widespread voter anxiety over rising violence to oust the left from power. Polling indicates Cepeda is most likely to face de la Espriella — a self-described admirer of former U.S. President Donald Trump who has nicknamed himself “The Tiger” — in the June run-off. De la Espriella has promised a full-spectrum military offensive against armed groups across air, land, and sea, echoing the tough-on-crime rhetoric that has fueled a recent wave of right-wing electoral victories across Latin America.

    “What De la Espriella wants is to put this country back in order,” said Wilmer Bolivar, a 47-year-old former soldier and de la Espriella supporter.

    Valencia, a conservative senator and close ally of influential former president Alvaro Uribe, endorses the same militarized approach to security. “We are going to put an end to ‘total peace’ in order to impose total security,” she declared during a recent campaign stop.

    While widespread bloodshed on election day is not expected, with even criminal groups traditionally declaring unilateral ceasefires to allow voting to proceed peacefully, the wave of attacks in recent months has left many voters deeply anxious. The National Electoral Council has deployed 408,000 law enforcement officers across the country to secure polling places. Voting will run for eight hours, concluding at 4:00 pm local time (2100 GMT), with preliminary results expected by 6:00 pm (2300 GMT).

    Colombia currently records its highest levels of violence in a decade, a crisis almost entirely driven by revenue from the multibillion-dollar cocaine trade. The 2023 assassination of right-wing candidate Miguel Uribe, which was blamed on a leftist guerrilla group, stoked widespread fears of a return to the full-scale civil conflict that devastated the country for decades. In April 2025, a bombing on a highway in southwestern Cauca region killed 21 civilians, making it the deadliest attack on non-combatants in decades; the responsible group later called the attack a tactical error.

    For many ordinary Colombians, the top priority for the next president is simple: end the cycle of violence that has upended daily life across much of the country. “The next president needs to give us some peace of mind, some actual peace, because the way things are right now, we’re all very anxious,” said Maria Eugenia Motato, a 57-year-old housewife in Suarez, Cauca. “There’s just far too much conflict.”

  • 780 arrested, deadly road accident in riotous PSG victory celebrations across France

    780 arrested, deadly road accident in riotous PSG victory celebrations across France

    What was meant to be a night of national celebration for Paris Saint-Germain’s historic UEFA Champions League final win over Arsenal quickly descended into chaos across France Saturday, leaving one young fan dead, dozens injured, and hundreds in police custody after widespread violent unrest. French interior officials confirmed Sunday that the total number of arrests nationwide reached 780, a 32% jump from the number of detentions recorded during PSG’s 2023 Champions League victory celebrations, when rioting also broke out. Anticipating potential unrest after last year’s disorder, French authorities deployed 22,000 law enforcement officers across the country ahead of Saturday night’s final, held in Budapest, Hungary. Even with the large security presence, unrest flared in 71 different municipalities, with small groups of rioters engaging in theft, looting and violent clashes with police. Interior Minister Laurent Nunez told reporters Sunday that rioters specifically targeted law enforcement with commercial fireworks, leaving 57 officers injured. In total, 219 people across the country were hurt during the unrest, eight of them with life-threatening injuries. One of the most tragic incidents unfolded on a Paris ring road exit ramp, where a young man in his 20s riding a motocross bike crashed head-on into concrete security barriers and was killed. Separately, authorities confirmed another young person was seriously wounded in a knife-linked robbery that broke out amid the chaotic street crowds in Paris. The most severe disorder unfolded on Paris’ iconic Champs-Élysées, where 20,000 fans converged to celebrate immediately after the final whistle. The city hall for Paris’ 8th arrondissement, the district that hosts the famous avenue, released a scathing statement Sunday describing the area as having transformed from a celebration space into an urban guerrilla warfare zone overnight. The district mayor called for a strict policy of zero gatherings on the Champs-Élysées for future victory events, arguing it is the only way to prevent repeat violence after repeated disorder following major PSG wins. That call was rejected by Interior Minister Nunez, who argued a full ban of gatherings on the avenue would require reallocating nearly half of the planned security resources for Sunday’s scheduled victory events. Sunday’s official celebration is scheduled to bring an estimated 100,000 fans to the Champs-de-Mars, the public greenspace at the foot of the Eiffel Tower, for an open-air parade featuring the PSG playing squad. After the public event, the team is scheduled to meet with President Emmanuel Macron at the Elysee Palace. To prepare for the official event, authorities have deployed an additional 6,000 police officers and gendarmes. Nunez has promised a robust, zero-tolerance law enforcement response to any new unrest, and warned that anyone found blocking traffic or intruding on the Paris ring road will face immediate fines.

