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  • Trump ‘very disappointed’ in Kurds who just ‘take, take, take’

    Trump ‘very disappointed’ in Kurds who just ‘take, take, take’

    Weeks after the United States and Israel launched their large-scale military assault on Iran starting in late February, former U.S. President Donald Trump has publicly slammed Iranian Kurdish groups, saying he is “very disappointed” in their failure to provide military backing to Iranian opposition forces. His remarks at the White House Monday came amid persistent unconfirmed media reports that the Central Intelligence Agency had supplied weaponry to Kurdish opposition factions to deploy against the Iranian government, claims that Kurdish leaders have repeatedly and flatly denied.

    In his comments, Trump painted a critical picture of the Kurdish groups, saying, “The Kurds take, take, take. They have a great reputation in Congress. Congress says they fight hard. They fight hard when they get paid.” These latest critical remarks mark a sharp shift from Trump’s own conflicting public statements on the issue just weeks earlier, highlighting the chaotic alignment of U.S. policy around the Iran conflict.

    Shortly after the U.S.-Israeli offensive began in early March, Trump confirmed to Reuters that he would openly support a Kurdish offensive against the Iranian government, a comment that aligned with widespread media reports of CIA arms shipments to Kurdish factions. However, just days later, Trump backtracked entirely, telling reporters he had explicitly instructed Kurdish groups not to join the conflict. “They’re willing to go in, but I’ve told them I don’t want them to go in,” he stated at the time.

    These contradictory statements from the U.S. head of state have left Iranian Kurdish party leaders caught off guard. The factions collectively maintain roughly 6,000 armed fighters based primarily in northern Iraq, and none of the groups have entered the ongoing U.S.-Israeli war against Iran to date.

    Mustafa Mawloudi, deputy secretary-general of the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (PDKI) — one of the largest Iranian Kurdish opposition groups — told independent outlet Middle East Eye that his organization has neither received U.S. weapons nor shipped arms to activists inside Iranian Kurdistan, referred to locally as Rojhalat. “A proof of this is that we cannot send arms through Iraq to our people,” Mawloudi explained, noting that cross-border arms shipments would create serious legal complications for the group, which is based in Iraq’s northern Kurdish autonomous region.

    Tensions have spiked dramatically in the border region since the U.S.-Israeli offensive began. Data compiled by independent Kurdish news outlet Rojhelat Info shows that Iran and its allied militias have launched nearly 700 missile and drone strikes targeting Iraqi Kurdistan since February 28. At least 15 people have been killed in these attacks, according to the data. Roughly 170 of those strikes have specifically targeted bases of Iranian Kurdish opposition groups, killing six opposition fighters to date.

    The back-and-forth rhetoric from Trump comes on the heels of major unrest inside Iran just months earlier: in late December, widespread nationwide anti-government protests spread across the country, lasting roughly two weeks before Iranian security forces violently suppressed the demonstrations amid a total national internet blackout.

  • Trump-Xi meet as petroyuan rises on Iran war’s tide

    Trump-Xi meet as petroyuan rises on Iran war’s tide

    The 2026 military campaign waged by the United States and Israel against Iran has done far more than distract global attention: it has acted as a devastating catalyst that has upended decades of established regional order in the Middle East, accelerating the geopolitical realignment that Washington sought to block.

    In the destructive aftermath of the conflict, the Middle East’s long-standing security framework lies in ruins. Key markers of this collapse include the extended paralysis of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global energy chokepoint, skyrocketing global oil prices that topped $110 per barrel, and deep retaliatory Iranian strikes that penetrated deep into Gulf Arab territories. These events have completely unraveled the decades-old agreement that shaped the region’s geopolitics.

    For generations, the core bargain of the Gulf rested on a simple premise: the United States would guarantee regional security for Gulf Arab states in exchange for their commitment to pricing oil in U.S. dollars, sustaining the petrodollar system that anchored American global financial dominance. The 2026 war has exposed this arrangement as an empty illusion. When direct attacks hit American assets across the region, Washington’s vaunted security umbrella failed to shield its closest allies from catastrophic economic shocks that threatened their very survival.

    This collapse has transformed what was once a distant long-term prospect into an urgent immediate priority: China’s emergence as the primary economic and political partner for nearly all Gulf Cooperation Council states, with only the United Arab Emirates remaining a partial exception. Alongside this geopolitical shift, the petroyuan has quickly evolved into a credible replacement for the petrodollar, with Iran and Russia playing distinct but pivotal roles in building this new regional order.

    The conflict has completely rewritten how Gulf states assess regional threats, destroying the long-standing strategic logic of hedging between the United States and China. For decades, Gulf leaders operated under a shared assumption: while they expanded economic ties with East Asia, their ultimate security would always be backed by the U.S. Fifth Fleet. The 2026 war has completely destroyed that confidence.

    The closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which carries roughly one-fifth of all global oil trade, combined with Iranian strikes on key ports, energy export terminals, and high-profile commercial targets across the UAE – including the iconic Burj Al Arab hotel – made clear that the U.S. was either unwilling or unable to stop retaliatory attacks on the Gulf’s most economically vital assets. At the peak of hostilities, 13 American military bases across the region were rendered vulnerable or nearly uninhabitable, turning the long-touted U.S. security guarantee into a strategic liability rather than an asset.

    This has left a critical power vacuum that Gulf states are rushing to fill. Rather than seeking a new single-power security umbrella, they are turning to a diversified network of partnerships focused on de-escalating tensions and securing long-term stability. China, which avoided direct military entanglement in the conflict while maintaining open diplomatic channels with both Tehran and Gulf Arab capitals, has emerged as an indispensable neutral broker for the region.

    Beijing’s consistent diplomatic posture – calling for negotiated ceasefires, refusing to back unilateral Western resolutions at the UN Security Council, and instead co-sponsoring compromise frameworks with Moscow – has positioned it as the only major global power trusted by both sides of the conflict to steer the post-war transition. For Gulf states looking to rebuild, Beijing has become the go-to partner for the diplomatic, economic, and financial support they need.

    Amid this shattered landscape, the long-discussed transition from the petrodollar to the petroyuan is no longer a gradual theoretical shift – it is an immediate necessity driven by the chaos of conflict. The war has become the very catalyst that Deutsche Bank analysts warned of years ago, splitting the global oil pricing system along new geopolitical lines.

    During the height of hostilities, Iran already implemented a new policy: it conditioned safe passage for oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz on payments being made in Chinese yuan, effectively using the strait’s strategic importance to break the dollar’s decades-long monopoly on global energy trading. This tactical shift has lasting structural implications for how the world buys and sells oil. Today, Saudi Arabia exports four times as much oil to China as it does to the United States, making the logic of settling these massive trade volumes in dollars increasingly unsustainable.

    The physical damage inflicted on key Gulf energy infrastructure – including Qatar’s Ras Laffan LNG facility and Saudi Arabia’s Ras Tanura refinery, two of the most critical energy export sites in the world – has required an unprecedented influx of reconstruction capital. China stands ready to provide this funding through Belt and Road Initiative financing, all denominated in yuan. Furthermore, the war has accelerated the rollout of alternative financial infrastructure, such as mBridge, a blockchain-based cross-border payment platform linking the Chinese and UAE central banks that enables direct yuan-dirham settlements that bypass the dollar entirely.

    After decades of seeing the United States weaponize the dollar and the SWIFT global messaging system to impose financial penalties on adversaries, Gulf states are now actively building a multipolar financial system as a critical insurance policy against future American coercion. While the petrodollar has not completely disappeared, its decades of global dominance have suffered a fatal blow. Already accounting for a substantial share of trade in sanctioned oil, the petroyuan is on track to become the primary currency for Asia’s entire energy trade corridor.

    In this reshaped regional order, Iran and Russia fill contrasting but essential roles. For Iran, which remains devastated by the war and the loss of its Supreme Leader, national survival depends on deepening its strategic partnership with Beijing. Tehran frames the post-war Gulf “Neighborhood Policy” through a Chinese-led framework: it views the detente with rival Gulf Arab states not as a genuine long-term friendship, but as a managed truce necessary to block the establishment of a unified Arab-Israeli air defense network backed by the United States.

    While Iran launched fierce attacks on UAE and Qatari targets during the conflict, it showed deliberate restraint toward Saudi Arabia and Oman, recognizing that Beijing prioritizes broad regional stability to advance its economic goals. Iran’s recent proposal for joint maritime patrols in the Strait of Hormuz – which would include tolls collected in yuan – represents a Chinese-mediated compromise that would reopen the critical waterway without returning full control to the U.S. Navy.

    Russia, by contrast, acts as a co-architect of the anti-unipolar resistance axis and a strategic military spoiler. Unlike China, which maintained neutrality during the conflict, Russia shared intelligence and advanced military technology with Iran to bleed American resources, framing Tehran as a key “partner in defiance” in its broader campaign against Western global dominance. That said, Russia lacks the financial capital to fund the massive reconstruction projects the Gulf needs to recover.

    Instead, Moscow plays a disruptive balancing role: it joins China in using its UN Security Council veto to block resolutions unfavorable to Iran, while selling advanced military hardware to Gulf states as an alternative to American weapons systems. Going forward, the Gulf will look to China for economic security and reconstruction, but may turn to Russia for counter-hegemonic political leverage and arms diversification.

    In sum, the aftermath of the 2026 US-Israel war on Iran has accelerated the collapse of the decades-old U.S.-led regional order, clearing the way for a China-centric economic system to take root across the Gulf. China has risen to become the region’s primary partner not through military conquest, but by stepping into the vacuum left by American failure: it provides the diplomatic exit ramps, reconstruction capital, and non-dollar financial infrastructure that Gulf states desperately need to recover and stabilize their economies.