  • Nigerian retired general abducted with his wife in the north-west

    Nigerian retired general abducted with his wife in the north-west

    Nigeria’s military has officially confirmed that a retired senior army commander and his spouse have been taken hostage by armed assailants in the country’s restive northwest region.

    Retired Major General Rabe Abubakar, who served as the Nigerian Army’s high-profile public spokesperson between 2015 and 2017, was pulled from his vehicle during an abduction that took place Saturday while he was traveling through Katsina State. Local media reports indicate the former senior officer was en route to a wedding celebration in the state capital when gunmen intercepted his car. His driver was struck by gunfire during the attack but managed to escape, while Abubakar and his wife were forcibly taken into a nearby heavily forested area, where criminal groups often hide after carrying out raids.

    Current Nigerian Army spokesperson Major General Michael Onoja told the BBC that active search and rescue operations are currently ongoing to free the kidnapped couple and apprehend their captors. As of Sunday, no armed faction has claimed responsibility for the abduction, and military officials stated they are waiting for the perpetrators to reach out to Abubakar’s family, a common step in kidnappings for ransom in the region.

    This latest high-profile kidnapping underscores the persistent, intractable security crisis that has plagued northwestern Nigeria for years. In this region, loosely organized criminal gangs locally referred to as “bandits” regularly carry out mass abductions for large ransom payments, steal cattle from rural herders, and launch coordinated attacks on isolated farming communities. The security challenge is compounded by the presence of small factions of militant jihadists that have also established operating bases in the area; last December 25, the United States carried out an airstrike targeting an alleged militant training camp in neighboring Sokoto State.

    Katsina has consistently ranked among the Nigerian states hardest hit by this wave of violence. Just one day before Abubakar’s abduction, the state suffered another deadly mass attack: armed men raided Kiliya village, located in Dutsinma Local Government Area, killing no fewer than 16 residents. That attack unfolded shortly after Friday communal prayers, as local residents had gathered to mark the Eid al-Adha religious holiday. Security agencies across northern Nigeria had issued formal warnings of potential attack plots during the holiday celebrations, leading several state governments to implement restrictions on large public gatherings and boost patrols in high-risk areas. Nigerian police have not yet released any official comment on the reported village massacre.

    Neighboring Zamfara State, which shares borders with both Katsina and Sokoto, has endured years of the same pattern of brutal violence. Some local communities in Zamfara have attempted to broker informal peace agreements with armed gangs in recent years, but nearly all of these efforts have failed to deliver long-term stability to the region.

    Nigeria’s federal government has ramped up counter-insurgency and anti-crime operations in the northwest in an attempt to curb the epidemic of kidnapping. Policy measures have also been introduced to discourage families from paying ransom to kidnappers, which officials argue fuels the cycle of abductions by giving criminals incentive to carry out more attacks. Despite these interventions, however, large-scale attacks and abductions of both high-profile figures and ordinary civilians have continued unabated across the region.

  • Laos cave survivors help with plan to find last two missing men

    Laos cave survivors help with plan to find last two missing men

    More than a week after seven local villagers became trapped in a flooded cave system in central Laos’ Xaysomboun province, international rescue teams have ramped up operations to locate the final two missing men, with critical intel from survivors now guiding new search plans.

    The seven villagers entered the narrow mountain cave tunnels on May 20 to hunt for gold, but an unexpected flash flood cut off their exit route, leaving them stranded deep underground. As of Sunday, five of the seven men have been pulled out to safety: the first survivor was rescued by official teams on Friday, while four more managed to escape on their own on Saturday after water levels inside the cave dropped enough to open a temporary path.

    Rescuers told AFP on Sunday that several of the recently freed survivors are already contributing to the search from their hospital beds, sharing detailed descriptions of the cave’s deeper, uncharted sections to help teams navigate the complex system. The cave extends deep under the mountain, with some passageways measuring only 50 centimeters wide, so the first-hand information from survivors is being described as “substantial” and has already been integrated into a newly revised search strategy, according to a local Laotian rescue organization. A fresh push to locate the remaining two trapped men was scheduled to launch Sunday.

    An unverified video shared on social media captured the moment the four Saturday escapees emerged from the cave mouth, drawing loud cheers from waiting rescuers and onlookers. While the exact cause of the water level drop remained unclear, Japanese rescue diver Yoshitaka Isaji told the Associated Press that teams have been working to drain flood water out of the cave system. However, the drainage pump that was in use over the weekend broke down, leaving the primary rescue passage used on Saturday currently impassable. Crews are working nonstop to repair the broken pump, after an earlier attempt to pump out flood water earlier in the week also ended in failure.

    The cross-border rescue effort has drawn specialized cave diving teams from multiple countries, including Thailand, Indonesia, France and Australia, all of whom have joined local crews to support the search for the two remaining missing villagers.