    At the same time, the petroyuan is rising not as a speculative geopolitical tool, but as a practical requirement for energy trade in the post-war region. Iran emerges as a battered but defiant junior partner to Beijing, critical to managing security and access through the Strait of Hormuz, while Russia acts as a disruptive guarantor of the new multipolar order. The war did not create this geopolitical realignment, but it burned away the last remaining credibility of the old U.S.-led system, forcing Gulf states to bet their long-term economic future on China as the only major power capable of managing the region’s new, more volatile order.

    This analysis comes from Bob Savic, an expert on sanctions, supply chains, and geopolitical risk, who is co-author of the new book *Multipolarity and the Changing Global Order* published by Springer.

  • Indigenous Australians win record A$150m after billionaire mined without permission

    Indigenous Australians win record A$150m after billionaire mined without permission

    After a nearly two-decade-long legal fight over unauthorized mining on sacred traditional land, Australia’s Federal Court has ordered mining magnate Andrew Forrest’s Fortescue Metals to pay Indigenous traditional owners a historic A$150.1 million compensation package, the largest native title payout in the nation’s history.

    The Yindjibarndi people, who hold exclusive native title rights to a 2,700-square-kilometer stretch of the mineral-rich Pilbara region in remote north-western Australia, launched their legal challenge in 2017. That challenge came five years after the court first formally recognized Yindjibarndi Ngurra Aboriginal Corporation (YNAC) as the legitimate holders of native title over the area. Fortescue, the iron ore mining giant founded by billionaire Andrew Forrest that has built its multi-billion-dollar empire on Pilbara iron ore extraction, had already developed its highly profitable Solomon Hub mines on the land by that point. While the company secured approval for the project from the Australian government and a competing local Aboriginal representative body, it never secured the required consent from YNAC, the legally recognized native title holders. Failed negotiations for a formal land use agreement between the two sides eventually led to the drawn-out court battle that concluded this week.

    In his ruling, Federal Court Justice Stephen Burley explicitly acknowledged the Yindjibarndi people’s unbroken “deep and visceral connection” to their traditional country, which shapes every dimension of their cultural and social life. He divided the compensation into two parts: A$150,000 for proven economic losses suffered by the community, and A$150 million for profound cultural harm. Burley defined the cultural compensation as payment for the erosion of the Yindjibarndi’s traditional attachment to their land, damage to their cultural heritage, and the loss of their ability to draw spiritual sustenance from their country. In their original claim, the Yindjibarndi had sought A$1.8 billion in total compensation, a figure the group calculated as 1% of the tens of billions of dollars in revenue Fortescue has generated from the site since mining began in 2013, plus compensation for the destruction or damage of approximately 250 sacred cultural sites across the lease area.

    While the ruling marks a landmark moment for native title rights in Australia — with the payout nearly tripling the value of the previous largest court-ordered native title compensation award — many Yindjibarndi community leaders have expressed disappointment with the final sum. Speaking to reporters outside the courtroom, Yindjibarndi elder Wendy Hubert dismissed the award as “peanuts” compared to the massive ongoing profits Fortescue continues to pull from the land. The Solomon Hub mine is projected to remain in operation and generate revenue for the company for at least another decade, with closure not scheduled until the mid-2040s. The case has reignited national conversations about resource sovereignty, the protection of Indigenous cultural heritage, and the fairness of native title compensation frameworks in Australia’s booming mining sector.

  • How are countries responding to hantavirus?

    How are countries responding to hantavirus?

    A hantavirus outbreak linked to the Dutch cruise ship MV Hondius has triggered coordinated public health responses across the globe, after the vessel docked at Granadilla port in southeast Tenerife to disembark all remaining passengers and crew over the weekend. Three people who had traveled on the ship have died, with two of the deaths confirmed to be caused by the virus, and the World Health Organization (WHO) has logged a total of nine cases: seven confirmed and two suspected.

    As dozens of international passengers make their way back to their home countries, public health agencies around the world have rolled out targeted quarantine and monitoring protocols to prevent wider community spread of the Andes strain of hantavirus, which is primarily endemic to Argentina and Chile. Investigations remain ongoing into the origin of the outbreak, with the leading hypothesis tying initial exposure to rodent habitats in Argentina, where the cruise began its itinerary after passengers completed a bird-watching trip through Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay. No official confirmation of this origin story has been released to date.

    In the United Kingdom, 20 British nationals, one German resident of the UK, and one Japanese passenger were flown to Manchester Airport on a chartered evacuation flight Sunday, then transferred to Arrowe Park Hospital in Merseyside for 72 hours of mandatory testing and medical assessment. Following this initial monitoring period, the group will return to their homes to complete a 42-day precautionary self-isolation period. UK Health Security Agency officials confirmed that strict infection control measures were enforced throughout the entire repatriation journey. Public Health Minister Sharon Hodgson noted that none of the repatriated passengers have shown any symptoms of the virus, adding that the overall risk to the UK public remains extremely low thanks to stringent monitoring and isolation protocols. In total, 31 British nationals, including both passengers and crew, were on board the MV Hondius, and some disembarked before the first confirmed hantavirus case was reported on May 4.

    United States health officials have echoed the UK’s assessment that the broader public risk remains minimal. Eighteen American passengers have returned to the U.S. so far: 16 are currently undergoing screening at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, while two are being cared for at Emory University’s Regional Emerging Special Pathogen Treatment Center in Atlanta, including one patient with mild symptoms who was transported in a specialized biocontainment unit on the repatriation flight. Four California residents with potential exposure are also being monitored: three were passengers on the cruise ship, and one may have been exposed on an international flight. The California Department of Public Health confirmed Monday that the risk to California residents remains extremely low. Per Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance, all returning exposed Americans will undergo multi-day health assessments, followed by a 42-day self-isolation and monitoring period that requires daily temperature checks, with individual care plans adjusted based on each patient’s health status and living situation.

    The European Union, via the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, has issued guidance aligned with the UK’s protocols: all returning citizens must undergo medical triage by trained healthcare workers, followed by a six-week self-isolation and symptom monitoring period, with instructions to seek immediate care if symptoms develop. In the Netherlands, 13 Dutch nationals (eight passengers and five crew members) who were on board when the ship docked were flown to Eindhoven Sunday, then transported directly to their homes for quarantine. Dutch health officials will conduct daily check-ins with all isolating individuals to catch any early symptoms and provide prompt care if needed.

    Fourteen Spanish nationals repatriated from Tenerife to Madrid are currently in mandatory quarantine at a military hospital in the capital. Spanish Health Minister Mónica García confirmed Monday that one person has received a preliminary positive test result, but remains asymptomatic, in isolation, and in good general health. The other 13 have tested negative preliminarily, with definitive results expected within 24 hours. While Tenerife and Canary Islands residents have expressed public concern over the outbreak being centered in their port community, WHO officials have emphasized that the risk of widespread local transmission is low due to the specific transmission characteristics of hantavirus, and all disembarkation processes were carried out at a port located far from residential areas.

    France has recorded its first confirmed hantavirus case linked to the outbreak: a French national who developed symptoms during a chartered repatriation flight from Tenerife to Paris. French Health Minister Stéphanie Rist reported that the woman is currently isolating in Paris, and her health is deteriorating. Health officials have already traced 22 close contacts of the patient, and all five French citizens returning from Tenerife were placed in immediate strict isolation per Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu’s weekend order.

    In Germany, four asymptomatic exposed people arrived in the country overnight Monday and were initially monitored in an isolation unit at Frankfurt University Hospital, before being transferred to their home jurisdictions across Berlin, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Bavaria, and Schleswig-Holstein. Germany’s federal health ministry stated that the group will remain under continuous close symptom monitoring, with local authorities responsible for determining any additional local public health measures.

    Six Canadian citizens were on board the MV Hondius: four returned to British Columbia Sunday on a chartered repatriation flight, and are currently self-isolating for a precautionary 21 days, a period that may be extended to 42 days to align with the virus’s 1 to 8 week incubation period. Two other Canadian passengers, a couple in Ontario, are already self-isolating at home with no reported symptoms, according to Canadian Health Minister Sylvia Jones.

    A Swiss national who disembarked the cruise at Saint Helena before returning home has tested positive for hantavirus and is currently receiving medical care. His wife, who traveled with him, remains asymptomatic and is self-isolating as a precaution. Switzerland’s Federal Office of Public Health has confirmed that the overall risk to the Swiss public remains low. Thirty-eight Filipino crew members are on the MV Hondius, and the Philippines has no recorded cases of hantavirus, with local officials stating that the risk of an outbreak there remains extremely low.

  • NSW Health issues measles alert after confirmed case linked to overseas traveller, multiple exposure sites listed

    NSW Health issues measles alert after confirmed case linked to overseas traveller, multiple exposure sites listed

    Public health officials in New South Wales (NSW), Australia, have issued a broad public health warning after a confirmed case of highly contagious measles was detected in an international traveller returning from a region with ongoing outbreaks. The case, which was confirmed earlier this week, has already been linked to dozens of exposure sites across greater Sydney, ranging from popular retail and community hubs to medical facilities and an international flight.

    NSW Health confirmed the infected individual had recently travelled through South and Southeast Asia, a region where health officials are currently reporting persistent measles outbreaks. The traveller remained infectious while moving through multiple NSW communities, leading authorities to publish an ever-expanding list of exposure locations that is updated regularly as contact tracing work progresses.

    Among the sites identified so far are well-trafficked locations including 7-Eleven Emerald Hills, Southgate Shopping Centre in Sylvania, Caringbah Auto Repairs and Service, Philter Brewery in Marrickville, as well as multiple medical centres, retail outlets, and major transport hubs across western, southern, and inner Sydney. A China Airlines flight travelling from Taipei to Sydney, which arrived at Sydney Airport on April 26, has also been listed as an exposure site.

    Officials were quick to clarify that the identified venues no longer carry an ongoing risk of transmission, but have issued urgent guidance for anyone who visited these locations during the active exposure windows to monitor their health closely for 18 days following potential contact. As of the latest update, 48 confirmed measles cases have been recorded in NSW since the start of 2026, leaving public health teams warning that the risk of further community spread remains significantly elevated.

    Dr Alvis Zibran, a public health staff specialist with the Nepean Blue Mountains Local Health District, emphasized that ongoing vigilance is critical, especially for individuals who may have visited one of the listed exposure sites. “If you develop symptoms and have been at one of the locations during the specified times, contact your doctor or local health service, including an emergency department,” Dr Zibran advised. “Be sure to call ahead before you arrive to let providers know you may have been exposed to measles, that way you won’t wait in shared waiting rooms with other patients, and always wear a mask during your visit.”

    Dr Zibran outlined the key symptoms of measles that the public should watch for: initial symptoms typically include fever, irritated sore eyes, runny nose, and a cough, with a distinctive red, blotchy rash developing three to four days after symptoms first appear. The rash usually starts on the head and face before spreading outward to the rest of the body. Even people who have not visited any of the identified exposure sites should consider testing if they develop these classic symptoms, he added.

    Unlike many common infectious diseases, measles can take up to 18 days from the time of exposure for symptoms to emerge, meaning people who may have been exposed need to monitor their health for the full incubation window. The virus spreads easily through respiratory droplets that enter the air when an infected person coughs or sneezes, making highly contagious in crowded indoor spaces.

    In addition to guidance for people who may have been exposed, public health officials are urging all community members to review their vaccination status to confirm they are protected. “One of the most important messages we can share right now is that people need to ensure their measles vaccinations are up to date,” Dr Zibran said. “Crucially, the measles vaccine can even prevent infection after exposure if it is administered quickly enough.”

    Officials recommend that anyone born after 1965 confirm they have received two full doses of the measles vaccine. This check is especially critical before planning any international travel, as active measles outbreaks are currently circulating in multiple regions across the globe. In NSW, the combined measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine is provided free of charge as part of the routine childhood immunization schedule, with doses given at 12 months and 18 months of age. The vaccine is also available free of charge to any person born after 1965 who has not yet received two doses.

    For children under 12 months of age who are travelling internationally, an additional early dose of the vaccine can be given as early as six months of age, though families are advised to consult with a medical provider before travel. For people who are unsure of their vaccination history, health authorities confirm that receiving an extra dose of MMR is completely safe, and eligible age groups can access the vaccine through general practitioners and participating pharmacies across the state.

  • Lego-hoarding mother begs court not to jail her after pleading guilty to $320k stolen haul

    Lego-hoarding mother begs court not to jail her after pleading guilty to $320k stolen haul

    In a case that has drawn widespread public attention, a 34-year-old mother of three in South Australia has pleaded guilty to theft-related charges after police uncovered a massive cache of stolen Lego estimated by prosecutors to be worth as much as $320,000, and is now begging the court to spare her a jail term for the sake of her children.

    The incident unfolded on March 31 this year, when officers from South Australia Police executed a search warrant at Dai Truong’s former home in Dudley Park. What they found exceeded expectations: countless boxes of unopened Lego, all hidden away in a garden shed on the property. The sheer volume of the stolen goods was so large that law enforcement needed 15 pallets and two large horse trailers to transport the entire stash out of the residence.

    On Tuesday, Truong appeared before the Port Adelaide Magistrates Court, where she entered guilty pleas to four charges brought against her: three counts of handling property without the owner’s consent and one count of unlawful possession. Court documents detail three proven instances of direct theft by Truong from a Kmart store located at the Marion Shopping Centre between September and November last year. Each time, Truong visited the store pushing a pram holding one of her young children. CCTV footage from the store captured her hiding boxes of Lego in the lower storage compartment of the pram, covering the stolen items with a blanket, and exiting the store without completing payment.

    The first recorded theft took place on September 11, when Truong stole four Lego boxes valued at a total of $600. Four days later, she returned to the same location and stole another four boxes worth $300. On November 7, she struck again, this time taking eight boxes with a combined value of $874. Prosecutors noted that these confirmed thefts only account for a small fraction of the total stash found at Truong’s home. The entire collection of Lego, all in unopened, brand-new condition, matches descriptions of Lego reported stolen in other open cases across the region, leading prosecutors to value the entire haul at roughly $320,000. Truong disputes this valuation, arguing the total worth of the collection is closer to $200,000.

    Truong’s legal defense team has made an impassioned plea to Magistrate Aaron Almeida to avoid imposing a custodial sentence, laying out the far-reaching consequences a jail term would have for the defendant and her family. The court heard that Truong is a Vietnamese national who relocated to Australia on a partner visa in 2017, and is the primary caregiver for three children aged 4, 7, and 10. Two of her three children have been diagnosed with autism and require specialized, consistent parental care that would be impossible to provide if Truong is jailed. Under Australia’s Migration Act, any prison sentence of 12 months or longer would result in the automatic revocation of Truong’s visa, which would lead to her deportation back to Vietnam. The defense argues this outcome would be catastrophic for the children, all of whom have grown up in Australia.

    When asked by Magistrate Almeida to explain what led Truong to commit the offenses, her solicitor described the offending as a series of escalating bad decisions. “It started as a stupid decision,” he told the court. Truong noticed how popular Lego was at children’s birthday parties, and began stealing sets before the operation eventually grew into an enterprise for financial gain. The defense added that Truong has expressed full remorse for her actions and accepted complete responsibility for her crimes. In a statement relayed to the court, she promised never to offend again, saying “I acknowledge what I did was wrong and accept full responsibility for my actions. I promise I will not reoffend in the future and still have responsibility to care for my family.”

    After the conclusion of this week’s hearing, Truong left the courthouse with her identity concealed by a hooded coat, face mask and sunglasses. A separate unlawful possession charge laid against Thanh Van Ta, a 42-year-old man who shared Truong’s former address, has been withdrawn by prosecutors. Truong, who currently resides in Devon Park, will return to court next week for her final sentencing.

  • Ukraine officials name Zelenskyy’s ex-chief of staff as a suspect in money-laundering probe

    Ukraine officials name Zelenskyy’s ex-chief of staff as a suspect in money-laundering probe

    KYIV, Ukraine — In a move that sends significant ripples through Ukraine’s political landscape amid its bid for European Union membership, two of the country’s leading anti-corruption watchdogs have formally named former presidential chief of staff Andriy Yermak as an official suspect in a large-scale money laundering investigation.

    The National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine and the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office made the announcement public via the Telegram messaging platform late Monday, detailing that the alleged scheme involves roughly 460 million Ukrainian hryvnia, equal to around $10.5 million. Investigators confirmed that the case remains active and ongoing, with the formal suspect designation coming before any official criminal charges are filed.

    Yermak, who stepped down from his post in November, previously served as Ukraine’s lead negotiator in high-stakes talks with the United States. His resignation came amid a growing political scandal that has emerged as the most significant challenge to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s administration since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of the country in 2022.

    Once one of Zelenskyy’s closest and most trusted confidants, Yermak held considerable power within the Ukrainian government. Zelenskyy for months resisted widespread calls to remove Yermak from his role, a fact that makes the current corruption probe deeply politically damaging for the president as he works to advance Ukraine’s EU accession agenda. Long-standing systemic corruption is widely cited as one of the key barriers slowing Kyiv’s progress toward membership, a process that is already projected to take years to complete.

    Investigators allege that Yermak was complicit in laundering illicit funds through a series of construction projects located in the outskirts of Kyiv. Authorities executed a search of Yermak’s personal residence back in November, and no additional suspects have been publicly named as part of the investigation to date.

    Zelenskyy has so far declined to issue any public comment on the anti-corruption agencies’ announcement. His press spokesperson, Dmytro Lytvyn, stated that with the investigation still unfolding, it is too premature to draw any definitive conclusions about the case. A final decision on whether to file formal criminal charges against Yermak could still be months away, according to official updates.

    At the time of Yermak’s departure from the presidential office, Zelenskyy framed the resignation as part of a broader restructuring of his administration, publicly thanking Yermak for his work leading international peace negotiations.

  • The Kabul rehab centre hit by deadly Pakistani strike

    The Kabul rehab centre hit by deadly Pakistani strike

    A deadly airstrike carried out by Pakistani military forces targeted a rehabilitation center in Afghanistan’s capital Kabul, triggering a sharp dispute over the nature of the facility and the legitimacy of the operation.

    According to official statements from Islamabad, the strike was a legitimate counterterrorism operation that destroyed key militant and terrorist infrastructure hidden in the area. Pakistani authorities have framed the action as a necessary measure to defend national security against cross-border militant threats that have long plagued the country’s western border regions.

    However, this narrative has been immediately and firmly rejected by two key groups: the United Nations and the families of those killed or injured in the attack. The UN has challenged Islamabad’s claim that the site housed terrorist assets, while grieving relatives of the victims confirm the location operated as a drug addiction rehabilitation center serving vulnerable local residents.

    The incident has stoked already tense cross-border relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan, raising new questions about proportional use of military force, civilian protection, and the human cost of counterterrorism operations. Global observers are now calling for a full independent investigation into the strike to clarify the facts and hold accountable those responsible for any civilian casualties.

  • Pakistan struck a rehab centre and killed 269 Afghans. Their families want to know why

    Pakistan struck a rehab centre and killed 269 Afghans. Their families want to know why

    On a frigid, rain-soaked morning in northwest Kabul, 27-year-old Masooda climbs a sloped hillside cemetery to pay her respects to her 24-year-old younger brother Mirwais — a young man killed two months prior in a Pakistani airstrike. What makes her grief even more agonizing is that she cannot pinpoint his exact burial spot. Mirwais is one of dozens of victims laid to rest in an unmarked mass grave, a patch of land neatly covered with small white stones and crudely marked by rough grey granite slabs, holding the remains of those killed in the deadliest single attack Afghanistan has seen in modern history.

    The target of the March 16 airstrike was the Omid Drug Rehabilitation Hospital, a facility that had operated quietly in Kabul for a decade, treating Afghans struggling with substance use disorder at a time when an estimated three million people across the country battle addiction. On that fateful evening, at 20:50 local time, three bombs slammed into the facility, which sits just a kilometer from major United Nations offices along the Kabul-Jalalabad highway. What followed was a carnage so brutal it has shocked even a nation long hardened by decades of war.

    A doctor on duty that night, speaking to the BBC on condition of anonymity over fears of retaliation from the Taliban government, described the scene of chaos and horror he encountered. “One bomb hit a large hangar that housed newly admitted patients, while two others struck patient quarters, food storage, and administrative offices,” he explained. The bombs also hit the center’s vocational training wings, which were constructed mostly of wood, sparking an intense fire that compounded the death toll. “I walked through piles of bodies searching for anyone still alive, screaming for help. The smell of burning flesh was everywhere,” the doctor recalled. “I have never seen anything this horrific in my life.”

    The United Nations, which was granted full access to the attack site in the aftermath, confirmed Tuesday that it has verified at least 269 fatalities from the strike, but acknowledged that the actual death toll is almost certainly far higher. The Taliban government places the count above 400. Many bodies were burned beyond recognition or torn apart by shrapnel and fire, leaving families with nothing to bury and no closure to their grief. The center’s full patient list was also destroyed in the blaze, turning the search for missing loved ones into a weeks-long nightmare of harrowing uncertainty.

    For Sediq Walizada, that nightmare ended on Eid, the Muslim holiday of celebration, when he and his brothers finally identified the remains of his 35-year-old brother Mohammad Anwar Walizada, who had been admitted to Omid just four days before the attack to treat his addiction to synthetic street drug “Tablet-K.” “We moved from hospital to hospital for days, hoping he had escaped. Not knowing if he was dead or alive was agony,” Sediq said, his voice still thick with trauma. When they finally found Mohammad Anwar’s remains, severed in half by the blast, it was devastating — but still a relief: hundreds of other families leave without ever recovering their loved ones. “He didn’t turn to drugs for fun, he turned to it out of poverty and helplessness,” Sediq said of his brother, a father of six who sold bottled water from a tricycle cart to feed his family.

    Mirwais’s story follows the same pattern. Orphaned young, Mirwais was raised by Masooda like a son. He was studying to become a pharmacist when he developed an addiction to Tablet-K, and had only been in treatment at Omid for 10 days when the bombs fell. “My brother’s body was just a torso. I identified him only by a birthmark he had,” Masooda said, breaking down in tears. “They found barely anything left of him.”

    The airstrike has exacerbated already soaring tensions between neighboring Pakistan and the Taliban-led Afghan government, a conflict that has stretched across months and left hundreds dead, most from Pakistani cross-border airstrikes. Islamabad says the strikes are targeted at militant groups that launch attacks inside Pakistan and are sheltered by the Taliban regime. Kabul has repeatedly denied allowing militants to operate from Afghan soil.

    Pakistan has also pushed back against claims that the strike hit a civilian facility, telling the BBC that “no hospital, no drug rehabilitation center, and no civilian facility was targeted” and that the targets were “military and terrorist infrastructure.” Senior Pakistani military spokesman Lt Gen Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry went further, claiming the center was “most likely a suicide bomber training facility” that used drug addicts as bombers.

    Every victim’s family the BBC spoke to rejected these claims, and the United Nations, Human Rights Watch, and independent observers have confirmed the facility was a well-documented drug treatment center, operating openly since 2016 in a former US-NATO military base. The center was so well known that the BBC was granted access to interview patients there in 2023, and UN agencies provided direct support to patients at the facility. “It’s literally about a kilometre away from the main UN offices. We have UN agencies, support to the patients of that hospital. So the site was well known to us,” said Fiona Frazer, the representative of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in Afghanistan.

    Human Rights Watch has labeled the strike an “unlawful attack and a possible war crime,” and there are growing international calls for a full independent investigation into the incident. The Taliban government has echoed these calls, saying the intentional targeting of innocent civilians amounts to a war crime that demands accountability.

    For Afghans, the attack has shattered the fragile relative peace that settled over the country after the end of the 20-year NATO-Afghan war in 2021, sparking widespread fears that the country is being pulled back into sustained, large-scale violence. For the grieving families of Omid’s victims, however, the pain is deeply personal. Most say they hold little hope that anyone will ever be held accountable for the deaths of their loved ones. “We are an oppressed people. We do not have the power to respond,” said one victim’s brother. “We have suffered injustice and brutality. May God bring the perpetrators to justice.”

  • BJP leader back to head India’s Assam state for second time in a row

    BJP leader back to head India’s Assam state for second time in a row

    In a landmark political event held in Guwahati this week, senior Bharatiya Janata Party leader Himanta Biswa Sarma officially took the oath of office for a second consecutive term as Chief Minister of India’s northeastern state of Assam. The ceremony drew high-profile attendees, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi, multiple federal cabinet ministers, and BJP chief ministers from across the country, alongside thousands of supporters gathered from across Assam.

    Sarma’s return to power follows a landslide victory for the BJP-led alliance in the recent Assam Assembly elections, held on April 9. The ruling coalition secured a commanding majority, with the BJP itself winning 82 of the 126 available seats, and its regional allies adding an additional 20 seats to the coalition’s total. This result extends the BJP’s uninterrupted control of Assam, which began when the party first won power in the state in 2016.

    Widely regarded as one of the key architects of the BJP’s explosive growth in India’s northeast, a region once dominated by regional smaller parties and the national Indian National Congress, Sarma has been central to reshaping the state’s political landscape over the past decade. Just 10 years ago, the BJP held less than 12% of the popular vote in Assam; today, that share has climbed to 38%, a shift political analysts largely credit to Sarma’s organizational work and strategic leadership.

    Sarma’s political career has been defined by striking longevity and strategic influence. Representing the Jalukbari constituency on the outskirts of Guwahati, Assam’s largest city, he has held the seat continuously since 2001, even after switching political affiliation. Prior to joining the BJP in 2015, Sarma was a top Congress leader and cabinet minister under former long-serving Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi. When he left the Congress alongside dozens of loyal legislators, the departure dealt a crippling blow to the state Congress party that has yet to fully recover, a moment widely viewed as the turning point for the BJP’s expansion across the entire northeast region.

    In the years after joining the BJP, Sarma built his reputation as the party’s most effective behind-the-scenes organizer during former Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal’s tenure from 2016 to 2021, helping the party forge alliances with local groups and extend its influence into neighboring northeastern states including Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, and Tripura. He first assumed the office of Chief Minister in 2021, and this latest election victory has significantly solidified his standing as one of the most powerful leaders within the national BJP.

    Within the party, Sarma’s success is attributed to his relentless campaigning style, robust grassroots organizational control, and implementation of high-impact public welfare programs. Supporters hail him as a results-driven administrator who has prioritized core infrastructure development, including expanding road and bridge connectivity across the state. One of his most popular initiatives, the Orunodoi scheme, delivers direct monthly financial assistance to low-income women households, earning broad support among marginalized communities.

    However, Sarma’s tenure and political rise have not been without intense controversy. Critics argue that his political messaging has increasingly leaned into divisive rhetoric centered on long-running debates over migration and communal identity, issues that have dominated Assam politics for generations. The state has grappled with political tensions around illegal immigration from neighboring Bangladesh for decades, with debates over language, land rights and indigenous identity shaping every recent election cycle.

    Opposition parties and human rights organizations have repeatedly accused Sarma’s BJP government of systematically targeting religious minority communities, particularly Bengali-speaking Muslims. Policies pursued by his administration related to unregulated Islamic schools and child marriage have sparked fierce political pushback, and earlier this year, a deleted AI-generated deepfake video shared by the state BJP party showed Sarma shooting at images of political opponents wearing traditional Muslim skull caps, drawing widespread condemnation from opposition and civil society groups. Sarma and national BJP leaders have rejected these accusations, framing their policies as necessary measures to protect indigenous Assamese culture and address the ongoing crisis of illegal migration.

    Despite these ongoing controversies, Sarma has emerged as one of the most influential BJP leaders in eastern India, and has become an increasingly prominent campaign surrogate for the party across national elections. Alongside Sarma, four other legislators – two from the BJP and two from its regional alliance partners – were also sworn in as cabinet ministers for the new state government this week.

    Political analysts say Sarma’s winning electoral strategy in Assam rests on three core pillars: identity politics, targeted outreach to key voter blocs, and tangible development progress. “The BJP has worked to bring indigenous communities closer to a broader Hindu identity, while portraying certain minority groups as outsiders,” explained Akhil Ranjan Dutta, a professor of political science at Gauhati University. “At the same time, under Sarma’s leadership the party has effectively engaged women, young voters, farmers and small business owners through targeted welfare schemes and messaging tailored directly to their needs. Development also played a major role – improvements to roads and rural connectivity have significantly boosted the party’s appeal across the state.”